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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-04-04 - Orange Coast Pilotr Huntington Beach pollce are warning residents of a rash of cat burglarlee. /A3 UCI Medical Center and an Industrial firm are join- ing up to build a $3.5 million center.I A3 About 500 Southern Call- fornta llquor stores are puJllng Coors off the shelves./ A5 Now pollce say Marvin Gaye was intervening In fight between parents wher1 shot.I A4 Twisters tear up a dozen communities as storms continue to plague much of nation./ A5 Queen Noor of Jordan says she's critical of U.S. pollcy In the Mideast./ Al Rome Cancer risks can be re- duced by avoiding certain environmental hazards. 182 :~!:.:.;::::~~=~;.:~:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:'.·!·!·Z.!•!·!·!·!·!·:·~·=·=· Food You can produce an award-winning table when you star shimmer- ing fruit desserts./C1 Supermaglclan Davtd Copperfield whips up some cull nary wizardry. /C8 Sports For openers, Dodgers a bust, dropping their first game of the season to St. Louis, 11-7.101 I Golden West receives a one-hit pitching per- formance from Mike Schooler to beat Full- erton, 7-0.101 :·:·:::::::~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Entertainment ..._ ''Double Trouble" Is a cute new TV comedy series with real twins In the leading roles./83 UCI graduate Stuart Duckworth has built a "Dream house" at a Los Angeles theater.184 ~-:·:·:·>:·:·:·:·>:·:·:·:~..;·:·:·:·:':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:,:·:·:·:·:·:· Bualneu An Ohio firm Is trying to bu~ parent company of The Broadway Stores. /88 I Airing \/alencla Bancorp. may be purchased by a Peruvian company.187 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Buslneu Callfornla News Cluaffled Comics Croaword . Death Notices Food ~:;ourself HorOICOP9 .Ann Lander• Mutual Fund• Natlontl News Opinion Potlee Log Public Nottce• Sport• Stoek Mark•ta Tetevttton Theater• WM th« WortdNewa BS A3 B6~8 A4 06-8 B5 08 04 C1·10 B2 B1-2 07 92 A9 A4 A10 A3 (),4-5 ohi 83 ~ A2 A4 One person shot; area evacuated a t.ome at 2093 Maple St. Paramedics Wtre clearly visible near the intenection of Hamilton an4 Maple streett about I :20 p.m. today, but information on who mi&bt have been wounded and how seriously was as gunman holds police at bay By Tiie Dally PUot 1taff to 1n1ual pohce l"CJ)Orts. There were no n:ports of bostqts having been taken and details were sketchy. Costa Mesa police attempted to seal off a neiJ!iborhood undcrsicge by an unidentified gunman who had aPJ>llrently wounded at least one person early this afternoon. accordina The aunman was holed up in a trailer without a phcSne book-up, apparently parked in the frontyard of · unavailable. A police spoketman totd the Daily Pilot the victim suffered a sunshot wound to the leg and was not believed 10 be a pol ice officer. Police radio reports said an apart- ment complex on Hamilton was in Parent. Billy and LeaADD Hodae poee with ND Shaun. 10-montba. ana daqhter 0.-,,... ....... _,Lee..,.. La.ondra. 3. lnalde tbe couple•• eo.ta Ilea apartment. Rare virus keeping tot out of Mesa schools program By KAREN E. KLEIN Of !tie 0.-, ........... Three-year-old Lasondra Hodge wants to go to school. Her parents. Billy and LcaAnn, want her to go to school. And legally. the Costa Mesa child has every right to be enrolled in a spe~ally developed program for the handicapped m one of Orange County's public school districts. But. because she cam es a rare though normally hannless virus. her parents say the child ha s been put off when they havcapplied toenroU her at schools in the Nc~rt-Mcsa Unified School District. Teachers and admmistratorsare afraid of putting Lasondra into a class with a female teacher in her childbearing years. the Hodges said. Lasondra. who has cerebral palsy and a genetic disorder known as T umer's Syndrome. was also identified shonly after binh as a "shedder" or cam er of a usually harmless disease known as cytomegalov1rus (CMV). Public health experts say SO to 80 percent of the ad uh population has been infected bvCMV. with the result bcingsymptomssimilartoa common cold or mono- nucleosis. About 30 percent of children are also carriers of CMV at any given time, seriological tests have shown. Though it isextremelycommon. very little as known about CMV by the general public. most of whom never realize when they have it, according to Dr. Tom Prendergast, epidemiologist for the Orange County Health Depanment. The herpes-related virus is nothing to worry about. Prendergast said. unless it iscontracted by a woman for the first time during a prC$flancy. lfit is contracted dunng pregnanC}'. he said. CMV can cause birth defects in the fetus ranging from enlarged splecn. liverorlungs to brain damage. It can also tngger a miscarriage. "If the mother has never been infected. and her body has not built up antibodies to the virus. 1t can result in (pennanent)defects in a mmonty ofbab1es." Prendergast said. i\uthonties as prestigious as the March of Dimes B1nh Defects Foundation have been quoted as sa) mg that CMV has outstripped German measles. or rubella. as the (Pleaee .ee TOT I A2) ranac of the 1unman. whoapparentJy bepn the shootilla ~about 1:10 p.m. Pblkc teams belift evac:uatina nearby homes and the apanm~t complex at Hamilton and Maple as detectives were tryin1 to obtain witness statements. Initial police reports tentatively identifae<j the 1unman as a former mental patient. He was dncribed as a 2S to 30 year old. 6 foot tall. white By JEFF ADLER Of ... O.., ........ Opponents of Proposition A -the ~nny transportation sales tax in- niative -kicked off their anti-tax campaign Tuesday by calling the proposal an unworkable solution~ Orange County's trans~rtation problems, a cwm that quickly was rebuffed by tax proponents. The IS-year tax inaease and as- sociated SS.4 billion pack.qt of highway and freeway improvements is a "dinosaur-Of ....uansporwioD theQJ')'," said Tom Rogcn, rep- resenting Citizens Apinst Unfair Taxation. And he unveiled the group's own analysis of the plan, p~d by a Univenity of Southern California transportation ell.pert. The l 3-page l"CJ)Ort prepared bv Dr. Peter Gordon, a profes&<>r at USCs School of Urben and Rqional Plao-nin&. concJlldes the 0raaet Ca.aty Transportation Commissaon'1 pla for spend.ins the money the tu Would raise is .. flimsy" and is "riddled with erron and contrivances." Gordon told reporters at a momin, news conference that bui.&diaa new roads and constructinaa new liaht rail line would not ease the .. rising tide of cooacstion," to which tu proponen..-.-- so often refer. · -~ Rathe.L.-.than_building new-~--... county rcsa<knts should make better use or what alread~ is there, be said.; s~tina car-pooling might · be a more reasonable solution to the congestion problem. ••The problem is few people per car. (Pleue.,. BIGBW AT I A2) CdM's Stotler gets federal judgeship, 87 JERRY HIRSCH -°' ........... Newport Beach atto rney Alicemarie StotJer was surprised by a call from President Ronald Reagan on Tuesday telling her that he was ~oing to apPoint her to a federal JUdgcship. "I definitely intend to accept the pre'$ident's offer of the appoanment." Stotler said this morning. "The phone rang yesterday and my husband answered it. The operator told him it was the president calling for me. He asked. 'who?' and she said it was the president of the United States so my husband ran to get me." said Stotler. a fonner Orange County judge. (Pleue eee STOTLER/A2) AllcemarleStotler Navy medal &rrives, butit's41 years late By KAREN E. KLEIN Of .... DeltJ Not ..... It may have taken four decades, but no one can say A.J . Capellanio dadn 't get his just reward from the U.S Navy. The 70;;-year-old ( osta Mesa man recent!) rece1\Cd his "Euro- pean-Afncan-M1ddleEastcrn Theater Campaign .. medal -41 years after he pan1c1pated in "Operation Torch ." the Allied invasion of "'Jonh <\fnca Why the dela)? "That's the Na'> ... Capellanio sitthcd Capellan10 onl~ found out he was entitled to the honor about a )car ago. when he sent for his mahtan health records to reopen a d1sab1ht) d aam The medal ne'er a.,.,arded to ham showed up on some of those record'> according to Seruor Officer Frederick Davies. department scrvi~ officer of the D'isablcd American Veterans Adm1n1stration. But when Capdlanio tried to collect his due. has request became knotted in red tape. That's when he approached Davies. who turned the matter over to his administration's office tn Washmgton. D.C'. "Even then there were foul-ups, - Da .. 1es said .. i\t one point they sent usa medal. but 11 was the wrong one." .\fter all the hassle. however. Capellanio finall~ was awarded his medal in a small ceremon) at the long Beach Veteran's MemonaJ Hospital a couple of months ago. "EHi') indn 1dual who served in the area was entitled to one of these (Pleaee eee RA VY/ A2) Jointuseheliporthasherspinning HB opponent calls proposed f ac y a 'HELL-a-port' Jeanne Collins has more or less retired after some pretty notable duels with Huntinaton Beach city officials over local aviation matters. Sut the 60-year-old former air t,.ffic controller. who Iona has cam- paianed for areatcr safety and less noise at Meadowlark Airport, as revvina up her' cn;ajnes onct apin even if : he's lost l\er love for council chlmbc ••When my time comes. I'm plan- n1na to spend my lu1 hour (ahvc) here," (at chlmbcrs) w ronftded "lt will make it last lonaer." Reports that cny leaden wtrc planninaJo share a pros>91Cd Hunt- anaton r &.ch Pohce Depaomcnl htlipon -she c.alls it KELL-a-90n -with Other ncic ha &QI. her goina apin. "You 1tt thi •• she asked City Council members Monday. "h's a lcep Mate and I bouaht it at Sea1'1 ROBERT BARKER ,., Nrws PERSPECTIVE a couple of ~ears ago. City Counc:iJ members beat back proposals b)' .\dman1strator Charles Thompson to ~hart' the site Wlth a pnvl)t~hdicol>let" husane~ Cit)' officiaJs'at the tame ~td the)' wanted to keep Ahtngs simple nnd mclpensive. Things prett~ well have remained up 1n the 11r unttl tV.'O wctks ago ~hC'ft officials eJCt>fnscd 1mpet~ncc over the lack of acuon. nd John Thomas. whov.as IC1in& ters to John Wa) nt Alrpon But 1t as mn)or at the ume, publicly wasn't the perfect soluuon because of chast1zed staff members for not h&gh costs. longer tra"el tame and act mg soo"tr and a kcd for a ttpOrt 1n wasted manp<>wer. two .,.,ttks ftts for basint the •1urlybards at That's .,.,hat he got John Wa)ne plus hi&)\er fuel pnccs The trouble was at contaancd tbc costs the city about S 161.000 1t ~mt proposals for tht more am· v.'Ouldn't have to spend af the roptcn b1ttou use at die hchpon sik that \vere bucd an the cat), K'C'Ofdana 10 counal membn'! had ltJ«tCd Pohcc Chief Earle Rob1t1tlle prc"aously. That co t and 1ncon\lcn1c~ C'1tyhall in~idcru•> tafTmembcn prompled a SC4lrch to find a ~ s11e .. ~tlmttted the earlltr "el'lion of the in the city. The reh s been 1oan1 plan. partl,Y to get the hall rollt"f - on and 10.na on and ao•na on . and plannm1 to make modifieauoni A location tn the \lte1n1ty of the later -and panly out of pitt to mttt tarhcr 1tc, nnr ttic fire dcpanmcnt'\ Thoma\'. dtmands for a quick ~t\. tra1nina hcadquanrr" at Talbert A\· But the problem ~uhfd when cnue and Gothard trttt was ~ltttC'd heh copter ( ntac < olhn~ and othcn But discu 10"' h&\t' \OUtlCrT'J and (Pleaae eee 11BLIPO 't/ A2) I \ ' ~ COelt DAILY PtLOT/Wednelday, Aprll 4, 19$4 The freeway is full of cars_, but oot full Qf people .. the use profeuor said. By buWdina new freeways, he Slid, transPortation planners would be crnt1na more conae tion. rather than .Wucin1 it because the added ca- pacity would 1pawn more trips. "We could act locked into a vicious cycle of crowded freewa1s. more buildina and on and on,' Gordon said. • Several hours af\er the anti-tax presentation, Supervisor Ralph Oar1c, chairman of the Orange Coun- ty Transl\ l>tstnct and OCTC com- miuoner. invited reporters to his Hall of AdministriUon offi~ and caUcd the profcnor's analysis a "potshot." .. His rcpon con ISlcd of some loo5e thoujbts compiled m the las1 few wccks<)>y an out~f-town professor," said Clark. ''Wt find bis research to .be shallow and his conclusions, such as they are, to be incomplete and unrealistic." Sitting at Clark's side during the news conference was Al Hollinden. exec-u1ive director ot the pro-tax Citi.zens for Bcucr Transportation. "lt'salwaysJust ·no' and they don't have an altetmative," Hollinden said in critic111oa the tax opponents' analysis. Among other problems profc sor Gordon noted an his rcpon arc: •That there 15n't suffitient popu· lation dens.ity to j ustify building a SI billion Costa Mesa-to-tullenon light rail line as proposed. •That there isn't enough money budgeted an the plan for maintatntnl the present anenal highway system. STOTLER APPOINTMENT ••. •And that using a sales tax to finance user~riented hiJbway pro- jects isn't as fajr as imposing highway or freeway user fees to finance the proposed tmprovemcnts. Prom Al ··Needless to 5ay. I was really e>1c1ted. President Reagan reall~ sounds good over the phone." re· called Stotler. who hns never spoken with Reagan before. en. Pete W1l~on. R-Cahf.. rec· ommended Stotler to Rea~n several months ago. Her nom1nat1on 1s scheduled to be sent to the Senate Jud1c1ar\ Comm1ttcr later this week and she ~s expected to breeze through confirmation hearinis. .\lthough Stotler as a Repubhca.n she was appointed to th<.' Orange County Mun1c1pal Court by formrr Democrati c Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Stotler sen·ed on the Municipal Court bench from 1976 to 1978 and in upenor Court from 1978 until March 1983. Stotler will serve al the U.S. D1stnc\ Court in Los Angeles but she , hoprs to hear somr casts in Orangr County. ··Thrcourt 1n L.A. can hold court 1n Santa Ana and I ha"e heard there 1s a search on now for some proper facaliues. My hope would be to hear some cases down h<.'re ~ut I am not on the bench yet and that depends on the n•hrr 1udges." said Stotler. who lives 1n Corona del Mar. . he was the first kmale prosecutor hired b) the Orange County Oistnct A.ttome} 's office -in 1967 -and would be the fourth female. federal judge in the district. ~toiler 1s a graduate of the Un1 vers1ty of Southern California Law School. Since she resigned from the Su- prnor Court last year for ··prrsonal reasons." Stotler has worked as a cnminal defense specialist in a la" firm with her husband. attorney James Stotler. PRETENDER ••• ham Al trje OWT*', an El Monte man, he wee a multl·m4UlonaJre race car d~ wtth lmernatlonal connec- UQM. • 0 He Ukl he wu a pro goiter, a ooleeetoc of exot~ cars and a race c.-drfwir.'' .td Detective John ~ of the Loe ~ County Shel lffe-Depertment. "B&ilCaltY. he_. )Ult a good talker.·· . Ednet·aald Booth wu arrested a.t WMk In Vl1ta, outtkle ,San o..go. The detective tatd the Ponche WU rec:cMW'ed and Booth boc*ed on~ of grand theft IUtO Md ~tiOn of hfl probation. 4 A ct.rtl-hatred man who dalme to b7e from Palm Springe, Booth first cam. to the atttntlOn of authorities '-l October when he reported toetno a gold-trimmed brtefcue contatntng $47,000 In cash at a ~Newport Beach nlghtlPOt. He told poik:e he tugged the cash l~to Bobby M<:G.e's restaurant, Vfher• he waa to meet a olient and purch ... a Ferrari. Booth said the aient never arrived and the brief· cate was ttolen from behind a hOtt'a atatlon at the restaurant. Newport police, suspicioos of the man's ctalmt, asked hlm to take a lie ci.tector test. He agreed, but failed to appear tor test on the day lt was scheduled. But pubttcity of the $47,000 lose brought a flood of calls from people wtlO ctaJrned they had been conned by Sooth, according to police. It al80 caught the attention of poiJce detecttvee In Anaheim Who were tookfng for a man who had vanilhed wtth an expensive Mercedee Benz after taking the car tor a test~. Booth wn arrested by Anaheim poUce on IUIPidon of grand theft auto. o.pfte hit ctaJms of wealth, the man wu unable to raise hit $50,000 ball. In court, he admitted he didn't have enough money to hire an attorney. He eventually pteaded guilty to auto theft and wu eentenced to six monthe tn county )all and three years probation. Booth was re. leased from Orange Coonty Jail on Feb. 17. A short tlme after gaining free- dom, Detective Edner alleged Booth showed up In El Monte and made arrangements to buy an expensive Porsche from an area race car bullder. "He said he wanted his personal mechanic to Inspect the car and that was the last our victim saw of him." explalMd Edner. "It waa l/efy almllar to the case In Anaheim." Booth ts being hetd on $}e,OOO ball In Loa Angeles Countj Jall. A probation hearing ls scheduled later this month. , A.J. Capellanlo NAVY ••• From Al medals," Davies said. ··Practically everybody who was issued one got it. but 1n the rush to get everyone out of the service. these things slipped by," he said. Caprllanio was 29. had been mar- ried 10 years and had two yoOng children when he enlisted in the Navy six months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. . ··1 went for training in Newport, Rhode Island. where I lived. and before the sixth week I was out on the high seas in the Atlantic," he said. Capellanio shipped out on the tanker USS Housatonic. which car· ned 500.000 barrels of fuel and high-test gasoline for refueling battle- ships. air craft earners and destro)'ers. .. After "e went 1n (at Casablanca). the Housatontc la) ofT the coast of Afnca for 10 ntghts and 10 da)S. sitting on 500.000 barrels of high-test gas. We were ~1tting ducks. rll tell \'a' .. V. hen ('apellan10 was discharged on med1~·al d1 sab1 ht) from Chelsea :--;,l\) Hospital 1n Massachusetts 21· · 'cars later. he said he was unaware hc had qualified for 1hc medal. When he finally got the honor. 41 \•cars la1 c. ("apellanio wa) nonplusscd. ··1rs too late," Capellanio said ... too late ... TOT KEPT FROM SCHOOL ... From Al nation's mos1 comfnon1nfec11ouscausc ofb1rth disease. And though Prendergast estimated that the chance of catching CMV and passing on birth defects to a fetus from a child hke Lasondra is ··minimal. .. both teachers who are fearful of contracting the disease and administrators who wort) about legal ltab1itt ~ have long been apprehen~I\ e about adm1tt1ngchtldrt·n hl.c Lasondra into pubhcschool classes. ... The pubhl !>chool'c, pos1t1on is being monitored b) Lawrence Fatt. client"• nghts ad.,,ocate for Orange lount) ·s Regional ( l'nH'r. a fac1ht) that provides support and aid to the count)'<, handicapped popula11on Despite h1<. .,, mpalh~ for the school district's dilemma Fatt said. ··Thl·rc 1s noquec,\1on that 111s the school d1stnct'., obhga11 on to pro\ 1de a program for th1c; child ·· I a .. ondra\ la'l' \' h1le rare. 1s not 1sola1cd 1n Orangl· C oun1~ Fatt -;aid hl· m·gn11a ted w11h a .,C'hool in H unungton l:kal h 1n 1hc paq month U\ l'r a '11m1har )llua11on and a< \1 \ 1.Jsc 1.ame up '>C\ t•ral } car'> ago 1 n thl' c 1arden (JfO\l' I n1lil'd 'ichnol [)1.,tnl t ( M\' ,., .. av. hok IOI mure prn aknt than pcopk arl' av.arc or· Fa1t .,.11J Tht· Hm.lgl' fam1h 1\ no1 rnnu:ml·d about other cac;e\. howeH'r Thl'\ .,, mph ''ant Lac;ondra rn a program in w h1ch she v. t1ftx-taugh1 ho" to rwrlorm hac;1c ta'lks hl.c dressing and leed1 ng ha'>l'lf r he: v. ant he no ha ve an opportunit~ to '10\ 1ah1l' ''1th othrn.·h1ldr<.'n. Marl. Han.,on dtrl'l tOrul '-'c" port.\.fesa's special l'ducJllon program rdu'>l'd tornmment on the Hodge l a\c But he drd .,a, thl' d1.,1n ct''I rcc,pons1b1ht\ in a l untag1nus s11ua11on I\ to rrotect all { hildren (rom being nposed .. ! It a~ h1IJ "UJnlagrousl wc e'plorc different placements for 1hntud1:nt<; and try 10 come up with altrrnat1' c<i ... hl' \aid ··v. ego b) their medical reco rds and h' 1hcad\lceofthernunt' health department We would nol "anllh1ldrl'n C\po<>ej hccausc we're responsible for all the children as wl·ll a' tor 1nd1" 1dual children .. This week. the Hodges' v.tre noufied that tht' d1str11.t "'ould be c,endrnga tutor to thl'tr home IO work with l a'>ondra unt1l 1mm un1t' te'>tscan be completed on some ot the t<;achcrs who might work with her But while LcaAnn said she was pleased that Lasondra would be receiving training. !>he sttll hopes the active. teachable 3-year-old "111 tx· admitted into a class w11h other children ··she needs other I.ids 10 gro" and karn." leaAnn u1d E'en at the ph) s1cal the rap) sess1onc; she attends 1 w1cc a week. LeaAnn said. Lasondra is isolated from other children and has her own toys and pla y mat. Fatt termed 1solat1on measures ··Just nd1culous. There 1s no reason that the matter cannot be dealt" 1th 1n the classroom ·· Dr Prendergast supports the nouon that basic h} g1ene measures arc sufficient for ( MY shedders and that 1sola11on 1s not necessary . "Exercising good personal h~g1cne" rs the bcsr prn ent ion against CM V. Prenderga~t !laid. And 1f a pcr<;on 1s a known caml'rofCM V. an} nsk 1\ probabl~ k\'ICncJ. he added. bec:iuse h)gtl·ne mea\ures v. 111 be more stnngentl~ undertaken. ··The great<.·r m l. 1\ rn acqumng 1t lrom \omeone )OU don't I.now ha'> 11.·· Prendergas1said.1hus making an) one \\ hn "orks With ch1klrcn \USCCpllbk \I nee the\ 1ru~ IS 1ransmnted through bod> nu1dBuch as sah' a and urine. .\n} onl' who changes a diaper o r wipes a ch1ld·s mouth ornose and doc\ nol wa~h Im or her hands afterward has a pornl11ltt ~ ofcatrh1 ng the' 1rus. ··!'fooncC'an C\pt'<·l toescape th(•' 1rus." Prendergast \aid Bui. he \aid. a rc1.ent stud} oftwogroups of nurses. one working" 1th 1den11fied CM V ~hcdde~ and the other not allowed to work \'Ith shedders turned up s1m1lar 1netd<.'nccsof(MV 1n both groups . "Therc'sas much a nsk in famil) :ind out-of-work l'onracts." Prcnder1tast '>atd the study appea~ to indicate But thccp1dcm1olog1stadded that an) 1nd1v1dual woman in herchtld·heanng }ears would probabl} have 10 deudc for hc"elf ""l'thcr shc w:rnted to work "llh a CMV \hedder .. The mk 1s prohabl) neverabsolutcl) zero." he said ··r very woman would have to come tognps with the problem and ho" she wants to deal with 11. .. HELIPORT JOINT USE OPPOSED ... From Al thought offinals we-rt.· still planning the more aml11t1ou\ \Cf\wn It wasn't the intention but nohod) mentioned 11 tu them The wa ) 11'!> gont• ~ far hasn'l rle3\ed ~vcral l'ounul Offi<:1als. 1n· eluding ( oun< 1l"oman Ruth Baik) 11 ) lll\. ~JI\ ' 1110 Ill lf,CI the rtgh l Just Call 642-6086 -II 1nformat1on to pcopk l hat d1dn·1 happen this time. ··The stall \houldn 't cut cornc" :ind 11 ~hould go through with a.prop(r proce\\, .. she said "I think wc·, c mJde 11 clear that we don't want ll T ,ll Mahal ~c wan1 something economical and rca\o able that "1ll las1 ·· Collins and othcr'i indicated the) could II\ e wtth the small-~ale heliport The) JU\l d on·1wanl1t used a~ a home ha'iC for lot\ of other copters What do )'OU ''ikt about tbt' Dally Piiot" Wbat don't yoa lllre? all tbe numbt'r at lt'ft and your mestaa• wlll ~ rt-C'ordtd, trant<'rlbtd and dtllvtrt'd to lllt approprla\t' t'dltor Tbt ta mt !4·hour an1wtrln1t 1ervl« may~• t'd lo rttord ltlttn to tbt editor on any topic. Contributors to our l.Atttrs <'Olumn mutt lncludt tbt'lr namt and teltphone iuamber for vttrUlcallon. No rlrrulatlon r.111. pltast. Ttll '" what·, oo our mind •' ' . Low clouds and cooler weathe~ Coaatal Extended MolillydOuOy Wllll I en-of 9he>w«I Frid.., 9nd Salllf d•y becomlnQ ..-11y , ... end _....., Sundey CNely wlnOI Friday encl S11.ird1y Hfohe In lhe IOI Friday wwmlnQ tow 10 mid 70. by Sunday 0-f\lilhl IOw9 43 10 S3 17 .. •i 41 .. = » 0 IO 57 M aa 51 ... 37 « 50 46 70 40 64 64 M 82 M ... 111 .. 13 71 50 61 18 75 n 511 51 77 18 42 .. •ti H 24 ta 5t 14 ,. ,. 47 .. II 46 .... 45 23 • 31 41 24 31 30 27 It 30 )l 30 14 52 41 411 12 41 37 45 41 57 411 ,3 •• 72 37 M~SI PllUI Nut!Yllle Newon..nt NewY0tk Nortolll Nof111 Plall• Olcllll!Ome City &::o ~ P!loef>la Ptltl~ll Portl ,Me POf'tland.Ote Ptovl~ =:::n1y Stahorusry • • 50 32 Alot\lnOnO H :1 10 .. SI l.OU!a .. IO 51 St.P91• T .mp.t u 13 .. hit I.ell• 53 ~ 55 41 kn A/llOnlO 13 35 30 SM'IO!eQo • 11 se 40 Sen ''MCllllClo 13 ... 42 S$ Stlte~ &4 n-ao .. a.11 .. 52 • IJO -« ~-:1:: 11 4$ IO S7 41 " 60 43 Spoil-~ 3-4 SI 211 Syr-S5 M SI 41 Toe>tlcl 61 60 3S Tiic:aon 73 M ~ TvlM 61 44 27 ... W~IOO ·-113 42 Wlc:NUI 47 Temperatures Tides ' SURF REPORT TOOAY All>af'ly Al1>uqu«que AmatUIO ~. AIMV!lle All1111a Allanllc City Autlln 811tHnOt• .. Le 53 33 St 30 so 30 45 211 SI 48 8-MI kM 4 06pm 11 - 50 s-wi lllgl\ 10 24 pm 61 511 TMIMIOA'I' 530am 1141am 4 24 p.m 10:5epm --~-~-- 8*it1gl BlrmlnQl\am a....... ct BOIN Boston IH 45 711 411 50 45 S3 36 18 55 SI 23 57 41 S2 40 5.in MC• !Oday II I 15 pm , rr.M T~ 11 5 35 I m and jlell 8'llH\ II 5 17 p"' Moon8'aa lodey 119 33 p "' • ·-•• 1"03 Lm ~lty and eet. egeln I I IO~pm Victim had difficultj breathing, ;~i~~E~pap p~T~~:7~~~~~~~~~n~~J~~~~~~~~~8;; ,·1 A dental reccpuonist who often $250.000 bail. He could be sentenced Luis Cardena s' Santa Ana ' assisted Costa Mesa dentist Dr. Tony to a maximum hfe prison term if courtroom. is in its second week. Protepai)pas to perform oral surgery testified in his murder tnal Tuesda) that a patient who later died was having difficulty breathing after being anesthetized in September 1982. Gayleen Magallanez. who said she was dirC<'ted to hold Kim An· dreassen ·s head while Pro1opappas worked on her. told an Orange Count) Supenor Court jUr) that Andreassen's breathing became no11cably "shal lower abou t three-quarters of the way through the procedure. .. Her chest didn't move hke 1\ did in the beginning. She was making a rasping sound. almost like "heez- ing:· Magallane1 said. .. A.t limes. she'd be breathing fine and then sh<.''d gasp..for air and be breathing shal· low. The former receptioni sl at Protopappas· h1gh-,olume dental clinic told jurors she menuoned .\ndreassen's brea1hingd1fficult1es 10 the dentist and he acknowledged the abnormaht\ Andreassen. 23. who suffered from a host of medical problems, including complete kidnc) failure and a heart condition. is one of three patients who died following treatment at Protopapas· clinic. allegedly as a result of improperly administered anesthetic dru~s ... Dally Piiot D•llvery 11 Guuanteed IO Caller ~reys on NordstFo~ em.ployees fr.oin two malls A twn• ~of 1M Nofdltrom'• .ten mt South Coat Ptiiif received a thrMWnlng PhoM ceM We weeec, tlmtler to a catt llRIM•ed by an emptoyee of the f:b'detrOm'• store tn the s.... MalJ IMt week, potk:e Mid. According to a Coeta M .. Pof1oe• Department repon, ~ 3+.yell'-Old ~ wu ~ tn a beCk ofb Monday momlhQ when IM~ •o•IUrom amMMM> idenU~ htm..,_L•Phif" ~ Mid M WU with atcwe Mcurity. , The man~ to be watcnlng her through en llr wnt In her offlOe 8nd Otdeted her to ''ect u •houatt IOmeone wu pointing• gun at her.'' The caHer told the woman to d..robeanduked queetlone about her IM anct bra llU, eooordJng to the woman's statement. After the Cotta MeM woman compiled. the~ hung up, ttM ~ Mid. Sect.lrltY QU9rdt comected after the U,CfiMnt NkJ U.. are id MCUrfty employMI named Phil and that no one coutd see Into the omce from any venta~ A store eecurtty ~ told police-· a woman em~ of .... Nordstrom'• In Br-. last week anew.red a call from a man Who told tMk' not to turn around beca-uee he had a gun on her. , The woman ll'l that c .. did tum around and from her office~ aald she epotted a man p8IUd In a car who appeared to be talldng on~ auto telephone, the teeurtty IOlftt Mid. , She al8o Mid lhe aw a gun in the car. The man wu de9Cttbed u Caucasian, older, weertng dark gt ..... and titting In a Whtte, ofder rnod9I Ford Granada. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Pubhsher Clrculatlon 7141142-4333 Cla11Ui.d advertl1lng 714/842-5171 All other dept1rtment1 842-4321 MAIN OFFICE I " 'Ii~• fi~, 31 (p IA IHV CA •Jo •n • fi • •""() C ,.,. Mt'Sol CA Qrf>:?6 Chazy Oowallby RoHmary Churchman • 1'"1"' 1qs3 "'•~ Coe\! P,,,~ng Comr•••v N< ~~ s.•0t~ 1 J\H4hOn• •KMOh•~ ""'•flt" ()t Ad\"eftrM 'f f'f'lf•, ~ttt1r1 rnay be lfllfW'ndUCfld W'ltti(Jut ~, .. ,,_, mrs$.IOO 01 cor•v• 'O"' ownef Clrculatlon Telephon .. ,, ' . ,. . h.. 142-4lll • J , t t ~ i t 4M..f.IOO • Ed itor and Ass1s1an1 Conrroller 10 rhe Publisher Stephen F. Cerezo P• <I, I Milnd\l!'f <....:ooa c au r"'~'"OI' NloO •1 '-OSI• ~na C•hlo,,.•A IUl'S l U 8001 S...~•o<>loon D'r C8'1~ $.i I'> mon""' Dy ""' $6 SO "1(1nll"y ., ,. o. .. "O" CoCMI" n...., r o• .. r• wn.c;1> uml>N'<) r~ t;f,.S P•M • rs pv~ D~ I~ 0.lngt Col11 Pu~ Glorle A. Powere f)M•L I I I A 1, .. ,1,~in\i Doneld L. Wllllemt C "' utat0t1n M:it•8Qt" ""°""" It'!~ fllolOI'\ ltlf pUl)I.~ "4..,,_y lhf°"O" r • u y A sonq-. '"9'0"• "°'''°" •• ""~ Si!u<<Uiy• Af.15.,.,.,,.,, H·-C'<•"' •rl• PU~•VlotlCJ plant ,5 Al ))0 WtSI 11~• 5,,_,., P 0 ff<>• l~fi() C~IA MU& C~t.f .,.,. Qi'!l,'i, VOL. n , NO. 95 ondee/s[ poce -Splli~g-- 1?o~d C ElligRt 1132 r Wl~ ..AU'e. ci,Je.stct00 ~1za 650 ?105 I ' GC f acuity· plans eoncert Thursday Cancer detection center fac By 1\08£1\T BAltllll Of ................ won't continue financial uppon past June. TM newly formed un R1 Rotary Club of Hunti~ Beach has entered tM- piccurr and 'his taken the center on as a community proj«t. b) the ccntt'r fot public KTV•~ em_plo~ such as city workers. Private esam1 "°'' about tl\rtt t1mC'$ H much n the c:cnaer'j &enC'J'll physic-.) eumiutions. whKh arr Oranae Cout Colleac'1 music faculty W1U offer its Z4DY .. April Fool1 Recital, Opus 3" Thursday ll l~ C<>•ll Mesa campus, TM concert beains 1' ooon in Fine Arts H&lll 19. Tbinas have been lookina pretty anm- terminal ma)' be a better word -for the Cancer Detection Center of Oransc County in Huntinaton Beach. .. Perhaps fearful of what they ;na)' find, only about 18 people a month ~vail themselves of the l.aw<ost services. Of- ficials warn that ifbusine•s doesn't pick up, the detection .center is aoina to close. '•This is• aood th1na fontic commumr and we shouldn't lose it.'' club president Wet .Bannister 58id. dminiStered by two \'Oluntttr dOc\ors, bf said The ~nter bas dclcc&cd several prNanccrou1 cond1t1on1 but no aevttt cases in 1ts two years or operation. MtdiCa.I officials say the physical exams are ta.- pecially imponant for peopl_e 40 and oldtr who have a hi1toryofcancet1n t.Mir family. The event wall raiae funds for OCC music acholar- stiips. Ticket1, 11 Sl each. will be sold at the door. . Tbe concert features a fife and jua bend. jazz im'.""ovisations and selections by P.O.Q. Bach. Particl- petma wiU be 21 faculty members. And if that happensalot of senior citizens and other low· and moderate-income people will bt de)>rivcd of complete physicaJ examinations costing SI 05 for women and $100 for 'men (the Pap tests account for the difference.) Bannister. who 58id ~-center needs only about 44 patients a month to break even. said the facility iJ more 10 need of patients than financial contributions. The club is a.uempt.in1 to get the word out to prospec-tive patients. h's taken out an advmisement in Business to Business mquine for Oranae County and has persuaded area msurance aaents to include fliers 111 monthly btlhnas. -~·If somebody secs u in the mail and puts it ·r on the (company) bulleun board. It m1 t have a shot un effect (other people wi.J learn about t~e center's existence).'' said Bannister. who operates his own insuran~e COfllpany in Hunungton Beach. According to the American an~r Soctcry. 90 percent ofbrtast c:anccrscaa be cured by early detection and 75 percent of bowel cancers are U'eatible if diqnosed Stop-•moting coane ottered . A four-week "freedom from smokina' course will be off~red at the Kaiser Permenente medical offices in Huntington Beach in conjunction with the American LWlg Association of On nae County, bqinruna Thursday. The facility. the only center specificaJly devoted to cancer detection in Orange County. has been bankrolled for the {>8St two years by Pacifica Gomm unity Hospital. It's near the Medical CentCT Professional Building, 18800 Main St. in Huntington Beach. not far from Pacifica Hospital. early. . Pat1ents at the clinic receive an un- !lalysis. complete blood count, stool blccd- 10g check and Pap smear. Additional tctts may be ordered to c:heck on btea t. rectal and colon cancer and tuna cancers. Chest X-rays. additional blood tests and a The course will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. at the me<1ical offlces, 18081 Beach Blvd .• on Monday and Thursday evenings through April 30. The cost is $25. and reservations may be obtained by calling 978-4093. The center has been losinJ more than S 1.500 each month. Hospital officials indicate if business doesn't pick up, they Bannister also said Sun Rise Rotary members arc cons1denng promouna 1he low-cost complete physical exams offered cat-scan also arc available. They don't sound like a whole lot of fun. but officials say the tests can save live$. The center's number is 841-1871. Parl~tarlan• to meet The Unit of the California Association of Parliam · ns will meet Thursday morning at the Town an untry Bank. 12535 Seal Beach Blvd .. Seal Beach. Evelyn Little and Rosemary Newton will conduct the IOa.m. program. which is open to anyone interested in the study of parliamentary procedure. Seminar on lllneu at OCC "Deciding Not to Die." an investigation into the emotional ramifications of serious illness. will be presented Friday evening at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. · Kimberly Heart. a mamage and family counselor. wlll conduct the seminar, which will run from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Room 102 of OCCs Science Lecture Hall. Admission 1s $6 and tickets. if available. will be sold at the door. Call 432-5880 for further information. OCC to present space program A program celebr;uiog the accomplishment of America's space program will be pre~nted Friday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 214 of the chemistry building at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. HB police warn agalnst rasfJ of·: cat burglaries By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. IW!r .......... Hunt10gton Beach police arc warning residentS to secure their homes 10 the wake of 14 residential Cl/I.. burglaries reponcd during the past month. Acal burglary, policesay.iovolvesa thid'whoen~ a home at night and steals cash or proper\)' while residents arc asleep. Huntington Beach poUcc Detective Chris S~ said 14 cat bursJArics. apparently commiued by the~ thief or thieves, have been reported in recent ~ neighborhoods just a block or two from Beach BouJev He sajd I I burglaries occurred off ~b · Warner and Edinger avenues. The other three ~ reported at a mobile home park at Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway. ~ Entitled "All Systems Go." the program will focus on NASA's Apollo, Skylab, Vikin~and Voyager projects. The program. featuring fi lm and slides, is directed by Stephen Lattanzio. associate professor of astromony and director of the college's planetarium. Artist'• drawtna of $3 .5 million lma&IDC center to be built at UCI Medical Center. Spumey said the burglars have never had to break~ door or window to enter a home. Jn each case, be Diet, entry was made through an unlocked or open door ~ window. • _ •,f He said the cat burglars have taken only wallets, usually from clothing or purses located in a bcd.roont} where the residents were sleeping. \J ..Their kicks obviousJy come from seeing how muc»\ they can get away with while the people arc sleepins.';.1 Spumey said. / ._ , In each case. be said, the burglars have removed only Tickets. at S2. can be purchased in OCC's Communi- ty Service Office, located in the Student Center Building. If llCkcts remain, they will be sold at the door. Morie •yinpmium •lated at UCI Film fans may view contemporary featrues and discuess the with the writers, producers. directors, actors and special effects creators at UC Irvine's Theatrical Film Syrnposium bcgipning Friday. . • UC! Medical Center, company join forces on imaging center cash from the walletS before throwing them on root\OJl' ~ an $brubbery.·Credits cards have been left behind. be said.: None of the burglary victims bas been inj~ Spumey said. In one instance. however. a woman a dunng a tmrglary. screamed and a,ppattntly 1Qmt' 10truder away. The poh~ dctecuvc said tht woman' The symposium. sponsored by the UCI film studies program. is open to the public through UCI Extension and enrollment 1s S 149. The class meets Fridays through June 8 from I :30 to 5 p.m. at the Balboa Cinema in Newpon Beach. Further 10form1ltion can be obtajned by calling 8S6-5386. By ANDREA ADELSON °' .. 0.-,""" ..... The UC Irvine Medical Center 1s J01ning forces with an mdustnal pioneer 1n medical technology to give doctors and researchers use of a high-powered magnetic device that can project 1magcs of tissues. Universit) officials hope the S3.5 million imag10g center to be built at 1he medical center in Orange will be open for use by patients and researchers by November. Dance festlval at Golden West The arran~ment with Los Angeles-based AM I Diagnostic Services 1s a first 1n the UC system: A private The Gloria Newman Dance Theater will present a fe.stival of dance Friday and Saturday at Golden West College in celebration of the spirit of the Olympics. The program. scheduled for 8 p.m. both days. will be staged in the main GWC theater on the Huntington Beach campus. Admission is $5 with a SI discount for studenls and Gold Key card holders. Call 895-8378 for additional information. San Onofre Unit 3 goes into operation CALENDAR Start-up t..u have been compt«ed on~ Unit 111 reactOt at ttie San Onofre nuclMr powet ptant. Md the 1, 100-mepwmt unit a. now generating -.Ctricfty for commercill uee, Southern c.Hfomfa Edtton Co. ~say. J Wednesday, April 4 The .ctJvatlon of the Unit Ill NNtetor marks the completion of the San Onofre plant, Edfeon official• Mid Tueldey. • 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa Redevelopmtnt Agency, Council Chambers. 77 Fair Dnve, Costa Mesa. • 7:30 p.m., lrvlae Community Services Commi11ioa , Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine. • 7:30 p.m .. lrvlae Unllled Scbool District, Lakeside Middle School, 3 Lcmongrass. Irvine. Construction of Unit Ill begM 10 years ago at about the same time that construction began on the Identical UNt II reactor, whtch was compMtted lat August. BuUdtng the two reactors C091 about ~.6 bUUon. Thursday, April 5 • 7:30 p.m .. Irvine Planning Commisalon. Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Road. Irvine. Each unit ta capable of auppfytng ~ for about 700,000 hOmee. 8CCX>f'dlng to Edlton, pr1nct081 owrw and oper•tor of the nuctter generating station. San Otego o .. and Etectrk: Co. holdt ab<M a 20 percent Interest In the plant. · • 7:30 p.m .. Fountain Valley School Dl1trlct8oard of Trustees. District Education Center. 172 10 Oak St .. Fountain Valley. The power plant compteted It• tests on Unit ltl by operating the reactor tor 200 hours at 100 percent capacity as of last Sunday, Edleon offlefats said. Poucr Loe -------"'------=- Three Orange Coast men jailed in underco""r drug operation Three Oranae Coast men were arrested Tuesday afternoon at a Santa Ana motel af\erthe tno allegedly tned to sell S 15.000 worth of high-grade cocaine to undercover narcotics of- ficers, authorities reponed today Michael J. Van Patten. 23. of Newpon Beach: John M. Jeffers Jr .. Huntington Beach A resident of the SJOO block of Old Pirate Lane told pahcc Tuesday that some property was stolen last month durin& "a party that aot out of control." The loss mcluded Jewelry worth S 1.775 and stereo-.clectromc equipment worth $478 • • • Someone broke into an older model Chevrolet station wqon parked Tuesday on the 17600 block of Jacquetyn Lane The loss included Jtcreo s~akeri wonh S2SO. • • • A resident of the I 7600 block of Bnttan~ Lane reported Tuesday that someone bufl)antcd hts home b)' entcnna tluouah a rear shdina win· dow. The lo s 1neluded Jewelry worth $200. • • • A resident of the· 600 block of Amber Drive told ~·cc h11 black 8MX dirt bike wH stoTcn Saturday at a fntgd's houae Th\ loss was csll· mated' at S4SO 35. of Costa Mesa. and Wilham <.. Davis. 32. of Westmmster were arrested on susp1c1on of possessing four ounces of cocaine with the intent to sell the drug. The arrests followed a two-month probe into the 1llic1t cocaine market A woman told police Tuesday that someone broke into her sil ver and maroon Dodge van. parked in a business lot on the 5800 block of Mcfadden Avenue. The los in- cluded a SI 00 radio and tool5 worth $200. • • • Entenna through an unlocktd rur door, someo~ broke into n home on the 8100 block of Whitestone Dnve The loss included a $4S mcn·s wallet. credit cards and a checkbook. • • • Four vehicles were bufllanted at an apanment c;ompln at 8400 Ed- 1n.aer Ave .. residents rtpon.cd Tues- day momma. A $300 stcrt0 wa stolen from o tan 1971 Dlt un A SSO sterto equahzer and $202 an tools were taken rrom a brown 1974 Ford vnn. ~ $300 t~rw wa. iuolen from while 1984 Volvo. A portable Sanyo radio worth S 160 wu tolen from a rtd 1978 Ford Ra nchcro. • • • The owner of 1he B)'te hop, 1868~ &ach Blvd ~por\cd 1 ue~h thar b) the Orange ( ount} Shenlls Oc· partmcnt. accordmg to Lt. Richard Ol~on He '>aid the in'cst1gat1on "ill continue Each of the thrt>e men 1s being held on S 15.000 hail at Orange Count} 'Jatl someone, possibly a shoplifter. srole a computer worth S570 from the store. • • • .\ wgman told police Tuesda) someonC' buf'l)amcd her be1g~98 I T oyoul (' orolfa station wagon w le It was parked at Golden West Col gc The lo'ic, mcluded a purse conta1n1na two credit cardc,, $27 ca"h and a S 180 Puls.ir watch • • • .\ r~1dent of the I SOO blocl of Hununaton ~trett reported Tue~a) that omeooe tole a $90 batten from ha~ areen 1972 Ford Mu~tana. parked in an alley • • • . ] \omconc 'itok a blue I Q74 O:mun p1clup cruel parlrd Monda) 1n n lot at Golden West Collcac The lo~s was cs1tmtlcd l $2.000 · • • • A rts1dent of the I ICX) blocl of Main Strttl rcponed Tu~a) that '>Omeonc buralnmcd his home. entet 1na throuah an unlocked rear dOdr The lo ~included o $200 handaun. a camera wonh SI 00 nnd 1cwt<ll'\ worth S2 000 ' corporauon 1s establishing a profit-makine center on un1 vers1t) property. accordrng to Richard W . Fnedenberg. professor and cha1nnan of the radiological depanment at UC'I MC. It v.111 be the first d1agnosuc imaging center of AMI D1agnosuc Scrv.JCCS. a subsidial) of an intemauonal hospital chain. AMI pioneered the use of mobile: computenzed tomograph) or cat-scan equipment 10 I 977 not v.earin& her glasses and did not set a good look at~ intruder. AMI President Larry Atkins said he doesn't expect the UCI center to make mone} He said )nvest1gators believe the 14 ~t buraJ,arii are linked. BUt they arc unccnain Whether one person or burglary gana is responsible. pume,ywd investiptor11 fear the break-ms could increase dunng Lhe appoachtnt• warm weather months. .: '. "We would be much better off putting our monc} 1n the ban k. but you don'1learn1hat wa)." he !>aid. AMJ intends to build about 100 similar equip- ment-packed d1agnost1c centers throughout the countlJ. Atkins said But since use of the magnetic device tS-itill in its infancy. the UCI si te will allow AMI officials the opportunity to learn how the equipment can best be used 10 an applied research setting. : OBIT UARIES .. ' ' ~--=-------~ t) "We're pa) 1ng out tu111on." Atkins said. Retired NB dentist .. "This relat1onsh1p with UCI strengthens ourcomm1!· ment to provide stale-of·the-a n technolog) to ma1nta10 ... patient services and medical research at teaching hospitals." said Ro)ce Diener. AM l'scha1rman and chief e~ecu11ve offic6. J . Clark Moore dieg Retired Newpon Beach dentist Dr. J. Clark Moo~ died March 25. He was 77. • In add111on. Friedenberg ~cs the opponunit) as a v.a) for U('I researchers to prove" hetherthe machine can hve up to 11~ potcnual to not onl} project images of tissue. but anahze cells to learn 1f the~ function properl~ "lfih1s v.orl..s that's a huge step abo'e the cat-scan:· said Friedenberg. who "as appointed medical director ol the center. ..\t the age of 3. Clark and his mother moved to Southern California after his father was struck b) hghtnang and killed on the famtly'farm in llhno1s. Clark $f3duated from Pasadena Cit) schools an<S Pasadena C'lty ( ollege. He rece1\ed his dental degree frOl'I\ l...!SC in 1934 During World War II. Clark served as' captain 10 the Dental Corps at what 1s nov. Edwards Air Force Base The magnetic image 1s e'\pccted to cost a pattl'nt between S600 and S800. about .:!5 percent more than a cat-scan. hr added. But the equipment can take horizontal body scans while the more commonl~ used cat-scan takes cross·sccti ons only. <\nd while the cat-'>canncr 1s good at detecting structural changes. the magnetic equipment can detect funl·t1onal changes. Friedl'nberg said. He mamed childhood swtttheart Elisabeth Wilson 1n 1955 and lhe couple adopted a Korean orphan. Kin\ Clark Moore. In 1969 the family moved to Newport Ekach. where Clark had a part-tame practice before rctirint an 1977. AM I will build. opera1 e and ~tafl thl' 5.()()() .. ;quarc·foOl rcnta and l ICI re'>carl·ht•r., pro' 1dl' tht• medical cx~rmc. Clar~ was a member of the Oran(e Countv Dental lioc1et). a member of the Balboa Power Squadron. He was a member nfSl ..\ndn:w's Presb)'tenan Church. Clar~ •~ 'iUn 1'-Cd b' his wife. Elisabeth Wilson Moore. a \on. l\1m ( larl.. i\.1oore and three grandsons. Fountain Valley .\ ph)'11cal litnl'\!I hull pro,cd )OU lan reall\ lo')t' "htlc "nrkrng. out Tue\da' in the "c1gh1 mom at Los ( aballero\ "ipom (om pie\. I 1270 Ne,.,,hOPl' '-1 -onh 11 ".i' monc~. not pound\ omconl' .. tirix·d in and llflt•d J "al let l onta1nrng ah«,ut s~n 10 l3\h and mt'i('ellanC'Oll' item' lrom the pant<, pockel\ of ha'> \\lCat \Ult "hirh ht· had kit on .1 Ix-nth • • • \omconc rcalhcd thrnugh Lhl' dm · l'r'~ "'ndo" of a car parked at the 7·Ek,cn market a1 10044 Ell" .\\C and stoic a w()man·, p1tr\C' lOnt:11nrng $.:!4 tn cn'it<and m1o;rt'll:rncou'> 1tl'm' • • • Vandal\ \mashl·d a "'"do" 1n the 15000 hlock of Mt Jad,,(,n ~t and rasacked '>l'\Cral room\ lau .. 1ng $200 in damage' Irvine .\n lntnl' \.\Oman rl'JlOrtt·d th.11 .. he was sc"<uoll\ a'isaulted in hl·r Knollg)en home ti~ J heardcd man who fled when told a lm·nd v.a~ (lO lhr phone The woman told police 'ihc kO a door open dunna a qu1ek tnp ootk to her ttou~ while' d01ng laundl'). The man ~urpn!Cd thc-"'oman 1n the entt1. pinn~ her to the floor but IJtcr flt<! ""~" told of the wa1tm phone caller Poh("C hehcH thr late'il inci- dent " unrclatC'd lo another 1l\\.'\llll Tuc'ida} h' 111. at hur&)ar tln ii 'kq'l101l 1rl ••• I\ S6Mkumputer d1~ppcarl.'<1 Imm a \C'C'ond-c,ton apanmC'nt on Kod· '1cv. Or1H ctunnit d:t'tltJht hour' Tue'idO) Pohl<' -..ud thl' 1h1d nMd<' cntl) throullh an uni!\ kC'd 1ln01 • • • \ "I" \l',11 nld 11 \IOI. IH.U\ "·l' .1rn•,1cd I lll''da' 1\0 ""f'I'\ 1nn nl t., assaulting h1~ t"o stt'p-daughtcrs dunng the last SI\ months Poltcc alleged that James Herbert ( onner assaultl'd lhe 12-and 1 '·)car-0ld daug.hu.·r.. ofh1s "ail' numerous ume' at tht• fam1h home Police ~1d the couple had been mamed tv.o )Car; but t'ould not \3\ v.h' the 1nc1dcnt "a" rt·poncd this ·v.ecl..· • • • ..\n e'\-1.•rnplO\tt or Haller ) \tCm\ allegl'<ll) emhcnlcd S2.000 from the rnmran' lhar&ed on a rred11 lJr<.I that 'ltwuld ha'e ht."\·n tuml'd in Costa Mesa <\ lt-x k placed on a storag(' v.are· hou\e at ~Otl'i Placcnua .\'e wa.' pried open and $3.260 l.\oOrth of fumrtufl' 'ltolcn The owner of the furniture told poltcc the hurglarv could haH· occurred an> time 1n thl.' pa-;1 tv.o monlh\ .\ rattan lamp and tahle along v.1th an oal S('("retal'\ dc<;l "l'rc among the 1tl·mc, l'l"ponetl m,..,, mg • • • \ 1001 h«I\ 1 n 1 ht• bat~ of a true~ p:irkC'd Cln the '~00 hlod. of\11C'h1µit \' enut· "'a' pned open 'tlmct1me \unda' 111gh1 and S'XP \\Orth ol h.>ol' and camera e~u•rmcnt "a' '>tokn • • • .\ aolfer ttportcd tha1 S'.-4'0 v.nnh ofJCVvt"ln v.a<,\l<llrn from hl\f.olrh. 1 after he pla~cd a round at th(' Cc.~t Me Golf and < ount\ ( luh lat(' la't month The mnn had ta lcn hie, "'-lh.'h, d1nmond nng. and hra ckt oil and plat cd lllrm 'f n tt\(' h t\ ti ht ill homt' 1hc 1cv.cln v.a, aon(' Newport Beach \ "ev.flOrt lWal·h \\oilman n:f'onrd l 11t•\d,1\ ··'..~' thd\ "' '"'" h111'1('ap' ,,1tuct1 at \111t1 C'at'h "''m h<'r l\1"'1 Dat-;un ~\ll l parked on Balboa Boul1.'\ ard ••• \ ~anta .\na attome~ reported the thl'lt ot her "allct from her purst "h1le '>ht "a" making a phone call trom a pa' tl'lephonc at the Harbor \1unupal t l'un at 4601 Jambortt T uc'<ia' • • • \ 't'\\pt1n Bl'a(h woman rt"poned \hC theft Of S~~) In clothes from l.D aJ')artm('nt t'tu1ldrng laundf") room an the thl' I '00 hlu\ I.. of PlaC'C.'nlla • • • ~ Nc"pon Beach woman rcponed the theft ol a I Y74 Cutlass valued at $4,000 from her home 10 the 400 block of Fern leaf in Corona del Mar luC'~a) • • • I\ Nev.pon Beach woman reported the theft of two wetsuit~ two b1c)cln and a tennis rad.ct wath a combined val ue of s1~q from her home 1n tht' 100 blocl of Rub) Tucsda) • • • .\ Newpon ~ach ~oman rtponed the theft of an auto tcrco 'alued ll S450 from her car ~rled an the ~ bloc~ of Desonia iuC1da). Polt« rcponed that t~o mhcr car'i parlted in the samt' <. orona dtl Mar ~iah· ""lrhood "~rt aJw robbed of their \ICrt() Laguna Beach \ ~1dcnt an the '00block of •Jon l ('nll c ~rortcd to pohtT that h•s hou~ v. c, buralarilcd ~l'Mtamc Wednddl) ofS t :000 .,_-onh of&QOd • • • \ tt'1Jc-n1 10 the 1900 block ot ( h11lon w., rcponcd a .. iu~p• •OU\ \Uh,J~t lcmmn around a "aanl ~tdt'net' •. \\'hen roll~~ rnpondtd tht\ rnnta\ ted the \UbjC\:\ a de· ttrmmcd that he -.u t e prd er. .. Mondale still won't admit he's out fEOnt• U.S., Soviet naval · . . --clashes spark talks NEW YORK CAP) -One of thctc pnmary days, York campaian was one an which Mondale "aot me do\l(n Walter f . Mondale may have to confess that he as once to his level. He won't do that apin." aaa1n the froni.runner for the Democrati~ presidential Hesaid1monthofnept1vecampa11n1n1by Mondale Cendld••··· 8 )' ~ Attoe'8ttd Prfft d I . 'II non\ination. had taken its toll in votes. "You can run a nC11tive WASHINGTON -A U.S. ~avy . e ept~on wa JO But not yet. campai&n for a period of time but you can't sustain u for Scorecerd to Moscow next month for d1~u1 1001 wtth So~et With New York comfortably an his column. MondaJe two or three months." Han said. -admirals aimed at limi!ina the. hk.elihood of e~plos1ve has reversed his early season setback$, and now it is Sen. Hart said New York is a atate that heeds endor1e-confrontations when t~eir warsh~ps meet c;>n the hta.h teafi s. Gary Hart who has to play catchup nelU Tuesday an ments from labor and party leaden .. nd other flaure-.. Her• ii a breakdown of the -etetenpe In the third U.S.-Sov1et na~al mc!dent .1n the past ave Pennsylvania. heads." ,.. NJs months, the 37.000-tOn Soviet camcr Minsk.on Monday "Jn the words of the SOn.f1 I know that ifl can make it Mondale had the backina of Oov. Mario Cuomo. rf ~t~ted ~~fed t s fired eiaht 1ianal nareut th e 3,900-ton U.S~ fripte Harold here I can make it anywhere,· Mondale said in Manhattan Mayor Edward Koch and other officeholders in New 81 to atic vention Holt in the South China Sea. Tbe narc~ bat the ~ol~. but Tu~y ni&ht after winning easily in what had been billed York. He won't have that kind of lineup in Pennsylvania did not cause 6lructural damaae to the fr~pte or iOJu'Ies to as a close New York presidential primary. where the aovcmor and both senators arc Republicans. its crew, said Defense Departm~nt officials who spo .. e on He won with 45 percent of the popular vote, and But organized labor should be a big asset for him next Mondale 181.25 condition that they not be identtfied. ~·~to. be dascussedf gamed t 33 Democratic convention delegates, nearly twice Tuesday, as it was an New Yorlc. in Moscow will be the .March 21 colhs1on m the Sea o as many as Han got. The Colorado senatQr polled 27 Han said he needs time to establish himself and the Hart 512 /L Japan between a So~1et nucl~r-po_wcrcd attack sub. percent of the popular vote; the Rev. Jesse Jackson. "new ideas" he said had pulled him out of the pack and / marine and the U.S. aircraft camer l(jtty Hawk. buoyed by o.verwhelming black.suppo~. g~t 26 P,Crten~. "into the finals" for the nomination. He'll have it. More Jackson 1 _."' 5 Do nvb•oo'-ln V~d'a• Hart dad. w1n a con~lauo~ pnze an ~i~nsan, than halflhe delegates have _yet t.o be chosen. -.v. n .T •' a -e• ~arrowly beating Mondale 1n a ,Pnma.ry that da~n t c~un1 But Mondale holds a wtdenang delegate: lead. He has LAS VEGAS. Nev. _ Dozens of pickets battled tor delegates. The tru.ncated W1sc~ns1n camP.atgn W111 be the sup~nof~t l~st 861 delcg_ates chosen so far. Hart has Uncommitte d 212.25 security auards with "a lot of fists flying" and the nu~ber waged for Saturdays Democratic caucusls, W1th 78 S 12. Mondale is v1nually ccnam to pass the halfway poant of arrests climbed to 69 as a strike against hotel-casutos drlegates at Sl?lke Mon~lc expects to do bener then. next w~k in his bid for a nominating maJori.ty. To Nominate 1 967 \ turned violent. Union leaders called the clash late Tuesday On the n1&ht of ha~ biggest tnum ph of t~e campatJn. He as. however. a ch~stened leader. While he battles ' I ··a real donn brook" and accused police of "man- th<' form!!r vice presaden.t was a s~udy 1n hum1l1ty. for the lead he shuns. the title .. balks .~t any ~ugg~stion th~! handling" pickets. Police officers arrest~ . .at least 63 Mondale JUSt about a~logized for sayang an advan.cc th~t he 1s the fr~nt-nmnu~g ~nd1date. I don t think I am. Total Delegates 3,933 people Tuesday. including one man carrying ligh t bulbs he'd ~ hard to catch 1f he w~n New York. He said he d Mondale ~ad after his victory party. "We've got a long filled with gasoline. Twenty-four of the flrTCSlS came ~i.'n tired at the lime and dadn t mean 11. He congratulated way !O go. He learned that lesson when Han upended Tuesday afternoon when about 60 of 300 pickets tried to llart. He said an victory as he had saad 1n defeat th~t the ham an Ne~ Ha!flpshare. and went on 10 sw~p the New march mto the Las Vegas Halton a block from the city's lampaagn suit will be a marathon. And he noted that 11 had England pnmanes and caucuses. famed Stnp only been a week since Han swept the Connecticut But Mondale and Han shttrc another problem -and · pnmary. . . the beneficiary may be President Reagan, who won Ml .. Teen from Illlnol• Hart was not so magnanimous. He said the bitter New Tuesday's sole Republican primary without opposition. , MEMPHIS. Tenn. -A 17-year-old lllinois girl said she was "in the clouds .. after winning the Miss Teen USA contest and the title's SI 00.000 in cash and prizes. "I didn't expect it at all." said Cherise Haugen of Sleepy Hollow. Ill .. after she was crowned T ucsday night during a nationally televised pageant. She was chosen from SO other contestants between th e ages of 15 and 18. First runnerup was Miss Hawaii. 16-year-old Malia Yamamora of Honolulu. and second runnerup was 16-year-old Mi ss Tennessee. Moll y Brown of Lorello. Two uecutlon• set Thursday TAMPA. Fla. -Attorneys for condemned child-kilter Arthur Goode Ill have asked a federal Judge in Flonda to stay Thursday's scheduled c:xecuuon. while the brother of a Lou1s1ana Death Row inmal~SO scheduled to die Thursday asked the governor 10 take hi'!-li · tead. U.S. District Judge W. Terrell Hodges was expected t le today on a request by Goode's attorneys that he sta)'. 7 a.m. execution until Ooode's sanity can be detcrm1 e at a mental hospital. a coun clerk said Tuesday. Meanwhile, Eddie Sonnier. the brother of convicted murderer Elmo Patrick Sonnier, appealed to Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards on Tucsda) with a confrssion claiming lh~t It was he -not Elmo -who murdered two lt't'n-agers an a lover's lane in 197 7. Lesbian bac.t ln ROTC PORTl,..AND. Maanc -A lawyer for an admitted lesbian d1sm1sscd from an Arm) ROTC program says a Judge's order that she be reinstated has the "larger am pact" of telli ng employers homoscxuahl) is not Jrounds for dismissal. Magistrate D. Brock Homby said Diane J. Matthews· dismissal "as a result of her declaration of homosexuality. without an y evidence of homosexual conduct." violated her First Amendment right to free expression. Gaye tried to end fight LOS ANGELES -Soul singer Marvin Gaye was intervening in an angf) argument between his parents over"no significant issue at all" when he was shol lodc.ath t b) his father. who has been charged with murder. police said The confrontation bc1wcen Marv an Gaye r. and his wife . .\lberta. apparentl) st~mcd from a lost letter from an msurance compan) that had nothing to do w11h their son. police Lt. Robcri Martin. commander of the detect ives investigating the slaying. said Tuesday ... He (the father). an the process of looking. was yelhns at his wife to help him find it. She didn't want to.'' Martan said. "At one po101 Marvin Jr. interceded and indicated to hts · father lhat he shouldn 't be yelling. One thang led to another and ulumatel) shots were fired." he said. ··-.. yes. I want IRA choices. And bonus interest! To lock in tax-deferred bonus interest, open a Great American 1-Year IRA today. 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Yield with bonus• Currnt Rate I ,, h11>,\I '··•'ft )f '1l llll11 llH ........... , .. ,.,,_ ,.,..~, hnnlr' w1rtt'f1 '",,If h.11 ... ,i f l'tll'H ,,,,, ,tf)(l tnfnt .... 4 ,, .. ,..., h1 '-• ,. "'.MI K•OI Hll1l 6'\dt11th .,. ' .. litt h ~ ..... , ~,11 ..... "• , ••••• ,.,. "'''''"'"'"' 'I• "" '"''\ft .... ,, ,, t, "'rl..-t1 1\\tl111ttw~t\t"1h1,~1 l1 .. 1h,1n ,•t ~1,tt nt 11(• "~'''""'ult1t1 1 -..ufrl.tl't11lm11u "''P•" 1h\ H'-1''' '1'4'''~, •. .,, .. t f.1111• o.-h.f11wk~t·•t1111•1MoH1 .. ,""'4 ••~" •••I '·''' '"' • I• I '"' ,1,., '·" 'I~~' 1.,,, . ., '"'' """' "'" h.11••• ilul\ I Gr~~r1~~~ican/ _/l~una ~ ~It~ t J -..•~•nf' Ayt1n41# r. ~·"'l''" f I• JI ...... l'.nl....U N'J{ 11'' 111 bo:M ... ,,!' ,-.., •pl" It-, \ 1 ~._ .. >l(.,pgtt1' l'telA , ... ~ ..... t .... 11111· • ~1111)' I lll'llW'< ~ II., I' I ll I• "IJioCI'• • I-1101 u.-~ I 117 • -V• ~,i ..... , '•tor",_••'>'• I ~a.-. f.l-01 N '.VI~ I IC..m•rtO lt•1 r •• ,,.,.,, ... • o I l'l~ • s... ~., ........ '°'<• 400~·'•"' {I ••~t 4 •H< """" ........ M;ll '~1 l' -.,,.m\ M"Uf' '~'""'t<IN> t(.~ l ••t ,_.... .. v.,..., 1011~5.,.,.,,,.., '"'"'""""' '1 } 11 •1 ~ • "'70 R•"l llCA ,. ... -.. ~. '•'•'""""" ...... 111101 l411"1ht<ll /'10 o, .. ~ i..~ ... '···~ ...• ,., .. ~ JIMfl c..p...,_ '1.' 1' t~ •nQfAJ"'lhtrw '••f'Of\Ot>• f,f,J 0891 C.••-9-11 ••M~,1'~11~ 1"'•'1'~ •% MOl More tampered coo.ties found AZUSA -A box of Girl Scout cookies apparently contaminated with glass particles. worms. and metal shavings w~s reported by th e mother of a scout. authorities say. The ' regional office of thr Food and Drug i\dmin1strat1on has recea .. ed 35 complaints of tampered cookies so far in Southern Cahfom1a. and an ves11ga1or Carol Heppr said Tuesda) that 10 sample anal)scs have turned up mostl) metal fragments. The region covers Santa Barbara Count) 10 the Mexican border. Sharon Gomez told Los Angeles County sheriffs deputies Tuesday that she had batten anto a chocolate mtnt cookie and found that ll contained "bits ofglass. ··said Deputy Joe Garza Fetus death settlement LOS ANGELES-A Duarte woman who was shot b) a deputy shenffwh1ch resulted 1n the death of her uoborn baby has won a $350.000 settlement from the county. The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approvrd the award to Delois Youns. her husband. Joe Kent. and her mother. Verlean Williams. The) had sued the count) for S 11 .5 million over tht' 2 a.m. shooung on Apnl 15. 1982 at Ms. Young·s home. i WORLD ------=. ----~ French strikers blast ref arm PARIS -French steet ..... orkers cut off maJOr c1t1es 1n the eastern Lorraine basan from the rest of France for several hours today as they launched a regional strike 10 protest a government plnn to reform the industry. A spokesman for the steelworkers. who have staged violent protests 'itncc the cutbacks were announced last week. said the) were lf)tng "to show the nation what ll'i economy would be without this region " Nu.te foes evicted GRFFNHAM (OMMON. England -Screami ng an11-nuclear protestcri, !tel fire to their plastic-sheet shelters today as bailiffs and hundreds of police evicted them from their camp outside the U S. cruise nuclear base here. Gas cylinders and aerosol cans exploded inside burn1na tents aner police blocked the main haahway alongside the base and 24 bailiffs mo'ed 1n. Pohce saad they arrested 15 women for refusing 10 move About 300 police officers drove up 1n 30 trucks soon after dawn and ranged the 2'h-year-old ~ettlemcnt. 'i1tuatcd o utside the base's main gate. B elrut checkpoint r egained BEi R lJi. Lebanon -Poh<'e regained full control of the onl) c:roi lnJ bt-tw«n Beirut' Mo lcm and Chnstian S«IOI'\ todO) af\cr a two-hour confronLataon w11h Shtilt Moslem m1ht1amcn Fttthtc:rs from the Amal m1h11a took over the check.point at the entrance to Moslem west 8c1ru1 after a rumor spread that nval C'hns'lan militiamen · forc-td police out o( the po itton on the oppo ue side of mu~um cro ~1na. on the "arttn hne" div1d1n1 the city. GI re•t. af ter •hootl.ng A THENS. Grttce -lJ \ Army Master 11. Robrrrl A Judd. wounded by •~o ma ked aunmcn aboard 1 motorc>cle. we "mt1n1 comfonably .. today after a thrcc·hour opcrntion to remove 1 bullet from hit lunf. a ho p1tal spokt'\man said Judd. '6 wH 'hot from ~htnd Tl.i~ay hy two a 5a1lant\. Octopulltna A motorboat tai• an I.DO.table 78 .. foot .. Joni. 28·foot-tall octo- pu down die Cbarlm Rl•er In Cambrtqe, llaA. The ad•ertla- m, etant bl'OUOt rub-boar traffic to a bal{ u motort.ta •topped for a better look at tbe 'mouter.• ~ed flotilla may be J>igge LONDON (AP) -A ATO ofticial M)'I more than 200 Soviet naval ve.la. led by the nuclnr-powri'cd betllc cruitcr Kito'4 and indudina an estilMted 20 submarines, att Llk.ina part in what may bt the bigm Soviet abome eurcitc ever. He said the maneu~en in the North Atlantic and the Norv.cpan Sea were intended to demonstrate the Sovteta' ability "to protect the homeland." 'rbe NA TO naval souru in l..Qodon said Tuesday nipt that the exemse incll&ded battle sroups from two Soviet fleets and surpessed any ~vaous show of Soviet naval nre"th in the Atlantic. At least 2S m.;or surface warships, led by the 22,()0().ton Kirov. are at sea from Norway's Stores pulling Coors off the shelves LOS ANGELES (AP) -liam K.. Coors. chairman apole>g1zed for what he the campajJ.P to spread 'to Coon and Other ea- Coors beer.will be taken off and chief executive. called bis"lackofscnsitivi-other parts of I.be country, ttut1vcshavcbem rw• the shelves of an estimated Six weeks aJo, Coors told ty." But c.ampaign or-he said. with black conuauaity SOO Southern California a m i nor i t y bu s i -ganizers said he bas not , leaden thioulbout die liquor stores by owners in a ness-organization meeting fully retracted the state-Morrie Danov. owner of country an« ~the 1Dmver "selective buyinJ cam-that blacks arc "intellcc-ment. a Los An&elcs area liquor speech, discuuiftl ••· paign" triaicred by what tually inferior" and "one of The campa11J.! bcJins in store, posicd a si_a.n on his created commitmenu IO they claim are radst com-the best things (slave Southern California be-beer case readinJ. ··No the hirina ud promotion pany policies. traders) did for you is to cause it is the company's Coors! We don't think they of blacb, aod the use of ·Soviet's space ship docks with station Customers will be urged drag your ancestors over No. 1 beer market. descrvetobeonourshelfor black distributorS. benb to buy other brands, black here in chains." Coors later McDonaldsa1d. He expects in our community." and veodon. ri•t community leaders said .------------------------------,--..,,.---_;.;,-----........;-~ Tuesday, stopping short of calling the action a boycott. MOSCOW (AP) -India's first space- man and his two Soviet colleagues today successfully docked their Soyuz T -1 1 spacecraft with the orbiting Salyut 7 space station, Soviet television reJ>Aaed. blasted off from the space center Tuesday. just 25 hours before today's linkup. "We're asking people to drink their conscience. if you will," said John T . McDonald Ill, president of the Los Angeles chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of The television report said the docking was completed at 6:31 p.m. Moscow time (6:3 1 a.m . PST). Television showed officials at the space center in Baiko nur in central Asia watching the final seconds of the docking operation and applauding its completion. The Soyuz T-1 l carrying the Indian and two Soviets Indian cosmonaut Rakesh Sharma. 35. mission commander Yuri V. Malyshev, 42, and ni&ht engineer Gcnnadi M. Strekalov, 4), were to join three cos- monauts who have been aboard the Salyut 7 since a Feb. 8 launch for a "cclebratton dinner," Radio Moscow said. Colored People. He said the move was prompted by "racist cor- porate policies" of the Colorado-based brewery and recent remarks by Wit- The radio said the flight was proceeding normally and the spacemen were feeling well after the takeoff Tuesday. Twisters tear through 12 communities By tbe A11oclated Press A furious spring storm hammered its way across the Southeast today after hurlrn' two dozen tornadoes ~t the Miuissippi Valley and pounng up to 6 inch~ of rain ~n Florida while cffons to reopen snow-buned roads in Colorado were hampered by 45 mph winds. For the second time in less than a month twisters tore through northeast Arkansas on Tuesday, striking 12 communities. About a dozen homes were destroyed. and a church near Bowman was turned to rubble. Tornadoes also touched down in Missouri and Illinois. where the tops.were t~m oO: a churc~ 1:nd_a house. the National Weather Service said. No tnJunes were reported. ~ • . . The weather service warned of flash flooding m Florida today after rains soaked Apalachicola with 6 inches in a 9-hour period ending Tuesday night. The Suwannee River was above flood stage from its source 1n the Okefenokee Swamp to the Gulf of Mexico. officials said. Colorado authorities meanwhile said they . have accounted for all motorists missing during a near·bhzzard that dumped up to 15 inches of snow on the eastern part. of the state Tuesday. But Interstate 70 and 12 other m.8Jor highways in the cast-central {>art of the state rema1 ~ed closed as winds hindered cleanng away 6-foot snowdnfts. "There is a threat of severe thunderstorms today from the Carolinas to the Ohio Valley," said Bill Sammlerof the National Severe Storms Center in Kansas City, Mo. "Georgia and the Carolinas should get 1t the worst. but ~his storm is not nearly as strong as the one they got last week." . Sixty-one people were killed when a senes of tornadoes cut a path of death across Georgia and the Carolinas on March 28. For northeast Arkansas, Tuesday was a flashback to March I 5 when twisters there killed six people. Only' minor injuries were reported this time.. but a dozen homes were reported destroyed m Cra1~ead County and several farm buildings and 16 farm trailers were damaged in Gosnell. . .. "Under the circumstances we were quite lucky, said Gosnell Mayor Carl Ledbetter. Besides Gosnell, tornadoes were reported m or around Oil Trough. Salem, Tuckerman, Grubbs, Otwell, Paraaould. White Oak, Laredo, Marked Tree and Blytheville. More than a dozen tornadoes slammed into M1ssoun on Tuesday, the weather service said, most of th~m darting around the towns ofScnath, Cardwell. Honersv1llc and Arbyrd in the state's boot heel. "It JUSt seemed like they were all on top of ':'s all at once .. said Dunklin County Deputy Lonnie Gattis. :.We were blessed." said Dunklin County Chief Deputy Gene Davis. "There arc a lot of people out that wa and no one was injured." Light damage was reported. NEEDED: CARING FAMILIES 10 HOST SCANDINAVIAN STUDENTS '84 -'85 school year. 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Lei c .112ens Legal Councors non·orohl 1ega1 a<lv•SOIV service eva1ua1e your par11cu1ar neeos -1hen ol an anorney is needed·011ect you to the rignt Quahl1e<l a•· tomey who nas me1 CL C's stanoaros of excellence 101 nones1y 1n1egri1y and competence 1n lhal area o f law 10 sahsty your partocu1ar s1tua1ton C111zens Lega1 Coon· cot has nelped ovef 2 1 000 indlv1<lua1s & ousiness peo- ple eQuate 1ne11 legal needS 1n sucn area of taw as Personal ln,ury -Accodenl -Bankruptcy -M1htary Law -Oomesoc Relahons -Oworce -Prooa1e Wills & Es1a1e -Real Estate -Taxahon -Workl!fs Comp -Landlord Tenan1 -Business & Corporate Law -lmm1gra1ton -C1Y1I Ut1ga11on -Ttlose on irouole w11h 1ne 1aw lttrougl'I drunk drtv1ng or criminal comp1a1n1s -Deot Relief & Collections -Foreclo· su1e ano over 80 doeas of law pro1ect1ng your rigl'lls ano 11.eeos CtTIZE\S LEGAL Coc~c1L A ~ON·PROFIT CORPORATION L.A. COUNTY 213-316-8493 ORANGE COUNTY 714-839-8544 -... , ..... -... Why Buy a Cr y pt BEFOR~ t h e TIME of need in the Mauso leum of the Pacif ic, locat e d h igh ·on the h ill ov~rlooking Ne·wport H arbor and th e Pacific Ocean? 1. TOG ETH ER learn about the construction of an above ground crypt. (Concrete, steel and marble) 2. TOGETHER select a choice location. (Without the emotional distress of one alone) 3. TOGETHER decide on the sa"ings. (As much as 1245 per crvpt diJC'ount prf'·need) 4. TOGETHER contract for a low inltrtsl monthlv plan. (At t1mf' of nf'ed 1t 1~ cash) MAIL THE COUPON TODAY OR CALL 644-2700 FOR AN APPOINTMENT ------------------------------------------' DARRELL WARD. Director or Pre-Nt!t'd I I PACIFIC. VIEW MEMORIAL PAflK ' I I 3500 Pacific Vit'w l>ri"t'• Corona drl Mar, . 92625 ; I I We would like the lnf onnatlon I I Name............................................................................................. 1 i Address ....................................................... Phone........................ I l City ........ : ..................................................... Zip............................. I L •• i••••·····••••••••••jllt••••••••••••••!••••••' SAVE s200 ON THE ONLY IDITABLE COMPUTER WITH 5 BUILT-IN PROGRAMS TRS-80® Model 100 Comes Ready to Use! • Personal Word Processor • Auto-Dial Telecommunications •Address/Phone Directory • Appointment Scheduler • BASIC Programming Language 8K TRS-80 Model 100 599!! Reg. 799.00 AS LOW AS '3519 ramt Get the 24K TRS-80 Model 100 for Only $799 (26-3802, Reg. $999.00) l _J Don't be misled! The TRS-80 Model 100 is the only battery-operated computer with ftve man- agement programs and a telephone modem built rn. Communicate by phone with other com- puters or access national information services. Fits easily rn your briefcase. 8-line by 40-chat~ ler display and full.-size typewnter-style keyboard. . . Enjoy Total Support from the World's Largest Computer Retailer CHECIC YOUR PHONE BOOIC FOR THE PARTICIPATING ladle 1'aet& STORE. COMPUTER CENTER OR DEALER NEAREST YOU A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES ANO DEAlERS Sponsored by Senator William Campbell Keynote Speaker Or. Toni Grant -KABC Talk Show psychologist, known for giv- ing on the spot advice to troubled callers. Originator of the phrase, "Life is not a dress rehearsal." The Day's Program Will Fea ture Over 50 Seminars and Tabletop Discussions, Including: • Power: Personal and Professional • ABC1 of Flnanclal Planning It lnvHtlng • Advice from Women Who've Made It • Women's Health: Physical & Emotional • Entrepreneurehlp: How to Start Your Business • Doc1 Your Money Wo rk for You? • Hooked on Ufc • Job Hunting Strategies • Networking: Is there a Mentor in Your Life? • Color Psychology and You: 150 Experts are scheduled to speak, including: • Pat Allen. PhD. Newport Beach psychologist • Ann Benson. Investor Information Specialist, Merrill Lynch • Janet Cater, Orange County President M ADD !Mothers Acainst Drunk Drivers! • ~, ..... t Plummer Cobb. PhD. President, Cal State Fullerton • Judge Tam Nomoto. Orange Co,unty Municipal Court • Tim Ttmmona. South Coast Community Church AGENDA Thur1day, April 26. 198' Dl1neylHd Hotel Anaheim, CA 8 oo-8 JO a m Re-g1str1Uon Cofftt 8 lo-& o;o • m ~t"I R•rn.trb Q ()().. l '\O p m SemlNr SessK>ns 12 l0-2 00 pm Lunchcon/Keynote- Spe.k~ Eh. Toat GrHt l ()()..'\ 00 p m Table-Top ~ '\ OCH> 00 p m COCXT AIL RECEPTION Q ()()..'\ 00 p m E~hlblts Ope-n FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 171•117~'\~ll FOR TICKETS. FlLL OUT AND MAIL THIS COUPON BEFORE APRIL lq, I~' ------------------------------------~------ REGISTRATION FORM: Please Include S20 00 for each reser- vation. Ftt Includes lunch. proaram material and parking. Name~·---------------------------------------------------------------Address ______________________________ _ City _______________ ___; Phone ------ Make check payable to 1984 Conference on Women Mall to: Senator Wlnlam C.mpbcll 231611.ake Center Dr. Suite #205 El Toro, CA 92630 .. -- ! • • I I I • . _, Al O~ C°'8t DAILY PILOT /WednMctayJ~prit..-. '1'184 IFJ. Newport Beach, its iw.n, swim~· run,p.ant, pant More than 100 appllcanta •tcned up for the frueltnc Newport Beach llfepard te.ta recently, with 82 flnlahln& the 880 yard •wim m 80 de&ree watera, •prlnta from the pier to 18th Street and back, u well a• a flrat aid teat and ~ ............ _,~IC..-, oral uam. Clockwlae from top left are Dianne Schnelder, 17, of Irvine, after ftnl•hlnl the wet part of the ~t; would-be-parda take off en maue toward the water; then enter the ocean, and round the marker for the return awlm. -.... CLASSES START APRIL 9th. CORRECTION The Daily Pilot has special 7'1elp for women wilh · On pace 1 of the Sean sec - tion on Aprl ht, then is an advertisement for T lffY Bath- towels, priced at $3.99 each. The c91>y incorrectly states the size as beinC 25 I 72 itch. The correct size shcdd be 27 1 52 inch. We siKerefy revet ttis error and any lnconve· nltnce it may have ca~ed. problelftS al hoane or work Maintaining a h o u se ho ld while µur~umg a c:an'er 1sn 't eas~ To help tochi' ·~ women ''1th thOSl' ehallt·ngt·~ tht• Da1h Pilot offers a "t'<J Ith of n·..,,Hl lTl'~ S~ h ·1a J>ortt•r adVISl''-on fmanC't'. Ann Landers hdps \\Ith domestic· pro blems and Sunday·s You Your :vtone~ s e c t 1 on f o t' u" es on a re a bus in es~ trends and opportunit1e" Other Dail~ Pilot mnnt•\ saH•r.., for '-'omen include the Suµ<.•rmarket Shop per column. advt•rt1sl'd \'alues. coupon sa V~S and I ...... l) rt'('IPl'" In Wt•cl nesda) ·s f<xHI pagt·~ And tht· ~11111 (,our mt•I hl'lps '"onwn k e c p tho~ t • I on d ' a I u rs off I lw fa mily·s wa1-.t lin<·.., :\lt'anwhile. the Ad Sitter telephone answering serv1ct• frees women from s ta ying home while their Daily Pilot c lassified ad wo!'ks selling household • 1temsor by finding a babys itter. Consumer advice a nd help with probll'ms comt• 1n the Dail~ Pilot 's Al Your Sen·icl' <'e>lumn. I nformative. in -depth features on neighborhood people. p laces a nd trl'ncb are found on the Featuring pages EH•n cla~ all along the Orang<.• ( 'oast. \\omen ·~ II\ es ;.ire madt:' easier '" infornrntion and ad\"IC'l' found onh 111 tht• l>:.nl~ Pilot Subscribe today b) C'a lling 642·4321 or b~ ma1Lrng tht• coupon to Dail) Pilot. :i:lo \\' Ba' St . PO Rox 15fi0 Co, tu :\1esa. C'.\ 9.262fi STREET __ _ arv ______ _ ZIP PHONE " I I I I I ~---~--------.. Daily Pilat 642·4321 . I Sears I Zestilink HJ:::r . is back! "',~N/fl Come to Hickory Farms and stock up on Zestlllnk, Sou th our traditional holiday sausage. It's only available this time of year, Aprll 2nd ~ st thru April 22nd, and only while oa supplies last. ~~· ~$3991b. 'Plaza ff lckor1 Firms g:,o. We11 give you a taste of old·tim~ country goodnea ™ -z ln•ex•pen•slve* ·(In lk spen' slv) not high In price; reasonats'le; ~ Lewer c:.r.v..f Md Bristol at the San Diego FrMway Costa M4tlCI ~ 4eity •••• , .... . Setvr4ey 'ti. , .... . Sunf*y 12 .. s '·"'· 540-6991 classltled advertising D1HyPllat ClassJfled Advertising a..2-7687 . ... • • PLAZA SPORTSWEAR 26% off: Lady Manhattan Silkhana blouses. Orig. 24.00 ..•............. 11.00 33% off: Pant-Her spring coordinates. Orig. 34.00 to 62.00 ....... 21 .n to 38.n 20% off: Farah poplin trousers. Reg. 24.00 ............................. 18.00 Spedail purchase: Short-sleeve stripe blouse . . . . . . ............. .,,. ...... 20.00 25% off; Campus Casuals career coor- dinates. Orig. 34.00 to 52.00 24.n to 31.n 25% off: Our own novelty T ·shirts. Orig. -~~ff: T~ddi ~h~~-sl~e~~ to~·s· i~ ~:·91 ~s. Orig. 25.00 ................. 11.00 SPORTSWEAR BO'S 30% to 33% off: Gloria Vanderbilt cotton separates. Double-pleated trouser. Orig. 44.00. . . . ........................ 29.11 Striped crop top. Orig. 30.00 ....... 18.n DRESSES ANO COATS Sp.Cw pwctame: Silk crepe de chine Ms. Chaus dre~s . . . . . . . . . . ..... 48.n Special purchue: M adras plaid shirtdress from Her Excellency . . . . . . . . .... 38.n Special purchase: Soft georgette dresses from Virgo II . . . .. .. .. .. .. ..... 59.91 Special purchase: Misses' jackets ... 29.98 SPECIAL SIZES • 1 33% off: Ecco II spring pants and tops. Sizes 38 to 44. Reg. 19.00 to 38.00 .. 11.99 to 24.99 Special purchue: Our own colorful crinkle cotton jog suits. Sizes 38 to 44 . 38.99 26% off: Fundamental Things pleated trousers. Petite sizes 4 to 14. Orig.· 26.00 18.99 Speclel purchne: Oakhill plaid tops. Petite sizes 4 to 14 ................ 16.99 25% off: Our own bright T-shirts. Sizes 38 to 44. Reg . 15.00 to 23.00 ... 8.• to 16.n 26% off: Lady Manhattan tops. Sizes 38 to 44. Reg . 24.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 17.91 INTIMATE APPAREL 20% to 26% off: Half slips, full slips and camisoles from Vanity, Fair and Olga. Orig. 11 .00 to 20.00 ...... . ..... 7.81 to 1&.91 23% to 33% off: Bras from Lily of France, Vassarette and Olga. Orig. 13.00 to 15.00 . 8.99 33% off: Selected Komar dusters. Orig. 24.001&.99 33% off: Gilead tricot gowns. Orig. 22.00 . 13.99 28% to 33% off: Control panties by Sub- tract. Orig . 6.00 a~d 7.00 ... 3.81 Md 4.19 20% off: Poirene Ultratoner underwire body briefer. Orig. 30.00 ........... 23.99 21% off: Tricot panties from Warners. Brief. hipster or bikini. Reg . 4.00 each .... 318.00 33% off: Miss Elaine tricot gowns. Long or short. Orig. 22.00 to 32.00 .... 13..• to 19.99 SHOES 8ped9I purohilee: Candle'se striped espadrllles ..... , ................. , .11.11 SpecW pwd'\ .. 1: Cobbie Cuddlers "Scuff" aand~I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 22.M SpecW pwchme: B1ndollno "Louise" leather pump . • . . . . . . . . . ... ..,. lpecl8I pwcheee: Our own high·heel leather sllde . . . . . . . .. , . . . . . . .11.• SpecW pwchMe: Naturalize,. "Jingle" sandal . . . . . . . .. . ...... , ... COME CELEBR.ATE ·wtJH OUR SPEClACULAR STOREWIDE SAVINGS Selection varies by store. All, while quantities last. ACCESSORIES 2ICM> off: Selected Danskin tights and leotards. Reg. 6.95 to 35.00 . 4.99 to 25.99 8pecW pwcheae: Spring straw and fabric handbags ................. 13.19 to 19.19 8pecW purchae: 14K gold pierced earr· ings .................... 14.19 end 11.n 32% off: Prince Gardner four·in-one cowhide clutch. Reg . 29.50 ......... 19.n 8pecW pwchMe: Our own quilted purse accessories .................. 1 ••••• 4.n SpecW pwchaM: Pierced or clip earrings 6.99 to 24.99 30% off. Pearl strands by Mikimi, 16" to 30". Reg. 25.00 to 52.00 ... 17.49 to 31.40 30% off! Mikimi pierced and clip pearl ear- rings. Reg . 10.00 to 17.50 .. e.n to 11.99 20% off: Berkshire queen srze pantyhose. Reg. 3.60 to 4. 75 ..... ~ ...... 2.80 to 3.80 Speclel pwchaM: Ganson handbags in five styles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... 18.99 25% off: All Oops a Daisy jewelry. Orig. 4.00 to 8.00 ................. 3.00 to 8.00 20% to 25% off: Selected sport socks and anklets from Adolfo, Burlington and leggacy. Reg. 3.50 to 4.50 ............ 2.49 to 3.80 WEST COAST KIDS 25°/1 off: Girls' side·snap short. Sizes 4 to 6X . Reg. 5.99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.49 Sizes 7 to 14. Reg . 6.99 .............. 4.99 25 % off: Girls' colorful knit tops Little girls' screen print tee. , Orig. 10.00 to 12.00 ........... 6.99 to 8.99 Size 7 to 14 stripe tops. Reg . 12.00 ... 8.99 33% off: Plush bunny collection Reg. 9.00 to 20.00 ........... 5.99 to 12.99 23% to 25% off: Toddler boys' shorts and tops. Reg . 6.50 to 8.00 ......... 4.99 to 5.99 20% to 33% off: Toddler girls' shorts and tops. Reg. 5.00 to 10.00 ....... 3.99 to 6,99 250/o off: All girls' famous maker legwear. panties, bras and slips. Reg. 2.00 to 5.50 ............. 1.50 to 4.12 25% off: Girls' 7 to 14 striped separates from Little Lady. ' Orig. 11.00 to 22.00 .......... 7.99 to 16.99 Special purc hase: Canvas and vinyl tote or bright nylon baekpack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.99 26% to 30% off: Little Bitty infant and toddler dress-up sets. Orig. 20 .00 to 24.00 .. . . . . . . 13.99 to 16.99 YOUNG MEN'S ANO BOYS ' 251/o off: Young men's Shah Safari camp shirt. Orig 14.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.99 20'1• off: Young men's duck dress pants. Orig. 24 .00 .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 18.99 'Z71/o off: Young men's Modz madras shorts Reg . 18.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.99 261/1 off: Young men's chintz 1ackets from West Coast Ways. Reg. 40.00 . . . . ... 29.99 20°/, off: Young men's Levi's 501 's cotton denim jeans. Reg. 17.99 . 13 .99 30'1• off: Young men's Kennington short· sleeve shirts. Reg. 20.00 . . . . . . . . 12.99 20'11 off: Young men's Angel's Fltght pleated poplin dress pants. W ill be 25.00 on 4/12/84 .......................... 19.99 3CW1 off: Young men's striped J .J . Mc Ways tops. Orig. 16.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 10.19 3CW1 off: Young men's Campus Le Tigre knit topt. Solids. Reg . 16.00 . . . . • . . . 10.19 Stripn. Orig. 18.00 . . . . . . . . . 12.89 27% off: Young men's Zeppelin ramie/cot· ton shorts. Orig. 18.00 ... . . . . . . . . .. 12.99 21 % to 21'11 off: Boy1' 8 to 20 striped Le Tigre knit tops. Reg. 14.00 to 16.00 . 10.99 B'l t to 311/e off: Boys' 4 to 20 ttrnss-up aeparates. Orig. 12.00 to 20.00 I .II to 14.n 261/1 off: ~oys' 4 to 7 knit shiris from Mmor Details. elrig. 7.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.• Speca.I purchae: Boys' 4 to 7 West Coast Kid shorts ...••..••........... -.'"": .. I.• MEN'S SHOP 20% off! Our exclusive Members Only jacket in .polyester I cohon chintz, will be 50.00 after 4116/84 ................ 31.• 28% off: Catalina "la Paz" jacket. Reg. 50.00 ......................... .... 28% off: Robert Bruce Orlon· acrylic V- neck sweaters in spring colors. Reg. 25.00 . . . . . . . . ..... 17.99 28'/• off: Cotton cabled V ·neck sleeveless sweaters. Will be 26.00 after 4/9/84 .11.19 33% off: Selected Catalina tennis V\488r. Tops. Orig. 24.00 ......... . ... 1&.11 Shorts. Orig. 18.00 . . . . ..... 11.91 30% off: Levi's for MerJ' E.S.P. stretch denim jeans. Reg. 32 .00 . . . . . . ... 21 .99 21% off: Spring designer cotton twill trousers. Reg . 34.00 . . . . . . . . . .... 24.99 25% ~: Cotton side-elastic waist slacks. Reg. 26.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 11.91 15% off: Haggar belt loop slacks. Save thiough 4/16/84 only. Reg. 19.99 ... 11.91 30% to 33% off: Designer sportshirts. Orig. 24.00 to 30.00 ......... 17.99to19.99 20% off: Puritan's cotton/polyester golf shirt. Reg. 15.00 ..... " ............. 11• 25% off: Harris cotton sheeting short. Reg. 20.00 ........................ 14.91 40% *-Arrow knit sportshirt. Orig. 17.00 ............................. ... 25% off: Carriage Trade long-sleeve plaid sportsh1rts. Orig 24.00 .17.• 33% off: Polyester /wool slacks. Reg. 30.00 ............................ 11.• 33% off: Diplomat short-sleeve. knee length pajama. Reg. 15.00 9.99 20% off to 40% off: Centura belts. Reg. 11 .00 to 15.00 . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.99 Special purchase; Don loper small leather goods . . . . . . ...... MCh 1.91 20%._,ff: Famous French Designer wool serge blazer. Available in Anaheim. Bever· ly Center, Brea, Carlsbad, Century City, Cerritos, Del Amo, Downtown Plaza. Fashion Valley, Fox Hills, Glendale, Hun- tington Beach, Laguna, La Jolla. Newport. Northridge, Orange, Pasadena, Panorama, Santa Anita. Santa Monica, Sherman Oaks. Tt)ousand Oaks, T opanga and West Covina. Reg. 150.00 . . . . ... 111.99 20% off: Arrow short-sleeve "Trump" dress shirt. Reg. 14.00 . 10.99 33% off: Designer cotton knit ties. Reg. 13.50 .... .8.99 25% off: Arrow tone-on-tone long-sleeve dress shirt. Reg. 20.00 . 14.99 36% off: Fr~c h designer striped logo tie. Reg. 14 00 8.99 25% off: Our own Mada' fashion briefs Reg . 3/10.00 to 3 /12.00 317.49 to 311.99 39% off: Designer silk neckwear Reg. 16 50 . 25% off: Folding umbrellas Reg. 20.00 Special purchue: Tropic Cal sunglasses . 25% off: Designer fitted oxford dress 9.99 14.99 ••• shirts Reg . 24.00 17.99 24% off: Designer broadcloth shirts Ong 22 .50 llKASA DINNERWARE 60% off Mikasa Whole Wheat or Potter's Art 5 pc place settings. 11.91 Reg . 27.50 . .1171 GLASSWARE ~ off Royal Crystal Rock and American Stemware in water goblet, cordial, wme or flute champagne. Reg. 6.00 and 7.50 ea 111 Md 4.•-. NOTI ON S ~ off Extra storage clo t Orig 40 00 1 ... THE BROADWAY IS sour HERN C AL IFO RNIA .. ... . Sil VER .... olff Lady Margaret 5 pc .• .,.._ • tea"llei. Orig. 400.00 ..........•... 111• 60% off 1881 Rogers al pc. silverplate service for 12 with bonus storage chest. Orig. 600.00 ..................... ... lUGG A G~ ~ to 18% off Ricardo of Bevetfv Hills tweed luggage set: Tote. Orig. 30.00 .................. 17• Carry-on. Orig. 60.00 ......•.••••••• 21.11 Garment Bag. Orig. 70.00 ••••••••• aa GIFTS ~ off &ass-plated lefVing-cart from -. Maurice Ouchin. Reg. 75.00 ........ ... STATIOH£RV 7.00 to %1 •• off Asaoned metal, wood and ceramic frames and collages from Burnes of BQSton* . Orig. 16.00-35.00.7• ., CH~IR~ lftt off Classic wing chair in jacquard print. Orig. 400.00 ................ , .. .W. off Low PfOfH Tempo r9dM· in Timbertine Smoke colored Herculon.• Orig. 700.00 ..................... -..0 fURN;JURE 131.00 to 451.00 off Cheyenne family room furniture: Stationary sofa. Orig. 990.00 ....... •.80 Stationary loveseat. Orig. 950.00 ...... . Wall-a~way recliner. Orig. 750.00 ... -.. Cocktail table. Orig. 430.00 ........ 211.• End table. Orig. 400.00 ............ 241.• Queen convertible sofa witfl polyf oam mattress. Orig. 1250.00 . . . . .......... 00 O~een convertible sofa with inner spring mattress. Orig. 1400.00 .......... Ml.00 212.00 off 5 pc. contemporary dining room set in oak finish. Orig. 700.00 .411.00 351.00 off Transitional sofa in natural with accent pillows. Orig. 850.00 ........ •.OO 000.00 off Matching loveseat. Orig. ~.00 .................... 471.00 It 101.00 off Curio cabinet in a pecan finish. Orig. 400.00 . . . . . . ............. 211.80 STEREO S 200.00 off Sansui 70 wan stereo system w ith glass top and front cabinet. If purchased separately 1099.00 . . m .OO 391.00 off Kenwood 50 watt audio system with glass topped and front cabinet. If purchased separately, 950.00 ...... m.oo 60.00 off Y orx dual cassette compact stereo. Reg. 199.00 . . . . ........ 1 ... 0o 20.00 off Sony AM/FM Walkman stereo with headphones. Orig. 69.99 . . .41 .. 20.00 off Sony AM I FM Super Walkman stereo cassette with Dolby. Orig. 149.00 . 1a.oo 60.00 off Fisher dual cassette compact stereo with Dolby Orig. 349.00 ... m.oo TELEV ISIONS •.OO off Zenith 19" diagonal remote color portable. Orig. 499'.00 ........ 411.00 20.00 off Magnavox 12" d~onal black and white portable. Ong 89.00 . . .aoo 30.00 off Zenith 19" diagonal color portable. Orig. 369.00 . . .m.oo &0.00 off Magnavox 25" diagonal color console. Orig 539.00 .... VIDEO RECOROERS 100.00 off RCA VHS video recorder wi1h touch button tunmg. Orig 699.00 . .... 100.00 off Sony Beta video recorder with Betatean Orig 599.00 .. -.. •• off Sanyo Beta video r9corder. Orig. 399.00 ..... *-M 58.11 off Pannoruc VHS video recorder with 10 function wir remote. Ong. !)99.00 .... ' °'M09 eo.t DAILY PflOT /Wect.le.d8j • .Aptt 4. tN4 .. Prosecutor juggles more thancaSes WASHINGTON (AP).:!_ J.a~ob A. Stein is one of tbe crack criminal lawyers in Wubinston, but be also finds lime to jog through Gcoractown.Ju.ule apples and oranaes and indulsc his passion for rciains about Winston Churchill. He's never voted. so he won't have to say whether be'1 a Democrat or a Republican if the q4cstion comes up as he takes on his new task as special prosecutor investtplina tbe allcptions about Edwin Mccsc Ill, President Reagan's choice for attorney general. Stein, S9, gained some measure of renown as the only one to pelJuade the jury at the big Watergate covcrup trial of 1974 to acquit has client -a lawyer named Kenneth Parkinson who had represented the Richard Nixon re-election committee. The bigger names, John N. Ma tchelJ. H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman, went to prison while Parkinson ~nt free. A fifth defendant. Roben Mardian, was convicted but the verdict later was ovenumed. "I hope to carry out a diP.'ified, thorouply professional investigation," Stein said Monday evening. When h~ was notified that he was the nominel'of a special thrtt-judgc panel. Stein said. "l thought it was a high honor and 1 accepted." In 35 years practicing law an the District of Columbia. Stein has never prosecuted anyone. Watergate trial judge John J. Sirica wrote m his biography that Stein was "one of the finest attorneys in Washineton." In his professional life. Stem has been president of the local bar association. In his private life. he likes to juggle and is a member of the American Juggling Association. He also likes to shoot marbles and do handstands. Stem has been married 23 years. He and his wife, Mary. have a 22-yea r-old daughter. Jul ie, who graduated from the University ofV1rgjn1a last year. and a son Joe, 18. who is graduating from high school. Stein is an ardent jogger. running every Sunday along the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal with a friend and stopping afterward to drink Perrier water an a chic Georgetown bar. Last year, Stein ran in the Marine Corps marathon. How did he do? his daughter was asked. "H~ finished." she said. Jul~ said her fath~r has never voted because ··he's never been impressed by anybody and he doesn't have any interest in politics." Stein says it's because Washington didn't have the vote for a long time and .. , Ruess I never lleae pl'OMCator Jacob Stein ta.nee ap. developed the habit." ··He loves Winston Churchill," Julie said ... He's read everything written by him and about him." Stein also is partial to books associa~ with English legal history and interesting litiption. He keeps many of those books in his office and he frequents libraries. Friends assumed that when Stein beaded the D.C. Bar Association, it would be a stcpping}tone to a judgeship, as it often has in the past. He stoppc<.lluch talk by saying, "I don't have black robe-it is." -Reagan to propose flat-rate tax, Laffer says I ' ... u~s .. -born Jordanian queen critical o:fAmericci 's policies . AQABA. Jordan (AP) -~n Noor of Jordan, the {ormtt Uia Halaby ofWasbi.naton, D.C.1 says ahc is disappointed with her nauve coun· try. . .. I feel there is a areat , lack of understaodin• of Arab society and the issues faana us in this pan of the world,'' she said in an interview with The Associated Presa. American pol- icy in the Middle East. she added, .. doesn't reflect the values and prin· ciplcs I learned in the Unjted States as acbild." The queen's comments ecltoed those of her husband. J(jna Husseini who in recent weeks bas been critica of the United States for providina heavy economic and military u- sistancc to Israel without s~fuJly pressuring the Jewish state to neso- tiate on the Palestinian issue. Of panicular concern to Jordan is the future of the WCst Bank of the Jordan River. the Palesti- nian-populated land taken from Jor- dan by ls~J in the 196 7 Arab-IJracli war. "We're taJkina about brothcn and sisters here." said Queen Noor. whose adopted nation on.a million people is more than half Palestinian in origifl. "We're talldni about one family." Her quest. she said. was for ·•a responsible and just and principled" American policy .. for the good of all in this region who seek to benefit far more from peace than from the continuing dissension." The queen spoke of Jordan's con- cerns and her life here from the veranda of the royal family's summer palace, a modern stucco building that overlooks Jordan's Red Sc4 pon of A<taba to the cast and Israel's pon city of Eilat to the west. A light wind off the sea occasionally Qaeen Noor of Jordan caught a loose strand of her long, sandy-blonde hair, which she wore swept up into a chi&non at the back. She was dressed elegantly but simply in an embroidered pink silk blouse and white pleated skirt. The l~·hccled pumps she favors don't ~pJetcly compensate for the fact that at S feet . 1 inches she's a bit taller than the king. Queen ~oor. 32. was one of the first women t3 sraduatc from Princeton University and one of the few in 1974 to earn a bachclor'sdcvee in architec- tu\"C and urban planning. t;fcr father. Najccb Halaby. an American of Lebanese descent. is chairman of a New York aeronautical consultina firm and formerly was chairman of Pan American Wortd Airways. She credited the combination of aviation and architecture for bringing her and J(jng Hussein together.- "( just happened to be here doing some research on aviation training fadliucs in th.e Middle East. and I was bescd in Amman," the Jordanian capital, she recalls. .. I met ~Y husbtl>d at the airport. I was workina and tie-you know he loves to fly - was either visitina ·or observina condition• there ... Hussein, 48, ha~ been married three times before. Two mani~ ended in divorce. His third wife, Queen Alia, died in a plane crash in 1~77. The two were married in Amman on June l S, 19'18. One of her weddina &if\$ was her name -Queen Noor al ' flussein. which translates to "light of Hussein." Queen Noor, raised as an Analican. convened to the Sunni Moslem rcUaion of her husband aftg their maniaac. She speaks Arabic, but is more comfortable in EnsHsh. Jn addition to her ceremonial duties. such as entertaining Britain's Queen Elizabeth II on her state visit to the Hashemite kinl<fom last month, Queen Noor has tried to also play a role in Jordan's development. The nation. covering about S6.000 square miles. has little oil but docs extract lal'JC quantities of phosphate and potash. Extensive irription has helped expand agricultural pro- duction. though the arid country is heavily dependent on Arab aid to meet much of its domestic needs. The qoeen~as ¥lively promoted cnvironmcntallffi)tcction and physi- cal fitness programs around the nation. She also has been active in urban and regional planning projects as well as the preservation and restoration of the nation's many historical sites. Despite the turbulence of the Middle East, Queen Noor says that she doesn't fear for her safety. , Pelle. Huntington Beach. M.arcb a boy Mr. and Mrs. Chnstophcr Mr. and Mrs. Tou Fu Lee. Brown. Huntington Bach. Huntington Beach. boy boy Mar~ i Mr. and Mrs. Lawrtncc Mr. and Mrs. James McCafTerty, Huntington FOUNTAIN VALLEY Febnary H LOS ANGELES (AP) -President enthusiast about a flali~ tax, but I only people who would be against 1t COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs. Mark Chcrf, Reagan will propose legislation after would not expect h · JJG propose arc maybe a few lawyers and a few Febraary U Huntin~on Beach. girl the November election to impose a IC$islation until after ~ion," he accountants." Mr. and Mrs. David Sayler, ebnaary H flat-rate tax on all incomes. says a said. H . ted . h R Huntington Beach, boy Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Dag-Southcm California economist. Under a flat-rate plan all taxpayers c rcJec suggestions t at e-gett, Huntington Beach, "This is not tnside information." would pay the same percentage of agan might back down on tax cuts in Fef»raary ii girl said Arthur Laffer, a University of their earnings as federal income tax. order to reduce the federal deficit. CMr. and Mrs. ~etcr Sklcna. Fef»raary U Southern California professor of Under the existing graduated tax "It would be totally inappropriate osta Mesa. gut Mr. and Mrs. Dominic economics and a member of Reagan's system, higher earnings arc taxed at for him to do it, because the defi cits Mr. and Mrs. Robcn Riley. Scbraslcy. fountain Valley. Economi c Advisory Board. progressively hi$lJcr levels. arc coming way down.·· he said. "The Huntington Beach. boy boy "If it were (i nside information). I Laffer, who 1s on the executive su11>luscs arc booming." Mr. and Mrs. Jay Peper. Mr. and Mrs. Cart Hay- wouldn't be talking about tt," Laffer committee of the Reagan-Bush 1984 The U.S. Treasury Department Costa Mesa, boy ward. Huntington Beach. said Monday in a telephone interview Campaign. said there is bipartisan estimates that for the founh quarter Lorraine O'Connor. Hunt-boy after he predicted the ta:11. acuon suppon an Congress for some kind qf of 1984. the federal deficit will be ington Beach. girt Marcil 1 before the California Republican Oat-rate tax proposal. down to less than S 150 billion. Febraary t4 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy League. "I don't know of anyone who compared to the $200 billjon that had Mr. and Mrs. Paul Diaz. Wright. Huntington Beach, "(Reagan 1s) very much of an doesn't approve of1t," he said. "The been expected. he said. Huntington Beach. girl &irl ----~--------------------------_..;.....;_ ___________________________________________________________________ Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Haol"fl a babv u a very special event In ,_.. life. It could alma« be called •prtcelea," If It l"9'e not /or the bllla that can accompany your ne111 antoal. The Humana hospltala In Orange County aoant to change that. Eaoitlally, we are fnlroduclng .financially palnleu childbirth. Here, for example, are two ways Humana hoapltala will eave you money If you have an uncompllcated vaginal delivery: • First, If yo u are covered by ln1urance, the Humana ha..- pitalt have an exciting new maternity plan that o&n a 25" chkount on yow hospital costs after lnaurance, up to a maxi· mum of SSOO. Since moet lnawance plane cowr 75" or more, Humana'• new program me&M you could deltwr your baby wtth virtually no out-of-podce1 ftpenMS to you. • Second, tf you'r~ not cowred by insurance, we o8sr a re- duced Bat rate fee for vaginal dellverta wtth no comphcadoM. Wtth a' hospital 1tay of not more than three days and wtth the blll 1>9kt In full before ditchargc, the lea (lndudlng charga for mother and baby) are: 0.. Dav Stay ...........................•.• t 750 Two Day Stay .......................•...... ti.- "'-Day Stay ....................•..•.••.. tl,IOO At Humana hoepttals tn Hundft91on Beach, W... A·•• ... w..tmlrwter, '" o&r the b.t care poed)le for nMCMr _. ~. Anaong the MTVk:ft and program•~ In ow a•1.....-t J lo menu ant alternate b&rthing rooma. a W ,..... of "'' • .. ~ bath dwa, ••bUnt YlllJC., candlclJght ................. iliiil ..... ' and fully equipped and it.tied modem nunert.. I° ... '" ... :..t ..... ......... 5 ..... ,, Two local firms ~Ive $45,000 to Orangewood Two Orange County cor- porations have contributed S4S.OOO to Orangewood. a new home for dependent children in the city of Orange. Aminoil USA of Hunt- ington Beach donated $2 5.000 and C .J. Segcrstrom &Sons ofCosta Mesa ga vc $20.000. accord- ing to William Lyon. Or- angewood's chairman ol the board. Thomas, Irvine, boy Beach. boy Marcia s Mr. and Mr$. Patrick Mr. and Mrs. Michael O'Brien. Hun tington Bissonette. Fountain Val-Beach, boy Icy. girl 1 Marcia 10 Mr. and Mrs. Allen Quinn. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Doyle, Huntington Beach. girl Fountain Valley. twins. girl Mud 4 and boy Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. George Gnf- Mcdina. Irvine, girt flth. Huntington Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Cun-~l. and Mrs. Dale Wall- ni ngham. Huntington ingford. Fountain Valley. Beach. girl &irl Marcia 5 Marcia U Mr. and Mrs. William Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Campbell. Hunt ington Nelson. Fountain Valley. Beach. boy boy Marcia I Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Vogl. Costa Mesa. boy Sullivan. Irvine. girl Marcb 13 Mr and Mrs. David Mr. and Mr!>. Wilham Berger. Huntingt on Beach. Crowder. H un11 ngton girl Beach. girl Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Thyni. Fountain Valley. Schoettler. Costa Mesa. boy boy Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Par- ish. Costa Mesa. boy March U Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stuhrman. Fountatn Val- le)". gJrl Marcia 7 Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Mur- ray. Costa Mesa. boy Mr. and Mrs. Michael Altobelri, Huntington Marcb II Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schneider. Huntangton Beach.boy Beach.boy March 17 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ha vel, Fountain Valley. Mr. and Mrs. John Rich· mond. Huntington Beach, girl boy ra-Z:Bov® MCUNA·ROCKIR8• PRICED $228 FROM Dozen• of Stytee and Fabrl<:a In 1t0Clk '°' Immediate deltvery. SOl.fnt·\\b'T ~(·~ S181 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 545-7188 <'JN Mod' .. ct •I 1.W Su Dlfllo 1'rY7.) HOUIS: lloa. Utl '11. lo.I, TINllS.·Duw. 104, S&t. 1"4, Sa. JJ.6 Limited time only Our Calflkln Parka 10< everywhere from Aspen 10 ' St Montz, quilted detailing and genuine red lo}( trim make this 1acket an exceptional value compare at '271 J4.999 ,,,,. .......... .___.. ..... c.. •JM' fPt•t .. , l•tJ .ll)J.J.,, o..,.. .-.. ....... Cll .... aoo s lnstol s.m. An• Just NOl1" "' 8outn CoeM Pl9u • 1n•1••-......... _ ..... o._ •the conwr Of 9t'11Qj & 9unflowlf {NiNI Pluma ltl9ldl S!>Onmattl Open WMMtavt 8 30 too 00 S.1u1ctav to 10 a Sundlv 10 to 5 YIM ~c.ara Md ~ Chlclit W.icomt 711 ·tole _ __._~-"--------------------------------------------·----------------------- QC Jews· laud Rep. Patterson The Jewish Nafibnal Fund of O;angc Coun&y will ~nor Rep. Jerry Pa~tcrso~ 0-Santa Ana, with tbe Tn:c of 1fe A~ard at a Apnl 15 dinner at the Westin South Coast lan in Costa Mesa . • The Jewish National fund is the principal land evelopment and land reclamation a4ency in Israel. Patterson, a resident of California for 30 years. was duated from UCLA Law School in t 966. He also holds a ~c~elo~ dCjl'CC in political science and public adm1rustrat1on from Cal State LonJ Beach. He was fin& elected to the House of Representauves in 1974. The conarcssman is a senior member of the House Banki".'& 9o~mi ~tee which handles all legislation affectina finanaal 1nst1tot1o!'s and housing maucrs. He is chairman of t!'e .Subcomm~ttce on lntemat1onal Development lnst1tutu?~S and Finance. He als6 serves on the Hou1in1 Subcommittee and the International Trade Subcommit· tee . . Pat~erson's professional career includes four years of service an tb~ U.S. Coast Guard. private law practice i~ Santa Ana since 1967 and service as the Placentia City Attorney between 1972 and 1974. · Prior to his election.to the 94th Congress. Patterson was a Santa Ana City Councilman for six years and mayor in 1973 and 1974. Previous rec1p1ents of the Tree ofl1fe Award include Gerald Ford. Nelson Rockefeller. Manin Luthur King. Jr .• Bob H ope, ltzah Perlman and other c1v1c and cultural leaders. Jol'6eaHa bead• ba.pltal Dr. Korey S. ~orgensen. a I 0-year staff member of the C~sta Mesa Medical C~nter Hospital. has been elected c~1efofstaffofthe hospital. Hospital Administrator Tom Richards announced. Jor:gensen 1s also medical director of .. Starting Point." a che~1cal dependency hospital in Costa Mesa and of the Flagship C~n_valescent Hospital in Newport Beach. In add1t1~n. to volunteering his time at the Laguna Bea~h Free Chnac. Dr. J.orgensen is a member of variou* envuonmental groups, mcludine the Laguna Green Belt and Vill~ge Laguna, Richards said. Odd.9 .t Ead.9 doa•te c.•b <?<ids & Ends. a group of Saddleback Community Hospital volunteers, have presented Executive Vice President James L. Ray. a check for $4.000 bringing the group's total contributions since 1975 to nearly $25,000. The k,raup's 30 members collect a variety of odds and ends and. using their talents. tum them into hand-made goods. The goods are sold each year at the Laguna Hills Mall hanty Bazaar and the Saddleback Community Hospital mployec boutique saJe. Proceeds are donated to the' osp1tal. Volunteers interested in participaung in Odds & Ends can obtain more information at 770-3728. Dr. Grazer but& .aclety Dr. f rederick M. Grazer of Newport Beach was named pres1dent~lect of the Amencan Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery dunng the group's annual meeting m Washington. Grazer, who lives with his wife Betty Jean m Corona de! Mar, is a graduate of the Uni versiJ ) of San Francisco and the UCLA Medical School. He is associated wath the UC Irvine Medical School. He 1s a past president of &he California Plastic Surgeons Society and is a member of the Hoag Memorial Hospital board of directors. Dr. Ravera cbJel of •tafl Dr. John Ravera was named chief of staff at Hoag Memorial Presbytenan in Newport Beach. Ravera. a urologist. graduated from the University of Southern Cahfomia and earned his medical degree at the t. Louis University of Medicine. Ravera served as a medical officer in the U.S. Air Force . .\s chief of wiff. Ravera will manage the admm1s- 1ra11 ve affairs of the hospital's 575-member medical staff. He will be asS1Sted by Dr. Donald E. Williams the chief of staff~lect and Dr. William Owsley. CdM y outb ci. .. pre.ldeat Joey Graves Fuschett1. son of Dr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Fuschett1 of Corona del Mar. was elected to serve as the 1984-85 sophomore class president at Pepperdine na versity an Malibu. The younger Fuschetu 1s a 1983 graduate of Corona ~el Mar High School. He 1s vice president of the Pepperdine en apter of College Republicans. Fuschetti is studying political science at the college d as part of his studies he is working as an aide to Los ngeles County Supervisor Dean Dana. Cleveland rOlld.9 reopened The Trabuco Ranger Distnct of the Cleveland auonal Forest has reopened roads and campgrounds that were closed dunng the winter. district Ranger Wayne d y announced. The four roads opened are the North Mam Divide. ford, Indian and Maple Springs. The Upper San Juan and El Can so South Camp- ounds along the Ortega Highway and Blue Jay Campground on the Long Canyon Road are once again open to campers. For more information, contact the District Office at 737-2462 or 736-1811. 1A1un• la.pector In •t.te po9t George W. Field. a building inspector for the city of Laguna Beach. was recently elected president of the of California Building Officials. a statewide association of local bu1ld1ng code enforcement professi~ls. As the organization's newly installed resident. Field bnngs outstanding credentials-to his po tion. according to a CALBO release. He has chaired t e association's architectural barriers committee for three years and coordinated the development of a modet disaster preparedness plan which has been implemented by many local governments. Field has worked for the city of Laguna Beach for a year and a half. Before that. he was employed for 11 years as a bu1ldin1 inspector for the city of Imperial Beach in San Diego Count). He makes his home in Encinitas. r• • • • Look For The Big Yellow Sign • • • • Dr. Vic's Orlglnal cuN1~~1~e~~ I LOW COST SHINE ICAT and DOG I Vaccination 1 CI In I c ,,. •• ~~~.,.. I Rabies $3.95 I Distemper . . $4 .75 Parvo $5.00 I Cat "3-ln·1· $5.50 I Ooo "6·m·1 · . S7.50 I ~'i'.P • PAAVOI !No ~I Heartworm Test $7 00 I Intestinal Worm Test $5.00 I Pet I D Tags $3.95 I Minimum age 8 w .. ka (for rabies. 'mos ) Doo rabtff.ev.ry I 2 yn , ot"-< vacc:mahons yearly. Vatannanan present Ooo• on LEASHES, cats rn BOXES Beware of recent rmllators I we·,. tht ••P9'1• wrth tl'la fastest. trlendlleat and t>nt 11ec-I cination and j)(tvanttv• c.ra pi_Oifl"l.. (818) 706-122<4 I llM: w. _., COSTA lllA 1a. ._.a !II.\ HI,_. II ,. •• Mlln. UI UL II IHI - I .......... c......... ..... .... t-._ ...... a.. ..... a_.c... 1ie1...., .... ...,. I rcun• ww.n: w. -... 1 IUflll&Tlll ••ett ._ ..,. , I --,.,... .... ,... ~ ,.,. .. ,., .. ........... c... ...... c...1 ...... 1 ... l:1:." ._ ·-. Q:. .-111u ........... I•• One Mllllon Yacclnatlon1 Since 1978 • • • .. SAVE 20.02 SAVE 43.99 THE NAPOLI • 36" x so·· •Top Quality • Luan mahogany door with raised mouldings • Ready 10 stain or pa1n1 • •050 799 •Reg. 79.H PROPANE TANK • Propane luel replacement cylinder • F1t1 camP stove~es heaters. 11nterns and tore • •003 673 I!! [140Z] 40 GALLON GAS WATER HEATER • ln111llat1on· 1v11l1ble Stete Contrectors License •396191 • 5 year werranty on all raflammable parts • Automatic temperllura control iBli!! 1411 Wlfllt • •409 102 12/2 NON-METALLIC WIAEWITH GROUND • Insulated copper wire •For indoor houH wiring • t'°9 078 ID! - DOG EARED CEDAR FENCE BOARD 1'' x 3" x 8 FT. #056 861 1" x 6'' x 6 FT. #056 879 3SE~H ,~~ DOG EARED REDWOOD . FENCE BOARD 9/16" x 4" x 6 FT. · #350 751 4" x 4" x 8 FT. REDWOOD POST #430 694 3/8" x 4 Ft. x 8 FT. 3-PLY COX PLYWOOD 1" x 6" x 6 FT. #056 911 2" x 4" x 8 FT. CON COMMON REDWOOD #056 937 •For ahellhtng or subfloor • Exterior glue 8 FT. x 26" CORRUGATED FIBERGLASS PANELS • ldHI (or roofs dlVld•,. privacy t cr .. na. fenceit etc • Choice of green or white • B gr1de 1 N NEWPORT FREEWAY AT EDINGER STORE HOURS: MONDAY THAU FRIDAY I A.M. to I P.M. SATURDAY I A.M. lo I P.M. SUNDAY I A.M 10 I P.M. lllDMlltUO 90 LB. BAG RED I-MIXED CONCRETE CONC1£Tt 90 LB I!! SAVE 20.02 WATER SAVER TOILET ~ COMBINATION "\ • Toilet seat not included ) • White only • ~ 200 •A-.Sl.M \ 3!1'!! 2" 1 4 " 1 6 FT. KILN DRIED STUD • -<>56 739 AD EFFECTIVE NOW THBU APRIL 8, 1984 ""OOUCT't AMO "'ICU• fMll AO MAT NOT M AYAK.A.U Mii OTMltl eutl.M"l IWOfl'tUtl ITOftll ...... I t j . College district gets a blueprint for the future The .. independent study'' of management practices in the Coast Community College District was just one of the controversial campaign issues that divided educators, adminis· trators and trustees into tense. angry camps late last year. Now. it could be the tool to restore harmony to the troubled campuses. The newest of the district's trustees -Conrad Nordquist, Armando Ruiz and Nancy Pollard -campaigned on a platform of fiscal reform and reallocation of resources. The district was spending too much money on things -like a television station that cost $2 million a year to operate -while laying off people, they said. They pressed their case after they were elected -with teacher support -in November. Like rational, reason~ble administrators, they commissioned an independent consultant, Evans Management Services of Santa Monica. to evaluate district operations. While the consultants were studying and analyzing, the trustees -filled with the fresh taste of political blood - launched their attack on another campaign issue -the employment contracts of several administrators. Nordquist, Ruiz and Pollard thought the contracts were too fat and lasted too long. If the trustees had waited for the consultant's report -it took only two months to complete -they could have avoided a messy round of name-calling and finger-pointing over the administrators' contracts. Evans agrees that the district is top heavy in administration and suggests the situation can be resolved with little disruption through attrition. This is a somewhat softer policy than the trustees have been pursuing since the new majority took office and it underscores theobjectivity of the reporfsauthor. Yet, it finds at least one of the disputed contracts to be superfluous and provides the trustees with ammunition for a battle, if not a war. The report also supports Coastline College -the unique .. college without a campus" -which was the focus of some negative campaign rhetoric and endorses the district's pro- duction of televised classroom instructionaJ programs. The consultant suggests a way to minimize the financial drain of the television station and ways to minimize staff costs -certain to generate opposition amon$ the teachers. The strength 9f the Evans report is its neutrality. Everyone interested in the viability of the district should accept it as a foundation upon "(hich to build a future. "We ought to assume that perfect Is average for a woman. It Isn't true, bu1 It gtves everyone somethlfW to •hoot for. • · AJfDT OORT cotamolat ·J1c1 AllEISOI Tha11and I cutsoll heroin traffic Americans created marker for drugs, DEA report says . WASHINGTON-Thailand has redrawn the boundaries of the notorious Golden Triangle, the un- tamed hill region of Southeast Asia that for the past two decades has supplied tonsofheroin to the world's junkies. Scared to death 'down under' The Thajs have finally gotten tough on dope traffickers. In fact. with the encouragement provided by U.S. financing and expcnise, the Thai government bas cracked down so severely on drug The wild dog of Australia called the . dingo feigns death when scared. As convincing as an American 'possum, that one. It can be poked, prodded, kicked. whatever, but won't evidence life until it senses its chance to escape. then whoosh! away it eoes. Other dogs don't do that. Genetic memory is a wonder. what? President U.S. Grant knew he had terminal throat cancer. How would his family get by? His memoirs might provide. he figured. He wrote diligently. Done! The manuscript was finished. W1th1n several days. he died. A curious California law makes it illegal to set a trap for a mouse without a huntmg license. Some prizefighters toughen up the skin on their hands by soakint them 15 minutes a day in beef pickling brine. • Talk about finicky. If it's not alive, the praying mantis won't eat it. Q. Where'd we get the .. jack" in .. jackknife"? A. Probably from the name of the maker of the first folding knife. a 17th century Belgian identified as Jacques de Liege -Jack of Liege. • In polo, the quality of the play depends 20 percent on the rider and 80 percent on the horse. about. Did you know there are no left-handed polo players? Left-handers an~ barred from the game. Q. In whi~h of the lower 48 states is the largest wildemns area? A. New York, am surprised to learn. It's the six million acres in Adirondack Park. Item No. 9833C in our Love and War man's ftle is this o~rvation by writer Adela Rogers St. John: ··1 learned that there is little difference in husbands. You might as well keep the first." To envigoratc his power. the ong- inal Popeye cartoon character ate garlic. not spmach. Am glad he switched. All planets spin. L.M. Boyd Is • 1yodlc•l~d col•malll. ex pone rs and opium-poppy growers that Thailand is now a net importer of heroin. The 35 tonsofopium produced in the country last year -hatfthe amount produocdin 1980-weren't enough to satisfy the needs ofTtuU- land'sestimated 500,000 heroin ad- dicts-roughly 1 percent of the population. Production and\-efining of opium into heroin are now largely confined to Bunna, which produces about 500 tons of opium a year. Laos, the third leg qf the triangle. accounts for about 50tonsa year. U.S. loses gC!_me of international chicken O n a news-gathering trip to Thai- land. my associate Dale Van Atta visited the dangerous area where Thailand, Bunnaand Laos meet. He talked with border guards, slipped into Burma briefly, artd talked with intelligence sources in Chjang Mai and Ban&kok. Here's what be learned: -In t>IO()dy battles fought in January 1982, the Thais managed to push the 3,0()().man army of drug warlord Chang Chi-fu across the border into Bunna. Both sides suf- W<\SHINGTON-Onceaga1n. the Reagan adm1n1strauon has mounted an eleventh-hour rescue m1ss1on on behalfofthe Big Banks Once again. the package will be underwritten by American people. With the Treasury Depanment leading the operation. a half-billion-dollar bailout was prepared this weekend for Buenos Aires. The purpose: To enable Argen- tina to meet overdue interest pa}'- ments to America's Big Banks- before the critical March 31 deadline. Knowing the susoicions that are out there. Treasury ,ecretary Donald Regan and subaltern lkl') l Spnnlel rushed to reassure the press that 1t was concern fordemocrac~ 1n Argentina. not 1he balance sheets of the Big Banks. that had Treasul') in a s.,..eal. .. We wanted to a\'ert the cnsis of $Overnment that would,.ha ve acceded in Argentina." protested Regan. In- deed we did. echoed Spnnt.,,el. .. It was to help Argentina ... There .,..asn't an~ interest on o ur part about banks having to lose some mone~ because of some bum loans." Come.come. bo~s. That 1sexactl) how Pinocchio go 1 into all that PAT BucHAllAN trouble. Argentina has more than enough reserves to pay its back interest. Argentina refuseq. At Punta del Estc last week, Argentine Finance Minis- ter Bernardo Grinspun, to roars of Latin approval. announced that the problems of the international banks .,..,ere not his concern. What took place last week was a game ofinternat1onal chicken -with the United States. out off ear. scrambling frantically to save America's ban ks from losses, when it became clear Argentina was fully prepared to let the first quarter of 1984 close, w11hout paying its over- due interest. J 1 was not A.rgcntina that faced a cns1sdeadhne Saturday night. It was the B1gBanko;-Cit1corp. Manufac- turers Hanover Trust. Chase Man- " ha nan and the Bank of Boston. Had Argentina failed to pay aU interest due as of December 31 . the U.S. banks would have been forced. by federal regulation. 10 stan treating billions in Argentine loans as non-performing, to withdraw from first quarter earn- ings all interest accrued in the fourth quarter of 1983 that was never paid. The first card in the houst"of cards that is the international debt crisis would have fallen. Rather than risk the consequences, the Reagan admin- istration apin conscripted the sav- ings of Main Street to rescue the bankers ofWall Street. Which is an outrage. If the Amcn- can people arc going to guarantee Manny Hannyagams1 losses on its idiotic loans to the Third World. then the American people-not the bankers-arc entitled to the profits. With their income guaranteed, · indeed subsidized. by the savings of Mid die A menca. the bankers arc su ll behavmgas though nothing had changed. Here 1s the fragment of one repon of the bankers at play in Punta del Este:'I "But all the talk of defJcit balance Spinach is in this season PARIS -Our. It' \UIS a Pans. The first time· I came here was August 24th. 1Q44 l entered \\tth 1he Liberation Forces o f French General Jacques-Philippe Leclerc acrms thr Bndge at Saint-Cloud There "'as a German truck asi..e"' in the middle ot the bndge with 12 to IS German soldiers m vanous rag doll pos1t1ons of death lying around 11. Some were hanging. half in. half off the Arm~ truck. Some were on the roadwa\ of the bndge. dnpping red hlood into the Scioe beneath Today. 40 years later. I ~.,.. another shocking sight in Pans I went to a fashion show It's here. dunng these two weeks. that the decisions are made as to what women will look like neict fall and winter Behe\C me. you don't want 10 know J kno.,.., it's trad1t1onal for the American male.-to make fun of fashion as though 1t were. as James Thurber said. ··spinac h... but that doesn't mean 1t 1<;n't true. Take m) word for 11. this vear's fashions art spina('h When I get into hed at night the first thing I do 1<1 pull the co' ers out Jt the foot of the t>fd Then. when I roll OAANGf COAST DailyPilai ANDY ROONEY 1n the middle of the night. I roll wrapped in blankets so by the time l''"e finished w11h a bed. it's a bed that sen ousl) needs making.-That's as dose as 1 can come to descnbmg the dothes women will be wcanng next \Car The ne.,.. clothes completely hide any shape a woman may have. I realize this may be good news for some women. but clothes have alwa)S bttn made for the perfect bod'f Even though there aren't many perfect bodies. going an any other direction 1s wrona. We ought to a sume that perfect 1s avcraJe for a woman. It 1~n't true. but It gives everyone '°methma to shoot for. As I waited outside.-10 aet into the IJ~hwn sho ..... 1t was comfonmg to note that the fashionable people going to the show didn't looll. an) better 10 H. L. khwerti tn P\lbll'\Ntt Chazy Dow•llby [dtlOt I M Au.11an1 I 0 I he Publ!Shet 'i.i~f'\! ... _ ... ' ' • tt,. ••• ~ ·~ ..... "'-'' llA~ 'it Lany D. lpean M1~C01t0t •4• MlttlA 4:Jc•·""'-QM""Ctflfl(jfw'W • t ~,..,. 1'.f "flt -.,t"'·' I A ; .. f.;>f. ,,.,. Zlnl " IOC.111• [0110< the clothes the) 'd been wearing for a few months than anyone else. Their shoes. for instance. were as mis- shapen as mine. All I could think was that next year's clothes weren't com- ing out a minute loo soon for them. A good-lookrng blonde model came out first wnh that trad1t1onal false look models affect. She was wcanng only pajama bottoms. They were attractive pajama bottoms but 10 tell you the truth I dido 't pay all that much attention to them. She was clutching a pillow to her bosom. As she turned her back. I couldn't help noticing what an a11ract1ve back she had. I expect she had an attractive front too but. because of the.-p11low, there was no way to tell for sure. Nothing at the show struck anyone but me as being funny. 1 never saw a smile. This was some senous spinach. Next year there will be a 101 of cloth. Womc.-n won"t have .to wol'T)' about sizes because two normal-size women could easily get into one of some.-of the drtsses l saw. They have o ne layer of cloth on top of another with scarves or odd bits of cloth tacked on in odd plncrs The) have cloth on cloth One major theme was the sh1rtta1I. Whatever the models were weanng. the> seemed to have some ksnd of shin on underneath and the sh1nuul protruded below evcryth1na else. I, didn't see anything you could hana 1n ll closet on 1 normal hanger and ~n't 1maaine what a dry cleaMr 1~ io1na to do \l>'tlh one of these crrattons Maybe a woman 1' JUSI suppo$Cd to throw them IY.."I)' af\cr she's wom them once. If so. thac's the best 1de.a of the ,how Alldy RHHy I• •.. lfadlf'•trd C'Ol•mal11. sheets at the meeting ... seemed not to constrict the apparently lavish public relations and party budgets oft he giant foreign banks in attendance. Aftcrthesolcmn daytime proceed- ings. the top bank officials, their spouses and friends kept a busy schedule of parties and dinners. .. Citibank entertained its guest~ in a villa that rented forS 15,000 for the week. On Monday, a heavy night with nine compcti~parties, agatheringat which First Chicago was host drew the largest crowds with a show of African dancers and drums. A Bank ofNova Scotia official confirmed that his company had a budget of SI 00.000 for the conference.·· While Amencan taxpayers are underwriting the profits of the pany-goersofPuntadel Este. Ameri- can businesses are closing for lack of capital at the rate of hundreds per week. While the savings of President Reagan'sconsutuentsare beingcon- scri pted b) Treasury to keep Buenos Aires currtnt on interest payments. interest rates for U.S. farms and factones are nsmgagain. The tragedy in this political folly is that the cred1b1hty and moral authority of the Reagan adminis- tration are being put at nsk in a gambk that cannot. ultimately. suc- ceed. To remain solvent. America's 81g Banks must maintain the pretense that their enormous loans to Argen- tina. Brazil and Mexico arc good. To majntain that pretense, however. they must contmue shoveling out 10 Argentina, Brazil and Mexico enough cash to keep them current on the mounting interest due. So. the seed com of the American economy-the savings of the American people-is being con- stantly siphoned ofTby Treasury, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank. the Big Banks, and shipped to the Third World to maintain the ridiculous fiction that half a trillion in overdue loans to communist commissars, African dic- tators and Latin American autocrats and generals were crackeFJack an vest- ments. P•trld Baclwwl 11 • •rndlcated col•ma/11. Tbe .. In .. look lor fall and 1finter .... f crcd casualties. -The expulsion of Chang effec- tively ended the local domination of mercenary armies in northwestern Thai land. As I reported five years ago. these drug traffickers had become so brazen that they almost succeeded in a plot to kill four U .S. congressmen who went to the Golden Triangle on a fact-finding trip. -In the last four years. the Thai government has suc.c.eeded in dutting by half the acreage of poppy fields in Thailand. -The Thai crackdown is a joint effort with Drug Enforcemen .. Ad- ministration agents ... We have pushed all active refineries back to Burma," a U.S. official in Chiang Mai boasted ... Ourintelligence is pretty good. so t~ey don't last long if they start up in Thailand." -Chang and the other dope traffickers are still a threat. Thai government informants have been buried alive, drawn and quartered and suffered other grisly deaths. When the Thais offered a $23.000 reward for Chang's capture. he countered with an offer to pay cash for killiniAmericans. In 1980. a DEA agent's wife was gunned down tn Chiang Mai. -Much of the heroin that comes oui o~he triangle stm travels throueti Thailand. But an American official in Banglcok noted that Thailand does a better job at interdiction than the United States does within its own borders. A single seizure usually brings in more drugs than a stateside.- DEA agent is hkcly to sec in his entire career. It's only fitting that the United States has taken a major support role in the Thai crackdown on heroin. A classified DEA report blames the long American presence in Southeast Asia for creating both the need and the &reed that nunured the Golden triangle m the first place. .. It was not until the buildupofU.S. forces in lndo-China in the latter pan of the 1960s that heroin production became wcll-atablis.hed in the Gold- en Trianale,"thereportsaid. "U.S. military personnel 1n Vietnam a11d Thailand provided a.ready market for tbehctoin." Another DEA report noted that "many U.S. armed forces penonncl returned from the conflict in Vietnam not only with heroin habits. but al~ with the knowlcda~ of where to purchase heroin and sm uuJe 11 tnto the U.S." Unfortunately. the opportunity is still the~. "An interested pany can caslly oblti o a ldloanm ofinjcctab~ heroin in BanP,ok. whett cst.at>- hs.hcd. detaUed or complicated con-e.cu With di tributon &re unnrnr><L ary,"a DEAi!n notes. Andi kilo ofheroinbo tforSlS,OOOtn Bal\lkok wou d whol le for more than SlOO.<XXHn N~w Yori and brina in Sl million an Slrtel ulcs. J•d Alld~nu 11•1 u~tftl ~1maJJI. " Sp_inacli pleasing inpa~tq Pie was' popular at cafe, especially with a waiter When I first opened Fem leaf Caffe (Now called Pave, and really the talk of the town. The food is marvelous). my mom gave me the recipe for her fabulous Spinach Pie. I find it simply delicious. and I guess a lot of other people agr~ because we had so many customers coming back for it. It became a regular on our menu and we must have made a million of them. PILAR WAYNE • ,. I had a waiter who worked' for me for almost three years. quite a won- derful guy. I could almost sense it when he was hungry. Evcrytime ·we •••••••••••1asked him. "Louie, what would you like to cat?° he would say, .. Spinach Pie. please." J, would say to him, "But you are going to tum green from eating so much Spinach Pie; please try something else." He would reply, ··No. I like Spinach Pie." Well, so do l...but not every day. This is a great pie for a bridge luncheon. Serve it with fresh fruits and you will definitely have a winner. SPINACtl PIE 1 '1il poaad1 packaged froita claopped aplnacb 4 e11• %4 oaacet wblte aaace (cuaed) Garllc uJt to tute Salt ud pepper to taste Da1llofaatme1 3 bard bolled eggs, cat lato 1lx1.la1 1 ea yolk mixed wtdl 1 tablespoon water, for egg wasb % recipes for Pastry Doa1b · Thaw spinach and press out all of the moisture (very important) using a strainer, and place into a mixing bowl. Add the esgs. white sauce; garfic salt. salt. pepper and nutmeg. Fit one recipe of Pastry Dough into a 9-inch pie dish. Trim any excess dough. , Pour in the spinach miAture. Cover with the other recipe of dough and press around edges to seal. Brush top with egg-wash. Make two "V" cuts into top oFpic. Bake at 475 degrtts fofone hour. ut the pie cool for 10 minutes before serving. Garnish with egg wedges. PASTRY DOUGH (For one tor 10-lacb sbell) 11/• cup all purpose flour (not sifted) 3 ounces butter 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons Ice water (a~proxlmately) Using a food processor with a steel blade, or a mixing bowl with a pastry blender. cut in the butter, flour and salt until mixture resembles coarse com meal. Add enough cold water. a little at a time, until dough forms into a ball. Wrap an wax paper and chill for about one hour; bring to room temperature before rolling out on a well-floured surface. When dough has been rolled out to proper size fold it in half, and then in half again to make a quarter circle; then fit into dish and carefully unfold it. Trim excess dough. Push dough up slightly around edge of dish to about I/• inch above rim. To bake separately, pierce dough with fork all over; place a sheet of aluminum foil or parchment ~per over dough and weight with dried beans or other weights. Bake at 430degrees1'or eight minutes. Shell is now ready to fill with desired filling. Pilar Wayne 1s a Newpon Beach residenr and author of"Pilar Wayne's i'avorite and Fabulous Recipes ... Send questions to Pilar Wayne. c/o Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626. PAPARAZZI Sbowrooma face terraced interior pntea landK&ped by R~en Gardea of l'fewport Beach and decorated with .. Waterfall." ecalptare by Puadena artiat Richard EW.. Design Center open Specialty mall ts suited to decorate 30,000 new homes By MARGE BITETl'I Oll)'l'leCC.111,1 •• ' Design Center South -the special- ty mall for home decor -is the new crown jewel for the 4"?-acre Birtcher Business Park in the hills of Laguna Niguel. The 30 decorator showrooms. each with furnishing.sand fabrics for home and office. have joined the Birtcher headquarters, Tjmcs Mirror Cable TV and several other high-tech ten- ants in the park. The $3S million mall was built and developed by Birtcher Pacific. "Design Center South . makes a most unusual design statement in Orange County much like our Pacific Design Center has done in Los Angeles ... said Brandon Birtcher. vice president of development for the family-owned firm. "Here in Orange County, the center's low-rise silhouette. coupled with mature landscaping and unusual water features. make the man an instant landmark." The first phase of the complex offers a tranquil setting with interior garden courtyards and a central_ sculpture entitled "Waterfalls" by Richard Ellis of Pasadena. Its peace- ful murmur offers a quiet repose from the fast pace of nearby freeways. Ground will be broken by year's end for Phase Two of the center. Its completion will give interior de- signers and clients 400,000 square feet of ground level shopping. The center is situated to serve one of the fastest $f'Owing areas in Southern California. Thirty thousand homes are planned for surrounding land. Fla4(a mark the entance from parklnC areu to 3'b abowrooma at Dealgn Center South·. By ANDY LANG ,, .... , I w There are lawsuits goin& on all over the country as co whether the owncn of so-called retirement communities can set limits on the aaes of its residents. It's easy enough to rqulate that you cannot live in this or that condominium or cooperative complex unless you are over SS or60or6S. It's what occurs laJ.erthat iscausiq the problems. What happens. for instance, if circuna· stances force an elderly couple to briq up their p-andchildren? And even if it as only for a temporary period, what is a temporary period - a month. a year, fjve years? ls a couple in their late 60s who chooses a retirement co~munity ~ that they ~ live in peace and qu.iet '°' their remamana yean entJtJed to do so? How is this stale achjeved if the couple next door are faced with the neceujty of raising two or three smaU grandchildren who cannot possibly or compassionately be silenced 24 hours a day every day in the week:? What happens when a couple's child. someone betwa:n 3S and 4S, for example, geU into a family or financial tangle that forces hjm or her to live with the ~nlS in a retirement area where the minimum qe limit IS 6IJ'! These arc not isolated cases. They a.re ha~na all the time, whicb is why the couns are filled with~ ~tlles among owncn, mo~ holden, homeowners associa- tjons and assorted other individuals and groups. Decisions do not come easily, because there is so much to be said for either side. And courts in different states have issued what appear to be contradiC1ory decisions, which in many cases actually are not. because the circumstances a.re seldom the same. The retim;nent community idea really p>t rollin.a in 1960 when Del Webb started Sun City in Arizona. After a slow S1art, it became so sizable that a second Sun City called Sun City West, was started nearby and bas po~ steadily. There arc even bi~ dcvelopruent.S tha.n the oriaiiil .... r .. " .... _. Wet?t> project. Many bu!lders are usin& various ~of getllng around the pos$1ble \epl squabbles over aee limits by lov.:ering them considerably and makin& all kinds of e~cepttons. · Several communities have no stnct • requiremeal except that no children undeT t I are permitted.. wbich solves some but not all of the probrc.ms. Some ha' e lowered the age limit to 40 and therc.tS at least one that uses 35 as the cutoff age. From the builders· standpomL of course, the more buyers the better. but they always have to consjder the possibility that some purchasers will be scared off if the age limic isn't high enough. Another angle to be considered is that some elderly people don't want to live in a comm unity where everybody 1s as old as or older than they arc. J recall reading some years aao about a rctinment village where some residents were disturbed because an ambulance was always parked in a highly visible space. They didn't want to be remfodcd constantly that someday theymighthavetoride in iL Yet. when a poll was taken. the majority of residents liked the presence of the-ambuJaooe asa reminder that help was close at hand ifit were needed Today. probably because the elderly have more money than they had when retirement housing stancd 2S years ago. the higher-priced retirement houses sell at least as quickly or more quickly than medium-priced homes or condos. In one new development 1n Tampa. Fla., boasting such ameniues as a spa, piped-an music. an underwater stereo system in the swtmming pool and a total solar system. the houses cost S2S0.000. And. so far. the elderly are snapping them up. If you are 50 or older. "'hat's your opinion on whethtt you prefer to live in a retirement community where there is an age hmit? So that we can categorize the replies by a,e groups, please give your age. Wnte to Andy Lang. AP Newsfcaturcs. 50 Rockefeller Plaza. NY I 0020. f .I 1 1 Very Impr-essive Persons receive scroll of thanks Fifty Republican women Join Harbour campaigning The Huntington Beach Assistance League honored several VI P's last week for furthering the league's philanthropic projects. Mayor Jack Kelly was one of the V cry lmpressi vc. Persons who received scrolls in5enbed with a message of apprcciauon. Others who were singled out for their assistance included Dale Dau, president 'of the Huntington Beach ChamberofCommerce. and league advisory board members Tom Harman, Lo1l1 Laptborne, Jerry Bar1ener and Roy SaukJ. Others honored were Katble Holmes of the Huntington Beach Co.; GallBartoslkandSerena Arnold from KOCE; Mickey Greeaber1 of Mercury Savings and Loan; CIHdla Klatt from Nordstrom; ElalDe Craft, president last year-of the women ·s di vision of the Chamber of Commerce; Jake Abbott, super- intendent of Huntington Beach ~on School District; Vida Dun, former editor of the Daitr.Pitot Style section: Debbie Arrln1tonofthc Huntington Beach Indepen- dent, and Jou Germany. A dedicated crew of assistance league provisional members prepartd the chicken divan luncheon, and Pat Tboma1 was chairman of the event. The proaram included a slide show on the history of the National Assistance Leaaue. presented by Sbtrley U~Jer, a vice president for pubhc relations for the national aroup hcadquanered m Los Anaelcs. The Huntinaton Beach lequc runs 1 speech center (located above the tbnft s~~P at 223 Main St.). ~tuch provides therapy on an ab1hty-to-pay ba ts forcuy residents; Operation School Bell, a program prov1dma school clothes for needy childttn referred by a school princtpal or nurse; and a program to prepare students to take the college prtparatory uam known as SAT. • • • • f'1f'h· new mcmbc~Joincd tlunt1naton Harbour Louil and Marcellentt Laptbol"De were two of Julia Gamble. a leape member. and Claudia the Very lmpreuln People recoCJalsed. Blatt, an bonoree. talked before lunch. Republican Women at the1rrcccntannual membership tea, accordina to Betty May., prcsidcnt. Held at the waterfront home of Sta~ and MarUa BNM r,thetea(rea1lyachampaanebrunch)saw200 women come together for some fun 1n an election year which promises a lot of work. Tbep"Oupsul>ports the Republican Party throuJ.h cducauon (cand1date in for· mauon). voluntccrscrv1cesand fundina. pedal sues ts for the affair were LoelH Hett ... Pat Wlteeler,Pe1~ner.KlttyMcCey,M11UeBelfer, Mary Ja1 Donet&,8'1rley Goodell and Helen Grace. alt of whom founded the club in 1966. Ctuhoffi auendina were Maya, BtttyTtrry, · Sfflla I.lick. Rita Lombar41, Marjorie Woods, Lola F•1t1. Martu Qstre. Mary Ciddto. Amonalhencwmcmbencnjo)1na thcS0C1al ~ere Jeu Evan. Betty Stoll. Vlr&lala Pelts, BarMra F1r1'. SH Wf,S.. H ...... and I.Mella CoueDJ. • • • Las Conchas de Oro held its spnng fashlon sho" and luncheon recently 1n the Newpon Harbor An Museum's pauo room PrcStdcnt Carolya C.uck welcomc<llhe mcmbef" and &uestsat the fundra1scr for the Alben Sitton Home's Oranaewood fac1hty for dependent children On t~c &ucst llM v.crc Vlctorla Avey, Marat ,_ams • -................ _...,_,.._ President. Marpret Carl8oD of the 1-... and Dale Dunn of the chamber conftl'MllC . ' UHa Boaattl, Bmtda c.nta. Leda de Gatti.a. Dtue Didi, LbMla E4lward1. Alie Ea1.ui. rw Es&erley. MaryaaC11•maa. Maril)1lCrlfll&U, ~le B~ ly, Mulme Hermes, DWl1 llellalMI, OU..U JobM9, Joycehl~Paa 1 .... su..r.Pmtey, VlW ~.£1dlu Uvaand MtieWehMr. . la Concha de Oro. a social and philanthropic orpn1zat1on, include w<\men 1n busan~~ and homc- makcn. • • • />ap:1ratr11s wntt<"n b\ I>a1h P,lot f\ le Editor Mc-11n9a Hudd/Mron wirh etl ntnt>ur1 on.s fro m Hunt- in,re>n Beach 1.orrc·wondcnr ~nn ( on~-a). · • ass a heel for giving commission the boot DEAR.ANN ERS: l work in store in Detrolt that Us only wol)leo '• oesand boots. It was my tum to •• IMDEIS proach the next 4\lstomcr, so J stcp-6cd forward to wait ~nawoman wbohad .... 111111111111111111 .. I ~me in with her husb4od. She said she wanted to sec the tlx different styles on display in the window and told me her size. When I brouj.bt the sbOC'S, her husband said ... I'll fit these." He kneelcd down in front ofhis wife and she tned on the various pairs of shoes. The woman walked around, commenting on the fit and style. Several times I said, .. This is my job and I don't mind HELP YouRSELF ------ doinait.''ThcmaorepHed ina bdhscrent tone, "I have been fiuina my wife'11hoc for lO ycar5. Would you prefer that we went elsewhere?" I aaid "No,'' and stepped aside . They decided on three pairs, pvt me S l64and I boxed the shoes. The manager informed me after lhey lcfi that I woutd not receive a commission on the sale because the husband had "done all lhc work." I need an unbiased pomt of view and will accept your word as final. Was I entitled to the commission or not? - MOTOR CITY MI KE DEAR MO: Y oa broa11tt lb dlon from tile 1tockroom u d 1apenhed tile fltda1, waatcla took dme lDCI pNCIMled f H from servta1 otllen. Y H also boxed &Jae 1Mel UMt ru1 •p tile sale. Evn tlto1p tile ltaabud put &Jae 1boe1 oa bb wlle'1 feet, )'H were ea titled to tbe comml11lon. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was recently widowed. My LOWER CANCER RISKS Pinpoint, then a void -----environmental h azards Ques11ons about en ~ironmental canca are answered by Hoda Anto-Guirgis Ph.D .. associate professor in the UC Irvine College of Medicine's Department or Com- munity & Env1ronmenca/ Med1cme. Q. How many cucer•bave u environmental cause? A. The majority of cancers -pan1cuarl) those that appear later in life -have some environmental component. However, the definition of "environment" is by no means limited to man-made chemicals and pollutants. Viruses. sun exposure. diet. smoking and lifestyle are also environmental factors that can contnbute to cancer formation. In fact, these "natural" components are prohably responsible for far more cancer cases than 1s exposure to arti ficial toxins. The good news is that man} environmental hazards can be avoided to some extent. For example. not smoking rtduces your chances of developing cancer of the lung. A ciiet that as high in fiber and low m fat appears to reduce the "'cadence of bowel malignancies. Staying out of the iioon-day sun -or at least using proper sun-screens -can lower the danger of skin cancer. • At the UCI College of Medicine's Depanment of ~ommunity & Environmental Medicine. we ha'"e a . ~ial study under wav de,1ined to 1dent1fy ~azards m the , workplace. particularly in industrial facilities. We believe that by pinpointing environmental dangers. we can develop sample precautions that will lower long-term cancer nsks to employees. As a first step an cancer control. we're looking for ways to prevent "premature" deaths due to that disease. We believe the chances of finding ways to avoid early cancer death are very good. These are mainly accomplished by early diagnosis. identifying possible causes and reducing nsk factors. • Q. We seem to bear more about cancer today tbu ever before. h tbe dl1eaae on tbe rise? Are environmental facton to blame? A. Ahhou$h we do hear more about cancer these days than we did an the past, statistics show virtually no significant nse in its incidence (excluding lung cancer) between 1935 and 1980. In that 45-year period, only lung cancer has nscn sharply. It appears that if there 1s an environmental agent increasingly responsible for cancer deaths. it's cigarene smoking. Cancer as more visible today for two major reasons. One. society 1s si mply more open about 1t than It was in decades past. There was a time, not too long ago, when cancer was not considered a polite topic of conversation. Today. it's discussed freely in newspapers, on television and 1n social gatherings. Two. death from causes other than cancer is on the decline. Even hean disease mortality as on the downslide. In comparison. cancer seems more prevalent, although its actual incidence -except for lung cancer -has not really changed. Best Rx: Don't develop habit . D E AR D R .----------- STEINCROHN: I'm '2 and never took a tfccpin' pall tn my p ontire_ hfe until I was ETEI •osp1tahzed las\ ~onth for over three STEllCROHI tieeks because of 'idne) compltca-1•••••••••••• lions. Evel) night I icce1ved a sleepmgp11l. even though I d1dn°t ask for 11. Nov. t'hat rm home. I find rm no longer a sound slc.-eper Without takinf a pill before bedtime. I ve told this tom} doctor who has set up a program for me to .. gradual!} .. withdraw from the habit. The rc.-ason . • FRED/ON FREE Dump Station & L.P. Gas ~Sold 7 Days a Week • In our South Parking Lot - FREDSON RV SUPPLY 8 15 N. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, CA 92703 We Sell (71 4) 554-8000 Open 7 Dsvs Pr09ene A Weeti for this, he says, is to prevent me from developing nervousness and nightmares. I'm looking forward to the time when I get a food night's sleep without the need for sleeping pills. Don t you thank patients tn hospitals should be protected from so man,r sleeping pills -especially when they don't need them. Mrs. 8. DEAR MRS. 8.: Many a .. non-insomniac" has been turned into a sleeping pall addict because of laxness in prescribing such medication while the patient is hosp1tal- 1zed. Here 1s a suggestion for such patients: '\d\ 1se )our doctor that }OU aren·t an the habit of taking pills while at home. Tell him you don 't want to become dependent on sleeping pills. Forewarned. 1t"s less likdy he will prescribe them Now, du ri ng April, 20% off all Kerstin Skin Care Products. FACIALS MASSAGIS • NAILS • MAKEUP I '65 So Coo•• Hwy loguno koch (7 I') '97-'868 on lhe Surf ond Sond Hotel ~hopping (enler -------------------... :;;-=- ORANGE COUNTY'S RELAXING MUSIC STATION IS KDCM 1D!l.1 FMSTERED ... husbaod'sdeath-wassuddcnand une"pccteel. LlkelO many other women I never lhouaht it would baj)Pen to me. I won't JO into detail about the aaony and loneliness. It would fill the entire page. Besides, you've heard it all before. I cannot get over the lackofcompusfon people have formyaneving. They don't want totaUcaboutmy husband, nor will they allow me to talk about him. When I mention his name, they change the subject and pretend he ncvereidsted. Everyonuays, "Keep busy and go out." I wish 11 were that easy. What should I say topeoplcwhoask(witha big smile) .. How arc you doing?" What do tbey expect me to say when the person I loved more than anyone in the world has died and shattered my life overnight? I am furious at the inscnsit1v1ty of my family and £ricndt. Any suaesuons on how to cope?-WEST COAST WIOOW DEAi\ w.c.w.: Too Nd fH 1re11rr0-.....bl HcJI .... ............ r,..,.fuill,~ttMMt .. aaow tUtpief ........ part•f die~procntud )'ff D"4 i. talka ... t ,.., feiliap. WHa ute4llow1" are•o1a1. say, "I am 1maa1Jq." Slaceao oae wlllallow fH to ukr4ell f"rtelf, pa1 a profeHIOllal to U1ten. It l• "senUaJ tlaaa yo• verbaUse your frtlt tratloa Ud rase. I ••• Don •r1ct burned bya "line•'that's coo hoc cobandl~. Play it roof with Ann Llnder's1uide co "Neckin1 and Petti111-Wbii Are che Limits'!'' Send your fNUe8t co Ann l...tndcrs, P.O. Box I 1995, Chicago, Ill. 6061 1, enclosi11150~ntsanda Ions, stamped, seJf.,ddrnsed eovtlo~. Glady• Karea In Glori.a Newman'• Dance Theater perform• In °LKed OTerlaya." Troupe captures Olympic spirit The Glona Newman Dance Theater -the only Orange Counl) dance group an vned to perform 1n the California Dance Fcstt\al dunng this summer's Ol}mpac .\ns fe)l1' al -will perform at 8 p.m. Fnday and Saturday in 1he Golden West College ma1nstage theater. The I 0-member company, which as based in Orange. specializes 1n modern dance. creating both abstract and dramatic v.orks and c>.plonng dance through a vanet) of approaches. A celebration of the spirit of the Olympics, their program at the Huntmgton Beach campus wall fea ture two contrasting works. "Rounds and Contrasts." which is. OCCONCERT SEASON ENDS Carlo Mana G1ultna will make his Orange County farewell appearance for the season. when he leads the Los .\ngt:les Philharmonic Orchestra at 8:30 p.m. Saturday . .\pnl 14. an the Santa l\na High School auditorium. 520 W. Walnut This will be Maestro Giulini's 14th appearance under auspices of the Orange County Philharmonic Society since 1978 when he.-succeeded Zubin Meh1a as the director of the orchc!ltra. The program for the concert wall include the Founh S\ mphon) of Johannes Brahms. and Mozan's Sinfonia Conccrtante in E Oat for Oboe. Clannet. Bassoon. Hom and Orchestra. Opening ~ t program will be Beethoven's "Egmont" Ovenure. The quartet of Ph harmonic pnncipals who will appear as solos1sts 1nclu e David Weiss. oboe; Lorin Levee. clannet; Alan Goodman. bassoon. and John Cerminaro. hom Wc1'is came to Los l\ngeles in 1973 from the' East, v.hcre he held first chair positions with the National S} mphon> (Washington. D. C.). Metropolitan Opera Na11onal Company. and West Point Band. Le'ce. who has won criucal acclaim for has performances at Philharmonic New Music Group events. is a graduate ofDe Paul Un1 vers1 ty and was on the roster of Chicago's Grant Park Symphony . Goodman has been on the Philharmonic roster since "970; has previous pos1t1ons included principal bassoon of the Milwaukee Symphony and associate pnncipal of the Pittsburgh Symphony Cerminaro was a member of the New York Phalharmomc for I 0 years before Joining the Los Angeles Philharmonic in 1979. The Juilliard-trained musician has been a soloist w1th the New York Philharmonic and the Aspen Festival Orchestra. considered a technical tour de lorcc for the dancers. and "Tv.o Passages." a sencs of ducts dealing with different rela11onsh1ps. Both works are choreographed b> Glona Newman. fou nder and art1st1c director . In add1t1on . the program wall prem1erc a piece b~ al.sastant director Gladys Karc.-s. "Facets of One," a duet for two men. '\nother textural movement piece on the program is titled ··Laced Overlays;· with Newman as choreographer. Tickets at SS general and $4 stu~ents and Gold Key cardholders. may be reserved at the college bookstore. 895-8378. Maeatro Carlo Glullnl l oncert tickets are available at the Orange Count) Philharmonic Society office, 234 E. 17th St .. Suite I 07. Costa Mesa. phones: 642-8232 or 646-6411. Remaining tickets are priced at S 17andS15. with spedal student and senior citizen discounts available. All seats are reserved; parking as free: and Visa and Mastercard orders can be placed by phone. New symbol of sex built on flex NEW YORK (PRN) -Celery·lhin models arc stanma to get compcullon from female body builders and fa shion photographen now have to rcthmk how to photo&raph the new body bca1.1t1ful. • nOn<OmpulSOry, COml>CtttlVC routtnC$ for po~S and her strcnath allowed her to hold a position for the extra seconds needed to photoaraph her an--multiplc exposure. To the photoarapher's dcliaht. Glady JUSt aot down to business and showed us her stuff The result diaplaycd the body as a tool to an1culate the clothes' attnbutes. she added. The Apnl issue of Amencan Photoanpher follows fa\h1on photoirapher Kathie McG loty throu&h an 1m1anmcnt with model body bualdcrGl•dY Portucun In the photographer's eyes. ''I'd never seen a wom1n Wllh that How docs the body t)uilder fttl about her new career kind of~xy. musculanty ... (at) would require a new kind of as a modct? Once a body builder. always a body builder, JXl 1 na. L1 ke 1t or not, body bua lders a re bccom 1 ng a f uh ion insists the e ver.an-<icmand Ponuaues. There's no question ~ns.ataon :· an my mind which comes fint. she said. •ddma that fame ha$ come as a urpnst The problem wtth pos1n1 the new ideal female form is• .. • • that the body m1aht actually OV{'rpo'A<er the clothe,, says I m five fttl, rout inches. In the ~st. t~al s bee~ American Photoarupher. McGanry lc:nrw ~onventional enouah to&et)'Ou thrown out ofa photoirapher s ~tud10. poses wouldn't do but she had to have athletic movement. Gladys Ponuaucs. featured o~n Photogra- She dcnded to cnllSI the model's help. phcr's pnl cover, wall b<' tht tar of the movie sequel Bod' builder Portuauc\ decided to use "Pumpana Iron II " .. Donnelly Rhode. bu Illa banda fall with claUCbten Lls (left) and Jean S.,al oo .. Doable Trouble.•• 'Dynasty-' wins TV ratings over absent '·Dallas' LOS ANGELES CAP) -ABC's "Dynasty" a41lfo claimed first place m the Nielsen ratings but arch-nval CB.5' "Dallas" took the week off to allow another visit from "The Wizard of Oz ... The two nighttime soap operas were in a seesaw battle for first place the past three weeks. "Dallas .. was first and "Dynasty" was second, then they swapped plaCH, and last week it was again "Dallas" and "Dynasty." The victory two weeks ago was the first this season for the ABC serial. Despite the first-place finish for "Dynasty" ABC placed second behind CBS for the week ended April I . "Dynasty." in fact, was ABC's onl y entry in the Top 10. NBC was third. "The Wizard of Oz." the 1939 fantasy classic starring Judy Garland, tied for ninth place. It was the 25th time the mov ie has been on network television ( 17 on CBS. 8 on NBC). .. Cagney & Lacey," the polrcc show making a murn to CBS, fell out of the Top JO to 12th place. Here arc the Top 10: ABC's "Dynasty," first: CBS' "Simon & Simon," second; NBCs "The A-Team," third; CBS' "Magnum. P.I.." fourth; CBS' "Knots Landing." fifth: CBS' "60 Minutes," sixth; CBS' "Newhart," seventh; CBS' "Kate & Allie,'' eighth; and CBS' "The Wizard of Oz" and NBCs "Flight 90: Disaster in the Potomac." tied for ninth. CBS won the week with a network average of 17.4 in the A.C. Nielsen Co. survey. ABC was second with 16.0 and NBC was third wath 14.0. The networks say this means that in an average pnmc-time minute 17.4 percent of the TV homes were tuned to CBS. CBS contm~ its lead for th e season to date. The ratings: CBS 18.1. ABC 17.2. NBC 15.0. CBS held firmly onto first place among the nightly news shows. The ratings: CBS 13.0. NBC 11.1 . ABC 10.6. Herc are the week's 20 top programs: I . "Dynasty.'' ABC. a rating or 25.2 or 21 . I million households. 2. ··simon & Simon. CBS. 25.0 or 20.9 million. 3 ... The A-Team," NBC. 24.4 or 20.4 million. 4 ... Magnum. P.l.," CBS. 23.6 or 19.7 million. 5. "Knots Landing." CBS, 23.3 or 19.5 million. 6 ... 60 Minutes." CBS. 22.6 or 18.9 million. 7 ... Newhart," CBS. 21.0 or 17.5 million. 8. "Kate & Alhc ... CBS, 20.6 or 17.2 million. 9. Movie-"The Wi zard of 0z:· CBS, 20.4 or 17.0 mall ion. 9. Tie-Movie-"Fli~t 90: Disaster on the Potomac." NBC. 20.4 or 17.0 million. 11. "The Fall Guy," ABC. 20.0 or 16. 7 million. 12. "Cagney & Lacey," CBS. 19. 9 or I 6.6 million. 13. .. Matt Houston," ABC. 19.8 or 16.5 million. 13. Tie-"Ho1e1:· A BC, 19.8or16.5 million. t 5 ... TV Bloopers & Practical Jokes, .. NBC. 18. 7 or 15.6 malhon. 16. "Scarecrow & Mrs. King. .. CBS. 18.6 or 15.5 million. 16. Tae-"Hardcastle & McCormack.'' ABC. 18.6 or 15.5 million. 18. "R1p11de ... NBC. 17.8 or 14.9 million .. 19."MikeHammer."CBS, 17.l or 14.3m1lhon. 19. Tie-Movae-"Temble Joe Moran." CBS. 17.1 or 14.3 million. ., rllED llOl'llENHaG l#T......._ ... NEW YORK -··oouble Trouble." NBC• new comedy about i~ntical tttn...,e twins. isn't 1wict as sood or twict as bid u other youth-onented proarams. It'• some- where between, altematina between sweet and silly but, mqst of the tJme, auainina an appeaHna cuteneu. Io the rara q,csock, A.lb10n itdoins a tmn pepcron Slturday ni~l. Ka~ of coul"lt. tbinkl Slturday is for dates and Sundly LI for crammlna. .. Sun· day is ror proofrcadina." counters Allison. The au ... uaar. tll"lpitt SJ>f it per· sonalities harken back to "The Pauy Duke Show" of 20 years qo. In that series. Duke played both the bub- blc1um chew1n1 American tcen.qer Patty Lane and her prim and proper Scottish cousin, Cathy. At criucal moments. they would switch per-sonalities. Lt~ ... NBC1 h ..... raled co.edy. •hich iJ on 11 9 on Wednniitlys.. COCMt from the 11mt st~ - Embusy-and miaht hr u dfective sprinaboard for .. 00\ible Troublt." Ton ish t. Kaie has just fluriked her wrirten tum for a dnvCT't tietiie. She won't study tM manual becaute it's "borina." She tctS i" a bind when she needs transponatlon to a.concen by the rock aroup Pol~. but her si.acr i• doina homework,. her boyfrieftd i1 workina and her recently widowed father is on a date. The new scnes, debutiq tonisht at 9:30 on Chal}Pd 4 and aettina an eisht-cpitode trial for possible in- clusion in NBC's fall schedule, is never boorish or insultina like some other sitcoms. "Double Trouble" has the same zesty cheerfulness that commercials strive for. so it shouldn't be surprising that the show's 22-ycar-old st.an. Liz and Jean Sagal. have appeared in TV ads for Doublemint aum. Similarly. the sisters· different style and attitude will be the core of "Double Trouble," so r,ou can exQCCt many lanes liie this: ·one or us 1s definitely adopted." says Kate. They also will do a lot of rolc-switchini. Since it's a1readJ been made dear that Kate can dnve (she just can't ~~~:~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!! read the si&ns so wdl)., the Pftdictable ti plot iJ on its way. with Kate t.akins bet dad's car and Allison's license.eettina into a minor mishap and usumina Allison Foster (Liz Sagal) is the A student with l.he anaelic demeanor. while Kate Foster (Jean Sapl) is the more devilish cutup. She's never 'really evil. just irresponsible and setfish . It's all lisht-heaned stuff. The problems don't seem destined to get too heavy. sticking more to pranks and youthful hijinks. Don't expect any episodes about abonton. It's odd that this is a 9:30 show. It would seem better suited for 8 or 8:30. Perhaps,,, the rationale is that .. Facts of her sister's identity. The twins' father. An. is not as foolish as some TV dads. nor wiU he remind anybody of the wise Robert Young in "Father Knowi Best" Donnelly Rhodes plays tilt part with his eyebrows in a constant st.ate of excitement. His return tQ dating will ;-~· Rlc:hatd Pryor. "The Cold "°°"1'H {1984) Geotgt Segal, Am*'Cll Pays.. CO)MOYIE ..... "Things Att Tough AM <Mr" (1982) AlcNrd "Cheedl" Merln. ~CN>ng. * * "If You Could See What I .._, .. (1982) MMe Siiger, R.H. Tllomeon. (%)MOYIE •• * "e.d Sorts" ( 1982) 5-1 Penn. Aenl Simoni. -e:ao- LMIOl\T ht' a conunuing thread. CA)MOYI!' * * * "Dead Men Don't Wtat Pllld" ( 1982) SIM Mlrtin, Rachel Werd (J) .-ouii W°<>RV ~ZONE U AX NEWS '*»n'uNE •lfMCHOF- MeftE IUMCl!R'8 Pl.ACE ITmYJ OFMN AWtC1100 LATBIQHT AMENCA 100a.ul 111.AMEQ -11:46-CH>MOVIE ._.,,,,, ,,.,,,, ,,,,.,,..,, NOW PLAYING miwa ~ 1 ~~ p Jl MAGAZINE A WAI.I( THROUGH THE 20TH CINTURY WITH ell MOVfM -t.00- 8 MOYIE ** ** "The Godf1ther" I 19721 Mll1on Brlndo. Al PIClnO -~ • A&.RE> HITQtCOCI( PMllNT1 -1:00- 8MOYIE * * "Ftr-e.t..n:." ( tt7 4) Oevtd J--.i, Hope LMge. (!)MOYIE ~ * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * ~ :S:gain Matinees! lfim.111•• ** .. ,,_ Ooeu (1983) Karen Vllen- tlnt, Wlllilm Dev-. It~~~ MERV ..... AU( THROUGH THE 20TH WITH at. MOYERS (I) Y°"" CHO«:E FOR THE FUt AWA/ltlt eOMeNET -t:ae>-l Iv. C>CQLE TACMllE • • • "The PuniplJn Eater" ( 1964) Anne Bancroft. Peter Finctl. I A DlffRENT DCCE HOMEMCING MOYIE ** "a..:tl & CN>ng's Sii Sine*· In ... ( 1913) Ricnard "Cheec:tl" Minn. Tommy~ -10:0l)- l l~ OHOT!L THESAINT •NEWS ~ANES OF8TATE IN m AOUEA DEA1Y CHl MOVIE *** "Max Oug1n Returns" (19831 Marana Muon, Jason Rol>ltds. (J)MOVE * * "Oartc Places.. ( 1973) Robert Hlfdy, Join Collins. (%)MOYIE t t 'A "Touched" (1983) Robert Heys, K11hleen Beller. -10:10- -10:30- • INDEWfT NEWS QlD COl.OA . -11:00- 1 .. D (J) (fl) QI) NEWS TAXI "'1WN4 & MAA'TJ('S LA~ I M'A'S'H 1:HOUYWOOO ***"Pit And Mih" (1952) Spen- * == Htpbum, i MCIC! OF THE :r 111..ov!E * *'h "The Vulture" (19e7) Robert Hutton, Akim Tanwoff. ())MOYIE * * * "Tht lords Of Oltc;lplint'" (1983) DMI Keilh, Robert Protky. CZ)MOYIE ** "SU. Orwn Racer" (1980) 0.vtd Wu. Betu Bridga -12:30-0 8 LATE NOHT wmt DAVI> **'h "~" (1954) Tony Curtil, F1lnk ~. eMOYIE ***'h "The SundOW1•1" (1NO) Oeborlfl KM. Aobtr1 Milcf1um. 1:econ ---**•in "Gideon's Trumpet" (1979) Herry Fondl, Joie ftrrw, -1::10-1 HfALTM AB.D AU.•THEFN&Y 8NlWI -1:46-(l)MOYIE * "The Man Who Couldn't Gii E"°'9'" (1913) R.L PD. V. HodgL ---NOW PLAYING--- • AllAlll.. CotlA •W Ml'nlf IMlllf ._..,,, UAC-~......... S....01 111 '"' !>40 ... n 1.ons u1-t110 .. llH ,_IJTAJI WAUfY • IAIWA mu.I ...... , ...... UA ....... £-... '--*"" S.... 1..--. YA Qr 0... HO~H ut tMlO Mii 71Met1 IM-alt MOllOAY Thf11 SATUllOAY fACUlfYotC ,1 All PwierniMCtt .... , • II NII "fOOIUm" (N) (h S,.. l,...111•b & HM) ft OOllY Sl'(J[O ...... "'"lll ...... (N) 12:30. 2:35, 4:40, 6:45, 9:00, 11 :05 12'.30. 3:00. S:JO. toe, lCl'JO 11 AtJ«JI'( AWMI> ._TIOlllS "1lm1FfM *' ('Pl) 12:aG. 3:05. S:CS, t.lS. 10:'5 IB IDIT•' (PC) 12:45. 2:45, 4:45, 6'.45, 1:45, 10:45 "fOOllOOF (N) "suma CIF.,.. _.. CN) 12'.lO. 3:1>0. 5:30. too, 10:30 l2.l0. 4:'05. J:to. ll:lS 11 IU«Jl1 AWARD MlMleATDIS "W CIF _ _.. (PC) 12:30. 3115, 5.40. 1:20. l~ "1111 IC( ... lO" (PS} U·40. 2:40. 4:40. 6:40, a~40. 10:40 •I U I tell: M 11111" fC) ft DO.BY ST£11£0 1 00. 3 30, 6 00, t30. 11 00 ....... , ...... ,., 2'JS. 5:50. 9'..25 * PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES * "aumf CIF 1ll CCIII" (I) P\US "DI sunMJI" (I) "lll IC( P'UlD" (PC) TOP 40 YIOE06 e JACU GLEASON G IE8T OF HOT SEAT (C)MOYIE •COSTA •UA fOlllUll WAUIY llMSI ..,.UTH 11"":-:;;;:;w:r.;r.;; * j * "love At F°lfst &le" ( 1979) GIOfge H1m1lton. Susan S1int J1mes G~X§J9KE TARZAN LORD OF THE APES ·-~o II A •.•I.. Y'J •, A "• V' 4t• • --· -· NOW SHOWING! AlllHEll 639-8770 lftllll 55}.0655 SYUFY STADIUM DR·IN EDWARDS WOODBRIDGE IUfH PUl 821 4070 llSSIOI VIEJO 830·6991 PACIFIC'S LINCOLN DR IN EDWARDS VIEJO TWIN COSTA MESA 546 3102 OIAICl 634·2553 EDWARDS CINEMA SYUFY ClNEOOME WlSTllHTH • EDWARDS CINEMA WEST 891 3935 I-.. C-C.. '-'loc, f-MIC .... Miii 11A C.- t 7t-4141 Y"4ty 01 962101 137 034t .. ,..... Watch the Academ Awards ADffl 9 • .....,™""!!!l PG'~~ A PARltll(1 PCtlR ft _..,.. ····-· ..,. _______ ,~ ---NOW PLAYING lllU fOUlll Alli WAUll ~111.U -.... "' ... 8ft111\&.t• '•""'I' ta., Ea.~ --·-~\)111 ·~ 1&I fil!P tlUIWIU COSTA MESA lllWll •OllAl9Gf Pcdlts1t1wg,: ~ ..... , l ..... o 8' ' C0flf)'tl ~ "'~"Tnl , ... ~(\1UA ""oootl '°" 63'~ • Cll ...... .._. COSTAMUA .... •WU~ --low.010 e;....,. l SS• 06S~ Eoiot-OMma ~ ...... 9•9 ••• W.SI ., 393$ --· Witch the Ac1d1my Awards April 9 lillmTOlE: 1ll Uml> C. TMZM u• CIF M lffS (PS) P\US .. ~rcrs> .!~\tflt}~i~l. "fOOllcmr tN> P\US "aamDI CIF T1I amr· (l) "YOlll5 W-.S" Ci) P\US "11( W T MDICM __.. (l) WKAlllST AU cmr <11 P\US "OMTlr Cl) ''PU.ICE ACMIOIT" (I) P\US 'WTOMl lAlllfOCM1 WACATDr (I GRAND OPENING Your feet need a doctor of their own! 20°;0 Off Everything FRESH FLOWERS, PLANTS, SILKS, GIFTS & ACCESSORIES Sotvrday April 7th, Sunday April 8th THE CORONA DEL MAR FLORIST 3337 E. Coast Highway 67!-8272 • Phone for importanv. information and an ethical referral. F\xiiatnc ph~ and 'Ut'l{tOf'IS -pndtatn<;t<i havt taptd important rM<;~ for yuu PhOMand ask for ..... ~ ... lht' lapf by numbtr • I. Running 2.~~~ 3. Alhlt'te's Foot 4.Bunk1f\S 5.Com call~ 6. Htahh and lltllg 7. I~ toenails 8. Mo18 9. Plantar wart to. Chtl.dm'l't ·~ 11. Hammmoe? t 2. F'\at fm • .... 81991!)0 ., , PAClflC S AIWHU>R IN 'if nu m ·S339 MANN BREA PlAlA ' • COSTI MSA 1~1 4 184 '1 EOWAROS TOWN CENTER • . U Tiit 581 S880 :; EOWAROS SADOCCBAClt "' lA llllA CllJ) 691 0633 • AMC f ASl.ION SQUARE • "W)() COWWt1 E.fASI . •• ' ..,.., .-:-W-!!'~ 0 HW PlAYIK! --NJI 49> 220 COWARDS lllSSION VlJO *'.l ll1IPtlT KACI stt 0760 EOWAROS NEWPORT IUllCf 6~ ml SYUFY CIN£DOM£ IUT•mt 89S SJ33 llA WCSl•STER TWIN IUTlmHI 891 3693 PACIFIC'S ti WAY 39 OR IN LUXURY THEATRES g • ;;a44ao& 25 5504 'Dreamhouse' not '& • home in LA comedy By KATHLEEN CUMMINGS "Dreamhouse," presented by the LA StaJC Company. was wrin~n by former UC Irvine s1udcnt Stuan Duckworth, who injects .it with JUSt the dearec of humor needed to soften the targets. It deals with the redefinil1on of the American family, takes plac.e over a C hristmas Eve somewhere in Southern C'ahfornia and involves five people wuh mterwoven lives. Each perso n has survived a former nuclear family disaster and, while sonma through the fallout, 1s making the uncomfonable trans111on fr'om rebellion to respectability. What do you do once you hve thrown over the "oppressive" old institutions of Ex-husband Dennis (Lewis Van Bt"en) is~he kinds of man who'd ntvereat quiche, and wants 10 be a father to his daughter Denise (Alyson C roft), who lives with Warren and Axelrod.- Warren's co-worker Bob (Matthew Laurance is h1Jarious) moves freely within this menage as Croft's "Uncle Bob" (something that irks Daddy). Laurance is a comic poacher who, thouih tcchifically gay, is wistfully circling Warren, who harbors a residue of desire for ex Van Bergen, which makes Axelrod jealous. 5 5 s a Producers~ l:laN"e -the tight s~uff By BOB THOMAS-.' LOS ANGELES -When the finaJ Academy award is announced Monday night, i• will be claimed by: Michael Sham berg, for ''The Big CtiUIV; Peter Yates, "The Ottsscr''; Irwin Winkler and Robert Chanoff, "The R1Jht Stuff'; Philip S. Hobel, ~Tender Mercies," or James L. Brooks, ·•Terms of Endearment." S marriage. family and parenthood? What fills the vacuum~ Judging b.Y this play, at(s the Rela11onsh1p that takes up the sprn1ual slack. The nuclear family (mom. dad and h's funn y to watch Cron in the midst of all the sexual Monday morning quar· terbackang and parental crossfire, blithelr. watchin~old reruns of"The Brady Bunch· and fantacizing domesticity with Ken and Barbie dolls. Croft acts as the hghtnmg rod for any tension between the others. Richard Hernandez' set 1s masterfully effective an dep1ct1ng the malnutrition of ...._ _________ ....;... ____ __, Household names? Not really, although Yates and Brooks have won recognition as directors. The slx men.are the producers of films nominated as the best of 1983 and hence arc privileged 10 claim 1he Oscar. What docs a producer do? The general public has only the faintest notion. lndeed, some people who toil in the film industry can't really tell you ·the functions of a producer. G~~XIT9KE At ~~~:o TA RZAN 2:40 1 :20 t •4 i+ t Ht A.rt' 1 :00 .. 10:30 Gtne Hackman /I/if U11tf~5f'"1' m 1:10 3 :20 S:30 7 :40 t :50 PDUCE .,,..ftW!IUV ffi~NST At U ·IS ftWllMilll (!) A L 2 :45 S:IS 7:50 .. 12.102:304:55 7 109:25 !!J 10:U .,(lt•ill1Jlri/h At l2:30 ••• 2:505:10 ,,,, .• .,.,All 7. 30 .. !1!m ,.-•t ·50 12:35 2 :45 5 :00 7 :20 9:40 i3imJ1113;12)6~~ 2553 /~~) GAANEA ... ~ 7;/M /7 ml! At JAMES 9AIK I 'f 0... Nom••tto.'11 Snow1 At 7 :30. Ar;~ ,';!rlt•r (f\, ~dif~ 7: ~~4~ fit;1'"!h•t.i#Hl6l619 e1101~~1u:) GREYSTOKE Aho .., • "'h Plut ·N• ,,..,,, • s11ow1n1 ••nt·111111r1l Valley TARZAN Suptrm•n l/tt• • ._.,, Girl 1 ,., • '"'""' & Ill (PG) ,.~ PG (A) AGAINST ALL ODDS @ Alto Futurlnt Allty Cit ~R) -~ Ptu1 -Nit ht Slllft rm IRI Ptu1 Trac:llnt Placu (R) Aho M r. Mom (PG) * Cnve.Jns Ooan 6 :l0 W-k•nc:lt I 6 :4 5 Wttlm'lgtftl 'it Children Unde1 12 f REE U1•lf'\\ Noren . .,,,. llo• l~•'' I 00 9 00 ..,,., ...... ~0 74.U ~ll!Tlt BfllSTOl nt lllOlf' !Kl "1 '• • ...,., i .~ 8 .~ 10 I~ ,.. • '"' ~0 14U SANTA ANA "llf.. Qlll-(I) 6 ·~ 10 co ''fOOltOOS(" (PC I ..~ Tll•SU !Kl &oo .oJO -su llOOD 111 l 1~ "'-'Ill If• U•~«D ICllllllU Bfl IS T Ol I l &{.All( lfT UIAll!l llOIBIA I IOl6 'U11I ... (fill :~·~..., 'ltm ll ~· 100 "~ ~O 7444 l 00 9 !O (PS) SO. COAST PLAZA BftlSTOl llHTHl'llH YIUS' ll'C) •••• I JO """'"' 'tlJlll n Dll., Cl> ~ ~-111 ~0 7U4 6.lO 19?0 ,._., .~~I~ El TORO 11otllll0 rtulNIS SADOUBACK I 0 I •o h t• Mil II( SllP '0 1 •• •' 11 ACAIJ(lllY AtUllO NOlllS SAOOlEBACK .,.,. .. ,,.., [' le 1 I -1 .. 1\115 I ••"I d '1Cl l'U TU. (l'C) sat saa~ .... , ..... ,JO 101\ • '' -SAU (11(' (PC) I '"'' '' !DIMS OI OlllaMllfl (PS) ..;ro"lw-~;.;;.·~~[N_l_[R_ ............. _" r_~_,_, >_oll!Tlt_, 10_ sat ~880 I 00 , )0 u '"' .,.t.. Ill ..... 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Alll[ ~I Alt ODDS 111 ]69 '611 I 0 I /C< \ )\ I •1 q •' lA~A HILLS MAU \0 '·· ~ I» I '•• '4 761·6'1 l • ''""' OOle• 111110 1'Wlf (l'C) 1 •~ n s .~ 'l LAGUNA BEACH a Mil n Dll llO ta1 ~ ,,, "' • '• SOOIH COASI 91Alle 11 °" • ., 1•1 ~ ,, UlllAllHllAI I !Ola! CPIOl "4 ,, '°""' "'MllOl1 m lol. • I I" IOOll<Xnl tl'S 'iii !II 1 • l()lll'Nf> PUSH rl'Cl """ •• , .. 6 \ 8 XJ 10 /{', MISSION VIEJO Qlln1oq Ill UllOI) QI I 1111 All l OllD OI llf _,U ll'CI ,, l'Ol IC( ACACOn tu I • \ 115 5 15 11~ "5 IRVI,. '"' .... • A ,11.,, •· SOUIH COASI . .. ..... UllAll~l' '!US (!'ii) ' 6 •~ !O /( Of llUSU ere: I , . llGa! MlM !Wiii cl'Sr ' . FOUNTAIN VALLEY FIN VAll£Y .... ""'''' , ..... 139 l~O HN VAlL[y ••"V•'' •art• m t~ i 11 8,C>GI AGA.llS I All 000S c•) . oc ' • !Jiii-) V\.slr f'";) llo• ,..,,, 1 I\ 9 lO WESTt.INSTER ..... mirn CINEMA Wf SI roon OOSI tl'Cl ~ ll) IUSUD (I I ~ IO ~ 111£11 lllU Ill t1c:r• OI TWA#' IN! i.., hM Ill'> 9JO tlJNTIMGTON DUCH .. loO(lln ..... - "' • .,,, ~ ' ,, • •. a.., ' . ...,..,',:,~~ ~~l 10 Dlll ltN\ OI llO&JW'1 H; INIJ 1!'1;)Hl}N --..,..ll"'""NC"""t...,..()fl----.M:M--fll-IN ..., r~ .. , ~ JO .... ,. •· '" IO)ll 111 '·~ '" "'' "'ilt' SO OJll """81 ~I OllOS Il l .. . ' - ~ '" tlOllf t'C' GARD£N GROVE WCSTBAO()I( aMI n Oii .O ,., ... -. ~ .. , ,, • _..,. L!!.~J '\IUTW&alt '1lln Bf U GI tftr •I WlSlBllO()I( mw. • .... --UM ICI ,.rns ~J u kiddies) has been replaced b} nuclear relat1onsh1ps. Wanda (Leslie Ann Warren) d~s a convincing JOb of showing a women strugg l ing to changt• f r om O\ cr-dependenc~ to self-suffic1enc) War- ren lea' es her husband. dra" ing 1he strength from her fnend Maureen (pla}ed 1ough and touchm$1Y by Nina .\ \drod). a pregnant (by synnge) lesbian with a take·me-as-1-am attitude . tract housing. ays Warren. "We didn't know what 11 would look like. we just put o ur names on a list." It all seems to boil down to life isn't a bo" I of k1w1 and aJI relationships are mess) No ne" ground plowed here. It answers no questions and, as far as I could tell. al!ito asks none. It JUSt presents a cut from currenl social reality. 1 enjoyed it very much, Top Sirloin~ Delicious.Top Sirloin, grilled to your taste. Served With homemade soup or crisp s4 45 green salad, choice of potato (baked potato or rice pilaf available 4 to 9 p.m.). II fresh roll and butter. Riil Sn '-er Fri~ app Served 3to10 p.m. Delicately grilled and enhanced with melted $3 75 butter. Served with tartar sauce and lemon wedge. Includes vegetable, trench fries, ~omemade soup, crisp green salad and I choice of dessert (pudding, Jello, ice cream or sherbet). GOLD, DIAMONDS and VALUAILIS WI. MUILI .IEWELUS 873-o3SS 3116 Newport Blvd. Family Restaurants RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, INC. ftr lk lut ef her l.rfe 1922 UllOl ILYD COSTA IEU -SU·l1S6 Nlna Allelrod in .. Dreamhoase .. lnternataonally known director Tony Richardson achieves a cohesive ensemble performance from a professional cast. The play runs through April 22. Tuesdays through Salurdaysat 8 p.m .. with matinees o n Saturdays and Sundays at 3 p.m. Cops and apes pace the field of new nJovies • HO LLYWOOD (AP) -Two Warner Bros. films.. "Pohce Academy" and the Tarzan epic "Greystoke." led a field offivc films 1hat each grossed $4 million or more over lhe weekend -draws thal rival summer's throngs. "Police Academy" was far and away the leader. bringing in SS million on 1.063 screens for a two-week total of S 19. 9 m1lho'} In fts first week. "Grcystoke: The Lcgena of T<trzan. Lord of the Apes" brou&ht 1n S6.5 m1lhon at 753 scrttns although its two-hour length limited theaters to two showings a night. Herc 1s a list-of the top seven grossing films last weekend. I. ··Police Academy:· Warner Bros .. SS mil hon 2. "Greystoke," Warner Bros .. S6.5 million. 3. "Splash." Touchstone. SS.6 malhon. 4 ... Romancing the Stone." SS. I million. 5. "Footloose." Paramount. $4.2 million 6 ·· .\ga1nst .\II Odds:· Columbia. SI. 7 m11l1on. 7. "Tank.'' Universal. S 1.5 m1lhon. The reason may be that there are different kfods of producers. They include: 1. The deal makers. These arc often international operators like Dino De- Laurcntiis and Raymond Chow who are skilled at putting l~clher film packages and arrangmg financing. 2. Executive producers. They arc usually veterans like Howard W. Koch ("Air- plane") and the late Lewis Rachmil ("Footloose") who oversee filming and make sure the budget is met. 3. Linc producers. They plan and supervise the day-to-<iay operatfons, at· tending to the myriad of filming details. 4. Total producers. They do everythina from originating the projec1, hiring writers, directors and ac1ors 10 planning the aa campaign and checking final prints. Irwin Winkler provides a good example of the latter category. He and his panner Robert ChanofTha ve been amon.g the most prolific of filmmakc" in the past 15 years. releasing films through most of the major distributors. They started with an Elvis Presley musical, "Double Trouble," and over the years have produced hits ("They Shoot Horses. Don't They?," "Ragi"I Bull") as well as misses ("Nickelodeon, "Valentino"). The greatest C'hanoff-Winkler 1numph came when they claimed the 1976 Oscar for producing "Rocky." Using "The Right Stuff' as an example, Winkler ou1lincd how he and Chartoff operate. Four and a half years ago. they outbid another company for the film rights to 1he Tom Wolfe book about begmningsof the U.S. space program. They made a deal with United Anis1s and hired William Goldman ("Bu1ch Cassidy and the Sun- dance Kid") to wri1c a script. "But Goldman's script had a differcnl po1n1 of view from what Bob and 1 had in mind." said Winkler. "We talked to Phil Kaufman. and he had the same concep1ion that we did. We hrred him to wntc and direct:· AT LONG JOHN SILVER'S! EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT Mon Thur~ 6 45 8 30 I 0 I; -~ ~;.~ m z::.. ~~ ., -A... (. ... , __ ~ .. #""-• ..-.. t-: - ---NOW SHOWING --- BREA LA HABRA ORANGE UA MOVles 990-4022 I ,.,,,, ., AMC Fashion Ctnedome Square 691 -0633 634-2553 \ -COSTA MESA Edward's Harbor lWln 631 ·3501 El. TORO WESTMINSTER Edward's Edward's Saddleback Cinema West COSTA MESA Edward's Town Ceoter 751 -4 1 84 S8t .5880 891 -3935 Witch tht ACldtmy Aw1rds Aprll gl I I ll 990 4071 UA MOV1£S 4 COSTA MESA ~46 2 7 I i EDWARDS SOUTH COAST PlA/A COSTA MUA 6JI 3~01 £ DWAROS llARBOR TWIN llVllU S) I 06)~ lOWAROS WOODBRIDGl • LAG""A HIUS 168 &611 l OWAROS SANBORN LAGUNA 1-111 l S MAI l MISSIH VllJO 491 Gno £DWARDS Ml)SION V1f 10 MAI I OAANCf bJ4 9 J6 I PACIFIC. S ORANG£ DR IN OHMCE 63/ 0J40 AMC ORANG! MAI I OIHCE 6i4 l~l I U" CllY CC NHR WISTMUISTH 89~ ~ J UA wr s TMINS TE R fWIN Look for Freebee the Fish on the menu board at participating Long John Silver's. Get a Free Fish Fiiiet when you buy any adult dinner that doesn't contain fish Offer good thru April 14 LONG]OHN StLVEl{S. SEAFOOD SHOPPES 3095 Harbor Blvd., just south of San Diego Freeway across from Fedco, Costa Mesa (Drive-Thru SerYtce Available) l WMAT AM I DOING? 0'71( DOE.~N'T EVEN KNOW. WMERE HE 15 NOW Tt:tlNIMt\11'! CAN "AIY IY TU:I Uolh vuln~rabl• Koulh dtab. NOltTH ~ tAUZ I' AIU 0 17U +K S W•!HT •!AS'f • QIO • JH5 ·;i J 109U '/' 75 '1 Q .,KHZ •Qtota •~o sou·ru •KH 'I QI• 11 A10$• •AJS Tht h1dd1nic: ~euth Wut Nwtlt t!ut I '1 Pu. It Pu1 I ~T Pua 3 NT Pua P&1111 PH" '11wn1nl( 11 .. 111 J J1·k 111 l101o1. 1·11u play .1 pJrlwul:1r r.1rtl rnmh1n11l11in 11,1rtl'' .&<' SHOE rc.,.fiitic Lu ho• naany """'" ,.,., fM't•d to ft•l ''°"' the' '"Ill. 0,0 thi11 h;anc'J, tfle dlalftond 11uil f'I tbt• key. Uow would you tarklt• th~ 11uirt TM· uuttl"n wa11 11tr:1l1ht forwurcl . South 11howed a billalM't•d h;And or no more th:an lfi polnt11, and North 1tw nt> point 1n showi11g hu dl4mond 'upport -why try ror an l'lt•vt•n trick ronlracl wht:n a pt'rft'<'tly attt'pl<tble no trump ~mt• wu avail ;ible'! Now let\ l(O had to llw lfUC'llion WC post.>d al lht' l'nd o( th1· nJ)('ntnl( par<&l(raph. H dl•rlan·r nl't'fl'l thrt'<' tritk'I in d1t1mnnd,, ht> mu~l f(UM~ wh1rh opp<1nt·nt ioi ~hortt•r 1n l ht· 'utl. I( ht• 1•lt'rls io play W t•'l for l ht• 'horlnl'"· the rtl(hl pla.v ''to lt•;id ;a low rlm llMHWI toward tw jMk and, ii W ri.t JOi'li up wiO &I ....,, ,..,,.. 5« tht·n to rrou ~ Liie a.a.er ... filM'llJIC' tlMi t4'D of ...... U dHlut'r lhinb that t:a•t ia ,ht>rt in lfwmond•. he· 11hmtld 11turt tht• 11uil fru111 t11\• board :and rint'I\.._., Jht' lt•rt IHI lMo fir11t rounJ. On thi11 b.and, howt'vt'r, dt'('lar .. r tuie ••ifcht ra.t trwu. 1'h.-rc• fort•. ht• n1•1•d11 to dc•vdop unly ont• t•xlr.a dt.l mond lrtf'k for h111 rontrJf'l. In .add1t111n, lht• t•nt•my h.iv .. 't:ir\t'd J 'uit 1n whkh Jll' ha-c I hrt•t• 'ilOplJ(•r<e. "41 b•• IUl-c ph·nt Y 11( I inw 1n wh1oh to 1lt•v1•lop .1 wrontl th.unond lrtrk. II th1• '1111 'l'hl' I:!. ti m.tkl'' nu d1lh·ri ·n1·1· h11~ cf1•1•l.1r1·r IC'~'' .1h11111 ht' J11h THE t',i\JllLt' CIRCL'S BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) i WO~~'< A~ ~ov. ~Z-~ ~ AU.. ~ ~OU~aF AT NIG~r j n.\ WAINED IN "I blew 'Daddy a kiss, but Dolly got in the way!" :tlARJIADUKE by Brad Anderson "I hope you can stay all afternoon. He hates to be disturbed ... "00~ BULLl~S "Thia country really grows on you.,. DE:\~IS THE JIE~ACE Hank Ketcham , • _c::. 11 He GHS INTO EVERYTHING IN n-115 ~SE E XCtPT 1l1E f3ATH1lJ B I • by Ferd & Tom Johnson HAND Mt= youR CREDIT CARDS, PE~~UTS l1M GLAD YOU'RE NOT LIKE SOME BASEBALL MANAGru, CMARtre ~OWN y- PLE,ASE . .,.---~ \ ?~ r READ ASOUT CNE MANAGER WMO USED TO GET REAL MAD AT HIS PLAYERS ... 'ti - .. .. IF A PLA~ ER DID' SOMEHHN6 DUMB. TME MANAGER WOULD PULL TME PLAVfR'S CAP DOWN OVER HIS HEAD .. </ by Charles M. Schulz I SMOULDN1T HAVE f MENTIONED IT .. ' i ---: .. .; • ,.. f l by Tom K. Ryan AN' '°lJ FE~ll !HAI I ~O F~~ WINNfi·1ME-ft>OH ! IN ™IS N~1G\.ieoRJ.la'.)D. ™E tM~~A~~. BRABBLE ~·1~ (,QEA'f IJONCi' I~ 1~E. ~L.O·~ ~T W.Utl 1t-t5121.>croR~ 00 t.l;j FOR BE1TER OR FOR WORSE COl"\eoN,e.L-VEN I Sf\10 SU&\N Wf\S ~y-1 t.iJf\SN,.. I lt'IPLVING \~ yoo , WERENT I ~ E.\JE.~i M~lllAN ~ 'f~E.' ~ Otoll. 'l ()lE l&)A'( 10 ~ WP\{.. / / 6'/,sl ~s' lblU.1 lt.S( '<(~ DONT T'PXE ME.1He. WRONG WAY ! I OIONT f'1EfV't To l-'IJR'I t'l"'°K t' 1'1,KERBEA'° by Tom Batiuk ! Dear Band Alumni, Not only are your con- DR. SJIOCK Hev, RE:Ac::> 1"'H IS N01"'e i'Ve eeeN C H6WING.' t'E,TO' ™~ I~ JIM f/6~ ON KTrX, TALX RAOO ... 'OJ'Rt 00 ™£ ~\R ! tributions to the barrl tax deductible ... but there's a box on 'YQJX 1040 form which you can check if you want your refund sent to the band! . ~ \ . . • .. .. .. . . . • ... . .· . • ... ... . . .. . . · . . ~ .. :· .· •• _, • . . .. . . . ... . ~ .. ' . . . .. I 11 , . ca o * a 0 0 5 a COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ~ISTINQS ~ CREDIT LIN[ . . Eld d t 1 Bid to take.over The Broadway er name o pane .· . . NB . t' Ohio-ased The Limited wants to acquire Caryer. ~rves 00 the University of 12-month high Monday, closin1 at On en Vl ron men Cahfomaa Board of Regents -the 2s1h on the New York Stock ~x- .i I \'-''-LA ter Hawley Hale department store chain gov~i~ body for th~ Unh'.ersity of chanae, up I~. as about 4 pc~n~ of Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart has named Eric Elder, manager of Villa Balboa'• newest phase of luxury condominiums, to the newly created Envtroamental Quality Cttheu Advisory CommJttee. With this appointment. Elder, who was raised in Ncwpon 8c<lch. follows in the family footsteps: His grandfather served as mayor. while his father was a vice mayor. Elder works for · Dreyer and Yoaag, a Newpon Beach-based sales and marketing firm. • • • Emulex Corp. of Costa Mesa has hired Briu Flower as maJor accounts managtr for its European markets. Sol Zecbter, vice president of markeung. has announced. Flower come!I to Emu lex with 19 )Cars of experience 1n the computer field. Most recently. he was a sales executive with Dl1Ual Equipment Corp., Ltd. in London. He will be based at Emulex' Euro~an-headquarters in ELDER FLOWER COL.SON FRYLING Hracknell. England. responsible tor pursuing maJor accounts in the European economic community • • • S01aone M. Colson IS the ncw media buyer/coordinator fo"r Cox & Barcb Advertising Co. of Ncwpon Beach . A Newport Beach resident. Colson will be responsible for research. planning. budgets. scheduling and placement of adven1sing for\ a nous account!I. • •• Daffie Fryling 1s the ne~ sales manager for Leisure Tecllnology loc.'s Ocean Hills commun1t) tn Oceanside Ff) ling bnngs more than 20 years of real estate sales and marketLngcxpenence to lusne~ posu1on. bav~servedas' 1ce president of sales and marketing for se"eral Sou them Calfom1a homebuilders. including Bartatt Corp. and Gfeller Development Co. • • • Security Mortgage Service. an Orange County-based mongage banking company. has moved its corporate headquaners from Costa Mesa to One Pacific Plaza 1n Huntington Beach. Secunty has taken over space on the ground and fifth floors of the L1beny National Bank building 1n a S 1.6 million lease agreement. The bank has branch offices 1n Long Beach. anta Mana. Den' er. San Otego and Oxnard. • • • National Medical Enterprl1es. Inc. of Los Angele., has reponcd its financial results for the third quaner and the first nine month!I of the 1984 fiscal year. Net income for the third quaner ended in Februaf) rose 24 percent to S30.35S.000 or 44 cents per share. Re\ enues for the three months in creased 14 · percent to $682.811 .000 For the nine-month period ended Feb. :!9. net income rose 31 perce nt to a record S86. 741 .000 or $1 .:!6 per share. • • • Collins Faller Corp. has lxcn named the e>.clus1' e marketing agent for three major business parks in Orangc Count). O' erseeing the marketing act1v1t1es for the mixed-use business parks in Anaheim. Fountain Valle\ and Costa Mesa will be Al Segal of Collins Fuller's In 1ne oflices The <\nahc1m proJect will be located directl) acro~s from the Anaheim Stadium and conm 1 of 2 t free-standing buildings The Fountain Valle) business renter will Ix compnsed of 17 buildings on :!4 acrc!I bl't'-'t'en Mount liha' Strce1 and Talbcn .\\enue from $100,000 to $500,000 Contact: SmJll Bu:-.tnt'S" Admtni...lrJt ion lJt'partmt'nt r---Ca1,ifom1a system, including UC the company's stock. or I m1U1on Irvine. shares changed hands. By JERRY HIRSCH OftM0.-,"911'811 The owner of The Limited Inc .. a popular chain of woman's clothing stores, offered Tuesday to buy the company that O\\ns Neiman-Marcus and The Broadway for more than SI billion. There are six Broadway stores in Oranse County. including one in Hunttngton Beach and one in Fashion Island. and there 1s one Neiman-Marcus. located at Fash1Qn Island. There are the The Limited stores in Orange Count). The L1m1ted . a Columbus. Ohio-based fashion retailer. said it would offer S30 a share for 20.3 million shares of common stock of Can er Hawley Hale Stores. Inc . the p:irent company of The Broadway and Ne1man·s. The takeover of the Los Angeles.-bascd rrtailcr would be a S 1.1 billion deal. The Limited said its offer would expire at midnight May I. "Our management and our board of directors believe that a business combination between our companr.. The Limited. and Carter Hawley will serve the best interests of our respec- tive shareholders. employees. cus- tomers and vendors." said Leslie M. Wexner. chairman of the board of The Limited. The Limited announce<! its offer without any pnor discussions with Caner Hawley Hale and the local depanment store chai n was not commcnung on the offer. "We are n01 commenting at this time. That 1s the ~Sitton we are taking for now." said Glenna Gray. manager of corporate communica- tions. · · • Carter Hawley Hale also owns a number of other retail chains includ- ing Waldenbooks and Contempo Casuals. The Limited also 1s the owner of the Lane Bryant woman's clothing store company. Philip M. Hawley, Can er Hawley Hale's chairman and chief executi ve officer, owns a summer home 1n Newpon Beach . Another senior ex- ecuti ve 1n the company, Edward M. Irvine's Printronix settles paterit suit From tbe Busloeu Wire Irvine-based Printroni x. Inc .. an- nounced Monday that receipt of an undisclosed sum of money has con- cluded its patent littgallon against C. ltoh Electronics. its affiliates and Citizen Watch Co The ht1gauon . which sought to invalidate certain Pnntronix patents or. in the alternative. absolve Ci tt zen from charges by Pnntromx that the Cl300 and th e Cl600 mfringed tts patents. was in111ated m November 198:? b} ( 1t1zen. Pnntron1x responded by counter- claims that alleged willful infringe- ment of Printron1x' patents. The case was v1iorously contested 1n both the U.S. D1s1nc1Court1n Los Angele!I and the International Trade Commission 1n Washington. O.C . where U1 late Januar.. after the tnal had comml'.nced. a ·settlement was reached Although cenam specific terms arc to be maintained as confidential. the essence of the settlement is as follows: • Citizen Watch discontinued its challenge to the validity of Pri ntronix patents. and both Cittzen and C. ltoh will discontinue importation into the Um1ed States of the CIJOO and Cl600. The date for cessation of imports and the numencal limi- tations on such imports are confiden- tial to the parties and apply also in Canada. the United Kingdom and France. where there are similar limi- tations. • Printrom>. has resened all rights 11 may have 1n respec1 to other products manufactured or sold b:y Ci tizen or C. ltoh. but will cooperate with those companies 1n a non-binding, two-step dispute resol- ution procedure pnor to 1nat1ating any legal ac11on based upon a claim of patent infringement . Robe~ H. Moro~ky. The Limi~ed's A ~mor on Wall Street Monttay VlCC chairman, said co~pany d1rcc-focused on a possible takeover of tors me~ late Monday in New Yo~k Caner Hawley Hale by B.A.T. l_n~u&­ i:nd decided to make th~ off~ now 1n tries a Briush firm whose subs1dtat)'. hght of the heavy trading 1n Caner in ~uisville. Ky .. owns U.S. rcuul Hawley Hale stock. " operations including Gimbels and • . On Monday. Caner. H~w1y. Hale Saks Fifth Avenue. issued a statement saying 1t did not know what was causing the activity in The stock opened trading today up its stock and was not holding merger about $3 a share. talks with any other company. said The Limited is one of the nation's Gray. fasted growing women's clothing Caner Hawley Hale stock reached a store chains. Heading west Stroh'• and Stroh LICht, flae•hlp brancta of the Stroh Brewery Co., are headed west, aa part of the largest market expanalon the company baa ever undertaken. Jl'amecl for their cllatlncdve fire-brewed taate, these 12-ounce can• are two of aeveral a•allable packa&es ln the new area, which includes Oranl(e and Loe Angeles counties. Los .\n~l'lt's Or.inj!t' Count y. ~ 12 1:11 ~:i-2fii:I 1il11 H95-2929 (XIII It 4 7:! -XS:!~ Toll Frt't' L/lwrf!I National Bani In f.qu11/ •1T•,.••lun1t11 /_.•mJ,•1 • 'l•·mh. r //J/( 1mJ h'liflol Hrwr•• Our _._ money mamet account Making a complaint against your broker As the stock market has slid when 1t was supposed to soar and rippled downward when most Wall ~trecters were betting it would npple up-up-and-away. complaints against stockbrokers ha ' e multiplied. SYLVIA PORTER When it's time to talk turkey, talk barbeque. • ·~,-~ • .,...;.;. ...... ...J Gl'l i~ I ... Of ,,~ \'OU T ht1$lnl''' J~SOCl;Jl(•J; In a rll·;i<.anl. rdd\l:J hu ... 11h '' .ilm11 ... flh t T\ l t1ITI\ on "" r 111 Tlw l 11unl\ l,lnl ,.,, n·al rn :J' b.irht·4u,· lh·al 1~ 1ur ''''"' 1.ill'., ri~hl. tr,.,11 llll'm 111 our h1i.! hll·h rih' lt<tn ll'n dl·r hn~hl I ,1nll 'Ph ' ~u<.ai.!l ,.,n1m l11t <.un~I -and c1 niunJ 111 Jrini.., from 11ur IHJP ,m1unJ J,., i., •in \\oo<lhnJ 1.,I\• L,1lw I lll'n ~ii d1"'n I•• our . fam11m l11unln Sl\ll· harht~4u" 111 d 'IJ.,:-lt llf \II\ ruadhou~l' • 1tm11~rhl'n: l>urini.! I IH ''l'l:~ n. ~:r\l' our pn\'ak JminJl room to \\ 11w and <luw up to iO of \' 1ur hu~1 nl''' 3\\11\IJh i-. \\"lwn \4111 \\,I OI lo 1.111-. turlu \'. ltll ~ <l al Ttw lnunl~ I.mi· won't tie up your.-ey. 10.11°10 9.5°10 \nn11.il) wld '.'\n lt:rm :--.nt a CD Un l1m1ted \'l.'1thJr,1\\.ll-. l\11ly compnunJing. f h..tl '> I ht· I lu nt ington I nvc-,t ment Fund .lCcou nt Imm I lunti ngton Savings. It s thl' high int<.·rc-,t Jccount that 's highl y tle xi hle. ton. And 1t'-, lully 1n-.ureu up l<l SI00.000 by the FSLIC. So comt 'l'l' u~ today about a Huntingt<ln I nw<.tment Fu nd Jccount. AnJ st.:i rt t•arnin~ high mtm('Y market interest without tvi ng up yo ur mont'y No"'° you know why your neighbor banks at rn HU NTINGTON SAVINGS ~~~:.ON t ' I " Cµstomers who couldn't care less about comm1ss1on charges when their portfolio!. arc increasing in value scream when their stocks decline. Investors who praise their brokers (and them sci vcs for finding the~ brokers) when the 111arket is in a major uptrend blame these same men or women when the market turns against them (and tout others). Le-g1t1mate or not. customer complaints must be heeded. That's the ruling of the securities industry's primary self-regulatory bodies. the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). other exchanges and the Natibnal Assoc1at1on ofSecunttes Dealer'i <....:A.SD). Bui how do you fik a complaint against )Our broker'? And lo wh om do )OU turn first" At a private luncheon meeting I attended recently with fi ve top marketing e>.ecut1vcs of five maJor brokcra'e firms-all members of the Secunttes Industry As.- soc1at1on -th1squest1on nasged the group from the stan. The answers they gave. however. can help you: I) Talk to your broker first. all the ex pens agree. Frequently, complaints in- volve operauonal snafus of which the broker 1s unaware. Many discrepancies - a "<;ell" order tumtnl{ up on your statement as a "buy" order, the incorrect pnct or size of an order. a mistake in your margin account-can be cleared up simply by reviewing the complaint with the broker. 2) lfth1s fails to sat1s.fy you, talk with your branch office manager. The ex- ecuti vcs who arc 1 n charse of the vast branch networks the brokerage firms have developed over the years can often help. EXPERT ADVICE correcting these mistakes than your broker. lfthe problem involves more than an operational adjustment, the branch man- ager has the authority to take your complaints (assuming they're legitimate) toscn1orexecuti vesat the firm 's hcad- quaners. One marke11ngexecut1 ve at the meeting stunned us all ~1th the case ofa 40-ycar-old investor who started with an S 18.000 account. A httleovera year later. his broker had turned the portfolio into $360.000-a 200-fold increase. When the account dipped 1n value toS342.000. thccustomer complained to the firm that the broker had mishandled his account~ 11 your complamt 1s more scnous than that . and 1fyou can't get salisfactory treatment from either your broker or the firm. you maychooseoneoftwoaltema- ttves: litigattonorarbitration. H1rinaa lawyer and takmgyourcla1m through thecouns is a lengthyi expensive and frustralinaexperience. A taster. cheaper and equally unbiased method of settling disputed claims involves filinaan arbitration claim with either the Arbi- tration Depanment of the NYSE( 11 Wall St., New York, N.Y. IOOOS)orthc NASO (2 World Trade Center. New York, N.Y . 10048.) Arbitration hearinp do not-require you to retain an attorney. Onet your request for arbitration has been ijled, the entire process usually takes lcn than a year. Whicheveraltemat1veyou choose. you cannot appeal an adverse dtttsion throu&h the other procc ,.,,l,.t\t.I ( rnlt t th .. n, t r I~ • h Ill 11 :ll na.~otf! t"',,. I ThCK branch office manaaeri must have three years as reaistercd rcpre~ntatlves (brokers) before even being considered for ti\~ manager's Job: they must pass the branch maraager's exam of the exchange and the NASO, they are under stnct stock exchange rules for the superv1s1on of stockbrokers' ac11v1t1cs 1n their offices In bnef, the branch officcmonagcrcan be fined or even fired if you, the customer. have been mistreated orlfyourcompla1nt has bttn in any way mishandled This 11 where the 1mponance ofhav1 na clearly defined investment aoaJs shines throu&h-Think throuah youraoals. in· come, capital appreciation. tax defrrral. thcde~cofriskyou'rea umina-and then you can make a rcalcaseofbroker m1smana1tmcnt should a dispute ante. ( )Jx-n· Monday· Thur~ay, .l· IO p m Friday·Saturtl:ty. HO pm Sunday. l2-9 p.m .. "'•"" 161~ Ruranca Parkway, Irvin.. .. .. " .. ' \l11t• C ~ .... .,. "'-\\ , .. \, If "41!1~! t !'9 e.t •u ,_,,, l:'t:"' I 4 • I ~"• 4. • Ii, fr f• I t1I t\.11.1nat • I • ., ,., t"'r, ' ~ " tdt. , , h r ., IJ( '>In talk1n1ao your branch managtr. you ma) find. aaa1 n. that at the bottom of Irony· The above 1nvcston rattly blame your compla1nt1s an opcrataonal error. The their brokers when antmpeled 111ns tum branr h manaarr has tttatcr lautud• in ouuourlosK . They knew the odds . No matter what you're doing, your hometown ne~aper ma In. The lllfflll Peru corporation acquiring faltering Valencia Banco~p Potential t:iuyout would enable bank to increase capital-to-assets ratio mtemauonal financtal 1n~1itutton . .. We arc impressed by their (l()m- mhment 10 our company and ~hear inttTc5t in helpina 10 provide the fin1nn1I suenath needed to meet our ptetent and future needs;• said Smith. 8~ JERft Y lllRSCll Of .. ~ ....... The ailina Valencia Bancorp, wh ich has branches in Newport Bea(b and Irvine sianed a letter of intent to be acquired by Crcdi\o del PeN Holdina Corp.. a Cayman Islands corporatiOh affiliated with Banco dt Credito del Peru. The Peru bank is the largest private banki na corporation in Peru with assets in excess of SI billion. Valencia Bank lost about $2 million in 1983 after breaking even in 1982 and hasbeen told by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to i~rcase its current capital-t~assets rata rom 5.2 percent to 7.S pe~nt by rch 31 . 198S. The buyout would give the bank the needed infusion of $3 million to $4 million to fu lfill that order. Following an e.Jltensivc audit of the seven-branch, San ta Ana-based bank. the FDIC also ordered Valencia Bank UP S AND DOWN S NEW YORK tAPl -The fotl011Ylng 1151 •howa lf'lt Over·lht ·Counttr stodla end werrenl• tn11 nave oont up Ille mos1 and oown the most based on .,.,-c:ent of chenoe for Tvtsdav to improve its asset quality and lendina practices and correct cena.in undisclosed alleacd violations of banki na laws a11d rqulations. Ray L. Smith, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Valencia Bancorp., said the bank has already implemented various actions to improve its condition, and that the proposed acquisition is expected to strengthen the capital position of the bank. "Becoming a part of a tarae-inter- national organization wiUaive us the tools to compete more effecti vely 1n this highly competitive environment, while still rctainin4 our local charac- ter and focus," Smnh said. If complete. the purchase pnce would be about S 11.6 million or approximately SI 0 per share for Valencia Bancorp's outstanding com- mon stock. "Our senior management and di- rectors recognize that the Banco de Credito organization is a high quality No 'ecurl11es trading t>etow S2 or 1000 snares are Included. Net and Percentage cnanves art lhe difference belwfffl the prfvlouJ clo,ing b d price end todav's last bid price "We. ~ndcrstand the growth op. portun111es for a strong, ~ponsive bankin1 organi1.ation operatina in Southern California. By Joinina forces with the people of Valencia Bancorp, we anuc1pate a suc<:eJsful future servina the banXjna needs of the Ohnae County and Southern CaHfof!lil commun1tjes and growini as an mtcyal ~n of their future prosperity, said Juan Francisco Raffo. president of Credito del Peru Holdina Corp. The board-of directors of Valencia Bancorp unanimously endorsed the letter of intent and agrded to vote for the acquisition plan and recommend it to other share-holders. No defin111ve merger agreement has ~et been reached and any such acqu1s1t1on would be subject to the approval of Valencia Bancorp's shareholders as well as appropriate governmental atten cies. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of New York acted as the go-between in arranging the takeover offer. Valencia Bancorp is the parent of Valencia Bank. a wholly-owned subsidiary. which was fou nded in 1971. f~! lf Up 1,1 J Phr~b DOWNS Le t Cl\o 1h -·1r1. v. -,,,. -lit •n -•h lf4 -1 -~ Pct. Get a handle I ~1 on legal lingo b:~ A NftPC)f1 8eectt legal ptace.-13] ment ftrm ta offering e $25 eemlnar 1 ., Saturday to tamNWtze thote who UP I ·1 I Senlrv Up 1 . 9 Vawtp un ~i 'Iii 1i ~~J~r UP I · 1• NYAlr un 8~ : tJ ~105~1 8~ : tt-Si~ 8~ ~·1 ~ ~~rMf Up : nvPal UP .,. telco Up '·· ,Wical Up 7.• fClubmrl OVER THE COUNTER MUTUAL FUN DS -2 'h l/4 -'h 11 · UM word prOC*eOf9 with fegea : 11"09~ 1 ·1 Thiworttlhop tegene at 9 a.m. a1 1 :1 Berrett & MeckWt ~. 3723 1 : 1 Birch. Sutt• 11. It -.. taught by .i J«ry Stem.. 1 WQrd proceuor 11.1 supeMaor With an Orange County · lawltrm. :I Ae11Natlon1 may be made by . calling 549·7887 •• 1 1 ••• L.Q9elrll 6 • 6t. MCI ' 4.. 4\.o MGF O•I II -, 11~ MfftGE ,. •• ,.., ~·Pt 21'1t 21 , Mal•• ~1! ~ ~'t'P 11 11 • MayPSft< 2 • 1' • MavnOI 24 • 14"'-M<Crm 13~ 13 , McO...v I I > M IOUW l3 ll • MdlCICeP 2 1° • M11111t•' 31• > 37 '• Midi&• 17' • 17 .. MIN1or 10 • 10'• Miu VIG JS• lS ., ~· ' ?f ?f • MOnfCI 14 14. MonuC > " Moo<t P 71 27 ) Morrtll l • 13·16 Mo1C11> 2Po 11 • M.,.lftr 41 42 Nerr9( 22 • 73 NOele 1 • 1 1 Nlw~!> \ 49'• ~· • NVAlrt 26 26t. NIOOG 3 .. 31.w Nl•l\A n" 11'> Nlef18 1$ ?S•., Nlkt 8 4' • 41,., NC•rG' 30 • ,1 NwNG 1· 16 I ·32 Nw11P!> 37'"' ,~ No•tll ''" >.. Oc•- :·4 :~ ~~ IJ-'.121·1' OflFerro It~. ?O OftrTP 1 • 21-PCA 1111 '°"' I'' Pet>llll ' t-14 '-P<Gell 42 '4 P...iPI 4 t 4 • PftrMI 4'• S 1 PtneE111 .,. •• 29 p.,,,., ' 1l , 13'9 P-E ' 29 • 30 , Pttrnt 141, 15 1 PtlhOOll 1 15 16 2 P•t rc.SS '4 , 46 J P10nH1 ll'• 3• Pon•l 30 > l1 fllow.CI 37 l7'• PrttGM r. • 14 1 Pr1w'oe'n 23 1, 74 Pr09rp 26 • 2••• Pt>SvNC IJ't 14 • Pur18tn 12'" 13 Ou•~ rC J7 3J Raoen ' 47 • 41' > Ravmru:I 11 .. 11\t llffvH 17'• II Roeos • • 4,.. Ro1>1>Mv • • , .. Rov t 291, 30 1 Sadffer ?f 29 1 !MllKO II 111'1 SIHtlGd 14 • 16>• SIPeuf 13'• 13'• m lPH 17•. 17'9 .. 91• ' ]J • )JI } '°' \ 7'• I '• v~r ' :!~ ~'• v:'fu,' ~~1Jl ~ 7S 2~ hic111t l 12 • n'- 7 1 1•. Ce1W1r if' 14h wEtSv • 21 > 6 ) .... .... • ,, ... n n ' lendv11 ,~. " 11 J 111, IOMIC \ I i: 19 12 1 .. • 1011'9 ' 3 1 ,, • II 1 11... t~ JS 1 1 7S'• 74 lrelCI 69 • 0 • 14'9 IS r11. ~ 11 • ?I~ 1: : uyr:E• ·~ 1 lr: n 1 74 , ME OC t 14 1 16 211• 1' t::.~~, rr • ri.: I ' f 1 ~Of/VY )·SI~ S"-, ]... l'• omOtl " ' U ' 44>, OYOli 12 • 12 > ~ > ~1• 11 a 1?·16 l ' 1 • 1 1 Trko a 40 42 1 16' 1 16'1 Tl'~ ' 17 • 17'• 70 , 71 U nr J , l"- 7• 7• '• u "' .. , ''"' S'• 6 • U Trek 10 • Ir' JP, 37 1 ~~~::pl U'~ l7 1 1 ' Vu tR 126 • 'f6'• S7 1 S71• VelNll 23~ 3 J •7w) VanOu• 1• • • , Jl't Jl'1 Vtlero 21 , 19 4... 5 Vlct~e 1 o 1 • 65' • 4S'-. V P 13"-131• 341, 35 Wern I Ill.. 19 • 6S'• w. wgie ~~ '? ' n::n,._~H=-SI ff'' 91, 10 WmorC 70•, 1, .4 .. 14'• ~r;:,~ n · l ~ WotvAlu ?O • 21 • wome• 21 '• 29 • WOOOL ' .. ... I !r~~:w 1T ! ,r; n • · Not ePot•cat>le GIVEN .AWAY WEEKLY \ . GRAND,JPRIZE EACH FRIDAY OF 5100 • NO LIMIT TO THE NUMBER OF TIMES YOU CAN ENTER! "-.NO LIMIT TO THE -NUMBER -0 ,._.IMES . YOU CAN WIN! Each Drawing will be for .. . ::t:li~~l ............... s 1 00 I st Prize.1~~~J ........ . Zad Prize.!~l. ..... .. 3rd Prize.i!~l ....... .. sso s15 SJO HERE'S HOW • • • ( 1) Enter your Social Secunly number, name, addreu and phone no on the coupon below Enter 41 maoy time• u you wuh. but only one eotry tor per eo•elope, ple&N. Eac h eotry form mu1t be ao on91oal Each member of your family with a Soc1&I Secunty card may enter by u11n9 a Hparate envelope (2) Mail your eolry lo Oraoqe Cout Dally Pilot. Social S.cunty SwMpltakff, 330 W Ht Bay St • Co.ta MeM, CA 92626 (3 A w1nom9 number will be pubh1hed each Mooday, Wedne1day and fnday 1n the Daily Pilot Ao add1booal oumber will be pubh1h.d qch f nday for SlOO W .. k. ly Grand P11w • U one of the wtoo109 oumber1 11 1deohcal Wllh your Social Security number, you muli cla1m your pn• money by bnn91n9 your Soc1al Security card to the D.uly Pilot oUIC9 You Wlll then be declar.d lhe winner and U111DedJately recei•• your prm Ui cub U you win a qr&Dd prim of SlOO., a check m that amollDI will be m..u.d to f0\1 after you bue pr .. nt.d 10\1.t Social Security card at tM Deily Pilot for verification (5) To claim a prwt, your Social Security card mu.t be pr-ot.d al tbe Daily Pilot no later than 5:00 P.M .. two bu.in"' day1 after the nwnber wu publUhecl. Ally prt. not c:laim.d by the dMdUne will be lodeitied (6) II 11 not nece1wry lo purchaM the Daily Pilot You may 1n1pect lh• WIDDID9 oumben ID the lobby of tbe Oranqe Co.Ii Daily Pilot or your local hbrary (7) E.mplQfMe or repr-ol&bYea, or c:treulaton and cll. tnbuton of the Daily Pilot or memben ol theu l&miU.. .,. not ehqlble (8) Tb. 0.Uy Pilot wtll be eole 1udqe 10 1nterpnhn9 th- rul• Dec:u100 of the 1ud9 .... final 4 WAYS TO CHECK FOR WINNING NUMBERS • SUBSCRIBE TO CONVENIENT DAILY PILOT DELIVERY. •CHECK DAILY PILOT NEWSSTAND EDmON ON MON., WED., FRI. • SEE RULE NO. 6 ABOVE. FILL OUT COUPON BELOW (Or R...anable Facsimile) AND MAIL TODAYI (Only One Per Env.lope, Pl ... ) My Social Security N umber ia ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- NAME ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J..._.;i"'r-~- AD DRESS CITY STATE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ZIP PHONE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D Pl ..... atart convenient home deliv• On th e , • o.¥ .... lllM Lll•t Cllt Oflt ......... &.at• °" Do" JoNl s AvERAG ES WHAT NYSE DID NEW YORK. (AP) APf.' NYSE LrAoER S NE!W YORK. (AP> -$eles.,, Wednnd•v price and ntl Cha~ of the I> mosl active New Yortt stock Exdla • isWH. tradlno nationally al more ll'l1m l,AJ ~rl~ Hawl 2.0~ , )Ji -t h c dent Pet 1. , mer T& T n 1.4~, V. FordMot s 1. , V> -~ Hewlet~ s \, , '--P• ~~Sier 9, >,(, -~ tch!~p}co ij!: ~ ~:~ lltA~s , I I/• + >Ji ~' JI. ~~-'A ~M 7 1 -'It omw Edis Hi' -1 '" ooprLbn , ~ ~ en MOtors 64 , V.. UP s AND DowN s NEW YORK. (AP> -TM follOwlno ll$t $tlOW$ the New York StQCk E•dl•noe stocks and werranti that nave ~ uo the ~st end dOwn the most ~~ on percent of cl'lange retierdlen of volu!'M tor Wad .. w: 'ecurltles trading below 52 are Ind·· -v d. Net and c>ercentege changes ere !he dlt ennce bt'lween tl'le prevlQi.IS dos no price and rodav's t,t price. Ntme Lu.I Clio PC't I Miii ~·~Iv 31 J11o Uo fl:f ~ ~~n-Wk~ 1t1 • ,;~ 8: 7:! 1 p~~JiCO s p~ 11: 8: : Fleetwgn 2h. IV• u8o . NobteAth 'J~ 1-\9 g A 11 ~~~~~., ~1: {~ 8: l ortg:•U 1 !Yt: 33J. 8: teAld s ~ ~ UP 4 ~'60ff1l'I n l't 111 Up s Nu,colnd I 'h 'h Uo 6 ValeroEnr 4'-'-" UP 7 TexConifn 4411• He Up 11 ~~ro~r Pll 11.1. 2>/o ~: i ~~vln f> Pf l3f¥: ,:~: ~ug H P J'-\ '"> P A nc • '~o MexlcoFd ~~ '1' UP Revron • t;, 1 1. Uo DO NS Ne~e Lasl C~ Pct l ~iH~er ~wt Jll = 4j1 ~ .l • ~h"ter o 7~ -•1• .4 PiN~ 2~flM lJ = 1 • l ·~ M~t:°n•t• ~t! = 1~1 1 ·1·:.· dlth,1m DI 1'1 -2 ''t NH 1S.4'of 1211. -111'2 It lllum l7'h -2 NutrlSyi • 6\.o -l4 1 CnPw 4Pr 19'• -2111 Ii 2tlH~r\I WI 4''t -1'> 1 l enClnern pt JJ~ -3'~ .: eworkRs ,,.. -'h 1 ChtrterCo of •11 -~ 18 C11Pw J.l~r 'I' 1 -P.i.o 19 yJ81dUn o -:i.. •• 6 20 ParrickPtr i~" -''• J jl FldNat Mlg 1 i , -l'• 1 1 Farah Mfg I -l'n 7. 3 emrvAF im -,.,.. 6 24 fllPw .c 20of I 112 -i 11e 6: 2S GOldWstFn I '--l 6.4 WHAT AM£X DID Advonced Oecllned . -... ¥nch,nged otal nues New l'llgl'ls New tows AMEX LEADER S ' Prev dav 109 ,ij 33 NEW YORK (AP) -Sales Wednesday price and ner cl'lenge ot the 10 most active American Srock Excl'lan e l uues. trading nationally at more then WengLabB rn· l4'h -1'i ~mth~r', ·~: im -11, .. TtE comm s . ,,. Felrf12:nt011 14 • 1~ '"-X~~.,,1~ Ha: 4' :~ -,,... oelmad 'v· ~ -~ We.l'IPost 7 • -JM K.lrbvE llP 6 • ,,. + 'I• I NASDAQ SUMMARY NEW YORK. (AP) -Most active ov.r· ·the-counter srocks SuJ>Plled bv NASO Name · Volume Bid Asked Cl'la. MCI s 1,u• ,800 8 l 't -l1• PtlhGI 700 16'9 16~ -~, Tandem 27 • 21~ -111 lonvgl m·m 13~ 133..o -~. andn s 4 ti j3'1• 13''• •t• ollM s I , 4 14'1& t ,,.. tf8dC , 771 'I• 81gltS s 1 ~', ~'h '"> O uonc 29 .000 1 • 1 '> Intel s 1t1,10ti ''• -lY> GoLo Quo TES · ME TALS Quo1Es --- That· s an apt description of both business and bu iness people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies ar going and which people are help1ng them get there.just watch ·credit Lin · -every day in th Bu ine ssectlonofyournew DlilyPilaf ... and are ... TAKE 4! ... Four ~ehcaous desserts, that is, and sot an Oscar-winning table. Shimmering with color and full of f~it flavor, these delicitiusdesscrts will star at your next get-together. Perfectanytimeoftheycar, they capture the flavor of fruit in scasonless style. Canned peaches lavishly fill crisp pastry rounds. A gemlike sauce made from frozen straWberries adds sparkle when tossed witbli&htangel food cake. Citrus.flavored ttostingand raspberry jam top off moist lemon layer cake with a glistening crown of color and flavor. Andjuicyfrozen blueberries fill chewy granola bars with berry goodness. Serve one to the family as a special treat or, for a star-studded occasion, serve several in a dcsscn buff et. PEACHES 'K CREAM PASTRIES l pacu1e ( 11 ouces) pie cra1t mix ... 1dcll1 ~ c•p dairy 1oar cream Chtumoe-Sagar Glau, recipe fol- low• 1 can (11 ouce1) lllced peacbe1, well dnlDed · l c.p cltllled w~ppln1 eream ! table1pooa1 powder~cha1ar Mix pie crust mix or 2 pie crust sticks and sour cream with fork until pastry holds toaether, divide.into halves. Wrap each half; refrigerate at least 8 hours. Heat oven to 350degrces. Roll each half of pastry into circle 11' inch thick on floured cloth<overed board wilh floured cloth-covered rolling pin. Cut each circle into 4-inch rounds. Place rounds on unereued cookielMet bnasb with CiD-namon-SugarGlau. Bake until light brown, about I' minutes. Remove from cookie sheet; cool. R~e 4 peach slices. Coarsely chop remainina~ch slices. Just before serving. beat whipp1nacream and powdered sugar in chilled bowl until soft peaks form. Fold in chopped peaches. For each serving. put 2 rounds together sp~eadina about 1/• cup whipped cream maxturcbetweeneach. Topdcssertswilh remain in& whipped cream mixture· pr- nish with reterved peach slices. Refngerate any remainiqdcseerts. 4 servinp. Cluamea-S.prGl.ue: Mix 3 table-spoonuupr~d l teaspoon ground cinnamon; st1r10 l tablespoon water. ORAKO&·STRAWBERRY AftO&L PAR.PAIT 1 pacbp (II emcee) w~t.e Ptel feodcakemb 1 ~ C9J>I C9N oru1e Jmlce StrawMn'y Sa•ce, recipe follow• 1 paeb1e (I CMIDCH) cream CHeHt Mf~ 1-np ••pr i teupoou crated oraqe peel 1 tea1pooa vullla l capt dilled w'1pplD1 cream 1 c.p mlalat•re manlamallow1 Heat oven to 325 degrees. Prepare cake mix as directed on (>ICkage except - substitueorangeju1ceforwater. Bake until top crust is golden brown and cracks feel dry.about I hour.Coolasdirectedon package. Prepare Strawberry Sauce; cool.Tear cake into about I-inch pieces. Beat cream cheese. supr, orange peel and vanilla in large bowl on medium speed. scraping bowl occasionally. until smooth and creamy. Beat whipping cream in chilled bowl until stiff. Gently fold marshmallows and cream cheese mbuure into whipped cream. Toss with cake pieces. Reserve V1 cup of 'he Strawberry Sauce; (Pleue Me DS88BRT8/C7) trawberries are ensational fare MARGE BITETTI ..... CeflllJ I •ot Strawbemes ha\ ea lot to offer. -They arc lowincalonesand hiah in vitamin C. Three ounces of the &trries provide almost as much vitamin C as an orange the same size. -Strawberries arc high in iron. But the best featur'els they can go directly from basket to table in a matter of minutes. Even though strawberries arc commercially grown in Louisiana, M•chiaan. O~on. Tennessee and Wa shington. 72 percent of the national crop own in California. "Strawberries arc the No. l alf"icultural crop in Orange County," said ve Riggs, president of the California Strawberry Board. He was one of the ken on a recent produce tour, sponsored by the Fresh Produce Council. man estimated 70 berrygrowers in the county. thecropeamed$290 lion in 1983. Rius said. Strawberries were introduced into the United States mort than a century . Early strawberries were probably a cross between meadow berries Jl'Owtng he Untied States and the beach berries from Chile, according to advisory !)'ii literature. Cros brccdinacontinuesasrescarchenworkatdevelopinaa better berry. ce strawberriesare still a hand-picked crop, the determination 11 to grow a that 1s biaer and easier to pick. At the Field Station in Jrv1ne, 1 tclf-supPotUllJ research proaram started ough the Univentiy ofC•lifomia in 1952. a vanety ofberries have been eloped and are now used throuahout the world. said Victor Voth. UC Davis OioSJst: New varieties introduced this yura~the Parker, Santana, Chandler and Selva. In past ycan Dou,W. P.;aro and Aiko have been principal varieties. "Foreveryacreofstrawbeme in OranaeCounty. 2S to 27 tonsoftbc fruit . Jl'Own;' wd Riga. "That's one pint ofberrics for every household in the n1tcd Statetcvtry seven dayut the peak of the be'!}' scuon. ·• The current promot1on of the Strawberry Board 1s to rt mind consumers l, "strawberries~re vc•t stra &ht.•· pnna and summer panics setm more t1vc when strawbemes add their sophistication and elqa~ to the menu. Hercart a fcwttpt to help you cajoy strawberries: -Shop for furty ripened. briaht ttd bcrric . -Ust trawbtnic 11 won as pos 1b1t aftt>r you purchase them. -Only wash thent ju,t he fort you plan to use thc-m , ' .. POur on the Sauce for Mexican treats With one basic chees) sauce. tan -process cheese spread. p1cante sau°' talmng MeA1can Sl}le foods can be and mil~ in saucepan. sur over low made easter than e'er in )Our own heat until proress ch~ spread is kitchen. melted. Sauce ~reparation ts fast and .\dd meat m1,turt and ohvcs: mu simple with pasteunzcd process well. Place one tonlla in bakin.a dtsh; cheese. milk and pacante ~ucc. top with v. cup meat mixture. Repeat Simply combine all three tngredtents • layers. enchni wilh meat mutture. 1n ~ne sauc:epan, then heat and sttr Bake at 350 devecs. l O minutes. until. s&l;ICC ts smooth and h.ot. Makes 3 to 4 servings. With 1t )((>U can make a spic~ dtp for chips. a rich and creamy fil hn.a and FIE.WA ENCHILADAS topping for enchiladas or give a spicy ct1p ~la carrot lllcet Mexaean accent to omelettes. c.p ~ ~ IUca I tabla,... ma.rprf.M MEXICANA DIP \IJ poad putevtle4 pncas ~ pond pa1tttrbed procn1 dMete, cee. ~. C11bed t tabtnpeom pkute awce t tablupooD1 plcaate 11•ce t taltletf 1 HI mla ! &ablflpooDI milk Np flHly ~Ip~ ceoke4' Combi ne ingrtd1ents 1n saucc1>3n: cklcllta st1rover~ heat unttl prottSs cheese 41-lad tortillu s~ad 1s melted. Scn-e hot v.1th OU ton1lla or com chips Mal.c 1 cup Varletloa ... dd 4-oun~ can chopped pttn chilies. dratned. ST ACK UPS OLE l pouct JT"lld ~· ~ CQ ~ 11"11 p«pper ~ pond p&ltHrilH prweu rMat,NW t tab...,._. plcute 11•ce t tabletrE' mll · " cwp «H rtpe ollVf' 1littl 4 f ·lnc noer &ordllH Brown mc:u . drain \dd grttn ~~r. rook until tender C omb1nt ' Saute \ tables ·in rtwpri~. Combine prottU cbttse. picatno aucc and milk 1n saucepan: rur o~er low heat unt1I cheese is md1ed.. Add vesrtable mmu"' and chicken: 1'111lC well Olp tonillu 1n hot oil; drain. Platt "• cup chicken mixture iD cen~r o( each ton1ll1. roll up. Ptace Kam ide down 1n 10 • 6-inch bekina dish: 1 p v.ctth rtm11nina chicken mt'<ture Bake at H O dqrtt\. 12 to 15 minutes or until thorou1hl) heated Makes 4 ~·' '"'' • IL Cle Orange Coelt OIJLY PILOTIWedMlday, Apr!! .t, 19M • Cltocolate With French accent · By JAMIB SEELBY OfllleM!w ........ From behind a atass counter filled with French truffics. pralines, cre,ams. pates. caramels , mouscadines and other confections. a man in a clean white coat arcets cus- tomers. "Bonjour," he says to one woman as she peers w1tb antkipauon into the glass. _,, ' . } and amponer of rew cocoa product-. an Meulan, France. Asked why Ile chose thts unusual voca. lion, Ou1cbardt1mply said. "I love chocolate." "fine chocolate mak.ina is an art and a craft that allows me to make a truly individual statement," be 11id. "I am proud to carry on this respected French tradition.'' In the back on the shop, the French chocolauer Jean-Marie Guichard 1s husy squcez1na drops ol ganachc, a blend of choc- olate, scm1-~weet, cream and butter, from a pastry bag onto a shin)' metal baking sheet as he mumbles to himself in f-rC"nch But things aren't alv.ays v. hat the) seem This choc- ola te shop is not in Pans. ( hamon1x or anvwhcre cl..c 1n France This §hop. ( hagall. rccenth had m grand opening at South Coast Plaza an Costa Mesa. olate sculptures and a French-trained chocolate chef. "You could find the sarnc chocolate shop on the Champs-El>sees m Pans," said Guichard. Guichard smiled. The master chef has been making chocolates for IS years. "In Paris we have a school that teaches onJy how to make chocolates. I went to that school and my parents in France have a chocolate shop too • " he sugar," he said. Cb.apll chocolatiers not only make authentic F~ncb cbocolates1 but mate them daily. A:> 7,000 eorobina machine coats the Rllinas Guichard creates with coveture right in front of the customers. And, though hundreds of ma- chines like this are used throughout Euro~. this is the first of its kind in retail use in the V.S. ( hagall chocola11cn haH· re-created a t}ptcal Fn.•n<. h chocolate '>hop~ 1th hru\ht'd bras~. plush tarpc1 . mo<:ha -colorcd marble. bold mirrors. choc- As Guichard tned Lo explain an an EnsJish masked with a thick French accent how he makes the fint' French chocolates. has boss poked his head throufh the door and said. "Don t give away any of our secrets Jean-Mane ... said. I In France, however, chocolate is not always called chocolate, said Guichard. "We call it con- veture. bccau~ we use less ''The Prench chocolates are not as sweet aJ Ameri- can candy. But when they touch your mouth, they JUSt dissolve and become smooth," said the master chef. Guichard came to the United Stales two months ago from France where he was chief technician and master chocolatier for Cacoa Barry, a producer In addition to handmade chocolates. Chagall also of- f en sculptured chocolate in shapes that range from a fancy e&J to a house com- plete with windows and doors. About 25 vanet1es of molded chocolates are made daily at the shop. The chocolates cost S22 a pound. GROUND BEEF ECONOMICAL BUY (1round beef as a most 'ersallle and ClCJnomacal wa) to bu) and S(rvc beef. It is the basis of man} !>uccessfu~rec1pe!.: and n1i1merous cookbooks ha H been wnttcn on the vanety of v.a~s to prepare 1his all-time favorite ~II ground beef should contain only beef ~1th no added trimmings from other meat. Beef from vanous cuts arc mixed so that the final product as a combination of lean cuts and cuts ha' mg more fat Jn most ca§(S the beef is ground twice and analyzed for fat conrent. Many markets label beef with an added descnpt1ve name of the cut from which 11 has been ground. such as ground chuck or ground s1rlo1n When a quaht) statement ts declared. for t .. <ample, ··1ean" or"extra lean." the percentage of fat should appear on the label. Accord mg to regulations. packages labeled "regular ground beef' ma) not exceed 30 percent fat . that 1s. not contain less than 70 percent lean . "Lean ground beef' and "extra lean ground beef' have an increasingly higher lean-to-fat ratio. Fresh ground beef should be used wtthan one to rwo days of purcha~. Ground beef has a shoner storage life than larger cuts of beef because there is greater surface area. It is the surface area of beef that has the possibility of becomfng exposed Lo bactenaJ growth. Ground beef may be wrapped well and frozen as long as three or four months. Although the term "hamburger" often 1s used mterchangeably with' ·•ground beef:' 1t is inco1Tect. The U.S. Dcpanment of Agriculture ~ defines "hamburger" as ground beef to which seasonings and pieces of fat may be added while the beef is being ground. On the other hand. ground beef as pure beef with no fat added. Seasonings ma} be added to gro und beef provided they are identified on the label. "Hamburger" rarely is seen in today's market. Ground beef 1s called hamburger after 1t as cooked. To purchase ground beef for maktng hamburgers cnsider the method of cooking. A barbecued hamburger is delicious when it's cooked outdoors over hot coals. However. someofthejuacesdnpout ofthe patties and onto the coals. To keep patties Juicy and tender, use regular ground beef or ground chuck. When pan-frying or pan-broiling burgers, a leaner ground beef may be used as the patties will retain more of theu JUi~es. Ground chuck is an excellent choice for making meatballs. The fat content is JUSt nghl for holding the meatballs 1ogether. It also adds flavor to the sauce. r -- -·1 Stra wherri es in seas·on WHEN ONLY THE VERY BEST WILL DO. 1 but they're never out FOR YOUR SPECIAL EAsTER You ju!'.t can't beat the good.old-fashioned Oavor of HoneyBaked .. brand ham for your holiday dinner. Or for those of your friends and customers. as well. Our ~ift cer1if1cates are redeemable nation .... 1dc. What nicer way to say Happy Easte r' ITS ONE GREAT HAM • Smul.ed & Baked for :.0 Hour\ • Hone)' & Spi<:e (i lazed • Sp1ral·Sliced for ~ervang bt'>t' • Whok & Half Ham\• Nati11nv.1dc Sh1pp111g •Gift Ccrttficate' •Party Trn}' A~AllEIM T Ile \ 1llJ11e (enter i 11 ~ '> lln,.•khuf\I lal Ball Rd I • 17141 fl.,, !-"•1 CORONA DEL MAR-'7l~l I Cu."1 """ 17141 b7J IXXXl EL TORO -Bell To,.,er l'IJ/ll urlll !"fl(JI RJ\mo1nJ Wily 1121•1 El To rl> RJ 1 • 17 141111'7 \1112 lll!NTINGTON BlAC"ll l'l(lfilj Re-.i.:h Bh.I I JI G11rf1elJ nell to Ralph\I • 17141 ~ lh7C. ORANGE 14111 N I u,1111 H~I Ka1~ll.i 1 • • ~111 •llJ7 '1'~'41 Strawbcmc'> and spnng seem made for each other. The JUICY and sweet. ever-popular fruit. which as actuall) a member of the rose famil~. makes a superb desscn all year long. Good things do come an small packages when strawberry tarts are on the menu. Prepared crusts make prcpara"hon a snap and are boon to the bu)' hostess as the) serve casa l)', can be made in exactly the number needed. and arc easil) transponed for that brunch buffet or graduation pan) away from home Chocloate. ~trawbcmcs and cream are a delicious combination in the following recipe, which as both fun to create and dramatic an appearance. CHOCOLATE DIPPED STRAWBERRY TARTS 1 pint small fresb 1trawberrles l "'2 0W1ces semi.sweet cllocolate 1 "'2 oance1 mllk chocolate % teaspoons vegetable oll l package graham cracker tart crastt l cup wb1pped cream or proared whi pped topping Wash and hull strawberncs; pat dry with pa~r toweling. Re~rve. Combine chocolates and oil in top of double boiler; heat over s1mmenng water, s11rnng frequently, until chocolates melt Remove from heat (leave top double boiler 1nscn 1n place over hot water.) lnsen fork on long wooden ske~r into stem-end of each strawberry; dip ln chocolate. turning to coat : 1 of berry. Lift berry out of chocolate; drain excess chocolate back into double boiler. Place strawbernes. stem ends down. aluminum foil to harden. Spoon about I 1/i tablespoons whip cream into each tan crust; arranJe ch olate coated berries over cream tn cru Garnish with remaining whipped crea Makes 6 tans. . Cooking with computers t'-HONEYBAKED "I ... '""IU 1'1 U HU>' \l>tl \1"'k II l'INll I'' I'll\\ I kl"" l~I 'rl'c. ,,,, 11~ .. 1 II l ... II \kN' I \!-I"""" '""'"""'I\ "'UO() '0MTHJtlJ)(",f OM.\"'-f.f t•\IU \I I•••''''"''"-M.\" ft11 '>11R"'•l ICl\IR\llH ,...,R.\"l"ll\4\llllC.1•\\'l•1\I '"'' H\MMAN\ \A,fo'\\fll,lt \\''\\\II f#HO(\\.t I 1 ••1 '''' \.\ll" 1 ... "I \I 1 '1\1'' "I \II,._. \Ill"·' "'"'"' ''1>11111' ONE TASTE IS ALL IT TAKES! J About 2 50 exhibitors will display the latest 1n cookware to th e newest an com puter technolog) at the four-day convention of the Cahfom1a School Food- service Association begin· nmg April 14 at the Anaheim Convention Ce nter. The latest industr} trends will be covered in seminars and workshops for the 2,000 state food- sccvice employees attend- ing the event. Topics will include computer ad- vances. menu planning, merchandising, public rela- 11ons. handling com- mod111es and transpora11on tips Mamou Hotel , and an anstallat1on banquet high- lighted b) the "Las Vcaas.. - Review," presented b) Johny Talon and the Hol - wood Studio Orchesta. ,,~,. •"•• ) ' Save 15c when you buy Squeeze PARKAY margarine. 11£TAIU" ~··~ Ill( 1Rt11 fooo G•O•PI . .. mou•M! •O• 'O<l'W 1.trt .,... '"' J(OUOO" p "' •c •1•0""11 I O*fllCf P<ll> OfG '!(Iv •tOff"'fil I ,,.. """' •m \,l~I o• l"t 1"'-0 P'00.<1•\ l"O in• •00" •tQ .. t\t ~ .. •• "'10 '•'"'"' p•oo• o• P•" ""' o• "-"' ,.,, o•oo..(t •o °"'' l •..itmotv Co.DC'• '. ~ ...... , IUIG P•O'>O C•C o• ut• '""' Ot ... '~ ..,,., no< bf n•-v""o o· 111· ''t"•C o. ,.,, Cn" ., ,.. , ?Oc c \CO"'• ,. '' ""' ,., 1pp•~t Ii• For •t0tmp1 o• "'' 10 «llA'!~ , ,_FG , 0 101 1IOO CUii A4 39 TOll.~m>4 ~ ... ~ 21000 134 ... 722 ···~··~·:..:·--------~ ----·-------- !O ~"-4' '" •«• .,_...., c•..,.. ~""" ·-'lllol'1IO>< d"""""' '"" _1 .. ....,.,.,,..,10•M ll'o\~C soe1 -""G P'• • W1 AW t~i' Clo\IOJI¥ ..................... 0910'~,llp•f'lw ........... ...,.._.,,, • ~' liU(fl ftVllllll-~ C»•'lllA•lill h ... .,..,)Ill"\ Ol"W'flt Wlf'..t_w ,-.. t" M 1'00 ti: Cftrtil ·--... -·-·--" -·-·-· lllt llCO "'Cit"'°"*''~ c-• ._ .. , •-•• l_ ..... l'ICMMla• ... OI~.,_ 1t••O c.,,_ ~ti""' 11"1 \4lt> t" °'-" • ~"' U~A <'11!•_1_...,_ ........... _ .. ~c-.. -............. c-.. , ---.. , • • ...... 11 (ARtUllO'< COUl'Qllj lllo 1rt 1111:11"""'1 CA~ c-l'I • 111 _. ,.,.,..... ....... ~MOl>torot r...,,,..., 1 /0 oil II Ull .. -11. lt~I'"" ol lllo\ r-I\ ........... , ... ,., ... 004> r.-.. .. , , •• &fttelt• Ct'•IOlll" l -OH -... ,., H•Une COUf'Oll t .,.. ...... J I .... I I I \ • • • A.ho on the agenda will Ix a luau at llll' ncarb' A food processor cl featunng an Italian me w1 II be presented t Fa ~sero's lnternatlol'ijll Cookware. 2919 E. Co8t Highway. Corona del Mar. at 6 JO p.m Thursday Fee io, $25. For rcsenations. tall 6 73-214.l. , f r1·1 Orwn I lrn1 ... ('1,,.., .. , ... l.V1•1•k of Apr•I "I 1 l v,. ,.,.~ 'i111111•1 ')""'""" "•·•~11"""'l April Q NOW l NROl l INC1 l .11 1 .. , !<1·•11.,11.1111111 & ( )p1•11 . I ... I 1111111 l\,!1K11l ss-2· i4180 • . . . llalA break-. f.liRorlmmcb 6b•canbe •lmple or ••borate u tie occuion warrant1. Here are two cluelca that la •e been r:red down • two Hr· ....... • Breakfasts special for two A simple breakfast 1s tine fO( hecttc weekday mornings, but the weekend deserves something special. And these main dishes can easily be pared down for two. Economical eggs are Meof the most versatile choices because they can be prepared in many creative ways. Spinach Mushroom Quiche, for example, is a contem- porary variation of the classic. SPINACH MUSHROOM QUICHE 1 cap (4 oances) 11tredded 1laarp nat1lral Clleddar clleese 1 tablespoon floar 1 e11p mularoom slices YI cap flull aptnacla. wdl dralaect. cllopped ~ e11pmllk z ew. beaten 1.4 teaapoon ult Daalaof pepper 1 5-ouce can refrtcerated battermllk flaky bl1cait1 Toss cheese With flour. ~d mushrooms. spinach, milk, eggs and seasonings; mix well. Press biscuits over bottom and sides of two 6-inch quiche dishes to form shell. Pour half of cheese mixture into each shell. Bake at 3SO degrees, 25'1.0 30 mfoutes or until set. Let stand S minutes before serving. Makes 2 servings. Variation: Substitute 4-ounce can refrigerated quick crescent dinner rolls for buttermilk biscuits. dressing, grated parmesan cheeSe and chopped spinach. BRUNCH FLORENTINE •4 cwp aalacl dres11D1 ! tablespoom Ooar Daill of salt ud pepper ~cap mJJk t,; cap cooked, frula 1plaacll. well dralaed, cbopped 1.4 cap (1 CHlllCe) grated parmeu.a clleese 1 EnsJ.bla malfln, 1pUt, toasted ! eu•. poaclled Combine salad dressinJ. flour and seasonings; gradually add milk. Cook, stimng constantly over low heat until thi<:kened. Stir in spinach cmd cheese. For each serving, top muffin hal ves with eggs and spinach mixture. Sprinkle with additional parmesan cheese. Makes 2 servings. Use the remaining fresh spinach and mushrooms to create a wholesome spinach salad. Crisp Spinach Salad can be served as a brunch accompaniment or light main dish. Wash spinach carefully in several changes of cold water and dram well on paper toweling. CRISP SPINACH SALAD Z cups torn 1plnacb 'i'I cap qurtered muallroom1 3 crllply cooked bacon 1Uces, cnmbled If Eggs Benedict are a favorite. you're sure to enjoy 11aar• cooked eg, chppe4 Brunch Florentine. Lightly toasted En&lish muffin halves ltallaa or 1oldn Caesar dres1la1 topped with poached eggs are onl y the beginning. Combi1tc spinach. mushrooms. bacon, egg Toppping both is a rich and creamy mixture of salad enough dress.in& to moisture; toss lightly. Serves 2. and Circus Information (213) 925-6541 -.... AN OUT-OF-THE ORDINARY OFFER Slll.Afl>: 2 ADULTS AID 3 CHILDREN Foothill Blvd at Wentworth Mon. Apr. 2 Tues .. Apr 3 Wed . Apr 4 tlJNTINGTON PARK: Hunhn&ton City Park Thurs . Apr 5 FROM DR PEPPER ONLY SANTA MONCA: 8:00 I Santa Montea Beach South 8 00 Fri. Apr 13 4.30. 8.00 Sat .. Apr 14 12 00, 3 30:100 430. 8 00 Sun . Apr 15 1004 00 7 30 COSTA r.t'.SA: Oran&e County F a1rKrounds 8·00 Mon, Apr 16 8 00 4 30. 8 00 Tue. Apr 17 I 00. 430 8 00 I ~nr iepper. ' I Fri .. Apr 6 Sat . Apr 1 Sun. Apr 8 12 00, 310, 8 00 Wed . Apr 18 I 00. 410 800 100,4 00. 7 30 Thur . Apr 19 I 00. 4 30. 8 00 I I I Save 40¢ I I I I I I I I I I Mon .. Apr 9 4 30,T:OO VENTlJtA: LANCASTER: Ventura County f a1rKrOunds Antelope Valley fair&rounds Frt , Apr 20 Tues . AlJr 10 8 00 Sal .. Apr 21 Wed .. Apr 11 4 30, 8:00 Sun .. Apr 22 Thur . Apr 12 TIQ,8:00 SANT A BARBARA: Carl Warren Showtrounds Mon . Apr 23 Tue . Apr. 24 Wed , Apr 25 fOf Furllltr hllormatlOll Call (2131 IZS..U.1 OUTIBllDIRG VllR '11" "FAmLT TICKETS" VALID FOR UNDERLINED PERFORMANCES . ,, , 800 12 00. 3 30. 8.00 roo. 4 00. 730 00, 800 no. 8·00 4 lO:TOO ' ---------• C! .. s10-. : s llllll111 ! .. . . ' , "IC)(l(I & I ' •• • 1 os .. gso PROCTER a GAMBLE .._ ___ __. ----· --------------------------r-----------------_._-~_•_·--·-"-~-·-··~ I c: REAL VALUES on items from applesauce to zippers ll·la. p· are advertised every day in the •J r: I I I I I I u l (I , JI .. • ) ' • -1 I ! ' \ ' \ ' I f I I ' • I I 1 I I r I I I C4 Of8l9t CoMt DAILY PIL.OT/Wedneeday, AprN 4, 1984 C.ap1ure the flavor of the sunny Greek bin in this attractive and refrnhina main-dish salad. Aooompanjcd with crusty bread, Greck·style Salmon Salad is ideal as a luncheon entrec or as pan of a buff el supper. Colorful chunks of canned salmon, sliced tomato, cucumber, creamy-white fci.a chccsc and ripe olives arc arranged on inmvadu.aJ salad plates lined with crisppttns. ·The salads are sprinkled wtth sliced areeo onions and dnzzled with a tanay oil and vincaar dressing. subtly flavored wuh herbs. Alaska canned salmon is a delicious choice for a variety of salads that arc quickl¥ and easily prepared. This convenient ~food provides bi&)\ quality protein as well as valuable vitamins and minerals. When color is imponant. choose the deep red Sockeye 'anetyofsalmon. Lcssexpcr:sive Pink or Chum salmon is suggested for casseroles. soups or sandwiches. AJI vaneties of canned salmon are waste-free and contain valuable nutnents. GREEK.sTYLESALMONSALAD I can (7~ oance1) salmon, cbllled Lettuce I tomato, sUcecl .. 1 cucumber, 1Hcecl % ounces feta cbeese, cut into 1 x "' x ~ 14-incb pieces Ripe olives · 1 • cup sllcecl green onion Herb dressing Drain salmon. reserving liquid; break into large rhun~s. On ind1v1dual lettuce-lined salad plates. arrange salmon. tomato and cucumber slices. feta cheese and oh' es. pnnkle with gr~n onion Dnzzle salads with Herb Dressing Makes 4sen1ngs. Herb Dressing: Add oli ve 011 to reserved !>almon liquid to equal 111 cup; combine with •1. cup wine vinegar.''• teaspoon each salt. crushed oregano and basil and 11, tcaspoon pepper. Mix well Makes about v. cup dressing. ALASKA SALMON TEA SAN DWICHES I cu (73• oonces) salmon 1 • cup finely chopped celery 2 tablespoons mayolll.lalse 1 &UletpM9 llm• or•• JaJce \41 ................. mt.W •• llleet firm, -~·· IM'ucl SofteaN IMIU.r or ma,1artae Watercres1 leavet Drain salmon:. ~rve J teaspoon liq_uid. Combine salm~11. ~rved 1Jqu1~. celery, mayonnaise. lime juice and dill weed. Cut crusu from bread, spread with butter o - edges. Spread salmon mixture on half of bread slices· top ~th wa~ercrcss and remaining slices of bread. C ut ~ach into 8 tnanaJes. Makes 40 tea sandwiches. VarlattM: For open face salmon sandwiches trim c~sts from 5 slices.bread. Spread with butter, then Utmon mixture. Cut each mto 9 squares; garnish with watercress Makes 45 tea sandwiches. · Tip: ~lmon Tea Sandwiches can be made ahead, covered with damp tea towel and refrigeRtted. SALMON SAUTE WITH FRESH VEGE'J'ABLF.S 4 ( 4 lo I •uces eaclt) Alaska ulmo. 1tukl, daawed lf necessary. ~ Sall and Pepper Oil 14 cup cbop~ 1reen onion "' teaspooa ull 11. teaspoon tltyme, crashed 1 'i'a caps eacb diaponally sliced zaccbinl or asparagus and sliced fre11t mushrooms t;t cwp water 1 teaspoon crated lemon peel Lemon slices ~son. salmon with salt and pepper. Saute 1n 11. cup hot oil until browned on both s1des .. Allow IO minutes cooking time per inch of thickness measured al Its thickest part. In separate skillet. heat 2 tablespoons oil. Add green onion, salt and th yme; saute 30 seconds. Add zucchini. mushrooms. water and lemon peel; cover and simmer 2 min~tes or unt1~ vegetables are cnsp-tender. Remove to serving plate with slotted spoon. Garnish with lemon slices. Makes 4 servings. Gallo 25°/o OFF AlL BUENAViSTA.WINES* i Red Rose·, Hearty Burgundy. Chablis Blanc Rhine, Pink Chablis or Vin Rose· Los Herma nos I Jt!C~ 1 ·~I I ~:;:, l ..._ White~infandel lzmira Vodka 100 Proof $796 J&B Scotch Any Advertised Price (Current Local Prices Only) Buena Vista Wine Shop Price You Sa .. ! $4.09 4.99 14.45 - 8.89 8.45 8.8~ 2.90 5.55 1.81 1912 SUY·-lllM tso .. 1815 I Beringer CllaW. Carneros Creek mo l'IM1...., 1H .. 112" Chateau St. Michelle Concannon m• "'"'' s••~ '" .. 1751 Almaden no .. 2, .. Franciscan mo z.u.,.. 1so. 1411· Lambert Bridge 1m *"'' 1so .. 1711 Mark West 1179 CllltdltlM' m. 11011 Simi 1u2c1111W111111c '" .. 1525 Chateau St. Jean .!!:~:.=.., 1so. 1811 Angelo Papagni M1K11t o-..,. 1n. 14" Lyness Creek $1 gg Cabernet Sauvlgnon m"" Jacques Bonet$198 Extra Dry, Pink or Cotd Duck 750 1111 Beverage Bonanza CllHHI $399 ll••t 7~0 .. 1st• s311 Weibe I Wllllt lilt"*' 7M • s211 Louis Martini c.--., •••rit-'" .. s319 Inglenook C•lllnlet SluYipen '" • s5ta Mateus ii. .. "w1111. 1so. s211 Lyness Creek c...-.,, 1H • s211 Lle~,~=-~llch $28& S.,,.r WlM 8-y 1.5 t.-. Cross Canyon $ Zlntandel or 3 5 Zlnfandel Blanc 750 • For Bourbon & Scotch Country Cooler Mii .111., 2 ,~5 Ancient Age H l"fwl '-"" m .'4" Cragmont Sodas "" n c-1 s1 2• Evan WtHlams '°,.,... 0eu11i.r 1n 1511 Kaiserdom Ptls 1''"""''1 '"' 11 s211 Old Crow ao l"fwl ._... , u 1 ... sgaa Heineken llflll. ~ .... '""'..-, "n 11 s391 Old Hickory " l"fwl .__ , 7) 1 ... s919 Schwabenbrau llfl (krlllHYI .,,, hi s211 Cutty Sark .. ,.,... 12 yur ... 7'0 ..'911 Sapporo 1J111111 i u. s 4 71 Hedges & Butler 11 l"fwl Sette~ , t .. 5611 Vodka & Gin Brandy, Canadian & Rum Popvo Vodka E & J Brandy 12 Pack 6 Pack Mario's Ch1bls, Vin Rose·, $275 Burgundy, Rhine or Pink Ch1bls 4 liter Beringer The most popular Chenln Blanc in $299 C11ifomiJ at this Price you•• want to buy the c111. 111 • Gold Chablis Remy Martin V.S.O.P. 80 Proof Canadian .Hill 80 Proof $898 1.75 Liter Gilbey's Gin $898 1.75 Liter STORE HOURS: Monday · Friday: 10:00 am to 8:00 pm Saturday: 9:00 am to 8:00 pm Sunday: 10:00 am to 7:00 pm 1726 Superior Ave ., Costa Mesa · Phone: .645-1608 25876 Muirtand~, Mission Viejo -Phone: 855·1437 10932 Westminster. Garden Grove· Phone: 638-4145 263 South Euclid Avenue, Anaheim · Phone: 991·6892 .. ltt m' and prke\ 1i1vailablr at abo\le store(s) Thur da), April 5, 1984 lhrouab Wrdnt"Sda), April I 1, l~nc.a. __ .......... ,_~--------------------~-------- . Easter menus feature a wide- variety off are By TOM HOGE ,, ............... Easter, one oflbc most joyous of Christian fcstivali, has Iona been a time for family fcastina in many lands. In America, roast lamb or baked ham is usually the centerpiece of the spread, accompanied by a variety of vcaetablcs and usually climaxed with a rich cake or pudding. But even this hearty meal pales in comparison with the annual banquet served in some European countries, including humble homes where famihes scrimp for months to save up the price of the feast. In Italy, baby lamb bu Iona been the tradition, but today some families feature instead youna ioat. or kid, fla vored with rosemary. Another centerpiece is suck.lina pig that has been Stuffed with herbs and spit-roasted, plus a tart filfed with spinach, sour cheese and artichokes. In parts of rural France, fann families observe the day with Easter Pie, stuffed with veal, pork, mushrooms and hard-boiled cap. In England. the tradition" h•m is said to date back to the early days of Christianity when the faithful ate slabs of bacon Qn the holy day. In Poland. many families serve a huge buffet featuring baked ham. roast veal _and turkey. also jellied pigs' feet, pork sausage and pickled mushrooms. In Finland, the day 1s ushered in with Mam mi, a rye porridge served in a birch bark container. Homemade sweets are a feature in many European homes. In Russia, cooks make kulich. a tall, golden cake filled with fruits, and a rich cheesecake c,alled paskha. In Poland, the gargantuan buffet is'wound up with mazurki. tiny pastries topned with nuts, dried fruit, chocolate and marzipan. And in Italy, the sweets are little nut and raisin cakes called pabassinas. The milk-fed lamb featured in Italy is so young. it is difficult to buy in America. But this recipe from the "World Atlas of Food" is also good with the older lamb sold in this country. It is called Abbacch10. ABBACCHIO 3 'l'a • to 4 l;t-poand le1 of you1 lamb i rosemary spri11 Salt and pepper lo taste 14 cap batter I 1ar1e potatoes, peeled ud c11t into cbu.aks I tablespoons wine vlDe1ar Sprinkle lamb with rosemary leaves and season with I salt and pep~r. In a heavy, heat-proof casserole. brown lamb on all sides in butter and ring with potatoes. Bake for about 90 minutes at 450 degrees or until done. Tum meat and potatoes occasionally so they will brown evenly. Baste lamb with wine vinegar from time to time to prevent browning too quiclcJy. Transfer lamb to a heated platter and surround with potatoes. Good with a chilled rose wine. Serves 4 to 6. Here's one even Dad can prepare Mom's workrng late tonight or maybe away on a business tnp. Instead of takini the family out to dinner. Y<?U car:i prepare a heany appetite pleaser the whole family will enjoy. · With the increasing populanty of Potato Bars in man) restaurants. you can treat }Our family to easy Steak Stuffed Potatoes at home. Your secret to success in the kitchen will be the oven cooking bag. Combine thin slices oflean round steak with vegetable juice cocktail. celery. carrots. onion. herbs and seasonings. The savory mixture cooks in the bag fo the flavor and tenderness of Mom's pot roast and vegetables. The mixture bakes alongside aluminum foil-wrapped baking potatoes. Remember to stan baking the potatoes 30 minutes before you add the steak mixture to the oven. \ STEAK STUFFED POT A TOES I bakiJlg potatoes 3 tablespoons flour Vt tea1poon seuonecl ult 14 teaspoon pepper t caps coc:ktaJ.J vegetable Julee l l;t pouds beef lop ro.ad steak, 'l'a·lncb tlaJck I cop 1llcecl celery l c11p sliced canots 'r\ cop claopped oalon I bay leaf / 11\'a cups (I ounces) sbredded Cllledclar cbeese Wash and d ry potatoes; prick with fork. Wrap potatoes individually in foil . Bake 30 minutes ·in •25--dcgree oven. Reduce oven temperature to 350 degree and continue baking potatoc alona with steak toppinJ. for steak topping. shake flour, salt and pepper in lar1e slle cookina baj; place in a 13 it 9 x 2-inch bakina pan. Roll down toJ) ofbaa.. Add vqetable Juice: squeeie bq acntly to blend. Tnm and shcc steak into thin strips, •, •• inch wide Add steak stnps. vcaetablcs and bay leaf to baa; tum baa aently to mill. U nroll be& and close wnh nylon tie mlkc6 half-inch slits in top. Bake 45 to SOm1nutcsorunul steak and potatoes arc tender. To serve, remove foil and make a sht in top of each pot1to. Stir steak topp1na.. ~move bay leaf and spoon over potatoes. SpnnkJc with cheese Makes 6 ~rvmp. L .M.Boyd in~~rr,:; Daily Pil , .... -+ • Uet out your wine shopping 1 list, I've tracked down so m e barpins. Some will be easier to ftnd than others, but all are com- mercially avail- able. ln the case of one or two rhat are really scarce, I provide the winery's ad- dress so you can anquire about local availability. SUtlM C.vee Hl Red Tule Wlae ($3. 75 or less): I'm not sure just how winemaker Scott Harvey eccomplished it, but this is -a beautiful light claret style that is gnat for everyday drinking right this minute and with some complex- ities that aren't usually found in such inexpensive wines. If you buy cases, which you should. the wine shouJd hold well for at least five years. P edroncelli UIZ Gewantramtner ($5.25 or less): On a scale of one to 10, 10 being best. this is at least a nine. A major hit at the recent "Wines of the West" conference at Har- rah's Athtntic Cit y. it gar- nered wi neman Jim Include starches in diet When persons on a weight-loss diet hear the word "starches" they head in the opposite direc11on. But. according to the Cali- fornia Dietetic Association (CDA). nutritionall y they're going the wrong war,. · Too many dieters in- correctly associate starches -th e com pl ex carbohydrates in our diets -with high-caloric foods." says Sharon Long, R.D.. president of the CDA. ''Co mplex carbohydrates are com- monly found in foods rich in vital nutrients and if you cut those foods out of your ditt, 1t becomes that much tougher to get the nutrients you need for optimum hcaJth." Rather than cut those foods out. Long rec- ommends keepi ng a careful eye 'on the foods that ac- company them. "Bread doesn't need Jam or Jelly to taste good. nor.do noodles need fattening fat-laden sauces," she says. "Fresh strawberries or peaches on toast and grated parmesan cheese on noo- dles can eliminate excess Calorics while enhancing the taste of the starches." By using the four food groups -milk. meat. veg- etables and fru its and breads and cereals -as the basis for your diet, 1t is easier to recognize what these excess foods arc. ac- cording to Long. ''When cmplo}ang the four food groups. you can rest assured your body 1s getting all nutrients necess- ary to keep it healthy. ''Complex carbohydrates. 9y no means, fall into the excess calorie category," L<?ng says. "They are an lm- perati ve source of fuel and nutrients and belong to a balanced die t." Oood examples of nutrient-packed co mplex carbohydrates are lcgum~s -peas. dned bcans1 lentils -which are high an pro- tein and fiber and low 1n fat. Other sources are grains and grain products such as ri ce. pasta. whole-grain breads and oatmeal Comple'< carbohydrates are aenerall) found in the vegetables-fruits and breadS<crcals groups. Torte tops ' Easy to make because you can buy the cake. POUND CAKE TORTE IO ~-oance froaen all-butter pou.nd cake 'it cup confectioners' au1ar '4 cup cocoa 1 cap beavy cream I &abletpooDI coffee U4aear Shce pound cake. while stHI frozen . into 4 ten:athw1se layers of even thickness. l n a m~­dium-size deep bowl stir toacther suaar and cocoa. Add cream and beat until alrqost sufT; add hqueur and beat unul sufT. Sprud bottom layer of cake Wlth some of the crum mixture. stack with rema1n1n1 la yers and tptead each with crc•"' mhuurc; cove~ top ond side wtth rcm11nin1 crcam mllture. Chill Call 142-Hft. Put 1 few word• to work for ou. JEllY IEAI Pedroncelli a very rousing round of applause. The ~lance is just ofT dry with die sweetness just enough ~o briQS u_p the fru1~ There 1s some Oewurz sp1c1ness, but it is subtle and the wine dril\ks overall more like a Riesli Prqer 1111 N.W. Cem- llUl• ($ 10.50): SimJ?IY the belt Pon ~ from lhi• tiny Nape Valley producer. The wine 11 truly Pon-like in els sweetness level, bavina only • 4 ptfUnl residual suaar. far lower than most CAiifornia PonL "Noble Companion" is one of aeveral Port styles prOduccd by J>rqcr, and the one intended for im- mediate consumpuon. It is enjoyable now, but even so the wine sbouJd benefit from up to I 0 years for celJaring. Selu 1 &1aa l ~ ••••• ,...i.; r .... 1 ($7,SO): Zinfudcl i• sa.id lo have a berry Chane· 1er, and ifscenawy uuc« this wine. Aled Malty a year in smalf oak burels, tile wine is fuU bodied, has a bia. muscular .structure and should IJt very well. As bia as it is. n is five years old and thereby ap· proacbablc and dnnkable with sturdy foods. Another five years should tee it peak and then plateau tor another aood many yean. ALL IN ONE PLACE- How many fair awards booklets did you collect, Cohfornio Buttery Rich Bulk, Choose Your Own last ·yeat'I A half dotcn~. ranain,a in pnce from ftte to S3. ll lt Vtt'J easy 10 invest at kast S l 0 in thott vllu· able Wine ahoppina IUides. A small _publisher called .. Varietal Fair" combined the rcsult1 rrom aU the major wine Jud&ina into one handy liulc book. Not only are the m~or varietals cros,,.indexcd to show ju1t how many medals each wine won and where, but there is a separ- ate listina by winery that shows every medal each winery earned. The onll catch 11 that th~ book can t come out until the last fair ii over. Tbc book is available at manywinelhopsand wine- ry tastlna rooms for ~.95, or can bt ~ lbr~ the mails for S6.25 (m- cludes postq,c and hand- lin.s) from: California Wine Winners. P.O. Bo" 7244. San Frandsco, CA 94120. ATLANTIC CITY -Harrah's, based in Reno, has long promoted Ameri- can wioes, both throuah its Reno Wine Adventure, four-day seminar, an throu&b wine lists that emplwize the wines of EA. CaJifomia and other wm-em statn. Tht 1&ate of New J~ aJm<>1t brouaht Harrah'• Winn of the WM (mjvaJ 10 a suddtn ha.It Up .until four days befort tht March even; ihe suite ABC (Al· cohohc Bcverqe Control) was threatcruna to force the event to dote bdon it Opened. However, the event came off. bu.t there were some sll'IJlat restrictions laced on diosc ia an.end- ncc. Many California winemake11 were Prtient. but ABC fof'ba(k them or FUERTE AVOCADOS ............... EA .29 LARGE MUSHROOMS ....... LB. 1.59 Fresh Great for Dip' 1-0z Pkgs SNOW WHITE CAULIFLOWER L8. .69 FLAVOR TREE FRUIT ROLLS .... ~ FOR •1 _ (•·ecA1W1•1nun) [{\.\'('fl~l >l~.\LS 111 AMD~ ,0 .. HC.AllMAYD_ N••••.,.on1an '-.\ \ 11 '/ Ml1SUKAJI '-...\ \ 11 I/ 11 · ......... ~ 80LOellA l . Hue.HES I 29 ~ M£1A~·OR I 69 ... RICE / SU ~ lllG. Ott ~ ~VINEGAR;: t »oz 8 • ::,._ CHIHHI - ....... ca.am ClllllA -· I ~~~:~ CAKE 169 · '· · · -! CHl~~1°looo e am • /// ,,,--:::::, IOllll • ~// ,,,...::::_ Pillsbury 12·0z. Buttery or Buttermilk 8·0t. Seafood or \ ·~~· J PLATE Yee Fu Mein 3-0z Pkg. Miyoko Sh1itoke l·Ot. Pkg. CHICKEN & BEEF RAMEN S '°" *I DRIED MUSHROOM .......... 1.69 BIG COUNTRY BISCUITS .... Al BOB'S TARTAR SAUCE.. ......... 69 . ..._/ Mog•" Oovid Kosher 12 Oz Knockwurst or Hughe' Random Weight Cheese Miyoko Ako Umezuke 8-0z. lO·Ovn<e ~g. • BEEF FRANKS .................... 2.29 SHARP CHEDDAR ....... LB. 2.89 WITH EACH J 00 PURCHASE CHOICE Of 3 PAnERNS PICKLED RED PLUMS 1.as MORINAGA TOFU ................ ... ,, \ '/ ~ VAC ~ BARM SLICED BACON 1.39 -PA CK --J.LB PKG //I'-\.' REG OR THICK Hughes PORK SAUSAGE LINKS LB 1.79 RITZ CRACK IRS NABISCO IA9 16 OZ BOX MAIN LA ... 1i...- l2·0Z 2 75 CANS e MAINLA9& &iUllll HXWl- cHABllS 3 A 9 RHINE OR VIN ROSE BONELESS B.llF ROUND STEAK Fillet of ·~.//,7 ~ '. ~~._..., Frozen ALASKAN \ \ II I/ HALIBUT ~ c~~rrER ~ STEAKS 77 LB. 2 99 · ...... DOVa SOLi .. , ~ .. LB 2.89 ,. DEL MONTI a.oz. TOMATO SAUCE 2<1 .Qz Round Top or Sandwich OLYMPIC MEAL BREAD .89 :$ R LIMIT 12 CASCADI FOR DISHIS so.oz INCLUDES 30C OFF 3 lb Tin Reg or Butter Floll'Or 1.99 CR ISCO SHORTENING 2A2 IYI Of ROUND ROAST ~~W" ... 2.99 ITl Of llOUND STfAIC ...... l& J .29 Gold Siar Nugget 96". Leon ARMOUR BONELESS HAM LB 2.ff VIVA TOWELS JUMBO ROLL 69 ASSORTED • 10 lb Bog PURINA DOG CHOW 3.H Ill ............. ,. ( ...... Moe UICIALS )--....._...-;.... MANISCHIWITZ MATZOS H B 6.69 Rokeoch Gelfiltef1sh or 27·oz Tin WHITEFISH & PIKE . 10 Oz Assfd ROKEACH MACAROONS Slb AVIV ISRAELI MATZOS 2A Oz Jor' ROKEACH GELFILTEFISH 1 ••• .. IA9 1 .89 2.79 LADllS SANDAL MU 39! .. " 32 Ot lottt• LISTERINE MOUTHWASH 2.H -2 · ~·'IC ~7~·, .. ~ " .. ·~ -. --·-· llANQUIT DINNIRS 11 OZ ASST D 79 VARIETIES • P•pperidg• Form 10 Oz "5~td Vor.•l•U FRUIT SQUARES • 99 C11ru5 Hill 16 Oz Bo"'" Pod< 89 3-PK . ORANGE JUICE 3 . DINING LITI ...,.llS _.....,. \MG"l'll lt(fJ 0-ZUC(HN l Av.GN• I 39 ........ . (Hl(lUN (H()fw ~11'< • Lo wa Y-TOTAi. M• aal.I .. ..... , •• .._au...._ ••• _ .... ................................................. .-.............. ..__ I c...,... ,..,..._,..., _..ott\ ••t..e .... ...i.,. el ..... •--•t.Oiil '°°' ... ..,... , ""'""'C--••.,..... l c ............ ___ .,.-.,......,...,. ...... ~ ................ •a...,_._..,_,._, .. ,, ao ... '-t<O'l lle......, \ ~· ·-~ ·-· ... ....,...,1.,. ....... ' ...... _ ""'°"""' ............. _ ,,, ""' ·-... ·-I·. t ....... 119• ........... lly _ ...... -· 1 .. -· .... ·-",... ·--··--~ ,.,..,_, rOVOlirt ..,. will '"""' twte Of' *"" ot ~, .......... .o?..... • l..,. ~- I _, "'""'"" h(I, ...... t ~~t '° ''"' ",.,..,..~ .... ..., -" ,.,.._ IO QM..~ ..... 1,............ .... ~ .......... -....n8 ••••• cou..-.... •T aca••• NCO ffffCTI'tt 'J DAn I A.M fHUft., ANtl t , nt9U WlO A"" n , ..... .~~~~~~...;_ __ ...; __ ..._ __ .... __________ ..... ________ ...,r--"" ,.uJ • JI , fiJI .. I \ Making food disappear ----doesn 't require magic --- When David Copperfield was a boy has mother never dared tell bim to make his food disappear from his plate. She could never be sure 1fhe'deat it or vi.n14'h it1 "When I was very young. it was not unusual fo r me to eat and pract1cc magJc at the same time. I'd have a spoon i one hand and be turning the pages of a magic book with another. In between bites. I'd try out new tricks!" Today, the 27-year-old supennagician astounds people the world over with his spectacular illusions and in- crcdible sleight-of-hand. Last year he made enter- tainment history by van- ishing the Statue of l iberty before an awestruck live au- dience while m11lions watch- ed on television. David Copperfield will once aga in attempt the im- possible on his sixth magical .01vid Copperfield television special ''The Magic of Da' 1d Copperfidd VI .. The program. sponsore'd b) Kraft. "-111 air Fnda~. at M p.m on Channel 2 This ma$1C show of shows "-111 be unlike an} ot David's prev1ou) ~peetals. Vamshment~ will take a back seat 10 a spell banding grand escape. rem1 niscent of Houdani, astonishing feats oflc, 1 talion across the CJra nd Canyon and elsewhere. and mand-bogghng sleight-of-hand tricks. The special will also feature a heanwarmmg segment on Project Magic. Copperfield's non-profit progn:m that teaches music to thr disabled as an unusual form of therapy in hospitals across the country. Fame and fonune have not spoiled David's apprecia- tion for the simple pleasures in life. like sharing good food with fnends. However. the prem1ermagJC1an does reget that he has been unable to perfect the ult1matr tnck -making more time for both! "Most of m) meals are taken on therun these da} ~.I keep up my energy with healthful backstage snacks and cheese is one of my favontes. Ho\l,e\cr. when I get the chance. I like to relax over a good meal \lo 1th fnends and family at home.·· David's all time fa vorite dish ts onion soup. topped with thick. Oavorf ul Swiss and Parmesan cheese. melted to perfection. Plus. for a touch ofruhnal) w1zardl). Magic Wand Bread Sucks. sel"\ed a~a crisp) and zestful complement to the soup. Admitted to the Amencan soc1et} ofMagmansat l!. David was well on h1swa)' to becoming a famous enten.ainer b) the 11me he graduated from high school H1scollege career was cut shon when he was ofTered the lead in "Magic Man" in Chicago. He sang. danced. acted and created all the tricks for the show. which became the longest-runnang mustcal in the h1stol) of that cit} Soon after the show closed. at the age of W. he ho!.tcd a promotional TV special highlighting the ne"' fall hne-up. The special rec1cved high ratings and launched Da' 1d on his television and nightclub career. In 1981 . he was named "Entcnainerofthe Year." b} the .\mcncan Guild of Vanety Antsts. ... Enter recipes for cook series If )ou\c been cnJO)tng our< ook-oJ:chc-\\'cck series and would like CUJOin in. rhc /)a1/_\ Pi/or ~\an rs ro hear from you. Send us several of your ftnontc recipes so we can pick a couple to share with our readers. The senes also tncludes a photo and sh on profile of our spenal cook each week. Sc:nd JOur recipes ro rhe Food Editor. c/o rhc Dail> P1/or. P 0 Bo\ 1560. Costa Mesa. C1/it: 92616. and be sure ro include\ our namt'. addrcs' and phone numba Nostalgic sweet makes comeback By CECILY BROWNSTONE DEAR l f < IL\ \.\ hl·n I "'a' gm"-ing up m) mother and hcrfnend<1 madl' a land\ lallcd Datl'-Pecan Koll' 1·,l' never come atrn'>\ this S"'l'l'l '>inet• C an' ou 1rad.. do\lo n t hl· reupc''-H>l RF-RIC ~I> BILI DE>\R FRlf-"'D Bii L I did trad. Jo"'n J rcuix· tor Date-Pecan Rulh It "'asn'1 Ill an) 111 m} land} n1ok book\, but 1n an old advcni..cmen1 ill m\ c:alld) hk ~o here's your no'tlalg1c sweet -(' B 3 cups sugar i_.. cup milk OATE-PEC AN ROLL.\ 11, cup light corn syrup "8 teaspoon salt l cap coarsely chopped pitted datet J i,,. cups coarsely chopped pecans In a heavy )-Quart saucepan Stir together the sugar. milk. syrup and salt until blended (her medium heat. sumn~ constantly. cool>. unul m1'turc hoils Whctbcron staacor In the kitchen, David Copperfield tands out as a modemooday wiurd of many wonders. ONION SOUP GR.A TINEE ScupsOllMariallt z tAbletpooal marsarble Z l O~-ouce cut coadtased beef brolll Z Ya nps wa&er Dula of pepper • Freaei bread 1Uce1, &oaattd z caps (8 Otl.Dfft) ureddtd SwlH claeete 1 z &abletpooDI srated Parmesan claffte Saute oruon 10 marpnne in large saucepan. Add broth, water and pepper. Cover: si mmer IS minutes. Pour soup in six 8-ouncc ovenproofbowls; top \\'ith toast. Cover with Swiss and Parmesan cheese. Place bowls in IS x 10 x 1-inchJelly roll pan. Bake at 42Sdegrces for 10 minutes or until cheese is melted. Serve immediately. Six l<upscrvings. MAGIC WAND BREAD STICKS '4capndr Ya cap oLd faaJtJoatd or quick oats, ucooked "" cwp snted parmeuD cbeete l teatpooD baklD1 powder tfa cup IOft marsarloe 14 cupmllk Combine flour. oats.''• cup cheese and baking powder. Add 11, cup margarine and milk. m1xingJuSt until moistened. Shape into a ball. On li&htly floured surface. knead dough IS times. Roll out to f 2 x 5-inch rectangle. Brush with remaining margarine: sprinkle with remaining cheese. Cut dough into S x 12-inch strips. Twist stnps; place on an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake at 425 degrees. I 0 to 12 minutes or until lightly browned. Makes 2dozen. EA. LARGE ARTICHOKES 5-LB. BOX MANISCHEWITZ MATZOS 24-0Z. JAR MANISCHEWITZ GEFILTE FISH 10.oz. CAN MANISCHEWITZ MACAROONS ....... .,.., • I HIH' t" "" •I Uf\4 ( ttffl' • t •ttU.._t t 32-0Z. JAR MANISCHEWITZ . BORSCHT • NHot J \N • 11"'4 . '""'" ..10~ 12-0Z. BOX MANISCHEWITZ MATZO MEAL ... 145 . ••• .......... EA 12-0Z. BOX 149 MANISCHEWITZ CAKE & COOKIE MIXES . ... EA. THESE PASSOVER PRICES AND ITEMS AVAILABLE IN SELECTED ALPHA BUA STORES TRAOUQH WED .. AP9'1L 25. 1194 DEL MONTE DRINKS c LB. BONELESS ROUND STEAK • ur in dates St1rnagoften. cook until the tcmpc-ra11m· on a candy thermometer reache s :!40 dcgrce<J or until a small amount of the mixture dropped into very cold Y.atcr forms a soft ball that flattens on rem<" al from thr "-3tl·r npy,1QM •9-.• AH ''QMt ,.,,,.,,"".,d w. '*'•"'• '"• ••Q"t ta "m1t ou1n11t1•1 s,-1 .. r •• (~I" '"'"en itl1 T •••bl• 1temt S..t W ,,. & '•auor ~I Aw• 1h•• '" •11 ~•£¥'•• Prices Effective 1t all Southern Callfornla Alpha Beta Market• Remove from heat .i\dd pecans. With a wooden spoon. beat until m1'tun· lOmpktd' lose~ 1t'i gloss and almost hold~ us <Jhapc Tu rn nu1 01110 .1 clean. cold . damp towl'I. DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS Shape into a 12-b) 7-incn rectangle: u'ing thC' tn'-'el 10 form 11 Rpll up cand) lcna1hw1S<" in wll~ roll far,hinn ,-----••i"#'ilf"ir :!:-1~---. '•••••• · •=-:i;~---.\ Usanathetowel.<Jhapeintoacompa,1rollahout 14\inchl·~ I ................. \ I , .. j 11 •• .,11.," Iona and 11·1 inches in diameter. Cut into 2 roll' rC''ihal'\' I DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPON I I DOUBLE IAVINBI COUPON I Wrapeachrol11t&htly1nplu\l1lwrap.1hcntoil \tnn:inthl' I PiueM111ut1>11i>0n•onO*''~'"•Pfl'""'""''0"'111 ttn"o" co1111on I I "utntlb•ttOVOM•loill •lllaltl-"''""'"'"'"' •n•••" (~llt'I I ref nicra tor •~do•· 00\JB J fHf SA'i "<i~ ... ,~ '"" Oll't!lu• 1r• 1rrr ..,.. Of! ~f ''* ~·" wf!••.,.., ,_,,...,. 111to 11 .... Toscrvc cu11n '•-inch th1d.a11""1\C\li~e'i \fall'' I OffOHJltll1Clutt.U•llO~UMletuNllUH•11:r.11vu11 I I tfJU '" l0Mlftal\UOHJ1llt1Urt1 "W'°1aovua1• I two 7-inch roil~. I rJ~::&.t.1U:',~~~~m~.,fy:=ut',?'m '• • •• •• '" I I ·r~:lt:t~.l'rUi~~l~U~uc•u "r 11°" .. "''!' I u t L bo I ·1 p·1 l ,..,, ..r,,~:Ari.~~m'11:r.~,... 1 1 INllT .~,~~ii.:~tm\f lfm\• , 1 0 og 0 . II J I a lltllt , ... , OOUIU CIUHll PU CUtT .. U I \ 1 T II( N\lkl COUP0.11 PIHUI II I Candid commntaruoa I \ OVfit"(.OQC 1 , ••1) 1~ .,a •'1111 •• """ ......,. ' .. ... ' • • "' t.;rclU11wl11 m tM ~--•••••••••••.-••-._-----..--------•-•-' ... -------· I I I I I I THEY'LL C OW OVER 1TAS11E, CREA TIVI'.TY - . Solve t~e. Junior luncheon probl~m by enbandna a bas1cally dehc1ous dash with some creative prnilhes . H.ere we've added attractive fmJer foods 10 cbJcken ravtoh ~uerole. To create the illusion of a chicken, add carrot tad feathe~ and a banana b~ trimmed with a ara~•t. all edible and nutritious. . CHICKEN RA VlOLI Mu I lablet,... lHlt&er or llW'priH, mel&ed -.cap~..._ . ~ ca, c= celery l ~ CtlllS toM-~ I Jl;Mbae fro1n peas, tllawed ! cut (H CHlllUI) mlal dllckee raYloU l8 dl&t'• flavore4 aatce , l earrot, lllce.4 lea"'"be 5 &oeeblcb, blv~ Several snpes 1 buua, eat la laalf % rabia1 Suatc oniOJ? and celery in butter. Stir in chict.ei\ and peas; wa"l'.'· Lane the bottom of a greased l 'h-quart casserole with on~ can of ~he Jlljni chicken ravioli. Spread the ch!ck.en mntture over the raviolL Layer the second can of rav1oh on top; cover. Bake in a 375-degrcc oven for 25 to 30 '?"inutcs. Arranie carrot slices at one end of casserole for taal. Place toothpick halves in grapes. Arrange 3 or 4 grapes ~n banana ~s cr~~t; arrange 2 or 3 underneath. Place toothpick halves an ra1sans. Arrange in banana as eyes. Arrange garnished banana in front of casserole. Serves 2 or 3. EL MONTE GREEN BEANS c DEL MONTE CORN 4 ... LB. ~~~-FROZEN GRADE A FANCY YOUNG TURKEYS BEEF CHUCK CROSS RIB ROAST •• • 10-22 LBS. • NACARONI A CH.EDE: • NOOOt.ES ROMAHOf'F 12-0Z. PKG. • ~ . .._.., ................... ..,. .... ---··"-~ .... ,..... ... ,...,' ,...........,.. ......... ...,._. '• ........ .,.._..., ... ""'" ~~, ... ....,.c ....... ~...,.._,, ................... ... ... . ... , .............. , ,. ... . _, ..... ' ·-..... "', .. .......... ,... .... .,. ............. ,..,.., , .. ,..,.... ................ ,..,...,.,.~ .... ..... ::,~.::.;:..:..::-:·~~::.~:: :.i:~:~,~= ,::: ;.--.._.:.\::. :::::::-.ct~..:::-:::;:::; -:::==..7: ......... !\ .... ~-..__,,...,._,,.,.,~.... .. ..... " ............. ..... ~ .... """ ............ ~ °"'' ...... -"'-' ................... ...v.. ................... "" .... ... c.,•t~•·•~,...-.,,..,...,....,. .• , 111•1 ..... -.. .... .,,.. SIOUFFER'S ENTREES Co\K '911Cf '""~llllAll 10 ~I Ill TAil '9IK'l OTHf•iA\.'INGSllllAfl 10 ,.\l'l()lG ~'SAl"4A•TA,_l OlillA'll ~TI "'toll fO W ,_., llfDlCTIO'H'ICll~\.'\ Ot" ~&O Oil "'°""°flO"IAI "°' '' Thureday, Aprll 5 through Wednefday, Aprll 11, 198~ HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE WINNERS IN THE $4.000.000 ALPHA --- • • ' ...=:w.i::~=r..:.::=::=c Calilofaia; Suawbeniel ... c Md .. =iaMI .... wilb l'eceDl heal~ bri 111 diem IC) mMllli1y U. a huny. • • Oxnard, 51.Daa Maria and l!lakienfidd 11ta1 ue aupptyina a~ variely of california lfC"W1l ~in qua.may. Lettucei leaf Aeuuce. IPialcb. brOC:coti ud ' caw~ are ,,.mew& MMcb ao Lbc ~'of anYt'bmy Saven ev~· tbe crop continua in •ndfi'w:. This year's crop ii om of tbe bat ICleD in yt*n. Scia~ me ii numins ..... Dc>usle11 \bc .1~UWH V~. bu a beauUftaJ ~Ind it-tlltnmely sweet. This deHciom treat &bollld aop tbe list afrah fruit vaJoes thil ~ . AnocMr exeennt hit vaJue it lhe O'Mjou pear. Maay area maiJen will fatu~ ihi1 rweet. juicy -.. at 1 bmPin price. -- The lG~ m>p#°·'8Alerinet 9'1l of'. Ariioaa is drlwi"' to a dole. Taitidos from tbC Fresno ara are appean~ 11 a low ,Price. Larae 1.iz..e and a loOle. easily peeled lltin arc typical ofthi1 variety. Melon supply is inausina from Mexico and some California srowina areas. Cantaloupes. honeydew and crenshaw melons should be improv1na jn quality u the melon 1CUOn draws nt.ar. Prices are sliahtly lower this week and should cootanue tb drop with ina:easina supply. Mexican tomatoes are alsodroppina in~ce. Weather condjtions south of the border have been':hiahly favorable over the past weeks and the quality and sdection of tomatoes and cherry tomatoes have an:atly improved. . "Die suppl)' of pineapp~es is up. Quality is hiah and pnce 11 steady. In selectina pineapple, color and odor aeem to be the most reliable i.ndicaton of quali~ ripe pineapple in sood condition bas a clean a and charlcteristic color accompanied by a fra&rant unell. Chilean srapes are available at slightly hi&her pric:es, but the quality is still excellent. Bananas shoufd be a little more expensive because of a bi& rain that hit Ecuador recently. · VEGETAB[.g Lettuce qulity i1 excellent and production is up. Leaf varieties as well u icebera should be aood produce values. Fresh broccoli is I super value ana bas exc:dlcnt quality. When cboosina broccoli. lelect fiesb ~ lll1b with compact but clusten that have not opened ao show yellow flowen. Color should be dark peen to purplish p-een, depending on variety, and stalks should be firm. Wben preparing broocol~ wash and trim the stems. Do not remove the stem. 11nce the whole stalk is edible. Cali flower is another plentiful vegetable. The popular snowball variety will be appearina in another week or so, takinJ the place of early varieties now available. Spinach is down m price ._nd up in quality. Some advertised specials should be available on it this v.uk. Asparaaus is an excel.lent seasonal value. The supplY. is hea!Y and the flavor pu.t. It should ~lured in retail ads this week. Artichokes will be mma more moderately priced as well . Some retailers have reponed lower prices on mu.sbrooms. Look for aood q_uality. Jicama is a specialty it.cm that is plentiful and moderately priced. too. . POTATOP.8 AND ONIONS Retail prices on russet potatoes have dropped sli&btly wi~ an i~creasc in ~upply. By next month tbe new crop.of ~hfomia Iona white rose potatoes lhoWd beaiD appear- ing. Onions continue to bold hisber prica with \itUe hope for an cue in price until at lea.st early May . . DESSERTS ST AR ••• From Cl cover and refnaeratc. Lightly spoon about V, of the cake mixture into 3-quart &lass souffle dish or bowl; gently spread to malce a layer. Spread half of the remajrung Strawberry Sauce (about 11/• cups) over layer in dish. Repeat with half of the remaining cake mixture. Top with rcmainina Strawberry I Sauce. Spoon rcmainin1 cake mixture over sauce. Cover and rcfri~rate at least 8 boun. Just before servina, drizzJe reserved Strawberry Sauce over top. 12 to 16 servinp. j Strawberry Sa11a: Mix 2 packages (16 ounces each) frozen sliced strawberries, thawed. and I tablespoon / cornstarch in saucepan. Cook over medium beat, stirrinf frequently, until mixture thickens and boils. Boil and stir minute. RASPBERRY-FILLED LEMON CilE 1 packa1e (11.i onces) lnnoa cake mix 1 pacbae (3 ... ttt) crum dteese, tofteftd 1 jar (lf ouea) red rupbeny jam Lem•-C..eam Ckfte Frottla&. recipe f0Uow1 Heat oven to 350 dqrees.. Grease and flour 2 round pans, 9 x I 'h tnches. Prepare cake mix as dircctcd on package except -omit oil; mix in cream cheese with the water and eggs, Pour into pans. Bake as directed; cool 10 minutCj. Remove from pans; cool completely. Prepare Lemon.Cream Cheese Frosting. Spread I cake layer with 'I• cup jam, 1h cup frosting and another If• cup jam. Top with remaining layer: spread with remainina jam to within 'h inch of cd&c. Spread remaining frost in& on side of cake. Refrigerate at least l hour. Lemon-Cream Cbeese Fro1tiD1 i cap clllJled wllppeil cream 1 pacu1e (3 oaces) cream claffae, aoftned l c1p powdered Hlar I teaspoon srated lemon peel Beat wh1pptng cream m chilled bowl until sufT. Mu cream cheese. powdered sugar and lemon peel. Fold cream · cheese mixture tnto whipped cream. BLUEBERRY-FILLED GRANOLA BARS Blftbeny Fil.Uq, recipe follows 1 packqe cl9ewy VUOla bar mlx (Uy flavor ) l,i, C9p flaked COCMlt •;. cep packed browa Hlar •1• e11p pJ11 Z tableapooDI margarine or bitter, aoftoed ~ teaspoon bakiq soda Heat oven to 400 dc-grtts Prepare Blueberry Ftlhng Mtx granola bar mix (dry). coconut brown supr, margannc and bakmg soda 1n I~ bowl. Prns half of tM crumbly mixture m ungrcascd retangular pan. 13 x 9 ' 2 inches. Bake 5 minutes. spread with filling. Top with rcmamma crumbly maxturt.1pressmg hahlly. Bake until top IS colden brown. 20 to 25 minutes. Cool. CUI into bars. about 3 x I 'h mchcs. 24 ban . Bllleberry FUUq 1 pacb1e { 11 oaeH) fro1n UIWeetaed bllleberrin 'iAa c•p aa1ar 14 cep water z tablespoou conaua~ Max all tngred1en1s tn 2..quan saucepan. Cook over medium heat, sllrnnf constantly. until m iAtu.tt thickens and boils. Boil and star I minute Ra~·F'llle4 Gruela Ban: Subslltutc I pada&e ( 12 ounces) frozen unsYoUtened raspbcmcs for t6c bluebemcs. Tuna a favorite Addma lots of celery stretches it TUNA Al.AD '7~cui-a.fralM4 1 ~ ct1p1 •kel cel«ry 4 pSmld~ttaffM eltvn lacallMa.~ ~~ma,_..lM Lemon Jmke t• tam lAtttee • Flake tuna and ma.A with cclt"f"), 011\·cs., Kalhon, mayonnaitc. ltmon 1ua ~ oo ltttUOt 0.miah, if)~ hkc. with tlltl"I ohvn Makc<l 3 strvingi '\. I t w I " Orlf'ie Coilll DAILY PILOT/Wedntlday, Ap,te 4. 1~ STIR-ER¥ CHICKEN.FOR TASTE Tbe eumce afSCtame Chicken Stir-Fry ls The combtnation is perfection with a 1pnnkle With staulless steel knife, au lettuce Into that it is a liaht and healthy rMal Tbe ftavon ohoasted aname aceds. chunks to make I quan. Rtfn4frate in alrtiabt and inaredients are fmh and simple, the containertocrisp.Cutchickeointo1tripsabout prep1.t11ion is 1ttaiahtforw1rd and u.n-SDAME CBIC&EN STIJ\.PllY in inch wide and 1 inch lona. complicated. a ......_ IMa4 leeMfl ten.. In a tarae fryr:n or wok. heat v*-1able and One new 1wiJt is icebett lettuce-steamed • Ulf ~ ~ ..... .., i... _. u••w sesame oils unti a dr~f water stnJea. Add riaht in \he pan and served pipina hot. It carries i ....._,... •tftlMll.. h · k d It till tJ .... J the savory prlic and ainaer. and adds textutt i ... ..,.... Orleallll ...... Ml c ac en an coo un Y "'owned, at Irina and coloc to this Oriental dish. i ~ .iapullJ ~ -., constantly. c:-~-·1 ( ···•1 ~-...a fi t ted t •·-t.... ttW&e. Add celery and IJ'C'Cn penner. Continue ~me 01 &ctwu Y. P~ rom oas ...... ~r, ce •a .. ..-stirring untU v-etables are erfs;.:._...,_r. Add sesame seeds and avallable in some super-1 C9p ilq eel~..._. ·• ....-"""'"' markets and specialty stores) is rich in aroma I C\'IP laalvt41 derry , ... ..., onions and tomatoes, Combine soy sauce, and flavor and is combined with veaetab!e oil 'le f.91 M1 aa.ee sherry, cornstarch, prlic and ainaer. Stir into for this sizzlina entree. I tab...,._, mHl1m iry IMrry chicken mixture. First tho chicken is quickJr browned, then I taMnp1• cerutattl ~dd lettuce to'1op of veaetablet. Cover, sliced fresh veaetables are star-fried till ten· I tt.v• pttk. alate4 remove from heat and steam I minute. Sprinkle der-crisp. 1 sea.-....... treP stqer ,.... sesame seeds over aUi stir and serve at pnce A soy sauce and sherry-based sauce is I &Ulelpoeu ............ ..-. over bot fluffy rice. added, then chunks offirm, cnsp icebera lettuce B•• natt1 nee -,-•or use chipped pttterved ainaer: Makes• are~~medM~themixture forju~ami~n~u~~~~~C~o~re~·~"~n~~~·~~~t~b~o~~~d~n~i~n~~~t~t~~·~~~rv~i~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Save .60 per lb. per lb. p int ctn 60 Proof Save 6 9i8 1.21 J 75 ltl btl • Special Values NUffTIMTOMMAOM -·-...-·~·­IOIT••H , ••. "'" ..,... -o,...., '"· ( ' per lb. s~~"l 59 44 0%-• btl Save 59 64 01 b ox 2.99 II F :::>=- Save Auott~ Van•t1•• ~J~~ 89 loal • ·"'---Ralphs_lllll'I Bathroom Tissue .85 Spec1al Values per lb * Double oupon ,._,., '"" c®pon OIOft9 Wlll>-onr one -n\&lonw•" <"•nl> Oft COUP"" OJ.0 9'I' dcNl>le 1119 "'"'l>Q\ wtwn ~puichOM •he H m ...,. '" 11>C1UO. ·-"" .~°!'9.:: ~=~~fa.·~:;:~· <k>llat "'••nHOd ,,.. •Cit ...... Umit One nem hr Mcmufcxtwen Coupoa and Umit) Newspaper Dou.bl• CO\lPODI hr cu.tomet Coupoe mectt .... Apdl 5 lbN April 11. 1914 Double Coupon ,.,_nt "'" "°""°" olo119 '""' Oftf OM -nutoch.,•n ,....,. nit '"°"P<>'• n1>d 9M ~· the Ml"'f\9\ •Mn f Ch.! pure1\0M the tt•tn Nol ao ~nt"f\,IJ(f41 t9taU•• t-tM ,r.,~:;J ~c.!:.':i:"'~t,~·.:.~.,;.,.. dollo1"' ••<'Md the •Ol.,. Of •ua Umit On• nem r.r Mcmu1actw•11 Coupon and Umit l NewspQper Double CouPona '9r cu.tenner Coupon EffectiffApdl S lbN April 11. 1914 1.49 bunch .25 ·,,:> .. Light & Elegan Lasagna 01 Spaob•ttl·nOHn Save l 39 l~~·· • ... ' Diicie 9" Paper Plt;ttes . , flCMnAM YMl.IT ., ... ,, .... , ..... LMIMAM&U ... , Mell,..., ..... Savfl .40 1201 can .'79 •' ' \ ' ThU ........ With .OCb l.afUI• U 00 pun:bOH Salad 69 Plate oJJly • .. Me pie butter berry tasty By CECILY BROWNSTONE '11 11111•,._,_....., Once in a ,.. while an inventive cook concocts something different and asks me to sample iL That's what an acquaintanoe of mine. proud of her innovation, did when she brought me a Wling of her Strawberry Maple Butter. Fresh strawberries are comina into the market now and she was spu~ on to use the fresh fruit in a newWl1j. This conserve is delightful to spread on Eng- lish muffins, toast. or hot biscuits for brunch or snaclctimc. lt'ulso good to serve on a Lazy Susan of condiments that may hold cottaac cheese or a cheese spread, cucumber --pick.Jes, spiced beets and a conserve. Now the last-named can be this new Strawberry Maple Butter. A hint about fresh straw- berries. When you buy them. use them right away; if you plan to refrigerate them, dump them onto a platter or tray with a little room between each berry. Rinse the strawberries 1n cold water and then hull them just before using them. STRAWBERRY MAPLE BUTrER I pmt ttrawberrlft 3 ettpl peeled, cored, 11Jced tart applet ( IDC~ H Gruay Smlt~) 14 e11p maple ayrap ~ ettp firmly pecked Upt brown 11pr 14 to ~ teatpooD 1ro.ad cluamoa, U desired Hull and slice straw- berries. In a non-corrosive medium saucepan bring strawberries. apples and maple syrup to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer. stirring often, until very soft -about 1 S minutes. In an electric blender whirl half the mixture at a time until pureed; return puree to saucepan. Stir in brown sugar and. if used. the cinnamo n. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer. u ncovered . stirring often u ntil thickened -about 20 minutes. Immediately pour into hot 1/2-pint canning jars. leaving '/•·inch head space. Seal accoroina to jar manu- facturer's directions. Place jars on a rack in a large sauccpot of boilina water -water should cover jars by 1 or 2 inches . Cover saucepot. bnng water to a boil; boil I 0 minutes. Remove jars to a towel to cool. Store 1n a cool dry place. If you do not wish to process the Jars. pour mixture into hot jars; cover and refrigerate up to 4 weeks. Makes two 'h·pint Jars. Spicing up beef stew I ... I ' 'I. VONS HAS LOWERED PRICES. NOT ON AN ODD ASSORTMENT OF LEFTOVERS. BUT ON THE THINGS YOCJ USE MOST. PRICES HAVE BEEN REDUCED T.HROCJGHOCJT THE STORE ON THE ITEMS THAT APPEAR MOST OFTEN ON Y9(.IR $HOPPINQ LIST.REMS THAT CAN REALLY SAVE YO<J MONEY. ADD ro THAT VONS WEEKLY ADVERTISED SPECIALS AND YOU'VE aar A PRICING POLICY SURE 10 SAVE YOO MONEY. T·BONE STEAKS OR LOIN CUT CWB TABLE KING LB BEEF (PORTERHOUSE STEMS 2 59 LB I 249 FRESH ~--~4 ARl'ICHOKES g~~~~~, ~ f" e COORS BEER 6PACK 12 OONCf \""I" 219 -. BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN ~ TABLE KING LB BEEF STEAKS MIRACLE WHIP KR An 32 OONn J;\R .. : : 'J 2 ·1~ J39 UNITZ IJNITZ 3200NCE BOTILE ~3 DOUBLE ~oUPONS PWSCOVER 10 COVER SAVINGS IN VONS PULL COLOR INSERI'. LOOK FOR OUR 16 PAGE INSERI' IN THIS NEWS· PAPER. J49 WE DON'T JUST FILL THE BIL;L, WE LOWER IT tt31 Q ;t•> •1• c!J 111 N~~el Oranges 4 .. : .89 Fresh Mushrooms • • 89 Garden Fresh Broccoli .49 Delicious Apples 5 3·Pack Strawberries t· I ''" Fresh Asparagus Salad Tomatoes Sun Maid Apricots Ready Pac Chop s~y 6·1nch Boston Ferns J79 }69 .99 .59 J99 .49 399 DELI •• LIQUOR ·J39 I Vons Cooked Ham Eckrich Bttf Franks J69 1 o9 Olympla· 'Iker. "1 2~Pack Center Cut Chuck Roast l 4 9 J(,B Ra:.e Scotch '. Chuck Steaks Carl Buddig Sliced Meats .39 Shoulder Clod Roast 2°9 Early Times Bourbon . ' 119 ' J98 Claussen Kosher Pickles London Broll Steak Bacardi Rum • q I• Pillsbury Ready Pie Crusts 1 19 Boneless Rib Steaks 2 39 Smirnoff Vodka Borden Single' Slices l 5 9 Lean Grou,nd ~er . l 6 9 Boot0h'~ .. GI~ · '. Oscar Mayer Bologna 169 Fresh Game Hens 109 J.F ~-Chablis Blanc Frigo Ricotta Cheese 109 Armour Boneless Turkeys . 1 59 Almaden M·~·:1Cha0bli~· ' Vons Soft Cream Cheese .89 Fresh Italian Sausage 2 19 Kessler Blended Whiskey Pillsbury Hot Loaf .-89 Fresh La~b Chops 169 Sco~·s•bY. Scotch •• GROCERY 11 " GROCERY fl ···.99 349 899 999 499 999 899 .99 479 999 999 I' ll/ I ..... ,_.1(1 0 ( ,~,..,~ < kH"'I fl Dole Pineapple In Syrup •• ,. ..,. tl/ "'" .. ..,.,.,1. ( ff ""'_,.,.... Fruit Stand fruit Drinks , 1 .,, " I tf • • It '·'""' Hansen's Natural Sodas ..... ,)/ 't; litt l I 0 ,,._. """ IW,, Seneca Applesauce '1~;,~ ehoco1ate ou1k f ... 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THRU WED., APRIL S THRU APRIL 11. 1114 b&.L 41111• ,,. •-ml! t~ fJlf ~ ~ '°'1 "°' AU n'fM NC> ...a.a 11'1 1"11 AD ~CTIVI A~ ~ IHO w PICX> ._.,,., Uf I W MTM IT. Lt»~ t lflaflil),...,, r~vt "'""'Ott00.'111.8"G LM~NID TUl.IUlt ~ ... u:a .. llSTM ~°'' "'°9f l'10llDOl'IJll eAlll JO IO""' f W9o\ wt lfarlM '"' RICIHT ltHl-.TClllltrflllefMlG 10 Cl&AUJlll '~-IMm ~II.Lit\' m,,_ ~ Cl'>ll\' #I l'OOwmt A NOl'MAtll"l'I • ....,,., .... , .. llAOM _......,. """'' ... Ootf•MllA tll I fntl .. ,... eftll Or-.. Awe ----_.._ __ s>taln Angel Food Cake 119 .99 t Chocolate Chip Cookies v;, .. o~:i ·~ Buns .85 """'" ~· ·~·1 " .... .._.., 179 ~Variety Dome c.a~s t' H"l.I ''' 109 Sunklst Orange Juice '"" l • t1()t ,,., .... l ...... "'' "'' " J 89 Sara Lee Croissants • , 11 ,. ,~ Majo1 Food Supplier to tlM 1984 Olympic Games ._.. ...... '°"'"Ml w 11&.LiY .... ....... ._.... CANft.MIO •AC* .. , .,...., ,.,. Dr •• Ylltllrte POWT•WMU• o•• a 1· at...,, .... , 'i:"tt-..!.' .... • Dodgers slow out of gate For openers, Cardinals win slugf est, 11-7 · ----- LOS ANGEL~S (AP) -Whitey Herzog was pleased that his St. Louis · Cardinals roared out of a "quiet'' spring with a hilling onslausht apinst the Los Anaeles Dodgers. but he also found some things to dislike. "You gotta play better than that." he said after the Cardinals opened the 1984 season with an 11 -7 victory over 'the Dodgers on Tuesday. "You gotta pitch belier than thaL ". • The St. Louis pitching looked good only in relation to that of the Dodgers. as the Cardinals ripped five Los Angeles pitchen for 17 hits. Bright spotS'for St. Louis, however, were the performances of relievers Danny Cox, who pitched four scoreless innings to notch the win, and Bruce Sutter who blanked the Dodgers lhe rest of the way after taking over in tne seventh to earn a save. DaJTell Porter had a homer, triple and-single and drove in two runs, and Willie McGee also had three hits. including a homer. and three RBI to pace the Cards. The St. Louis assault. which in- cluded Los Angeles starter Fernando Valenzuela among its victims, came after the Cards had a weak-hilling spring~sthey won only eight of their 24 exhibition games. "I've never put too much stock in what we do in the spring," said Herzog. "But we did have some trouble getting hits down in Florida. "We hit the ball in this game. though," he said. "This was not like the Dodgers; their pitching normally d~n't let you get many runs." Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda was just as amazed. "No one could have figured that we'dg1veup 11 runs in the game, with our pitchinJ staff." he said. "But that's one of the m ystenes of baseball. Fernando was pitchinf fine in spots. but they were just hilting the ball ~;:.,zuela. who absorbed the loss. was tqged for six runs on eight hits and two walks in the three-plus innings he worked. Porter said he telt he and his teammates were very excited going into the pme before a packed house of50,103 at Dodger Stadium, and he admitted he had butterflies. "I was as nervous as could be, but I went in and sat in the whirlpool before the pme and came out feelin§ great, just enthused and ready to go,' he said. "I think maybe everybody was fired up and that was the reason WC hit SO well." Mike Manhall had three hits for the Dodgers including a two-run double, and Terry Whitfield. return- ing to the major leagues after playing three years in Japan. hit a three-run homer. The Dodaers took a 3-0 first-inning lead off St. Louis starter Dave LaPointe, but the Cards picked up sin'1e runs in the second and third innings, then exploded for five in the fourth to move ahead to stay. They tacked on two more runs in the scventh1 then, after Whitfield's homer 10 the bottom of the frame narrowed the difference to 9-7, McGee lashed his homer in the eighth. Fountain Valley'• Gary Schoonover await. throw at mecond to retire oncomtnc ....,,.. ........ _, "9wN "-' buel1UlDer Gret v1uecu d1llinl Samet t.eacae contest Tiaeaday. Baron• won, 3-1. Chargers take over lead ~dison batters Oiler s. 12-5; FV knock s Lions out of first Edison High reigns as the Sunset League baseball leader after outsluging Huntington Beach Tuesday •ftcmoon. And, in another Sunset encounter. fountain Valley knocked Westminster out ofa share of the lead with a win at home against the Lions. And. in Academy League pla)". Newport Christian continued its unbeaten roll with an easy victory over Capistrano Valley Christian. Here's how it went: Edison ll, 8 utinpta Beaclt 5 The Chargers raked five Oiler pitchers for 10 hits, and prevailed despite three Huntington Beach homers. Edison started quickly, scorinll three times in the first inning. Todd Nash had the key hit, tripling in a pair of runs. Chip Damato went 3 for S for Edison and also drove in two. The Chargers were helped by six walks, with five of those players eventually scoring. For Huntington Beach, Pat Gordon. Ed Lidyoff and Bob Rehling all drove homers to account for the Oilers' five runs. Gordon's homer, his fifth of the season. set a school record. Foutala Valley 3, Westmla1ter 1 The Barons opened the second round of play on a winning note, and in the process re-emerged in the title chase at 3-3. two aames behind Edison. Bob Sharpnack twirled a two-hitter. strikina out six and walking three. The.only rutt be allowed wu in \be top of the first when senior Ed Pimental doubled and eventually scored on an error. Tht Barons took the lead for keeps in 1he fourth with a pair of runs. LeadofT hitter Kelly Bowman doubled and sprinted home on Gary Schoonover's 1wo-base hit. Schoonover then was brought home on a singJe by Ray Llamas. Fountain Valley added an insurance tally in the sixth as Don Snowden singled and the Barons loaded the bases on a pair of walks. David Leonard then drove in the final run with a base hit. Fountain Valley meets Edison Friday night at Mile Square Park in another crucial. Newport Cllrt1ttu 1%, Capo Valley Cllr. I The Conquerors, who have won each of their four Academy League games by larae marains. erupted for six first-inning runs against Capo Valley Christian and breezed. bueranner Donny Snowden d1llinl play at .econd bue Taeeclay afternoon. Mike Scbooler·s masterful one-hiner helped the Golden West Collcic baseball team pull into a ti.e with Orange Coast for second place in the South Coast Conference as the Rustlcn blanked Fullerton. The Pirates. meanwhile. were stymied against sec leader Sant.a Ana. as the Dons erupted early to put the game away. AndSaddlebackkcptit1Jripon the lead in the Pacific Coast Conference by downina Grossmont. Here's how it happtned: <I.we. West '7, Fallerleii I Schooler was in command throughout., retirina the first 17 batten before yield in& a bunt sintle to Bobby GouJd, then settin& down the final 10 Hornets in order to earn his third win apinst one loss. Golden West Coach Fred Hoover lavished praise on Schooler, callina the outins. "one of the best pitchina performances I can remember •t Golden WcsL" Schooler allowed only the one ba.F.nner -Gould's bit -and struck out seven. The Rustler bau also produced in support of Schooler. In the first, Les Liaht sin&lcd and came home two outs later on Shane Flores' double over the riaht fielder's Mad. Golden West added a run in the second as Rod Oark tripled and~ home on a fielder's choice. The Rustlcn added four more in the sixth to put it away. Kevin Elster sin~ and circled the bases on a three-error for one run. Brad Sechawer followed with a bad-hop triple over the ri&bl fielder's head. and after a walk to Clark and a hit batsmen filled the bases. Gary Buckles doubled m a i-ir of nans. A do\lble steal accounted for the final run of 1he inni~ A triple by Bucldes scored Clark with the seventh run in the eiahtb innina. Golden West improved to IQ..4 in the confcrcnce and 14-S overall. Fullerton. expected to contend i.o the South Coast Conference this eeasoo. fell to 7-7 and 10-7 overall Suta .U. t, Orap c-t I A chaoce for 1be Piraics to make their move oa tbe COllfermc:e-ladiaa-·~ .. - Dont was quickly dispelled a Se.au Ana erupted for au DI.DC runt ia tbe fant four inninp. The Dons chased OCC sta.rttt Jdf Goettsch in the 1CCOnd inllina by scorina two in the first and two in tbe second. Reliever Eric Reinholtz was also treated rudely as Santa Ana added three more in the third and two iii the tourth tie ore lefl-han Mi Stomp could restore order, tbuttina out the Dons the rest of the way. "We certainly came out Oat today, .. said Pirates' Coach Mike Mayne. Sa~l,Gr ... meatf The Gadchos maintained their I 'h-t!me edae over Palomar in the Pacific Coast Conference by boldina off tbe Griffins at Saddlebact. Ri&bt.-hander Mike Lomdli eamc.d the win. Wein& an 8-1 lad into the ninth innina bef<>ft tirina and eivina way to Dave Shaw in the 6ul fn.me.l Four different Sadd'dMck llayeri had two bits apiece -5'eve Mckee! Dave Rohde. Mark Gnice lmd Al Comacbo. _Express making too many stops LA team bucking a lot of obstacles. despite efforts A sleuth the other day checked with Forbes Magazine. which keeps track of folks of substance. and was told Bill Oldenburg is not on the roster. This is surpnsinf tnasmuch as Oldenburgisdcscnbed in the media guide of the Los An,eles Express as a "self-made billionaire ... Oldenburg makes the media book in the first pla~ because he owns the team. On the other hand. Oldenburg may have been the subJcct of a media guide writer who was swept up in the excitement of publication. O ne such author credited RamsownerGcorgia Frontiere as playing to a seven handicap from the men's tee. Oldenburg is spcndin& in a manner to suggest a billion will not be enough. He has given general manaaer Don KJosterman an unlimited player bud~t and. in the fa mous words of another place and time. Klosterman hasatrcadyexcccded 1t. Most prominent expenditure was Steve Young. a descendant of Brigham Young. who came from BYlJ to become known far and wide __.as the "S40 m1lhon quarterback~ course. this 1san inflated figure m terms of what the Express actually has to put out but the quarterback 1s not workina for sweatshop wages. The fact the Express 1s putting out this kind of monc) m1aht be d1stur~ ing to Oldenbura becauK nothing 1s coming in. The Express simply can- not interest Southern Cahfom1a in springandsummerfootbaJland the pastime is sellina very much hke winter baseball in Minnesota. The last timeout, the Exprcss put fewer than 20.000in the LosAnacl~ BuD Tucm SPORTS COLUMN IST Coliseum, which creates vast empty spaces. There was considerable talk about the many enterprises the Ex- pms was bucking that panicular Sunday in the form ofbascball. auto racing. horse racing and basketball live and on TV. Ho~ver. this 1s not coincident.al in the Southland. This is a way oflife. It should be pointed out that the Express has done everythina quite right. The general pubtic bu been met and dealt with in an honest and courteous manner. The professional gimmicks have been ofcxccllentquality. An attempt has been made to put the same sort of team on the field. Name cntcrta.incn have put on concerts following games -Wayne Newton. theGathn Brothe~. Chuck Berry and others. The last lime out. the El.press sold the seats on a 2·for-1 bas1sandpve awa) airline tickets to New Zeal.and and frtt au1omobtles. On top of that., the)' ~scnted the debut ofY ou.na. the S40m1lhon dollar q,uartuback. who bad spent the previous wveral gamesobscrvinathe ExprcssotTentc. Sllll. as mentioned above. more than 70.000came d151Utscd as em pc) ~ats al the enonnous Cohscum. Theaoatofthc United States Football Leaaue is to force a meraer with the National Football Leaauc which was the way it went with tht old o\mcrican Football Leaaue. Under this sort of arrangement. the strona and desirable survive and tM weak arr abandoned and left to die. . I Estancia sweeps Sailors in volleyball With this 1n mind. it is difficult to (PleueeeeSZPitssa/f») .. said. "We made aood passes and served very well. We were also able to run out offense very effectively." E1t.anc1a·s standouts included senior middle blocker Sherman Dickman and senior outside bitter Steve Conti. In another Sea View ~uc matchup, Irvine brcc7cd 10 a I S.S. t 5-S, I S-4 lnumpb over Wlnleu Cost.a Mesa. The Vlctory, which movtd the Vaqueros into a tic for tce0nd at 7-2 wtth Ne 1>0tt. wa acb1cved in hule over an hour al Costa M . nior outside hitter Orq Dunlap and snior mtddlc blocker Kcnh Purtcl ~ 1n1trumcnial 10 th( •w -p for lrvi~c, which plays hoiit to ' Corona del Mar Fnday In South Coast Lcaaue actton. Laauna Buch rtboundcd from its lo s last Fnday to Capistrano Valle) wtth a convmc1na 15-8. 15-S. 15-11 vcrd1ci over Woodbndac The Art1S1S improved to 8~ I 1n lcaauc play. while the Wamors. pla)'lnl wtthout Marco Baldi who wa\ out of town, dropptd to 3-5. P1ay1na ,,..en in th~ vtciory for l..quna wtrt Scott Fonunc (14 lulls} and Kurt Blanton ( 12 \till ) .. We rt.all)' didn't ltt them att Into any of the aame .. ~1d Artist Coech 8ill Ashen, who had lo mtructu~ h1• hntup wtth thrt't i tancn on the \ldchntt. Mwuna the mlltlh wc-r1' ~l\<'n • Chris Wh1t1na and C&5t'y O'Callahan and naht· idc blocker Larry Holland. The An1m t.an&}c With Llauna Hllls.Fnday. then paruapale in the presttisou, lnaJewood Tournament Saturday ntaht The Sunset Leaauc swrnp t.ck into action this even1na with thl'ft 7 o'clock matchups Leuue-leader Fountain Valley (6--0) lw drawn the bye. but tre· ond·place Edison and Manna (ach 5-t) Wiit be tryina to kttp pace. The Charaera ho t La Quinta (J-l), while the V1k1np wtll be on the reed at Westmin\ttr (~S). In the other Sun 1 match . Ottan View (~6} Sttks Ill lint win at Hununatofl Beach (2-S> I City welcomes Cougars back HOU TON AP -Un1veT- lit)' of Hou D ctbell Coecb Ouy ~ .. t.o&d about 2.000 fa.ns Tut'Sday ~t ht wu not ashamed of his club's lou an l~ NCAA basketball champioMlup ~ fi .... _ -• .. IJllC'l"I tnt in uu;-nstK>n t definitely our , but MID& teCODd im•t all t t bed .. ~Wll \Old a aowd or about 2.00o which bled at Hofheitu Pavthon to meet tbc rctumina C'aupn From AP ..,patcMI .. Ill NEW YORK - A basebalJ arbitrator has ruled that suspended players Willie Wilson and Jerry Manin should be reinstated on May 15. the commissioner's office announced Tuesdiy. The ruling came after Wilson. of the Kansas City Royals, and Manin, a former Royal who has signed with the New York Mets, filed a gnevance of one-year drug suspensions levied by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn last Dec. I 5. At that time, Kuhn said he would re view the players' cases on May 15 with possible reinstatement coming no sooner than that date. Kuhn made no guarantees the players could resume playing at that ume. Impartial arbitrator Richard I. Bloch made his decision after three days of closed-door hearings last month in Tampa. Fla. "While my decision oflast year made pro" 1sion for review of the suspensions on May 15.1 very much regret that Mr. Bloch did not find it appropnate to leave tt up to me to decide the nature of m)' Ma} 15 review and th<' date of their reinstatement." Kuhn said in a statement. The comm1ss1oner's office said the arbitrator had made no dec1s1on b'n the gnevance of another former Royal. Willie Aikens. who also wa!. suspended fora )ear subject to the same re" 1sion . Aikens was traded to Toronto. Bloch. who handles grievances as pan of baseball's collecuve bargaining agreement "'1th the union. said the reinstatement would stand .. unless he (Kuhn) finds that aspects of their ind1 v1dual bcha' 1oor in the 1ntenm require the continuance of the suspension." Quote of the day .toe ~. the NBC eportacut• *1d humorist, on the recent hubbub ca.a.ct bV Tom Seawr being dalmed from the Mets from tM ~ Whtte Sox: "tt•• the most pubMcfty '1'lfW nothing ainoe P~a Zadora." Olympic cage tryouts lure 74 NEW YORK -A, group of 74 • basketball pla~ ers. ranging from • •• All-Amenca center 7-foot Patnck Ewing of national champion Georgetown to two teenagers still in high school. were in vited Tuesday to try out for the U.S. Olympic basketball team. Ewin.$ wa s JOined by such as Michael Jordan and Sam Perkins of North Carolina. Wayman Tisdale of Oklahoma. Chns Mullin of St. John·s. Leon Wood ot Cal State Fullenon and Kei th Lee of Memphis State \ Also included were Delra)' Brooks of M1ch1gan C11y. Ind .. who will be a freshman at Indiana for Olympic Coach Bobb} Knight next year: Dann) Mannan~ of Lawrence. Kan .. expected to enroll at the University of Kansas. and Walter Berry. a New Yorker who Led San Jacinto Junior College to the national title this year Ben: 1s expected to pla} for St. John's nc\l season The 01~ mp1 c tnals will be ht'ld .\pnl 17-2:! at Bloomington. Ind. Knight has said he e\pectSi to pick 16 players for his ongmal team. to be cut to 12 for the Olympics after a senes of exh1b111on games against professional and amateur oppos1t1on. Culton Chicago overpowers Gl Jody Davia drove in two runs with a Ill double and KelUa Morelucl and Roa Cey each hit solo homen to lead the Chicago Cubs to a 5-3 victory Tuesday over the San Francisco Giants. New Cubs Man•acr Jim Frey got 12 hits from his revamped lineup, including two doublcs and a singJe by Larry Bowa ... In other Nat1onal League openers. Steve Carlton allowed two bits over seven innings for his 30 I st career victory and Mike Sckmldt belted a home run as Philadelphia blanked the Braves, 5'°. in Atlanta. Carlton walked one and fanned six. lifting his all-time leading strikeout total to 3,715 ... Eric &bow and Rieb Go11a1e teamed on a three-hitter and Kevin McReynold1 and Carmelo Martinez home- red as San Diego downed Pittsburg.ti, 5-1 at San Diego 'Stadium . . Andre Dunon'1 RBl triple snapped an eighth-inning ue and pinch hitter MlgaefDUone added a two-run single. lifting Pete Rose and the Montreal Expos over the Housto n Astros. 4-2 m the Astrodome. Rose. "'ho was released by Philadelphia after last season and signed with the Expos. went 2-for-5 in his Montreal debut. Tipton added to Titan staff S1x-)ear National Football League [!] veteran Dave Tipton has been appointed 4 • defensive hne coach at Cal State Fullenon II b~ head football coach Gene Murphy. Tipton. 34, has been the defensive coordinator the past three seasons at Sweetwater High in the San Diego area and served in a similar role for the three pre"1ous )ears at Bonita Vista High. Tipton graduated from Stanford m 1971 with a degrtt m pohtrcal science. He was a member of the team that defeated Ohio State, 27-17, in the 1971 Rose Bowl and was an all -Pcific-10 and All-West Coast selection and a second-team coaches' All-American. The New York Giants drafted him in the founh round of the 1971 draft and he played three years with the Giants before mo9ing to San Diego for two seasons. Tipton pla)'ed one year with Seattle before rctinng prematurely due to a neck injury. T ipton replaces Richard Smith. who left Fullerton after three years to become defensive end coach at California. Sims KOs foe in second RESEDA -Walter Sim!. of North m Holl)"wood stopped Jen rob Muane-Sunntr of Thailand at 2:2 1 of the second round Tuesday night in their lightweight bout sched uled for I 0 rounds at Chuc!.. Landa!.· Count!) Club. Sims. "ho 1,1,-e1ghed 136 poundo;. raised h1<. rerord to 11-1-1 '141\h S<.'vcn l..nockou1s Muane-Sunntr "ho scaled 1361 ~pounds. fell to 11-3-1 There "'ere l'-'O knockdo1,1,ns in the bout. both b" Si ms. Muanc-Sunntr "'ent down m1d1A a)" through the lirst round after a left-nght combinauon and referee John Thomas ga' e him the mandatory eight count. Second time may be easier Georgetown expected tc_:> ~e loaded again next season SEA TILE (A P) -Chasing the national cham- p1onsh1p will no longer be an obsession. says Georgeto" n Coach John Thompson. And that might make w1nn1ng ll again easier. Wnh onl~ tlAO players graduaung and .\11-Amenca ce nter Patrick Ewing expected to remain through his senior )ear. the Ho)as will be loaded again next season. Georgeto"'n pla)ers were some"'hat subdued after Monday night's 84-75 tnumph 0' er Houston for the NC AA basketball champ1onsh1p "'It feels prett~ good." said sophomore foNard Da' 1d Wingate. "but we we~rett) confident rnmmg in ... Ralph Dalton. ajun\or forward. added. "We expet"ted tu "'in 1t. We we re hoping to win 1t. If we played our game. 1,1,e knew we could win 11." Georgeto"'n 's first NC .\A cro" n "as a boost to the methods employed by Thompson. IAhO Lumed around a program after taking o"er a 3-23 team in 1972. The 6-10. 300-pound former Pro" 1dence College star and Boston Celt ic. is a believer in using a lot of players. BICYCLE REPAIRS Servicing All Makes And Models 751 -4882 Costa Mesa H WERNER BUCK ENTERPfltSES Presents 16th Annual Anaheim NOW thru SUNDAY "otllt!1"1A 1k an)one "ho g1"e!> them tree room. board and tu1uon 15 a fool " Thompson. "ho has a 262-104 record O\er 12 seasons. 1s proud to point out that 42 of his 44 former pla~ers rece1"ed degrees. · He also is a belle" er 1n shielding his players from the media. Hence the label "Ho~a Paranoia" given by the media. The experienl·e acquired b} the younger players over the long-sca:;on paid off againc;t Houston as fre shmen reserves Reggie W1l11amsand Michael Graham led the wa) against the South"'est Conference champions. George to"' n reserves outscored Houston's bench, 43-13. Q, erall the Hoyas shot 56. 7 percent from the field . "That's our style of play:· said Thompson. "These pla)ers have accepted their roles wel l. They all ha ve made sacrifices to win the national championship." Thompson shuffies players in and out hke a hockey coach and 1s a believer that defense wins games. Full-coun or half-court defense from the outset and fresh pla yers to execute 1t ha\C beefl Thompson's success formula. Entenng the Houston game. the Hoyas had held the opposition to a 39 field goal percentage. However. the 'aunted Georgetown pressure wasn't so effective against the run-and-c;hoot Cougars. SOFTBALL Vikes, Edison open with wins Sunset l eagu, ""omen's softball auwn tx·gan Tues· da~ "' nh a pair of \hutouts -including a no-hitter -and an extra-inning game. But the no-hitter "'as turned in b~ Ocean Vic"'. "'h1lh allowed a run and 1,1,-as heaten b). Manna ~1can"h1k l:d1son blanked Hun11ngton Beach and Fountain Valle) tripped Westminster an eight innings. In a c:ornrnun1t)' college contest. addlebaci.. "'as trimmed h) '1!>1ting El Camino llere's ho"' 1t happened Marina I, Oeun View 0 For the third time this season. the V1k10gs beat Ocean View. and th1'i 11me did It wnhout benefit ofa hi t. Thr lnm· run of the contest came againc;t Se3ha"'k loser Jad.1l' Oak le} in the bottom of the third Kns Kag)- walked. "'as sacrificed to second and S(.Ored on an error On·an Vic"' had a chance to tic the game in the founh ""hen Jana Darling s1n&)ed and moH•d to S<'Cond. then tried tO score on a base fut b) Tnna Vlacho'\ But Darling was thrown out at the plate Edison 4, Huntington Beach 9 Julie ( arpenter o"erpowl·n·d the Oilers. scattenng three hits, as the Chargers opened their league campaign on a 1,1,.inning note Carpenter did no1 allo1,1,. a runner 10 reach third base in e\cning her o"crall rC'Cord a1 5-5 Mran1,1,.h1le. Edison ~urcd lhe onl) run \he would n<'ed 1n the firc;t "'hen frc'\hman Dena Baker inrll<'d 1n a run The ( hargcr~ added thrl'C moH' in tht: fourth a' ( arpcntcr helped her own t au:.c 1,1,.1th a two-run double and Kon (1endron sinttlcd in the nth<"r run Fountain Valley$, Westmln1ttr 3 The Barons brol e the uc in the eighth inn in~ u t-.crn Clower delivered a two-run sin&I<' and 1 en Ne"' man drm<' 1n the final run with il b:tc.(' hit r ountain Valley had ralh~d "'11h" pJ1r of~1xth -111nin1_1. run'> to tak(' a 2 I lead. hu t thc l.iono; t1C'd 11 with a run 1n thl' OollOm of thl' \1,th tO "'.nd lh(' iillllC into ntril 1nn10@\ LC'I Young. Therese Puchaf,k1 <1nd l :khb1~' Du kc"on _, all had a r~llr nfhll\ .IJll('H 1n 1lw li.1t1VI\ Ill hll .lllill k Quizatart .. euonwtthuve Witt'. pitches Da1 Qalseabe.Tr)', the former Costa Ill fi A I Mesa High and Orange Coast Colleae or nge s standout, took up where ht left -off last se,ason. earning a save Tuesday as the Kansas City Royals opened their American Lttaue season wuh a 4-2 victor'y over the New York YankttS. Quisenberry worked the nnal two innings in relief of starter Bad Black: allowina one hit and no walks. New York's only two runs came on a home run by Dave Wlafleld, while Olllx Oollcepdoa homered for the Royals .•. Elsewhere In American Lcaauc openers, Detroit's Jacll Morrlt and two relievers com· bined on a fi ve-hitter and Darrell Evans bit a three-run tiomer in his AL debut as the T11ers romped past Minnesota, 8-1 . Monis. who led the American League with 232 strikeouts last year, sun;endered all five Minne- sota hits and fanned eight in seven "'-•--be innings. A11rello Lopez pitched .. _. ft'7 the eighth and WIUJe Henwsdez worked the ninth ... J11Uo Franco's bases.loaded tnple backed Rick Satc1Ufe'1 seven-hit pitching. earl) mg Oeveland to a 9-1 victory over Texas in Arlington. Franco's Steond-innmg shot over center fielder George Wrigbt11 head keyed a six-run outburst off Texas starter Cbarlle Hoagb ... Oakland rallied for four runs in the bottom of the ninth, spoiling rehever Bollle Flngen' first appearance since September 1982. as the A ·s beat Milwaukee. 6-5. The last two Oakland runs scored on S«ond baseman Jlm Gutner'• 1hrowing error. Csonka promoted by Bulls JACKSON VILLE. Fla. -Former Miami Dolphins running back LalT) Csonka has been promoted to executi ve vice president and general manager of the Jacksonville Bulls, the president of the United States Football League club said Tuesday. Csonka had held the position of executive vice president, director and chi ef scout. team President Billy Cash said. "This is a great opponunity for me to make a future in football from a totally different perspective," Csonka said. "I've played in nearly every stadium in America and believe the fans in Jacksonville. with all the spint and tremendous support they've shown this expansion ·team. are the greatest spons fans anywhere," he said. The Bulls. 2-4. one of six expansion teams in the league's second year. set a USFL attendaiice record of 73.227 March 2 against the New Jersey Generals. Jabbar NBA player of month NE W YORK -Kareem m Abdul-Jabbar of the Los Angeles Lakers. who scored 20 or more points in all 15 games he played during March. was named the National Basketball Assoc1at1on's player of Lhe month Tuesday. ~bdul-Jabbar a"eraged 26.2 pointSi and 7.3 reabounds a game as the Lakers went 11-4 for the second straight month. The 7-2 center shot .611 from the fi eld as he increased his streak of sconng in double figure!. to 530 games. Television, radio TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADtO 7:30 p.m. -BAIDALL; Boston vs. Angels at ~Stadium. KMPC (710). Diff eience of opinion W eatmlnater High baaeball coach Blll Whiteley ezchanaea word.a with umpire Angels seek second win against Boston tonight , After an off-day Tuesday, t~e Angels rcsum.c their American League camJ>'Jgn too~t (7:30), mccuna the Boston Red So>t at Anaheim Stadaum. Mike Will (7-14 last year~ has taken over Tommy John's l)lace in the rotatjon and will &ct the st.arung nod against Bob Qjeda (12-7) of the Red Sox. • Win suffered through a 'cti1appointing seasons last year, opening the year with three st.rajght losses. Aft~r being relegated to the bullpen early an the season, Wm returned to the starting rotation in late July where he .split his n~xt six decisions before winding up the year with a five-game losihg streak. The ybung right-hander, beginning his fourth year in the ma,,ors. had his best year an 1982 when he went 8-6 with a 3.51 earned run average. The Angels are coming off a 2-1 opening night victory Monday against the Red Sox. in which a throwing error bv Boston rookie shortstop Jackie Gutierrez with the bases loaded and two outs an the bottom of the ninth was the difference. The error presented a victory to Angel starter Ken Forsc.h. who went the Wltt distance. walking none and scattering six hns. Forsch also struck out eight. two more than his high of 198 3. I Boston's Bruce Hurst was· the hard-luck loser. working 8111 innings. allowing six hits and two walks before being relieved by Bob Stan le)". who yielded the ground ball to Bob Boone which resulted in the error. The Angels meet Boston again Thursday. then welcome Toronto for the first 'of a three-game weekend series on Friday. Anteaters win fourth straight UC Irvine kept its gnp on first place in the Southern Cahfom1a BascbaJl Association Tuesday. easing to a 9-4 viclOfY over the Uni versll)' of San Diego at Anteater Stadium. It was the founh straight win for the Anteaters m the SCBA since an opening loss to Nevada Las Vegas. - Bo Kent went the distance. allowing three earned runs. striking out six and walking five. Kent improved to 6-2 this season. Bob Perry's two-run homer in the first capped a four-run mnmg that put UCI ahead to stay. His first homer of the season brought home Adam Ging who had earlier doubled m a run. After the Toreros sha ved the lead an half wi th two in the third. UC'I answered with three in their half of the inning. Don Davis tnpled. Adam Ging walked and Doug Irv ine brought in the first run with a sacrifice fly. Then. Steve Morgan lifted a fl y ball to left center and Torero outfielders Andre and Dave Jacas colhded with the ball falli ng to the ground. Morgan circled the bases and was credited with an inside-the-park homer. The A.nteaters closed out the sconng in the seventh with two more runs as Ging ca me through wath his third RBI single and Irvine doubled in the second run. UC'l is 16-18-1 o"erall. while San Diego dropped to- 2-5-1 in conference and 15-19-2 overaJI. Larry SU•erman during Sunaet Lea&ue 1&ame acatnat Fountain Valley Tue84.ay. JABBAR CLOSING IN ••• EXPRESS ••• FromDl FromDl Introduced. He h8d mllMd the put 18 gmnes aft• bfeek&ng hit ct'9ek In a game egatnst Utah tn ~bruary. .. ,.~ belf'I WOricmg very hjrd for the tut •he week• to be rMidy tor tonight. It felt ~ ~ to ptay W91f, •noe thl9 WM IUCh • btg game. I'm rMdy both mentldy Ind ph~ to s*Y • ~ l'nlntttee u It tmkN to -wtn the rMt of our garnet," GHmore Aid. The 7 -foot-2 oenter ftntthed the night with nine ~ntt and eight rebound•. · "Just the praenc. of Artt• gave ua a~ ntt." Mid Spura' COllCh &Ob ea.. 'It w11 ftke a dtffet'9f'lt teem Wtm him out t'*•· EYWybody hid a good game ton19ht. When the Lakera went lnto a t\aff ..cqurt trap, Mltehelf Jut1 went cruy on the t>ueflne. Artit played greet. and he Should ~t the game ball." •·we got bfOt.ttn out th0tooghly tn ~ phMe of the game tontght.'' Mid LM .. ' Coedt Pat A'ley. ''tt'a rwlky ltr.nge ~•ng the great atart M Md. If the Spun get to.,.~. they're going to bi very -..roue. m. wet J"8t the Spurs •. i'llclht. .. t"9 Lill ... 50·25. I.ct 22·12 at OM ltage Md 31-28 after one P9rtod of'*'"'· BUt the 8pUr9 fOUgtlt bade to go lihM4 69-54 at hetftlme. San Atitonk> ~oded tor 41 Potnt1 lri 1M ttMrd quarter, com-Pll'9d to 23 for tM lakera, •o take 100-7.1 adventege .nw thr• C:~· The &pure b1 eirled alter ~ pfayed molt of the fourth quatter. the Spura, 3.:J...43. led by • many• 97 point• llt 13+87 lata In the p.tod.. San Antonio'• ~ff hopee •• 11HI .nv., and H the club dotin't rMkl the pt8yoft. It wOutd be the f rat tlrne In the 11·tel( hi.tory of ' ,,..,, '· see the eventual.1oal of the LA Express. In the event of the NFL taking ma few of the robust franchises of th U FL. the Los Angeles area would hardly figure as a desirable area in which to put one of the operations. There 15 already a team in Los Angeles and one in Anahcam and another one in San Die~hat is more. there 1sa team in San Francisco which makes Oakland theonl)" logical plact fo r expansion in Cahfomia. In the mcanumc. you cannot • d1~pute the fact the Express organ1za- t1on 1 made up of gamers. They pcn1st m gcttana up from the floor and comina bllck for more each time the schedule calls for them to m~t the Cohstum challenge. a fonmdable foe to utter the very least. ObKl'\lm& this. one 1 not in the lea td~ra to the mo11vesofthe owncnh1pofthe fxprc . which 1r. not to s:a y one undersiands the re<'tnt pure hast of tbe Dt-nvcr BronC'os for S Om1lhon or course. it 1s not out of the quc tton lf-m~dr b1lhona1rc do not ne\;d mot IV('"\ • ' ' For UCI, th~ celeti:fation doesn't last After upset of nationally-ranked Cal. . The. UC Irvine tennis leam had Unle um.e to ~lebrate an upset win over Califomta Monday, droppina a 9-0 setback to Stanford Tuesday. The Anteaters topped 12th-rank.eel Cal Monday, playing what UCt Coach Orea Patton tenncd "the best match of the season." But, •aainst third-ranked Stanford the Anteaters 101 a jolt of reality a~ they were unable to win even a' set 'Y . ' . • MAJOA LEAGUE STANDINGS Arnerlaln LMtlUe WIST DIVISION ~ Cl'tlc•llO IC.eniH CllV 0.ktend St•lllt Minne.ate Tnea W L ~ct. GB I 0 l.000 I 0 1.000 I 0 1.000 I 0 1.000 0 0 .000 .,, 0 1 000 l 0 I .000 1 Oetroll CleV91enc1 Toronto MRwalW.ff &attlmort I°''°" lffw York aAST DIVISION l 0 1.000 I 0 l.000 0 0 000 0 I 000 0 I 000 0 I 000 0 I 000 TveMlllV' s Sc9l'ft IC.ensas Cllv 4, Hew YOO. 2 Detroit I , Minnftole 1 c i. ..... nc1 9, Teus l 0.klend 6, MllWeukM S TedeV's Gwnft 'I> 1 I I I Boston <O.CS. 11·7) at AMeb !Witt M 4l. lnl Cl!Qoo (OotM>n 22·71 et S.ttrmore (lodolcker 16·11 lffw York (Ni8ro ll· 10) e t IC.e n.el CllV (SC>flllorlf ll·I ). <nl Toronto IClencv 15· ll > at Seellte !Moore 6-11. In> MllwauU8 ICeldwetl 12-111 11 O.klano !Conroy 7·101, In> 'Tl1un419V'• Gwnft Boston 11 A""'9, (n) Detroit 11 Mlnneso11 Cleveland II Ttxu, (n) Ntw Von: I I K1n1t1 CllV, (n) Toronto al St1ttlt, (n) Ne'*'fl LMtue WUT OfVIStON W L ~ct. GI Cincinnati I 0 l.000 Sen DleGo I , l,000 ~ 0 I .000 Houston O l .000 Allanl1 0 I 000 Sen Franclico O l .000 Chluoo Montr1a1 Pflllade!Pl'lll SI Louis Maw Yori. Plll~Qfl EAST DIVIStOH I 0 I 000 I 0 l.000 I 0 l 000 I 0 I 000 0 I .000 0 l .000 T~V's $Qr'ft SI Louis II. °"""' 7 Clllavo S. San Fr1nclKo l Ptlllaoetonla s, Atlenla O Monlr"I 4, Ho\4ton 2 San Dle9o S, Pitt~ l Tecllv's 0-. Pflll90elonl• (OeMy 19·6) II All1nta (Mc.Murtry 15·9) Hew York (D1rlln11 1-J) 11 Clnclnn1t1 (Price 10-61, tnl Montreal !Gulllc11son U· 121 •t Houlton (llvan 1••9), (n) TlwndeV'S Gamet SI Loul' ., °"""'· (n) Pl11s1>ur11l"I at Sall Dleoo Chlc•oo I I San FrencJICO, (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE C.rd!Nlb 11, Dodlen 7 STLOUIS LOS ANGliLU LoSmllhtt Suiter P Allen P Oberkfl 3b Herr 2t> AHowe lb Htnelrlck r toro lb McGMd Poner c OSmflllu LaPolnt P COXP lreun !)fl Lanorm" Mrllt1I nrllbl 4 I l I Sax 2t> • 0 0 0 1 0 0 O IRuuel u 3 1 o o 0 0 0 0 L1ndr1 cf 4 l 1 O 4 l I I Gutner lb 2 2 O O 6020 Marshll" S233 2 0 0 0 Whltllld r1 2 I 1 3 S02l Mldnoor1 1011 3 1 2 2 l rock Ph I O O O S l J J Rlvef'I 31:1 l 0 0 0 4 1 l 1 Scloscl1 c l 0 I 0 • 1 J I Valen1le P 1 0 0 0 I o o o Zaclw'y p O o o o I I 0 0 lncttty Pl'I 1 0 O 0 I 0 0 0 Hooton P 0 0 0 0 I o o o Mora n !)fl 1 o 1 o Her,1"11" P 0 0 0 0 Andftnl)fl 1000 CDla1 P 0 0 0 0 Ttt.b 42 II 11 11 Ttt.ls n 1 9 1 kw. llv ""*"" Sn..ub Oil S00 220-11 Let..... )00 000 --1 Game Wlnnlnv RBI -OSmllh (I). E-<>Smllh OP-Stloul• I, LO$ Anoetts 2 LOI -Stlouis 10, Los Anoelel 9. 2&- MarshaA, lore. lB-Porter. HR-Porter (l), Wl'lllfltld (1), McGff (l) I~ H RIR H SO Stt.91111 1.1Po1n1 Cox W,l·O Allen Svlltr S, I Lot...., 2 • 0 3 4 2 J 0 3 3 0 0 • 4 0 0 s 0 ~ t 2 0 Vaten1l1 L,0· I 3 I 6 6 2 2 Z1ct1ry 1 1 I I I 0 Hooton 2 7 o o o 1 Hershlser 1 2 1 2 l I t>let ·• ~ • -2 a 2 2 0 I LaPolnl PllCMd to two better' In the third, V1Jtn1ueta oltched to lour betten tn 1111 !Ourth, Ahn oltC/leO to tour ballers In 11!1 MVelllh. H8P-Rlver1 (by Suiter) WP-t..aPolnt T-3'09 A-SO. 103 Caleet UC lr¥IM f, U. ef S.n OM.-4 u 01 San Oleoo 001 010 ICI0-4 6 I UC lrvlne 403 000 20x-f 12 2 lertrlncl. H1wbllUM (7) I nd o.Gan· naro, Kent ano Moroan W-IC.ent 6-1 L-e.r1reno, S·J 21-Glno IUCll. Irvine (UCll J8-D1vla IUCll HR-Perry (UCll Moro•n CUCll Comnwnltv c ..... 0....... West 7, ,.....,,.., 0 FUiierton ooo· ooo ~ 1 J G010tn Wnt 110 00& 01•-7 I I Motl, ChevH 161 1no LoMr, k'llooler and FIOrn w-$cfloOler, J·l l-Moll, 7·J 78-f"IOrll IGWCJ 31-Sttt\twtf' (GWC). Clerk IGWC), l ueklts IGWCI Senta AM t, ~ Cte\t I Orenot Coall 000 000 001-1 I 0 S.ntt An1 m 200 OOJt-f 12 0 Goelltd\, •t1nholl1 (2), COIClnoe 131. SIMIO (5) I nd terrYf\IM; HtlleV and Ecci.s. W-Hl llt Y. L-00.lhCh. 18-G1rcla (OCC). WoolMY (SA). Curren ISAI )e-lrown (OCC> Se .. lllldl a. Grw.,,..,., • Grotvnotll 000 000 01,_. 9 I ~ 700 003 Olx-4 il I . l lahotl, l a .. OM (I) Incl Sladek, lomeM, Shew (t ) end CometN> w-\.omel, 4·J L.-8W-M-c'-'ll (01, MotKM IS) 2. O.Mettls IS>. Grae. ISl 7 >I-Comacho ISi ,adACCe .. tC..lflf~ SaddltOe<k 1'110mer Sall °'"° M..u Soulhwflltf'l'I Grownent Mir.CO.It Siii Oteeo ~.-. ~ W L TOt ' ) 0 1 • 0 1\'ll 1 4 0 ·~ 6 a I 1 4 s 2 JY, t • 1 ' , ' 0 ''- 5e6d110.Cll I . Groatmonl 4 ..,, °'"° Mew •• $W1 oi.eo 1 Patomar t , Southw"ttrn t ftuna~I ..,.._. ('llJI ~) Mlr.Cf'll 11 ~ OlelO .._.lofNI' ti s.n oi.eo MeM &0\111'1•"'""' •• C>l'oatmOlll q,ain1t \he Cardinal. The most disappointina aspect of the lo11 to Stanford was the double5 play, which has been a etrona point in recent matches for UCJ. · "This is the fil"lt time I've ever elt poorly about our play in doublts.," a disappointed Patton offered. "We played without emotion. almost as if we didn't want to be thett." $eu9' CMlt C• ... we S.n11 Ana Or•'* COH I G060en Wnl Cerritos Fullerton W L ~I 13 1 10 4 l 10 4 ) Ml. San Antonio CYoreu Compton ' s 4 1 7 ' 5 ' • 7 12 11 0 14 13 Tuesc19¥'s Scwft Santa Ana 9, Or•n" COH I l Golden Wtst 7, frullerton O Cerritos 3, CYoren l Ml. kn Antonio lO, Compton 3 TllurMllY's ~ (2:l0 D.lft,) Santa Ana at Oranoe Coal GOIOtn West •I Fulle<ton Cerrflcn 11 Cvoress Ml. San Antonio al Compton """ ~ l'auMalft Vl/ttlv J. WottrnllMter I Westmlnater 100 000 0-1 2 o Fount1ln Vallev 000 201 x-3 4 2 MooMv •no Lone. SMrPNCk ano Leonerd. w-sn.roneck, 4·2 L--Moonev 2&-eowman IFV). ~Yef' (FV). Plmtnltl (W ). ...... 12, " ......... a.di s Edison lOO OIS l-12 10 2 Hunllnoton IMCf1 00'2 OOl 2-S I 0 Emma. Coe m and en''°"· Comadlo (61; Denton, Curren (I), HM<* 16), Gordon m. Rodtleuel (1) end SNnev. w-emma l-Denlon. 21-Shlnev (HI). Patc0e IHBI. Walter !E l. l&-Hash (E). HR-Gordon (Hll, LJovoff (H8 ), lttNlt\11 (H8 ). ~ Olrts1IM 12. C... VIV OW. l Ceoo Valrt Olr. 000 000 1-1 4 7 NewPOrt Christian 630 030 x-12 14 2 o.rvasl and HtwlhOml; Cllllv 1nd OMll, .._YCUll C•). w-cui.v, )-2. L---0.rvasl, 2·4. 21-f:reoertcuon INCi. W L GI EdlM>n S I Ocean View Wtstmlntler Fount1ln Vellty Hunllnoton 8each Marini 4 I 1h 4 2 I l 3 2 I s 4 0 s 4"'2 TWMIY's ~ Fount1ln V11tev 3, Wotlmln11tr 1 EdfM>n 12. Huntlnvlon IMd1 s T......,.1 Game (7) Marina YI. Ocean View ti Mite SC1uar1 Pan. 'rillllV'' Game ( 1) Fount1ln Vatiev vs. EOiM>n al Mli. Sooart Pal1l Setura'('• ~ Oc.Mn View al Huntlnolon Beactl (noon) Westminster va Marina 11 llelr Fletd (noon) NHL Plevetfa otVISONAL RM.,INALS ( ... f.tf·~M) T......,.t Games Pt111aOtiPhlt at WaShlnoton Montreal al loston Quel>ec 11 Buffalo NY lletloer• II NY Islanders Chic.loo 11 Mlnnetol1 Detroit al SI. Louis Wlnnlpev 11 Edmonton V1ncouver 11 ca1oary "nlurMteV'• G-. Pfll~• II WHlllnoton Montreal t i Boston QulOtc •• Buftato NY "•""" II NY lstandefl Chlcaoo 11 Mlnnetol• Detroit at SI Louis Winnipeg II Edmonton Vancouver 11 Catearv Se,.,,.¥", GMtM Waihlnvlon 11 PtlllaOtlotlla SI. lOUli 11 OtlroCI Buffalo 11 QulOtc Edmonton 11 Wlnnl099 Ctlolrv 11 Vancouver eosron 11 Montr••I NY lllenden 11 NY lt1"1>ers Mlnnts0t1 11 Cl"llceOO SundeV'• Games "" ~ .. ,.,) W1shlnoton 11 Phlladete>hla SI. Louis al Dllrolt NY lslenclen II NY R1n1141u Buft110 el Quebec eo,1on •I Monlretl Minna'°'' 11 Clllcaoo Edmonton I I Wlnnle>et C1'9arv al Vancouver TUtt41aY"s Oames CH lllUUMY) PtllleO.IPl'lla 11 Waslllnoron Monlrtal 11 loslon QulOtc at 8uffal0 NY It.angers •• t-IY hllncleu Ctll(eoo 11 Nllnnts0ta Detroit al SI. l04.ll' Wlnnloeo 11 Edm<>nton V1ncouvef' 11 Calolrv U'flL WHTEaN CON,.IRINU ltKlfk W L T ltct.. ~, ~A Dfflwr $ l 0 m 125 lU Arllont , 3 0 !00 171 " ........ ' 4 0 ,lJJ 64 " 0.klend 0 ' 0 000 • 12t c.... Mlc:llltan 6 0 0 1000 la& "' 0.tehOme 4 2 0 "' '° ... H<luston J 3 0 500 m 171 CNcaeo I s 0 167 1)7 IU ._,, Al'llol\lo l s 0 161 '° 11 l IASTa•M CON~ll .. NCI A...- New.Jerwy s l 0 w 15' ,. Ptllledtlllflle s 1 0 m 13' n Pit~ 2 4 0 m " no W1""11tton • ' 0 .. .. 1'7 ..,.... l ltm!Ml\em s I 0 w 16' 11 NewOr!Mn• s 1 • m "' " TetnH .. Y l J • .JOO IJl , .. Jecllsonvllle ' 4 D m 110 let MMIDH\ ' 4 0 ..m 103 in ...... ~ ....... Sen AQI~ at C.11<..o ~ •• OktallOn\I l lrmlneham at .i.ct; '°"" Ollllend ti TetnN lav ......,... ...... ,.ltttiureti et New Orr.ans ~ ... Hew .Mney ~•tArlt..-MIMaW-.0..... .-..,.... at Denver Welftfntton •I Houlton Apanst CaJ, UCI won the dttidi.nt maschup in doubles. thanks to Bruce Man Son HJna and Ktn °'"· who rallied frol)'> a 6-S defk1t in the fin.al stt to win in a tic~r. Neil Amor 5wcpt his opponent to s-ce ua in $in,Jes. UCl's match qa.inst Utah, oria- inally achedulcd for Thursday, has been cancelled and the Anteaters don't return to action until Tuesday apinst Cal State FuUerton. In community collear action, the 0ra1'&e Coast Collcie men and WO!""eO eacb posted lopsided VIC- tones over Fullcnon. The men claimed an 8-1 decision to NBA WESTIRN COH,.RINC• ~•elk OMslaft w L. f'd. Ga x·L.Utn so 2S .'67 •·Portleno 47 21 .•'11 3 s .. 11 .. ll 39 .494 13 Phoenix 3' 41 .... IS GOIOtn Stitt 33 '3 .434 171.'J San DleGo ,. ... .361 n• ... Mklwfft OM.- x·Ul111 43 lA .SSI 11·D•lle1 39 37 .Sll 31h Denver 37 40 .4 1 6 Kansas City 3S 41 461 7112 S.n Antonio 33 '3 .'34 9''1 HOU\ ton 21 ... .3'I 14'h IASTIRN CONl'HINCI ·~ OWblM v·8oston 51 19 1SO x • PfllleOlloNa ... fJ "° ..... 'x·~Yor'k •S 31 .S92 12 x·Ntw Jet'MY 40 lS .m 1611) x·Washlnc11on :w '3 '42 n i,., c..w~ x·O.trolt 45 31 .m x·Ml1w1ullM 45 ll .S92 x·Atlent1 lS al .461 10 Ollceoo 26 .. .347 11\.'J Cltveland 26 .. ..347 ll 'h 1no1an1 2S so 333 191h • • dlnched PltYoff wth Y·dlnc:hed Olvlslon lltle TundaY's Scer'ft San Antonio 137, L.Mtn 1111 GOIOtn Slatt 99, Houston 92 ~tft.~JerMV ft Dtnv• 124, St11tte I 13 Portlend 91, Dalltl • Htw York 113, ChlceOO 96 Washlnoton 106, lndlena u lo11on 9', Cie.ttlend 16 Detroit 111, PlllltOllPhlt I IS T......,.s CO- lnolana at Ntw Jerwv Weahlnolon at Atlenl1 K1nus Cltv t i Sen Dleoo Spun 137, Uken 109 LOS ANGILIS -Rarnbls •. Wllkft o. AO<lul· Jabt>ar 27. Scott II, Johnson 6, c_, 6, Worlllv I , McAdoo 10, Kuocl'lak 4, McGtt l4, SOrl9os '· Nater • Toran ...... 13· lt lot. SAN ANTOfQO -Banks IS, Mlldletl 21, JonH IS, Lucas l , Ger11ln 23, Moo<• t , ROClttll 16, Gltmore t. 8'-10. McHamare 3, Puson '· WetdMr 2 Totals· s.-97 2S·lS ll7. Sc.-. w Quenw'I \..Os Anoetft 31 23 2'l ll-109 San Antonio 29 30 •1 l7-ll7 FOUlecl out_,._ RebouncSt-1...0s An· gele\ " l ltambls l l, San Antonio '5 (Mllchetl I). Assists-Los ~ 7• (Jonn· son 10), Sal\ Antonio 37 (Moore 121 TM foulS-i..OS Anoelft 2', Sin Antonio ,. A-9,7'0 HIGH SCHOOL Al·CIF 2·A ,.!AST TEAM ,._,,.,, SCIMoll Ht. Yr. A Y9. V. llow, Workmen 6·9 Sr 72.0 E Samuelson, Sonora 6-7 Sr. 19.3 R Flieller, Glenn 6·7 Sr. JO.O G. Herdln. Ger1v 6·5 Jr 21.0 C RMM, StUllV' 6·2 Sr. 11.0 J Enla, Duarte 6·3 Sr 22.0 S Cvllanovlcl"I, S.nt1 Ciera 6-3 Jr II 6 D. Mlans, 8urrouons (Rid.) 6· I Sr 21 s T Coll, Ont1rlo 6-2 Sr. 29 9 IC. w11anet1e, Sannne S-9 Sr 16? SECOND TEAM M. Smith, Arroyo 6-4 Sr 11.0 I . Richard. Aoolt V-11ev 6-6 Sr 19.2 F. Rodrloutz. Palo VtrM 6·2 Sr 20.J M. Mallo•, Garey 6·5 Sr IS.9 8 Gltvard. Antelool V111ty 6-S Sr. 16 I M -Weise. Megnollw 6·S Sr 11.0 H Orie, Monrovia S· 10 Sr ll.O l Mft~r, NordhOff S·I Sr I 2 R llelr, BrH ·Ollndl 6· I Sr IS.S J Simmons. San 8arnardlno S-9 Sr IS 0 THlltO TIAM M H1rk•Y. G1nesh1 6-~ Sr 20. E S.tttr, C1t1rlllo 6·4 Sr 11.S K. Kramer, Sonor1 6-7 Sr 14 0 J. Che>OOrow, CallbHH 6·6 Sr 17 I M.. Looney, Workman 6-1 Sr 16.0 L Aubrv, Wor1lmln S·ll Sr. 100 R Ventura , Rlohetti S· 10 Jr 20.3 8 . LHlll, Sal' Marino 6·3 Sr. 11.6 G West, Montclelr 6· I Sr 14.0 G Nunez. E l R1ncho S· II Sr 171 P\1yer of tl"le Veer ll'lncant Blow, Workman. Co11"9 Wom«I All-'AMEltlCA TEAM Teresa Brown North C1rolln1 Sr J-1 H1rrl' Geor11la Jr 8ec11v Jertaon Auburn Sr Yoll NI Laney Cheyney Siii• Sr Jtnl« L1wrenc:e Loulsl1na Tecl"I Sr Pim McG" use Sr c11erv1 Milter use So9'I Annette Smith Tun Jr Marllvl' Sleoflens T..nPlt S'r Jove• Welker LSU Sr ~ • • ., . Wemen'I Mlf'ltNll COMMUNITY COLLEGI II C.mlM S, S.MabKll & Et Cemlno 030 101 0-S I • St~ 003 100 D-4 s J ECllbuO ano Cro'°". Meany and Loci.· l"lerl w-Ecllbvt L-MHnv, 2·5 28-eoufferd ISi HIGH SCHOOL .... 4, """""""" a.di 0 HuntlnOIOtl l1K11 000 000 0-0 3 • e c11'°" ioo JOO .-.. • o "°" tftCI °""tfl· ,.,..,.,,,., and Prosser ~--· s s. l-f'Ollll 28-C-(l!I, Caro.tw (E) ll-hker IEI ,..... l,OC-Vlew. 0cMn Vlr# 000 000 C>-0 S I Marina 001 000 •-1 0 0 Oeklrt. VIKllOI (4) •nd Ser-. J lM1e'I tnd ' YIWll W-J l.tr'"911 L-<>taltv 9•3 , ...... Vllln S. WMW!ilnt* l FouMalll Valin 000 OO'l ~ 10 Weslmlrl1tw 000 101 01-3 t 0 He~ ... ~tit 171 Ind ~·. Martlll eftd o-c-w-......, •. 2·) 1..-fNrllll Mlltw o.I 1, .... AIMf I Melf/I Otl 001 .. OOt-1 " l llUIOe A~t GOD 000 1 ... 1 S 2 Timctton tnct letrlor •· o· Nell tftf LeMIN Tl!Mer (IA). ....... ~M.C..YlllnCllf.t ~ Olnltlell OU 7>-16 U O CHO v*' Ow .. 00-0 I ' Oevldlofl ..., Andiw10n/ ll'oww aftCI Sornllll 29-0t~ (HC), Ciiiey 4HCI t . 0...... (HC) ..-i-AlldlnOn INC) • improve their South Coast Con· (~ record 10 6-1. with the lone 1etbeck comina apiost Mt. San Antonio. Jefr Ewina brtt«d pm his foe in san&Jn, 6-0. 6-1, then teamed with Brad Parker for a 6-3, 6-4 triumph in dou~les. Parker and Ewina art 7-1 in doubles $Ince beina teamed just before the start of the confettnce season. The Pirate team of Mike 8onfa and Jeff Barnard also have lost only one set in doubles after winnin1 their m1tch. 6-2. 6-2. Wemen'a~ (9111-•Md) ~~ Chrlt Evert LIOYd IU.S.J def. Lisa 8ondef (U.S.>. 6·1, 6·2, Andrea JMOef (U.S.) def ltlllna lun941 (U.S ), 4·6, 6·2, 1·S. • Celeee UC lrVIM S, CM 4 ~ O.Frlts CCII) dtf. Anlston (UCI), •-o. 6-1, Man Sofl Hlno (UCI) dlf Hactlt <Ct ll, 1·6, 6· I, 7·6, Derr IUCI>. dt'f ~ (Cal), 6-3, l -•. 6· I; Amor <UCI) Clef Ealat>el\ (Cal), 6-3, 7·S, Sornmervllll (Call oet ~nt !UCI). 6·0, 6-2, Wrlorit CCall Clef. larllem IUCt). 7·6. 6-7. 6·&. DellMls Oerr·Man Son Hing (UCI) Oel Wrill'lt·Estaben IC.II. 3·6. 6-4, 7·6. An ltton·larlle m (UCll def Scr.oop·D1Frlu (C11). 6·•. 6-J; Hacht·Sommervllte (Cal) Clef ArMr·OowM IUCI), 6·J, 6-l S~ t, UC lrw.O ~ Goldll !SI dtf Anlston, 6-J, 6·1, R_. nfelO (S) def. Man Son Hlno, 6·2, 6·3, GretlCI (S) Otl Derr, 6·4, 6·4, McK_, (S) def Amor. 6·2, 6·1, ltOlllilllO CS) def. Downs. 6·0, 6-l, Jacobff!' IS) oet larl'lam. 7·5, 6·1 '*'-' GrabO·letll !SI def Oerr·Man Son Hln9.. 6·0. 6·2, McKNq·ACW.llllO. I.SJ dCl Anl,lon·larttam, 6·3. 6-'•; Rownfwld·GolcSle <SI dtf Amor·MYers, 6·l, 6·4. Cemmunttv c ..... <>ranee C•st 1, ''*"-' 1 ~ Ewlno <OCCI def. Qulrertt, •·O, 6·1, 8onfa (OCCJ def. We"'9ert, 6·0, 6·2; l1rn1rd IOCCI Clef. Riot, 7·5, 6•4; P•rller IOCCI def Ferlno, 6·0, 6•3; Rhetorlll IOCCI def. wren. 6·3, 6·2; Perez CF> dtf. Matlai, 6-1, 1-6, •·l. Dtulllet 8ont1·8ernard IOCC> dtf Wren·ltkn, 6·2. 6·2. Ewlno·P1rker (OCC) def Qulr1rte ·Wt lne1rt , 6·3. 6 ·•. Rhet orlk·Ma ll1s IOCC J dtl Ferloo·Pln!P.erton, 7-S, 6·3 """ ~ "~ IMdl ll "", ...... ""' ~ Ho!mel (E l '°'' to Nor~e. l·•. "°''to Gaorlel, 1-6, Clef Mar-,, 6-1, "°'' to Fowle<, l·6, Plaff (El IOSI, 0-6, 2·6, 3-6, 3·6. Ho <El lo\I. 1·6. 4·6, 2·6. won. 6-4, T1ub <El lo\I, 3·6, 3-6, S-7. 4•6 '**-' O'Connetl•Molo"'°> CEI SPiii with G1n1·ledtev. 6· I. 6-3. d•t 0 1 mPma n ·8er11lund. 1·6, 6·1, H1n·McCarttn (E) lost, •·6, 3·6, won, 6·3, ti-I Communttv caleet women Of'9'* C••• '· "~ 0 ~ 81rmor1 IOCC) <llf 8 owl1nd. 6·0, 6·0, 8rool1 (OCC) def BoOourlen, 6· I, 6·2, Gevlan (OCCJ def G1utt, 6·1, 6-0, Lin· cu ter COCC> clel Morris, 6·2. 6·2, GaltY (OCC) dt'f. McKinnon, 6· l. 6· l, K1no0e IOCCI a.I Zipf, 7·S, 6-3 OeullMs l1rmore·8 rodlt COCCI del Bowl1 nd·Mor rl s , 6 ·2 , 6 ·3 , G1yl1n·L1ncnter IOCCI <llf loo· ourl1n·G1ull, 6·7, 6· I, G1lev·K1noclt (OCC) clel McKinnon·Z1of, 6-2, 6·0 The Piraia visit Santa AU Tltun-da}'_. • The On• Coest women Mot their spoclets i'ecord iotKt ini·,t.&e South Coast, winllina for the ln'Cftth Jtraicht tune by a C)..() marpo. v &«Icy BU'm0tt -oa from \be No. J Jin&)es aaot at Jove, lbm 81nnote aftd ~nner SuZanne Brocbe bn:aeid in doubln. ~2. 6-l. The Piralet host Santa ADI Thw. day. In hi&b school action. Huntif\llon Beach inocked off Editon. l&'h-9Y?, and Marina took the meulft of Ocean View, 22--6. The Oilen. S-0 in lca&ue and 11-l LN Aa.mlM TUUOAY .. RIMA.TS (ft!Wtf ............... .,....... ,.ST IUCa. One mlle Nee. CIMnuP Hitter ICra11t) 3.00 UO 2,40 , Jesont Bftl (LUMtord) "20 UO Timber CrM (FllCO) UO AllO recao: •eter To Miker. J J Sllck, R~ L.eit G, SlllC>S Tio, Foll9d, Tuff H •ftldv. Time: 2m 1/5. '2 aXACTA Cl-91 Mid 12UO. saCOMD RAC8. One mile lt"OI. Pl'OllNCY (Uehlhltl) 11.00 10.AO uo Pl'«ael Ctl~ (Aullln) 25.20 S.40 "WPOlnl Sorltl (lavtlst) tAO AllO rec-. ICP, L..-dY l , 01emo11c1 Hunter, C1'0I Finl!, Wajr\A, IC.euff ~ .. T1me: ~ $1 IXACTA IH) Nld 5121.00 TH.-D UCL One mM1 NCa.. Miao Me9'c (a.Mr) UO 2M UO A,,,_ (l..ecUv) 2.40 2.20 Bwn 0 OI llCuebW) 3.20 Ano raced: L..umber• SlliP, F-Card Malor, Heel llaat, Matlll No Knodl, ... y C.1'1. T1me: '::S9 2/ s. 11 IXACTA (&·S) Nici 121.00 'OURTM RACI. One mlle HGt SYr't Sc:NW. , ... , uo > 40 i,oo. Venlsnlllo Act (ltOMn) lM Ut Metrht (Plfr<:e) 5.20 Also rec:9d: Or-11 BrldOet, Coumrv Comfort, Miu Hlflllend MIOa, Navy Cheer. TTmt: ~l. "FTH ltACa. One m11t -· Sloe> The ltaln (Pet11M) 23.tO 10M 6.00 Dads Ou Bet1 lf'\enol S.60 ~ C.tlfornla Suf1..-llefllaroeonl 7.20 Also receo: Selle~. Fiora Danica, Hi9Nend lAule, HeY Toot"8. TI!umoere~. &oerd 1 111 lebv. Tlmt: 2:01 &IS. 'i aXACTA ll ·Sl Plld $121.40. SIXTH ltAca. One mllt NCI. Pow1lfter (Ptrw) UO UO 3,JO Condlos s1 ... (Pierce) 11.40 •JO Spectacular Danc.r IV~) 2M A.tso raced: Mn. R~ w . Wlm.r· bclurne Star, S.lors Sii'. lk"9 Go L. SAlppers lnv.O., CalOOnla Timr. l:Ol l /S. U IXACTA 17·61 Nici "3.lO savawn4 RAca. One m11e trOI. a•$t• Hll G tCllfll S.00 UO UO 8errlen C-tv (PW'Qrl 310 12t a·Flelh Storm (Plarc:e) 5.00 2A 1AO ~ Abo" r.ceo ttieuo. L.o«*I. er.- 5"ectr SW'"4 leu. It E Tock!, Huntrni Star. T1mt: 2:01 U EXACTA {l·S) paid Sll.00 IMiKTH RACI. One mill MCI Whittle a.11 (lkYllUJ 2060 lt.20 00 1.IO 300 Laov LYM J (Adlerman) • ., C.amlc Gll1 (llVl"llhUll AllO rK9d: SIM'nmer, Al LO<Nlme, 119 Soflle, llOuom 8urnen Bvro Time; 2:01. U IXACTA 16•4J oeld S9240 NINTH RACI. One mite P9GI Oel'tt. Time. No Sallstecllon Cllronl 1.00 • 40 l.IO Country Coot <CroeNinl 12 40 t.20 Cruze On I V (Kuebler) UO Also rtced: Aunt Gealy, TrMturts eooe. Ant91ooe. Sokv SOrino. Too SWllct Time: 2:00 S2 I XACTA (2·1) oeld 19320 S2 ~K MX IS-1-7-1-6-11 oal<I Sl,19100 wllh eight winning tlcklfi (five tlorift) c ... ryover POQC· s Is. 1'4.76 TENTH ltACI. One mile PKe Mull! lt11nbow (TOOCI II) UO 3.60 JOO DUllOM Chief CLIOfllt>lll) l 70 2 '° Hullllle (Va .. ncllneMml 3 40 Ano raced: Jennvs Lad. Manitou. Jo BoY, COllMlu Loveal)le Rogue -.JI Time 1 :S9 21 S H1911 sc:Md awlmmlne MarN 9S, La..-H .. '1 200 ~ rMav-l Marirwi 'A', I 41.0I, 2 Laouna Hllll, Ht 40, l Marine 'B', lSUl 100 tr-I Brotherton !Ml, 1Sl19. 2 LYllCl"I (M), 1SI91. 3 Hfmeton (LH). 2 OJ.61. 100 lnOo-1 JOl'lnston (LH). 2:09. 10, 2 Weroe (M). Hit 90, l Wltlll"IOeftr (M) 2 20 40 SO ir-1 Eulo (M). 23 SI, 2 Har-.ev ILHI. 23 71, J Mc Nell (LH) 2313 100 llv-1 Di v IMI. S9.6l, 2 O.Pew (LH), 1 01 26; 3 Hlmeton (LHI. 1-01 26 100 tr-I McNeil (LH). SI SS 2 Eutg !Ml. S2 19, 3 8rotherlon CMI. S2 45. S00 Ir-I Dey (M), S-o'273, 2 LYncl"I IMI S I I l9 l H1rrl1 tM). S 37 64 100 back-I w1roe (Ml. 59 16 2 Jol\llston (LH>. l--01 ... l Anderson CLH l. 1 07 I 1 JOO br111t-l Booth ILHl. I 06 12, 2 So1novlcl"I (Ml, I 06 17, 3 Mannion !Ml. 1-ot t• 400 lrff ,...._, Marlr>• l3711 2 l ffun1 HI"' l '6 67 MIM'$~ H.OH SCHOOL Me View t..•we Estan(ll def Ntwoort Hart>or IS·S 1S t , IS·l trvlne def Co111 Mew 15 S, IS·S. 1S-• Seu1'I CMst LMW9 Laouna 8ee(h def WOOObrlC!Oe. IS·I, IS·S. IS· II ..,.._~­,,....,,,,.,.... (It teeclR. ti ..... l Elli~ I ~ ••• 1 C~ P , l M<Ktt111t 61, • O."'* .. s Cllfton. 6S Marlfta I °*'"· 51. 1 Che) "'9tWMll •I'd Noti. to; • TortftO t.>. s KIUfmen 61 '"""'•~m t•t llll!ICM &Ill .............. , lrvlM l Houodtrl(, )7, 1 loulfefO .0, J (tit) LI/lo ~. L~ ... Ulllvwsltv 1 Han, 41. 2 •OU11:t1, 0 , 3 HI-t6 4 Jolln\Ol'I, 47, S ~. • Oc.-v.. 122. ........ 116 (at Mlle ,._,.. t '-"l I "t"av (W). )9, 1 Oueri. IOYl 41, > ll S.1kl IOVI Q , 4 ltOCltfl\ !WI, U . ~ ~ Ill 10Yl, M S2 IXACTA (2· ll oak! Ill 20 A trencsence •,"3 0..., SH flsMM DANA WHA•,. -36 tnoter• IS ban. SO macktrM, IOS rock cod ... ,,.. ,., ..... , l lohtw.ioflll -W1,,... Sims (Noni! Hollywood! IC.00 Jenr~ M-·Surlntr !Tlla llandl 11 2.21 of t!W MCond rouno ol KhedlMd 10-round bou1 111 1 orel+m•narv bout~ !of eto111 rouncts. Twyo\N Hamada (TOkvo. J-n> IC.00 Gr-99 Trllllell (P~I al 149 ol Ille tlllrO rOUncl ""II\' (It s.cr.m.ttl l'llf\~IS -Tino HU991n.1 (Sacrl rT'e!'IO) KOO Evarao ltlco (Sall Olitoo) two mln\llfl Into Iha nlnlll round ol KtlecllMd 10-, OUftCI !)Out TUftdev'a "•...ad•• aAsaULL ..-..1.-.... TOltOHTO I LUE J4~tcaliecl Jommv IC.ey, ... mer. ll"Ol'9I Svreane -' IN lftttrftalloftel L.....,. ~--.,..,.,. Clerk, ootct. lo SY'1'9CUM ~ICll l.HCfl ffrtl M-.n-dnleMIM hltt9r, llM ,.,.,_y Ca"lllo ~. to T,_•A COO\ trecti f"edk Ceet.t ~ HAWAII ISL.ANOE .. s-sa... ... w .... er~ '00T9.AU u..11 ..... tt .... L._ ~NIX wttANGLI•~ ,_,.. f Oltloef1 ... ,........ • ,. • .... ,.. COlltrecf JAC«.SOHVI LI tVLI.~ l"rM•l<M L.arrv CIO!IU ,. .,ecv1..... vice ~l el'd ............... HOCKaY .............. ~ N W JE.. V Of:VIL$-A\a~ ,.,.,,.,.., ........ ~ta Me .. -·~ ......... 1..-.ut Q)L.L.&M LAFAY(~-Htl'Nd M 'a van ,, .. IC4ldl ....... "' ..... ('M(fl . J .aeget, Lloyd in finals By BOW ARD L. HANDY _...... ..... ~ .... • RA NCHO MIRAGE -Nancy Lopez, winner of the Unidcn Invita- tional at Mesa Verde Country O ub ~ Costa Mesa earlier this year. returns to the women's pro ~f tour for thr first time since that victory Thuncla)' in the Nabisco-Dinah Short' Invita-tional at Miss-ion Hills Country O ub here. Lopez. playing in only ~lect~ events this season. will bc-amona the favorites to capture the title and, perhaps go on to win SI million fort second v1e10ry a week late in the J-&B Scotch Pro-Am in Las Vcps. The unusual offer by the two sponsors will be extended to next year when a player can also win SI million for repeating as champion of either event. If one player should win all four, it would mean a total of S4 million for that achievement. ~fending champion of the Dinah Shore event is Amy Alcon. -a Southern California product. "When I was 19 and played in my first Dinah Shore in l 97S-, I finished 12th and swore I would be back to .vi it Last year's vraory was vtO thrilhngand impon.aOl~~u.tt 1t was the first win for 'J.e -~ family and friends in this area. -.1 Alcott. ' The tournament is o ne of the major events on the LPGA tour and bas l pnzc fund ofS400 000. lafFSt on tht tour. >\lcott has 17 victories dutin& her carttr mcludmg three m~on: t1* Dinah Sho~. U.S. Open and Ca.a, ada·s Peter Jackson Classic (now l.be du Mauner). She nttds to win ta LPGA championship to bcoocne tit first pla}'er to complete the arup slam of women's golf. -\Icon says she would bke to ,..11' thrtt tournaments lhas year "But he}. 1f I don't wu2 ... I'm gOtOJ to die. I achieve my goals playmg wctl and brma competitive of\cn as poss.ible." I Long matches in tourney HOUSTON CAP) -It was 1 for marathon tennis matches 1n opcnu11 rounds of the Rt~r lnternataonal tmnLS toumamea1 AustraliAn Pat Cas.h toot 2 hoao. S6 minutes to d1spo51C of Karoit Solomon. 7-S. S-7. 6-3 in o~ •r Tuesda> 's fiBt·round matches. Stt\·c Om ton nttded 2:3 I lo dee Balazs T &:roa'), 6-). 6-7. 1 ~ Mart Oackson of tbe U.S. ddCa Mike latch. M . 6-7. M in 2: IS. C h. dtspi te hittina 49 OICJklWllP C1TOf'&. outlasted bometo,..n fa\ori~ Solomon. .-ho lost hl1 ttrwe niQC urnn. Toptetdcd Jamm) Ari ranked player in t~ d. ~hcd1cd•o~1Eddict>i today a fint round ma h of thi 16-m field a1min at Sunda) ·, i1s.ooo fiRl pnre • ' BeaelJt 1olf toamament Over l.OOOamateuraolfcrs twve rqistcred lo date for Amencal\ Golfs Cana Blanci Call· fomla C'lusic on April 30 with a maiumum of 2.SOO e¥pec1cd to enter the men's and wo.men·s compttitioh in the 18-bolc event. a benefit to aid CHS provams dealina with child abuse, teen pattnt oounKlinJ and sccunna foster homes for l\andicappcd children. Coursn hostm& the event 1n Otanac Count)' include Yorba Linda Country Club. wbctt the arttD (tt IS $~5. Public COUl"SCS include Fullerton. Meadowlark in Hununaion lkach. Costa Del Sol in Mission Viejo and Ra!"cho San Joaquin in Irvine, whett the srtt~ fee is S35. Entries can bt made by contac11ng any of the course mana,ers. Tee pnzcs include opportu.n ittcs to wan vacations an London and Hawa11. ArM trad edledaJe KIOH acBOOl. BOY Tburlday-Utant'ia at Saddkback, Irvine at Et-Tot0, COila Mesa at Newpon Harbor, Corol\a del Mar at Univenit)'. Edison 11 Westminster, Fountain Valley at Oceln View, Huntington Beach at Marina. Lquna lkach at San Ckmente, Woodbtidaeat Mitsaon Viejo, 3 p.m. Saturday -Corona del Mar at Esptranu lnviiauonal, Woodbnd&e at Hawthorne In vita· Ilona.I. Tu111n Relays. HIGH stff()()L GIRLS Thulldly-Estancta at Saddleback. Irvine at El Toro, Cost.a Mda at Newport Harbor, Corona del Mar at University. Westminster at Edison. Ottan View at Fountain Valley, Manna at HuntiflitOn Beach . Lquna Beach at San Ckmente. Woodbndae at .Missio n VicJo. 3 p.m. Saturday -Tustin Relays. COMMUNITY COLLEO~ • ' ... ~ fnday -Golden West. Fullenon at Com · pton: Santa Ana at Orange Coast: San D1cgo- Mesa at Saddleback.) p.m . Off-Road c1 ... lc Off-rood racing stars M ike and Scott Gillman conlinut' their quests for season 111les in lhC' second N1s~n OIT-Road Cla~m· Saturda> and Sunday in Devorc. The two brothers lead a group of top off-road shon cou~ racers from around the west an th<' t"'o days of racing a1 Glen HC'len Regional Par!... nonh of San Bernardino. The C'ven1 1s the third of the' eight-race schedule staged by the H 1gh Desen Racing Association. The onC'-m1le course features 1wo-wheel dnve and four-wheel dnvc trucks through Jumps and tight lums, Saturday's schedule begins w11h practice at I! a.m. and qualifyanga1 IOJOa.m . The first race 1s schcdu~ to start at I· 30 p.m . Sunday's program beJjns with practice at ro a.m. and the first race aa 12:30 pm. Admission 1s S7 on Saturday and SIO on Sunday with children under 12 fre-e . The race me can ~ reached b) taking the Palm Avenue eiut off 1-215. nonh of San Bcmardino and across CaJon Blvd. 10 Jnsti1u- 11on Road. Area volley bllll 11ebedule HIGH SCHOOLS Tomgh1 -La Quinta at Edison. Manna al Westminster. Ocean V1ewa1. Huntington Beach, 7:30 Frida) -Corona del Mar al Ir. inc. Umver- s11~ at Costa Mesa. El Toro at Estancia. ~cv. pon Harbor at Mater De1 . 5:30 p.m. Edison at W estminster. Fountain Valle) at Ocean V1ev.. L("'Qu1nta al \.ianna. Laguna Hills at laguna Beach. Dana Hills at Capistrano Valle~. San Clemente at Woodbndge. 7 p.m COMM UNITY COLLEGES Thursda) -~lumm at Gold en West. 7 JO p.m . Area •ttrlmmliv 11ebedule HIGITSCHOOLS Today -Estancia at Saddleback. lr.·ine at El Toro, Costa Mesa at Newpon Harbor. ( orona del Mar at University. Westminster at Edison. Ocean V1rw at Fountain Valle:r. Manna at Hunllngton Beach. 3 p.m Thursday -San Clemente at Laguna Beac h. Woodbndge at Mrss1on VieJO. 1 pm. Saturda:r -Fountain Valle). Ed1son. l 'n11<tr· Sii) and Estancia at Footh11l ln"11a11onal COMMUNITY COLLEGES Fnday -Orange Coast at Cerntos. Santa -\na at Golden West. 2:30 p.m . DEATH NOTICES PAYNt. Ht:TH LETITIA PAYNE of L<1guna Bt>ach, passed away April 1, 1984 in South Laguna. California She 1s s urvived by and sadly massed bv her two sisters. Mrs Hcstor Lawson Payne HAABOA LAWN-MT. ouvt Mortuary • Cemetery Crematoc;v 1625 Gisler Ave. Costa Mesa SA0-5554 of Ben1c1a, California and M rs Grace Lawson Hamlin of Esco ndido. California, three nieces. Mrs L11l1an Gerald Orlob of Benicia. Mrs Nanc y Roger Bain of Es<.'ond1do and M rs Irene 0 C Vanstratton also o f Escondido, two nephews. Mr Dale Pace and Mr Haro ld Hamlin. both o f Es<:ond1do Mrs Pavne was born an Springfaeid. Mis- souri before moving to Cali - Ml.IC NOTICE Ara teaai. .clJedaJe HIGH SCHOOLS Toda) -Corona del Mar at Saddleback. Estancia at University. Irvine at Estancia, Newpon Harbor at Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach at San Clemente. Woodbndge at M1ss1on VicJO. 3 p.m . Fnda) -Corona del Mar at EJ Toro. Saddleack at University. Estancia al Cos1a Mesa. Irvan~ at Newpon Harbor. Laguna Beach at Capistrano Valley, Woodbndge at Laguna Hills. Edison at Fountain Valley. COMMUNITY COLLEGE MEN Thursday -Orange Coast at Santa Ana. Saddlcback at M1raCosta, 2 p.m . COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN Thursda) -Santa Ana at Orange Coast. M1raC.Psta at Saddlcback. 2 p.m . COLLEGE WOMEN Today -San Jcrn-State al UC' Irvine. 1:)0 p.m . Fnda) -Loyola-Marymount at UC Irvine. 1:30p.m A.re• ba•ebaU 11ebedule HIGH SCHOOLS Wcdnesda> -Coro na dcl Mar aa Saddkback. El Toro at Un1vers1t). lr.•ane at Estancia. Laguna Beach at San Clcmentr. Woodbridge at M 1ss1on V1eJO. Laguna Hills at rT.tna H ills. 3 pm Nev.pon Harbor al Costa Ml·~. Manna 31 Ocean Vie" 1 p.m Fnda' -Corona del Mar al Estancia. Saddlc:bad. at Un1,crs1t). lrvLne at Nt"wpon Harbor. Laguna Beach at C ap1s1rano Valle~. Woodbndgeat Laguna H ills. 3 p.m .. Estancia vs. Costa Mesa (Tc Winkle Park). Fountain Valle) vs. Edison (Mile Square Par!..). 7 pm Saturda) -Ocean V1ev. at Hun11ng1on Beach. Westminster ,s. Manna (at Blair Field). noon. COMMUNITY COLLEGES Thursday -Golden West at Fullenon. Santa <\na al Orange Coast. 2:30 p.m . Saturdav -Golden West at Santa Ana. Cerritos ai Orange Coast. noon; Saddleback at Southwestern. 1 p.m. f COLLEGES Fnda) -Peppcrd1nc at UC In me. 2:30 p m aturda~ -UC Irvine at Pcppcrdine 1doublchead1:rJ. noon MLIC NOTICE F1Cm 1oua I UllHHS NAME ST A TEMENT f h I The following persons are do1n11 orma w ere S'h <' was a ong business H • lime res1denl of Orange MedlMIH1l, 500 w .. ttord It., Counlv She was a n aVJd Anaheim, Ca. t2I07 w orld· traveler and known Shull Hugh Namahwa, 500 WHtfOfd It., Anehefm, Ca. nt27 for her many ph1lanthrop1c Thi• bu1lnn1 It conduct9d by: works. She'll be s adly an lndMduel. massed by all Services wall Shull H119h NalMllawa .__ d T · 1 Thia alalemenl wee flied with ,...... heJ hursday, Aprt 5 · the County Cieri! of Or~ Coun· 1984 al 2 PM at Pac1f1c View ty on Feb. 24, 1914 M o rtuary Chape' Inter-F23t33t , U f 11 h I Publllhed Orange Co111 Daily mt: nt w1 o o w c ape ser-Piiot M1rcr1 21. 28. Apr11 4 t I 1984 v I(' es pa(' I f I c v I e w t642-84 M o rtuary. Directors, 644-:l700 f'\8.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI iwa..-u FICTITIOUI IUatNfll NAME ITATEMINT NAMI ITATIMINT FICTITIOUS I UllNEH NAME I T ATUlllNT PIU•CE 8"0THE"8 I ELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Coste Mesa 642-9150 The tolJOWlno person 11 do.ng Ttte foltowing peraon 11 dOlng bus•neH 1$ buslneu aa THE METALS INVESTOR 711 MO CERAMICS 18782 Matn St .. Well 17th Street. G-3. Cotta Mese. Suite 2G. Huntington BeacPI. CA C1 92627 926-48 JoM Finn, 819 Sustne Avenue, Michael Ryan Oletrock . t 100 AIKlondo Beach, CA 90277 Sandi Lene. Co111 M"e CA 92627 ~l'tlS bUll"41SI ts conducted by 1n Thia bUtlneH 11 conducted by 1n 1nd1v1dua1 tndMdual JOPln Ftnn MIChMI Dietrick Tiii• Slllemenl Wat ,,i.J wttll the Thia ttltemenl WU Iii.cl Olllth Ille tr>e fotlowtng person •• dOlng bulll'leSS II SOf'T POCKETS 406 I Old Mtll SI . Irvine. Calif 92714 Shefllyn Rae Renaud, 4061 Old Miii St Irvine. Calff 9271' Thia buainess 11 conducted by an Individual Shertlyn A Renaud This 1111ement wH 1119d wllh the County C.k of Orange County on Mer 20 191• M l.IC _,TIC( PM:TmOUe autn ••• N.AlllS ITAfttmn ~tmoUa.,..... MOncl 0#,,..,..... IM.a MAim UAW L.-..._ Mii .. Tht~~eredolng T.a...._-.e ............ ........,..~~ ...... An>c/SUPt:AI OAA'EAY llP-w:ca.. VICE. IOOM ~. w.t· • c•m• c.r= 11 mln1t.,., CA. • aululy ~ltd fruit .. under the Al-Nailr A. KUMM, 2243 (Wing follOwlng dteerlti.d dted of lrutl St .. Loe AnQelN, CA. llOOSt Wtll SUL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Ou-.0 lt.....-n. 2243 btng St.. TO THI HtOHHT INOORR FOA Loi :r::· CA. 90039 CA8Ji tpeyable •I tN time of .... In L~tt'E-·~hlnf8t, ~~.:,~~~ Thie .. COOOucied bY' • to and now htkt by II under Mid general pwt~. OMd of Tna1 In the l)r°'*1y ~ AbdUI K-.rn lnatlet dMCr°*': Al·Nulr A. K .... m TAUSTOA! PAANIAN ETEZADI, GuW\111 K...am an Uflmel'ri9d woman Tllll t llletMnl w .. 11!90 With ttla 9ENI FICIAl\Y: MIDWf.8T PA• County Ctetk of Orange County on CIFIC FINA~A~. INC., Maroh , . 1984 eo !Owe Cor atlon ,._.. RECOR D .My 22. 1111 aa Publh1hed Otllfti' co.t Dtly 1"9tr .• No ~IH 11\ locMl 14150 Piiot Matdl 14, 21, 2t. Apfil 4, 1 ... P11Qe 254 Of Ontc1e1 R9oof01 In the 14~ oftk» °' the Aeoorw ot C>tanoe bU~~ne pereon 1a cto1no r---. -MUC---,.,-TIC-E __ _ FLORAL. FASHION CENTER, 1--..;...;..;;.;;.;;;;..;...;.;.;;...;..;.._,, __ _ ~~ Of trual <*cflbal IM fOlto'MnQ Pfopafly: l.01 t J5 ol Trac1 No. 8952, In the City of lrvlft41, ~ty of OJ9n09, Stat• of Callfom11 ... per INlp '• corMd In Book "3. ~ 3e to •2 lnclUIM, M~ M.,e, In the ofb Of IN ~ty AtlcorW of 1780 Monrovia AYa. B·ll. Coata PICTITI008 IU ... 88 Mela. Cellf. 928'7 ~ ITATIMlfNT Calvin John George. 3702 Sen· The lottowlng '*90f\I are doing Nae AYe., Long a..cti. c.111. IOIOll butlneu as: Thll bUllnMa It CX>nducted by en WA TERMAIO OF CALIFORNIA. ~~HERfFROM ... oil, oaa. mlnetal1 ano other hydrocarboN, belOw • dtothof 500 f.... w41ho\11 the r~ht of aurface entry, u r• terwd In ln11rurnen11 of record. l'tCm'IOUtWH NAiii 8TAftMlfNT lndlvicSual 18952 MacAlth1.11 •235, Irvine. CA. CaMn JQhn George 112715 The IOllowif\O ~ II dOlnQ, bu'"*81* •This statement WM filed With the Mlehael Hughea. 41705 Yorba, County Clerk of Or11nge County on Temecula, CA. 92390 Mer 11. 1984 Richard ,£dwards. 5493 Rainbow DEMAND ELECTRICAL CON· TAACTORS. 721 W. <Anltlf St. 'A", C09•• M .... cam. t2e21 ~ tielghll, F1llbrooll. CA.112028 Publl11\ed Orange Cout Dally Peter A McKay, 26701 Loe>e De YOU ARE IN OEfAUl T UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED July 7, 1981. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN OPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER Piiot March 21 , 28. APfll 4. 11, 1H4 Veg1 Of • Mission Viejo, CA. 112691 1827-t.4 W1yne Sorensen, 21518 Sltlo Miio Keith Leonard, 721 W. C«tler St. 'A', Cotta M .... ~II. 92827 P\B.IC M>TICE FICTITtOU8 IU8*E .. NAME STATEMENT The followlng peraon1 are doing bus1neu 11: MISSION BAY LANDSCAPING. 16 I East 18th StrMI. Costa Meta, Ca. 92627 Cary John Kellum, 161 fut 18th Street. Cotta Meta. Ca 92627 This bualnaa 11 conducted by: an lndlvidval. C•ry John Kellum This 1tat~nt w11 flied with the County Clerk or Orange County on Feb 23. 1984 '2.111 Published Or•noe Cout o.Jty Pilot Merci'! 21. 28. Apfll •. 11. 1984 1641-84 P\B.IC M>TICE FICTITIOU8 •UllHHI NAME aTATWMtfNT The following peraona are doing buSiness u · FUTURE COMMUNICATIONS CO .. 9622 Tunl«love AYe .. Foun- taln Valley, Ca. 92708 J ames R Annetta, 9622 Turtledove Ave , Fountain Yall9y. Ca 92708 . Paul Annette. 2402 So Rita W1y. Santa Ana. Ca. 9270• This buslneu Is conducted by: 1 general P•rtnefthlp J•mes R. Annetta TP11s statement wat filed with the County Clertl of Orange County on Feb 21. 1984 ~ Published Orlf\99 Cout o.Jly Piiot March 2 t. 28. Ap11I 4. 11, 198-4 1640-8-4 P\8.IC NOTICE FICTrrtOUI IUllHfU NAME I TAT£MENT The tollowmg persons are dOlng 1>us1ness es A-PLACE SALOON. 8871 Adema, Huntington Beach. CA 92646 ROiand Bruno LukaaPlvn. 191 Fa1rwlnds Lane, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Vickie Ann Lukasc:Plun. 191 FaJr- w1nds Lane. Cosll Mesa CA 92626 This 1>us1ness 1s conducted by a general p1rtnefst>•p Roland Lukllhun This st11emen1 was ftled wllh the County Clerk of Orange Covnly on March I, 1984 F23IMe Publ111led Orange Coast Dally Piiot Merch 14, 2 t 28 April 4. 1984 , 1478·8-4 P\8.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS I UllNlll NAME 8TAT£MENT .The following person is doing business u ST AT. TYPE. 19821 Scenic ear Lane, Huntington Beach. Cali 92648 Mergaret H Ness. 19821 Scenic Bay Lane Huntington 8"ch. Calif 926-48 This t>usJness 1s conducted by an individual Margaret H Ness This statement was flied wllPI the County Clerk of Orange County on Mai 20. 1984 f241407 Published Or1nge Coast D1ily Ptlot Marc:tl 28 April•. 11, 18. 1984 1757-84 M LIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person 19 doing business as NEWPORT FINANCIAL SEA· VICES 88 t Oove1 Drive Suite 14 Newport Beach Caltf 92663 JoM A Tweed 204''1 Garnet Ave BatbOa IS1and, Cam 92662 T1>1s bustneh 1s conducted by: an tndlvldual Jonn Tweed Thia slltement was ftle<l with the Counly Clerk of Orange County on Mar 20 1984 F24140e Publlahed Orange Coast Dally P1101 March 28 Aptll 4 11 t8. 19S... 1753-34 P\8.IC NOTICE F1Cm1ou1 IUllNEll NAME I TA f!M£NT The IOllOwlng peraon 1e dOll'IQ buStne» 18 MARQUIS CUSTOM COACH. 3933 Btrch St . Newport Beach, Calif 92648 w T Anderson. 906 t Ll !CPIWO<>d. Huntington Beach. Calif 92648 This bUSineas 11 conducted by an individual W T AndeflOtl Thi• ltelemenf OjWI$ ltl«I wltPI Iha C01mty Cletk of Orange County on Mar 18, 1118-4 Verano. El Toro. CA. 92630 Ricnard A. Edwards This 1t11ement W.:. 111«1 wnh 1ne County Cletk of Orenga County on March t, 1984 FZ*M Published Orange Coa11 Delly Piiot March 1•. 21. 28. Aprtl •. 1984 1472·84 t7S 11 Luther Road. Ste. C, lrvlne. CA. 92714. ··111 a 1tr"t addrua or common designation of property ts lhown 1bove. no warr.,,1y la given u to lt1 Thia bualneaa II conducted by an tnd1vld'* Miio K. Leonard Thia llatemenl WU flled with Ille County Ci.tk of Orange County on Mar 27, 1984 P\&JC NOTIC£ compleltneN or correc1.-s)." The ------------beneflelary under Mid Dted of P'MINI Published Orange Cout Dally Pilot Apfll 4, 11, 18. 25. 1114 18"-I' FICTITIOUI au•••• TNll, by reason of. bteec:h or 0.-Ml.JC NOTICE NAME ITATl•NT .tautt In the obllQatlona MCUred f'IC11TtOU8 _, ..... The loltowing petton It doing tn..by, heretofore exec:ut9d ano butlneu 11: delivered to the undersigned 1 wrtt-NAME ITAftMlfNT "SLICE OF ORANGE", 20411 ten Oecl.,.atlon of Default and 0... The following perl()(lt are doing bu•lnett as: O.namore Ln.. Huntington 8.-ch, mand tor Sale. and written notice or CA 926-46 bre~ and of tMctlon to C.UM the Owen Douglu "Doug" Flnley, undeftlgneO to Mii tald pr()C)erty to 2~ 1 1 Densmore ln . Huntington satisfy Mid obllgatlont. and ther• ~. CA. 92M6 af1er the underligned eeuMd Mid Tn1s business Is cooducted by: .,, notice of breech and of 9'tctlon to tndlvlduat be record9d August 26, 1982 u (a)LEISURE TbNE SYSTEMS (b)NPUT. 323 N. BfN Blvd., Br-. c.111. 112621 Uoyd K. H~vy. M.O. lne., Call-- fomla, 207S7 Rancho LOI Cem109, Covina, Calit. Owen Douglas "Doug'" Flnley Instr No 82-300075 of Offlclal A.- This atllement wu flied with 1ri. cord• In IM offlot of the Recorder County Cle<ll of Orange County on of Orange County: Thia butlnest II condUC1ed by• a corpor•11on Lloyd t-tam1vy, M.D. C.E.O. March 5, 198• • Said .. 1e wlll bt made. but Thia atatement wu filed with the County Clefk of Orange County on Mar. 23, 1984 Fn0011 wtthout C0\191\.,,t or warranty, ell· Publlahed Orange Cout Dally preu or Implied, regarding tlllt Piiot Mareh t4. 21. 28. ApfU 4. 1118-4 posMNJon, or encumbrancee, to 1480-~ pty the remaining principal eum of ,,.,... PubtlsMd Orange CoMt Deity Pflol AP'1I ... 11. 11, 25, 1984 1aeo-e.4 flta.IC NOTIC£ FICTITIOUS au ... 11 ,.._ IT•TRMENT The tollowtng peraon 11 doing bulln .. 111 WOLF GRAPHICS. 1702 E. Ladell Cr , Santa Ana. Calif 112701 Wll111m Harold WIHiamlOtl. 1702 E Ladell Cr .. Santi An•. C.Ur 92701 Thts 1>u11neu 1s conducted by an Individual Wiiiiam H Wllltamson Thia 1111ement -• Ille<! wllPI the County Clerk of Orange County on Mar 8, 1984 • f~ P\lbllshed Orange Coa11 Delly P110I M1rcn 2 t. 28. April 4. It. 1984 1601-84 P\8.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI IUllNEll NAME IT A TEMENT The foll0W1ng persona ere doing business as. I( R ASSOCIATES 4095 E le Palme A· 1. Anaheim, Cell! 92807 Aussell Kingsbury 2233 Rutgers CX Apt A. Costa Mesa, Calif 92627 Denny Reninger 2233 Rutgert Or Ap1 A. Costa Mesa Calif 112627 Thts ix.siness ta conducled by: a general partnership Russell Kingsbury Th11 slatement was filed with the County Clerk of Orange County on Mai 9 1984 f'240571 PubltShed Orange CoHt Dally Pilot MarcPI 21 , 28. Aprll 4, 1 t . 198-4 1624-~ Ml.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUllNlll NAME STATEMENT The lollowlng peraons are doing business as MADERA INVESTORS, 24i21 Catie de la Louisa. Suite 308. Lagun1 Hiils Calif 112653 J A Evens Companlel. Inc . C•ll· lorn1a Corporation. 24221 Calle de 11 Louisa, Sutle 308. lagun1 HIHa, Calif 926S3 This t>uStneu I.a conducted by: a corporation J R Evans, President T1>11 statement was 111«1 with the County Ci.rk of 011nge County on Mar 8. 1984 ,2A046) Publlstled Orange Coast Deity Piiot M11ct> 21. 28. April 4, 11, 198-4 1597-8-4 Ml.IC NOTICE F°ICmlP\t_S IUllNEll NAMl stATIMENT The IOIJOwtng person II doing business as COUNTY MAINTENANCE SER- VICES. IOS91 Bechler River Ave . Fountain Valley. Calif. 92708 Steve Baltes. 3 tOS S Artnla, Santa Ana. Calif 92704 Thia business 11 conductael by .,, tndMdual Stave Baltes This 11atemen1 was hi«! with the County Ctm of Orange County on Mar 26 t984 fl.41151 Publl1hed Orange Coall Deity Piiot April 4. 11. 18. 25. 1984 1182-84 PlB.IC NOTICE f1CTITIOUI IUllHl81 NAME IT ATUtlnfT The lollowtng peraon II doing bualneas u BE.AM ASSOCIATES, 8853 Send· piper Cir . Fountain Valley, Callt. 92708 Yvonne C Leong. 8853 Sand· ptper cir Fountain Valley, Calif 92708 Thll bUllNU IS CondUC19d by an Individual Yvonne C l do the note(•) MCUred by Mid d..o of TNtt. with lnttreet u In laid note provlMd, edvancN. II any. unOer the term1 of Mid Dted of truat. 1 .... cnaroes. end expenMt of the T ruatee and of IN lNStl created by said Deed of Trust. Said .. 1e wlll bt held on: Mon<11y, Aprll 23, 19~ at 2:30 p.m .. at the Chapman Avenue entrance to the CIVIC <Anter Bvlldlng. 300 East Chapman Ave . Orange. C&. Notice At the lllN of ~. bidl may be made In cuh and/or the cashlerl 0t certlfleO Chec;l{s IP9Q· rted In CIVIi Code Section 292•h. Al tile llrN of the Initial publl· cation or thla notloe, the total amount of the unp1ld balance of the obllglllon MCured by the above 0.- salbed deed of 1ru1t and estimated cos11, expenMt. and ldvancea II $87.206 43 To delermtn9 the c>pen1ng bid. you mey call 18111) ~4-8333 Dated M11ch 2t. 1984 BURLINGTON FINANCIAL SEA· VICES. INC a California corporation as said Tru11ee. ByT 0 SERVICECOMPANY.1gent By CHAIS DEM LOW, Assistant Sec- retary 3633 Camino Del Rio South. Suite 204 San Diego, CA 92108..40« {6 19) SS-4-8288 Published Or1nge Cout Dtlly Piiot Marcil 28, April 4. 11, 1984 1784-84 PlllJC M>TIC£ &UN"'°" COUfllT Ofl CA&.WONt!A. COUNTY Ofl LOI ANOE.II ESTATE OF MARGUERITE SHARP. all• MARGUERITE F. SHARP llkl MM . MAURICE J. SHARP 0... ce ... ed K-12211 Tl ~12.a1t-4llO NOTICE Ofl TRU8TU'I IA&.I YOU AM IN DSFAUL T UNDO A DHD Ofl TltUIT OA Tl.D JW 11. 1•t. UNLEll YOU TAKI ACTION TO PfH>TICT YOUfll .-..oNRTY, IT MAY M IOU> AT A flUlllC I.ALI. W YOU ..aD AN IU'Ur- NATION Ofl THE NATUM Ofl nta NOCUDINQI AOAINIT YOU, YOU aHOULO CONTACT A LAW· YER. I April 2S, 1984 at 1.00 P M. CEN- TRAL CAPITAL CORPORATION u the duly appointed Truat .. under and purauant to Deed of Trutl ,.. cord9d on June 17. 1981 u Oocu· ment No 2600S Book ,. t~ P-oe 896 of Ott~•I Records in the office ol the Rec;order of Orange County, Ca lllornla exec:uted by. JOHN SEITER. AN UNMARRIED MAN WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Tt-IE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH. (payable •• time of .. In lewful money ot the United Siii .. ) 11 the not1h front entranot to the County Courthouae. 700 Civic <Anter Ornfe w .. t. S.n11 Ana. CA. 92701 au right, 1111e and lntareet oonveyed to end now held by It under said Deed of Tru1t In the property sltueled In 111d County, California describing the land ,,...,.._ In; PARCEL 1: Lot 78 of Tract No. 9S08 of Tract No. 9508, In the Coun-- ty of Orange, State of CelHorNa. • P9f "'llP recorded In bootl ~. Paoet 4 to 8 lnclualYe of Ml9- oellaneout Mapa. In the Ottlot of the County Recorder of Mid County. EXCEPT Tt-IEAEFROM all min· era11. oil, gu, pettoteum. other NO. •1 M hydrocarbon eubatancee and all NOTICI Ofl INTENTION undtlfground w1ter In or under or TO 8ELl·RE.Al. NOPEATY wttlch mey be produced from Mid AT PNVAT£ IALI land wtildl underllel 1 plane ~lel NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thll. to and 5SO tett below the preeenl subject to confirmation by lht a.urfact of l8ld land tor the purpc1te abov.enllll«I Superior Cour1. on of proapec:tlng for, the txplOratlon, April 9, 198A, or ther .. tter Within de'f~t. production, extrac:• the time allowed by l1w, the under· lion and taking ot aald mlneral1, oil, Signed. admlnillil trill ol the •tale 011 petroleum. othel' hydroc•rbon ol MAAGUEAll SHARP, dt· 1ub1tancea and water from Uid c:eased, wll1 Mii at rlv1te Nie lo the land by meant of qiln ... wells. dfr· highest and belt ~t bldde< on the rlcQ or o'her tqull)fMnt from IW• termt and cone lone hereln1ner tacie 1ocat1ons on adjolruno 1or mentioned all light, lllle, and neighboring land 0t 1y1ng out~ of lntereet of MAI UEAITE SHAAP. the ebOVe-Oescrlbed land, It being deceued. at th1 time Of her duth uno...11000 1t111 the~ of IUCfl anO Ill right. tltlt. ano lnttlf•t thtt rn1nera11, Oii, gu petroleum, other the estate hU acquired In addition hydrocart>on1Ut>ttancea1nchwt'9r, to that of oeceoent 11 the time of tier 11 .. t forth lboVe, lhall hl\19 no death, In the rut property located In right to enter upon the aur1ace Of Orange County, Calllornla, dt· the above d.-crlbtd tend nor to 11M scribed any ol the said land Of 1ny P<XVOn An undlvidael one-third Interest thereof above aald plane parallel 10 in· end SSO '"' bt4ow the prttenl IUf· (legal Description of Property) lace of the Mid laod lor any purpc1te The North • 1 ·~ feet of Lot wttataoever. u reterved In the Oeed Fony-e.ght (481 and all of Lot recorded Fony-MVef\ (47), except the North PARCEL 2· Non-exclualve ...... 34 ''\ f .. t. 1n floral Pano. Tract No. ment1 for acceu. lngr .... egr .... 748. 11 per map thereof recorded In m11ntenanot. r99alr. drelnege, tn• Book 30. Page 9 ot ..Mlecellaneou1 croachment, auppon ano tor other Mapa, A.cords ol Orange County. purpoMt. all .. deterlbtd In the C1llforn1a .. declaration of covenanta, con· (Str"I addrHa 1719 North dltlonl and r"trtctlon1 and ,....,. Flowef S1r .. 1. Santi ~. CA vallon or NMmenll ree«ded In 92706) bOOll 11908. pege 712. Otflclal ,__ · The .... 11 eubjec:t to current eotd1. u ttnen6eCI by a~lnstN­ IDM, covenanl1, condlllont, re ment recorded In boot\ 120.t~. pege slrlctlona, reHrvatlona, rlghll, 683, ~ Record•. and the eup. right• of way, and euemen11 ol r• paementary declaratlon rec:OtMd In cord The hit I• contingent upon bOOll t2S15, page 614 Official A-. the purchase of an thr" undlylded cords. one-third lntarttts by Iha same per-The ttr .. t addr... and OIMf eon at the NIM PflOe Ind term• for common deltgnatton. If 111y, of the uch undivided one·thtrd lntar•t rHI pr()C)erty delcf1btd a~ la The prope<ty 11 to be eolcl Man purport9d to be TAJ< PARCl!l ··u ts•• ball•. axcec>t u to 111191 •8$4-13 t-78, 28131 Rubteo~ Bid• °' otttlf1 are Invited tor IN• Court, lagu.na Nlguel, CA 112677 Pf°'*1Y and muat be In wrttlng and The undefsloned Trust" ~ wtll be r9Qelved II the offlol of etalm• any ua1>1.ITty tor •ny lnco«tct· Sarah e Dannlng. attorney f0t the *'of tl'lt llr•t addr"' and olhef admtnlst,..lrlx, 11 1801 c.ntury common d .. lgnatlon, II any, lhown Park Ent. Sutt• 1500. Lot A~ herein. C•llfornla llOOe 7. or may bt ,.~~ SalO Nit will t>. made, bUt with the clerk of the Superior....,.,.., w4thout covenatll or warranty. _. or delivered to Swan B. O.nnlng Pf... or lmpli.d, ~ding tlUe, peraonally. at .,,Y time after tlf11 pot ... lk>n. or 91'1CUmbranc:.a, in. publication of tt111 notlat and befc:n eluding .._ ~OM and •• .,.,, ... milking the .... Of the True,.. and of the truet• 8.Al TZ BERGERON S MITH 6 TUTHILL WESTCLIF'F CHAPEL. 427 E 171h SI Costa M•sa County Clerk of Orange County on County Cler11 of Orange County on March 1 t~ Marti\ l 198'1 F241404 FM11• Thia 1t11enJ ; .. filed wUh the County Clettc of Or911g9 Covnt~ on The prOC>9f1y wlll be .old on the C'Nted by NICI OMd of Tru1t, to lollowing t•rnt. CUh, ten I* cent ~Y the rem.lnlng pn~ eume of ( 10%1 of the amount bid to accom-the note(•) ~ by Mkl Deed of pany Iha otter by certified °'*"· Tru11 to wit: 133,600 00 with ano the bllancl to bl paid on con· Inter"' therton trom July 1, 1Ma tlrmetlon of .... by tht Superior o 19~per1nfl\lmupr0Vldedlt\ Court Ta.-. r9nll. ()9efatlng ana lllld nolt(•l ptua all eotit. c:Nrvea malnt•nane• exP•nHI, ano and any and all lldVW'CM 1211..20 pr.-nlviM on ln1Ufanc9 ~able With Int.,.. thereOn 646 937 I PACl11C VllW MEMORIAL PAM c.met~ • Mortuary Ch•'* • Crematory 3500 P80fflc View Orlvft Newport Beacl'I 64•-2700 McCORMICK MOAT'UA"V '715 Laguna c.,,ron Rel ~· hac" Ca 9265 1 •'4·9• 1~ c ,.2*51 Pub1t1hed Orange Co411 Dally PtlOI MllCPI 14 21 28 Aprll 4. t984 1478-84 Publtthed Orange Coeat Dtlly Publ!Stled Orange Cout Dally FHMH Pilot M•rch 28 Aprll 4 t t 18. 11184 PtlOt MaroPI 28, April •. I I, 11, 1H• Publlahed 011nge Coatt Dally 1154.94 1741 -84 Piiot March l<I 21, 28, Aprll <I, 1984 1'71 8• Ml.IC M>TIC£ ~TfTM>U8 IU .... U Ml.IC NOTIC£ NAMI ITAT'EMINT flCTITIOUI aullNHI r,,_ following per.on ts dOlng NAMI ITATbtfNT bV~I at The lollowtng pereon ti dOlng SK1 6 TAAVEl CLUB. 21881 s .. bu11""a 11 tlOe Ln , Hunllntton Buell. CA PARSON PlllOOVCTIONS. 100t 92648 Wut 17th St , Suitt S · Coe11 JoM R~ Hewkin•. 21118 t Sea M...a Ct\ 92827 11<18 Ln HuntlngtC>tl e.ach CA l al\Qe Irvin fEltrtlm~ llSSO 92648 l09 MetQulles Ort~ CA 92M9 Thi• bullnMf It eondue1ed by an Thlt butlMU IS COftdve180 by "' lndMduel tndl~ JOfln A H.-m l ane. I F11rainwnon1 T'lltt tllt4"1'1«!1 Wat filed with the Th+• Ital""*'' ..... tiled wltPI t .... 1Cou111Y C'-111 or OftlnQe Co\lnfY on County Clerk Of Otet\ge County on March 5. 1914 Mtrch t t984 ,,,... nMl7 P\IDlllMO Orano-Cout Daily Put>ll•"-<1 Cringe COMI Dally PtlOI March 14 2t 21, Apr• 4, 1NA Piiot Marci! , .. 21 )I Ae>til 4, tH4 , .. ,..... 1204.94 P\&IC r«>TICE FICTITIOUS au1MH HAMI ITAT&•NT The lollowtng P9fll0n 11 doln9 bullneH 11 ACE CHIMNEY CLCAHtfllG ' AE· PAIA, 539''1 Reed St . Laguna e .. c:h Calll t2651 MlehHI Thomae CletMflt 529·~ A.-d 8 1 laovn• 8dcPI Ca.hi 112851 Thil ~NM ~· conducted by IWI 1no1v10ual MldlMI T Ctemenl Thia tlllemenl wa flleO With the County CH9fk of Orange Count-, on Mai 21, 19&4 M UC NOTICE ACTITIOUI auaaMlll NMlll lTATIMENT The IOllOW!ng PW9Qnl ere Oolng bUlineat at GRAPHIC SALES COMPANY, 2:Z91:Z VI• Nutt MtallOI\ Vle,o. CA 112891 John Ca1'119'0f\. 17702 lrvlne Blvd •207. Tu.itn. CA 928'0 M~• QH1m0te. 17102 Irvine llvd •207. Tv Un CA t2t80 Tfll9 bullne&a IS condVC*J by I 09MJll l)MtMrlhlP Jolln Cam.on ThfS ltll«neflt W"I llle<J with the County ci.11 of Orange County on fib 27. 1ta.4 ,,."11 ~1S Publlantd Or.. ca.ti Dally Publt"*1 Of•"98 Coea.1 Delly Piiot M.vcn 21 Apfll • 1 '· 11, ttl4 Pt4ot Maren u AOfll 4 11 , ta tN4 115H4 11114• ---------... - Mii 22, t984 \ '"1111 Publ11'19d Orange Cofft Deify Pilot April •. 1 t t4, 25. tN4 1879-84 Nil.IC M>TICE 'ICTITIOUI WIMll NAMI ITATSMlfNT The IOltOWlftO pel'IOft 19 c1CMnO butln ... •• PACIFIC COAST JANITOAIAL, 20902 Brookllurll. Hun,tngton a..etl.12847 V!Qjl D RtlCl'lle. 24792 ~Ide. ll T 010 Calif ~ Tiu. bU11neu II condUtted by an lndMCSual VldUe 0 Rilchle Thie 1tat.,,..,1 Wiii llled .-1111 fhe County Ct.<k 01 0rllfl08 C®nty on Mar 16, 108• , .. ,.. PubUVle<I Orenoe eo.11 o..t-, f'tlot ADfl! •, 11, 11 H ttM , ... _ .. to the putehMer anal! bl prorated The beMfldlry llndet Mid O..S u Of tl'lt ct.t• of reco.dt110 Of con-of TNlt hlretofore execv19d and veyancA OMlvered to the lll'lderllQned a '"11· Tne u~ ano tl'lt owners ten Dacttw.t~ ~ O...ill and o.. or llle otnei ~ 1nw.11 ,.. manes tor Sale, and • wrlti.n Notloe ..,.. the rtoflt to reJtiCtany and alt ol Def.ult and bKtlon to s.i. The 0A11 PftOf to .nlry of .,.. otdel COi\• unClerllgned ~ Nici Notloe ~ firming the..._ DefMilt and ltecUoft to Sel tcr bl 0.ted Match 23, 198" t*IOlded In the ~ty wlW'e IN !l HEL SHAAP KATZ u Adfnlnil ,,... pr0peny 11 loc;et«f tratm1 . DA Tl. Mardi 20. , ..... 01 Ule ... .,. ore the ab0\19 named CEHTML CAPITAL COAlt'Ofl· decedent, A TION I AlAH la DU18•tQ IV Didi ~. Vlat Ptealooant ~ -. a... ~ • een1,., c~• Cotp ~ PO.lo:atHlt tto1 CaftMY ~ ......... tD IMI Oleoo. CA. tti31 L.• ~CA...U t81tl23}~61IO (Jtl) ,,,,...,, Pl.bfllfled OrllllDt eo-1 Ody,... Mard'I 18, 2t Apr"• 1"'4 Nlfll 4, t t, II ftl4 1'10·M tl11-M I I ------------------1------.-----~-...,.._------~ -'------------------------~---~-llftnf't---------1----~0 --------------~--------~----·---~~~~~~---.-...... ____ ....... ......, __ ...,.. _____ 1-----'"~~-------'"""=---______ .... ___ 1e ....... •..._11Cl.,.._....._ __l ----~ ..... ------·"""-------l'·---"-• .... ic ll)1lC[ ncnnoue .,.... P1Cri11CM .. ,...... -fltcnnOUe ••••• "'""°"" • 1 •• , llOTa °" ..... l'TA" ErT um eT•TR IJfT MAim ITA-V• ' .,... .... -. " -· •JFalll '" The tolOwlat Pll'tOft '9 doing Thi IDloWlg •eoc. ... llOlft9 The .._... ~ i, doll'9 TN ...... ...,_. _.. .... Nolloe Iii ........ ..-, ._ .. ~ • bulll'IW • ~ • ._.._ _ ..,..,......, .. nol bet•an •• PAC111CIHCOM.M01Unooln, THI WATtA 8UMCt COM· P8YCHOOYNAMIC IUCOl&S 'A<»ICA~CO-t112 tcw .~ ... or ........ con.- 120, Cypt .... C.... IOl30 PAflfY, lllft • MecMhur •236. INSTITUTe. H ..,,._, lrllfN, La,_ Or . tr*1ed ~ lft70'W °"* thM my. AiahtrCI A. Wlleee, M01 l..lnooln lrvlne, CA 12116 Ceilf. t2714 A,Huntlnlleoft....._Cellt nt47 ...,,en Of.,_ • ._ 120, Cwwwe. Celt. 80e:M> MICtleel ~. <11105 VOf'ti., Ellie l.oulM 1'anabottom, 25 ~ I, Kertlfl. 1 112 La Pw Or.. ~ th6I *' o., Of MMCtt Thlt ~ "conCludtrCI "Y. In Temecula. CA. t2* ~. tMN, ceif '27 t4 A, Huntington leeall c.lf. t2M7 tMA lndMclUlll ~d !Gwerdll. 1493 Amnbow Thie~ .. ooftducl9d by . ., oon..d A.~. l 1ta La,. Dr. Klrftberty Aylnen RldWCI A. Wal9oe ~ f llbr._ CA. 1:aoN lnCIMdu.al A. Hunt~on 8-dl, c..t. taM7 11111 ~ Pn. Tu.tin, CA. Thie .a.-nent .... wtth "'9 ,..., A.~. 2170 1 Lope 0. !lilt Lowi. AM.bottom TNt~llconductieCfby:1n t2MO County Clerll Of OrlnQ9 County on V9Qll Or, Mllelot\ ~.CA. tHlt Thll •tetement-. ftl9d With tM lndMduel ~ Dreno- 1 1 Coe.t ~ Piiot M8'. fO, 1M4 WllyM ~ .. 21511 llUo County Cler1I Of er.,. County on lyMI I.~ ~ 4, I. tt, 1M4 111CM4 ...... .._~ 0tzr. ,.~~~ VetMO, II Toro, Ce.~ Meir 20, 19e. T .... 1taWn1n1 wee tlll9CI wlCb the .. v.,.,._, ......_. ..,_, Thia builnele II conCluQeCI by: a fl'M1m ~ C6ettt Of 0r""9 ~en ----------Piiot M1td'l 21, 4. 11, 11. ,.... ~el pattMnh4P. PuOllahed 0r_,. Co.I Delly Mer. 9. 1"4 "8JC MJTICE 17H44 Rllctwd A. !dww~ Pilot Mwc:h 21, April 4, 1 t, 11, 1eM ,._. ---- •-~ 1111'111C( ni1e Nttment w .. flleCI Whll the 1762·14 llu~ 0r.,. COMt cwv .. 0 " . ' c • 0 , ~ "" County~ Of <>ranee CQu.nfy on . PllOt Mwcn 2'. 21, Aptll 4, 11, 1Nl .,..,...~ '1Cnnouteue.H Marcf'l t, ,ta.. ____ .... NttC=;;..;...NO ...... TICE..-......,~--1121-14 Notice 11 tw.oy ~that the 1---.. ----w-..,.--~-------.;..;;;=~...-..;;o..-..._ .... ..._ .. _ -----------i~Wlllnot &e r"PQMI~ '"_"", 11114 -eTA"-NT Pubfllhed Orange C0Mt Deity PICTmOUa ._.. "8.JC ll)J)C( IOI any oebtl « llabllltle9 oon-1--.....;..;;.;;.;;;.;.....,_......_...___ ftcnnoUI ...... n,. folOllMO P9f'IOl't II doing Piiot Mwc:tt 14. 21, 21, Apfll '4, 1tM NAm eTATWNT treot.O by MYoM other than my. AetmOUe ..,.... MAim ITAR AT ~~SPORTS, 209 A\!9tllde 147'°"' The fOllowlng ~ lie doing fllCTrnOUa ....... Mii, on OI ,,._, tN9 cMt• ~ 8TATWJfT TtW lcMlowlnO _.... ~ doil'D .. ..,..,..,, ~11· MAMmlTAT'lmMT Detect ttlla 27th Cley Of M.,cti, The~ perwon 11 C1o1nQ ~-0.. .... &Ylte 205, San Clement•. FINANCI AL SERVICH, '71 The fo110w1ng penon .. C1o1nQ 198' bull,_.... ADVANCE MARINE TRANS· CA. 92t~2 p 0.. 1 ___ Ml.JC...._....__.llJT...__IC(...._ __ louth Anita onv., Oteno-. Calif. ~ 111; AtUu H Aoctl, Sr. J T MOOOY COMPANY, 4641 POAT, 1110l~Ct .e. ROM . on~ 20t~llCI• CA. "*"C NOT1CI 82MI MARINA PHYSICAL TH!MPY. 23H N. FOICIMM Or LOI P«oe. H\lntlngtOl'I Bw:ll, CA. !MM, Cell. 82714 Mlt, Suite 206 • en le, N01'CI OI-f'MPMAnoN 0.M T ~1 Inc.. 171 1202 Valende Ot.. Huntington Coete M .... CA. t2e:z7 92149 81nlbeld4 Co. Inc. CeiltOfnle 92172 N•;g ... , o.e.. ......... , ~!'.!Anita OrM, Orange, Cellf ~. c.lff. 82647 PublWled Drane-Ooeet Deily Piiot .... T. Moody, ..a41 l.oe P«oe, Corp .1tt02~CI'. !Mt TIMI~ II~ by: 911 NOT~• •• H"'ar .. y OI'-"' .. t .,..,_ MetY Jo K.-.. 1202 Vellnde Maretl 21, 29, ACHll 4, 1964 Hunttnotcn Btiedl, CA. 82649 """-· Celf. 8271'4 lndM<Nel "..., "'""""' .. ir.n 1"• TIMe bwllnele 11 conducted by·• Or ...,_.._ ................... CMI -~1 1772-&4 T"lil~llconducteel"" en T .. ~It condUct*' by • Roee a. POfl• the 8oete1 ot Dlrec:lOfa ot the MeM cor-a11on · ·• · ..... -........ -·· · .,_ ·-v, eUan Thia "''-"*'' Wll m.o wttti the Coneolldeted Wetw Dittrlet wlll. .. ~ M Tec:t\ak P...-ci.nt .,J~ ~ .. conducted by. lln "8JC MJTICE I~ Moody corJ:' SlnlOeldl. Vice ~lllldent Coun~ Clefll or Oranee County on :::,:d:z: M"e:.~01:: eoufh" ·~i_ement,iu ~-~the MetY Jo i<.t• ~ Thll ... ,..,.,.,,1 wu nted 'With the Tl\ll 11atel'Nnt .-. fll.o wttti the Feb 2 ' '"" '2MMI edoe>tlon of Negative Oec:.t••tlon nty .,...11 Of ..,.ange ........ ,.., on Thie 1tetecnent wa fled with lhe Tt ::-County Ci.ti ot Orange County on Gounty Cleft& Of Drenoe COuncy °" Pu*Md Or11nge COMt Delly 84-1. currently under P'9f*•tlon. Mii 18. 1"4 fliil11A ~~ ~ of Orange ~ty on NOT1CI! "" Tl•·· IAU Merd'I 30, 19&4 ~ ,,.., ~. '"' Faittlll Piiot Merell 1<1. 21. 28, ApfU ... 1"4 ror tti. lo4towlng: Pulltl9hed Or~ COUI Diiiy . • ,.... YOU AM* DaAUl T UNOllt A Put>lf.ned OfMge Coett Daily PubieMd Orange Cout Delly _________ 1 •_ 1 _0-_ 14 _ .. ~~~ BIYd. W••• Pilot March 28, Aptll ... 11, 11. '"' Publl9hed Oranee Coelt Deify ~ ..r ""'9T DATID PllOt AP<ll ... t t. 18. 25. tff4 Pllol ""'" 4. 11. ta. ~~ "8ttC M>TICE LOCATION. Harbor BIWI. be-1760-14 PllotMareh21,28,AptU.11.1914 ~TO ~c;~J:C~: tea~ ----------- '1CTIT10UI IU .... U NA•ITAn.NT The foffowlng pareon 11 dOlng bUlineu u : ARIES COMPUTER SYSTEMS 3303 Herbo< Blvd F-2. Coate M ... CA 92626 Ron11d R Stager, 23886 Syc1more, Mlaalon Vlefo. CA 92891 Thia bullneu II conducted by: en lndhltdual Ronald R. Steger Thia atat~t WU flied with the County Clef1c of Ot1nge County on Mardi 1, 188'4 f2*M Pvbllahed Orange Coelt Diiiy Piiot M•ch 1<1. 21, 28. April <I. 198<1 t4<1H-4 ACnTIOUtlMIMllN NAMl!ITA~ Tti. fOlowlng pereona 8'a doing bullnall U H.U.G E WATERWORKS, 18952 MacAnhur •235. INIM, CA. 92715 Mlctiaal C Huoh•. <1 1705 Yorba T amacuk, CA 92390 Richard Edwatdl, 5493 Rainbow Helgtill. Fallbtooti. CA. 92021 Pater A McKay, 29701 Lc>pa De Vega Or .. Mlaaion Viejo, CA. 0269t Wayrie Soranaan, 21516 Sltlo Varano, EJ Toro. CA. 92630 Ttiil bu1iMa Is conducted by: • gen«al pactnerahlp. Riotlerd A. Edwarda Thia 1tatement wu filed with the County Cieri< ol Orange County on MlfCh 1, 198" ,~ Pvblllhad Orange Co&at Delly Piiot March t4, 21, 28, Apr11 <I, 198<1 t<l7<1-14 MUC NOTICE ,...,. 19\ti Street and Hemlhon PlllJC NOTIC[ /'v 162s-.14 lln'Y fT MAY IC tOU> AT A l'Ue- Str"t UC t'i.ii. t11 YOU •tD AN D · PROPONENT: Men Con-'ICTIT10Ua9Ul*IH Pt8JC NOTICE l'UNATIOM CW TH9 NATUM CW 1olld1ted Water District. 1965 NAMe ITATl•NT TMI ,ftOCC&DtNOI AGA.INtT Pleoenlla A~ue. Costa M .... C1'. ·The following pet90n Is doing '1CTITI0Ue 9U .... ll VOU, YOU IMOUlO CONTACT A 92627, Telephone: (71<11631-1291. bulineu 11: NAMe ITATDllMT LAWYl!R. Copie1 of Iii. lnltlal study are on HI-TIME TERRACE CAFE. 26G-D The, follOWfng l)ertonl are doing On April 25, 1"'4 at t.00 P.M. ftle and ava111ple for Inspection It Ogle Street. Co.ta M.... Calll. bualneaa aa. CENTRAL CAPITAL CORPOR- tli. office of the proponent. f2627 WOL Dir act Adver11alng, 200 A TION 11 tli. duly appointed Tti. Aprll 5, t984 Adjourned Reg.-Doug Davia, 279 t6 Peral... McCormlctl. Cotta Mela. Ca . 92626 Trvttee undet end pursuant to ular Meeting ol tti. Board Of Olrec.-Ml11lon Viejo. C11il. 92891 N1tlon11 Education CorPOtatlon, Deed o1 Truet recotded on &iptem· tors will l>9gln at 7:00 p.m. In tli. This bualneq la conducted by; an a o.taw1re eotp., "3e1 Birch Street, tier t , 1982 u Document No. meeting room of fhe Mela Con· Individual Newport Beach. Ca. 82tle0 82-309067 of Offlc:lal Recordl In the IOlldated Weter Dl1trlct ortlce Douglaa Davia Thia bulll'IMI la conducted by: 1 office ol tli. Recottlet of Ol'ange located 11 t965 Placentia Avenue, Tt11~1tatement wu flied with tli. COfS>C)(ltlon. Coun'Y. CalHornla executed by: Co1ta ...... Callfomla. CoullfY Cletk of Orange County on National Education Corporation ANN VALGENE MARTIN. AN UN- Oue1tlon1 end/or commenll Mer 20, 1984 Jucty Ba)'«9dorfer MARRIED WOMAN WILL SELL AT lhould be directed to the proponent ,,.1. Aaalatan1 Secretaty PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGH· on or before Apht 5, 1"4. Publlahed Orange Coat D.uy Thie atatement wu filed with the EST BIDDER FOR CASH (peyeble at DATED: March 6. 198" Piiot March 28. Aptff ... It, 18. 11184 County Clerk of Orange County on tlma Of Nie In lawful~ of I.he Kart K1m9 1753-14 Maretl t9. 1"4 Unlt.O Stat•) It at tti. lront en-Ganeral MeMger l SecratetY FM1201 tranc. to the County CourthouM, MESA CONSOLIDATED WATER PlllJC M)JlCE Publllhed Orange eo..t Delly 700 CMc Cartier OrM WMt. Senti DISTRICT Pilot Marett 28, AprilA. 11. 18, 1"'4 Ana. CA 92701 Ill right. title and PutMilMd Orange Coelt Deily Piiot FICTlnOUt .,._... 17<1s-.14 lnt.,...t conveyed to and now halcl March t4, 28, APf'il ... 1984 NAME 8TAT'lmlfT by It Under Mid Dead of Truat In the 14M-84 The following pereon II doing proe>erty lltuated In Mid CounfY. buslnell ... rtalC M)11C[ Celilornll deecriblng the land thar• MLD a ASSOCIATES. 3<18 y In: Place, Laguna Beech. CllH. 92651 f1CT1TIOUI .,..... . Loi tO ol Trect 32 t5 In Ille County MlctlMI Lei DaY9npo(t, 348 Y NAME ITATl..wT ol Orange. Stlla of Clllfornta, u NOTICI Off TlftJITErl IALE Plec:e. Laguna ~. Calif. 92651 The lollowlng per.on Is doing per mep rec0tded In Boo1t 112. LCMln No.JUDD IOI l/PfllltlEY This bull,_.,. Con<IUC1ed by: an bu11neaa H : Pegee 2•. 25 and 211 of Mi. T.I . No. C.1122S-ln<llvldual TAEKWONDO CENTER, 225t cetlaneoua Mapa In Iii. Ofllol of the UNIT CODE C Mletleal 0.~Port Harbor Blvd., Co.ta Meea. Calif. County Recorder of laid County WSL FINANCIAL CORP9RATION Thia ltllement WU flied with the 92626 Tti. street addr ... end other .. dulyeppolntedTrvateeundertli. County Cieri< of Orange County on Benton O Culhlng. 23-40 A-3 common dealgnatlon. II any, of the following deecrlbed deed of truet Mar. t9. 1984 Sent11 Ana Ave .• Cost• Mela, Calif reel proe>erty deecrlbed above Is Wtt.L SELL A"T PUBLlC AUCTION '24t• 92627 purported to bl: 13401 SulM.ll TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR Published Ot1nge Cout Di iiy Thia butfneas 11 conducted by: an Place, Senti Ana. C~70<1 CASH AND/OR THE CASHIERS OR Piiot March 28, Aptll <1. It, 18, 1884 lndlvldu1I The undetligned rustM ell• CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN 1751-&4 Benton 0 . eu.hlng clalmuny llabllTty f any Incorrect- CIVIL CODE SECTION 292411 (pay-DI-•c NOTICE Tiii• ... lenient WU tiled with tti. ,,... of,,,. ltreet lddr ... and other able 1t tti. time of Ula In lawful n111u County Ciani or Orange CoUnty on common deelgnatlon. If any, ahown money of the United Stat•) all Mar 22 t98" herein. rlgM. tltie and lnt•est conveyed to F1CTfTIOUI 9UIMll · ' f2Atall Said Ula will bl mlde. but and now held by It under uJd Deed NAiii ITATl!:MIENT Publlltled Orange Coat Diiiy without covenant or werranty. ex- of Trull In tli. proe>erty heraln1f1ar The lollowlng perlOn Is doing Piiot AP<ll 4, 11, t8, 25. 198<1 pr"' or lmplled, regarding title, desctlbed: buaJneaa u : 1878-14 poaMlslon, or anc:umbrancee. tn- TRUSTOR: LOUIS A. OE NUC-BEACH STRIPPER, P.O Bok eluding lea. chlfVM end·~- CIO, JEAN W. DE NUCCIO ••5". LaQuna BMch, Calif 9262t Pl8JC NOTICE ol the Tru11 .. and of th41 trueta ,tcTlllOU8 9U ... ll BENEFICIARY: WESTWOOD Jonn Gl«t Cornwall, 900 Sea created by Mild Deed ol Truat, to NAMI! ITAftMl!lfT SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION Lane K-tOMI pay tti. remaining prlnclpll euma ol Tti. lolowlng pereon la dotng recorded Seplernblt 111. t982 u 87. Corona del Mar. Celtl 92625 NOTtcE Of ~AllON '"note(•) MCUreCI by said Deed of buaklell II lollr No 82-327"°3 of Official ~ Thia bullnete II con<l\IC1ed by. en T O I ELL AL C OH 0 L I C Truat to wit· $59. 137 30 with IN OOD WE TRUST PRO-corda In tli. offlCle of Iii. Recorder Individual M'VEftAGeS lnt•est thereon lrom July I. t983 OUCTIONS. 2080 Pleoantla. Co111 01 Or~ County; John G. Cornwall Mareh 30. 198" 0 t6 00% per annum u provided 1n M .... Ca 92827 aald deed of trust ci.act1bea the Th11 l1atement WU llled with Iha To WhOrn It May Conoern. NEW-aaod 0011(1) plut all COlll. Chatgee Mr Chris David Bueno. t7 1 Coto following County Cletlt or Orange County on PORT RIB COMPANY Is applying to and aroy and all advancee S t.581 38 Trabuco C.oyon. Ca 92678 The land r•terred to In thla Mar. 26. 1914 , ._... th• Departme nt of Alcoholic With intefet1 thereon Tl'lll bualn.s 11 conducted by an guaraot .. ts situated In Iii. stat• of ,,.,_ Beverage Control lor ··• 1·· ON The beneficiary undet aald DaeCI individual. C1111orn1a. County ol Orange and II Publilhed Orange Coat Daily SALE Beer & Wine( PUB. EAT. PL.I of Trust heretofore eacuted and Chrll Bueno ~lbed u follows: Pilol Mtrc:tl 28, Aprll '· t t. ti. t98" to .... alcOhOllC bevlf'lgel II 2000 dell~.O to the undlrllgn4KI. Wflt- ThlS 1t.atemerot wu filed wtth the Lot 13 of tract no 6237, In the t789--8" N NawPOfl Blvd., Coste Mesa ten o.etaratlon ol Deleult and De- County Cieri< of Ofenga County on City of Coste M .... County of Of-Publlahed Orange Cout Diiiy Piiot mand for s .... and 1 written Nottce M.,ctt '· 198'4 enge. State of CalifOl"nla. u pet Pta.JC M>TICE AprW 4. 1984 t870.a• ol o.rault and Electlon to Sell The F2'lllO map r9COl'd«I In bootl 232. ~ underslgfled cauMCI aald Nottce of Publlahed Orenge Cout Delly 20 to 22 lnolullve. mlaoellaneoua NOTICE OF DEA TH OF TICE Del1ult and Election to Seti to be PUot M1rch 14. 21 , 28, Apr11 <1, 198" map1, In the ofllee ol the Coun'Y WALTE R lh URD CHELET· flt&.IC NO recorded In the county wnere the 1477-14 Recorder ol said county n OF real property 11 localed ----------E11cept 3t4th 01 au o11. ou. TE aka W. HURD CHELET· NOTICE OF DEATH DATE: March 1J. 1984 flt&.IC NOTICE asphaltum and minerals below I TE aka HURD CHELETTE REGINA BODE BRIGHAM CENTRAL CAPITAL CORPOR- NONOTITlg: f': ~ ~:e'~11 ~h9:!~rf~~~~~~n~b~~t~= AND OF P ETITION TO AD· AND OF PRETESIT~O:i.r> ~g-~;:1i~il Foll, vice President • tile right to enter upon said ptoperty MINISTER ESTATE NO. MINISTE · Central cap11a1 COfp. tl'le Or1nge County Boerd of Super ,, a point fess then 500 leet to Nld AUU68 AU2592 P.O. Boa 85511 vlsora will tiold a publk: n.artng to aurtaoe, u raMfVed by Harold T. To all heirs beneficiaries To all heirs, beneficiaries, San Dleoo. CA 92138 cooelder Iha proposed Raeourc.e ~atrom, et 11 .• In deed• r• • . ' ed. d t • gent (619) 23'·5160 E181Mnt of th• Orange County Gen ~~ Jenu 27. t9&4 In bool< creditor s a n d contingen t er _a tors an con m Publlahed Orange coast Delly Piiot erel Plen. 1 8898. page 3-:1. of offlclel racorda. creditors of WALTER credit.ors of R F.GINA BOOE Aprll 4. 11, 18, 198" Tti. Resources Elem4(lt IUCCMd u.,8 360 1 f W BRIGHAM d ho t872-8" the e111tlng Open Space and Con· •nd In boot1 -· • page · 0 0 • HURD CHELETI'E ak.a . an persons w llfVatlon E1ement1. The proposed llclal rec0tda. HURD CHELETTE aka may be otherwise interested Alto ••cept all rem1ining mtn-. . di . DIDI II' NOTICE Element la comPQMd ol live com er•I•. oll. gu. petroleum and other HUR D CHELETTE and per-m thew~ an or estate.. .-~ ponenta, Natural Reaourcaa, hydrocatbon aubltanca In and sons who may be otherwise A peuuon has been filed = .... ~1...;.21...;.M;...;... ___ _ !::~. Ro=rc;;ec.w~ ~:.= und•. or which may be Pf'oduoed interested in the will and/or by EARLLEEN ZELL r .1. •tWS12-«167 'urll-Hlstorlc Reloufcee from laid land. wNctl un<lerllel 1 •-· KIRBY in the Superior NOTICE Of TlllUSTH'I SALi plene parallel to end 500 feet below esta....,. OU AA! IN DE,AUlT UNDER A The AesourC411 Element 1>'8!'.: the prnent surface Of said land for A petition has been filed Court of Orange County re· Of.YEO Of TlllUIT OATID:t;: .. er111on la 1n compllence with ''"' the purpote of rvospect1ng tor, the b y C H A R L E S V . questmg that EARLLEEN Advance Planning Program u... .. . .,.. 1 0 ted 1•1. ~SI YOU TAKE 1lON teblilhed by the Boetd ldoe>ted :~~"!~ir~~ 0.':e:'..;~r 0j McMANUS m the Superior ZELL KIBBY be ap~in TO ft9'0TICT YOUft "'°"'"'" General Piao Modemtlatlon Pro-.. id minerall, oil, ges, P9tro6eum Court o f Orange County re-as personal representauve to fT MAY 8:~~E~TA~ ~ gram. The Element clarlllea ••latlng end olhef hydrocarbon IYbstencee. questing that CHARLES V. adrnmist.er the estate of RE-=~~Of THI NA~ Of n. =:~ed1rn';!:i.=: providing tti. grantee hefetn lllall McMANUS be appointed as GINA BOOE BRIGHAM ft9'0CEEDINOI AQAINIT YOU, grerns coneiatent with other mod· = ~~ ~ '~'~ ~ ·~~ penonal representative to (u!'der t~e Independent Ad-YOU SHOUl.D CONTACT A LAW· emlzed llernent• of the G8Mfll thereof ibove any Pllfl>OM whit· administer the estate of m1JUStrauon of Estates Act). Yl"- Plan, •nd comp11a with State men· eoavar. 11 M1 lorth in deed r• WALTER HURD CHELET-The petition is set for hear-ci'~T~~~1 2JA~~f:L•t do~P~~­d~r-g:~ ~=~y'~~~ corded May3t. t91171nboo1<&266. TEakaW HUROCHELET· ing m Dept. No. 3 at 700 ATION u the duly appointed Commlulon and the Orenge Coun· P'x;i6~N °1 ~~~~~~DER A TE aka HURD CHELETTE Civic Cent.er Dr., West, TrustM u~~t8:~~~~:~ 1~°: ty Harbor•. Baac:hel end Pa~ DEED OF TRUST DATED 9/6/82. (under the lndependent Ad-Sant.a Ana. CA 92701 on May ~ ~! ~ment No 20916 BOOll ~?7:-=::::n=:,,f'::'.11e UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO ministration of Estates Act) 2 1984 at 9:30 A.M . 1'4024 Page 206 of Oflk:lal Recofds Boerd ol SuPlfVltor• ~~~Tit~0rg~~ :~:c~°Z;.L~ The petition ts set for hear~ ' IF _YOU O~ to the 1n 1he 0111oe of the Recorder of Or- Tne !r'd h~f Supervl~~ •• ~:: IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION ing in Dept. No. 3 at 700 grantmg of the petJUon. yo~ ~~~JAg~;·iAg~~h~ J~~~~ ~!~= 11 gr~od~fy~:n:,,. Board OF THE NATURE OF THE Civic Center Or.. West, s hould either appear at ~he DAGGETT. HUSBAND ANO WIFE deem• 1ppr09r11te ~~gernDd~i:~t+~su~~e~?u Santa Ana, CA 92701 on hearing ~d st.a~ you obb~-WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION A public heiring will be lletd on 2737 Sandpiper Or .• Coat• Meaa. Apr il 18, 1984 at 9:30 A .M . lions or file wn.tt.en 0 iec-TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR the llflt ltoor ol the County Hell of Ca IF YOU OBJECT to the lions with the court before CASH. (payable II time ol sale In Admlnl1trellon bulldlng It 10 CJvlc y l1wful money of the United St11e11 "-tar Plaza, Santa An•. Calltornl• .. (II a atr .. t adores• °' commor1 granting of the petition, you the hearing_ our appear-at the north front entrll'ICe to tne VID'I• de11gn1t1on ol property •• lhown h be · person or by c 1 Co rtho ae 700 C1v1c on Apnl t8. 1984. at 9 30 • m or 11 above, no warrenty 11 givenes 10111 should either appear at t e ance may m ouo Y 1.,.uw"i~ Senta Ani CA eoon u poaslble therHlter •• tti. corT19letenesa or correetne11):· The hearing and st.ate you objec-your attorney. Ceoter °' Board·• 1g1nda permlta :,1~ beMflclary und• Hid Deed of tions or file written objec-IF YOU ARE A CREDI· ~~~;i ;~h~~dtlt!:'!.~nl~e~: lnt••ted petton• ire Invited 10 Trull. by r .. ton of a breach or d• u·ons with the court before TOR or a contmgent creditor unoer aald Deed ol Trust on the land and bl heard fault In tile ot>llgetlonl MCUred ased C Environmental documen11t1on thereby heretofore uec:uted and the heanng. Yo ur appear-of the dece • you must property lltulled 10 aald ounty ~~i:f~r~1t1:~0 ~ ~1....,.d to tti. un<lerllgned •writ-ance may be m person or by file your claim with the ~alllornoi ~•bing th41 l•nd tn.r.- ca111orn11 Enwonmentel Quality ten Dectarltlon of Default •nd De-your attorney court or present tt to the per-Lot 37 ol Tract No 8130 on the Act (CEOAI NegltlY• Deci1r111on :=~~~·=t:~:" ~.:: IF YOU A.RE A CREDI-sonal representative ap-City or San Juen Capistrano, as P« 3PA t05 hal beell det«mlned to bl undereigfled to Mii said property to TOR or a contingent creditor pointed by the court within ~~ r:C~:: 8:* .. ~:..::=~ ~~t=·~:ino ~11•~,:ldn:~·~":; of the deceased, you must four months from{ th 1 e date of Map1. 1n the olflce ol tile County For further 1n1orm1t1on, peteona • er u -v·-file your claim with the ftr'St ttmtance o euers as Recorder ol aaod Of•nge County are lnwlted 10 1napect th41 fMel on :'~~~~~ :'.'f= ~ court or pre.ent It to the per· provided m Secuon 700 of The street eddreu and other thlalternlntheolflceeoftti.Cle1'11of lnatr No.83-489250ofOfflc:lalR.-sonal representative ap-the Probate Cod. e of Cab .. -commonoesign1uon.lf1ny.of111e Iii. Board ol Supwvteora located tn offlcl f tile Recorder Th f {ill rul prOP8fty deecriblcl lboY8 11 the county Hell of Admlnlatretlon 11 cord• In the 0 pointed by the court within fomia. e Ume or ng purported to 1>e 29306 Applewood f'tlll.IC fl>11CE FtCnTtOU9 IU .... I N.AMI eTATIMINT ,ICTITIOUI au11NEa1 The lollowlng ~· .,. CIOlng NAMe STAn.NT bulinele .. : The followinO per90ns 11e doing S & L DESIGNS. 2335 MeM bu~ aa: Dri'.le, Santa Ana, Calif. 92707 SON-VAY CORPOAATION (OBA) Sandra Hallamore AitderlOO, HI· TIME CELLARS , 260 Ogle 2335 M ... Drive, Santa Ana. Calll. Str .. t. Coste MIN. Calif. 92627 92707 Son-Vey Corpor11lon. 1 Call· Ledl F. H8'grove. 7860 Garner forma Corporation. 495 E. 17th Street, 1.ong a..cti. c.111. 90808 StrMt, Calif. 92827 Ctlrlallne Haltamora, t<tet El Thia businaa 11 conduct.CS by: I Mlr"ldof. Long 8"ct\. Calif 908t5 corporation Thia bualfltlN It condueled by • CXena H. Hirst. Secretary general pennar~ This 1tatamet1t wu flied with the Sandra H AndlrlCll County Clertl of Orange County on Thia atatament wu fnad wtttt the M., 20. lff.4 County Clertl of Orange County on FM1.al Mar t2. 1"'4 Publlahed Orange Cout De.lly ,~ Piiot March 28. Ap(ll 4. 11. 18. 1814 Publlshed <Xange COllll Deity 175e-e4 PllotMarch2t.28.Ap1114.11, 1 ... 162~-M YOU AM .. DDAUlT UMDIJI A NOTlCI CW TlllUl'f'lrt &ALE DftD CW TlllUIT DATii> ...._.... ~NO .... llllaf U , 1-. UNl..Ell YOUlAKI YOUAMINDU'A.ULTUMDIJIA ACTION lO PftOTl!:CT YOUR DUD CW l'MltT, OATm NOYDl-~. n MAY• toLO AT A 81.ft 11, tlla. UN&,.ISI YOU TMI "*-IC 8AU. • YOU ... ID All ACTfON TO ~TICT YOUft Dft..ANATIOM Off THm lllATw. ""°"""· rT MAY• toLO AT A CW THI '9ff>CIEDING A4AIM8T PUllLIC tAL.E. rl YOU NllO AN YOU, YOU 9"CMAJ> COHTAC.Y A t>IPl.MATIOM CW THI" NATUM L.AWftll CW THI ft9'0CIEIDINQ AGA*fl NOTICI QF TftUITll't IALE YOU, YOU 8"0Ul.D CONTACT A T.t . No.17417 LAWftll. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. that On Aprll 26. tff4 II t0-.30 Lm .. on Wedneeday, Aptll 25, 1"4 at NEWPQRT ESCROW CO--.\NY u tO:ooo·cloQa.m.ofMldday,lnthe duly IP90!nted Truat" ~and room Mt ulde lor conducting putlU&f)t to Dead Of Truet recorded Trust .. 't Salee. wllhln tli. offiOll of November 18. 1912. M ir.t. No. REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SE~ 82-408573. of Olfldal 'Rac:o'Cla In VICE located at 2020 North Broed· the olfiOI o1 the CounfY Racofder of way, Suite 206, In the City Of Santa Ol'ange. Coun.-Ca111omia, WILL Ana County of Orange, etat• of SELi, AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO California REAL ESTA le SECURI-HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH. TIES SERVICE. e Cellfom6a COfPO'· CASHIER'S CHECK OR CERTIFIED atlon. u duly appointed Trust• CHECK. (pe~ at time of Mia In under and punuant to the power °' lawful money of the Unit.CS Stat•) .. 1e conferred in that Clrtaln Deed et th41 main entrance oft Birch Streat ol Trust eJtecuted by 9-TEPHEN C to tile Orange County Hart>or ~ FORDE a tingle man recorded Sap-niOipal Coun, 4601 JembOI• Road. temt>et '26. t080, in Book 137111 ot tMwpor1 Beecrl. CA alt right. title Otflclel ~di of laid County, It end 11'11 .... 1 conveyed \0 and now pege <174 Recordar'a l~t held by It under aald Dead of Trvtt No 37652, byTMSen ot a brMc:tl of In the prQOerty altualed In Mid detautt In peyment ol performance County and Stat• deacrlbed u of the obligations MCUred thereby, The Nottheall 15 teat oC Lot 3 and Including that brMc:tl or def11111t. No-the Soutl\Weet 25 IMI o4 Lot 6 lo tioe of which wu r8COf'ded Sept«n-8loclc 234 ol Cororni o.i Mar. in tne baf 13. 1982. es Recorder·• lnatru-Cit}-ol Newpor1 Beech Count}-of ment No 82·321935. WILL SELL AT Orange Stat• OI c.llfornla, .. par PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGH· map recorded 10 Book 3. Pegee 4 1 EST BIDDER FOR CASH. lawful end 42. Moacellaneoua Maps. In Iii. money ot the United Stat•. or a OlllOfl ol the County Recor<Jef of cu111er·s check Orewn on • stile or aaoO County nellonel bank. a state or federal APN 052-082-09 credit union. or a state or federal Trustor °' record owner ROB- 11v1ng1 and loan assocl1tlon doml-EAT H RUDE Ind SHARON L. cited in tl'll• atate, all payable at the RUDE time ol sale. 111 rloht. title and TM "'"' lddr... and othef Interest held by It. as frustM. In that commoo designation. fl eny. of the rHI property a1tu1te In Hid County real ptOC*'ty delcrlbed •bolla II and Slate. described u followa· purported to be 303 and 305 Perce! 1: Lot 5 In Block E of Tract HellOtrope. Corona def Mar. CA. No. 323, as shown on a map r• 92626 corded In Book 1 <I. Pagea <IO and 4 t The underalgned T Nit• dlt- of Mlscellaneoua Maps. records of claims any habllll)o for lily fncOl"reci· Orange CounfY. California. nen of tli. '''"' lddreu ana other Parcel 2 Lota 19 and 21 In Bioc. oommon dealgrlatlon. II any. llhOwn 533. Corona del Mar. u ahown on 1 herein Mep recorded In Boolt 3. Pege 4 1 Said aale wlH be made, but and 42, MllCellaneous Mapa. r• Without coveoant or warranty, 911- cords of Orange County. Callfornle preu or Implied regatding tlt1e. Tile str"t lddreu or other po$MSSIOll. Of eocumbranc::ias. to comon destgnatlon ol Ill• rMI prop-pay the unpliCI balano. of tl'W erty heremabove deacrlbed 11 nota(sl MCUred by Mid DaeC1 ol purported to be· 2743 Eut Cout Trust plus u prOV\ded In Nkl Highway. Corona o.i Mar. Call-note(s). 1dvencea, 11 any, undef tti. lomla ••ms of aeld Deed ol Tru1t, fMI. The undersigned hereby dis· charges. and e11pen-or the claims all ll1blllty lor eny Incorrect· Trustee and of the lrusts crMteCI by neu In said street address or other Hid Deed ol Trull common designation Al tile time ol tli. Initial publl- Sald sale wiH be made wtthOut cauoo of this nottce. tti. 10111 w1rraoty. •llPI'.., or Implied. r• amount ol the unpaid balance of lhe gatdlng title. poSMSSlon. or ancum· obllO&tlon MCUred by •bo~ ci.. brencea. to aatlsty the Pflnapal bal· scribed deed of trust and est1m11eo 1noe of the Note or other obligation costs. e11pen-and aovancee I• secured by said Deed of Trust. with S30•.277 71. Interest and other suma aa provided Tile banef1Cl1ry u~ said Deed the<eln; plus 1ov9noes. fl any. under 01 Trutt heretofore e.oceeuted and tile terms thereof and lntlfet1 on dehvered to the under.igoed a writ· such aovances, and plus fees. 1eo Declaration of Defaull and De- charges. and e11pen1es of lhe mend for Sale. end a -meo Notioe Trustee and of the trusts created by ol Default and Election 10 Sell The said Oeed or Trusl. The 1019' uoderSlgned c:eused said No11ce or amount of said obllglllon. Including Oetaull and Electlon to Seit to be reasonably estimated fMI. charges recOfded In the county wtl4we tne end expenses of the Trust ... at the real property 11 foceled ume ol 1nrt111 publleallon of 1h1~ No-Party COl'l(lucting sale tlce. 111710,868 84 P"lle Ftn&nQal CorPOtaflon Oiled April 3 1984 591 Camino De La ~811\1 Suite •OO REAL ESTATE S ECURITIES Sen Diego CA 92108 SERVICE Phone 6191299·7t10 a Cafllom11 eo<potallon Diie March 2 t 198<1 H Truat.. NEWPORT ESCROW COMPANY (Seatl DJ MOf08f •ts President Trustee 2020 Nor1h Broadway. Suite 206 PEELL E FINANCIAL CORPOR· Santa An•. Ca. 92706 ATION Agent Talee>hone (7 1<11953-6810 By DIANE BLACK Ma~ PubltstleO Orange Co&at Daily Publllned Orlf\99 Coest D111y P110I Pno1 April 4. 11 18 1984 Aor11 .c 11 18 198• 1871-a• P\8.IC NOTICE Nl.JC NOTtcE K-tttM T.S. •1t-atl:mf NOTICE CW TIIUSTD"I &AU YOU AM If DVAUl T UllDl9' A DUD Oii TMltT OATID Mfll t. 1•t. UMLl!U YOU TAICI ~ TO flROTlC'T YO&M •"'°'millllllill ... T'..,,, n MAY IC tol.D AT A ~ IAU. • YOU lillllD M IJlllUr NATION Oii TMI lllAT\m OI' 'nm NOCEEDIMQa AOAMeT YOU. YOU 1HOULO CCllTACT A LAW.. YUL On April 25, 18"' at 1:00 , .... CENTRAL CAPITAL CO~"­ ATION u the duty ~­Trust• under end our-..it • Deed of Trust recorded Oii Apt 11. 1981 • OocurMnt No. tolM ec.ia 1402<1 Page 206 ol Offtdat "9c:rofclll In lhl offtce ot IN Aaoorder of Or· ange County. Caittome r •=...., t>Y" JACK D DAGGETT A JUOfTH A. c-.ooETT. HOS8AMO AND WR WtU SELL AT PUBUC AUCTIOH TO THE HIGHEST ~ FOft CASH. (paya~ at time of ... In lawful money or the Unned S__, 11 the north front entrance to the County Courthouse. 700 Civic C«rle< Ol'lve West. Santa Ana.. CA 92701 all right. title and lo ..... cooveyed to and now held by It under said DaeCI of Truet In tM property Situated In Mid County, Calilofnla deeMblng Ule larod ltler.- ln Lot 37 of Tr9Ct No. 8130 In tN Clty ol San Juan~. M per m-i> recorded in Boot 350, Pao-8 thru 8 lnclushle of ~ Maps. 1n tile otflOI of the County Recorder of uld Orange Cowrty. The street addrell end ~ common dealgnatlon, It any, of the real ptoe>erty deletlbed &boft It purponad to bl: 29305 ~od Court. Sen Juan. Capil., CA. 82175 The undtlrSlgned TNl1-~ cl4WnS any l1abillfY for any lncolTwct- ness of tile street addt91 end ottls common delignatioll. If any. ltlOWl'I ,...em Said sale win bl medl. but wtttlout COYen:ant or wwrwtty, •- press or Implied, ~ .,..._ po$M5$1on. or ancumt>rencea. ~ eluding fees. margee and ...,._ of the Trust" and of the tn.lllla created by Mid Deed o4 TNM. to pay Iha Nlmalning pnnclpal MT\ c2' the nota(s) sacur.O by Mid DeaCI <2' Trust 10 wit: 198. t21 88 Wtttl interest u,.,.eon from Jl.Jly 1, tteS " 15 25% pet ennum .. provided lin said oote(sl P4U• an ooste, ClflWgea and aoy and ell adv.,_. S2.l70.12 w1th 1nl•est 1"8f900 The befleflclaty under Mid Deed 01 Trust heretOIOfe axecut.O and pellvered to the underllgned a writ· len Oecleratlon of Oeteult and ~ mand tor Sate and 1 Wfttten NoCtca ol Default and Elee11on lo Sall. The unoersigned caused Mid NotlCe of Defauh and ElectJon to Sell to be recorOed 1n the county wtw-. the rM I pr()Qerty IS localed DA TE Mareh 14, 1984 CENTRAL C'-PITAL CORPOR· A TION By ~ FOil. Voce P...o.nt Ceo1ra1 Capital Corp r> 0 Bot. 85511 San Oleoo. CA 92138 16t9J 23}-5160 Published Ofangtt Coe.at Dally Plot .-pru 4 t 1 \8 1914 1173.-84 tile ebo\19 l<klrna or to contact the 01 ~~nge ..;ou,::r bl macse. but four months from the date of clamlS will not expire prior Court. Sen Juan cap1s. CA 92675 Adv~ Pllnnlng OMaJon loceted without covenant or wa<ranty. ax-first issuance of letters as to four months from the date Clar,:-~~=•~:,..~~~~~: ~': ~~ s~!.,An':.'tiu=~ pr... 0t ln'lplled. regarding title provided m Section 700 of of the hearing nouced above. nee. (If tile 11reet lddNll and other gt• ..... SJ80) potlffllon. or encumbtlllCM • 10 Uie Probate C.ode of Cali-YOU MAY EXAMINE commor1 dealgnatlon. tf 1ny. lhown -~ P•Y tti. remaining Pflnc"* eum of . ·1 k b h t If .._. 1tad: Maron 30. t98<1 the nota(I) eecured by Nld deed of fornia. The time for filing the f1 e ept Y t e cour · '"'"""" Nie Will be made. tM BY ORO£R OF THE BOARD 8~ Truat. with lnt•ut .. In NICI not• c laims wiU not expire prior you are Interested in the es-.. ~:1 C<Mlflent °' warranty. ••· SUP&AVISORS OF ORAN provided, .ovenoes. II any, undet to four months from the datll tat.e, you may serve upon the implied. r-ardlng title. COUNTY CALIFORNIA f Id Deed of truet ,... pr... or -.. (S!AL) ' DORIS L. HIL81!RT ~i;::•m.•oan': •xpanMt of 1~ of the hearina noticed above. executor or administrator, or ~· 9' encumbrencee. In· NOTICE Clet'IC or ,,.,. 8olrrd °' Truar.: and or tti. truat• created by YOU MAY EXAMINE upon the attorney for the ex-~:!: T~t=•= ~':'r'""~ Su~ ~.:S: laid Deed ot Truat the file kept by the court. If ecut.or or administrator. and cnated by aald Dead of Truat. to Publttn.o or-~· Diiiy Piiot Said aale win bl held on: wecinee-you are Interested in the •· file with the court with p1y the remaining ptlnclpal tum of •.vii•. t"u -.... Clay. April 11. 1814. at 2:30 p.m. at . the roof of aervlce a written Iha noia(a) Meured by Hid Dead ol ......,, ...,.. .. 7_.. the Qiaprnan Avenue entrenoe to tale, you may aerve upon P • _._ Trull 10 wit Hl.121 61 with 1 """ tne CMc c.nt• Building 300 1!.a•t executor or administrator, or request stat.ana that you \K'· 1n1.,...1 thereon ''°'" Jvty 1. 1M3 ---------ChlC>INI\ Ave · Orange. Ca upon the auomey tor the ex-lire special no~ of the hi " 15 25% pet annum 11PfO¥tOtld1n TO PATRONS NllC fl>TIC( ca~.!-, lheof '":,Of ,,!~~1:_ ~o~ ecut.or or admlnlstra\Or, and ins of an in~niory and ap-Hid note(•> iM an CC*a. Ctlaf9M .-one. cw~ IMJ amount of the unptllCI balance of tM file with the court with pralament of state u.ta or :;:. !,";"::: ~~ S2 110 12 OI-NMOMAL ""°""" obllgatton ~by lhe above ci. proof of tf'rviC'f', a wrt~n of th• pet1Uons or k'COW\ta The blneflClety llf'tCW Mid Dead Notice 11 '*9t>y ;!Ven 111e1 ec:rlbed o..o of tNlt end .. t1met.o rtq t ti.Un, that you d • ~nuorwd tn S«-Uon 1200 of Truet nerecotor. ~t.o an0 ~:;1~~,:::=r. 1~:.000~ end ldVenoM le airespeciaj notice of~ fil. and 12005 o.f UH-Cahfomla ~~:,:~-:,~.,:,~ llClfWO wat NII at pubtle '* by Tti. 10ta1 lndebt*"*8 belnQ en ll'\8 ot an lnwntory and ap-Proti.tc Cod~. mand tors.. and 1 _1t1«1 ~-- COffltM'llttvil bkSdlno on"'-11111 Clay "11mat• on wNcn the opening lid le prailemeot of f'tta~ aaete or Mark C. Harsu °'°9fault and e1ee11cn to a.i nie .J ·-, .... ~ at 12 ~ the Pf'• oomput.O may !»obtained~ c.1-•· 8 U n T 0 N ,...,._,....... --~ Mid of ~....,--.d°~. ~ 10 be 1ng(7t4)137.oMeor(21a1121...cee& of &M ptUUons or ac:coun00 .. "'NGLEBRECH't a A·N-Ottd-_;;~-; 10 10 be ebandoo.O try WI.. ~ & the Clay ~ the .. mcntionl!d In S«t.lon l2 g racord«I "' IN county .,.._. tM Kw.n HIM, wt*9 IM4 eddrele WM 0.1.0· ~ IS, tM4 and 1200 s of th• California DRADE ,.... ~ 111oe;e1.o 10740 ltand•CI Ave . Lynwood, WSL "NANCIAL CO"PO"· Proti.to c-ao• N. Newport Blvd .. Sah• OAT! Matdl t•. tff4 c.!lftal2.endw41beeO'detfi'! ·~~Trvt... Camene Ja ttQUa lH CENT"AI. CAPITAi. CORftOR· ~-::=.~::.--!~· ey T.O. s.mo.eompeony . .,., eta H m Strut #l t Newport Bue ~. CA . ~~Fox. Vlei PreelOent o..c,lptton of Pro.,.rty , aty ~ ~· Nnport Baell, CA.. tHU tHU-4U! C#ltrtt c.pital Coro BedfWM Of~·~· =~Blvd w~t 11S·Htl llt-tlH PO &o•H6t1 PUBLIC WORKSHOPS WILL BE HELD BY OCTD AND THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH TO DISCUSS BUS LINE REROUTINGS AND FREQUENCY CHANGES IN THE DOWNTOWN AREA OF HUNT- INGTON BEACH. PATRONS WHO RIDE THE 25. 29 & 76 BUSES MAY BE IMPACTED. THURSDAY. APRIL 5, 1984 3:00 PM-4:00 PM & 7 .00 PM-8:00 PM CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS tOYe. 1;:: mltO~~ anci 0range~C.llf. t2t11 Publiaht!d Oru\ge Cout P\Abllshtod Or .. Coast ~~~6 c~ •21~8 ~ .. "'= ~ ~~i::s·2~ ca.t Dally Daily Pilot Aprtl 4, ~. 11, Daily Pilot April 4. :'.!.! 11, ~J.;.. C:,n: <'AHi (}ally Pllnl ~~~M ~77~ ~MM~t1,UA-4~ .. 19~ 18~·~ 19M 1~3.~~<1,1 ' ~ N• ~73 ML-----------~---------------~.~---2000 MAlN STREET. HUNTINGTON BEACH '• .; •. ·~ ... - •1 Lido Isle Bayfront I One of the most spectacular views ln harbor from beautiful 6 Bdrm pool/spa homt! on 79 f~~rime bay front. Room for 120 ft. yac . OPEN DAIL 12-5 10 I Via Lido o ud. Lido Isle Courtesy to Brokers 673-7873 673-7677 IHllf THUOE SH0,000 Fabulous forever view of bay and ocean Bring your decorator and imagmation Lo tum th is into a showp~ce. Gorgeous pool. super for ente rtammg. Outstanding neighborhood. LllO ISLE Traditional 3 Br. 3 'h Ba. Bayf ront. pier & float for 65' boat. P riced to sell $950,000. "Remodeled 3 Br, 2 Ba, lrg playro0m, fireplace, beam ceiling $420,000. Bayfront Spectacular 6 Br. pool. with 79' of prime bay front, room for 2-120' yachts. UYSllE llllfl llYHOIT Jetty & bay vu, newly decorated Mai Kai Condo 2 Br 2 Ba 40' bay patio $695,000. lJalebout . Boy-. Beach Real Esto1e IAYCREST Spacious lour bedroom home Located in a family neighborhood Formal dining room Laroe family room Solar heating sys- tem Two furnaces Bricked backyard area with spa $299 700 111-1100 UCEPTIOllL YILIE llVllE TtllUCE B"ght cheerful 3 Br 2 Ba. comfortable tastefully remodeled home Ex· panded Mstr Bdrm suite, near new kitchen up-I graded plumbing ca- 1hedra1 ce11ongs auto mat1c sprinklers & ltghls and new driveway This '' 1 a must see home Call Belle C:hnf' Lee Onty S229 950 with land 644-7020 Hlll&ElllS Formerly Lingo A E EJ I l j.I Tra ditional Re alty H~s 1-;:no 5Au 1•l ..___.w'---'-·__.I __ ' I _J : ~ ,. f _, ...... f\(10(1• "'"°"'"' oe•-bll "Q !(ii"•• '" f(ll,,. .. J ~"" lot I I!' I rel' ..... UTITll NEWI Maonf nc.nt • With VIEWS of C..t .. lne to Peio. Verde. n!Qht llQhll and the MCurlty ol • guarded oat• communi- ty Y04M own prlv•t• tP•. 3 Bdrmt + ~rMt, lerge femlly rm, 3 frpa. 3 car garage & ••1«1ll1te UM of mirrors •nd m•rble. Owner• Wilt help nnanca alter an 11aumabte loan. $695,000. A new lltllng llAll..U NLY 1111,IOO Priced under eppralaal . steps to bay & OQffll. Just aoorabl • with bulltins 1n thll 2 bed 2 bath wltti beams and warmth perfect for dally llvlng or weekend retreat. A new ll1t1no CALL 673-6900 IA.I\ 11 HI Hll" T li<>Mt .., 1-. REAL ESTATE 131·1«>0 Macn11b·l1vine Ullll EIMlllN Exceptlonll 4 Bdrm c:u~ tom home that wlll pteue the mott dltcefnlng ··-IC\Jtl~ COuntry llltchen. panOfamlc; vi.w Wlndowt, stereo Intercom tyttem throoghout. Lrg lot with pool. Call Fred Poulan. GE 759 9100 .. on Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach FREE HORI 'ltMYrts • lo Host l1r lusic F11turl11 Jth11l1 l1ok NORTH LAGUNA: Home of Linda and Jeff 444 Jasmine Street SATURDAY OPEN HOUSE AT PAT'S 4-7 P.M. 660 Bluebird Canyon North Laguna llEFllEllllEITI WATCH CHANNEL 10 to SEE YOUR CANDIDATE Elect CHRISTIAllSEll .. 642-5678 -f • ... " " -.. .. j '· I -a. '· ' -• l. I. ~ :; I . .. t 3 $2.17 per day Thoet'l ALL~ Pty for 3 fkw, 30 deyt ln!N DAlY PlOT SERVICE DIEC TORY s*J1 the IRVIN! MIRROR 9nd iht HUNTINGTON Bl!ACHOOMB!R .wry WICIMed•y.at no .xtre ch•D91 CALL TOOAYll &llMLlll Vour Delly Piiot SerYICe Directory ~tell-.. M2 ... H1nt.llt HOROSCOPE ------______ 3ott_... ltlJ Waat.. 9111 lel1 Wu... SHI ltlt Wu... SIM lelt Wu... II• !fl W~ Prof. F tootling for 1 bf apt Found: brwn puppy, pt Pit Another Wendy's IOCal9d G~ ... ~. ----~t H~ ~_.!? ~ modtr.....:, ••rrll•T PROH!~M .-.o;;JA or room & beth In home. Bull. vie. Magnolla & at Bllit• & Fairview In ., •••• ,..,.,_ .. .,._. _ .. _,.,, _........ ..... -.. •••-....,., M ~ _, C d M I 8 . I I I . 19th, C.M. ~2·218e Costa Meta Is now ec.-SELL 1C KODAK FILM Balboe Bay Ck.1b-70"M fOf preetiSJ'Olll llitln cer-. ...._ ~ 759-9360(7-9pml Found: Keys. ,,.., o .c . ~ting appllcatlont fcx eoupona...Church t>enellt. comm 831-7117 a.ion In Uguna .8eech. ____ ._.;,;;==.;..;.;;;~-- If" 191 Fa Ir ground I . Ca 11 quality mlnd9d people at 240-<M27 mTIU Call tor appt. 4t1-4Na. r.::,t:.. "::!!!e !:! lftt 2tl2 241-8517. ~~."~T~~t: PllGlllWU Preatlglou1 OrWlQ9 Coun ....,_AllllTllT ttudent "* 18. Hour'9 C Q i50 XJ1ey acce.-Found: Smt M. bfk Poodle, btwn 2-5PM. Mon-Fri. $75 per 100. no exper z::, ~= F/tlme Prlmar1t)' b8dl of. ~ .. ~.~- . SYDNEY OiARR 112 dbl. CK Oat 343 no ID. 15th & Clay A~. E.O.E. Part°' lull Ume Start Im· lmmedlately. So mt. floe Experd. ~ , _.., Cabnlto. 548-9518. Npt Hgts. 545-78'SO An1werl"" Service need• medlatefy. For datalla modalin"' experlen"t MEOfC"L ~ t.lkeol'f J*1IOn. pt., Tbthauay, April 5 . Found tan£ bf9cil pu......,, ··• v rl send ••If addreaHd • .. ,.. , ... 642 7222 ... k>r ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Emghasas on movement variety Sl~le Gatage. ..._ p--•11c s--"'a .;-~ t~hona operratCK • -11amped enveloPe to preferred Outgoing P«· lrnmedl•t• opening. • • • · · d · . . . ' . ' Cotta Mesa 150. .... ...... .,,.. ..... ., ous 1M11 362 3rd St •C. CRi..53 Box 9014 sonallty Apply In perlOt' front/beck. Xln1 tran-~«Bob A6MIOtl expcnmentat1<?n. creauve en eavors. aan md1cated 1f yo~ get ideas . 831-6155 Hunt Bdl. 536-4182 Leiguna Beactt Stuart. floricta 33495 • to· 1001 QUa. st. Np1 IOl'lber. Local"'~ ,.IE:S Wlllll on papcr-wnte, 1mpnnt style. elevate sclf~steem. Shon tnp could be Otfi In I t• Loat: Brittany SpMlel F. Aulslant Manager for 21 Bdl. J1m sa.mon1 Im-~5-9700 Of J31-5580 Coelt Ubl&.Mlellla -.~~ on agenda in connec.tion with mission or relative. Watch Virgo! ct ta I "' vie. Bahr & Fairview. Unit• Costa M .... \\rent EUOTllllO ASSE•I. ports/Resale 01v111on Modets M*-'Femlll9 one lft~ In~ TAURUS (Ap~I 20-May 20); You locate needed material. 1h f iNrm or. N.e. C.M. Renrd. !557·75-41 + uras pd. Exper req'd. Experleuce In 90tcMilog ~9300 at19de. 712~W9Y. paymef\lS are made an connection with an object. luxury item or borne. ·~t $1.30 sq :_.1_5032 Lost email rid c:at. t"Mte, Handyman. 855-086!5 :'od ~p~i~~ HOUSECLEANERS w.m-WE NEED NEW FACES Costa Mw ~ Family m ember makes major conc:cssion . Focus on diplomacy, diet .,.,_. Bluebifd P.,tt, Leg Bch Am •W engllth requtr9d. apply in ed: Must be l'lonest & r• For placement In rnodelng liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii and ~urprise git\ from loved one. Libra. Scorpio persons figure IALllA ISL.All area REWARD •9..,.535 Expef'ieneed: foreign & P9f'SOO. 2911 west Garry. liable Good pay, OOoC> l<>ba In Orange County. Pll•ITill prominently. Space for rent. Mike Loet: Wht Samoyed. domettlc. Comml .. lon. Santa Ana. company. 966-1300 MW f• mt Cert GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Temporary setback boomerangs in 673-5374 or 752-2141 "Frlstly". Reward $50 AUTO-TECH 631-6283 lLEmlllCTIOI. H::i~=-tyP.~ TllMtl&..., ~tnNghtty? your favor -views will be vindicated. t1minJ, wtll be on 1.arget and eRtSTOL & REDHILL 3129 675--6855 • IELIYEIY • 5-10 yra experience, eoolllng, cleanl~ SOIM •• 1111 Aleyou .... you'll overcome obstacles. Someone works an your behalf behind C&'ner prof office bldg p uh 30l2 nee01 background In b 1 1 f 11 * m•-• Wellgroomld scenes. Judgment, inutiuon wtll be successfully featured. Take 1000 sq ft & up. Wiii build tnt Need extra Income? Be an troublethootlng analog. ~}r~~ nt,t ~.,,"';':. llJIPod ~·h!:rat ~ · initiative, be confident. to suit tenant, attractive lndependentCarrlerfOf digital & microprocessor quir9d 673-&255 ......... ,.,. ___ u2 ·--andeedrnottv...,.., CANCER (J 21 J I 22) S d G · r: terme WI 111 ITILl IPll THE REGISTER control circuitry Will be ,,,_.,..,,_ .... '" -Do you .... une • u Y : tu Y. emin1 messageiorvahdhint. R.H.lnv•t 751-5999 And running 2, hours a Must have a dependable auembli~ and teetl~ INTERlOR OESIGH. ftare ......... 111 £ntoyWOl1Ungwtcttk.ld97 Someone m position of authonty will back you, will lend suppon. day. 7 daya a weet<. Pr.._ economy car. lrvlne. pr 0101 y p • e I e c. fOf color? Quality people OCC Sli94 ,0 S1!5n mo 1tyouc111unewerYES perhaps financial. Ancnd m~ting which is clandestine in nature. ~~~~~~Ji775 ant this ad and receive a Newport Beach, Costa tro-mechan1ca1 1n1tru· needed to coordlna'e 11 ~/yr Tyi>e 55 wi ~646-7021 You'll be gjven access to confidential material. Relationship grows &40.5470 'two m..UO-tor the ~!:.agoa11 ~ =. ment1. Call 549-4777 decor tor olllcH & good ~ S.-5 M-F 2:30-tpnMon.""' Fri. stronger. priceotone 11am·951-7113 •-. --irw~ homu PIT.FIT w111 Cont9C1Coee:tCommuni- E J I 23 .,2 F Hunt a..cti 419 Main St. OllOlllF•ASUIE ~· .. --·-• ttsm.Unltmltedpotentlal. eou.g...1370 ~ -------L 0 ( u )' -A.ug. .. ) ocus o n populanty, aspiration. 380 sq It Private en-Babylltter. loving reliable tor one ot o .C.'1 o4dest C-118.48-9774 tor ~t. 2 M 432•5007 ~ t>Y Pl BJ lftj I .. fulfillment of goal. Cycle highlights achievement. profit. ability to trance. 'It bath. S225/mo. 111L1&1• 10 care '°' 16 mot boy. companies Cofone del .a&llTllW. ....,_ 4 ·30pm. Arif. 13 \E::.!:"=.,:~ 0r:! reach wide audience. Sales potential is tremendous -you can win Sierra Mgmt 641-1324 FIWITll Ret1 Af1 4Pm. 548-8.455 Mat ~ Ex~tlonal Pwt time Mon ttwv FrL EOE. Mlf/H lnQ H.B. tlrm. c.t Tom Of frienvds1Ran00d m(Aoney2.3A~st. L21.,b)ra0natt\es1 figure phromin.enbtldy. F l.C.mNIT AIU 111-1112 UIYllTTlll•tKI ~~t~~~7_5~;~•tlt• 20•28 tin week ean PW1 Twnet*Ptor ~ Sandy~1900 ug. -.x-p ... : ngma approac gelSJO one. OCUS Otc11>aoe.309-1183sq.f1. DOG OBEOIENCECIUMI Adutta. FIT. PIT Call --557·74801vm1Q u.i bulkier. GeMr• of·--::====-=-===-- on responsibility. achievement. standing an community and in· Lots of prkg, janllorlal & at your home. Rsnbl Charlotte's Sitters •20 EUGmYE SICIETUY flee & receptionist dutlee. •••t-11111 tensified relationship. Be direct. independent. creative and get to hean all ulllltles Incl Mo-to-mo rates. So. Cal. Dog Train· 62nd St. NB &45-3746 Experienced eucutlv• .IEWIUY ULIS 12-5 30 Call Jacki• 3 )'MI'S hotlll expertence of matters. Leo. Aquarius persons pla) key roles. OK from 11/h. 557-7010 Ing Sctiool 963-3388 secretary for maganne Lido Vlll-o«t flneet AGS 833-ln31 or atrong fOod & Mquor LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) Accent on d1rect1on, instructions. Otfiee for ... ,. 525 ft. ESClllTl/IOIELS Baxte<'s neec:ss cocktail. ~1';,~h•~'~ ~~ ~ ~:~:11~n~iq':: PAIT Tm .::C:feoound. Cal M~ spinlual values. ability to communicate needs. Family member plays S-420/mo Ut111 pd. air Outcall ONLV 835_9199 t:><>okkeeP9f'• & cooks. skills Attractive offices In P9f'sor'I expe<'d In quality LllAL ·-REAL ESTATE key role. talks about security. helps you realize ultimate goal. lntutition cond. grO\lnd floor. l055 Apply In pe<son 1•346 Irvine. Call 752-6-474 Jewelry. china and crystal Start at S7 '5. SMklng 11 ••• l 'II hat h Id ........ d d t 'm no ·n i....... accurate El Camino Or Coste TOP SSS Culver Or 1n11ne sates 5 dys a wtt. no HS "'r·"'·. us -·~·. mTAIT •H• is s rong. you sense w s ou vc: one an a I e wa ix . Meu. 3 blks East ol Fa•« Females pref Modeta and BEAUTICIAN F&OIAUIT /&ufst..t eves. 673-9334 hard:.;;.,.. ,,..;;o:,: Rental eo-'11 nMded IOt SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21): Demands are made o n }Our time -view & Adams 754·tO•o. Eacorts (2ta)866-t984 f0< P<es11g1ous skin care busy t>Mch omc:. 10 member of oppos1 te sex could be frivolous despite claims to contrary. Mr Tracy i:~:;:~~ aalon in Laguna B .. ch UUL IEOIRAIY c~u~1~ 964-2890 t>eqtn today. Call PM'I. Kno't'it.protectselfanemotionalclinches.G1velogicequaltimewith lft.S,.fr .. IOoa/f laalan1n Callforappt.•97-4868 IFFllll&lllD 3 burr whit logo 1mpulse.Protectassets.refuselog1veupsomethingof valueformerc Sult .. to3000a/tt fer Salt 4012 •IUm F/TIME TRAINEE for Prln<:ipalofsmall~.-yrMI E. led wi 6T5-t830ptlon9 verbal promise. . Nr Harbor a Baker ciGARETTE or V16Eo •ASSISTANTS sales. delivery and 111 =~· ~:~;:~.,1~ Pt~R~~~M v:,ty ~~ IUl.DTATI SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 )! Be ready to revise. review and 5'9-8181 dys, 720-1'44 OISTRIBUTORSHIPS •MANICURIST phases of hOme center experienced lltlgelion weekenda. Musth9ve~ ULll llNMI to authenticate source material. Check leg.al documents. be posiuvc Open IPacle office In NB. Ca1h Buslne11.... We Clientele not nee o Per 11 10 n Amer· secretary Who will alao pendat>le lltlhlae (amall M~ pubtidy hefd r..i concerning protected material. Means be aware of n$hts. permissions. desk & furn In place. gd J><Ovlde money tor ex· A~~:~b~.S~l~n Bulldlng Center HB. Call as91st In day to day man-truck . van. 11a11on eatate company..-.•· Accent also on possible pannership. public rela11ons and marital water view 646-5015 pension. •11 locatlona. 962•3321 Mr Howden agement 01 office W900fl) to aunt news-perienoed ..._ ~ status. 1ra1nl~ & • BONDED Ill PllSll 'flLLITI•E PAY Accuracy. 1ppr~at1on ~ deal9I' In Irvine In all phHH. com· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)·. Emphasis on emplo)·ment. Unique waterfront office '11'n·~tt toupassvl•ot UYO\IR lnOMWtN· Day thlft. 5 day week Call P&•T/TllE w-1 tor detail and referenoes area. Must be depen-merclal/industrlal condO building In Cannery dis· S •97 ,...77 x292 n wn required Call Britton deble. Contact Grag convarelon helpful people who rely upon you. pets and resolutions concerning nutrition. 1r1c1. Large & 1mall space PA T OR FULL TIME hefry, -Opportunities avallable 640-6962. 8 30-11 30 Hy<M Monday th<u Frida) Pteue reply to aa1ee diet and health. Communication received which could involve avallable. 675-9588 INBVUESSINTES3SS"""5 to S50 000 C&SllEI (rnta1r11f} wl1h the LOS ANGELES t>etween 9·30 and 10·30 manager. P . o Box member of opposite sex and possible holiday JOUmey. Gemini plays lasiana ·'"' · 7-12 noon, 5 day week TIMES Circula!lon De· IUlmllAIOl IUI am onz . ~2~21 8708-t2!5 , Newpor1 key role. I I 2916 Wln1ton-Salem-K0011 Experienced only Call par1ment 1n our door to Perform 111 types of apt 8Nct't. CA 92658-1708 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Sudden announcement could mean tatl 1 l-800·241"2268 Marla. •9•·8,60 EOE g~g~r:~ws~~:an~!:~ ~=· 1,,Pr::oum'!!ni-: UllPT/111'1..,. you have more m oney than onganally anticipated. Emphasis also on llllOAL IUI ••rt11'-"' CWSllll &1111-hourly wage plus com-bu11def/costomer MrvtOe P&IT/19 Phonel. Nt• typtng l Nino affection. romance. variety and speculative venture. Purchase Well .. 1 medlcaleult .. for T.D. I 4021 Substitute Classroom m1as1on Hours 4pm to req'd 642 .. 907 W1••"4aJ..., good starting po8ltion In · d . cd f n I c al bl cat.on Libra plays lease, close 10 hospitals. I HmEll Aides end Special Ed gpm Training Is pro-9am to 5pm Driving growing company, 8-!5. 10 teal an area o a . uxury or spc I pu I I . Hunt Bch. $1.15 tull Mf· ,I.. Aides: PIT; 1-2 yrs exper-vlded Potential to .. rn Lou of wOfk for 1011 of F n1a.1n Val~ & Hunt~ 558-3318 Jadtle impop~~~Fcb. 19-March 20): Define terms. get promises in wrlting. vice. Call 642•8657' lert.111 Ct. IH. lence WO<klng with chll· !~1~ce~ For ~ • full ti~~ 1~ ,,;on 8Mct't ~ -i:: Aec.ptlonl•t tor buay see others m realistic light. Romance 1s involved, but practical issues t~JM~!~tit!LI~~~. S~I~= ~~4~ 2nd ~~~P~~:m~~~:~ 957-2361 exi 1204 Ull IP AITIST ;::::: neoeuarY ss :1r:,~~ ~ also art featured. You'll learn more about propcny, home. safety and port. 549·8181 dys, Robt. Satti.r NH/CM 760·3•00. E.O.E GENERAL OFFICE for pr"llglous skin cer• P9f' hour ptu1 mt~ and dep9n<SM>te w/OOod potential value of possessions. Another Pisces plays important role. 720-1444 ev RE Broker Bd Realtora Cleanlng person, •XP. Part 11me 6ookeepet with salon In Laguna BMcn. Apply In ~ et he phone VOlcle. Non-amkr •••• rc1•1 6"2·2171 545-061 1 part°' FIT tor est busl· accura1e lyptng. also Call for appt 497·4868 Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay preterr9d 631-5e80 U I H general c1er1eal duties --Costa M_. S.. Mr lNrtanta. Oat. AJ!!l••••·· • . 4AA• ..... 11 ztll Wsl~oci6oH~Sp$S~~°'c~.e;~ ~~~~~u·~r7!~sc·~.c& CoSta Mesa 546-8671 Manager for 16 Untl Apt Clyde Barrow EOE. lfCU11mlt I .. I. 2711 •-CJ t 2771 •~ . wkdy mornings only Bldg located nice quiet f !WJ!ft IC• ua taH t -1 ""e"AP".-..,.,.,,--new-.-n--•""m'!"k-r 1~0 Harbor F V. check . no penalty. Cel 641· 1269 East side area. Coste Immediate openl~ or -2 Br. doee to beach 1500 ·-., 1240 SQ ft. 0en1aonA1soc. 873-731 ' --CLERICAL GENERAL OFFICE Mesa Mature couple PIYllLL Ct.DI part ·llm• Receptionist PARK MEW,ORT APARTMUTS 223 La Paloma Cell tor ~~~0$!~~ ce~'~7;~ Agent 541 ·503~ W Sl Clerk lypls1 trainee preferreo Please Mnd E~ Eaoel com-with some PB)( ••- appt 437.7919 I • 1.1 -Btlr aat •Secretaries wtaplltude '°' math & resume to Ad •908. Dally pany beneflll and excel t:*'lenOe Hours 4 30 pm •---------Beyalde Or. on Bay Pvt a aatruu Zl20 •Flle Clerk• posting ol accts in prop. Piiot. PO Box 1560 working cond lllon1 lo 8 30 pm · Mondaythn.I bch Poot. Shr 2BA 2ba. ltatala U.111 &OOlllT •RecepllonlslS er1y mngmnl/lew offices Costa Me11. Ca 92627 Apply In person Unlver· Friday end every other 'la.alt bl 2710 $•75/mo Incl utll Boat 4 IQ girallft-•Word Processors Plenanl telephone man Stty Oldtmobtle 2860 WMkend Call J~ (n(e NEW 1 BA CONDO dock avail O Johnaon 3975 Birch. NB "9Wnn •Typ1111 ner Coste Mesa 12 hr: Harbor 81 Coal• Mee& Collins for appt Jim 1 b k 760·t968,675-6000 S50sqfl Agt 5•1•5032 The Or-noe Coas1 Daily 1rrllllllEI. prwll 957-1414 IUl&IEI _ Selmons lmpon, 1301 IN NEWPORT BEACH Sec gate. prv rg ac Piiot has en excellent op-"" PBX Opefators. PIT 4-8 Ou all. SI Npt Bctt. yard, trplc. dsw. w/d MIF 25 yr or older to lhr 3 c M 600 sq f1 with tmall por1un1ty lor a career TIP 1$1 IH. OFFICE /P&YllLL T~cEc~p~:~~ P~~~~c:11":; PM/awing and night thlf1 833·9300 Slnglel 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart- ment• & T ownhousH lrom seeo ~Aak about lumllhed aptl complete with TV. linens & utenlll•. m•y be rent9d fOf 1hort tefm or longer). On Jam· t>ot .. Rd at San Joaqulh HUit Rd hk-up, rec area w/pool Br hte H.B. nr bch ~tr'lce & rutroom. oriented Major AccO\lnt VICTOR Permanent part/time pos reltel Ellper pref, but wtll $495/mo. No pell. Av ell S4ooimo 751•497 4 $300/mo Agt 759-8006 Executive with 1 proven TEMPORARY SERVICES 111on Bedell ConstructlOt for Otstrtet Mll\899(S to tratn Regency Anawerlng Shop at home 1r1 M9Y now S.. by appl only. M/F thr turn 3 Br COM ------1rack record Great 4341 Birch St Suite 105 co c M s•5·3292 :~~,:;·•~us~e~:·~:,r s.rvic. ~5-2550 with ctaalti.cs ~2-5671 141·2"1· hH $375/mo • utlll Sttrlft 29 potentlll, guaranteed Newport Beactt 556-8620 -.i--· I wagon or plek-up Good --;eR CONDO. S4~ Avell 720-164i af16PM 1300 aq fi Oil Newpof1 drew 1g1lna1 com--GLAZER NEEDED I salary. mileage allow- Blvd In Costa Mesa ml1Ston. O.llra to move CLEll/TYPtST Experienced some autt No "'"ti. ready now .. ,F to •"r CdMar 2Br furn p 1111~ ,,.,.m·---t Hrs nreferred 642-0084 ance. company t>eneftts ,.. m .... .,. tt Ant 875-6700 lnlo manegement a plus ar ,,_ ...... ....... ,.. end "~u• """"""unity 5•9·2•47 apl Poot $395/mo 1.-\ .... • Send resume to 9-I 60 wpm $6/hr I llllll AwtY 7"' ~t Deity 1'4·1100 = .... --,---2tii utll, 1mmed 329 Aaat••ctanta p o. Box 1580 March ot Olmes. Cotti Piiot Circulation Otfkle 2 Room• avail In Jrg A 8. ~~~~~~~O ~t4~S-~~ XffENTfON: EmPloyef• 1 Costa M .... 92628 ~91 ~ 1·97oo --1 See our ad 1n today't 330 we11 Bey, Co1ta Sharp 1 Br. s..oo. Refrlg. hOm•. poof, female stu· Peraonnel Handwriting EOE Companion mature tor 50 pape1 under SECURITY Mesa Monday thru Fr1- cerpoft, ate 633B West-dent pref s 175 8-47-189 Prof M/F 25-35 thr ex9C An1ty1I• clasa. yr old dlllurbed Fem Pvt OFFICERS and call day No phOne calls mlnater AV9 142·174!5 after 9pm °'before km 3 br houaa. E/blutt, NB _Call Retha 831-1829 &-mM OUU rm & board No c00kln9 (11•) IU· 1111 E o E 1•••[iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiill --WHh/dry, dlahwHher. _. 01 houseworli. Salary 1--------• M/F Amenltl .. Newport poof. frplc. gar. Avall. Splrltual Reader & Ad· IQ.lerlof ~n firm Mell· open 49•·5857 DYNA MIC Spadous sfnglt. Ont Cr•t 1375.00 Aft 8 call 4.13 9llO() 640-6383 vleor Advloe In all Ille 11'g bright per ton capable PROTECTION Find wttat yo~ wanl In Dally Pilot Clasaiti.da 850-5'58 mattera. iov.. marr19Qe. of handling a variety of Cl lmlOTtll SERVICES & two bedroom apts. Prof reep MIF to thr loV9-buslnna. etc. 631·9397 !Unctions Potttlon r .. General contrac1or look- RJRHISMED or UHtURHISHED, AU UTILITIES PAID HEM.ll4 CLUBS. TU~NIS. SWtMMiftG. ~s rmich mort! Sorry. no pcb. Modeb Nr Hoeg Hoep • Mel em· ly M ... Verde CM hOuM SPIRITUAL READINGS qulr• light bkkpg, 120 Ing !or tubs to bid in- ptoyed JadY. Rm & Ba. S300 mo . 957·&&82 Ad'llee In •" matters. l~. key by touch and strong turance worll. Send re- S260. Relt 5•8..0261 Br & ba In lfg CM hme. marrtege & butln .. 1. d111 Input eitper Good iume to G I C 312 Oak Nr S.C Plata. Room In 38r tmk. contlder•t• Fe Alto counMllng 1115 communl<:•tlons llclHa • Pl •G Br•• 92621 condO 1250+ amt des> S300+ !>'~2497 So. El ~ AMI San muet PIMMnt enwon- POOf/.-C s.t&-!510.... .. ..__.. ... _ Clem Uc'd 492-trie rnent and gOOCI benefit• Clll ""P · Mar ......,,, n-. Non-amoker ~ 1~ " l I I 11 ti "· 2 30 Room. lg hm In NB/CM pool, ln<Sry. utll Incl. 1250 t f •-•••-•-... e ie · v me .,.m · arM Pvt ba. kltCltt pttv L ... 875·5282. M2.eot9 __ , ... , 10am·8 30. rotettno N-amkr prof Fem $350 Found 3/31. Ffn vty. blc ln¥eet1Mtlt corp .. Newi>ort WMkend• Hotpltal exp aft 5•30 pm 2• 1-9915. Rmmt• ..,..tld to tl'lr 3 Br M. Lab & Aetr~ .t-5 8McJ\ Strong aipeMe. ptef Apply 1n peraon t-3 14M120 aft W9d ~ .. 73,_~,'.~ ~2.;.!!M7 moa. "'7..a823 ...,., 1 pro~1 ~OOf'dt-Mon -Frt Mel8 Verde v ~ """ -...,..., ~, Conv11eacen1. 861 Room 111819 Bath 'emaie nation '"pontlbllltl91 Cent• SI . C M 30 & uc> Newpot1 Beech. Shr 3br Balboe Pt1nn 9Pt. Mu.t PGMt1 exc.ftent 1225 l>h ~~2S90 MtF sm mo. Cell t>twn 3 f NIU\ ADS penorlMI manaoerMnt CUSTODIAN. dY• 40 • & &pm 871-250t g.._, UUIWI & organliatlonal 1111n1 hra/wti S5 72 hr• ben- SEA & SUN LODGE win ~ 10 dept efltl Pickup ~ICWlllon S 120 -/up. Cofof TV Stw IUx hme 1• 1215. Pvt •ft[ fR£[ 1taff members, Incl Ex· at St Andr...s Pr.-by-3028 W Coat Hwy Npt 2 rm eult• 1376. RooftoP " ecutlw a.cr.tanaa lClnt tettan C~h eoo St An· -...... -,ro--,.--"I:' ~!".'.'I ft611o ¥\I 1tt. lat. -.. c I SH .. _._ ........ Ina... .. .. NB .... 1 2·-You'M be 8nug Au 6UO li'i ~tlltM2-344S.9M-M"79 a: Mtn·~~ .. ~ g:,7,3 .... ..., IOY9IY room. poot, kl\ prlv I ~t req Non/amotter nraltPCWtS300 54-1740 ta U Ml .... ll lmmed GC*k'll s.no I EIT&LHlln. So .... ,tm oc;a:;: mt. UV reeume 'o TMI. PO Box Busy, cheefful offa _., Ncw,1t1 leadt • Gdjf; cere fOf u;; ~ ::..~~o 2600, N.a t2MO .\Un ~4: ;:!ed tofree: ~ 1700 161h Sired Eld.,lf. 24 hours ot FOlinO e.nJle \: l'Mlt Cermen w°". vencernent ROA pref 4 (al~~ ""*""'°"· 131·1011 A .. IMd men emptOytet m.r '*· llBILllTUtm Ult Olly .,... P1MN call .... ~ 111 •• Faehlon Ill end arH -tor..._ Ofb. eklltl req'd Mency MS-7S80 Nca,1rtludlk ..... 1 .... 7 wantt pnvate room In found Bill l9'1 Germ ~ booel~ & ••• -... -• wul ...., home. CdM .,.._ Lany Sheflf*d M ~ H8 Must be Nit ,_ .....,.. UO IM A~ eeEXA#RoAf: lovely wrtt• Ad 011 clo Oelty "3·7201. 2,3JMCMM97 21i.tt11 E•~ to WOfll ' (It 1611\) P9nln PrjGBA 3" be Piiot. P.O Box 1&60 .,... Ca.tMtic:a. OTC. l -·"-5···ll·04--•l.' ;J\IJJ~llwtg ~ 813-tOIO Coeta M..a 9*9 Wal'lt ~di Call 142 111 tttlll ldlll 8.4~5611 pt\afmecy Ftl !'9-212, l -====::.t=== Daily Pilai GRAPHIC ARTIST Orang County daily n '"' popt-r ~ seek.lng a quack layout artist w1lh knowledge of ty~1zing, rt-pm duct1on. camE"ra ready art Must ~ able lo gt'l along Wt>lt Wllh Ml~ reps nd interpret their ideas into lnyouts AddlUOMl pror:ts may tneludP fly f'n. brochur<.'S, mas-. And gles pn..· c nl.:ltion vtsuals. 3 years ex pcnenl't' nt>w,paper pre ferabl S.-nd ~ume or l tt r of qunhfi· ca11ons to OR~,(, .. : <:O SI' DAil.' PILOT P .O Box 1~60 C ta M CA 92626 Attcnllon Mt-hndn ThackN•i C R EER OPPORT ~ITI ES 1 IU 11\ll \ f'1l01 llf .. ~r l m1111\ • ,.,,..,,.1 , nmm11mh .,..., 'l"'r" hil• JI '.,,..,. ul lull an<I p41• ''""' I'"'"...,. •• 1\at., '"' ~ u4 11 ... le,.,,..,. .. •n "PJ""tol\ll\ '" ..... ~ .. ,.h •• fRll•tancl"'ll 11all mtrrr•t ... t" •. nlf"\ lf\jl """ ·~ tir.• •1th111 •n ru1t11111 1ncl11•tn \r1\ FR 11"1\< . o., .......... "" ua ... llt'd ~ Itri.~ "-'" dttpla\ rtmt<><' ''Y""'np lot • aM..t.t" '"'" nf)"Wntt and · 1 f"n•rll tra•l !N utd !'.ala,. phia ro<nm- • ll•p•t< 11 [ln~~ (loft M~t--"' 1t1· • ~ pttl"'f, .... and ~ ..ta ad pttpar•htlft, ~ ntahh.11 and '"If'~ • ..,,.f'IM 1:..ndodat" mu•I IW' at lo-a•I .21 v,..n m ~ ""h a ,,IUll J1n1ua ,... ~,.J w>mr .,.,.. .. ""°' ...,.arh t nn11R1 \l • I lrrl I •pnt Part llm• ,_.,"~ lo• "'I" """''' IT'••I end ft>n~ral .... ,,.:>n<otali• ............ M-111> f'Rlllll tilt'' '"l"'"'na I"''''"' • ~·'"'""'•~ ',.,,_ l'or 1 11111" "f'fl<•tuntl\ 1t 1Nn1 .... t r~., '"" '"-...... -n4 , .... lw--1 ',,_. •• "1 i....,. ""' ... ,. • 'l r 1111"1 .-••-1trnwth do-•...,>mrnt end a "'"'I""'"'' i.iwf11• ,._,.._,r II '"'~'..t 1•"'- '...,.,. '" enol .,.,.., I""" I II:.. it.ii\ '" •!ld ,,...._ 10 P .. ~...,....,,_, ·~ , ...... -.... ' J ACROSS 1 Flatltr 5 Rampart' 10 Be deprived ol J4 Large- mouthed 111 15 Foolish one 16 Rose Bowl, •g 17 Hello and goodbye" 20 Many limes 2 1 Chimney d1h 22 Warns 23 Knock out 24 Commands 25 Church area 28 Soap mal(lngs 32 Wiiiow 33 Provide food 34 Spree st 35 Gr11ty par11cles 36 Showed griel 37 Canine treat 38 Brunch item 39 Rowing crews 40 Billow 41 Acts in return 43 Lent 53 56 59 obMrVer 44 Intertwine 45 Unctuous 48 Summon back 49 Lab burner, SO Poor actor 53 Geis revenge 56 Tooth: pref 57 Fruit 58Gem 59 Food morMtla 60 Put forth 61 Unlle DOWN I London area 2 Norse king 3 Got off 4 Buddy 5 Be a victor 6 Append 7 Eteva1e 8 Mauna - 9 Drew tight 10 Meanest 11 ··-the Waves 12 Season 13 Pipe JOlnlS 18 In motion 19 Berry bush 23 Hastened 57 60 "'IVK)Ut "'ZZLI I OL YID 24 Mouthfuls 42 Factories 25 Model 43 Bes1 26 Treatment 45 Additional 27 Burbots 46 Make over 28 COYples 4 7 Always 29 End prenia-48 Penny turely 49 Substitute 30 Appliance sufl 3 1 Handle the 50 Expect rudder 51 Russian sea 33 Unrefined 52 Card 36 Finish comb1nat1on 3 7 Occupied 5 4 Goddess of 39 Young horses peace 40 Casa rooms 55 tn11m1date 9 10 11 12 13 16 22 S ECRETARY L.AAG! S!L!CTlOtt 0' NEW & VS~D 8MW'81 ........ VOLUME &AL!S SERVICE & LEASING 3'70 N. CheNy A\19. LONG BEACH (No. CMrryexlt...05) l l1C)llf.1111 'fr .. lne Wetoome OPEN SEVEN DAY'S P/TlmelorSatesman.6-10 ••= I '74 8210, right aide hrt wk Type, file. Nr 171h amUhed eng OOo<I 8"t lrvlne NB 54.50 hr t Win If mMllft Cetta ..... lilt '71 Bubble Top oft., &4M93~ att ePM BILL YATES YW-PORSCH 'i,lfl I lLHI C 1 lll, 111 837-4800 49l-4S I "'" 1 533• tt • Camper, fully equipped. start "" • .. • ~ Wlll'l IMIMIT Ywd s• Sat/Sun 8-4 off•. &44-$591 --.-,-7 .. -D-A-T""'S,.....U_N....,Z::o---Vtl" I Secretary/Recepllontat, TRAVEL AGENT: GOAL: More apendlng 255 Cotta M .. St. .. JL I Aulo, blue, gr .. 1 cond., ldE 17§ I 8 top 5111111. rela .. lor busy No upeti.nc:e required. money. Requetll hu... 650-6016 ttr .. n ™00 493-0789 inJ ean, r Laguna· Hiiis law office. Free aemlnar. 650-1500 b•~~lolocatefOlherl desired l~rt ltac• lit 178 PUdl Maxi. 808 ml, xlnt .78 280z 5 apd caaa. JciW wagon.4'9'4-~658 830-6660 po .. t n aa OM... __ eond 675-2176 $400 • • ISeoo 11•n /TYNT HOURS: No mo<• ll'lan Bl ... pe;g pong teb,, .• . miles. mint cond . ~5 Dl '75 WAGON. IEOlnlllY 11100 •·•'A '* day, 5 day weelt attun.,. & doon. lklle & Honda Expre11 Motor-8~5899 Clean, rune great, 1225 Top Job In growing CM Newporl Beach office only, Mon.· Fri. (prefer ·equip. CIO~. 81c. Sal. ~~k50•. lowbO ~1•. ad9.3cond ·at 280ZX 2+2, au10, fully FIRM &4~7 elee1ronlcs co. Handle 10am-2 Of 2;30pm). Fri-M 1447 GALAXY OR ... o ·.,.. -049: loeded, tow ml, goodr ....... -_...._,..,...,.--=-o---:~ salH. admlnt11rat1on, needa outgoing, exp. dayt off u nece.sery 10 · · l / cond. $9950 obo. Volvo Pt800 '63. Run personnel & top exec•. typlll 75-85wpm & golol\usbancfsranct\fOf CHURCH RUMMAGE ttrcyc n 983-78"3 Of ge2•3138 grMt. nd1 coametlct 540 ... 208 for appt. receptlonl1t wlfronl weekend•. SALE t5tl'I St & St An· lcttttrl 1111 12000. Call 4'944975 office appearance. 3.5 BENEFITS EXPECTED: drewt Road. Newport 175 y ;;;. ITW 1350 trrad ti I A IL.-... SIOllm lfflllll yrs ·~· Catt Joan •1 Paid l'I011day1, paid v•-Tl'lur9 M . Fri 9-Noon. runs~. &46-1262 ' '17 FERRARI 336dt at", .... nnc Fill I Partin.. 7~80 O catlona. lnturanoe. J""1 4 640·834'7 Of 644-5&42 Appllcatlon1 are now Typll1, FuH Of PIT. exp. for SERVICES: Nothing re· l!l , '16 250 Honda EltlnOfe, AJIC 138 being ace.pied IOf pot.-structural peat control re-qutring tiring exertion. 1.52 ~ Brllnt Diamond nda work 1100, 650-5026 Flat 173 HORNET· a; 1t1ons In San Clemente, ports. Call 752-2357 Muat relalll en«gy fOf Ring. lab appr. *7600· ·a.. HONDA 250 175 Fial good cond. radio new wb c. u:~ Cotta Meaa & NftP0'1 IOc:IGalES~bTllgalloni. .... S3900. 642"123" THREE WHEELER S650/obo. Mutt .. u. •tarter, good trantp. areas. !Mneflt package & nPllT WA · 0 be b8"d on Rolex Slalnleea & 0014. 65M593 mutt MOl 960-0730 MUSf'SEll S500 uniforms fur11l1Md. Un-lob held 20 yean ago & datejuat. At cond Piaper9 . 84~57• cOlnSecurlly SeMces W •Pr T Ii coslofllvlngral.-.Hour-tnc1a 1950720-1998 Tl&llm 78 X19, 11750 Excell.1=-...,....,..-------r~ 999-01521(213)802-2•7• 1mm:1a1e 9:i>e~1n~or ~tl'lb<.=; ~t~~ng •11ctl1Uffta llll Tra"\ MM ~~~~~~987~old, runa lalck IEOllm Word Proceuor Trainee. OFFERING· Dependablllty Tour m 1hi9 lf;7iii7p;.iOi(lii.es_.Xe•R•E-4''!""'IOOOiiW'!ill Mu11 have accurate 70 Mon.-Thu;a., Fri. ques-2 Wrought Iron Swag 1Umm.,. Must ncrtflQ9 Ht l S SEDAN att power, xlr lf'10llS wpm typing lkllla & be ttonable Dependable Lampl 180. Aquarium Beautlful GMman Trailer 112 ACCORD 5 aPd altver cond. S2300. 642-3030 14·4.21/llr dart de tall orten~ed . Gall 1ran1pona11on In my Stand *150· Office Deak Call 857-14'29 43K mt . many xtru, perl. "'"-r..~n~----ZTr. Frankie at 553 1212. Mercedes Benz $100 557-1630 d $8895 eM-5571 -IC · •Immediate openings IElllLL LOOI APPEARANCE: I will wear 35gal hexagon aquarium A••• men/ ~on . . 7 ·73 c8dltrac CdY. , OWMI =~~11{!~,t~ded ULIUTlll ~ all my diamond• w/11nd. nda pump S100, Putt 9015 asa Best otter •Weeldypay EOE M/F EDUCATION: llmlled. apt n frtg $75 650-502e J = ·ti a;;;: m 964-6700 •Mature 18 year olds High .el'IOOI. 1 temeater 9 tt couch w/2 match chra t95x 15 Tires. wl'IMll '74' Eldorado Cad Conven and older welcome bookkeeping (do not It oond 5400 Whlrtpooi l'lub caps & trim rtnga Mini cond. Stored. Full YtterlHIJ ....... understand 11, have not ex l'I / u d · 5450 all $200 645-0792 &45--0721 equipped. 70K ml IYUlllO PllTIOTill IEIYIOll f0< busy amt animal tioapl· applied It). ws r g ryr · $8000 &42 149Q ta.I. Mature, friendly com-WORK EXPERIENCE: 650·l 750 8 apolce rlrnt, cheep. S75 /obo, • petent person. Com-connected with market-Antique bed, 1 oe.k & 1 962-294'2 '77 BlariU. ltte blue. 1250I putenzed records. Wiii Ing (auembly tine' at mahogany Amol re, Compl propane Ml-up .., obo or trade. 891-7606 train Stalf Is small. Nabisco) Connected walnut hutch, desk. fold· tanks. runs on propa'~ •D WEllA'I '77 Sed Dv. 111'1 Int. man (114UH·1HI enthuslutlc. geared 10 with world trade (men-Ing c:l'lrs, sewing mach <>< gu s750 645.265l SOUTH x1ru 25.500 ml. S699~ 10AM-~PM. Mon.-Frl high quality care 6 days anger f0< the Stoci< Ex· w/cab, mlac. 675-6770 · · Owner 4'94'·l502 5100 Service station at1endan1.j w.-. 2 afternoons ott. change). Restauran1eur AQUARIUMS· 130 & 65 It ltrt laHr Olllfll cou1n '79 ELOO"•OO BIARITZ 8-Spm, wllh 2 hr lunch (wal1rett) Executive al Incl• ·atanda. all FOf max. $325 per Yf "" P/T eves & wtmd1. neat break 642-384'3 (wrote ohecil1 fOf the ~ulpml w/wo 3 lg fish Amer Inter Aulo Auoc ISIZI loaded. exit. $8300 re~~~,~~ST iHOSTESS Retail sales !':ri:'~a:1~ ~ :~~-WlfTH /ESS owner. my husband) tn-$225 & S 125 Of $300 both will do all repatrs and..,. 644-6829 •••• waat" sure •••• w ..... HOlmtllST 5100 Btlt W1at .. FI T Phones typing. some bkkPQ C M 546-1730 Recep11on111-genera1 ot- t1ce lor growing bottle water company Good phone per!lona111y non.smkr Will tram Apply 1n person 17842 Cowan St, Irv RECEPTIONIST Headquarters o"'ce of res- taurant chain has an 1m· mediate opemng for a lull time. permanent Recep· 11on1a1 Busy lobby & D1m.,ns1on PBX swltch- boerd that requires a very personable 1nd1111d- ual wllh front office. pro· lesseonat appear a nee Pos111on also requires use ?>f 10 key adder & Ille typing Lovely olltces. medical/dental package Apply In person Tiit Jelly bur;., lee. 1704'2 G11tefte v Irvine 250-0331 RIOIPTllllST For law ott1ce. hgl"ll ac coun11ng good typing skills & good pl'lone per- sonahty Call 644-5292 HOEPT/nPIST Active sates office with buay telephones Central Newport 1oca11on Ask fOf Joan Lamb W1ttrfr11t llt•H IH. R11lttr1 II 1-1'00 Fun responsibtlllles. New· ·~•alC.111lt11t* 2590 N......vvi Bl.C M vOlved In making de-644'72110f6754'870 vice 2•0-8310Mr Van "WIWILLMT '80Cped8Vllla.xlntcond Port Beach location Exp d or will train tn bridal. v~ ... ~·. P/llme Apply In peflOfl at clslons (cleaned new • • 11 •lllllLI I I al shocks Mii Reta 1 1 th 1 s k B PI T hel d & Di Prego'1 Restaurant. homes lor acceptance ol Carpel 37 sq yds. deep ROLL BARS w/llgl'lts. like ow m · r • wage commensera1ew1th i co ingsaesexp nae ar. p, •Y 2267FalrvtewRd CM buyers). Helped to pile Nylon. It grn, xlnt nu$14'5.673-8726 VolumeSalel,S.rvtce tires &i brakes, tralle expereence req PT /FT Costa Mesa eves 18 or over. Rec-change tl'le outlook of my 1175. Also new Anso " A W .. And Leasing hitch & lots ot ~xtrH WAITER/WAITRESS 859-5559 546-1821 quetball World Call Wuylll/W&ITllSS community (worked In blu/gry carpet h 10 atn aat 18711 S..chBlvd $8900. 963-78"3 wkd)'9 Days only experience re-Sales --1 MOllly962-1374' Oaysl'llft 5dayweelt.Call cleaners). 1110 Drapes, gold, xlnl IO&llTllAYI Hunh"ilonBeach 962·3138evu qui~~o6~~~~RER AN OHIO OIL CO otters Slllll ... CUii Sherry. 4'97·4'4'77 X292. ULTIMATELY Would con-cond. call tor Mes S165 fOf vehicle 551-8285 (114) 142•2000 '81 BIARRrTZ: loaded, kw ExPMtence helptut part high income. plus cash wtth food expeflence s Wanted exper'd manager lld« acc.eptlng • d• 962-5825 I ml, xlnl cond. S 16,900 time days bonuses. benef~s t o day week. Call Merla, and sales persons for ~~:"inm:~~ ~:1=~ Magic llland Gold Card 1111111 Call 831-6259 att. 6pm. Call between 830·11AM c~~~~~ ~~~!°nA';ga:~I~~= •94-846Q _!OE Hallmatk •hop. 780-9277 Reply to Ad • ,, 1, Dally mem bersh Ip 1595 WE •• , 181 Jag XJ6. cobalt blue. '82 FltWd Brougham aed8' 759 1122 p I PO B 1560 644' 2326 Clra111 o••s anlr1. good cond, 28,500 de' Elegance. loaded Restaurant • ~~:~pe~:~~ca~rll~~r~-Da1·1y P1·1a1~ . c~~:. Mesa. c~x92626.. .MOVING SALE ~ "" ml, ll9,500 64'0-5766 everything! Showroo" EUIAIT IEWNllT cants Co Box 426, Day· From utensils 10 king sz All TllOIS J.aahr1•la1 1331 = 0~1yW:.:. ~ IUOl RESTAIUIT ton Ohio 45401 hit SSl waterbed 6"6-5603 '37 106Gf 2+2, restored, S 15,000 64'0-5560 needs Hosl/ess. Bar-HUS RETAIL SALES ~kton Frlse, I ke. male. Niiiy· Tl'lrlfly Fuhlon xlnt cond. Priced to MCI. 64'4'-0505 eves tenders. Wa lterteu and Challenging oppor1un1ty !Omo. S350. 673-5376 ShOw. Attlatance League PIP. •99-234'7 wkdy1 9-4' NABERS Busboys Apply In per-for sell-motivated home-COORDIMAJOR of NB., 505 32nd SI SAT tr~ft = 145 son 1000 Bristol St makers. part 11me or lull n Dog Obedience clasaea at wllh MOdellng 10-2 North. Newpofl Beach lime commission sales your home Rsnbl rates ·se 190sl. I conven c•n1LLAC of protesstona1 high Orange County dally ne w spaper 1s Call So. Cal Dog Training SCM Copier, S15. Sac· Rebll engine, new paint, NI RnAIL quahty g1tts to business Sl"<'king fast paced, flexible achiever SCl'loOI 963-33~8 tarlal dftk s75. 2 ChalM $9500/obo. 786-6419 ~ (new) S125 ea. Ratan WE llY SALES CLElll clients Call for appl to coordinate display sal~ act1v1ty K ... l'louncl AKC. Beaut. table baM 540. Bombe USED CARS & TRUCKS '81 220S. MUST SELL LARGEST SEU:CTION ot late model, low mlteage Cadlltacs In Southern Catltornlal See us tOdayl STOOi CLlllS 250-0352 Must have exccpllonal organizational 2'h yrs. Travel req Free chest S135. mirror S 10. COME IN OR CALL FOR · S l250. 6"5-3392• PART TllE Sates-Person. par1 lime. skills Duties include tracking daily 10 gd home 4'99-5538 lge 'h ~ass sq. 150. Owl FREI &PPllAIS&l call anytime. * Retall ex per preferred (But not required) * F1ex1bte hours (AM/PM evenings) Apply Now COIHllH llSTllllmll 10080 Adams S1 Hun11ng1on Beach 9am-6pm Dally Read the claulfled ads for the bell deels In apart- men1 renlals 642-5678 uperienoe req'd Barely 1 b h f Labs. yellow. 7 wk1. AKC lamp S 5• 831-2191 Connler-0.llllo '87 MB 250S clautc. There Swim Wear. 2 111 ~a ('S, answering usy P on es or Chempllnes.sl'lots,mele SCRAM LETS lmmac cond, $6900 2600Harbor8lVd w Balboa Blvd NB outside sal~ staff. coordinating S200 842-U94 • llEYllUT 673-1000 COSTA MESA Salesperson• Ml/lime theater adverusmg Some typing. fil-wan1ed· Fem Queenaland lNSWERS H1~~~::0e:8~ :iXgH '7t 290SEL. lmmac. rune ~nrtltt I New designer boutique. mg required N ewspaper o r agency Heeler 10 breed or 10 n 141 ... llJ 141·1111 beaullfully Mull aee. -------- Fashion Isl. Must have l'X"'•r1enc:e a+ S0 nd resum"" or le tter k .. p. 673-64'57 15.950 979-3904' 1980 Citation. fronl end exp & refs. 760-9333 r " ~ Toward· uu., WE wu19 YHll -11( qualtficat1on~ to: •-titan Blank . C.eal -• ·11 MBZ 2SOC. S9000. damage. drlveable 12250 Sales Tradlllonal Mens &. ,... _ UNAWARE 1••1 A&•J C.M. 15"3 Orange Ave Ladies slore IOOiltng lor Orang ... Coast Datly Ptlot Claw foot bathtub. 1200 1 wlll'I thete wes • happy "' """ IN PERFECT CONDITION lull or par1 time sales-Ad r: 968 GOOd cond 5"6· 1379 medium berw.en being Sae Ronald Deca 640·~7 673"3388 'll le.tt Oarlt I 1llO person. xlnt opprlny tor p 0 Box 1560 Attllaacta l l totally Informed and '76 450SL. tllve<fred Int, 956-2258 tile right person, e1Cper __ bllaatvlty UNAWARE both tops, vJtry nice. -------- helpful Halltday·s Costa M esa. CA 92626 ....... ,, lrtl ~Hlfft 122.000. 4'97-6222 '11 l&PlllOI nl T d Cl All t P H h •• -Tollet N l-'y trame $30. Eva4'74 IOOOwkd-8 5 ra 111onal Olhlng Pn 1nn. eggy oggart Relrlg s~.c-,.~-d •• 7" 300TD T .. -• , •• 645 0793 "'""""' .,...,..,., OroparmcommodeS14'0 ' • urt>o char.-.,,....,.---,---.,--,...,,-• ORANGE COAST DAIL y PILOT Sales Guar 54'9-3077 Custom wheelehalr, re-f,lllt wagon. Sunroof, caaet· ·79 Impala. 4'0r, V8. Claasified Ads 6"2-5678 i io w BAY <;' • "?S '.~MC SA CA 9767& 22 elf Frigidaire. SIS, gold movable arm/leg S700 I.I te. auper clean S19,500 PS/PB. AC. AM/FM. " S250. 648-8078 Twin bed 150. 5-46--9147 bat olr. 6"2-3103 $2500. call 850-7045 &40-1880 Daily Pililf •• • • • • •• • • : '82 300D turbO dsl, 12,900 IEE UI FlllTI ac1ual mt, mld-nlte blu, we have • :ood Mlec1ton anrf. AM/FM can. of NEW used Cl'leV· • • --------1• . RECEPT /nPIST : PART TIME : Sfl?950. 675-7713 rOlet•I See U-. lodayl AP •bOut the money we can save you thru our purehase & teaM plans COHHELL CHEVROLE T 1mmed11te opening tor e• • • pe11enced protess1ona1 in 1 • : oiusti corporate o111ce • Deliver Daily p,·Jot by auto • Mu~t have e1cellent : • phone and communica· Jn ' Aauna Beach ar ( non Sl(lll5 front Olf1ce ap 1 : ...,......, ea 8p-: pearance and accurale • prox. 2 hours per day) week-• typing 155 wpm m1no , • day 81 ternoons & early • r:ivm1 Call 547-5616 • e Rtor11tl11 su,1ni11r J: mornings on Sat. & Sun. : Part/lfme Elemenlary age • Earn approx. $400 per • c111tdr!'n H B 964-4223 • month. Ask for Bruce • RESTAURANT 1: Emsley 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. : Host hostess P T Apply e • 1n person btwn 2 4PM • • Reubens Reslaurant • CIRCULATION DEPT • 2s1 E Coast Hwy NB : 642 _4;J2 l EOE : SELL Idle items wllh I \ • Dally P1101 Class•fled Ad ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newspaper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!' A~S 11-14 EARN lJ> TO S7i.OO PER WEIK W• now tiavt I~ ~Ill' IOI ,ounc utf' btntr1 lo wcurt rQdff1 tor Thf Or.nee Col" Oa ly Pilot Our crtwi Jl1r1 11 J lO P m Ind .woo 11111~ S lO pm Wttl~Yl On S.tur~r wt lfM 1 In lllO<t llOurs Yo. wdl ~arn IMllJ trips 1nd Pfl"' ~ wttfl r.trlM"C ,0111 own lllOfltf • tlltu " ,. dfollvt11nc 01 tollf<!IOll IAYOlvf'CI Ii yOll 111 tnl,,nlf'd plu\# c.tlt M1 I 1rl (714) 548-7058 DIMES A LINE WANT ADS r IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIES Sell yoor lt.m• for $5() or '--In oor famou• DIMES-A-LINES pub- llNl«1 NCh Saturday In the Dally Piiot. 1 DIMES·A-LINE ad• mutt be p,._pald to mall or bring them Into the Dally Piiot 0"10.. S. 1ure to fncl!JM your pho,,. numt»r or ad- dreu In your ad. ,, • ..,.. a prlf.» on 811Ch Item & no abbreviation•. Sorry, no OOfnfNl'C/a./ ad1, g.,_,. N1-. produet1, plant• or MJlm.i. .,.. acceptab,. \. llW'l4121 11Tt.._f,.. AMdy '°' lmmed!at• ~ -lllSUlllS llNllTI 1301 Quall Str•t NEWPORT BEACH '-"-"II'''•" I• ' I ..... I ' ,, I ' I 541>-I 200 __ 11_1·_1_111 __ Fm TOP SSS PAID For Pampered IEROEIES IEIZ Top Mer~ Pttces Paid Olll"'1r/l1y DIAL 213/714' MERCEDES HOUSE OF IMPORTS. Inc ·75 WAGON good trans- port l600. 720-979e eva ·75 VEGA BODY, good cond ti ave eng nd• to be Install. 5400 593.?>789 '78 MUSTANG 11 GHIA Very sharp $3500 548-4'633 llADIUM llOllllAC ~· f A UM - 'I - • I, i >, \ -• ~ I i ~ ) -• J . ' f { I Huntington Beach police are warning residents of a rash of cat burglaries. /A3 UCI Medical Center and an Industrial firm are join- ing up to bulld a $3.5 million center./ A3 California About 500 Southern Cali- fornia liquor stores are pulllng Coors off the shelves./ AS Now police say Marvin Gaye was intervening in fight between parents when shot./ A4 Natio n Twisters tear up a dozen communities as storms continue to plague much of nation./ AS World Queen Noor of Jordan saysshe'scrltical of U.S. policy In the Mideast./ A8 Home Cancer risks can be re- duced by avoiding certain environmental hazards. /82 Food You can produce an award-winning table when you star shimmer- ing fruit desserts./C1 Supermaglclan David Copperfield whips up some culinary wizardry. JC& :·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::·:·:·:·:::::::::·:::::::::::::::::·:·:::·· Sports For openers, Dodgers a bust, dropping their first game of the season to St. Louis. 11-7./01 Golden West receives a one-hit pitching per- formance from Mike Schooler to beat Full- erton, 7-0./01 Entertainmen t "Double Trouble" ls.a cute new TV comedy series with real twins in the leading roles./83 UCI graduate Stuart Duckworth has built a "Dreamhouse" at a Los Angeles theater ./84 Business An Ohio firm is trying to buy parent company of The Broadway Stores. /88 Ailing Valencia Bancorp. may be purchased by a Peruvian company./87 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Business California News Claulfled Comics Crouword Death Notices Food Help Yourself Hom• Horoecope Ann Landera Mututl Funds National Newt Opinion Police Log Publlc Notleel Sport• Stoek Market• TeleVl&lon TMit91'• Weatnet WOf'kS~ 8 5 A3 86-8 A4 06-8 85 08 0. C1-10 82 81-2 07 82 A8 A4 A10 AS 0.·5 01-3 88 83 83 .... A2 A4 le tax plan t~med 'Oimsy By JEFF ADLER Of .. o.lr ........ Opponents of Proposition A -the ~nny trans~rtation sales tax in- itiative -kicked off their anti-tax campaign Tuesday by calli'\& the proposal an unworkable solution to Orange County's trans~rtation problems. a claim that quickly was rebuffed by tax proPonents. biahway and frcew~y improvements is a "dinosaur of transportation theory," said Tom Roaen, rep. resenting Citizens Apinst Unfair Taxation. And he unveiled the group's own analysjs of the plan, prepared by a University of Southern Cahfomia transponation eitpen. TransporUltjon Comm1ss1on's plan for ipendina the money the tu would raise is ••flimsy" and ia "riddled with errors and contrivances.'' use of what already is there, he said, sugesting car-poolina might be a more reasonable soruuon to the consesHon problem. Gordon told reporters at a morning news conference that building new roadsand constructing a new light rail ltne would llot ease the "rising tide of conaestion." to which tu proponents so often refer. ''The problem is few people per car. The freeway ts full of cars, but not full of~ple," the USC professor sajd, By building new freeways. be said. transportation planners would be crcaung moreeonarstion. rather than rcducin& 'it because the added ca- pacity would spawn more trips. The l .l-paae report prepared by Dr. Peter Gordon. a profetsor at USC's School of Urban and Reaional Plan- ning. concludes the Orange County The 15-year tax increase and a~ sociated4 SS.4 billion package of Parente Billy and LeaAnn Hodae po.e with .on Shaun, 10 -montha, ana daqbter Rather than buildina new roads, county residents should make better O.., .............. LMP ... Luondra, 3 , lnalde the couple'• Coata Mesa apartment . Rare virus keeping tot out of Mesa schools program By KAREN E. KLEIN Of IM D.., Piiot a'8fl Three-year-old Lasondra Hodge wants to go to school. Her parents, Bill y and LeaAnn. want her to go to school. And legally. the Costa Mesa child has every right to be enrolled m a specially developed program fo r the handicapped in one of Orange County's publ ic school districts. But, because she carries a rare though normal!} harmless virus. her parents sa y the child has been put off when they have applied to enroll her at schools in the New~rt-Mesa Unifi ed School District. Teaclle.rs and admin istrators are afra id of putting Lasondra into a class with a female teacher 1n her childbearing years. th e Hodges said. Lasondra. who has cerebral palsy and a genetic disorder known as Turner's Syndrome. was also identified shortly after birth as a "shedder" or carrier of a usuall y harm less disease kn own as cytomegalovirus (CM V ). Public health experts say SO to 80 perce nt of the adult populati on has been infected bv CMV. with the result being symptoms similar to a common cold or mono- nucleosis. About 30 percent of children are also earners of CMVatanygive n time. scnological testshaves~own . Though it isextremelycommon. very little 1s known about CMV by the general public. most of whom ne\er realize when they have it, according to Dr. Tom Prendergast. epidemiologist for the Orange Count} Health De partment. The herpes-related virus is nothing to worf') about. Prenderga st said, unless it is contracted by a woman for the first time during a pre~ancy. , I fit is contracted dunng pregnanc}. he said. ( MV can cause birth defects in the fetus ranging from enlarged spleen. livcrorlungs to brain damage. It can also trigger a m1scam agc. "If the mother has never been infected. and her bod~ has not built up antibodies to the virus. 11 can rt"!lilll in (permanent) defects in a m1nont)' ofbab1es.'' Prendergast said. Authorities as prestigious as the March of Dimes Barth Defects Foundation have been quoted as a' ing that CM V has outstn pped German measles. or rube I la. as the (PleaeeeeeTOT/A2) . Jet loses tail o_n land_in,g at John Wayne By JERRY WRSCH OflMOellJNot8teff A Frontier Airlines jetliner lost its tail cone as it was landing at John Wayne Airport Tuesday night. The plane landed safely and no one was mjured. The mishap was minor and none of the 103 passengers and crew o n the McDonnell Douglas OC-9 Super 80 was in danger, according to Beth Caughey, a spokeswoman for the Fed.era.I Aviation A.dmi.nuuation. "Only minor damage and no injuries were reported. It is Just a minor incident. but we will still look into the cause of il .. Caughey said. "The tail cone does not affect the airworthiness of the aircraft and comes off when people use the rear emeriency cut." Caughey said. The incident took {>late on Oisht 6 77 at 8:08 p.'1). as the Jet was landfnl after a flight from Denver. "The tail cone is pan of lbe airplane's secondary struct~ and is not essential to the safe night of I.be aircraft. Aerodynamically it •~ proves the airflow ove.T lhe rear of the airplane:· McDonnell Doulllas spokdwoman Etayne Bendel said. The part is made out of Kevlar-a fiberalass-like material im~ wa1Ja epoxy, she safd. Airport workcn retrieved the tail cone from the runway and found a. small crack m it. sajd Bob Schulman. a Frontier Airlines spokesman. ~The cone had a small crack in iL (Pleue eee JETLl!Ua/ A2) Cd~ s Stotler gets federal judgesfi.ip By JEf.1\Y BlBSCH Oflfleo.lfr .......... Newport Be a c h a11 o rne) Alicemane Stotler was surpnsed b) a call from Presjdent Ro nald Reagan on Tuesday telling her that he was i oing to . appoint her to a federal Judgeship. "I defi~itely intend to accept th~ president s offer of the appomment. Stotler said this morning. "The phone rang yesterday and my husband answered 1t. The operator told him It was the president calljng for me. He asked, 'wh o?' and she said tt was the president of the Untted States so my husband ran to get me." said Stotler. a former Orange County Judge. ... eed\as to say. ' ,.,., ml~ uc1tcd. President Reagan really sounds good over the phone... re- called Stotler. \¥ho has ne"er lpoken with Reagan before. Se.n. Pete Wilson. R..Calif.. rec- ommended Stotler to Reaean ~ve~ months aao. Her nom1nauon is scheduJed to be sent to the Se.natc J udinary Comm1tttt later this week and she 1s expected to breeze through confirmation hearinJ&. Although Stotkr 1s a Republica..n she was appointed to the Orange County Municipal Court by former Democratic Gov. Ed mund Brown Jr. Stotler ~rved on the Municipal Court bench from 1976 to 1978and m (Pleue eee STOTLER/ A2) Navy medal arrives, but it's 41 years late By KAREN E. KLEIN Of the o.-,. "°' llafl It ma ) ha' e takrn four decades, but no one can sa y '\.J Capellanio d1dn 't get his JUSt re'>'ard from the L' Na\) The 70-,car-old C'o!lta Mesa man recenth · rCCl'I' ed his "Euro- pcan-A(ncan-M tddlcEastem Theater Campaign" medal-41 years after he part1c1pa1cd in "Operation Torch." the Alhed in ' as1on of North Afnca Wh) the dela'.o''l "That's the Na"}:· C apellan1 0 sigh ed · Capcllan10 onl) fou nd o ut he "'a' entnlcd to the honor about a )Car ago. when he sent for hi s m1htan health record~ to reopen a d1sab1ht}' claim The medal nc"cr awarded to htm showed up on !>Orne ol those rl'COrds. according to Senior Officer Fredenck Da' 1cs. department service officer of the Disabled .\mencan . Veterans Admin1stratton. But when Capellan10 tried to collcc1 ht!> due. his request became knotted in red tape. That's when he approached Da' 1es. wtlb turned the matter o'er to h1\ adm1n1strat1on's otfae 1n "'ash1ngton. 0 .C. .. ['en tht.·n there were foul-ups." Oa' 1es sa11J •• .\t one poin t the) sent us a medal but 1t "as the wrong one." •\ftcr all the hassle. ho1.1.ever. <. apcllan10 tinall~ was awarded hLI medal in a \mall ceremon' at the Long Beach Ve tcran·s Mcmonal Hn~pttal a couple of months ago. "f ,er. 1nd1,1dual who served "' the area ·wao, entitled to one of these (Pleue Me NA VY I A.2) --------------------------------------------------Gr eat prete n der held fo r ·\car theft Joint use heliport has her spinning HB opponent calis - proposed facility a'HELL-a-porr- Jeanne Collins has mort or less rcured after some pretty notable duels with Huntington Beach city officials over local av1at1 on matters. But the 6().ycar-.old former air traffic controller, who Iona has cam- paianed for arcater safety and less no11t at Meadowlark A1rpon. 1s rcvvina up her enaine once aaa1n even if she's lost her love for council chamben. "When my ume comes. I'm plan- nina to pend my last hour (ahve) here." (at chambers) he confided. "It will make it last lon&er." Reports that city leaden were planning to thare a proposed Hunt- maton Scacb Police Dcpanment hel1pon -she call it HEllA-.pon -with other nci has aot her aomaqain. "You sec this," she asked City Council mcmbcn Monday .. It's ·a lccp Mate and l bOu~ht it at Sean and Roebuck. lt makes a droning so und and helps to drown out the flappy sound of heh copters l'H \\-Orn out four of them and the> co t S35 apiece. "I don't want other departments basins thctr polict helicopters here Why can't Huntinaton Beach u~ other et ties for its helicopters. "We shouldn't be the acnal dump- "'' JfOUnd of Oranae Count)." she said. Colh n.u nd othcrcnt1c,. who claim they would be caught in a "war zone" between the police finna r.inae and the heliport. may ha\lc bttn rtactina needle ly to faulty 1nformat1on com- in& out of City Hall. But they thought the (It) might soon become a btth1vc of helicopter acttv1ty and they ,urtly didn't want to Set that happen. Hert'~ how 1h1np amv«i at their pre nt state, ~)' C:ll)' hall '" idcn.. h1npr It t~ ptt\ IOUS hchport ·1e. ituat~ on uMtable around nC'9r Central Parklnd the new library. pht up and b«amt inoperable 1C'Cn )Clnqo The natural d1 tcr fol'C'td the cit) to mo' c 1t thrtt opera tional hd1rnr ROBERT BARKER ,., NEWS PERSPECTIVE tcrs to John Wa)ne .\1rport But 11 wasn't the perfect solution hccausc of h1ah cost\, Ion er travel umt" and v.astcd manpov.tr Fee for ba 1ng the "'h1rl)bmh at John Wayne plus h1Jher fuel pnct'i co lS the c1h about S 16 1.000 1t wouldn't ha\.C to spend if the copter\ v.crc based 1n the city. accordm& to Pohct Ouef Earle Rob1ta1tlc That c~t and 1ncon\cn1encc prompted a ~an:-h 10 find a nev. \1te 10 the Cit\' The search h \ bttn I Otng on and ao1ng on and aoin on ~ locauon 10 the vicm1t) of the earlier "'c near tht fi re d J',lMmcn\'\ tnun1"g hcadqµanef' at 1 albtrt ~' • enuc and (1oth1rd \trttt "'a~ ~ltttcd Rut d1~ \S\lon\ h:l' c '"u11cl'l'J amt a couple ot \ears aao. <. tt) C'ounC'il mcmbe" beat back proposals b .\dm1n1strator Charles Thompson to share the si te "'uh a pn\ate hehcoptcr business (it) officials 'llt the tune ~td the' wanted to keep than simple and inupens1'e Things prttt) \\-Cit have f"(matned upin the11run t1I two wttkSBJO Yr en officials c'prCS5C'd 1mpat1cnoe over the l•ck of actton '\l{d John Thomas. ~ho was act1na as ma)Of at the tame. pubhcl) chast1zed staff mcmben for not acuna ~nerand askC'd for a repon in t~o '>'ttks That's ~hat he 1ot. The trouhlc v.as 11 cont.tin~ the qmc proposal\ for lhe more am- bauous use at the heliport ate lhat • council members had l"CJ~ttcd ~10"11). Cm h.all 1n,1dcn y WTmtm~ ubmiu.cd th.c carhcr ~mlon of th<' plan. l)ml) to &C1 the II rolh - and plann1na to make mod1fic: t1on5 later -and partl\ out of p1tc mttt Thoma,· demand~ for a quick port. Rut the rr<>blcm rt'Sultt'd w.hcn heltcopter cnuc ( olhn\ and 01hcn (Pl tee ULIPO J/il) .. I 4 1' 1 r Ofang. Cout DAILY P1LOT/Wedn61day, Aprll 4, 1984 HIGHWAY PROGRAM ASSAILED ••. l'tomAl ··potshot" "His report consisted of some loose t~ughts compiled in the last few •ks by an out-of-town professor," said Clark. "We find his research to ht shallow and his conclusions. such as they are. to be incomplete and unreahstk." Sitting at Clark's side during the news conference was Al Holl inden, executive director of the pro-tax C1t1zens for Better Transponation. ··1t'salwa)'$JUSI 'no' and the)" don't have an alternauve," Hollinden said m criticizing the tax opponents' analysis. Among other problems professor Gordon noted 1n his report are: STOTLER APPOINTMENT ••. •That there isn't sufficient popu- lation density to 1ust1fy build mg a S l billion Costa Mcsa-to-Fullenon light rail line as proposed. •That there isn't enough money budgeted 1n the plan for maintaining the present arterial highway S)S tem. Prom Al StJpenor C'oun from t 978 untal March 1983. ... Stotler will serve at the U.S. Omnct C'oun m Los Angeles but she llbpes to hear some cases m Orange Count) ··The coun 1n L.A. can ho ld coun in Santa .\na and I ha ve heard there is a )earch on now for some proper tat•ilt ttes. M) hope would be to hear ~ome cases down here but I am not on the bench )et and that depends on thl' JETLINER ... From Al 'W e repaired 1t. put 11 back on the plane and checked the latl·hes a nd the Jet depaned o n a regular flight back to Denver. The company will in- -.cst1gate the incident," Schulman ~Id. In the evC'nt of an emergenc~ landing. the tail cone 1sje1tasoned and an emergency slide is inflated out the back end of the airplane as an exit, Bendel said. 1 "'lier Judges." said Stotler. who hves in Corona del Mar. She was the first female prosecutor hired by tht' Orange Count) District Attorney's office -in 196 7 -and would be the founh female. federal Judge in the district. Stotler is a graduate of the Un1vers11y o f Southern California Law School. Since she resigned from the Su- perior Coun last )ear for "personal reasons." Stotler h·as "orlt..cd as a criminal dl'fense spec1alts1 m a law firm with hl'r husband. attomc) .. James Stotler. Local Judges said Stotler will malt..l' a fine fed eral Judge Thomas C-roSb\. a Slate Coun or o\ppeal JUSlite. c·alled the appoint- ment a "'t.'n good cho1<.'c." He lauded Stotler for her "patience. 1n1elligcnce and perfect JUd1c1al temperament " ·-rm glad 10 be able 10 call her 'J ud~e· ·again:· said John Trotter. presiding Justice of Cahfom1a's 4th District Court of Appeal branch 1n Santa Ana. "She is an excellent lawyer and will mai..e a marvelous federal Judge." •And that using a sales tax 10 finance user-oriented h i~way pro- jects isn't as fair as imposing highway or freeway user fees to finance the proposed improvements. The tax-increasing 101t1at1ve will be submitted to county voters on the June 5 primary election ballot. PRETENDER ••• homAl the owner, an El Monte man. he was a muttt-mllk>naJre race car ditver with tntematlonat connec- tt®e. 1 "He said he wa a pro golfer. a ooffectof' of exotic catS and a race car drtwr-," Mid o.tectJve John E~ner of the Lo9 Angele9 COunty s~ Oepanment. 0 Ba1Catty, he was JUlt a good talker." I Edner eaJd Booth was arrtlilsted tast week ln Vista. outtide an Ofego. The detective Mid the Pcnche WU recovered and Booth booked on euepidon ot grand theft auto and Yk>tetton of hf9 probation, A dft..gjred man who ctalml to be frOm Pmm Springe, Booth tnt CMWt to tn. attemton of llUthoritles lat October wt*l he reQC>rted loeing a golO-tnmmed brlefcue containing $4 7 ,000 In cash at a pbputar Newport Beach nighttpet. He totd poUoe he lugged the cash tnto Bo"'9i¥ McGM'a reetMnnt, Where he was to meet a client and p(Jrchaae a Ferran. Booth said the client never arrl\'ed and the brief- case waa stolen from betllnd a hott'• station at the restaurant. Newport pottce, ausptdous of me man '1 claim$, 88ked hJm to take a lie detector teat. He agreed, but failed to appear for test on the day tt waa ICheduled. But publicity of the $47,000 loss brought a ftood of calls from peopte who dalmed they had been conned by Booth, aecordtng k> pc>Uce. ft al90 <*IQht the attention of pola detectfvee In Anaheim Who were looklng for a man who had vllnllhed wfth an ~e Mercedee Benz after taking the car tor a test drtve. Booth wu arr .. ted by Anaheim police. on eueplcfon of grand thett auto. Oelplte hjt ctaima of wealth, the man wu unable to ratse his $50,000 ball. In court, he admitted he didn't have enough money to s:,1,. an attorney. He eventually pteaded guilty to auto theft and was eenteooed to six montl\a In county Jail and ttlree years probation. Booth was re- leased·from Orange COunty Jall on Feb. H .· A short Ume after gaining free- dom, Detective Edner alleged Boo1h show9d up In El Monte and made arrangements to b"4)' an expensive Porsche· from an area race car builder. "He said he wanted his personal mechanic to Inspect the car and that was the last our victim saw of him ," explained Edner. "It was very stmllar to the case In Anaheim." Booth Is being held on $50.000 bail In Los Angeles County Jail. A probation hear1ng Is scheduled later this month. A.J. Capellanlo NAVY •.. From Al medals.'' Davies said. "Practically everybody who was issued one got it. but in the rush to get everyone o ut of the service. these things slipped by." he said. C-apellanio was 29, had been mar- ned I 0 years and had two young children when he enlisted m the Navy su. months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. "I went for training in Newpon. Rhode Isla nd. where I lived. and before the sixth week I was out on the high seas in the l\tlanuc." he said Capellanio shipped out on the tanker USS Housatonic. which ear- ned .500.000 barrels of fuel and h1$h-1cst gasoline for refueling battle- ships. aircraft earners and destroyers "After we went in (at Casablanca). the Ho usatonic la) ofT lhg coast q( "' .\fnca for 10 nights arid 10 da~s. Silting on .500.000 barrels ofh1gh-1es1 gas \\c "'ere sitting ducks. I'll tell 'a, ,, · \\hen Capellanio was discharged on medical d1sab1lm from Chelsea 'la"' Hosp11al in Massachu~11s ~·: \Car<.. later. he said. he "as unaware he had qualified tor tht• medal. Whc.·n he linall~ got the honor. 41 ~cars late ( apcllan10 v.as nonplussed .. ,,·s 100 late.·· C apellanio said "100 late." TOT KEPT FROM SCHOOL ... From Al natton's mo~t common inlc1. t10uscause of b1nh disease i\nd though Prendergast estimated that the chance o t catch in~ CMV and passing on b1nh defects to a ferus from a child hke Lasondra 1s "m1n1ma1:· both teachers "ho are fearful of contrac11ng the disease and adm1n1s1ra1ors '-"ho wo~ about legal l1ab1ht\ ha\l• long heC'n apprehens" e about adm11t1ngchlldrcn Ith· Lasondra into public \chool dasses. The public school'\ pm111on 1'\ heing monitored b) Lawrence Fall. cl 1cnt's rights ad" ocate for Orange <. ount) 's Regional CC'nter. a far1ht~ that pro' ides i.uppon Jnd aid 10 the county's handicapped population Despite his s~mpath~ for the school dt'ltrtcfs dilemma. Fall said. ··Thl·rc 1s no ques11on that n 1s the 'lhool d1\tnct's obligation to pro' 1de a program forth is child." Lasondra'scasc. v.h1k rare. 1s not isolated 1n Orangl' < uunt~ Fa1t '>a1d he ncgnt1all'd "1th a'"' hool in Huntington Brach 1n tht• P·''' month ll\l'r a \1m1har \ltuat1on Jnd a ( M \ 1.a<.t' t .1me up '>I.'' l'ral ~car-. agu In the ( 1ardcn Grm el 'mfied l huol D1\lfll I { ~ V 1<. ··a " hole 101 mm I.' pre' aknt than pcopk art• J"areof" Fau said T ht• 11 odgc fam 1 I' "not lonccrm·d a hou t ul her rn't''I ho"C\l'r Thq s1mpl~ \\,JOI L asondra in ii program 1n \\h11.h c;he '-"Ill be 1augh1 ho" tn pnform ha<.11. tasl.<. hf,..t· dn•\\tngand kcd ing hcr\l'll r he~ ..... ant hn to ha\ e an c1pportunit~ 10 <.oc1ah1c "1th other chtldrt•n Mark Han5on. d1rt.'c Im of '\ic" port-Mesa-., spcnal l'dutat1on program. rclu\t'd 11nommrnt on the Hodge 1.asc But he did sa~ 1h1.· Jl\trtl l "rnpon\lh1hl\ in a 1.ontag1ou' '>lluauon 1c, 111 pr ntc1.1all1. hilJrc.•n Imm bc:mg 1.'\post.·t.l ··1 lfa1. hilt.l 1Hontag1ou') \Ne nplorl' <.111Tcrent placements for the s1udC'nt\ and t~ to rnmc up" nh altcrna11 vn ... he said ··-w c go h\ thc1 r medical rrcord'> and h' the ad' 1ceofthrcount' hl·alth dcpanmt•nt \.\ e "oulJ not v.ant children C\po\('d hec;1u\e "t»rc rl',pom1ble for all the children a'\ well a\ for indl\· ldual r htldrcn .. Tht\ w(·ck the Hodge<.' "ere nn11fit•d that the J1.,tnt 1 "ould be 'lending a tutor 1111hc1r home lu 'A-ork with Lao;ondra until 1mmun11' ll''>tHan bclomplcted on \Om1.• of the teachers '-"ho m1gh1 "ori.. "11h hl'r But 'A-htlc Lea .\nn said she "as pkased that la'iondra would be rcce1 \'Ing tra1n1 ng. she s1tll hof)(·s the act I\ c. teachable 1-\ear-old v.111headm1t1ed rnto a cla'.>s" 1th othC'rchildrt:n. "~he nc.-cd., otht·r k td'> to gro\' and learn ·· Lea .\nn said E.' en at the ph~ \Ital thaap~ scsswns 'ihc attend\ t'-"l(e a "eek. Lea Ann <,a1d, Lasondra 1s 1solakd from other l htldren and has her own tO)S and pla) mat. l-a111crmcd 1solat1on measures "Just nd1culou\ Thrre 1s no rc.-ac;on that the maucrcannol bcdt'alt "''h 111 the das~room ·· Dr Prcnderga" support<; the notion that basil' h}g1t.'nc mea\urcsarc '>Unic1cn1 for< MV shedder.,anJ that l\Ola11on 1s .not nen·'>sar~. "f \t'rt l\1nggo<ld pasonal h) g1enc ··is the bc'>t preH·nt1on aga1n<;t CMV Prendergast said 4.nd 11 J per'ion "a I.nu" n earner ol C\.1 V. an" no;,lo, 1s prohahh kso;,cnt•d hl' added hc.·l Jus1.· h) g1cnc m(a~ures" Ill h..· mort· \In ngt•ntl~ unckrtaken ·· fht· greater nsi.. I'> 1n an.1u1n ng 11 from ~omeonl' \ uu don't kno" has 11:· Prcndcrga51 '>aid. thu~ malo.1ng an Hine "ho" ork'> "tth chtldrl'n ~uscept1bk stnt'C the' lfU'> 1\ 1 raw.m1lll'd through bod' l1u1dssm h ao;, <;alt' a and urine -\n\ ont· "ho change-. a diaper or" 1pc'> a child\ mouth nr no<,c and dot''> n01 v.ash h1., llr her hand' a Item Jrd ha\ a pos'llhd 11 ~ ofca1rh1 ng till'' 1ru'>. ·· "'o one cane ,pcl I to escape the '1ru .... Prenderga\I <;aid Rut ht• '>aid.a rC'n·nt \IUd) oft""ogroupsol nurst·~. ont• v.orlo.1ng v.11h 1dent1ficd CM\ \ht.·ddcrc; and the other not allo"C'd to" ori.. '-"Ith 'ihedder; turned up s1m1lar tn11d1.•ntc\ ofC~t V 1n hoth group'>. "1 hnc. .. sa~ much a n11k 1n famtl} and out-of-work rnntal·t., ·· Prcnder11.a\t '31d the 'itud> appcarc, 10 1nd1calt.' But the cp1dem1olog1<,t added that am 1nd1' 1dual "om an 1n hen h1ld-hc.•Jnng ~ear'> "ould prohabl) ha\ c to dcudc.· for hcr<1cll .,,,.hc.·t her c,he 'A-anted 10"ork"11h a ( MV 'ihcddcr ··Tht· n<ilo. '' prnbahl\ ne,cr ab<,olutcl' 1ero." he said ··E\cf) woman would have to come tognpc; w11h the probkm and hov. she "'ant'i to deal v.11h 11 .. HELIPORT JOINT USE OPPOSED ... From Al though! olliuah '-"CH' \ttll planning the moreamh1t1<.lU!> 'crs1on It v.asn't tht' 1nten11on hut not>od) nwnt1oned • 11 to them. The wa\ 1f<; gone \O far hasn't pleased S(\ era I council ofTic 1als. tr\ duding (ounc1l""oman Ruth ttallq 11" 1m l•I\' 1un lu t'll 1h1: ngh1 Just Call 642-6086 ' • ------- intorm:won 10 people That d1dn·t happen 1h1., 11me "The srnfl c,houldn 1 tut l·11111t.·n and 11shouh.lgu1hrnugh with a proix·r pr<>CC\\:. \ht' 'ia 10 "I 1h1ni.. "'··q· madr 11 \!C'.H th.11 \I.I.' dnn't ""ant ,1 fat M,1hal ~t want \omC'th1ng etononlllal and n•ason- Jblt' that "111 la'>t ·· ( olltn'i and otlll'rs 1nd1catcd the) could llH' w11h the small·\Calc hchpon f hc\ 1uc;1 don't want 11 u'cd J\ a honw ha'lt for lot'> of other l Uf\l\,'f\ Whal do you lib about thf' Oall) Pilot" Wbat don't } oo like·• tall tht numbtr a t ltft and your mtua•t will be re<'ordtd. tran•<'rlbtd and df'llvf'rtd to thf' appropriatt editor. .. Thf' umf' 2•·hour 1 ntwerln1t servltt' ma) bt> ustd to rtcord lttttn to the t dltor on an~ tupk. Contributon lo our Lf'ttf'r" column must lnf'ludt thtlr namt and tf'lf'phonr numbtr for vtrlflrRtlon No f'l rc·ulatlon c-1111. pltHe. Tt'll us • h1t'1 on u»ur mind ( ' .. ... . _, ... I M ~ l Low clouds a,bd cooler. weather Coaatal Extended Moelly dolodywtlll a~OI-. l'rldey and.SaM~ ~mo.Uy llir end w.,..... &.nday Gutty Wlnda Friday and Sa111tday Hig/19 "' Ula 60a Friday WIJrmlnQ '°"" 10 mid TO. by Svnday o-nlgf\1 IOW9 43 to 53 ., Ill .. 41 H H 41 24 M A eo '' '° ... ~ 11 41 ,. 50 41 61 "' .. se 55 •• 111,. « n: 44 M 50 41 45 24 • ' 10 3' 40 30 5-4 27 S4 1t se ao 82 31 M 30 ... 74 7t 52 41 41 13 49 71 12 50 41 SI 37 Ill 45 75 47 72 57 St 41 51 33 77 .. 711 72 42 37 00 10 to 93 55 35 66 42 5t 47 5e 44 82 56 53 H 13 50 Temperatures Tides 19 111 13 •• S4 29 52 38 71 45 41 31 S4 34 55 M se 31 73 44 ~ 42 ... 41 47 M TODAY Albany Alt>uq~QUe AmatlltO AncllO<• "-"Ille A11Mta HIL.o 113 33 51 30 so 30 45 29 51 .. 51 St 57 •• 79 •• 50 45 S3 36 71 55 51 23 57 41 51 40 Scond IOW 4 06 p m 11 - 50 : SURF REPORT 5-wJ lligll 10 24 p m THlMIOA't 5 30 am 11 47 a.m 4 24 pm 10 Slpm -. - 03 3 I LOCATION 2 o fM!llnQlon ea.a. am 2·4 3-4 3-4 Allantoc: Oty Awlll'I 84illllm0f• BlltnQa 81r"""Oll•m $1.,,,arck Bo!M 8otlOI' • t ~ .i.uy. ~ 40tll Sttwt. Newpot1 22nd St,., Newpot1 Balboa Wedge "9wPO<I Laguna lleactl Sun N it lc>Oay at 8 16 p m, r- T~ at S 35 a m 8l>CI Mt111g91n at 8 17 pm 1 s..e 1·3 3·S Moon Nit today at 9-33 p m , rt-at 8 d3 a.m Tllurad•y and Mii aoa1n II 1034pm San Clttnante Water tamp.St-112 S--* Olrectten IOIUt"-1 Victim had difficulty breathing, Protopappas 'assistant testifies By JEF F ADLER Ot!MO.-, ......... A dental receptionist who often assisted Costa Mesa denttst Dr. Tony Protopappas to perl'orm oral su~ testified in his m urder trial Tuesda) that a patient who later died was havi ngdifficult) breathmgafterbeing anesthetized in ~ptember 1982. Gayleen Magallanez. who said she was directed to hold K1m i\n- dreassen's head while Protopappas worked on her, told an Orange C'o unt} Supenor Coun jury that Andreassen·s breathing bectrne not1cabl) shallower about three-quarters of the wa:v through the procedure. "Her chest didn't move like tl did m the beginning. She was making a rasping sound, almost hke wheez- ill&-"' .Magallanez said. "Al times. she'd bC' breath mg fine and then she'd gasp .. for air and be breath mg shal- low. The former rccept1on1s1 at Protopappas· high -\ olumc dental d1n1c told Jurors she menuoned o\ndrcassen·s breathing d1fficult1e., 10 the denim and he acl..nowledged 1h1.· abnormali t ~ .\ndrcassen. 23. who sufTered from a host ofmcd1cal problems. including complete k1dne~ failure and a hcan cond1t1on. 1s one of three patients "ho died fo llov.ing treatment at Protupapas' cltn1c alleged!) a!> a result of impropcrl~ ad ministered anesthettl' dru~s. Oa l(y Pilot Dell very 11 Guaranteed .... f f 11 ... I 4 t.' ,,. • ' • I The 38-year-old dentist. who lives in Laguna Beach. remains free on $250.000 bat I. He could be sentenced to a maximum hfe prison term tf convicted on the three second-degree murder charges. The tnal. in Judge Luis Cardenas' Santa Ana courtroom. 1s in its second week. A ~~Of the Nofdltlom't ltON 9t South Cout Pftza reoetwd a thteetenlnQ pfMW'9 c.11 tNt .... .imiear to a c.lt anawwect by an~ ol IM ~·1etoreInthe8tM,...... a.at week, polk:e eak'J. . According to a co.ta Miia Polee Depwtment report, the M YMt-okl ~ w ~ •n a baick omc. M~ mornfno wt*t lhe reoeMld I eel hm a m9' wttO ldentmed htmletf aa ~PNI" Md taid he .. wtth .... ~- The men_.. to be ~'Cl her through an• vent In het omc. and ormr.d hw to ••ect • thOugh 8CHMOM wu J)Olntlng a gun at h«. •• The~ told tf'9 woman to dltrobe ~asked queetlont about her ege and b,.. w. IOOOfdlng to the .-oman'• etatement. Aftertheeo.ta Melawom.n oon~. thec:der hung up, the report said. Security guards-contacted arter the fncldent eald there are no secur1ty emptoyeee named Pntl and that no one could see •nto the office from any ventt. A store MCUrfty ~t told police a woman employee of the Nordstrom's tn Brea last week anawered a call from a man who told her not to turn around becauee he he.d a gun on her. Ttwt woman In that cue did tum around and from her offlee window MJd lhe spotted a man p&ft(ed In a car who appeared to be talking on an auto telephone. the MCUrtty egent Nid. She atto eafd she saw a gun tn the car. The man was detcrlbed as Caucatlan, ofdet, WNtlng dark gta .... and sitting In a white, older model Ford Granada. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill P11bllsher Clrculetlon 714/842-4333 CleHlfled edvertlelng 714/842-5678 All other department• 842-4321 MAIN OFFICE ' .,,,,...,p,.~ •' ,,.,,..~ (..~ ~" IJJ..-r. • , "\'A •~.-.... t.A. 1,1}/f. ,, Chazy Dowallby Roeemary Churchm1n ~,.,, , I 1 ' ' ... Clrculetlon TelephonH ., .... •• 411-teoo Editor and A ss1s1an1 Controller to the Pubhsner Stephen F. Carazo r, duC.1 t)n Mc\t1tJUf'' Glorla A. Powera Donald L. Wllllsm1 f•1 lt4h~· t'\.1'-f (My P~1 'l/lt/1h 11tf\<h1\( )f'f\~ I~ •1et11\ P'""'fl r!t (11;bf1-..t·~ by 1"'1! l.)f1)n9f' CoA4it P'JD'•~\) ( ""'"3"1 H '""' eo.ioor~ ••f> po~1"1\eo "4•>n<ldy lll•OUQfl i •.tJR f A Stfl<J•t' "°\)H (•t\1 ~·lfCY· ~ P'.1h4•4.n.MJ S411v''llY~ 1 :l Sw '1il)''i T '~',ti.( 'J -l i •Jt• V'h~ f'i.t' • '' '" JJC W~l A.,.<,,,..,, r ft~ ·•.f(I Cu-..t,..._,~ •·t,. ,.q~;>Ei ,. ' , ' A; .. ~,, '"":J C ff 1c)I M<! ilQf' VOL. n , NO. 95 on dee 1 s ooce .. ' 1132 T flUi~ .At.ta. ~eStcR.ibb Pe~1zL .. , 650 ?105 • ,, ~ ' ! ' WE ONE SD A Y, APRIL 4 1984 co&at Huntington Beach police are warning residents of a rash of cat burglaries. /Al UCI Medical Center and an Industrial firm are Join- ing up to build a $3.5 mllllon cehter .I A3 California About 500 Southern Cali- fornia liquor stores are pulling Coors off the shelves./ A5 Now police say Marvin Gaye was Intervening In fight between parents when shot.I A4 Nation Twtsterstearup a dozen communities as storms continue to plague much of nation./ A5 World Queen Noor of Jordan says she's crltlcal of U.S. policy In the Mideast./ A8 Home Cancer risk a can be re- duced by avoiding certain environmental hazards. /82 Food You can produce an award-winning table when you star shimmer- ing fruit desserts./C1 Supermaglclan David Copperfield whips up some culinary wizardry. /CS Sports For openers, Dodgers a bust, dropping their first game of the season to St. Louis, 11-7./01 Golden West receives a one-hit pitching per- formance from Mike Schooler to beat Full- erton, 7-0./01 Entertainment "Double Trouble" ls a cute new TV comedy series with real twins In the leading roles./83 UCI graduate Stuart Duckworth has built a "Dreamhouse" at a Los Angeles theater ./84 ·:·:-:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Buelneee An Ohio firm Is trying to buy parent company of The Broadway Stores. -·- /81 Alling Valen,cla Bancorp. may be purchased by a Peruvian CQmpany ./17 INDEX Bridge Bulletln Board Butlnees Callfornla New• Clu1ffted 6omlCI Crouword Death Notices Food H .. p YourMlf. Home Horoacope Ann Lander1 Mutual Fund• National Newt Opettton POia Log Public Notte. Spor11 Stock M•rk•t• Teeevtllon TMtter1 WMther World Newt 85 A3 B8-1S A4 oe-e 85 08 0. C1·10 82 . 81·7 07 82 A8 A4 A10 A3 04-5 01-3 88 83 83·4 A2 A4 1 -~c.ent ..., .... ,....._,~...,,.. Opponent says $5.4 billion plan By JEFF ADLER ...... Of .. ..., .... _ Opponents of PropositionA-lhe ~nny transportation sales w irv ttiative -kicked off their anti·&ax campeian Tuesday by caJlinJ the proposal an unworkable soluuon to· Oranse Count.Y's trans~rtation problems, a claim that quackJy was rebuffed by tax proponents. The l S.year Wt increate and as- sociated $S.4 billion pee~ of hiahway and freeway improvements is a .. dinosaur of transportation theory," said Tom Roten. rep- resenting Citizens Apinst Unfair Taxation. And he unveiled the group's own analysis of the plan, pre~ bya UniversityofSouthem California transponatiorr expen. President Reagan nominates former jurist to post Newport Beach auornc;y Aliccmarie Stotkr . wu nomiu.ed Tuelday to .a .lllleral j._.. by Prnident Roaald llcqn, a Sl)Okawomaa in the oftk:e of Sm. Pete Wilson, R-Calif:. said this mom· ina. .. We have no official comment but the repons are accurate," t~e spokeswoman said. Stotler. a fo11J1er Oninac Co11.nty judge, told the Auociated Press she's "naturally very pleased." Stotler, 41, said Reagan tele{>honed her Tuesday with news of the oomi· nation. She was in court this morning and could not be reached for further comment. The 13-pqe rcpon preparedbr"Dr.1 Pecer Gordon, a profalor at il.JIC!s School of Urban,and RePoMI Plmi~ ni._ conclud~'the Ora •. ~, Transponation CommiS11on'1 PIU for spendin& the money the Wt woald nise is·"ftimsy" and is .. nddlei;t wi1b errors aod contrivances." , Gordon told rePOrten at a m0mial news conference that buddi111 Dllr roadsand constructinaa new U-.t nliJ line would not ease the --riJina Ude ol congestion,. .. to which tax proponents so often mer. RatbcT than buildio& new ~ county residents sboukl make ~ use of what already is ~ he Mid. sugesting car-poolina miabt br a mOf'C reasonable solution IO the (Pleae-lllGBW AT /Aa) Parent. Billy and LeaAnD Bod.ale poee with 80n Shaun. 10-montha. ana ctaachter Luondra. s. ln•lde tbe coaple'a Coeta 11-apartment. \ Wilson recommended Stotler to Reagan several months ago. Her nomination is scheduled to be sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee later this week and she is expected to breae through confirmation bear· in gs. Although Stotler is a Republican she was appointed to the Orange County Municipal Court bench by former Democratic Gov. Edmund Rare virus keeping tot out of Mesa schools program (Pleue eee STOTLD/ A.2) Navy medal arrives, butit's41 years late By KAREN E. KLEIN Of .. o.llJ .......... Three-year-old Lasandra Hodge wants to go to school. Her parents, Billy and LeaAnn, want her to go to school. beingsymptomssimilartoacommoncoldormono- nucleosis. About 30 percent of children arc also carriers of CMV at any given time, seriological tests have shown. Thouah 1t is extremely common, very little is known aboutCM\'byt,hegeneral public, most of whom never realize when they haveit,accordingto Dr. Tom Prendcr&ast. epidemiologist for the Orange County Health Department. By KAREN E. KLEIN Oftlleo.llJ ......... It may ha ve taken four decades. but no one can say A.J. Capellanio didn't get his just reward from the U.S. Navy. accordf ng to Senior Officer Frederick Davies. depanment service officer of the Disabled American Veteran1 Administration. _And legally, the Costa Mesa child has every riJbt to be enrolled in a specially developed program for the handicapped in one of Orange County's public school districts. But. because she carries a rare though normally harmless virus, her parents say the child has been put off when they have applied to enroll herat schools in the NeWJ>C!rt·Mesa Unified School District: Teachers and administrators arc afraid of putting Lasandra into a ~lass with a female teacher in her childbearing years, the Hodges said. Lasandra. who has cerebral palsy and a genetic disorder known as Turner's Syndrome. was also identified shortly after bi'rth as a "shedder" or carrii:r of a usually harm less disease known as cytomcgalovirus (CMV). Public health ex~s say SO to 80 percent of the adult population has been infected bv CMV. with the result The herpes-related virus i$ nothing to worry about, Prendergast said, unless it is contracted by a woman for the first time during a pr~nancy. I fit iscontracteddunngprcgnancy. he said. CMV ~n cause birth defects in the fetus ranging from enlaraed spleen. liver or lungs to brain damage. It can also trigger a miscarriage. · "If the mother has never ~n infected. and her body has not built up antibodies to the virus. it can result in (permanent) defects in a minority of babies:· Prendergast said. Authorities as prestigious as the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation have bttn quoted as sa yi ng that CMV has outstripped German measles. or rubella. as the (PleueeeeTOT/A2) The 7().year-old Costa Mesa man recently received hi s "Euro- pean-African-MiddleEastern Theater Campaign .. medal -41 years af\er he participated in "Operation Torch:· the Allied invasion of North Africa. Why the delay? "That's the Nav). ·· Capellanio sighed. Capellanio only found out he wa s entitled to the honor about a )ear ago. when he sent for his m1htan h~lth records to reopen a d1sabiht)'. claim. The medal never awarded 10 him showed up on some of those m:-ords. 8ut when CapeUanio tried tO- collect his due. hi s request became knotted 1n red tape. That's when he approached Davies. who turned~ matter over to his administration's office in Washington. D.C. "Even then there were foul-ups." Davies said. "At one point they sent us a medal. but 1t was the wror\gone.·· After all the hassle. ho~vcr. Capellanio fina l!) was awarded his medal in a small ceremony I\ the Long Beach Veteran's Memorial Hospital a couple of months aao. "Ever) md1v1dual who served i• the area ~as entnled to one of tbett (Pleue eee NA VY/~ Joint use h·ellport has her spinn.lng and Rocbu~. It ma,kcs a dron.ini a couple of 'tears ago. Cit)' CounaJ HB opponent calls sound and helps to arown out the members t>Cat back proposals by d f 1 t flappy sound of helicopters. I've worn Administrator Charles Thompsob to propose aci J y out four of them and they cost $35 R share the Sile '¥tlh a pnvate hcl~ a 'HELL-a-port' •P!~on't want other depanmcnt~ OBERT ~i~n~Y C~n~!;cit!!s :~elh~; Jeanne Collins has more or less basina their police helicopten here. BARKER simple and inexpensive. f\ Why can't Huntinaton Beach use Things pretty well have remained retired a er some pretty notable other cities for its heUcopters. uJfiin the air until two wccks•-.n wbcia duels with Huntiqton Beach city w sh ld • "'-h · J d .. ..., .. ..,c ..... officials over local aviation matters. •• t ou n t ~ t e acna ump-o 1c11ls ex.,....,,_.... impatience ovfT' But the 6()..-.r-oJd forrMr air inJ sround of Oranae County," she the W:k of action. 1w-saHl And John Thomas. who wu ~--traffk controller, who \one bas cam· Collins and other critics.. who claim ters to John Wayne AJrpon. But 1t as mayor at tht ume, publid)' Plianed for pater •fety and less they would be cau&ht 1n a '"Wat zone" wasn't the perfect 1<>Juuon becausc of chasttzed staff members for not noix 1t MeadoWlark Airport. is ... _ poli r.. d " revvirf up ber .-.toes once ... in tJet.,..... -. cc 1100& ranac an hi&h co u. lonacr travel time and act1na soonerand asked 1orarepon ut --.. .....-:· the helipon, ma.y have been react1n1 wasted manpower. tv.o v.uks.... ~!~~'s lost bet love for council need.teuly to faulty info"l'ation com· Fees for basin, the whirl)' birds at That's Yo-hat be got. "When my time comei. I'm plan-ina out of City Hall. Jobn Wayne plu bi&hff f~I pn~ The trouble Yt'&s 11 contained the nina to spend my lut hour (alive} -But WY thouaht the C1t)' miaht costs tbc city about $161 .000 it .same proposals for the ~- bcre,"(atchamberi)abeconfided. "It soonbccomeabcch1vcorbchroptcr wouldn't have to peftdifthecopten bitiou utc at the bchpon ite that wilt make it lut Ion-." activity a_"d they urelyd1dn't want to were based in the C1ty. aecotdi \0 counCll members baa rtJ«t.fd ...... , __ ... _ · see that bap~n. Police Chief Earle Rob1ta1llc. .PreV10U5ly. Rcpons that city ~.. were Here's bow thinp a.rri"Ved al tbtir That eo11 ind 1nc;on~enicoct Cit hall inS&dtrssay Maffmanbeft Snnina to sha" a proEunt· -nt t.atc, say r1ty hall in idcrs: prompted a ~b 10 find a new itc ubri\ittcd t~ earlier ~enioa of the ton Beach Police nment .,.. ... _ :h · htl' ipon _ she Calls it HE ·port A hancar ll t c previous 1pon in the city. The ~arcb bas ~n pna plan. panly to Jet the baU rolhnf - . has b 1tc, 11&uated on un t.able around our on and'°'"' on ind aoina on... ind plann1na to lnAt m6d1fi ttons -with other aaicnoes aot er CtntralParltandthenewlibrary. plat A·l()('ltion in lht vicinity of tht latcr-andpenl)'OUt of ittto meet •0!~0':'~ this." she uked City up and beelme ino~rable seven carlitt site. near the fire department's Thomas' demand fi ra quick npon. Counol memben Monday. "Ifs a years aao. trainina Midquancn at TaJbcn v-But the problem hed .,hen Sleep Mate an\I bouaht it at ars The natvral disasttr forced the city cnue and Gfthaid trcct was 1«1cd. h licoptct m tk C'ollinJ i nd othct1 to move hf th rte ~rnuonal hehco~ But di.cu ion vtsouttcrtd i nd (Pleue eee ~ / A2) • J l . ' HIGHWAY PROGRAM ASSAILED ••• Al aesoon problem. ....1... _Tht problem is few people per car. •'DC freeway is full of ca~ but not full of ~pie." the USC pro1cuor saad. By buildina new frttways. be SAld. t(llnsportation planners would be cteat•na more conacstion, rather than rfducina it because the 8'1_dcd ca· pecity would spawn roore tr~. ~"Wccould act locked into a vicious eye~ of crowded freewa1s. mo" bu1ldina and on and on: Gordon said. ~veral hours af\er the anti-tax presentation. Supervisor Ralph Clark. chairman of the Oranae Coun- ty Transit Di~trict and OC'TC com· minoner, invited rcp0rteri to bis Hall of Administratfon office and called the professor's analysis a "potshot." "His report consisted of ~ome loo~ thoughts compiled in the la~t few weeks by an out-of-town professor," said Clark. "We find h.is research to be shallow and his conclusaons, such as they are. to be incomplete and uorealisuc." Sitting at Clark's side during the news conference was Al Holhnden. executive darcciot of the 4ro-tax Citizens for Better Transportition . "h'ulwaysJu t ·no' and they don't have an ahemauvc," Hollfoden aa1d in criticiLina the tax opponents' anaJysis. Among other problems professor Gordon noted in his report are: •That there l~n't sufficient popu- lation den ity to Justify bu1ldin1aS1 b1lhon C'osu Mesa-to-Fullenon liJht rail line as proposed. •That there isn't• enough money budgeted in the plan for maintaining the present anenal highway system. STOTLER APPOINTMENT ... •And that us1na a saks tax to (jnance uscr-onented h1ptway pro- jects 1sn 't lls fair as imposing highway or freeway user fees to finance tht Prom Al Brown Jr. . .c.Local Judges said Stotler will make a 11nc federal j udge • Thomas Crosby. (\tatc Coun of Appeal Justice. called the app,o1nt- men1 a "very good cho ice. · He lauded Stotkr for her "patience. intelligence and perfect Jud1c1al temperament ... ''I'm glad to be able to call her 'Judee· agam," said John Trotter. presiding Justice of California's 4th District Coun of Appeal branch in Santa Ana. "She is an excellent lawyer and will make a marvelous federal Judge." Stotler ~rved on the Mun1c1pal Court bench from 197610 1978 and in Superior Coun from 1978 until March 1983. She lives tn Corona del Mar. Trotter and Crosby said Stotler's appointment may increase chances of more federal cases being heard in Orange County. Since 1982.Judgesat the Los Angeles federal coonhouse have been allowed to hear cases in Orange County but few have don!. Stotler has said she would h o sec civil cases heard in Oran County when acceptable to the prc- s1d1ng1udge and the llttgants he was the first female prosecutor hired b> the Orange Count) D1~tnct A Horne) 's 01Tice1 -in 196 7 -anJ would be the fourth female. federal Judge in the district. Stotler 1'> a graduate of the Universll) of Southern California Law School. ince she resigned from the Su- perior Coun last year for "personal 1 reasons" Stotler has worked as a criminal defense s~1ah~1 in a law firm with her husband. attome't' James Stotler · proposed improvements. ' PRETENDER •.• hOaAl the owner, 11n B Monte man. he wee a multt-mMllOnafr• race car driver wtth tntematlonal connec- tlOM. . .. L ... He Mid he~ a pro golfer, a eolector of exotic car• and a r.:e c.r drtwr," eekj Detect.Ive John Ednef'_of tM Los Angetes County 8twtffa Oepllrtment. "BasJcalty, he wa Joet a good talker." EdfW' eaJd Booth WU arreeted tMt ..-In Vlata. outlkte San Ollgo. The d«ecttw Mid the PorlcM w r-=overed and Booth bOOk9d on IUI06Ck>n of grand theft auto and ~tlon of hla probation. · AdWk..ulred man whodedmeto b9 from Plllm Springa. Booth first 09IM to the attention of .uthortttee .... October wher'I he reported toeing a goks-tt1mmed ~ ~ "47,000 In cut\ at • .,.-4wi>art 8w:h n'Otrt.pOt. Hetotd pob he~ tMCMh Into Bobby McGee'• restaurant. Where he ~as to meet a ctlent and puf'Ch ... a Ferrari. Booth said the Clent rwver arrived and the brief- c.-wu stoten from behind • hOef t ttatlon at the restaurant. Newport ponce, 1Uapfclous of the man'• clalmt, uked him to take.a lie detector teat. He agreed. but ~ to appear tor test on the d-.y". 8Cheduted. 8ut pubflcity of the "47,000 IOU brought • nood of c8'1s from people Who ctalmed they h9d been conned by Booth, according to pola. ft llao caught the attention of poffCe detectlvw In Anaheim who were &ooklng for a man who had vantthed with an e~ve · Meroedel Benz after taking the car tor a teat drive. Booth wa• arrested by Anaheim ~ on auapk;fon of grand theft auto. Oeepfte his ctaJma of wea1th.. the man wu unable to ralae his $50,000 l*I. In court, he admitted he didn't have enough money to hire an attorney. He ewntualty pteaded guilty to auto the'tt and was eentenoed to six months In county )ail and three years probation. Booth was re- leased from Orange County Jail on Feb. 17. A short tl~ after gaining fre&- dom, Oetecilve Edner alleged Booth showed up tn El Monte and made arrangements to buy an expenllve Porsche from an area race car builder. "He said he wanted his personal mechanic to Inspect the car and that was the tut our victim saw of him," explained Edner. "It was very similar to the case In Anaheim." Booth It being held on $50.000 ball In Loe Angeles County Jail. A probation hearlng Is scheduled later this month. A .J . Capellanio NAVY •.. From Al medals." Davies said. "Practically everybody who was issued one got 11. but 1n the rush to get everyone out of the service. these thin~ slip~d by." he said. C'apcllanio was 29, had been mar· ned 10 years and had two young children when heenhsted 1n the Navy six months after the bombang of Pearl Harbor. "I went for training in Ncwpon. Rhode Island. where I h ved. and before the sixth week I \.\-BS out on the high seas in the Allanllc." he said ( apcllan10 \h1pp..:d out on the tanker USS Housaton1c. which car- m:d 500.000 barrels of fuel and h1~h-test gasoline for refueling battle- ships. aircraft earners and destro)ers. "After we went in (at Casablanca). the Housatonic la) ofT the coast of ..\Ima for JO nights and 10 da~·,, s1t11ng on 500.000 barrels of h1gh -te~1 ga'I We were s1111ng ducks. rll tl'll \a Whl·n Capcllan10 was daschafged on medical d1sab1llt) from Chcl~·a 'la'~ Hospital in Massachusetts::!•. 'ear' la1er. he said. hl' was unaware he had 4uahlied for the medal. When he finall~ got the honor. 4 I ~ca r\ late. ( apclla n1 0 was nonplussed. "It 's too late.'' < apcllan10 said. "too late." TOT KEPT FROM SCHOOL ... From Al nation·., most rnmmon 1nfec11ouscau~ of birth d1sea~e And though Prendcrga~t est1matl·d 1ha1 the chance of ca1ch1n$ ( MV and pa-,.,.ngnn birth defcrts to a fctu~ from Jch1ld hke Lasondra 1s "m1n1mal," both teachers who are fearful of contracting the d1'><.'ase and adm1n1'itrawrs \.\-ho wort) ahout kgal hah1ht~ ha' c long bt'cn apprehcn\1\ e about adm111in gch1ldrenjke Lasundra into public '>t hool t;lasses. The puhll( <i<. houri. po•-.11on 1<; hcing monitored h) La""rence F-atU hent'' nghtt:. ad\ocate for Orange <. uunt) ·., Reg1<1nal Center. a fac1l1I) that pro' ides '>urrort Jnd aid 10 tht count)' ·s handicapped population Desp11c hi\') mpath~ for the school d1\tnct''I c.J1lemma. t-a1t o;a1d. "There 1c, noque\t1on that 111s the \chool d1!.I net"• obligatwn 10 provide a program for th1., l hlld .. L a<,ondr•l'\t'3\t• v. h1lc rare 1\ not l\olated 1n Orangl· < ount~ f-a 11 .. au..I hl· nq1.11tiall'd "1th a \l hool 111 lluiitintttnn tkath in tht• pa<.,t month 11\l"f J \1md1a1 'ltua11on Jnd a< \.1\ l.l\l.l <.1me up \CH'ral ~l'ar<o ago 111 lhl· < 1arden (iroH· I lndicd \l hool 1>1.,l m t C M V ''"a v.holc lo1111un.· pre' aknt thJn pcupk .ire ,iv.an: or· I a11 <ia1d 1 ht• I lodge lam1 h "not lt>nll'rnl'd ahout uthn lJ\e\ hnwe' er Thn \1mph want I awndra 1n a program 1n v. h1ch '>he will he taught ho" tu perform ha\lt task., llkl· c1re'>'>1ngand feeding hl'r'>ell The' want her lo ha' l' an 11pponun11 ~ tu \oc1al11c" 11 h othl'r rhlldrl·n. Mark Han\on. direr tor ol "e" port·Mt•<oa·., '>p..'.t 1al education program. relu\1.•d lol·omm1.•n1 on the Hodgl' la'>C Buth1.·d1do;a' thed1\tm1Ht<,pon'lhll1t\1na 1 on1ag1ou\ \1tua11on 1'i tu pru1ec1 all lhlldrcn from being c)(pO\Cd. "(I fa rhlld 1~ ( ontagiuu\) we l'llplore d1 fkrent placemen!\ forthe studt•nt\and II) tomme upv.11h al1erna11 vc\ ·· he\a1d ··~ego b' their medical record\ and b\ the ad' 1u·of thernunt) health dcpanml·nt '-"1.· ""ould not want <. hlldren npo'><.'d because "c re.• re'iponc,1hk tor all the childre n a'> well a\ fo r ind1 v1du.ll dHldren " Thi~ week. the Hodgec,' w<.·re notilkd that the d1'>lm 1 would be sending a tutor to their hc1m1.· to ""ork "'1th l.asondra un1il 1mmun11' lr'>l'>can bc(omplrtrd on \om1.· oft he teachers who m1gh'i \.\-Ork v. 11h her BtJt while LeaAnn -,aid she v.a' pka,ed that Lasondra wou ld be rccc1v1ng 1ra1 ning. !>he <>t di horx·<i the actn e. teachable 3-year-old "'111 lx· adm 11ttd 11110 a class"' 1th otherchtldrcn. "'ihc necd~other kid' to grov. and karn:· LcaAnn said I vtn at the ph) '>Kai therap) sc<is1on\ shl· attend\ twice a week. LeaAnn \a1d. La!londra" 1'iola1ed from other children and ha'> h1.·rown tOY'• and pla) mat. f att termed 1sola11on measure-; "J U'>I rid1culou~. There I'> no reason that the manerurnnot be dealt \.\-Ith 1n the clav>room." Dr Prenderga~t suppon<> the notion that basic h:rg1enl' measures arc '1Uffic1ent for< MY sheddersand 1ha11\ul:lllon 1!1 no t m·n·'>sal) "I ~t·rt 1'i1nggooJ pcr<ional h~g1cm.-· 1\ thc lx·\t prn l'nllon again\! ( M V Prcndcrga\I \J1J ..\nd 1f J pcr<,nn "·' i...nov. n <.arnerol < :v1 \ am n\i... is prohahl) lt''>\t'nl·d he add(·d. hctau'>c h'.g1enl· ml•J\ure'I v.111 lx· morntringcn tl~ undcnai...cn, ·· l he grl·ater n <,J.. "1n acquinng 11 lrom someone \ou don·1 Ii.no"" ha' 11." Prcndcrga~L saJd. thLLS making an) one v. ho "Ork\"" "h l h1IJr<.·n \usccpt1bk \Ince the' 1rus 1s 1ran\mllll'J through hod v Ou1ds '>U<.h aHah\3 and unne .\mom· "'ho change'> a diaper or'' 1pcsa child·., mouth m no'c and doc' not "ash h1' or h<.·r hand'> afterward has a po,i,1htl1 1~ ulca1ch1ng thl' vi rus. .. 'lo one can 1: ~pcl 1 IO escape the\. lfU'> " Prenderg<i\I \31d Hut he ..aid a rccent '>IUd) of 1wo group'lolnur\l'\ om· working with 1dl'nl1lied ( MV shedde~and thc other not allowcd to work with <ihcJder<> turned up s1m1lar 1 nndl'O<.'<.''> of( M V 1n ho th group\. .. fhcrc·s as much a ri'k in lamll:r and out-0f-wor~ u intact'i "Prendenwst \31d the stud) appears 10 tndll:tll' But the cp1demmlog1'it added that an)' ind1' 1d ual \.\-om an 1n hcrchlld-heanng )ear<i would probabh ha H· to d1.·ndcfor heN'lfwhethenhc wanted 10 work \.\-1th a ( \.1V \hcddcr. , "The mi... l'I prohahl) neH'r absolutel) 1no. ·· hl' 'aid "bery woman would ha"e hHomc tognp' v. 1th thl· problem and how -.he wants to deal"' 1th 11 .. HELIPORT JOINT USE OPPOSED ... From Al thought ollic1al'> wcrt• \1111 planning the more amb1 11o us vcr\lon It wa•m't the in1rnt1o n but nobod:r mcn11oncd 1t to them Th(' wa:r 11\ gone '>0 lar ha'>n'1 pleased \CV<.'ral council ofTi('lals. 1n duding ( ounc1lwoman Ruth Uatk) 11 'I we lll) \JUD Ill ~\'I th(' r1jhl Just Call 642:.6086 1n lormat1on IO people l hat didn't happen 1h1\ time .. the stall o,h1,uldn·1 mt corner' 3nd 11 'ihould go throu(l.h with a propt·r pnKC'>'> ... shl' \31d .. I think \\.l .. \C made 11 tkar that "'C don't want ,1 I :ti :vt:ihal We want <;omr th 1 ng l'I. onuhlll al Jnd rc:i~n· ,1hlc tha1 w1ll la\I .. ( ollin.., nnd 11thl'J\ 1nd1ca1cd they rnuld live ~1th the 'imall-~alc ht:hpon T hn 111'1 1lon 't want 11 used n<, a honw hn'-t· tor lol'i of other (Opl('t\ Whal do )'OU llkt about the O•lly Piiot" What don 't vou like" Call cbe oumbu at ltfl and ~ur mt''IH•f' will bt rtt'Ordtd, tran1c-rlbf'd and df'llvtred co the approprlalf' tdltor . ..... Tht Hmf ?4 ·bour an1wt>rln• 11trvh't' may ~ u1cid lo n·rord lt'llera lo lhf' t'dltor on any topic'. Contrlbuton to our LC'llt'r'I ulumn muu lndodt their namt and tfl~ pbont nGlp'lbt'r for vrrlrlratlon No rlrrulatlon "''l'· plu1f'. Ttll u1.w .. t,'" on your mind , ... ' Low cloud·s and cooler weather Coutal Eztended " 17 .. 51 ., 52 a• ., 24 ·es 12 '° 51 IO S4 32 " •2 3• 60 •7 67 .. .. .. u 45 51 " .. 45 37 u •• M 50 41 46 24 70 ,. "° .30 ... 27 $4 It " 30 12 ,1 541 JO .. 74 79 52 .. 41 ~ 40 71 82 50 •f M 37 .. 45 75 41 72 57 59 •9 81 33 71 •• 71 72 •2 37 60 » 70 .. eo 51 13 •• 511 .. 35 JO M 40 42 3$ eo .. eo.u 80 57 eo ., S1att01Wy •• : ~ 12 M N ,311 ~ 60 . " 13 •• 64 2t 52 " 71 45 Temperatures Tides 58 29 58 40 eo n ee 50 •• 27 83 0 SUR F REPORT 41 31 54 3.t H N 5' 31 n •• 50 42 ... .. •7 341 TODAY Allllny Alb<lq-que Amit IMO Ancnot1(141 Atlle>ltli. Atlent• HIL• 83 .,, ~low 40tpm 1 9- 50 59 30 50 30 45 211 51 .. 81 Sii 57 40 79 ,, Sec:oncl lllgll 10 2• p.m. THUlttoAY ---------- 530•m 11 •7 • m 424pm 10Mpm A lllMIC O ty Au.1111 BelllfnOr• Blllif>g• 81tmlnOll•m 81tm1rctt 8ole4I 8oe1on eo •s 53 3t 78 S5 51 23 57 •1 52 40 Swn Mii IOOtly 11 8 18 p m ,_ Thurldey 115 35 Im Ind Mle ~ 11 0 17pm Moon lefalOOey 1111-33 pm. rl-11 I 03 1 m. Tlluraday encl Mia IO"" 11 10 3.t p"' Victim.had difficulty breathing, Protopappas 'assistant testifies By.JEFF ADLER OftMO..,NeC• .... A dental receptionist who ofien assisted Costa Mesa dentist Dr. Tony Protopappas to perform oraJ s'urgery testified 1n his murder trial Tuesday that a patient who later died was hav1ngdifTicuhy breathing after being anesthetized in September 1982. Gayleen Magallanez. who said she was directed 10 hold Kim An - drcasscn's head while Protopappa~ worked on her. told an Orange ( ounl} Superior ( oun JUr) that Andreassen·s breathing became n o 11 c abl~ s hallo w er abo ut thrce-quaner-; of the wa~ through the procedure. "Her chest didn't move hke 1t dad 1n the beginning. She was making a rasping sound. almost like wheez· ing." Magallanez ~1d "At 11me,, The 38-year-old dentist, who fr~es in Laguna Beach. remains free on $250.000 batl. He could be sentenc~ to a maximum life pnson term 1f convicted o n the three second-<icarec murder charges. The trial. in Judge Lu1·s Cardenas· Santa Ana counroom, 1s 1(1 its second week: ealler preysil>n Nordstrolll etnP.loyees f iunt two inalls A female empa~ of ttie Nordltrom'1 ltore at South COllit Ptela receN9d. ttw..-q ~--week, ltmlerto •C.-..., ... by an~ of the NorCM1om'11tore In in. 8tM Mel IMt .-. poloe Mid. . . . According to a Coela M.a Ponce oep.rtment report, the a.-~-old .,.,.,,_ w ~ ln a bedc ofb Mond~ "'°"= when• rec•~••,,_.• mm MM> ldentlfted ....._., • ....... : uld he ... wlttl ... MCUrtly. -.she'd be breathing fine and then she'd gasp fo r air and he breathing '>hal- lo" ... The man dlllmed to be watdMQ her dvOUQh an• vent Int. oftloe and ordered her to "act u though eomeone wu polntlng a gun at'*"·· The caller tofd the woman to dtlfOM and uked que1tlon4 ~her age and bra llU, 9CCC>rdlng to the woman'• 1t1temMt. 1 h(• formt'r relep11on1!1t al Protopappas· high-' olume dl·ntal cl1n1C told Jurors she mentioned .\ ndreasscn 's brt'athing d1 fTiculllc'i IO the dentist and he acknowledged the abnormal it\ Andreassen. 23. who suffered front a host of medical problems. including complete ktdne> failure and a hean condition. 1s one of three patients who died following treatment at Protopapas· clinic. allegedl) a~ a result of im propcrl} admin1~tered anesthetic dru~s. D•lly Piiot Dell very 11 Gu•r•nteed 'J. ., .,, .. , . ' .. I .e ' ..,.. 6 . ' . . .. After t"9 Cotta Meea wom11n compiled, the catler hunQ up, the r9PQrt said. Securtty, guerda ~ed after the tncident Mid" tMre .. no tecurlty employ ... nwnec'f PhU and that no one could ... Into the offtce trom any vent•. A store eecurlty agent told pottoe a woman «nptoyee of the ~ordatrom'a In Brea aaat week anewered a Cllll from a man whO told her not to turn around beclM• he had a gun on her. The woman In that ow d6d turn around and from her oftloe wtndoW said the epotted a man pwtced In J car who~ to b9 talk1ng on an auto telephone, the eecurtty egent Mid. • . She mo aid she aaw a gun tn tM car. The man wa deecrtbed a Ceucastan. otder, wearing dark~ and titting In a whtte, Older modet FordGraMda. ORAN<,,[ t.OAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Publisher Clrculetlbn 714/842-4333 ClaHlfled advertl1lng 714/842-5871 All ot.her depertment1 &42-4321 MAIN OFFICE I"'""-·' Flo,,. •t ~CA "'" • ... ~ •1.-. *1 • •:t. " 1a ._..,....,. c • ''lhX ~ I L. j f • Chezy Dowellby AoHmery Churchmen 1 •''I'' •'IA t l>eo_,. C•oA\f l'ut>Oo•l"'ll <:ompitr·1 ~ ,, ... , '•''"~·!. 1! '''''8hC>11• "1J1U>ttia ·~IUl~t ,,..., &Ove1t1\P, mHf1\ ,.,.., • .n may ~ t~(wO(!tJ(.f'ft w1l"4°"Jt \Pee .. , Pf!' n11\• '1 f • ( ••'Or•1 V#'°""' .. t , It,. Clrculetlon TelephonH '• .......... Editor rind Ass1stari1 Controller u ltic P Jbhsher Sl•phen F. C•rHO J '' (JU(.ltt)r M·'''•ti.Jtt' >"< ~ > 1~1 1~ I•"'.! •I l:u91a ._...., C1•t()r- UI •U -ll(J Sulo\(•C '<II> t.y ~ ...... " /~ ··~mwy • ..,,., '6'.tl. '*'•. h • O•Jt~ r:r•ittt 0.1 .-. ~"<>t ""'''" wn.t"" tbn'lblf\eO 1"9 '"·"" I'•!'\\ ·~I"'""" M t.y '"" O afl\l'I' <.AHi Pull""""9 ' '""'• nr•y ,,,,_ ••111'°"" 11• llU~d Mon<llt tlltoogh ' • ,., 4 ,,~.,. '"'<.I'<" 1 ecNior "· woiMe<J Saturdaf'. • • !> iN1111.,. ,,.. J '"''< ., 1 pu~""'O r •t t ~ "' 1X' wn1 f4 .. , !>h...-• i f4 • H,(j C..0.t .. ~ t.1 IN~9?6'6 Glorl1 A. Powert Don11d L. Wllll1m1 o. "'I ' j 11 MM.I~•· VOL. n , NO. 95 Splli~g­ t? oW 6 t? rugRt 1132 r M)l~ ..Alle. CWes1rilbb P~zu 6~0-?105 .. ..