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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-05-02 - Orange Coast PilotWEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1984 It your Soclal . Secu lty .. numtier·.1• 578-24-7350 ' _ you've wonl Cout Supervisors have hired a Newport Beaehflrm ro- promote Ontario Inter- national Airport aa an alternative to John Wayne./A3 Five Orange Coast stu- dents receive National Merit Scholarships./ A3 California Newsman Jerry Dunphy decides not to return to his 11 p .m. bro~cast. /A4 Nation Vietnam-era veterans are gratified by their wel- come as they return home after duty In Grenada and Lebanon. /Al World Chinese Great Leap For- ward kllled more people than Hitler's Holocaust. /A10 U passenger& and crew are rescued after their helicopter Is forced to land In the North Sea./ A5 Home Air pollution poses a haz- ard to fitness converts and may slow down Olympic athletes. /82 Food Create your own fiesta to celebrate Cinco de Mayo. /C1 Originally viewed as a short-run phenomenon, plain wrap products are hereto stay. /CS Sports Lakers take a command- ing 2-0 lead over Dallas with second straight romp, 117-101,atthe Forum./D1 Huntington Beach High stuns Ocean View In baseball to knock the Seahawks out of a share of first place./D2 Entertainment The director and two stars of the hit movie "Some Like It Hot" remi- nisce on the film's 25th anniversary :183 Bualnen Graduates of the Katherine Gibbs Sec- retarlal School of Boston gather In Coate Mesa to· toast old tlmes./85 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board · Bull net• C1ttfornt1 Newt Ctaumed Comlcl CrONWord O.ath Notice• FOOd Http YourMff Home HorOIC<>Pe tnthe8ef~ Ann Landera MutuaJ Fund• National New• Opinion .Potic. Log Publlc Notlcet 8Port• St~ Market• T ... vttlon ThMttr11 WMther World New1 J 84 A3 95.e A4 08--8 84 08 oe 01-10 82 81-2 07 A8 92 98 A4 A10 A3 oe 01·5 97 83 83 A2 A4 0 f~ AN C1 t C 0 UN T i (,A t IF 0 HNI A 'J ·~ CE: N 1 :i .Sa.n Onofre ·1eak ·plugged 'Minimal· contamination poses no • sk to public. nuclear plant officials say By DA\'ID BISHOP u4 ANDREA ADEUON OfhO.., ........ A faulty valve ~used a I S-minutc radiation leak from the San Onofre nuclear power plant early today bu1 1he amount of contamination posed no risk to 1he public, aothoriues said. The low-level leak of fission gases from a wutc treatment compressor wasapoued by plant operators al I: I 0 a.m. when moni1ors that detect radiation began to rise. Nuclear . Smuhup on Cout Hlgh~ay A Newport Beach woman wu crttlcally tnjared In ~ three-car accldent OJl Pacific Cout JDibway near the Santa Ana Rl•er lD llewport Tuaday nlC)t. llary Fry, 38, S. ln the Rqulatory Comm11Mon 1poke1man Greaocy Yuhas said lhi1 mbmina. Preliminary findinp show abou1 I 07 Curies of radiation were releated. An individual •Lindina ouuidt the planl's penmeter would have re· ccivedad<>Kof.01 m1Uirems, Yuhas 111d in a teJepbone inltr'View from the NRC's rea>onaJ offi~ in w,1nut Creek. By compamon, a typical chest X-ray results in radiation of about 40 to SO milhrem't. he said. ·"Tue con~ueneet of 1he· ~ are minimal," he II.id. ''Thote con- centration limits are n01 acceptable, but they are not a b11 de._i •n terms of public (rilk) f i:om uposu?t." The leak did not disrupt the plant's opcrauon nor were any employees contaminated, 111d Dave Barron, a spokesman for Southern Cahrom1a Edison. majority owners of'lhe threc- reactor plant A cny offical at nearby San lnteaal•e care ward at P'oantaln Valley Commanlty Hoepltal, while two otbera ln•ol•ed were b'•ted for lener lnjurtee and a fourth penon wu 11Dlajve4. - Clemeftte laid be WU infonaed ...... • radiation leak by an Eda.oG Ciftiail • 3:27 Lm .• two boun after ··1.11ie i._. occumd and an boW after die Nae had been notified. San Ocmeate Ckyi; Man., GeofJt CanvalhO liid lie was told the low-level leak ~ .o lhrcat to tbeC1tyofSao C1anca .. ,.. surroundina areas. .. , don't think 1brii'•1 atty ~ lcm," he said ... 11'5 a minor 1nci*ln (~ ... OffOnt&/d) Plane Crash ~kills 8 Trio took off from John Wayne sometime Tuesday Thret people fly1n1 a twin-ename plane from John Wayne Airpon werr killed when they crashed near Ukiah 1n a rugpd area after ukina landina 1nstructJons ror a rcfuclina atop. lbe • Mcn.docino County Sheriffs 0epart. men1 reported today . The victims, whose idet\tities werr w11hhek1 so their families could be notified. were on a fliaht from Orante (Pleue .... Pt.An/ A2) Ex-Marine saves truckei-'s life on 1-5·· Driver's legs severed below knees: UCI doctors fafl tn try to reat~c_h o~e --, r By STEVE MARBLE Of .. o.llf""' .... A 22-year-old former Marine used his mittJary trainina Tuesday to ue tourniquets on a truck dnver Whose legs were severed an a spccLacular acc1den1 on the Santa Ana Freeway thai coated the highway with toiuc chemicals and snarled traffic throuf}lout Orange and Los Angeles counties. _ The late-morning 1ruck acc1den1. which forced officers to~el off one of Sou1hern California's busiest free- ways for seven hours, left truck driver Jim Martine~ S3, pinned instde the cab of his vehicle with grave injuries. "The doctors attribute the savinaof his life to the young man." said Orange Coun1y fire Battalion Chief Lee Chamberlain of Daniel Mon- tanez' quick act1on11. Montanez. an employee at t')Jer· nauonal Frabricators in Irvine, said" he was one of the flrst people at the 5eene of the accident. The Irvine worker said he was headed in the oppos11e direction on the Santa Ana Freeway when he saw the wreckaae of 1he truck. Montanez said he stopped. leaped the center divider and ran to the wreckage. He said he could see Martinez' crus~ legs and n011ced lhc man was bliqd1ng al an alarming rate. "I took off m y belt. pur rt around one ofh1s legs and tightened it w11h a twig I found," explained Montanez today. "I asked a bystander for his belt and put that around his other leg." Martinez was taken to UC Irvine (Pleaee Me CRASH/A.2) Pair save woman from rape suspect ......... An es-Marine aa•ed the lUe of the clrh·er of tbia o•ertUmecl truck yeaterday when he applied with the woman, then suddenly . a toumlqaet to the tracker'• maimed tee•. By STEVE MARBLE °'""'.,.., .......... slugged her an the face and dragged ·--------------------------------------A pair of Costa Mesa men have been credited with rescuing a 24-ycar- old woman who was kidnapped. raped and savagely bcalen durina an ordeal that began late T·ucsday at a Ncwpon Beach nigh1spot. Randel Crawford, 2~. and Malcolm Scou. 24. also helped lead police to the allcacd at1acker, who was hunted down and arrested 1n the c11y of O range. Gary Lee Marthaler. a 32-year-0ld unemployed model and executive recruiter, was arrested on susp1c1°" of attempted murder. kidnap. rape and assault w11h a deadly weapon Marthaler. a bachelor with no apparenl past ~rimmal ret:ord, Is bcma held today on S2S.OOO bail at Newpon Beach City Jail. Police said the spree of violence bca.an a1 10:30 p.m . as 1hc uniden- tified woman was le11v 1n, Bobby McOcc:'s, a Pacific Coast flghway restaurant 1n Ncwpon Beach. Marthaler struck up a conversation her to his car, according to Newport Buch Sgt Paul H eniscy. The man reportedly pulled the wom~ into the front !>cat of his car arid s~d otT. "As he drove she screamed and he hn lier~veral more times in the face ~th a n unknown object." Heni~y said. At said the woman \lapped 1n10 unconsc1ousnes~ following the -;cm·i. of hi ow\ The allacker parked h1'i l'ar on Cabnllo Street, a reo;1dcn11al avenue off Newport Boulevard in ( osta Mesa. and pulled the woman into the back seal of his car. poh1.·c said. "She was sltpp1ng in and out of consciousness at fhat po)nl." \81d 1he dcte 11 vc. He said 1hc assa1lan1 forced the woman to perform \Cxual acts The woman'i. cries for help broughl Crawford and Scott. who hve o n C"abrillo . running to 1he curb\1dc where they allegedly saw Marthaler on 1op of the woman. JPleaH tee SAMARIT A1f&/ A2) Amphitheater neighbors wailin 'about Willie Nelson By KAREN E . KLEIN OflMD.Hy"°'llllfl If there wa,n·1 eno\J~h wailing going on at the W1l11c I Nel'ton) and Wa)'IOn (Jenning\) conLcrt al the Pacific Amph11hcatrc I uc\da' night. ther<· was plenu qf 11 in ttw res;den11al nc1ghborh0<xh \urrnund1ng the con· l'Cn fac1l11y. accordin~ to re\1dcn1s "There wa\n't an) going to skep around here l:m night ... "-aren Millar ..aid 1h1<1 mornrna The mun tr) mui.K concert Wl'nt on until about 11 I 'I pm . 'ihc w1d. "llh the loudl''' part coming 1n tl)c l:t\I 45 minull'\ OI lht c.·onccrt M1 llJr "'IHI!.\' hu,hand Ru'' " intt fi1m hm·d b) the ~·it) of 'C'1>sta prc~1dent of a homeo"' ncr' group \k\J tu l cmduct amphitheater noise c.allcd lhe ( onn·rncd ( 111/l'n' ot tr'" • ( os.ta Mc\3 . ..aid \he h.u.I hl'r hml\t' I hl· •'"'en not~ reached l 6 on a block d1recth JUU\\ from thl Jl'lJOt'I' o'er the hm1t dunn& five amphitheater rnmpktch do.,.,·d minute' 111 the concen. 4 6 dcc1beb -The wund pcrmc:ntcd--thruugh d all11q· thl· li m1t lor ~ 5 minutes and 7 6 \'t•r. tighll) do<cd houw I l'\l'll hJd dnih\:l' mer 1hc threshold dunna a tov.ds stufkd under 1hc J oor' Jnd 111 ,,._m1nu1e pcnod. actordin& to Cotta the crJck~ ol 1hc v.indow' \Ill· \J1d \fr....i ( 1t\ .\tl me-. Tom Wood She \3td \hl' did nor ~no" \.\hl·thl'r V. nod \31d the Cit) filed a thrtt- lht group's no1~-nwn11nnna t·qu1p· l ounl 011\.demc-anor no1~ compta1nt mcnt had rclordcd an\ \111lat111n\ ot .11u11n\I thr ov.ncr'i of th( 1h1.· 5Ckknhcl not\t' llmH during Jmph1theatcr 1n Harbor M un1c1pal Tucwa)' 's conn·n < nun 1 uc.-'ida) But 01 a hea '°' -nll'tal uinll'n \atur fhe cit) plans to continue ~1tana the Ja}. the 1.uunt\ ·, ki£11 ltm11 "'·" Jmph1thc.-ater, Wood wcl, when ~1ol11tcd three t1mr,, 1h:rnnhng 111 noi\C' C\CCl'd'i the hmtt m Coll~ · . Gordon Bnckcn and .\\\4.X.ta11.·, thr Park and Me\& dtl Mar, the ne11h· County plans to C'lose loophole _san-taA-na--h:u-l·<L-arn_u,•1-i:nl -cn1t-'"<'\:_., __ (P•_eaM_ ... _coll!'ll"c-s•~T' ... A.2> in campaign co~tribUtion law Gay rights The Oranac County Grand Jury thinkt IM eounty'a. poritical-reform TIN CUP ordinance may have a hole uu.t.. ,B_ui County Counscl Adruan Kuypcf' bclieivtt 1 prol)OMd llln! supplcmenttna the TIN (UP ordi- nance will be uffic1ent to case thox concemt. The proposed ordinance, be1n1 circulated 1n draft form, would close a loopholo ,..,.nd jurora tum led u-pon durina their review of 1 propo I that would have permitted th1 Irvine ( o to own and operate landfllls near the C ll)' ofl rvinr.. • Tht' loophole 1nvotivc~ the ownrr o( o corpnrotion makina ll um~11n contrthu11on to ll CO!!nly omcial JEFF ADLER. - NEW S BACKGROUND under 1hc I '178 TIN C"UP (Time h Now. <·Iran lip Pohttci) ordinance Under , a kc) provl11on of the meuurc, ft ~orpor•tion i• dct"mcd a M'l.Jor r1mpe11n ~ntnbutor and mu•t d1.cto\C m ,ta tu if the corpor .. at1on'tt ownrr makc11 a po1i11col co,,. • tnbuuon to a candidate ncrtd1n1 St .40' over four yean Howevt'r. the law " vaauc :.hout the status of the owner of a ~orpor auon when •he corpora11on makes th<' rontnbuuon Ku)pc'r \lid rhe ord1 - nan~ docs not rtqu1~ 1hat the owner be deemed a mlJor conlr1butur The measurt pmh1b1t, \uprrv1sot'\ from vouna on matt(n aOe<:11na ind1v1dual1 or firm~ thal ha"c been declared m..,or umpa11n con· tnbuton b) donauna more than 1hc S 1,403 lhtt hold. When 1rand Juron in~C1ttpted nl'lotiauons bttv..(el'! the count)·, ae1 "8Mt m11•n "*-~ laric t landowner and 1hr count) h oourd I petlllOn of 380 over \he landfill, thc' d1~ve~d llldngfOra.._.-nda~~ (PleaM ... CAM'PAIOJIC/A2l. ~ ttw mMIUf9 on nu, Iv . ' ' . \ ONOFRE.LEAK ••• Pr-Al contained within the plant." A~rding to Yuha-. amcc San Onofre's Unit 3 went into operation in February, there have been "many . small releases. but of no dose consc· quence. "This is the largest release this year," he said. 1b.Lhold. The threshold as the lowest Bui a ltalunJ chttk valve caused lei'd "tncident'' that requires NRC the stand-by compressor to be press. notificauon w1thm four hours.. he urized. A '"Tupture dlsc .. deiiped to s:ud. • ,, tnp and 11vc the equipmcn~ opened, A plant alsrm .sounded, M did one affowma pscs to escape J,nto the at the $late Office of Erneraency plant's qntilatioo sysicm, Yubu Services in Sacramento, Yuha said. explained. . Marion Pack. a community or- ganiar for the Oranfe County Al- liance for Survival, said "thul's their usual pat answer. We're used to hearing that." Pack said the anti-nuclear or- ganization "expects the~ thmgs to continue. We know there are prob- lems down there." Yuhas said an "unusual event" was declared at I :29 a.m. after the amount of radiation escaping thro ugh plant vents exceeded a specific rad1a11on The NRC's office in Wa.shinaton, Southern California .Edison Co. D.C' heard about the leak at 2: 13 own' 1S percent of the nuclear a.m., he said. facility, five miles south of San The leak .. was a~c the alarm kt J;temente. point. but it was not a btl Two of 1,100 megawatt nuclear c:uastrophe." Yuhas said. jeneratorsart opcratint while a third The malfunction mg valve was on a is down for repairs. stand·by compressor which wasn't San Diego Gas and Elcctnc Co. running. ihe compressor suctions ofT owns 20 percent and the cities of air around nuclear power Units 2 and Anaheim and Riverside own the 1 and funnel) any discharge into remaining interests. storage tanks. Contaminants are al-Edison is the projc-ct manager and lowed 10 deca)' m thl" tanks for up to the lk<:htel Power Corp. is the major 40 days. he saui contractor and arcbJtcct-cn&meer. GAYRIGHTSORDINANCEPASSED ... - From Al kmeJian veto ofa state bill that would have banned di!>Cnmmauon based on SC"xtlal onentat1on. Council members unanimously approved the local measure upon its first reading. and again Tuesday ni~ht. Following council's acuon. Jahraus said he would "take a few days off and thtnk" about his next course of action. Opponents of the ord1nan('e approached him concerning a recall effort but the Laguna Lumber Com- pany v1ct' president said he would wait to make a dec1s1on. "I have reservauons about a recall be<:ausc 1t would generate a lot more publicity, which I don't want.'' Jahraus said. "Maybe 1t will be better JUSt to wall for the next election ... Numerous speakers tor both s1dc1> of the issue attemptt'd to persuade council mcmbe~. Jay Grant, a pastor at the Laguna Church, said the ordinance "alienates the entire Chnsuan communll\ 1n Laguna Beach " · An un1dent1fied. masked woman was permitted to speak. who said her costume symbollLed the d1scnmina- t1on she feels: "This mask 1s suffocat- 1ni me, please help me take 11 Qfl "~he said Others said the ordinance would "polari1c" the cit)' and create animosity toward the g.ay commun1· ty Architect Storm Case said he "resents" the ordinanct' because 11 "appears 1t is being used to gain nationwide anention ... (and) that o nt' individual is doing 1t. It can totally polarize the commuo1ty and change the demography." · · Don Hagan. a fam1I> phys1c1an who is gay andThrisuan said, "I didn't choose to be gay and I don'1 choose 10 be _d1$Cljminated against The same kind of people who hola their Bible tonight are those who held their Bibles out to prevent black people. front atte~hool in the south. They beliC'Ve 1t 1s their God- given-nght to discnmmate against me." Council members listened. then repeated much of what the~ sa1d before tirst appro\.lng the ordinance two weeks ago. ··1f I had an)' doub1 abouC my \Ole before, all lilad 10 do 1s read the letter!> I got this week." said Councilman Neil f1upatnck. He elicited ~ans and laughs when he said the 9CC?lsion was a mauerofweighmg tht "di~om­ fon" ~f oppon~nt~ ve!Sus ~h~ "sheer terror' of discnmmat1on v1ct1ms. Recently elected councilwoman Manha Collison was cntical of Gen- try. saying the problem .. focuses on the ex-mayor's personal issue and dream." Both panics were guilty of using the media to exploit the issue, she said. Collison. voted in favor of the ordinance, however. calling it a "human nghts, not a gay rights ordinance." In response to those who say there 1s no evidence of discrimination in Laguna Beach, Gentry said he ktlows of someone who gets a paycheck every week with the word .. fagot .. wntteo on it, which he must then present to the bank. "Discrimination 1s not rampant. Laguna is not gomg down the tubes," Gentry said. "It 1s very simple. We all saluted the flag tonight and I think I heard every one of you say the words, 'libeny !ind J USllCC for all.'" The ordinance, which spccififies c1v1l coun proceedings for enforce- ment, will take effect in 30 days. CRASH VICTIM'S LIFE SAVED ... From Al Medical Center 1n Orange where doctors tned in vain to rcauach one of his legs: which were both sc"ercd JUSI below the knees. A hospnal spokes- man said the Los Angeles truck driver 1s in scnous cond1t1on today. Montanez said he relied on tra1n1ng he rtte1ved during llts four year" 1n the U.S. Marine Corps "Later. as I thought about 11. I co1ddn't bcltc.ve what I had done." sa(d 'he 22-year-o1d "I remember when I first v.ent up to the truck I thought I was going to get SICk but I told m yself. ·come on. JUSI do what you got to do · ·1 tncd to comfort him the best I could. I covered his legs because I was alratd ifhe sav. them he might go into shock and not make it I kept telling him 1hat he wa~iotng 10 be OK and that I was staying with him.'' Officials at UC Irvine Medical Center said the)' were ama1cd at MohtanCZ.:s cool _ "My God. the pre~ncc of mind this guy showed was JUSI remarkable. Just incredible." a hospital spokeswoman commented The 11 :08 a.m. accident on thl' Santa Ana Freewa} at Western .\' - enuc in Buena Park dosed all south- bound lanes until 6:30 p.m .. Thl' truck spilled 60 pounds of sodium bromate. a 55-gallo n drum of polen- tiall) explosive h}drogl·n peroxide. and 600 pounds of an unidentified white poweder, Chamberlain said. fifteen people -13 paramedics. one ambulance dn\'l"r and the dnver of a car -were c\posed to the fumt's .\II were treated and 'IA.ashed down at the scene and did not require further medical treatmC'nt CHJ1"spokesman Rid. te"em said traffic 'IA.as bad.ed up into Los Angeles and presented one of the "'orst traflic snarl!i in Orange County 1n years. W1tnc'><>cs claimed that a Ford LTD reported!)' caused the accu;ient b~ pulling ofT a shoulder of \h~ highway in front of the truck driver. according to Stevens. Martinel swerved lo m1'>~ lhl· car. flipped the truck and ~p1llt:d the vehicle's toxic cargo. Martinez was extncated by fire- fighters from the truck registered to V1V1on Chemical Co. of Vernon. During a helicopter flight to the hospital. he spoke with paramedics, Chamberlain said. The dnvcr ofthc ford, ide nufred as Peter Yiu. 58. of'Losj\ngeles. was not ci ted in the accident. PLANE .•• From Al <;Punt} to Ponland. Ore., when their Piper Aztec crashed Tucsda} after- noon. said 'ihentrs Sgt. Frank Staf- ford The plane had radioed for landing mstruc11onsa1I:17 p.m., according to Stafford, but was not heard from after that. Ukiah Flight Service contacted the shentrs office when the plane did not land. Some ,,wreckage was spotted during an air b rch by a reserve sh.eritrs deputy about tive miles southwest of Ukiah about S p.m . He called the ~heritrs department for ground units and deputies confirmed about two hours later the wreckage was the rema 1 ns of the missing plane. Stafford said. There was no tire, and Stafford said the cause of the crash was under invest1gat1on CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION LOOPHOLE .•. From Al Supervisor Bruct• Nc\tandc 'IA.-ii\ onl' of two supcn 1<,or\ dl·~1gna1cd to represent the hoard in lht• wm- pllcated matter They al'>o d1'>CO\Crcd that Nestande had recc1 .. ed SI .8(Kl from the Donald L Bn:n Co 1n 1982 and 1983: a $1 .000 Pl'N>nal contnbut1on from Bren 1n IYIC! and SU:!~ from the Irvine ( o. \Inn~ 1981 Bren hold~ 87 percent ol IP 1m· ( o. \tcx k The problem aro\t' hct:au'>c while Bren filed a ma1or donor '>tatt•mrn1 on behalf of the DonJld L Brtn ( o . he failed to d1\t'l11\c hi\ rclat1onsh1p with 1hc !nine ( 11 -l'H'n though the two compan1l'' Ml' unaftj,l1atcd eJ1cep1 through him If Bren'<, rela1111n \h1 p 'IA.Ith 1hc -.anous companll'\ h.1d Ocl'O dl\- tlosed. "'ll·standc "ould ha \C ~l·n barred not onl~ from \Ol1ng on mailers afTeoing the In inc ( o. bul al\o lrom \Cf\ mg on the ncgot1at1ng comm111ee n1nrern1ng tht' landfills count\ over the landfill issue. the ln1ne' Co. drl)pped its proQOsal and the maner nncr 'IA.a'> brought before the Board of Ciupc!' 1sors. The Grand Jul) took the mailer 10 the Dtstnct Attorne) 's office. In- ' esugator'> determined that Bren had allegedly violated the law b) failing to disclose hi' rclat1onsh1p with the Irvine Co. But l'Ven though Bren was in 1echn1cal .,.1olat1on ofltle law 11 was dl·termtne<l he had m11 criminally attempted or in1ent1onall) J\ 01dcd thl' d1\d11surc rcqu1rl·ment T hl· Ir\ inl' ( o d11l'I ha' \Ince agrc:cd lo suppl~ Jn atlida\11 \3)1ng hi\ Donald l Arl·n < o rnn1nbu11on had noting 10 do 'IA.Ith lnine Co 1n1ere'its .\l'lo. he 1' to lilt-,1 maJor donor 'italcm&.·n1 d1\llo<;1ng h1'> rela- 11onsh1p "Ith thl' ll'\lnl' ( (). e\en though thl· la'IA. 1n hn1t alh dol''> not require '>Ucha d1"" lmurc maJor donor statement when a cor- porate contobut1on 1s made to a count)' candidate. Grand Jury foreman Ellen Wilcox said such an ordinance would close the problem loophole. She also point- ed out t~at Bren is not the only politically active ind1v1dual in the county who 1s a principal in more than one corporation. When the measure is brought before the Board of Supervisors 11 will be structured as a supplemental ordinance rather than an amendment to the ong1nal TIN CUP leg1slat1on because the act was adopted as the result of a county initiative and cannot be changed except by the voters. Kuyper explained. "We're not changing. diminishing or allenng TIN CUP. T his can be regarded as a new ordinance." the Board of Supervisors chief legal counsel said .\' 11 turned out h0wc .. cr folio\\ -/'ng month., of nwct111g\ 'IA.Ith the The proposed \upplcmcntal ordi- nance I'> designed 10 pre' cnt a repeat of ~uch a srtuatl<111 It 'IA.Ou Id require tht· owrH'r of a rnrporation to hlc a The proposed ordinance 1s ex- pected to be considered b) super- visors sometime during the next several week~. ) I WE'RE LISTENING Just Call 642-608.6 .- \\hat do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, trantcrlbed and delivered to the appropriate edi tor. Thf' samt' U·hour Anliwc>rlnat servlct may btt osed to ncord lenen to tbe . ttditor on any tople. Contributors to our Lellcn ·column mu1t Include their name 9fW telepbont' number for nrlficatloo No circulation calls. please. TelTus what's on your mind. Dally Pilot Oetlvery 11 Ouera ntffd ~ 1oit f .J,11, I t ~f'>lll.,,.,~t-~~ Ii.,; I' , ~ .t c.-t ,. I c "' ~ .. ' "' (If ' -,,. ~ ... .,, Clrculetlon T•l•phonH "' ' .,..~r ., "'"' Ml-4.UJ ORANG( COAST Daily Pilat H. l . Scttwar11 lU Pubh!>hf!r C .. HJ Oowellby AC>Hmary Churchmen f l•t •• 11 I A '>'' 1.1 1 Cor'troller IO it.,. ~utJ' """"' Ste-phen F. C•ruo Qk>fl• A Pow•ft (>tO If f A .. v,.rt 1' V r u,. M • tJ'" Oon•ld L. Wllll•m1 ' 1llf "4At iJf'H .. Circulation 714/142-4333 .• c1 .. 11fled edYer11alng 714/142-5871 All other depertment1 142~1 MAIN OFFICE l .,.,. r .~ • 11 lol~M CA ._., u • I\ • Y: t •• .,._.. 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UI o.,l fl 0.-, 57 33 Slo-10 ,, n $3 " St Lou1t 70 54 72 5S StPW-Tamc>e ~ TO 80 73 s.n Liii• City 47 .. 50 SanMloniO 16 7t 71 .. ~Olago .. u 51 45 8Mf~anaeco .. 61 ,., 57 Sen Juet>.P Fl .. 71 57 45 s1ai.w-,. 30 .. " Seeilte 65 46 83 43 === .. ... .. '4 M " 85 '3 SIX*-50 " s. 31 srr-$2 35 85 .. T09Mta .. .. eo .. Tucedn "' 61 .. 43 futM 78 $4 16 47 Wuntnglon 73 47 42 3A .,..~,. 72 53 58 44 Wllll-letre 87 'Cl 79 .. WllMinglOI\ 0. 72 4$ Moon~ et t it<J m f1-Tru. ct8yt l7 '3am ~aoalrlat 1031 pm Temp• ... 41 12 eo 78 56 M N .. 50 81 62 78 67 11 78 IO 59 SuRr Rr PORT .. Le LOCATION am o.cno. Altleny H 37 Extended HunllnQIOf> 9Mc;ll. 1..J tw-poor Al~que 75 51 F!Mt~~ 3.4 lllif Atnfllllo 72 62 40!11"81 ·~ 3.4 felt MCllOrllge 41 3t Lei• night illld e.1\1. l'l\Ofnl1'9 IOw 22ndSltMI, 3-4 ,.,, AIMYllle 71 '3 8altioe wecioe 3-4 '*' Allen1a 7t 57 CIOuOt otntrwlM Nit. .,...,,,,.,., Wltll L.aOune 8-il 2·3 ,.., AllenUc: Cny ... Q hlgN ':tl:'om lhe IOw 70. el the Sen~ 1·3 ,.., ""'"" '6 10 .....,_ ~ lew IOI ......,_ Wlll9ye w.rw lefnp' SUI S...it0<1ec1ton IOUlf\.. o..nlglll towe mid 40I to l!lld ao.. -· Doctor sajrs dental victim probably 'over-medicated' Physician restarted heart of girl. 13 . a fter s urgery at Dr. Protopappas · clinic to document the quan11t1es of med1- ca11on Cra ven had rece1"ed dunng dental surgery. But McCormack said he d1sagre~ with another doctor's diagnosis that gauze packing that had lodged in the girl's throat caused 'her breathing and hcan to :aQ.Q:. By JEFF ADLER Of !tie o.ie,,... ...... The emergency room physician who successfull y rcstar1ed a 13-year- old girl's heart hours after she had been anesthetized d uring surgery at Dr. T ony Protopappas' Costa Mesa dental clinic testified Tuesday that over-med1cat1on may have induced cardiac and respiratory arrest in the girl. Dr. Michael McCormack. an emergency room physician at CostaMesan stabbed in1 family fight A Costa Mesa man suffered mul- tiple stab wounds while trying to break up a fight between his identical twin bro.th er and a younger brother at the Aloha Palms Trailer Park ift Costa Mesa, poli ce said today. Richard A. Smit h, 28, was treated Tuesday night at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach and released after beinf stabbed with a large carpet layers knife in the stomach, arm and shoulder, police said. His 24-ycar-old brother, Dale, was arres ted at the residence. The victim's twin brother, Roben, was being sought toda}' after allegedly fleeing the scene, officers said. Police said they found the victim l)'mg wounded inside the coach when they amved at the park, wbicb in the past year has been the scene of a homicide, shooting and a child molesting incident, according to of- ficers. . One of the windows had been smashed in the melee and consider- able damage was rcponed to the interior of the coach. Pohce did not explain why the victim, acting as the peace keeper, was attacked. Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo. told an Orange Coun- ty SuperiorCourtjury it is his opinion that Patricia Craven "may have sustained cardiac and respiratory arrest secondary to over-medi- cation." Under questioning by Deputy Dis- trict Attorney James Clonin&er. McCormack said 1t ~s has medical "opinion" rather than "diagnosis" that over-medication caused the &Jrl's ..falaLmcdical comphcatlons because no laboratory analysis was available "My reason for d1sa&reetng 1S'that I saw no evidence of airway obstruc- tion when I retrieved 1t (the two-inch square guaze)." McCormack testi- fied. Craven. one of three female pa- tients Protopappas is charged wtth killing, died 11 days after she was admmed to the hospital's emergency room on Feb. 8. 1983 -um111~-; SAMARITANS THWART ... J'romAl "Scott copied down the License plate number and ran back inside to call the police," a police spokesman CONCERT ... From Al -· borhoods adjacent to the 18, 700-scat concert facility on the Orange County Fairgrounds. Wood said the c11y did not issue citations for noise v1olat1 ons at the amphitheater last summer because 1t was the facility's first season of operation. An May 16 arraignment has been set for the city's complam1 and a representative of the amphitheater's ownership group, Ned-West Jnc .. of Los Angeles, will be required to appear in court to enter a pica. Wood said. Bricken and Associates also con- ducted noise tests Tuesday night. Wood said, but the results of thok tests were not available this morning. The next amphitheater event is not scheduled until June 23, when jazz saxophone-player Ronnie Laws 1s to appear. s~ud. "Crawford ran back into the hou~ and got a baseball bat. .. Crawford reportedly returned to the car and. waving the bat, called for the attacker to get out of the car. "Get out of here, I have a gun," the man r~portedly called out to -crawrord. Crawford, however. boldl y opened the car door and pulled the wounded woman to safet)' as the attacker scrambled mto the dnver's scat and drove off. "These two fellows obviously did an outstanding Job." Hen1sey said. Usi ng the Ileen~ plate number Scott had supphcd police. officers tracked down and arrested Man haler at a residence 1n Orange where he.was staying with fnends. Police said Manhalers home a)idress is 1n--Wh1t- 11er. t • · Police said the man didn't put up a fight at the time of· his arrest. "Actually, he wasn't given tame to," commented one officer. The woman was taken to H oag Memorial Hospital in Newpon Beach where she was admitted for treatment. Officials said she sus- tained major injuries to her face. Police don't know what motivated the attack. ondee/s PIOCe tJo>. pAf.·tea.s o~d jU"-lo.tS 5-asRioo to 5-i1 a LilJe ·s~te. }lot aK ..Age 1132 flUAAe J4l}e., C:Westclit;b P&lza 650~2i05 ' -··1 , ~~~~--------------------....... --~~ I 1 t BuLu TIN B o~wn ' Frlzzeiie to ·atltlress Mesa ciyic group A special meetina of the Cona Mesa C1v1c AllOClation will to be held Fnday at 7 1.m. at the Facuhy House ofOranae Coast Collqe. 1 Assemblyman Nolan Frizzcllc 11 sla&cd to address the aroup on key issues facing Costa Mesa. A continental breakfast is included in the $2 fee for the meetini, For reservations and more , information. call S49-3469. Parllamentarlan• to meet The Theta Unit of the California Association of Parliamentarians will meet Thunday morning at the Town and Country Bank. 12535 Seal Beach Blvd, in Seal Beach. Rosemary Newton will conduct the program on elections at the I Oa.m. session, while Angel Colella will be installed as president for 1984-85. Further information may be obtained by calling 548-2675. . Parent. of gay• to convene · The Orange County chapter of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays will meet Thurday at the Community Church by the Bay. 148 E. 22nd St., Costa Mesa. Onentat1on for newcomers starts at 7 p.m. followed by the regular meeting at 7:30 and d1scuss1on groups until 9:45. Call 964-4392 for additional information. JobJt ineet_lor Toa•tma•ten A Joint meeting of the Spokesmen Toastmaster Club and the new Rise and Shine Toastmaster Club will be held Thursday at 6:30 a.m. in Rosatynn's Restaurant at Gothard Street and Edinger Ave nue in Huntington Beach. The meetings are open to anyone who enjoys public speaking. Call Karen Franz at 536·2905 for funher information. · - MoWJtaln ailment. dl11euued How to treat illnesses and in1uries co~on to mountainous areas will be d1scu~sed Friday ®nng a three-hour seminar at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. OCC biology instructor Don Baud. who has led numerous wilderness tnps in the United States and Mexico, will conduct the 7 p.m. program in Room I of OCCs Science · Lecture Hall. ·Admission is $5 and 1nformatton is available at 432-5880. Friars plan sliver jubilee The Orange County chapter of the First Friday Fnars wtll hold its "silver Jubilee" luncheon Fnday 1n the Magnolia Room of the 01Sneyland Hotel in Anaheim. Flre,on the freeway Traffic along the northbound lanea of the San Dleio Freeway near Sprtnadale A•- enue wu funneled into two lanea du.rhl& the raah hoar Tueeday morntnc when The Newport Harbor Area Cbaiiiber of ColnmlilW i will tiott a break:f111 diecu11ion and dale • mdi '' • tation fundinc and the cootrovcnial MellHff A -• i coi&ory prOPQSltioo that will increue the Mldau hm 6 to 1 paeeot '°fund ttanlPOf1,lt.ion impro¥emnts. VOllll 1 will docidc whether lO approve the uJet sax ioa'Hll • lliillil their June S ballot f Reservations for 1be 7:30 Lm. Friday~ al die Balboa Bay-Oub can be made ~ the cMlnbcr aa , 6-44-82.!J. lbe panelists will include Oruee Comity. , SupcTVJsor Tom Riley, Fif\h District; ~· Roa Packard. R·Mission Viejo; Al Hollindcn of Cit.attnJ for Benet • Transponation and Norm Grossman of Citizens~. balea of cardboud aboard a track caacJat fire. The Californla JUibway Patrol and Weetnitnner Fire DepUtment reeponded and kept thlnC• ander control. Onfair Taxation. • • • • Lawrene Ni}ton Anfinson. the dau&htcr of Mr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixon of Newpon Beach, was appoinled Senior Assistant for Conarctsional llelations wilb t.br Department of Housio& and Urban Development in Washington. Prior to joinma HUD. Anfinson. •1, was Com- missioner for Community Services m Irvine. She bu a bachelor's degree in historv from Whittier ColJqe. " . . The National Women's Political Caucus of California has endorsed Newport Beach City Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plummer with a $4,000 contribution. PJummtT 1s the only female candidate runninJ for the Republican nomination in the 70tb Assembly Di•trict. The caucus also endorsed Mary J...ou Brophy of Seal Beach who is ru.nnina for the Democntac nomination in 42nd Congressional Distnct. NWPC was founded in I 971 to increase tbc number of elected and appoinsed women 11 all levels of government. • • • -Howard Adler, the Oran&e Coubty Democratic party chairman. and Lois Lundbera, the Oraqe CoWJty Republican chairman, will hold a joint town ball meetins at Chapman College in Orange on May 10. James Rooseveh will moderate. The 7:30 p.m. meeting wiU be held in Hasbjnaer Hall Auditorium on the Chapman campus. For more• mformation. call 997-6705. • • • The Lea&ue of Woman Voters of the Orante COUl wtll host a debate bctwccn the candidates nmttina for two Orange County Superior Court judgeships at 7:30 p.m. May l 7 at Newport Beach City HaU, 3300 Newport Blvd. Six candidates arc runnina for the bench in Department W All past and present members and presidents arc invited to the affair. Call 832-9832 for further infor- mation. Laguna High reunion slated The first annwal Laguna Beach High School reunion for all classes from 1930 to 1950 will be held Saturday at noon in Heisler Park at the foot of Myrtle Street. LBHS alumni are invited to bnnJthetr fami lies and a p1c01c lunch. For more mformauon caU Madeleine (Tompkms) Lewis at 494-7307. Ann (Ipsen) Parks at 494-7980 or Marilyn (Taylor) Schmidt at 494-3466. Countypaystoadvertise - virtues of Ontario Airport andJ.breu.re runnina for Oepertmmt l l . 5apail8r C.ovn jud&cs are elected on a county-wide basis. For more infonnation. call 645-7 I 20. • • • Maureen Reagan, special consultant to \be cbairman- of the Republican National Committee and the daqbta of President Ronald Reapn, will speak at a reception honoring Oranac County's Repubhcan female elected officials. The reception will be at the Santa Ana Country O ub. 20382 Newport Blvd, from S:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Thursday. For more informa\ion, call ~9141. By JEFy-{DLER -..- ot 1N OM1J "-' •i.t1 Band to play ln hospital lot Ontario A1rpon will be getting a big boost from the Orange County Board of Supervisors who would like nothing better than to diven passengers there from the county's overcrowded John Wa'fne Airport. The Edwin Parr Composite High School Orchestra from Canada will perform Fnday in the parking lot of Huntington Valley Convalescent Hospital as part of the day-long Cinco de Mayo fesuvnies planned for residents and staff. The residents ha ve in vited membersofthecommun1- ty to JOtn them for the performance at the hospt1al. 8382 Newman Ave .. Huntington Beach. Call 842-5551 for funher information. To help encouraae passengers to Oy out of Ontario Airport in neighbonng San Bernardino County. super- visors unanimously approved a $28,600 contra"C't Tuesday with a public relations company that has designed an advertising campaign to promote the Ontario alternative. Book sale set for Valley The contract with Basso &Associates. with offices in Newpon Beach. was delayed by the board for more than a month after On t.ano Airport losti LS noise variance and the number of fligtits the airpon could accommodate appeared in doubt. The Fnends of the Fountain Valley Library will conduct a used book sale Friday and Saturday at the Mile Square Plaza on Brookhurst Street at Heil Avenue in Fountain Valley. But board Chairman Harriett Wieder. in rec- ommending the contract be approved on Tuesday, told supervisors she had been in formed Caltrans had "no plans to u~ the noise vanance to limit flights" at Ontario. The sale will be located in a storefront behind Vendome Liquors. Hours arc 2 to 7 pm. Friday-and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturda}'.. Proceeds will be used for scholarships and donations to the library. Residents wishing to donate books to t!t~ sale can bnng them to the plaza or can call James Dick, 962-5157. or Betty Soule. 962:5824, to arrange"-pickup. The advertising. or "public awareness program," conceived by Basso & Associates would strive to eliminate misconceptions about the airpon's location relative_t9 Orange County. traveling times and distance and ground transportation services available from Orange County. Also, the program 1s intended to provide additional information about parkrng and terminal facili ties ac Ontano as well as deuul the range of airline service provided. I Wednesday, May 2 • 9:30 a.m .. Orange CouDty Board of Supervisors. Hall of Admin1strat1on. I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • I 0 a. m .. Co1tf Mesa Traffic Commluloo. City Hall. Coast students win m e rit scholarships First Floor Conference Room. 77 Fair Dnve, Costa Mesa. • 2 p.m .. Municipal Water District of Oruge County Board of Directors. D1stnct Office. 525 N. Cabnllo Park Drive. Suite 124. Santa Ana. F1\C more local students have been awarded National Ment Scholarships of S 1,000 to $8.000 over the next four years. • 7:30 p.m .. Coast Community College District Board of Trustees. Costa Mesa Ci ty Council Chambers. 77 Fair Dnve In the second of three announcements. Rohen Yuan of Fountain Valley, Adam Wantz of Laguna Beach. Donald Hilliard and Tracy Schmidt of Newport Beach, and John Pernick of South La11.una were honored. PoucE Loe ,_ Second victim of weekend crash in.Irvine succulnbs A San Die$O Count) man died Tuesday from IOJunes he suOcred in a spectacular weekend collision 1n Jrvmc that k11lcd an off-dut} sheriff-; deput} and scnously JOJured a third person A Mission Community Hospi tal nursing supervisor said today that Ccql Bishop r .. 41 , died after four days m the ho~pital's critical care unit. Rebecca Bearden, 20, of Los An- ttrine A secunty guard for MacPhearson Chevrolet apparently ~ared off a buraJar who had pned open a door of the dealership offi<.-e on Auto Center Drive this momin •. Pohcc fou nd no sians of the culpnt and the guard found no property mi"ing. • • • Twenty·se ,,en liaht fiitturcs were du1covered stolen ..,.u~ay from a temporary construction office on Cowan Strccc. They apparently had been pned open sometime the m&ht before The appliances were valued at $2.190 ••• Four lrvUlc rc&ldcnts were arTCstcd for susp1c1on of grand theft but released Tue~ay momina after the foursome aarced 10 f'C'tum $760 allCJCdly stoltn from lWO VISllON.. Pohcc said two OcoraiJ ·men met thrtt lrv1M womt'n It thl' Mnmott geles Count}. a pas<;cngcr m the car dnvcn b) the Los Angeles Count) deputy, was listed in scriouc; con- d111on this morning m the M1ss1on V1CJO hospital intensive care un11 California H1ghwa} Patrol Otfaer Rick Stevens said 1n"est1gators arc still probing the 1nc1dent in which Jtffery Anderson, 24. died aftcr th e car he was ndin• was struck head-on by a motorist dnvina the wrong way on the San Diego Freeway. Hotel the mght before and left the hotel for the women's apartment They discovered their ca h n11ss1ng and called police fter questioning. all agreed to settle the d1i.pute them- selves. • • • A. car stereo wonh $480 was rcP<?ncd stolen Monday from a vehicle left in the: drivewey oh home on Paine Court 11nce laat week. Police s.aid the driver's window was len open. • • • Two teen-a e boys who escaped last week from theJophn Boy, Ranch 1n Trabuco C'nnyon were found wandenna an Irvine netihborhood Monday mom1na. The youth~. ages 14 and IS. wttt boo.Iced nt Juvcmle hall for escape . • • • •• Thrct l'onstru1..t1on comp:in1cs rc- poned the ~O of SI 2.000 wonh of tools trom hxl boitc\ ten at 6 -\nderson workcd in the Antelope Valle} substauon and was off dut} at the time of the accident. the shenffs department said tevens said officers werc 1n- "cst1ga11ng Bishop for dri-. mg while under the influence of akohol. but results of blood tests were un· available. Bishop'!. death means no cnminal complaint will be sought, he said. Execuuve Center We t over the ... eekend PoUet say dnlls. saws and elcctncal cords wett taken after locks were pned ofr sana boxc at the unfenced construction site. CoetaMeaa The Transamenca Insurance Co .. located on the sixth and seventh floo" ofa h11h n eat 3420 Bmuot St .. was broken into over the weekend Poht't said de ks and doors were pned open but no loss was rtponed • • • The offi~ of the Acadcm} of Defensive Onvina. at 88 f11r DnH, ~ere buralamcd over the weektnd and a video camera was stolen. Loss was plaJ at $Q88. • • • A ncrc wu 'tolcn from the offices of ndpipcr hn1nc1al at l 700 Adams A vc Monday. There was no cv1dtnce of forced fhtry 10 the SSSO • • • Besides the cou~e Newpon Beach City Council, always eager to su\)port John Wayne Ain>onallanauves, has agreed to1cick tn ss-.ooo toward the project ash.ave the Community Airport Council. which contributed $500, and the Mariners Community Association. which gave a s I()() CORtribution. The Balboa Ba ~ · · host a de te between the seven candidates nmnina b the 701h Assembly District 11 a.m. May 9 at the lrvme Coast Country Club. For more information, <:all 640-&SU. ••• A detailed program, to be administered jointly b} the Ontario Airpon Workina Group and the county's Airpon Commission, is to be ready in 90 days. The Newport Democratic O ub tritl h06t a Cinco de Mayo pany honorina state Attorney General John Van de Kamp 3 p.m... Sunday at 20\ 82 Klim, Santa An.aJkipt.1.: for more information. call 5S2·l424. Police chief will fire officer .who lied about .CM shooting By KAREN E . KLEIN OflNO..,Nllfli.fl Costa Mesa Police Chief RO$er Neth said today he will ao ahead with his plans to terminate suspended officer Bruce Ross. the patrolman who admitted last week he hed about being shot in the back m February. Ross. 31 . of Irvine. had requested that Neth grant him a on~er medical leave to allow him to obtain psychiatric treatment and solve his emotional problems. "I am carrying out m} onginal intent to discharge him cfTect1vc on Ma) 3rd," Neth said. "It's kind of cold and to the point. but that's the way it's got to be." The chief said he based his dec1s1on on Ross' "1olat1ons of the pohce department's manual. Ross admmed to filing a false police repon, de- stro> mg ev1dence (the gun he used 1n the incident) and bemg untruthful to anothl'r po1cc officer when question· theft police said • • • .\ ( o'ita \ksa man ".is arrested Tuesda) for po-.~ss1on ol a sa"ed-ofT shotgun "h1ch hr allegcdl) pointed at three men "ho came 10 rl'Pl>S!teS\ h1<i car. Rohen Lee Dotson Jr . J6. was t¥cn into custod) after he allcgcdl) pulled out the gun and told the re possessors ... Lea-. l' or d1l· ·· • • • The Flu IT and 01) (leancrc; ~ 10 W IQfh t.. was broken into OH'r thc wctkC'nd but nothtnl( "a~ rcponl·d stolen • • • i\ construction s1tt at 2'K>O Bric.tot • t was the 'illC' of a burgl.tr) 0' er the weekend, when tti1cvc.-s made oil" 1th S 56 7 worth of plywood and l)oug\ac; fir bolts. Fountain Valley A. Costa Mesa man wa" arrested and lod'ied in Ora~c County Jaat af\er allesedly eApo ma himself to 11rts wal.k.ina_ to Fountain Valle)' H11h SChoo1 alona Talbert A venue. Police. who \lltd he was suit oomm1ttJn& the act when they amved. rcporttd he lso was 1dent1fied by one of the v1cu ms from 1 photolineup. • • • meone stolell Jlrl-'f btue Murray Crut9er bicycle that was locked up and parked at Fulton hoot. 8778 fl Laao Ave. Newport Beach A Newport Stach man rtponed the then ofS200tncash from his home on Royal t Gwf'IC Tuc~a) ~mcone ~mashed a window 1n h1$ k1tchtn ond stole his money chp. • • • VcNHec. a hu~nes' ot 14~1 rt· poncd the thef\ ofS ~.0001n otlkc nnd video equipment T u1.·~la' ed about the shoollnJ. Netb also said Ross adm1ned to concoct1 ng a couple of 1 nc1dents when he worked for the UC Irvine campus polict:. . "He.will be notified ofour decision today:· Neth said. Ross was suspended with pay April 24 when he admitted to ngg1ng a flare gun with a .22-cahber bulfet and shooting himself in the back while wearing a bull etproof vest. He later told his fellow officers that a sniper shot him as he was wnting a traffic uclce t while on rouune patrol duty. The incident attracted wide- spread media attention when Ross claimed the bulletproof vest had saved his hfe The faked shooting was unco,cred by detectives who were upped offb} authorities on the UC Irvine Police Department, where Ross prcv1ousl} worked. police said. The campus police at l l('I said Lagu na Beach .\resident in the I 00 blocl of Nonh Coast H1gh ... a } reported a los!> of SI 00 in ca~h from a burglar; Tucsda) shonl} after I CJ a. m • • • Jewelr; and camera equipment of undetermined -.aluc were reported m1ss10g 1n a burglar) earl) Tuesda~ morning in the 3000 block of Cresta Wa~ • • • Police r(''pondcd to a report of '>ome pcoplc ... Ith a gun in thl' :2600 · blocl of Laguna Can,on Road Tues- da' at about I p m When. located. those cam 1ng thc l8 cali~r re-. oh er ..aid the\' had lounJ 11 in thc caO\,on and turned 11 ll\cr to police. Hantt.ncton Beach Three peopll' ran into thl' Mont· iomef) Ward ~tore Tuesday at Munt· mgton Cenctr 7777 Edinger .\ 'C: • grabbed SOO'W'-lhlldren"~ Jean' and ran out the stott Tht thrtt appart"nt· I Oed 1n a bluc 1 %Q CheHolcL The los~ wa e umatC'd at SI IN • • • Someone pned open a w1ndo\\ to buqwue a home on the I 0600 block .nfSa.ndptpet U1le. The lot>." included Jewelry wonh $4,000 • • • A rcs1dent of the 19800 block of Coventry Lane reponed Tuesda) that someone stole his red IQ~ 7 C be\. r<net The to \ 111>u estimated at S•.000. • • • A betae Huffy 10-.. J)ttd OO)l bicycle was f't'POMC'd '\tolen Tues.di~ from the 1600 block of R1\en1cv. Circlt The lou ..,,., «t1matcd at St60 • • • Entcnns throuf.h ~n unlod.td front '111<l1na ... mdow ~lml'onc ~urr.lanTtd ~ . Ross was suspected of baviQI.. con- cocted a bomb scare and a buralaI} while he worked there. After Costa Mesa detecttvcs confronted Ross. he 1n1tiaJly denied the allcpt1ons and then confessed he fabricated the shooting incident. Ross said laS1 week that be was filled wi th shame over the faked shoot mg and realized he was "sick. .. He said he hoped the department would give him time to get his problems straightened out and allow him to return to pohce work. Ross. v1s1tmg his family in Utah. said he was very disappointed with Neth's decision. "I alwa\S thought the dcpanment wouldn't ium its back on you 1f you had a problem." Ross said. "I felt I wasn't askrng for anythmg un- reasonable." Ross said he has had several calls from people interested 1n talkmg 10 him abou1 ~mployment. an a pan ml·n t on the 21600 block of Brool hur'it trttl. a resident reported Tuc..da-. The loss included $300 m cash · • • • .\ re~1dt"nt of the 16300 block of Bol~ ( h1ca Street told poh~ Tues- da' that someone had stolen hts 28- foot \ anson boat trailer from a \Jl30t lot on Heal Avenue. The lo s ~a .. t·c.11matC'd at s 1.:wo • • • .\ l 3t burglar entered a home on th..: ~I Miil block of Broolthurst S1rtt1 "h1h: the rts1dent win aslttp and \tole S 5 5 from the: man's wallet. Entry apparent!} was made throuah an unlod.ed front window • • • .\ man reported to Golden WC$t C ollegc security office-rs Tue5day 1h1t someone had stolen his gQld lO.spccd Gemco b1cvck The lo V..U esti- mated 11S100. me<.ine u~ a d. lo bftak a . ·~ ~ mdO\\ and gam f) to a borne Tue~a} on the 4900 block of Hilo < tr('le The house Wb ransacked.~ lo~~ included tetto eqwpment ~onh s l()() • • • • .\ ftmale juvenile was atTnted T unda)' on susp1aon of \hophf\ana at the 1 argct 'tore, 9882' 4dams ave RecOH'red were sunal.aues and car- nngs v.onh $27 • • • A ""'dent of the 3000 bl of Aquanu Dn"e ~rted Tuesda) that someone stole $7,000 lft coan from tler unlodcd p to~tJmc bttv.ccn No\iember 19 and Ma) I, 198<4 • • • ~mron~ \tolt 35 tmpt ~S-pUon Jrum' fmm the Engard Coat1n Co I S ~4 I Cum mtrcr Lane l hel.011 v.a~ C'lllmatt'd at SI ..,00 / Your Prescrtpt10n tor Immediate Medical Care ' • Open 8am-9pm· Every Day Of the Year • Physician on duty • No appointment necessary · -Ee.ononiy ... chJsgghlg along 01ore ~lowly By Tk A11oclated Preu The economy 1schuag.ing along hs fo rward course but has shtfied mto a lower sear, according to the latest ft1urn rele~ by the government. The Com~ Depanment said Tuesday that a sharp inettase in factory or~~ in March wa~ mostly• the result of a surge an m1titary spend ma. ·And. in i ..... K"Pbnale report, the Commerce Depanmcnt !laid that coost/\"li<mJJ>COd1Jl& was up l.2 ~rcent 1~Mnrcll well btlow the S.9 pen.-ent spurt-of Februaf) 'he late~t reports followed news Monday lhlt the gove,;, ent's Index of Leading Economic lndicaton fell I. I J')t'rccnt 1 n March. tl)c first decline in 19 mQnthl i!' the govemment'i main economic barometer. Arid retad sales. housing constructi on and sales of single-family nomes were also off for the momh. Haltlan tot smuggled In The Rev. Jesse Jackson embracea hllh Khool MDior Gloria John.on, who spoke at the candidate'• 'Victory celebration. MIAM I -His name ts Zachane Eustache. or Jean- Ma' Choute. or Emmanuel t. Eloi. But whatever the lot 1s calll'd. he remained unclaimed four days after he was appan.·ntl) )mu&&lcd 1n10 the country from Ha111. an 1mm1g.rat1op official sa)S The bof a(Tived alone Fndayorf an Eastern J\1rlmcs 01ght and 1s bcheved to~ less than J r.ears old. "Of all thl' children entenng this country 11legall~. this 1>. a., far as I know ... the youn~e~t unaccompan1l'd c.hlld we've e1.cr had. said M1ll1e Groobc}. of the Jusrn:e Depann:ient's Communi~y Relauons Sen ices. Thl' child sa)s his name 1s Zachane Eustache. But documents he was caf111 ng when he stepped off the plane lis1ed the surnames ( houtc and S1. Eloi. offit·1als said He "as u~len to the Catholic Home fot Children 1n south"'cst M1 am1. where he remained Tucsda\ 15464 Golden West Avenue, Westminister At the corner of Golden West and McFadden (7 14) 891-9008 " v ·~·· .. -.., ' .. Truckload Plant Sale Hunt1r1g1on Center J4il~ thn:; at 6.. 298 pob CJ CAN~9:QA FASHIONS, A TRUE. 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Petites 4-16; Jrs. 3/4-17 /_18; Misses 6-18 "Ont of tht Larttst AssorlmtnB of Skirt Suits and ·Blazers in So: Cal. " m11n111111: 0/T 6'rmtnt Dist. n.uandOab Wul Co""1 • lahwood • TGrr.-wtt S...ValtJ PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports, and Advertised Values .In the HWtS: Moft.0 f ri 10-i Sat. 10 6 b .ll·S ~M/C~O.Ot IM 0tts:Uiia 1.- bdl:lllln "' .... ,.'a, Daily Pilat • Jackson wins 1st primary "-.\SHINGTOI\ (i\P) -Proclaiming "On to San Francisco." the Re1.. Je'i~­ Jacbon sa}s his fir~t 1.1c- tor) in a Democratic pres•· denual pnmar) v.as not a 1 pt."rwnal one but a tnumph for his "' holl' .. Rainbov. { oahtton." No retrial ln Lennon death . NE\.\ \ORK -.\n appeals coun has reffiscd to , acatc 1hc guilt) plea and sentence of Marl David Chapman. v.-ho confes~d to the murder or rock star John Lennon. Chapman. ::?8. v.ho adm111ed shooting the 40- vear-old Lennon on Dec 8. 1980. as the former Beatie returned home to his Manhattan apanment building with h1~ .... 1fe Yoko Ono. 1s sen 1ne a 20-year·to-hfe sentence at the .\111ca ( orrec11onal Fac1ht}. Legal Aid Society la wyer Hillard \\ 1ese had argued that Chapman was insane when he confessed and his sentence should Qc: vacated. He said Justice Dennis Edv.ards comm111ed an "abu~ of discretion .. b} failing 10 order mental tests for Chapman and not holding a·compctcn(') heanng. Jackson eas1I~ s.,..ept past Walter F Monda({' and Gal) Han in the D1stnc1 ol ( ulumb1a pnmar~ on Tucsda~. tal1ng more than Pact reached wltb Hlltons 1v.o-th1rds ofthl' 'ote 1n the . , _ maJOnt\ blacl !.'II\ _ L<\'i \ ~G.\ -Negotiators f?.r Hilton hotels have In thl: same r0tim v.hal' r~chcd an agreement in concept with the Mus1c1ans he declared his candidan l n1on. om· of lour unions 1n' 011. ed in a month-long hotel al most c'acl h '>l' \l' n stnll'. offinals said IO<ia) Hilton operates only two oflhe months ago. Jacl~on tallt"d 32 hotel'> '>I ruck b~ 17.000 hotel-casino workers. but the) of .,.,hai victor. m1.·ans klr r~prescnt I(~ percent of hotel rooms 1n this reson c~ty. thl· poor. the ' todcd-ou1. C uhna~ l n1on kader JcfT Mc~oll. whose union the people ht" !Ml\S he is rcprc'lenlS the 1.ast ma1ont} of the sinkers. has sa id t~ere .,.,orking for · will be no end to the .... allout unless all four stnking unions "Tonight'<; 3 \Jl hlr. for -including those for mus1c1ans. banenders and the 00315 \IUl l 31 ihc stag1.·hando; -n:at'h agrt>ement .... ~th the hotels CALIFORNIA bottom. a 'ictor. tor lhl' Rainbov. Coali11on." Jacl- son told morl' 1han I .Oon chcl'nng supportt.'r'i. ··ro- n1gh1 IS a \ ICIOr. for ncv. d1rect1ons. a '1c1on tor a Asterold.named 'San Dlego' pean· econom~ 1n\tl'Jd ot c1 v.ar n·onom' · "Fa11h "ill n111 d1)ap- po1nl .. On lo ~n Fran- nsco Thl' Dt-monatu. "-a· t1onal ConH·nuon opt."n" Jul\ I h in San Franc1~0 Jackson 1.elebratl·d h1\ '1c1or. .,.,llh 1v.o lt1. '>UP- portl'r' in the na11on·~ 1.ap1- 1al. ~la,or ~1anon Bern and D ( De leg.ate \\ altc"r Fauntrt". Jac~on an· nounced.h1s bid on '-o' 3. 1983. in the con' cnuon center here The pres1den11al hopeful planned a da} of mee11ng~ here toda}. ~fore heading to Dallas for the league of Women Voters debate l here ton 1gh 1. Jaclson also claimed he was ple~d \lo 1th his shov. - ing in the Tenn~se pn- man on Tue~a1. . .,.,here ht.: fims·h~ third. ·Sa~ 1ng he had \loOn maJon11cc, in Memphis. Chattanooga anl.I Nash' ilk. Jackson said "Trcmendou~ things arc happening alrc>o;s the ~uth ·· The black prcs1den11al hopeful 1s looling to the Te\a~ caucuses and the Lou1s1ana pnmal) on Sat- urda} for s1m ilar \ho.,., ings. Jackson continued to rrcv; hi\ 1heml' ol thl' pac,1 tcv. \loCl'ls. tha1 the pan~ JnJ the nauon must come lngether "Our mt\SIOn I\ Ill t'\· panl.I and heal our pJM ). to e\pand and heal our na- twn. 10 mall' room for the I01.lc.'<i-ou1." he 'kl1d \\'1th tl.\O OI ht\ Q\lon lhtldren -Jt>s~ Jr and ~ant1ta -s1and1ng at h1" ~1de. Jackson repeall-d a fa\-un te hnc from h1'i cam- p:ugn speech. "I \a\ to \OU tonight -I will not tra1'n thcSl·ch1ldrco to to ( entral ~menca or Grenada. I'm not l"31S1ng them 10 go abroad and kill or be ~1lled I "ant lo heal and rebuild at home " Earlier Tu~a). Jackson met \lollh '\Fl-('10 P~s•­ dcnt Lant> Kirkland. a session the Cl' 11 n&hts leader said could lead to .. an opt>rat1ng rc=-ID· 11onsh1p· b<-tY ttn the tv.o "The~ made the fault) JudJmcnt of puttina all their suppon ~hind Mr Mond:tlt'. but all of u!l will !>UI"'\ t\C' t.ha1;· $Al(j Jack-"°" .. Bc)ond that .... e arc 1111 OJ')t'ratma '-'llh a com· mon commitment to c=-nd the '"'Pf~ ive RC'. n I"('· a•me. ..\\ t ha'c a common 'ommumtnt to having 11 con,cn11on for our part) 1n 'ian f-ranc'ISCO that v.ork and l\Oid~ the l.1nd of donn' brook or coAlronU1· 11on that "'ould Ir'-"'" our ab1ht) to f\"pre nt th~ prople th.al V.1: h:tH• lhC' moral 1mptrat1\ t to rer-- rMCnt." M ~1J \-\~ DIEGO -ml·.,.,hcre up m space 1s a htUe Pll"Ct' ot \.in D1t>go th.anl\ to the Cahfom1a Institute of Technolog' ( altcch said rue~a) 111i. naming an asteroid alkr thl· natJOn·, se' enth-larges1 Cll) .. in apprec1a11on for ~an D1l-go's h{'lp 1n sa' mg Caltech's Palomar Observatory b~ adopung a hglHing pol1 ~ that reduc~ light pollution ... The e\act location ol the 1hn:c-m1le·across space boulder duh~d .. .\steroid San 01{'go" v.111 be re,eakd at a news n>nll·renle Thursda~ It v.a\ d1~0,ert>d in 1982 b) ( allc~ h a'>tronomers u!ling the Palomar tek~ope in nonhcrn \an Diego Count) Dunphy glves ap 11 p.m. slot LO .\?\GELES -i\nchorman JerT) Dunph) has dended nm to return to the 11 p m. 1ele1. 1s1on newscast ~e has ~n absent from sinCl' being v.ounded in an ambush last October. station KAB( c;.a1d. Dunph~. a popularfigu~ on tht' Los Angelc:s telc' 1S1on ne .... s scene for two decades. v.tll continue as anchor of K.\BC-s 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. nc .... !lt'ast!>. KABC general manager Tom Van Amburgsatd ~onda~ Paul Mo)er. ~ho stepped in for Dunphy on the 11 p m nc"'scast. will remain as the permanent co-anchor on the late-night ne.,.,s. teaming w11h Tav. n) Schneider. The pair ha1.c 1umcd in strong raungs. otncer objects to ammo T .\NTO:'-i -.\ former police officer V.:ho shot to death a 5-)ear-old boy pointing a to~ gu n claims the Police Depanment was negligent in issuing e\panding "dum- dum .. bullets. The bullets "s1gn1ficantl~ mcrea~d the hkehhood of death or scnous m1un:· according to an amended cross-complaint tiled against the (it) of Stanton b~ former officer .\nthon) pcrl. :?5. Sperl also alleges in the complaint that his supcnors '1olated his civil nghts by forcing him to remain "drenched in blood" for about five hours after the shooting wh1k he was q uc t1oned by police. The former officer 1s sc<.'ling SSO mil hon in damages from Stanton He tiled the complaint after hl· and the ci t)' wC"re named as defendants 1n a .,.,rongful dl·ath \Ult hrought h) Patnc1a R1dgl'. 30. mother uf the slain bo) Bouvla still wants to dfe LO .\!'IGELES-El11abcth Bou' 1a still wan ts to die and branded ac, "inaccurate and misleading" reports tl\it her Easter ~unda) dens1on 10 begin eating 111d1cated a change of mind. the .\menl·an C 1"1l l1benics Union says. Bou' 1a. :?ti. has kft the T1Juana . Mn1co. clinic where she 'oluntanl} ate for the tirst ume in se1.cn months and 1s bacl in the l "n11ed ~tates. ~11d Carol obcl. assoc1att director of the Southern ( ahforn1a chapter of the ACLU "She doesn't .... ant to go back on that dec1s1on." Ms. So~i ~1d TueMia) of Ms. Boll' 1a's 1n111al wish to die. Kohl arnvea Jn England OXFORD. England -West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl amved today for talks w11ti Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher that v.-crc expected to center on the • Common 1ar1cet budget dispute and forcian afl"11n. Kohl was grttlcd b) Forelgn Mmastcr If Geoffrt')' Hov.c aner he nc~ into the Ro) al Air Fortt Base at Benson. about 12 miles southeast of this un1vcn1t) city He lef\ immediately for Chequers, the pnme minister"s country res1dt'n~ 12 m1leseas1 of Oxford for talks wtth M~. Thatcher. Late~. he wos to dch,·tra $peech at (),ford llniven11y ~fo"' Oytna home Bnll\h and West Gcnnan oflicuils said the wks .... ould coH~r East-WC"lt rela11ons. hes wuh the United States and possible chanaes in d1plomat1c immunity follov.1n1 the L1b)an Emb3\S) 1cte in London TJ:L .\VIV hrael -lhrtt of the suspects rounded up in a crackdo~n on :in 11lcg.al Jev.1sh undervound aroup haH ..:!milted I role In the planl"'I m \1mc bombs tn Palc\unian busn. an lsrach new paper reponed loda) Poh« di mantled 1~ bomtx "'h1ch '4eTC attached 10 fh~ bu~ 1n ast Jcru).llcm on Frida)' The bombs 'It.ere limed to c~plodc when tht' bu~s v.ould be full of Pale tJnaan rcwm1n1 frooi M o~lt'm pru)cr scn1ces Mo t io( the w fk'\'l •~'led v.cn-ll.'ponNi to Jewish ~Hien ·ri( thc °'-'<up1ed Wc,t Rank anJ Gulan Ht•ahl\ 4 -------------- - Lt. Oen. Robert II. ....aond . Eviden.ce. of firi11:g found in embassy LONDON (AP).-The search of the abandoned Libyan Emba\SY continued Joday after police found loaded pistols and ··proof' that a gunman fired from inside, backin3 witnesses' accounts of the shooting that led to an I I-day s1egl. Commander Wilham Hucklesby. bead of ScotJand Yacd's anti-terrorist branch. told a news confcr~nce Tuesday night that the disroveries refuted claims by Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy that Britain was· responsible for the April 17 incident that triggered the siege. ""' · "We have found evidence }hat totally refutes Col. Khada(v's version of events, which is that British armec:f police fired on the building." he said. "We have positive proof that shots have been fired from a first-floor window," he said. The British use of "fint-Ooor" corresponds to "second-story" m American EnaJish. . ""' "This spot is at the side of the window from which witn«Ses saw the automatic weapon being fired" on April 17, when a gunman opened up on Libyan protesters ouuide'the building. killing a Bntish policewoman. Huck.Jesby said evidence that a weapon had been fi.rcd -traces of gun powder and metal -was found on the carpet near a shellcasc by a window on the second floor of the embassy. The ~ellcasccame from a 9mm submachine gun. · The British Broadcasting Corp. today reported that a I;byan .official accused British police of planting the shellcasc. It said the official. Ibrahim Bishari of the People's Committee or the Foreign Liaison Bureau, also said that before the police made the finds. Libya told British authorities that there were three pistols in the building. The BBC quoted Bishari as saymg the evacuated Ljbyan diplomats did not use diplomatic pouches to transport weapons in and out of-Britain. -Poltce have-said the policewoman was shut~· trT..-+ AK-4 7 submachine gun. which uses a 7 .62mm bullet. and there was no mention of any such weapon m the inventory of \'(capons police said they found in the five-story, 70- rodm mansion. which was evacuated by the diplomats and other Libyans on Friday. Wlah come true OaYln MacLeod of the telerialon aerlea .. The Lon Boat" ahar• a warm but with 8-year- Olcl Tammie Powler of Reno. Ke•., a Cy1trlc Plbroel• Ylcttm who wanted to meet th ca•t of the •how and walk the deck with Mac.Leod'• character, Captain Stublna. Bond was a veteran pilot and had flown several thousand ho urs in fijhters, including U.S. F-4 Phantom jeu in Vietnam. His dutie$8ttbc ti.mt of his death/Were mostJy adminis- trative, however, and it was not known Jf he had any experience pilotiAA Soviet planes. 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It's a 180- degrce turnaround" from the Viet- nam era, the 23-year Marine and Vietnam veteran said Tuesday as he arrived here with the 22nd Marine Amphibious Unit. Hundreds of flag-waving relatives greeted the Ma rines and Navy sailors at Camp Lejeune and adjacent Camp Geiger. Banners and welcome-home signs had lined the route taken by buses that earned the servicemen to .. their bases from the State Port at · Morehead City. The unit's mission involved mote comba( than any U.S. unit has seen sin~ Vietnam. · ln Virginia Beach, Va., the parents of Lt. Mark Lanae waved Tuesday as Attack Squadron SS flew over the Oceana Naval Air Station in a tribute to their son, shot down last Dec. 4 durina an air strike against Syrian positions in Lebanon. . The squadron flew in ahead of the aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy and escort ships that were to dock today at ·the Norfolk Naval Air Station with about 8,000 sailors aboard. Five of the ships had stopped Tuesday in . North Carolina to leave the 1,800 troops tbert. Many of the retumina ~icemen said .they felt satisfied with lbe unit's efTorts in Belrut, althou&h they ended up pinned down if)rbun~el"I under hostile sniper, -mortar •"d artillery fire at the Beirut airjort. Fisher, of Riventde, said the pub- lic's attitude was a partial expla- nation. "Those of us who were Vietnam veterans could see the difference," he said, cl utching a flower and balloon• given him by his tearful wife, Carolyn. "It was amazing. Those 'Dear Marines' letters we aot from people who weren't even family members ... were just great." TV movie reunites family . !!'ti Tipster helps locate two children -------by _phoni~g in after ·Adam' airs TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (AP) -Two children whose pictures were broadcast at the end of the TV movie "Adam" ha ve been reunited with their mother. nine months after she reported them missing. officials said. group af\cr the movie, spokesmen for the --Aonda Department of Law Enforcement said. NBCs Monday night rerun of the film , which depicted the 1981 kidnap and.murder of 6-year-old Adam Walsh from a Florida shoppina mall, concluded with pictures of 49 missina children. • Marine Cpl. Scott Harrington hold• ht• 2- ~onth-old 80D Scottie for the flnt time u _.,.,...,..._ .. hla mother Wanda (left) anct-wtfe Jeana welcome-him back from ovenea. duty. JessicaHagpzad.eh. 4. and her brolher Aobcn. 2. were among six or seven missing children on whom authorities culled "very hot leads" from thousands of telephone calls Acting pn a telephone tip. police found the Hagjizadeh children Tuesday in Burleson. Texas, where they had been living with their father. said Fred Schneyer of the Florida law agency. The children were in good health when they were reunited in Texas on Tuesday evenina with their mother, Carol Hagjizadeh, who had not seen .them since July. Schneycr and Burleson police said. ' E & J ~--Kamchatk Brandy ~ vodk• BO 'Proof ~ 80 PtG01 9 ~$ 9~1 ~. ' . ~~J Amber or Lager 12 oz. N.R. 11$2~!. Carlo Rossi )Almaden Chablis, Burgundy, Vin Rose' or Rhine Chabtls, Bufiundy, Rhine, Nectar or Rose· PaulCheneau Blanc De Blanc (Spain) South American And SSSanlsh Wines • High Quallt -Low Prices .. ,.111 CllUHO II tMtH My rnen1e 111111 s,.111111 $ 3 g 7 Domecq Celebration cJ::·=.., Torres Grand ,,_, ..... , .. '"' Spatlilen" Kalli O'Ktt•. WtlMft I Wine lie•*"" "lplf'klllt .... Illy . '"" CllUHY .. llC ::': ::· """"' ...... 750 ml Torres Grand 1s-1t•-· "" '" .. '5" Concha Y Toro c--i~:~ '"' '"• '541 Concha Y Toro '"• '411 Sparkl ing Wines · Celebrate & Save Freixenet Centtn MtlfO &fut (Spiln) 7SO ml s4&9 Freixenet Ntwld1 !fut (Sp1111) 7501111 s399 Codorniu lfvt Ory If Cla UICI ( SPl!fl) 7SOml s399 Taylor C"""1lll Cdlf a c-...,.._ $399 fall• Ory '"'' .. ""'' no...t Asti Spum1n11 1so m1 5595 25°/o OffThese Robert Mondavl Wines ISi • et Sauvignon Chardonnay 1 Fume Blanc IHlll Chenin Blanc "' ... Ptnot Noir , .... llt41,Wllilt Vlnta e Table ., .... , s u. 11.,1911 '11 11 1111 11•1'6" '5" 1119. II s5n 11. '4" 1111. TOTAL SAVINGS 25 oft s7'q ?5 olf sa bq 2~1 oll s5:• ?5 olf ~4 4" ?~1 off \4 "I 21 ott \3 ... s11 20 39 Liquor llarn Location' 1726 Superior Ave .• Costa Mesa -Phone: 645-1608 25876 Muirtands, Mission Viejo· Phone: 855-1437 10932 Westminster. Garden Grore -Phone:~38-4145 263 South Euclid Avenue, Anaheim · Phone: 991 ·6892 14417 Culver Dr1ve, Irvine · Phone: 551 ·2757 Box & Jug Wines Cribari YIM lkanc•. Ylll llou s31s Clllllil II 811f9Unfy 4 I Ot Gallo $298 c .... llllnc .. kt11cll Ctltllllllld I ) Uff Mario's l"lft• Clia"1. "'""-·VIII"'" s299 Culll1 t1 BtqlHMly 4 l•" Franzia ... W1111 s399 C.Mls, lllllM 8llftyMy ti lltH \ 10 < Summit ... Wlllt s499 CIYMll. lllltM lulfYMy ti llt It • t •., Magnums P.I. PRICES INCREDIBLE! Cffl""1 Sau• ... Estrella ., Cll ...... A•Y m 1 \Ill s499 • c ..... , •• ,.. Maison Blanc h tt• .,,., s3H I ~ ltr Weibel 1 s lb s5e1 Fe P , llM WIW tzer rem1um ., "'" 1 s llf s4H Pedroncell H l• s5n German Wines Havemeyer ...., w• 1H .. '~" Kart Manheim ... , Wiiie m .. 1241 Erbachtr ,...._.,." KNIMtt 1se .. 1711 Zeier Schwartz Katz '" .. 14" K1uber Rosrtetn h11e.. !H .. '1141 ... ,. Sll'9fl'1 .. 11• c.. ll 'Mli ..... C111nt1 lllttt-1t .. C..1 "'"" •r• lltlltmla 1t" •• ·-I l'JU '3" 1u,.r1., 1t ..... ',it\ a3u 8"11 Llgllt 11 ..... • ,_ 13 .. Ttc1t1 "tJ c.. ., •• '2" 1Z II " fl , lltlll or Nacho -J Regular """"' Of Diel ..... ggc: 12H.!1 B9 1 r1e1t Cinco De M•yo Tequll• F•vorit•• Jose Cuervo Jose Cuervo Puerto Valllrta Sauza Hornitos 10 "'"' WIM!t 10 l'fttf ~ 10 l'fNI Wllllt ., itltll Two Fingers Limitado Jose Cuervo 1800 H1"1dura Reposado n ""' Herradura Anejo to ,,... Tres M1gueyes ••,,... ..,., Tres Magueyes 1•,,... itltll Monte Alban 10 ,,_ Mttut •IAtn• w11111 Gusano Rojo ao """11ma1 •IAfl" ••111 Brandies Presldente 80 "9tl (Meaoco) Don Pedro 10 ''"I ( ... IOCI) Viejo Vergel 10 "'"' (Me~•) Cheverny to ""' (Mt•octl Fundador IO l'fttf (SpHtl San Marcos IO l'fwl(S,..1111 I H• 15n a•• s5n '""" s40 •so n•• 15' Ill '10" IH Ill •1221 111•• IH 111 l)t .. 114" '6" 75t .. 75t .. s711 n•• sen IH • 110" I IS l•t1 '13" 750 ... '9" 1st .. '7" ISO• •e .. IHMI '8" lltf1 1911 Single Malt Scotches Glenfiddich Glenlivet Glengarioch Macallan Mortlach I Smirnoff Kavlana lzmlra Aalborg Akvavil Linle Aquavit I Wild Turkey Ea9te Rare Maker's Mar1t Oki Grandad 86 ""' 16 ""' 12 ........ .. "'"' H PrHI 17 vu i tld 16 PJMf 12 yu1 "" Vodkas IO l'fNI IO l'IMI 100 ''"' IOPrMI 10 ''"' Bourbons 101 "9tl 101'9MI 101'9Mt ,,. ""' I I Licor• De Cate KahlUI Chtviller Coffee Cafe de Gaetano TI1 Maril C1'9 lDttta Rum Bacardi lll'f .... U.1111A.., St. Elmo t,O "tel WIMlt 11 M Btca Chica IO "'°' Wllllt 11 ..... I Qlns All1chm1nn's .. ,,. St19r1m's ........ Gordoft'I .. ,,... ISi • '1611 1~0"" '17" 150"" '1811 11911 750 .. ISO• '18 .. 151"" s4u l•lll 14'' '8" 1151 ... ,~.Ill •10•• m• '12 .. IH• '10" 1st• '12" '""" '12" ... ,.. .. '13" ao .. 1711 l~fl '4" 1 "l ... '9" Sit .. fJ" '" .. '5" 11.l W •911 "'" '4" , .... '3" 'It l ... '9" UH , ... ~ 1 "u.. '9" I a., .... ...,.. ...... ..., . ..., t. 11t• .. ' • Unconfirmed leads on missinJ children were being withheld. "One of the worst things 1s to get people's hope up and not find anything." said Mike McHargue of FDLE's executive investigations unit. In Florida, a national hotline operated by the FDLE and ihe Adam Walsh Resource Center of Fort Lauderdale reported receivina 1,400 calls. An additional 1,000 telephone tips, includina those that helped police find the Hagjizadeh children, were received by Child find , a group based in New Palu. N.Y. Childfind offi cials said the new information could help locate about five other children. "Wt: know where they arc. and in those cases the parents have been notified," said Nancy Stella, a spokeswoman for Childfind. "There's a whole legal procedure {the parents must go through ) to reclaim their children." Israel asks U.S. aid in freeing three diplomats BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Lebanon's new Cabinet, even before its first mectina. faced a confrontation with Israel today because of the aJTCSt of three Israel\ diploma1s in Syrian~ntrolled norihem Lebanon. . Israeli newspapers and radio stations said the diplomats were being held today by the Syrian army af\q lostna their way Tuesday while driving nonh of Beirut. . Israel's st.ate radio said llrael asked the United St.ates. France and the United Nadons tointerveneandsccurcth~ release of the lhrct Israelis, who served with the tsraeb haison office in the Christtan-controlled suburb of Oba yet, nonh of Beirut. The Israeli Foreign Ministry, in a bnef statemcqt Tuesday niaht, sajd the diplomats were stopped at a Lebanese army roatlblock car:lier in the day. The ministry refused to confirm that the diplomats were 1n Syrian hands and declined to say anythina about the case today. The news reponsdid not name the diplomats, who a mcmbcn of the fsrael·Lebanon Liaison CommiUct represent the Foreian Ministry in Lebanon. · Syria said today its army an Lebanon had ca~tured thrct lsraeli diplomats and a~cused them of trytna to infiltrate Synan-controlled territory. lsra,,.el held l.Cba- non's new aovcmmcnt reaPQnsible for the trrc1t1. The capturr C>OlCd a major crisis for Lebanon•s Olbiriet, which had Ht firft mcctina today an its cfTona to 510)) wtrf'att between the nation's Cl\nshan and Mo lcm Otte . President Amin 0 maycl was there, but two key Moslcms nominated to the Cabi¥t were absent. \ , ' .. • J . I" ' < . . THtJRSIJA THROUGFI SLJNE)AY SPORTSWEAR BO'S 33% off: Active coordinates from La Blanca. Axiom. Jag and more. Orig. 20.00 to 46.00 .......... 13.-.W 32.99 33% .,ff: Nubby linen blen'd separ~tes from a famous woman designer. Orig. 37.00 to 76 .00 ......... 23.99 to 49.99 33% off: Daniel Caron t-shirt dresses. two styles. Several colors. •Orig. 38.00 .................. 24.91 to 28.99 25% off: Spring skirts, sizes 6 to 14. Reg. 36.00 to 40.00 . . . ...... 27.00 to 30.00 33% off: OversiM drop t~h:•t. white, biack, red, blue. sand. Orig. 22.00 . . . . . . 13.99 25% off: Famous maker t-shirts with mesh trim. Brights in S-M -L. Reg. 16,00 to 21 .00 . . . . . .11.99 to 14.99 25% oft. Counterparts trousers. Polyester , 6 to 16. Six colors. Reg: 32.00 . _ . . . . . 24.00 21% oft. Sportsphere polo shirts . .Cot- ton/polyester, S-M-L. Spring colors. Reg. 14.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.99 PLAZA 33% off: Summer career'separates from Act Ill. Sizes 8 to 16. Orig. 26.00 to 44.()0 . . . . .... 18.99 to 28.99 SpecW pwchaH: Lady Manhanan polyester bow blouse. 6 colors. Sizes 8 to 18 . . 20.00 25% off: Novelty conon pullover sweaters Summer colors, S-M -L. Orig. 22.00 to 30.00 . . . . . . . _. . 15.99 Spedel purchase: Devon's coordinates. Black. white. yellow. Misses' 10 to 18 and S-M -L .................. 19.99 to 29.99 Speclel purchue: Polyester georgette flutter short sleeve blouse. White. peach. lilac. pink Sizes 6 to 16 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 22.00 Spedel purchue: Oakhill plaid blouse. Cotton. 8 to 18 . . . 15.00 25% off: Kettlecloth skirt in white, red. kelly or denim. Polyester/cotton. 8 to 18. Reg. 22.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16.00 LINGERIE 20% off marked price: All cotton knit and cotton blend sleepwear from Barbizon, Bran- dywine, Miss Elaine, Gilligan & O'Malley, Jayre, St. Eve. Berkleigh Jr's and our own. Reg. 14.00 to 48.00 . . 11.20 to 38.40 20% off: All our camisoles. half-slips and full slips. From Maidenform, Vassarette, Olga, Warners, Vanity Fair, Deena and more. Reg . 8.00 to 36.00 . 6.40 to 28.80 20% off: Famous maker terry and chenille robes. Reg. 18.00 to 72 .00 . 14.39 to 57.&9 20% off: All our control briefs, panfy girdles and b<>dy ·briefers in Body Fashions, 139. Orig 5.50 to 26.00 4.40 to 20.80 ACCESSORIES 20% off: All our tights, legwarmers, leotards and active separates in bodywear. Reg. 6.00 to 82.00 . . . 4.80 to 15.80 20% off: Evan Picone fashion Collection of knee-hi's and our all sheer opaque styles. Un- til 5/13/84. Reg. 3.00 to 3.50 . 2.40 to 2.80 20% off: All our Gold Toe soort socks and casuals for women. Cotton and Orlon· acrylic. Until 5/13 /84. Reg 3.50 to 5.00 2.80 to 4.00 20% off: All our pierced earrings. Orig. 2.00 to 40.00 . . . . . . ... 1.80 to 32.00 ~ off: All our Marvella costume pearl necklaces. Reg. 10.00 to 30.00 1.00 to 24.00 ~oft. Our better faux pearls from M1kim1. Reg. 12.50 to 52.00 . . . . . .10.00 to 31.00 ~ off: All our fabric handbags and clut ches. Reg. 12.00 to 38.00 • 1.80 to 30.40 SpecW pwcheM: Soft leather shoulder bagS" by Phillippe. Four styles 17.11 20% oft. All our ladies' belts Orig 7 .00 to 50.UO 5.80 to 40.00 . , COATS, SUITS AND DRESSES 50% off marked price: All our misses' coats and jackets. Sizes 8 to 16 and S-M -L. Orig. 30.00 to 135.00 ...... . .14.19 to 14.49 Special purchase: Career silk dresses by Maggy London. Assorted styles, colors. 4to14 ... . ................ 79.91 Spedel purchase: Spun polyester dresses in solids or prints. Misses' 8 to 18 . . . . . . .19.99 Special purchase: Two piece flax skirt sets in natural. S-M -L ................... 11.19 SHOES 20% off: All active sliloes for men, women and children. Men's: Ong. 15.99 to 56.00 . . 12.80 to 44.IO Women's: Reg. 17.00 to 38.00 13.80 to 30.40 Children's: Orig. 9.99 to 27.00 7.99 to 21 .00 20% 91f:_AJ L_our Natural1zer' shoes for women. Reg. 25.00 to 47 00 . 20.00 to 37.80 20% off: All our 9 West shoes for women. Reg. 29.00 to 46 00 . 23.20 to 38.80 20% off: All our Nina• shoes for women. Reg. 35.00 to 63.00 . . 28.00 to 50.40 20% off: All our Red Cross• ·shoes for women. Reg. 35.00 to S2.oo 25.80 to 41.80 'No connectoon whatsoever wrth The American Red Cross MORE WOMAN AND PETITES Special purchase; Devorrs coordinates in black, white, yellow 38 to 44 ...... 19.99 to 32.99 25% off marked price: All Chaus. Sizes 38 to 44. Reg . 12.99 to 72.00 . 8.71 to 48.24 25% off: Levi's' polyester pull-on pant. Sizes 32 to 38. Reg. 19.99 14.99 25% off: Lady Manhattan polyester blouse. nine spring colors. Sizes 38 to 44. Reg . 24.00 . . . 17.99 25% to 30% off: Famous maker petite coor- dinates Orig 26 00 to 44.00 19.99 to 32.99 YOUNG MEN 26% off: Zeppelin oxford shirts Short sleeve stripes. Reg. 15.00 . . 9.99 25% off: Jordache cotton denim jeans. Reg. 40.00 . . . . . . 29.99 Special purchase: Solid short sleeve ox for<! L shirts. Cotton i polyester. five colors . 12.99 21% off: 0 P. cotton polyester cord shorts. Orig. 19.00 . 14.99 25% off: Cotton twill West Coast Ways shorts. S-M L. Orig: 12.00 8.99 25% off: Short sleeve or muscle sleeve fleece tops from Visage by Toma19. Reg. 16J)() ta.22.00 --~· .... 1f.99to16.99 20% off: Elastic waist sohd chintz pants from Bugle Boy. 28 to 36. Reg. 20.00 15.99 BOYS 26% off: Boys' 4 to 7 lzod J.G. La Coste' striped tops. Orig. 15.50 . . . . . .10.99 Special purchase: Boys 4 to 7 West Coast Kids shorts 6.99 31% to m off: Boys' 8 to 20 lzod J G La Coste· striped shirts. Ong. 19.00 to 21 .00 . . . ._.12.99 25% off: All our shorts for boys 8 to 20. Orig 10 00 to 17 00 6.99 to 11 .99 20% off: All boys' 8 to 20 novelty tops from Cha ms and Tomato Reg 13 00 to 20 00 1.99...to 16.19 25% off: Boys' 8 to 20 dress shirts. White collars, bu non down. Reg 14 00 to 16.00 . . . I .II 21% to 30% off: Boys' 4. to 20 dress separates from Farah: blazers, pants. Rog 17 00 to 50.00 11.19 to 31.11 • • ... WEST COAST KIDS SpecW purchue: Toddler canv~ shortalls . in solid colors. 2T to 4T ............... 1.• 30% oft. Terry appliqued sunsuits for newborns and infants. Cotton/nylon. 3 mo. to 24'mo. Reg. 10.00 .................. I.II 25% oft. All our stretch terry coveralls. From Carter's, Le Roi, Trimfit and more. Designs and solids. Reg. 11 .00 to 15.00 . 7.91to10.19 Spec'8I pwchae: Plush pet animals in white. Lion or dog .......... -~ end 1.99 MEN 20% off: All our polyester slacks. 32 to 42: Reg. 19.99 to 29.00 .......... 16.11 to 23.20 33% off: Arrow Brigade plaid short sleeve shirts. Polyester/cotton,. S-M-L-XL shghtly fitted. Reg . 18.00 . . . 11.91 20% oft. All our men's swimwear S-M-L-XL. Reg. 14.00 to 22.00 . 10.99 to 11.99 25% off: All our short sleeve dress shirts. Reg. 10.99 to 23.00 . . . . 8.24 to 17.25 25% oft. All our lon_g sleeve, full cut dress shirts from Arrow and Van Heusen. Reg 14.00 to 24.00 . 10.50 to 18.00 23% to 28% off: Nubby polyester Robert Bruce sport shirts. Stripes, solids, fancies. S-M -L-XL. Reg. 26.00 to 28.00 .................. 19.99 20% off: All our polyester I cotton blend slacks. Reg. 25.00 to 32.00 20.00 to 25.IO 25% off: Catalina tennis separates. Navy and white polyester/cotton. S-XL and 28 to 40. Reg. 24.00 to 28.00 . . . 17.99 to 20.99 33% o1f: YSL fashion briefs. Cotton. sohd colors. Reg. 7.00 to 8.00 4.59 to 5.29 25% off: All men's iewelry Reg. 7.50 to 22 50 . 5.82 to 18.75 24% off: Lightweight robes from Diplomat. One size. Reg . 25.00 18.99 30% oft. Men's neckwear in polyester knits, hnens, and more in the group Reg. 9.50 to 16.50 6.65 to 11.55 20% off: All men's.jeans and casual slacks. Reg. 24.00 to 32.00 . . . . 19.20 to 25.80 26% off: Short sleeve plaid cotton madras shirts. S-M -L XL Reg. 20 00 14.99 33% off: Chintz reversible l1ghtwe1ght jackets. Reg. 35.00 23.35 33% off: Cotton and ram1e1 cotton long sleeve sweaters. Orig. 30 .00 20.01 33% off: Famous maker warm ups in several styles. S-M -L XL Orig 52 00 33.99 30% off: Long sleeve madras shirts from Carriage Trade by Arrow Cotton. S·M L XL Reg. 24.00 . ·' 16.99 23% off: Short sleeve cotton polyester woven shirts from a famous Italian designer S-M L-XL. Ong 26.00 19.99 25% off: Men's pants and shorts from famous American and European designers. 29 to 36. Reg. 24.99 to 52.00 . 1.7.99 to. l8.99 ~off: T rop1cal wool slacks by Louis ~~p_t)ael • 6 colors Reg 65 00 44.99 26% off: Silk and silk blend blazers from Neil Martin and Robert Alexander· ·selected stores. Reg. 135.00 99.99 SHEETS 50% off Our exclusive Cannon Flying Color sheets and comforters. Sheets, twin to king Reg 11 .00-30.00 &.60-1IJIO Std. cases. Reg . 13.00 1.60 pr. King cases. Reg 14.00 7.00 pr Comforters, twin to king Reg. 65.00-100.00 . 32.60-60.00 50% Off Satin sheets from Mr. Satin. Full to king Reg. 52.00-72.00 ~Q0..31.00 Std cases . ...,eg 35.00 17.IO pr King cases. reg 40.00 20.00 pr Matching comforters. full to king Reg · 160.00-275.00 .. I0.00.137.00 ~ oH Our exclusive Showcase Lace sheet set from Springma1d. Twin set with one std. case, full to queen with two standard cases, king with two king cases. Reg 40.00 80 00 • 20.0CMO.OO BASIC ,COOKWARE SpecW pmtt.M a. 5 pc. stainless steel bowt set from Metro.Mar.keting ........ _ .. _ ... ... SpecW pwd1111 .Multi·ptece cooker/steamer from Metro Marketing .. 1 ... SpecW pwch111 8 quart stockpot/ steamer 'from Metro Marketing ............• _ •• 1 .. TOWELS 50% off Assorted famous maker bath sheets from Royal Velvet, Fieldcrest, Century Classic. J.P. St~1t0d-• . · . Reg. 30.00-35.00 . ~. . . . . . . . . ........ 17M BATH RUGS 50% oH National Velvet cotton bath rugs. 17x24" reg. 16.00 . . . . . . . . . . .... 7• 2lx34" reg. 26.00 . . . ..... _ ... 12.11 Matching lid, reg. l l .00 . 5.41 BATH SHOP 50% off Continental doctor's upright scale in white enamel with 3 year warranty. Reg .. 195.00 . . . . . . . . . ...... 17.49 SILVER 60% off 54 pc. stainless flatware service with bonus chest from International Silver. Reg. 400.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199.00 NORITAKE CHINA 58% to 85% off 45 pc. fine china sets from Noritake. Choose from Amenity, Monteleone and Marseilles. Reg. 480.00-585.00 .. 191.• GLASSWARE 38% off Delilah lead crystal stemware from Schott-Zwiesel. Reg. 11 .00 .l .99 .. GOURMET COOK SHOP 10.01 .off 14 pc. wok set from Metro Marketing with bonus 2 pc. bamboo steamer. Orig. 30.00 . . . . . . . 19.19 FASHION ELECTRICS 18.00 off Compucal personal diet computer. Orig 135.00 111.99 FURNITURE 301.00 off Low profile Barcalounger and Cat- napper recliners. Ong 700 00 . sale i .00 less 25.00 4 day bonus pnce 74.00 ~1 .00 off 2 pc' sectional 1n blue Hercu on velvet. Ong 1300 00 sale .00 less 50 00 4 day bonus pnce .00 131.00 ofl Double door ctmo cabinet Ong . 400 00 sale 299.00 less 30.00 4 day bonus pnce . •.oo 201.00 off 5 pc contemporary dining room set with upholstered chairs and smoked glass topped table Ong 700 00 sale 499 00 less 50 00 4 day bonus price 441.00 201 .00 off Traditional wing chair 1n Wedgwood blue. sand or oyster jacquard co¥er ~ Ong. 400.00 . . _ .... 1a10 less 11 00 bonus pnce . 1&00 ELECTRONICS 21.00 off Record-a-Call answering machine. Will be 129 00 . 11..11 10.00 off Super Tel AM FM clock radio telephone Will be 59 99 41.11 20.00 off Phonemate answ ring machine. Orig. 149.00 la..O 150.00 off Phonemate answering machine with TelelOglc microcomputer Ong 399 00 20.00 off Tnmhne and European style telephones Will be 49 99 241.00 21.11 I .. Hoeing down a car flre, Explorers auperviaed by Orange County firemen. ~ Laguna Ezplorer Josh Shielda (left) instructed on use of alr packs. '· .. • Som§ 150. Explorer Sco1.1ts between the agn of 14 and 21 g.ave up their Easter vacation to attenct the 10th anniversary of the California Fire Explorer Academy at the Los Alamltos Naval Air Station. During· their week of Intensive training, the scouts were Instructed In ·basic fire behavior, wlldland fire contgrol, oll fire control and the use of the "Jaws of Life~· device to extricate crash victims from vehicles. Explorers from Orange County and the entire Southwest United States participated In a live fire training exercise -the burning of a vacated house -In Tustin. Tl:le structure. donated by the Anslle Constructton Company of Tustin, was scheduled to be removed. The OrlUlge County Fire Department has hosted the annual Fire Explorer Academy since Easter Week of 1974. During the f irst academy. 50 Explorers :: from several cities In Or- ange County attended. Since that time, ttie academy ahs trained over 1,200 Explorers from throughout Callfornta as well as the states of Or- egon, N~vada, New Mex· lco, Colorado and Arizona. •' j t ' I La&ana Beach Ezplorer Lee Rhodea blindfolded :Tn:etdl 19Cb of San Clemente before .earc for ... ricdma" In burning bulldtna. . ; Armand Minogue of Ml .. lon Viejo takea a big blaat with the fire boee. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Humana Hospitals in Orange Cou11ty ' Take the• •• -. ''Carefr•'' Pledge If your medical emergency turns out to be a minor one-you won 't have to pay any emergency room charge at all! They're not nice to think about, but emergencies happen 1n all fam1hes. And. when you 're 111 or huning. you want medical help right away .. . . • When possible. the first thing to do 1s to call your family phys1c1an When your doctor isn't available however you know there 1s only one f/gflt place to go for emergency medical care the only place in the community where quahf1ed medical help ts always available 24 hOurs a day, every day · a proless1onally qualified. fully stalled and equipped hospital emergency depanment ' But we understand th.11 cost 1s also a concern That's why the Humana hospltals 1n Orange Count y have taken the .. Carelf:H pledge When in doubt at>Out whether a s1tuat1on 1s an emergency or not -it's best to play safe. What 1f that bump on the head 1s not ··minor?·· What 11 that · · heanburn · · 1s really a heart attack? We would rather have you come to us and not pay anything when 1! 1sn ·t senous than have you stay away, and pay the ultimate pnce. when 1t is senous For care of minor medical emergencies -such • ·~ as simple bandaging , a couple of asp1nns or some good medical advice-we won't charge you our regular hospital emergency room lee In tact. . . . ·. . '• there'll bt no tmlfttncy room charge at 1111 There will be a physician s tee but 1! will be nomrnal On the other hand. 11 your emergency turns out to be a maior one. you II h.1ve the peace of •• mind of knowing all of the professional and • technological resources of a modern acute ::: 1:.1re hospital are available You pay for • ~ what you nBe<J with charges scaled m : • accordance with the amount of d1agnost1c tests. equipment and treatment required . ... If you don't really nBe<J anything, we don't think you should have to pay anything' We Invite you to "'ke us your hosprtals of choice .. , and the fine doctors O!l our mtdlcal staffs your physicians of 'Ctlolce We hOpe you· II never have an)l.emetgenc1es OOt tf you do. we hOpe all ~r enlergencles will be · ·caretrtt umana -ttum.n.~ Huiltittgtonewh 11112 8Hcl't 81\'0 Hunt•"Qion 9-lll CA 928'4 7 17U l8A2 1H3 ...... ....., Xl33 w Or~ M Nwlt#fl, CA 112804 171o4) 827 JOO() fNoffhwHI r..ot'NI OI 8..cf1 I 0rlnQ!tl '· ,I IN THE SERVICE Mesa airm·an decorated Airman I st Class Robert J. Secrest, son of Roben and Brenda Secrest of Costa Mesa, has been decorated with the Air Force Achievement Medal at Hahn Ai11- Base in West Germany. Secrest , a 1980 graduate of Costa M esa High School. 1s a security specialist wtth the 691 1 th Elec- tronic Secunt) Squadron. • • • Atrman Robert H. Jonet, son ofS)lv1a B . Bales of Fountain Valley. has been as- ~1gned to Sheppard Air Force Base. Texas, after cornpkuna basic tra~tlackJand Air Force Ba~. Texas Jones. a 1979 graduate of Fountain Valle) H~ School. will receive spcc1ahrcd 1nstructlon m the aircraft mai ntenance field t\obert K Ford, son ot Robert and Amalia Ford of Cost.a Mesa. has been promoted to the rank of corporal in the Army. Ford, a 198 J graduate of Costa M esa High School, is a squad leader wnh 1he 82nd Airborne Division at Fon Bragg, N.C. • • • Air National Guard Alrman Kip A. DaSalr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roben i . DuSair of L.aauna Hills, bas been assigned to Shepeard Air Force Base, Texas after complctJng basic trainin1 at L.ackla~d Air Fo~ .Base, .Texas .. Du~ir will receive Spccl~ 1nstrutt1on -m l bt 1urcraft maintenance field. • • • ; , • • Pvt. Luce R. Hoskin, son of Richard and Pvt. Gary W.Loft11,son ofluc1::1 A. Scars Daphne Hoskin of Huntington Beach. ha's of Fountain .. Vall ey, ha~ completed 1c completed one st.atJon unit trainma at the training at Fon u onard W ood. Mp..4-fe 1s a '-Ar my Infantry School in Fort Bennin&, Ga. 1933 araduat~ of.t..os Amiao~ High School A1rman Jo11ac.s1:rua1Jr.,son ofGayle in Fountain Valin Sephton and stepson of James Stphton of • • • Seal Beach,~has completed basic training et PF< Clifford A. Offmt, on ofTerrrntc cWalldAar Force Base: Texas tcrhni. a B. Deem of t{untinaton Beach. has I traduate of Los Alamitos High completrd b,ac;1c training at r on Sill. Okla. Sc ool. will beam on-the-Job Imming in the Deems 1" a t 980 graduate of ( al S1:.tc Long transportation fi~ld nt March Air Fo~ Beach Base. C'ahf • ' . - Women and l!omance: A:g~ becomes a barrier PRINCETON. NJ. tAP)-A woman's chances offind1n1 a husblnd fall as she le\S older, and men who tic the knot a second Orne tend to choose you9ger wives, accordin.J to a new st"dy by Princeton University population researchcn. The report concluded that women qed 20 to 24 are the only ones whose chances of finding a spou1e arc near! y as &ood or better than a man's. "Tbe (atudy's) only major conclusion is that women find the competition increas... int Iv h1rdt'r A!I thev arow nldcr." Princeron BeB:tles get statue, Dut fans pail.it &raduatc student Charles R. Ham· merslou&h said 1n a telephone interview. Hammenlou&h was one of three Office of Population Research academicians who conducted the study. The others were Noreen Goldman. a senior ~rcher, and Charles F. WestofT. office chairman. To be published in the sprinf. issue of Population lndu1 the quarter y of the Population Association of America, the study wa\ based on 1980 U.S. Census.data aftd-vitaJ registration data filed with the federal government f~m 1976 through W78. . Among whites in the 20 to 24 age aroup . • there were 126 "suitable" men for every 100 "suitable"--womcn. The ratio of suitable black women to black men in the same age aroup was 93 to 100. But tho..ftmale·maJe suitability ratios of both races were found to be very similar in al~ other groups. In all of those other groups, p5ospective wives outnumbered the potential husbands deemed available to them. • ,, ........ Pre.ldentlal souvenir Pr•ldent and Mn. R:fan aet a nreatahlrt from the Uni•eralty of Aluka hockey maK darl.n.I fe8ttYittee at the anl•enlty lD P'alrbanb TueH&y followtq their return from a Yiatt to Cb.ina. LIVERPOOL. England (AP) -Liver- pool hortcfred its four most famous sons - the Beatles -by unveiling a statue of them. But disappointed fans said they could hardly tell the images of the singers apart. Among whites. the ratio for the 2S to 29 age group was 77 men. to 100 wo!'len. For other age groups of whites, the ratJo of men per I 00 women decreased steadily from 62 fortheJO~~~aroupw27furt~60w ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 64.group. "The real explanation for that is that 'I'V • I h 11 The life-size bronze statue of the foursome with musical instruments was unveiled on the street where their \egend was born. But many fans said thy could hardly tell John Lennon from Paul McCanncy, or George Harrison from Ringo Starr. men who remarry tend to marry women spec1a c a enges younger than themselves and that women . • who remarry tend to marry approximately thesameage,"Hammersloughsaid. u s busi•ness system "A woman who marries at age 40 is on an : • average about two years younger than her groom. whereas Lbe averaic man who gc,ts By'TOM JORY married at 40 is about seven years older ._..ted,.,_wnt.r than his bride." he added. Mike McCartney, who unveiled the statue. said he didn't even recognize the likeness of his own brother Paul. A fan picked out the McCartney image by looking for the left-handed guitarist among the four. Sam Leach, an early Beatles promoter, called· it "a big letdown .... The only one I rec0gnizcd was Ril1go, and that is because he was sitting down and holding a drumstick." ·Sculptor John Doubleday said he ··par- ticularly did not want a clone likenes!I:· He said the $56,000 sculpture sou~t "to capture the energy and the dynamism of the group as they were in Liverpool. before the period of the tidied-up Beatles image and mop hairstyles." The statue is the centerpte'cc-uf a 112.6- million Beatles Complex on Mathew Street. the alley where The Cavern. a basement music hall. once stood. The Beatles were discovered in The Cavern in January 1961. The project was financed by Royal Life. a large British insurance company. City Hall refused to contribute funds, sayrng it preferred to spend its money on creating 1obs and caring for the needy. Liverpudlians say' the city has always held the Beatles at arm's length. • "It's because the Beatles fairly quickly left the city. Once they made their names they left and we haven't seen much oft hem since." Mayor John Hamilto"ri said in a recent interview. None of the surviving Beatles was at the ceremony. Lennon was murdered outside his New York City home in 1980. Starr. McCartney and Hamson have hom~s in the London area. Hammerslough said the study accounts NEW YORK -"The Business of for over 95 percent of the actual mamage America ... "on public television is not, as behavior of men and women between the it sometimes seems in the course of the ages of 16 and 65 counted in the 1980 hour.Jong documentary. a broadside con· census. ~ demnation of U.S. Steel Corp. for econ- In calculating "suitability," Ham-omicdecline in western Penns.ylvania. merslough said the study made several The giant steelmaker is indeed assessed "arbitrary" restrictions. such as not con-responsibility for cutbacks and layoffs sidering interracial marriages. which he affecting tens of thousands of onc~cure. said account for less than tw:o percent of all and well-paid. blue-collar workers. but the unions. message of the film. to be broadcast by The researchers also ruled out marriages many stations this week. 1s more funda- in which women were substantially better mental: educated than men. "I believed in the American Dream," "A woman of the highest education says Maureen Trout, who lost her job when group wouldn't marry a maQ of the lowest U.S. Steel pared the labor force at its educational group," he said, .. but a woman Homestead Works near Pittsbu~h. "I of the lowest educational p-oup could really thought as long as you were ~il~ing to marry a man with any education." work that the ~Icy woul~ t?e the hm1t. ... I He said that a "major confounding always figured 1fl was w1lhng to go out and effect" on the study was that although the get it, it was there. divorce rate is declining more people than "But," she says, "it's not there any· ever are hving tOgether without being more." . . •. married. ' "The Business of Amcnca ... challenges The 1980 census showed that 7 .8 percent some basic assumptions about the coun- of Crnmarried males and 6.4 percent of try's economic system, largely by asking unmamed females between the ages of 20 whether big co~rations will, or can. and 74 were cohabitating. Figures are not continue to provide for fhcTtnancial ana- ava1labe for 1970. social needs of working men and wome n. .. The effect of cohabitation means there The filmmakers permit the people most are fewer ·available' stngle people out there directly affected by industrial constncuon than it appears from the census." said -the unemployed -to answer that Hammcrslough. question. and the result 1s a highly charged Unmarried peo ple h\'mg together were argument for change rather than an not included in the stud}'. He also noted the stud) could not take into account such variables as ph)s1cal auracuo~ Orange County's Relaxlng Music Station Is Hawthorne Christian School "For the Right Start in Life" Join the Summer Fun at DAY CAMP!! GI VEMOMA VACATION. • • • Field Trips • Crafts •·Swimming • Picnics • Before-care ~nd After-care Available JUNE 18th thru SEPT. 7th exercise in impartial. balanced Journalism. That's not necessarily bad; here. how· ever, tj,lere's the sense that those tingled out as cuJ~rits ought to have been given more of a chance to defend themselves. David Roderick, chairman of U.S. Steel. does appear in the film to blame the company's cutbacks on inadequate de. prec1ation, '3utdated tax laws. low profit margins and environmental restnctions. But Maureen Trout has an answer to that: ··corporate greed. that's what our problem is." The film was produced by C~lifornia Newsreel, established in 1968 to provide alterna-tive coverage of the antiwar, student and civil rights movements. The film· makers' early credits include "Columbia R.evolt," "Black Panther," "People's Park" and "Only the Beginning. .. "Our films don'tjust document reality," said Lawrence Darcssa, one of the producers of''The Business of America ... " "Their purpose 1s to help our audience rethink the reality to sec that they can change 1t." FREOJBll For our cusff)fflers FllEE Dump Station & L.P. Gas Sold In our S.Uth P•kinv l ot In that context. the film follows the laid- off steelworkers through their immediate resP<?nSC to unemployment -anger at US.-Steetand etfom toiletp-one another through the crisis -to more profound reaction: the drafting of an alternative industrial plan for the region. FREDSON RV SUPP 815 N. H.,bof Bhd., Sam. Ana. CA 92103 = {714) $48000 °':" 7 0.,. And it's at that point that "The Busi ness of America ... ·· be<:omes. in a sense. a call to acuon. Save 10-300/o on selected items throughout all of our stores. Brighten your home with these outstanding values! • s995 Our handsome sofa combines rich leather with a solid teak frame 84 "I reg S1489 Matching loveseat 601 ~"I reQ S 1149 sale $895 Teak and glass coffee table 'eg S339 sale $275 Corner table reg S259 sale $209 Left s225 Teak fm1sh home-entertainment cabinet features glass doors record d1v1ders and caste rs 41 "w x l911~"d x 351'2"h reg $279 DIAICI Enroll Now-Fall Semester Starts Sept. 10th Reasonable Tuition UMMER SCHOOL ,~ui.. Y 5th thru JULY 31st ''A Private School of Dlstlnct1on Founded In 1942" IN FOUNTAIN VALLI Y Open Daily 10 6 Sunday 12 5 Customer Service Hotline (213) 548 1335 3015 Bristol Street Costa Mesa (714) 751·2977 SAN P£DAO lONG IEACH PHOENIX 16135 l•OOtC HUIST ST. .I , I I ' I ' _ --City's policy -conflicts with. 'its interests While Fountain Valley's elected and hfred officials try to thrash out a workable definition of "conflict of interest," the taxpayer pays. The city council has a conflict policy regarding bids: It won't accept one from any person related to a person who prepared the specifications for the' project -in this case, the new police headquarters. · If that policy seems just a tad arbitrary ·to you, then you might \Ulderstand how the city's staff. architect James Karl Robinson and his wife businesswoman Deanna Tichy Robinson feel. James Robinson designed the new building and prepared the specifications for furnishings.· The specifications were acceptable to the city. Robinso~then informed Fountain Valley city officials -the hired ones, not the elected ones -that his wife, who owns an independent furnishings company. intended to hid on the project. ~ 'Fine, he was told. Deanna Tichy Robinso.n's firm submitted the low bid. That's when council cried foul. Or, more specifically, conflict. Other than the fact that they are married, what evidence of a oonilict of interest exists? Is Mr. Robinson active in his wife's business? Did he improperly pass information to her? Did he attempt to disguise their relationship for the purposes of personal profit? · · It appears from what we are told that only the potential for a conflict of interest existed in this situation. And~ while it behooves council to be ever vigilant for signs of real conflicts that threaten the integrity of public policy and leave the city vulnerable to f.raud , it~ot in the city's interests to stomp on the rights of a legitmate l>usinesswoman simply because of her mate's occupation. Or to suggest that two people with unblemi~hed professional reputations participated in some- thing improper. . Certainly, the situation is delicate. The city must balance its need for an honest bid process against the bidders' rights to do business openly and fairly. ·It failed both in the Robinson case, apparently. The city lost a low bid, the low bidder's company lost the job and a second architect had to be paid to repeat work for which the city already had paid. . · Fountain Valley's council a nd staff have to hammer out a new conflict of interest policy -one that will not discriminate against a person based on the activities of a spouse. Opinions expressed the space abo ,·e are those of rhe Dari_\ Pi/or. Or her ,•iews expres,sed on rhis page are rh ose of rherr authors or artists. Reader eommenr 1s{nv11cd. 4ddress: The Dail-. P1/01. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. C 4 . 92626. Telephone: I 7 I 4) 64-2-V.21 · . ' . .. j ·~ ·'Robert and Ethel [KenottlyJ prollfera ted ... In part because tbey ikre serious Catholics but In part. also, becau~ they must have felt that thelr children were eminently worth pop~t1ng.the earth with.·· ·~ ~Y.ROOJUlr cola•nlat Blllnese outdid ·Sitler in · genoclde Great Leap Forward killed 30 million WASHINGTON -Surely, these w~r' the most unself-consciously hypocritical people to appear on the face of the earth. Jf that is history's epitaph on the P!'.iwd•IN~I -readership elite of this generalion of Americans. it would not be un- deserved. Juxtapose. if you will. a few clippings from the past week. Pranksters went underground Sunday night; at Washington's Kennedy Cen~r. a solemn ceremony was held to commemorate the Holo- . caust of Europe's Jews, and to celebrate one of its survivors, Elie A hill is a hard rue that didn't erode Wiesel. The turnout of actors, artists, away ." Debate goes on. • journalists and politicians was tremendous. There were poetry read- -Tunnels under the campus of Concordia College· in Moorehead. Minn., connect buildings. including the Dining Services and Library. Not everybody knew at>?ut the tunnels 20 years ago. but cert.am students knew. clearly. One morning when the libarians opened up, they found aU the library tables properly set for breakfast. and it's said they kept going back outside to look at the sign on their door. Q. Didn '1 Johnny Carson once host Allen Funt's old "Candid Camera" show? A. No. Carson auditioned for that job in the. 1950s. but was turned down . Winners oft he first Ol)'mp1cs -in Greece. 776 B.C. -sot-free meals and tax exemptions. For life. Q The 40.000 members of the tribe called the Qurunguas in Bolvia re- portedl y never speak. Wh}' not? A. They can't, if the record is correct. It indicates they suffer from an hereditary defect that disables the vocal cords. ' When a cow dies in Liechtenstein. the princ1pahty's newspapers run the animal's obituary. Am told snoring 1s grounds for divorce in 16 states. "An elected official is one who gets 51 percent of the votes cast by 40 percent of the 60 percent of vot~rs who re~istered." notes one Dan Bennett. Sweden won't permit commercials on its television. It's a hill if n's less than 2.000 feet high. a mountain 1f 2.000 or higher. Such has been claimed. But some geologists disagree. Altitude isn't the determining factor. they say: .. A mountain ts the result ofan upheaval. Ti tic of one song now popular in ings. recitals. hymns. Wiesel spoke: China translates: "How t Love to "Have we really managed to con- Carry Fertilizer Up the Mountainside vey something of the experience to for the Commune." you? ... I still don't understand. How The tongue of a grown blue whale weighs more than most elephants. When a mother takes her walking preschooler to the _supermarket with her. that child puts some item into th e shopping cart every two minutes. The mother puts back on the shel ves about 55 percent of such merchan· dise. buying the rest. Or so say the market resea~hers. · Anzona Epitaph of the Weck: "Here li es Sonn y ... Planted raw ... Quick on the trigger ... Slow on the draw." L.M. Boyd columalsl. Is a syadicated could it happen? How did madness invade history? R ow could Hun- garian J'ws be wiped out • in six weeks?" "It is virtually impossible to grasp th~ enormou$. amount of suffering felt by 'tictims and survivors," President Reagan said in a note to the as- sembled, calling the Holoc.aust "the ultimate horror.'' and addinJ that he regretted his personal participation had been precluded by bis v~si~ ta the Peoples Republic of China. The same Monday edition of the Washington Post that described the scene at Kennedy Center led with th' head- line. "President Calls for 'Friend- ship'." Though Reagan "once had viewed China as a bmer foe," the story warmly reported, he has now declared Acts of charity repaid ah undredf dld that relations between Peking and Washington "had reached the po1nt where we can build the basis for a lasting frien(iship." Nowhere in the article was it mentioned that the aging despots, with whom Reagan intends to build this "lasting friendship" were, to a man, the energetic henchmen of Mao Tse-tung in 1958 when the Great Helmsman launched the Great Leap Forward that brought starvation and death to five times as many Chinese as all the Jews who perished in the Holocaust of Hitler's Germany. Generosity of poor woman inspires others WASHINGTON -Long ago and far away, Jesus Chnst said ofa popr widow: She gav e "all that she had." There is heanwafT"'ing evidence that the sainted widow. who donated her last two mites. has a counterpart 1n Amenca todav. Such a woman was Joann Jones of Paris. Ark.. who was drained by medical bills until she had no mone y to keep up her insurance premiums. Then she lost all her possessions in a fire. She moved her three childre n into a cheap. cramped. seco nd-hand trailer and found v.o rk as a waitress in a small diner. While li ving under these con- ditions. she came across four Mex· JACK ANDERSON ~.,,, ~~ ican migrant workers shivering be· neath a cedar tree on a bitter cold day. Only one had a blanket: the other three were in shirtsleeves. She took two blankets off her own bed, and her sick son gave up his wool coat so each Me~1can could wrap himself against the cold. When I hea rd about her kindness. I tned to loca te her. but she had no telephone. I finally reached her at the diner where she worked. But she didn't want to talk about her good deed. "Charity should be gi ven in secret." she said." Anyway, it was no big deal." I wrote about Joann Jones anyway. and a remarkable thing happened. Thousands of Americans sent her money to buy a new home. But the most incredible thing was that most donations came from women who didn't seem to be much \>(tter offthan Joann. Typical was a worn. single dollar bill from a woman in Hot Springs. Ark. "I don't have much money, but I do want to help a little," she wrote. From Poplar Bluff. Mo .. a great- grandmother wrote: "We have ve ry little cash. but we do own our home. My heart was touched by the story of Joann Jones. Please accept this small check." A widow, plagued with problems of her own. wrote: "Joann's story has been an inspiration and help for me. I hope my small contribution helps her to continue helping others." Life has also had its difficulties and discouragements .for a Granite City. Ill.. woman who sent a tattt"red $5 bill. "My first reaction to the Joann Jones column," she wrote. "was to wish l could afford to make a donation. After a minute's reflection.J decided I couldn't afford not to." , Perhaps the most startling con- tribution came from a woman in Pacific Grove. Calif. "I have a small savings account and am a se1'ior citizen on social security," she wrote. "I feel if Mrs. Jones can do all she did. I can at least do this much." She enclosed a check for S 1.000. An elderl y couple subsisung on social security. ages 84 and 73. sent a dollar apiece from Collings Lake. NJ. A housewife. caring for a stricken husband. contributed $10. Another widow. li ving on a pension. mailed in $6. And a man. who had already given all he could afford to charity, wrote me: "After reading your column. I have been moved to Jl,ive a little more. Thank God for people like Joann Jones.'' A bewildered Joann Jones, mean· while. will. soon be moving into he r dream house -a modest rural home on JO acres of backwoods -thanks to the generosity of people like herself. What was her reaction? Her.church leader in Paris, Ark., John D. McGill. told me simply: "She wept." Footnote: The letters that deluged Joann Jones expressed a sense of sympathy. a sense of others' suffering. Yet many of the contributors are themselves in need of help. Maybe the chain of kindness shouldn't be broken. If others wish to make donations. I'll try to channel the money to the most deserving. Con- tribuuons should be sent to the Drew Pearson Foundation. P.O. Box 2300, Washington, D.C. 20013. J•clt Anderioa is a sya~lc•led colamaJst. Thursday last, the Commentary Page of the Baltimore Sun was given over to an analysis by Judith Banister. chief of th' Chinese Branch of the U.S. Bureau of the Census. Using China's own reported demographic statistics from 1952 through 1984, Banister came to an astonishing conclusion, summarized by Com- mentary Page editor Stephens Broen· ing: .. More people died in China during that four-year span than in all the battles of the First World War, or the Holocaust of Europe's Jews, or Soviet collectivization and Stalin's Terror, the figures show_ nother Kennedy tragedy Housing code needed on Balboa Peninsula "According to one calculation. the deaths of Chinese from famine and related causes during the Great Leap Forward may even have totaled 30 million people. or nearly double the battlefield losses of all countries of World War II.'' The Kenned' famllv handled the death of Robert and E1hel's wa yward son. Da' 1d Anthon~ Kenned}. "'1th grace. More surpming was the at- ti tude of the Amencan pu blic. The publil· war, con~1derably more compassionate than migh t ha ve been expected. The public "a!". willing to accept the extenuallng circu mstances of the boy'~ drug dependency. Eve n those people ""ho ha'e nothing good to say about an~ Kennedy. denved no satisfaction from th is unfortunate chapter in the cont inuing 'aga of America's best·known family Sen . Edward Ken ned~. Ethel Ken- nedy, the boy's mothn:h1r, brothers, sisters\. cousins and aunts. all com- ported themselves with d1stt ngu1shed dignity. They see med unified by the tragedy. Senator Kenned} ne,er looked more capable and statesmanlike than he did in taking over ma ny of the responsibilities of handling details of the tragic event. We are all simulrnneousl) repul~d and fascinated by the-kind of pictures newspapers and televi~ion love to show us in the aftennath of a 1rag4:d~ We berate the photographers for intruding on ancf but we stud) the pictures intently Pictures or the OAANGf COAST Daily Pilat J' ,,,..,'4.ll0 l"vf"ly •A, I I•• ,, " Gdfoft ~"" -'·1·''"'~ , •, ~ e, .... "'"" .. "}"'•' ANDY ROONEY Kennedy famil } following the d1s- tovery of Da' id's body 10 the Palm Beach hotel room were 1rresistabl) 1nterest1ng, although I could not have taken them. The most poignant among th e photos was Whal will probably be an award.winning vignette of eight young men. brothers and cousins. some of them coatless. carrying David's coffin up Hickory Hill to place it in the hvmg room of the Kennedy home. • You knew they had been through so much with this young man whoS<' body they bore. They loved him but certainly they had hated him for the grief and diM"omfon he had brought the fam ily · Thf picture of Ethel. in a simple hlack dress. kneeling at Robert\ grave, was moving. She clasped in her ·hand a rosary an d I had \he fee lin g. as Chazy Dow•llby Hliln• 1111d A ~ql;inr ''' 1'11' Pubh~t>er Fr•nk Zlnl "' V1( ''"I' [ ,, , .. Tom hit • rv r J•''" her lips appeared to move. 1hal she was talking. not to God bul to her beloved Bobby. The picture of Sen. Ted Kenned}. groping for the elbow of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. as he held open a To the Editor: door for her while he looked towards The peninsula area is becoming a someone who may ha ve called to dangerous and unhealthy place in him. su~ested thousands of words. which to li ve . As a 20-year home· The relationship between them is one owner/taxpayer I am in despair over I hadn't thought much about. and yet the escalati n$ lawless, destructive there was warm familiarity in the environment in whi ch I find myself protective way he reached out for her. a~ in which m}' fellow homc- lf they were not good 'friends. yo u owners/taxpayers find themselves. could t~ll. at least. that they'd been We have come lo th e conclusion that through a lot together. the appointment of an Ombudsman The picture of Joseph Kenned)'. for the peninsula and the develop.. Ethel's oldest son. striding toward the meot and enforcement of a Housing medical examiner's office to identify ~pde would do much to alleviate his brother's body. was evidence that some of the problems. there is still some stren~th in the ..Ihere has been no representative younger Kennedy gen,rat1on. from our area on the city council since The only unchantable thought that the days of Don Elder. Therefore. we crossed m) mind was m regard to thl.' need an Ombudsman to advise and II children. If an ignorant fami ly direct us as to such problems as child 1nOicts 11 potential ignoramuses on endan$cnnent. destruction of public society. it probably happened because and pnvate property, distutbances of they didn't know any better Rohe-rt the peace. hara ment of persons by and Et~l prolifm ncd not ~a use vagrants and transicntJ, drun,kenness the) were ignorant 11 wa~ in part and drug abuse in and abou1 public beca use the-, were \crwus Cathohcc; places. and violation of noise levels but in part. alSQ. ~ausc th~)' must beyond human cnduronce. have f,lt that their children we re A Housina Code should ~. dc- eminently worth populating the rarth veloped and enforocd to mamtam a with. safe and healthy cnvironmcnL Dav id's drug problem was al~t 'Absentee landlords should huve an agent in the area who will be responsible for adhc.-nng to said housing cod,. Dang,rous and un- healthy living conditions ( 12 to 15 re volving persons living in one unit) and questionable businesses operat- ing in garages and alleys should be dealt with accordingly. Code viol- ations should be noted and "notioe and order" must be issued under which misdemeanor charges can be filed. Criminal prosc:cution shol.&ld be pressed apinst landowners who fail to meet tiouslna code rcqujrcmcnts and allow property to deteriorate w.hich kads to funher personal and public abuses. This is not solely a peninsula problem. This is 1 Newport Beach problem. The drugaed an~ drunken smash your cars, maim and kill you and ~ours, burglarize your homes. steal from you, rape your wife, child, mother. sister. girlfriend. The crimi- nal clement nurtured In our environ- ment p~ys on you as well as U.1. What steps must now be taken to solve the peninsula problem in New· port Reach/ B V. WEHRLY Newport Stach "How could Huogarian Jewry be wiped out in sjx weeks?" asked Elie Wiesel. Indeed, it does rivet the mind to read, as William Shirer wrote in his history of Hitler's Reich, that "in 46 days during the summer of 1944 between 250,000 and 300,000 Jews alon' wetc done to death at this camp.'' He was speaking of Aus- chWlU, where it is said 2iSOO,OOO perished durina Wor1d War I. Yeti for every Jewish man, woman and child done to death at Auschwitz duringthefouryearsofWorld WarH, a doun 01ineae men, women and children perished during the four years of the Great Leap Forward. Who remembers what became-of the Armenians? Hitler said in "Mein_.., Kampf." Who will rememb(r what beCAme of those-30 million Chinese'? Who cares? ceruinl) related to the 4'hoc k of 5tcmg .,. his fattfcrdestrO)'ed befo re h1seycs on • D1is:gust··d b,v supe...wriso,•11:1. tcle v1s1on. but how much of a ',I. ..,, .,T .a 9'. .a a relat1onsh1p could one of II children The Amencan Journalists junket· ing with the president and con· f.ratulatina him . on havina finally 'rec:oanizcd reality" on China arc t~ setfiame ones who said it would be an obscentty if he ltOppcd off in l:llc Manila of Ferdinand Marcos on the way to Peking. The ®ngressionaJ Democrats applaudi!'f the "new re· alism" ofReapn's China policy, and workina Ul> the World Bank aid, the loan auarantecs and tu preference$ for p,\ina., a.re also laborina diliccntly to sever commcr<:ial ti~&h thOtC dreadful sqreptionlsts ln South • . ? ever hn vc with a parent . To the Ecjitor: You wonder" hethcr David would This is to express my compktt' ha,t· died of druas 1f he had been one disgustatthe atrhudcsandcondut t of of two rh1ldrcn the supervisors of Orange Coun h . Aady Rooaey Ii • •J'•dlcattd Your editonal of Apnl 27 cr1t1· <'Olamn/11. ci1lng thei r dtsp1cablr action was on fric•. We Americans have 5tan-dards, you know! ta~el J.J. GIBBONS P•lrkt Boc.Uua Ii 1 1yHJnf.fid ( oron~ <lei M r t'0}1.qiaJ1t. ·~ .,. .......... ..,L8ehJN Pat McClellan and Andi RoJJ,rer admire quilt p ieced by Irvine Terra ce Philharmonic .Group memben. I Treasure stitched for benefit By GINNY OLSON DA VIES Oellr ..... Ce11 ' •• 11 A quilt Ince grea1~randmother's for your very own! • 1 This unique prize. created during many months by the Irvine Terrace Philharmonic Group. may be won in a drawing from opponunity tickets purchased before or during the group's annual MiQi Flea Market. years ago." said Jodi Harrod, co-chamnan oft he Irvine Terrace branch. ''Helen Gepfen. Pat McClellan and Helen Tedford were responsible for this year's design and completion. and flowers were embroidered by individual mem· 10 come," said Andi Rohrer. flea market co- chairman. Proceeds. which have averaged $400 from the quilt alone. are presented with other flea market revenues to the OCPS to help it continue to bring the Los Angeles Philharmonic Or- chestra and children's con'ccns to Orange County. bers.·• • This year's event. which benefits the Oranae County Philharmonic Society. will be held from 11 a .m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday. May 16, at the home of Margaret Kredel. I 530 Santanella Terrace, Corona del Mar. Previous pattern themes have included all 50 state flOWCfJ, well-known scenes from Newpon Harbor, such as the Balboa Pavilion, and in 1976, the Libeny Bell and red, whhe apd blue desiJns commemorating our coun1ry's bicentennial. Also available at the sale will be a Cobb salad luncheon ($6). collectibles, objets d'an. couturierc clothing. Sweet Shoppe treats. plants and paperback books. The SI admission tickets and SI oppor:iunity tickets for the quilt may be purchased at the event or earlier by calling 644-9842. 720-1020 or 644-9715. ''These quilts have continually gained in fame since the first was created more than 15 "This year's stunning quilt with spnng flowers on an aqua background would comple- ment the decorating s1yle of anyone's home and will be a conversation piece to treasure for years Sewing Fair educates More than 100 exhibitors and 200 booths will be the focal points of the Great American Nccdl~work and Sewing Fair Thursday through Sunday at the Anaheim Convention Center. Three daily fashion shows will feature 42 items from McCall's latest patterns. including the Brooke Shields. Linda Evans and Joan ColHns celebrity designer collec- tions as well as men's and children's clothing. Show times are 11 a.m .. 3 and 7 p.m. through Saturday and 11 a.m. and ) p.m. Sunday. Nancy Fleming. a former Miss America and an accomplished designer and seamstress. will be fair hostess and commentate the morning and evening shows. The 3 p.m. shows will be narrated by Elsie Archer. McCall's promotion manager and ex pen stylist. Actress Mariette Hanley, whose line of casual wear as being distributed by the McCall Pattern Co., will give a commentary of'-r line at a special 2 p.m. fashion show on Thursday. PAPARAZZI "The multifaceted needlework and sewing ans are more popular than ever." said Fleming. "From the pracucal home sewer to the accomplished anast we're see an$ a revival of interest an the t.radational crafts as well as bold innovations in their application." Demonstrations wall range from a begmners' corner to state-of-the-an home sewing machines, patterns. fabrics, notions. sewing tools._ embroider)'. machinery. quih,ing supplies. needle~int kn.sand weaving ac.ces~on~s. 1:h1ny informative semmars wall cover the sewing mtncac1es of darning, lacemaking, ultrasuede and designer jeans. A special attraction w11l be a fiber art exhibit ~y award- wmning graphic anist Margaret Cusack. composed of 13 onginal works for "The Christmas Carol Sampler." Th as wall be the first West Coast showing of her fabnc collage and sof\ sculpture which have drawn wide acclaim. Falr hours will be I 0 a.m. to 9 p.m. through Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission is S4; children under 12. free. Nancy Fleming Quilts -like the women who make them-havecomcalonaway. The bedcovers once made by the dozens from household scraps to warm a family . arc now a creative outlet for women ~orking in the computerized 20th century. "Skillful and inventjve wort.en. using taste and ingenuity, created masterpieces from otherwise plain. utmtary objects and brought color into our homes," said Tressa Ruslander Miller, gaiter) director at Secur- ity Pacific Plaza. American quilts "Made for Each Other" will be showing there at 333 S. Hope St, bos Angeles. beginning Tuesday through July 8. Curator Mary Kahlenberg arranged the exhibit ''to provide a glimpse of the character of the women and the times in which they lived and to show the combina- tion of economr.. utility and ori&inality behind the text1le tradfrion... . The gallery director noted that certain works reflect the more refined skills and tastes that developed in the Victorian households. Victoriana is one theme u.sed by Mary Cardin ofHuntington Beach for her Cardin OriginaJs-ap.,lique patterns for today's quilters, includinganuque tele.P.hone, train, hot air balloon and wildlife motifs. While some seamstresses pref er the tactile satisfaction of band-sewing. Cardin "pcdaJed" a state-of-the-an. computerized machine with embroidery capabilities at" last weekend's "Celebrauon" sponsored by the Orange County Quilters Guild. "Always applique trom the center out and you won't have any unwanted bulges.'' she advised spectators at h~r exhibit. "These spools hold 7 ,000 yards; it's always so annoying to run out of thread,·· she added with a knowing wink. Elsewhere on thevoundsof Peralta Junior High School m Orange the an of quilting ranged from Amish simplicit y to the Mola folkartofPanama'sCuna Indians to pa ndau-"flowery cloth" of· the Hmong tribes of Southeast Asia. One hint of the pride and price involved in the exhibit of7-to 9-foot quilts was the warning to phot~aphcrs to use hi&h ASA film. No flash bu I or cubes were allowed bc<:ause strong light damaJeS fabnc. And white-gloved attendants lovingly showed the reverse detail of quilts because moisture and oils on hands of viewers also would mar the artistry. But most spectators were satisfied to admire the kaleidoscope of colors and mtricacicsof pauems involved. Novices quickly learned quilter's terminology. re- alizing that "Flying Geese" referred to precise-rows oftraingJcs in formation, not bird appliqucs. Ow~ Wa t.on, center, and ber daajbter Sandy O'Connell eajo a ~cewlthGrayceRoe.eler rrom Golden Weet Colleae. 0.-.,...,._....,.._c...,_ Bomell Peue, Betty 8oY"Y and Gerry Stewart recall Gwenda'• Rpport of the Child Galdance Center of oranie County. Vivacity, Volrinteering earn· tributes . By BEA ANDERSON °' .................. Gweecla WataoD 1$ probably best descnbcd as "the little lady (a djminutive 5-foot-2) with a 11ant capacity to love ... serve. .. 11ve." That's)ust one of the tributcsaccordcd at a luncheon aivcn in her honor by the Orange Coast Colleae Women. And while more than I 00 women. community leaders 1n their own nght. braved the ch ally bl'ceze in the tnum at the Newpon Marriott. the warmth of fnendsh1ps permeated the atmosphere. aturday'sevent was declared "Gwenda Watson Da)." and emphasiL1n1 the theme *ere proclamauo ns. sah.1t1ng her leadership and dcd1cat1on of voluntccnna ... her tame and eneraics to numero~s youth and chant) organ izataons as ~'Cll as OCC from: -The Orange County Board of uperv1sors. presented b) Emma Jane Riiey"' wife of 5th D1stnct: uperv1sorTom Riiey -Tht city ofNewpon Beach. prncnted by Carol . (Pleu.teeeOWENDA/82) And th<>1e who marveled at the pa&ienoc · required'for the "lone Star'• s-ttem done by Cynthia Chabot arti:i La&arie Mutatipelli were convinced when tt~y11w .. Bos1oa Commons" by Blanche Youna who noted ''the piecing took two days; tbe quiltina 800 hours." Such time and attention to detail are labors oflove to the ?Juild members in Orantt. Los Anaeles Rivenide coyn- ties who believe"mendship as like a patchwork quilt; it becomes more valuable with time." - Such was the case for Marty Johnsen who sewed "Dana Point Dolphins" as a 1983 high school graduation pretent for her niece. It won a blue ribbon for oriainal design at theOranaeCounty Fair. Mary Alice Hammond embroidered J 3 endanacredandcxtinctbirdsonaquiltfor her husband who colleasthem.lktte Pllcuro updated the traditional Lo& Cabin pattern into a 38x44~inch .. VintqePlck- ard~' car for her husband and used pastels for"Dresdcn Plate" forberdaucbter. !cndeachprildl)r'CSKlenlrcceiveia _ friendship quilt as she leaves office. Kaye Rheingans' was fashioned in bronze, brown and areen tones while the blocks of Jan Davis' featured blue and maroon 1leinsand hands. Births and Christmas are another in- spiration (or deadline?) forquiltmakers. Most of the whimsical, pastel baby quilts featured Teddy bean while the red and ~ hofiday motif$ ranged from poinset-~ tias to snowflakes and choirboys.. I In true quilter's fashion,JuanitaSwarts had appliqued rose and purple swatches of velvet and Sf Un into "Btts and Pieces of My Life." And she admitted that her dramatic 92x92-incb .. Poppies" started small .. but I kept addin.OOrden ... Moreenthusiasmfortbcartwsasbown by Donna O'Brien of()raqe paild president, who Jleefully and kftOwiaaly upped the bidding at the Sunday afternoon auction where the offerings avetaerd S40 per square foot She and other purists-many of whom wore~u1hed vesu.~skirts-know that the flipside is equally imponant and lin~ly beautiful. too. . That's because a quilt has three la yen bound by tiny stitches, frequently worked in a panem that c-0mplemcots the decorat- ivcfront and usually only vilib&e on the reverse. The top, decorative fabricis picador appLiqued. The center layer is fillini. There as a waiting list to join the guild. but applicants may write to Orange County Quilters Guild. MembershipOtair, P.O. Box 3108. Orange 92665. PILAR WAYNE • .. I - • 0 . . . . . ~Ir pollution may slow down Olympic athlete ~ Smog a hazard ... to mtllions of fitness converts I later leamed i' a prime smot :tone." Dem's collapsed luna (orc:cd him to stoprunninafor 14montba. Althouab a cause was never officially cfe- termioed, both Dem and his doctor suspected that Dern 's noon woncouts in LA. 's smoa~loged air had dam- a&ed bis lunp to the point of collapse. tfe moved to the beach, wherc pollution levels arc lower, and took to running between 5:30 a.m. and 7:30 a.m., when air quality is generally at its best In the 18 years since his lung collapsed1 Dem, now 47, has loged 70,000 males. tetn cao relate to what Dem calls sm~ pojsonina. And recently, in andct~tion of the Los Angeles Olympic pmes. researchers have focused more attention on the effects ofair pollution on atble\es. Even their preliminary data show that, in ad~ d ition to lowerina the number of world records we can expect in Los Angeles., smoa may pote an insidious hazard to millions of recent fitness convens. Not even the a.toomaest researchers SUgaest that WC gj vc ue exercise; in fact, many att compemive athletes livma in hiah·smog zones. But -they do advise that we adopt strateaies for reducing exposure to the worst aJop. traffic for 30 minutei dorina rush hour raised their blood CO level to about 5 percent. That's the umc amount produced by smbkina up to a pack of clprettes a day. Weekend jocks JCncrally won't see their e.crfonrianc:f' drop until· their blood CO levels hits about 15 percent, but Olympic athletes may bc&in to slow down at 4.3 percent. When the CO level is high, 11n athlete's best stratcgy_ is not to breathe any outside air until t}le last possib&e moment - whether that means warming up indoors or bringing an oxyacn tank onto1he field. shallow brcatbtn&- Con tin uous exposure to omnc. bowevtr, wean down those defense mtthanisms until the symptoms 10 away. Given the hiab p(J)bebility ol an ozone alert, many Olympic ath· letes may oonsjder tramina in the area for a Wttk or more before competina -in an attempt to detenajtiJe themselves to ozone. Broce Dem felt u if he'd been shot. Halfway through a 17-mile run up Malibu Canyon, pain rammed through the actor's chest like a hot iron rod. He limped home and lay low for 24 hours, waatina for the pain to subside. It didn't. Dem's doctor · thought he'd pulled a pectoral mus- cle. But an X-ray revealed that his ri&ht lung had collapsed. lt was July 1966. Dem hjld been running since 1959. "I would run every day close to noon. regardless of the beat or smog conditions." he recalls. "I did an awful lot of tram mg an Griffith Park in Los Angeles. which When he doesn't stick to his early- momm' time slot, though, Dem says he feels 1t. "I ran at noon rtccntly and got smog poisoning. ll was 92 degrees. and the Santa Ana winds had died the day befo~. _I got real groggy, and I couldn't ta'ie a detp breath." Few of us will suffer a collapsed lung. but most urban-dwelling ath- Duringe.xercisewebreathcupto 16 times as much air u we do at rest, pulling each breath {and whatever Junk we take in) deeperinto the lungs. To move lb.at much air, we switch to mouth brcathini. wbkh bypasses the body's moss effective air filter, the nose. Long before picnickers in a city park feel any discomfon from air pollutants: passing runners.. cyclists and jouers may be struggling for breath. There are a host of air pollutants that can affect the body in numerous ways, but two of the worst arc carbon monoxide (CO) and oz.one. cMbon monoxide as produced by the in- complete combustion of fossil fuels, mainly gasoline. Ozone forms when sunUgbt interacts with hydrocarbons and. nitrogen dioxide. They're both colorless. so you can't tell a bed day by looldna out the window. If the air you inhale contains carbon monoxide, your blood chooses it over oxygen. bonding to CO 240 times more tightly and robbing )'our muscles of oxygen. A recent study of New York City runners found that runoing near At the same time. thouah, work· outs in smog may be a way for an athlete to dampen the effects of ozone. At first, ozone activates irri- tant receptors in the lungs, a safety mechanism to prevent too much diny air from entering. The receptors in tum triuer cllest pains. coughing and Keep in mind that air ~Uutlon rc$CUChers don't believe their fiodina should ~re utban athleie. ifttO lethargy./We know that endurance runnint ·and other cJletClise i1 beuefiCtal to tl'le cardio~aacular 1ys.- tem, and that seems to o~enide lhe risks of exercising in a polluted environment," says Or. Peter B. Raven, vice president of the Ameri· can College of S~rts Medicine. "But," he admits. "!l's a little wishy· washy. Shon-tenn effects arc all that's beina stlidied." · Wres t ling attributes pinned down by fan DEARANN LANDERS: I am sur· pnse-d you don't ha\ e a better under- standing of pro- fessional wrestling. The fans are aware that eventhougbthe outcome is prear- Arn• WDEIS ranged, SQ me of the - pain and in)uries are real. Nevenheless. we enJ OY watching the Von Enck brothersc~h the Frcebards. And everyone lS wa1ting to sec Gentleman Chris Adams pulvenze Go11eous Jimmy Garvin so their valets, Sunshine and Prcaous, can claw each other to pieces. I beheve professional wrestJ1ng is less harmful to the viewers than the trash we see 10 the soaps. Why do I say that? Because professional wrestJing is so different from most P-COple'severyda) lives, there 1s no tendency to 1denufy with at Speakmgstnctl) for myself. bone-crushers provide a great escape from the real world. Your narrowness surprised me. -J.K.C. lN 0 . C ITY Good for you! Daily Pilot. ( ld':><..,tl1f'fl dd'> rhone 642 567~ DEAR-J.K.C.: I'm ln favor of escape. Lord k.Dows. we au need a re1plte from tile dally pres11rea. Bit I wotlld derive lltlle plea11re from 1eeta1 tM V oa Erick brolllera crull tile Freeblnls, u d tile tlaoaot of one la1maa belllg paJverlllng uotller leavft me cofd. 'he key, I believe, la my feeU111 about violence. I flJHI lt frlpten1D1, not eatel1ain.lll1. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last week I was fired from my jobalasavingsandloan for stealing money. I took S300and fetl very guilty about it. My boss said the company would not bnngcharges against me but I must Jet counseling. I promised I would as soon as I could afford 1t. l need to know how this incident will affect my future employment. Will it be on my record? My boss said the ,.. grounds for dismissal will be stated as "misconduct." My formerem P.loyer refuses to answer any questions. I am afraid this temblc mistake is going to follow me for the rest of my hfe. I won't be able to find a decent job anywhere. Please help me. -NOT A BAD PERSON (LONG BEACH) DEAR L.B.: Get counsellni at once. (Contact tile FASHION SALE 50"'·10"' Off let.lit To, hshltr CletMIC Sizes 2· 14 Store o,..1a, PostJHt4 RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, INC. F• die lest tf Y• ute ll22IAINlllft. COSTA •sa -S41-115' YWCA. Salva lion Army, or a .member of tile clerc .) It may coat very little or .otll1D1 at all. Repay tile UH 11 sooa as po11lble ud let yHr bots bow yoa are determlllecl to 1tral1laten o.t yo.r Ufe. Explalll yoa desperately aeed to set tllat word "mi1coodact" off your record. • I wiala be coald read tbe Rev. Tbeoclore Hnburp's mapiflceat essay OD for1M.111. See Pqe 417 lll "Tlae Au Ludera Eacyclopeclia.'' \' 01 don't bave to bay It. It's bl tlae Ubrary. • • • DEAR ANN: 1 married a widower late in life. Af\er several years. lam stilt running into locked closets, locked doors and locked boxes. Last week I found some 40-ycar-old love letters from my husband to his wife. Shall I throw them out? We have a good marriage but these mementoes bother me. -TOO MANY LOCKS IN OHIO DEAR LOCKS: Y oa laave tile mu u4I ta.at'• wit.at couts. Stop belaavlDs ~Udiallly, or yoa may lose IUm. Leave IU1 letten ud plctarH alone, womu. 'hey belong to HIM. lllEDIATE CASH GOLD, DtAMOHDI and VALUABLES n . uau .annuu --.n-osas 3118 New Blvd. A.&D ENGAGEMENTS Sa•aae-Tadlock Earl C. and Peggy J. EVERYTHING MUST GO PARTY RENTALS Savage of Costa Mesa have announced the engagement of their daughter, Regina Enola Savage. to John Wil- ham Tadlock. also of Costa Mesa. The bnde-to-be 1s "a graduate of Mater De1 High School. anta Ana. and attends Orange Coast Col· lege. Costa Mesa. for llformltiol C1ll U1d1 759·1206 Pl , Wttktt4s 557 .4343 9·12 •• pecialis ts in weddings, parties a nd fund raisin g events 642-1184 Lynda L Potter P arty Con~uhant Her fiance. son of Judith Bobenread of Long Beach, graduated from Orchard Park Central High School in Orchard Park, N. Y. He J---------~1 .. ------------------•1 as a student at Santa Ana "" ~·'~~ (11 111.>~. -. BO< )l\~I H >PPI· May Gar·den Chinese Restaurant 7'~ Jp(e1td"~ "' C!MiJte.u C!m~iJte iJt ele91mt diltiJt9 LUNCHEON SPECIALS Dinner • Cocktails College. The couple are planni ng to marry Sept. 15 in St. J oa c him 's Catholic Church. Costa Mesa. Art Show Mother"s gift ale thru Sun. at Huntington Center Breaded Shrimp Platter s2.99 ~:V026 • Sunday Brunch Open 7 days a week Banquet facilities • Wedding R eceptions • Private Parties 1400 SE Brtetof, Coeta Me .. Corner Aedhltl A Brtetol U se Answ11Ad S hrimp lovers! We've got the best little shrimp at the best little price in our Breaded Shrimp Platter! Lots of lightly breaded s hrimp. served with f ryes. slaw£, 2 hushpuppies. 3og5 Harbor Blvd. In Costa Mesa just south of San Diego Freeway across from Fedco (Drlve-Thru Service Available) Daily Pilat 642·5678 756-9229 flL-eA FACTOR Y SURPLUS OUTLET· Open to the Public mothe,. '.1 ';J)a'J Sa4 WEDNESDAY, MAY 2 S .. ,.,,"., /.,,...,;IL 11 .... u/,./ ..f.·,,,.,.;,lff P,. i'"' lnal ,,..,,..,//. 1/;,;/ 01., /,u/°"/ ,,.,t/,1 ,.,,J ,L...,., '""" a ,.,;J, a1-1, • .,,.1 o/ J1u11,./;,...,J ,,,.J ,/;,~d'I ...... , .. ! ... '°'"'"'· ,..,.!.. •. ro,.liu, ~.,. ,/i1,, .,.J .,.,..;,,.., ••• 'v 1L1. /.,..,,..1 J,,.,,,.,. o/ ,.,.J,,/u '~""'' ~ ..... ,. ' ····· ... , SALE ENDS WEONESDA Y MAY 9 '. ·. . :. ·' ... IJ. ITOM "°""' .--.~rt. 10'.80 ~ ...... a.tunley 1~ -~ ..... 8AklR IT1'11T IOUARI 7'1 ... ., atr .. t, Coeta ..... 0... 9loc:ll W• of llf.-OI (71•) 157-1214 0.-, ................ ~ J ud y Oleon-Luakln. emcee. check.a wit.Ir Bobble Ballard. lancbeon chalnroman. GWENDA ••• From Bl Gandy, assistant public a°dmm1strator for the CoJ.mty of Orange and former president of the Coast Community College District trustees, whoal.soa~nounced a . resolution from the State ofCahfom1a was fonhcommg, L-A commendation, read byCarol Klfek, a founding member of OCC Women, from the p residents of the college district -Benard Laskin, OCC; ~ Stevens, Golden West College; Ed Decker, Coastli~e Community College; and Bill Farni11, KOCE. ~ -A placqueingratitude for her work with th Florence Crjttentol1 Services of Orange County ewas vice chairman), presented by Katheryn Nle1',en. auxjliar)r coordinator. ,,. - A parchment declaring a scholarship had been established at OCC in her name. Presenters were Jady Lindsay. presid~nt of the OCC Women.and JadyOlaon- LoakiD. emcee. Gwenda. whose husband Norman Watson 1s retiring as chancellor of the college district next mC?n~h. also was commended in letters from a numbcrofc1v1c leaders mcludrng Mary Douglas. YWCA executive director, for her'"mspirat1on and dedication:" Larry R . Rlchardaon. executive director. March of Di mes, for her '"time. expenisc and talents:·· and Rlcbard Simon. director of community relations fort Ile-college district.. who claimed Gwenda is "Scotland's bestexpon." Excerpts were read by her daughter, Katlleriae Watson. Other fam i I y members sharing her joy were daughterandson-m-law.Saady and Dr. W. Fred O'Coaaell, and her grandson. Seu Gordon. Reminiscing about their years together. attenqing college functions and organizing receptions and othe,r social events. were Pat Moore, whose husband Robert B. Moore 1s past OCC president (here from Medford, O re.) and Mary Boyce. whose late h usband, Dr. R. OOiey Boyce was founding president ofGWC. Representingotherorganiza"<>~farwhicb<lwcn­ da has served unstintingly. were Llz Toomey, board member of the Assessment and Treatment Services Center (Gwenda was a founder); Betty Boyvey and Jue Prlcbard. members of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County (founding president): Helen Hamplu1e1 , Women's Executive Council, Dorothy Satberlud , past executive director. Helen Clrkle, Women'sExecutive Cabinet and Annabell Tolbln. mem bcr. March ofDimes (vice chairman of volunteer services and state volunteer adviseT for 15 years); June Kauamara, past president and.Zada Taylor, board member. Florence Crittenton Services: Kathleen Ryder. president and Nancy Mlaor. board member, Coalition Concerned with Adolesc,cnt Preganancy (founding chairman); Margaret Lamar. Newpon Beach Ebel! Club· Obviously moved by the awards and praise, Gwenda said ... My feelings arc far deeper than words can express." She, in tum. commended the audience for their volunteerefTons. "This(voluntarism ) has been terribly important in my life," and quipped about all of her accomplishments-"It's longevity that counts." Mary Boyce and Pat Moore remember momenta •hued at colleae functtona. ·- Twi•t of fate Jean S.,al 1ete a boo9t from father Donnelly RJaodea after •pnlntn1 ber ankle ID a.dance coatelt OD 0 Double..Troable" tonlpt at 9 :30 on MBC_, Cban.nel 4 . -8:00-.... NEWS e a.s I POl.aWOMAN THAEFS COMPANY • llJa( AOOEA8 • MACHBL. / l.EHRER NEWSHOtJA 6i> BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT (()CBS NEWS Ol ABC HEWSQ IBHICNEWS m DICK v~ DYKE lCJ MOVIE * * "W'llly Wonlla And The ~ lalt FICtory" ( 1971) Gene Wiider, Jldt Albertson. MOVIE ** "Clacking Up"' (1983) Jen'y Lewlt. MMlon Berle OJ AOa< AHO AOU. THEN AHO N<M --8:30-m AUCE I!) A MA mR OFT ASTE NEWS (JJ) TAXI QIJ WHEEL OF FORTUNE •lHHATGIRl -7:00- f) CBSNEWS U HICHEWS D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN · G ABCNEWSQ Q FANT Alff ist.AHO m THREE'S COMPANY • WHEEL OF FORTUNE 8D BUSINESS REPORT 6i) MAGtCOF FlORAL PAINTING P.M. MAGAZINE ~ EHTEATAIHMEHT TOHIGKT LCM CONNECTION mMOVIE • 'b · Tiie Blob" (1958) Steve MoOueen, Aneta COfseaut 01MOVIE * * * "Who Is Kilhng Tiie Great Chefs Of Europe?" ( 19 78) George SeQal. Jacqueline Bisset. S FAERIE TALE THEATRE -7:30- 6 2 OH THE TOWN U QIJ FAMILY FEUD D LAVERNE & SHIRLEY & COMPANY D EYEOH LA. (!)HEWS m TOO ClOSE FOR COMFORT m> ®) PEOPlE'S COURT flf) WILD, WllD WORLD OF AHIMALS 6i) THE COMPLEAT Gii.SERT ANO SUWVAH ()) TIC TAC OOUGti l~l HBO COMING ATTRACTIONS CZl MOVIE * t ~ "W111ter Ught" ( 1962) Ingrid Thulin, Gunnar Biomstrand -8:00-6 (()ONE DAY AT ATIME U la REAL PEOPLE D AMEAICAH VIOEO AWARDS 8 ®l THE FALL GUY Q JOKER'S WILD I ~AINMENT TOHIGHT t * * "LOOltlng FOf Mr GOOdbat" I 1977) Diane Keaton. Tuesday Weld m THE COMPlEA T GILBERT ANO SUWVAH lC)MOVIE • • • * "Young Frankenstein" ( 1974) Gene Wilder. Peter Boyte. rti1MOVIE * • "~thor! Author'" ( 1982) Al Peclno, Dyan Cannon S MOVIE t • * _ 'Oh God'" ( 1977) George Burns. John Denver • -8;30- 6 MOVIE * H~ "Being Tllefe" (1979) Peter Sellers, Melvyn Douglas. Q TIC TAC OOUOH LOVE BOAT m P.M. MAGAZINE -t.00- .. '8 =CTS OF LIFE 1111 TY =GAlmN GDRAOH£T MOVIE * * "Kifttel Conledy" ( 1912) ~ et1 DI Niro, Jerry LIWIS 'ZlMOVIE t * * "LOOI" I 1972) Alctltrd Atten- borough. l .. Aemlc:k -~­.. a OOU8lE TllOU8l.E MOvtE .. ~ "Johnny COol" (19e3) Hwy SM. Eliubtth Montgomery G IMAl<M THEtuNCE! THE GENEAAnoN ~THI HOLOCAUST GHOMEAAONO -10:00-1 1~ THf&AfNT ~Pl.AYERS AAAEl Y EV£JI l'\.AY TOOfn@ '-="DEAIY • .. .. "The Flglltlflg SulllYln•" ( 1944) Anne Bu1tr Thomte Mltdl- 111 '"'CUL TUAE ClU8 IN CONClRT l$)MOVIE t * '-' "Horr Of Planet" ( 19811 -10'.30- • INOEPEHOENT NEWS 6i) THE GREAT OVTDOOf\S -10:45- ll., CHARLIE CHAMPUH OH THE ALM SCENE -ti:00-608 (J) tll@ NEWS D TAXI Q AOWAH & MAATWS LAUGK-IH I M•A•S•H HAWAII FM~ fD LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS PAESIOEHTIAl OEBA TE m DICK VAH DYKE (B)MOVIE * * * "And Now For Something Completely Different'' ( 1972) Graham Chapman, John Cleese. (.Q) MUSX: OH VIDEO L MOVIE ** '-' "FOfced Vengeance ( 1982) Clluek Norris, Mety Louise Wetlef -11:30- 6 ()) POUCE STORY D 3 TOHIOHT _ D SATURDAY NIGHT 8 tit ABC ~ f.IGHTUHE Q IN SEARCH OF ... m ARCHIE BUHl<ER'S Pl.AC£ m 700ClU8 'O,MOVIE * * * "Fort Apacr.e" (1948) John Wayne, Henry Fonda -11:45- S MOVIE * * '; "Some Krn<l OI Heto" ( 1982) Alctlard Pryor. Margot Kkldef -11:55- C SCTV -12:00-a EYE OH HOLL YWOOO Q MOVIE **•~"Mr. Deeds Goes·To Town" ( 1936) Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur Cf) CHllOREH OF HOPE m THICKE OF THE NIGHT m>HARRYO fl!) LA TENIGHT AMERICA al MOVIE * * "The Couple Takes A Wile ( 1972) Bill Bbby, Paula Prentiss -12:30-0 QJ LAT£ NIGHT WITH DAVID l.ETTERMAN 0 TWILIGHT ZOHE Q LA. TODAY Cf) ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN l MOVIE t * "Lone Woll McQuade" (1983) Chuck Norris. Oavtd Carradine. -12:35- IH MOVIE * * Cractung Up' (1983) Jerry Lewis. Milton Berle. -12:40-u MOVIE t * "Never Con A Killer" 119771 Stefanie Powers, Harold Gould -12:45- 'C MOVIE • • •; "Eatrng Raoul" ( 1982) Paul Bartel Mary WOf()(l(YV -1:00- D MOVIE * * 'h "Chamber Of HOfr()(a" ( 1966) Patncl! O'Neal~uzy Par~er Q MOVIE . • •'h "Tiie War Between The Tates" ( 19771 Richard Crenna, Elizabeth Ashley MOVIE * * * 'h 'The Ftghllng 69th (1940) James Cagney, Pat O'Brren G) MOVIE t •on "Girl On Tiie Run" (19!>8) Elrem Zlmbalisl Jr . Erin O'Brien 8i'l ART OF BEING HUMAN moENESCOTT -1:30-D HEAL TH AELD m ALL IN THE FAMll Y 3 AOWAH & MARTIN'S LAUOK-IN S MOVIE H ·~ "Vrce $quad" (1982) Seuon Hubley. Gary Swtnson -2:00-6 C88 NE:WS NIGHlWATCH mNEWS (Q1MOV1E •• "Summtt l<Mrl" (1982) Da'Yf Hwinah. Ptl• Gabgher -2:10- ~)MOVIE t t "ExpoMd" (1883) Nutlllla Klnsl!r, HllVey Ktlt8' -2:15-C MOVIE * • * "Just Ttll Me What You Wll'lt ' (1980) AM MacGraw. Alan King G NEWS m MOVlf -2:30- u "BlOndlt'a Hero" (t850) Ptnny Slngtllon, Arthur Laite· M()VI( • U .,.. "Tiit Klngfllher" ( 1982) An H•rtton Wft14y H -S.-00-~~ To·Kl~' (1969) Ptl(IC* O'Nttl. _, ~tu ( CHICO AND TMl M~N CORONADO (AP) -Af\er 25 rQB. the tars of"Some Like It Hot" pthered on the beach where the m ilestone comedy was filmed, but this time they lcf\ their dresses at home. "Not too much haschan.ed," actor Tony Oinrs, who co-staried in the 1959 rdcasc, said Saturday. "I have been expcctma to look out there and sec the crew walling for me. and say 'Tony we:rc ready fo~ a shot.' •· But the mouon picture camera t'rews that occup,ied the shore on this island about 100 rtiiles south of Los Angeles were g,.one. In their pla~ on the cool. but sunny. afternoon were television cameras, reporters and fans all waiting to sec Curtis, actor Jack Lem~on and director Billy Wilder. ' who alons wtth Marityn Monroe, were the pnncll)als oflbe film. For Wilder, th1nas had cbanaed. "I can't find m)' way aroJ.1_nd anymore," Wilder said. ''Evef'YtNna 1s 50 different." A quarter of a century qo, the trio were on the beach to film the story of two unemployed mUlicians who Ocd to Miami after witncuina the· St. Valentine's Day Massacre. The musicians, played by Cunis and Lemmon, joined a travelina aJI· girls otehcstra, donQ.ina make·up and dresses to conceal their identhiet. "About a week and a half into it. J really bqan to 1Ct the ilcl\. the feclin§ that this mi~t be something terrifk, Lemmon said during a break from the TV cameras and autograph hounds that pursued him. In an interview, Curtis bragged that "Some Like It Hot'' was a precursor to "Tootsie," the Highly successful 1982 film starring Dustin Hoffman. "I am proud that Jick (Lemmon) and I were first to go drag OI) screen." Cums RWi,-becautc it makes O\altin Hoffman look so uaJy." Cvrti~ who was witb.ttls vofe of a week and a hal(, Andna Savio, 21 , remembered the manner of Monroe. wf\o was incurably laLC tbro~t the shootina or the film. .. She was about as vulnerable as a Sherman &an.k." Curtis A.id or~ la~ actttU. .. But tbaf1 not a criticism. h was part of her genius that &be made people think 1he was vulnerable." A dinner and aalute io tbe movie and ·its stars were io follow the afternoon plberin$-A Billy Wilder film festival fcatunng 1uch films u ·'The Fonunc Cookie," ··sunset Boulevard," and "Seven Year heh .. were to round out the celebration. The actors and d irector apparently enjoyed the commotion surrounding the film on its silver anniversary as mucb as the film buffs. "What a wonderful thrill to be ma movie that people love," Curtis said. .. After a whiJe, the aud1ence has as much right to the movie as you do. They know it as well a5 you do." --·· l Jack Lemmon. BlDJ Wilder, Toay Cmtll reunite lD Coronado for Udl aaal~ of their moYle ... Some Like It Bot.•• · VCRs turn Fiji Islanders into TV jurikies By BARRY RENFREW A.~f'NMWrlW SUV A. Fiji r-Fijians ere turmng their backs on the sunny tranquility of their South Pacific islands and becomingaddictecfio the passion ana greed ofJV dramas, such as "Dallas"· and .. Dynasty," despite the absence of broadcast tefev1sion. Fiji is one of the few places left in the world without telev1S1on transm1s~ion. But the arrival of video cassette recorders.in the last few years has presented Fijians wi1h the chance to tune in with the rest of the world. .. Things were just dead before we got this," an islander said recently as he selected a cassette of the movie .. Tootsie" at a rental shop. Stores renting video cassettes dot the capital of Suva with bright signs proclaiming the latesrarrivals. Gleaming video cassette recorders st.and in majesty in the windows of several department stor~s. The craze has even produced "FiJi V~deo," a monthly review of the latest releases. Viewers are particularly keen for recordings of U.S. Cosby gets series .I LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bill Cosby, who won an Emmy Award for his role in 1·1 Spy," will return to weekly television as the star of a new half-hour comedy series on NBC. NBC has placed an initial order for six programs and has aske~e delivery of a presentation tape by May 1. Ttre show focuses on the ups and downs of raising four children. Cosby won an Emmy as best actor in a dramatic senes for each of the three years "I Spy" was on the air m the mid-1960s. He later starred for two years in a situation comedy and in a short-Lived variety show. telev1S1on senes. especially "Dynasty" and "Dallas," gobbling up 12 episodes at a ume. Distributors take out prominent newspaper advertisements to.. announce the arrival of lhe two shows' latest installments Martial arts offerings are a huge hit with younger viewers. A new rclca~en the adventures of some bloody duo was advcQ1sed as "lhe greatest team in the history of mass slaughter." The government has resisted the introduction of television, saying a small nation must develop 1ts economy before indulging in luxuries. TV will also have to wait until the whole country is electrified so everyone can have it, otherwise there will be a major population drift to the towns just to watch television. officials say. The video craze is ruming business for Fiji's cinemas. a few of which have been forced to close in the face of the challenge. More and more peo ple prefer to do their viewing at home. saymg it's more comfortable and cheaper. "I haven't been to the movies in months. We lust stay home and watch video all the time. It's terrible,' said an American diplomat, who said he'd rather not be named since he had an image to maintain. Movie theaters arc trying to fight back by enlarging their programs, offering up to nine films a week rangmg from the latest releases to 30-ycar-old reruns. 1'1llbtrllll3"" ll<f llNAl (1-<AP!ft 110 1030 tR) "PUPPIES" (I) -·~ "TIO'll PUlllC WITI All" (I) 6 ·~ 10 40 "TUlllG PlACES" fl) 8 l!i Owning a VCR, which costs Sl.000 or more. as beyond the hopes of many in a country where SSO a week 1s considered a J.ood wage. The theft of a recotder was the lead Item on FiJi radio's national news recently. Instead. ~oups of families have adapted the traditional Paofic system of sbarina property by joinina tQiCther LO rent recorders. Many people have triec1 &o cub in on the booming industry, and srimr little tailon' lhops or country stores offer tjny displayi of &apes for rcnL Oubs and bars that once dominated Fiji.an ni&htlik, along with the cinemas, have had io defend the~vea by insta11ing recorders. The chatter at the bar now competeS with the loud dLalogue of tbe latest pr:ovam. "I don't read anymore. Just dnnk and watch video," sajd a local journalist. , The video craze has also focused the att.entioo of pohce forces mother natJons on Fiji. Cl\eap pirated video tapes have taken a heavy toll against salea of the authorized versions, and American film producen. the FBI and Interpol have taken out ads and sent representatives to warn that such tapes are prohibited under international convention&. But 11 has made it more difficult for some people. Hotel guests who want to sec a movie io their roonu on a V.CR must first sign a statement declaring they won't record the Prottram or sell adm ission tickeu. IM)llfl MUl1Clll l!atSl()l '191f M I» M "ICllllMf' tK I ...,,.. '9l CIW18" •I I IS 10 ~ .... .._ . """'°'" IJ\ ,..,, 1rx, •\A. .... ~.,.;..;.1,..,w ___ -..~=~'=00 •istCk s ~ ililiiii I \U 1ANt lllf.AC.llllll(I •-IC • S1 f'ltl\a "t1 .. tr •I ..... _ · ._. •------100 '10 !140 ,... , • '1D tPC:• BatSfOl nn·1uu• ·~· .,,. ,... 111 .. .,.,,"""" SO. COAST PLAZA 1UJCI 6'M10lr' Ill ~ 1"4 ,...., '. 810 10 I~ "'" . ~ ~ H TORO ~ * PACIFIC~ALK-IN THEATRES * ~ ~gain Matinees' •tJMMiil'.•14] ·iiiJ'.) ~ APWM1M1t1lff n ·· lrloNon ThrvsAruAon fACUtTYotCANOt{wooo ILI•.,,=~=~------ -...,.._.,_., { ': All 'erlorm1nc11 8ffo1t S 00 "'1 "fOOiJlOOSl" (PG) l.i.llDI ~-...,._~, ........... ~ ' ... '"S19ll SMf"l "'' 111io.1ow p• A.Vllliio.IG .. __ . .:-·· u~S,K E"flttl!llllfl &Hohl frr and Sal only• 1230. 300 ~30. S~DOUBACK ) ac.i«• MllMOS \ c ,., ,~ lllCl •ST l'Cl"' ••••• •itmOI.._, 1""1111 """"' ,..... 10 30. prrv 8 00 IQIQl;;J6172::4) ~ ;~ :c:.:~~~ .... 111 I ~ ·~ ~ OG l lMl)IHl ..,II°" 'ICOIW' ii') I 1\ 9 I) ~I ~IMI 64~ 91~ !'IOI SAOOHBACll ,_,., Ill Uk N COSTA MESA EllWiiels 8nsto ~07•~ COSTAMUA eo .. 1<os~m1 Ceolt! 979 4141 El TOHO £ o .. 1ros Saoo•t0ec• 581 5880 FOUNTAIN VAUIY f1tn1y fQU< 963 1307 GMOENGAOVt EOwJnls Weslt>IOl>k SJ0.4t()I OAA#Q( AMC0r¥>OtM~ 637 0340 •·M"'C'71 .. ':v~ , ... , ORANGE PilOI< s{)r;tnQt ()Ne-In 63A 9361 WUTMINSlER PK,t< s Ho WJf JY l>rvt In 891 3693 The nlusic Is on. his side. PG ~ R ~I P( llR "" .. .., .......... ·-· .. -·-, ' .... ,. __ NOW PLAYING lflllA H IOllO OflAllG( M•,118,~~ P 41 I IA HO\ ( 1n.PO<.t" t . .. \;/<I ~319 , • .., . .,,.t, •• hi~ )~~J 1•1Dt111:~t .. 'ill' \AA( OllAllGf COSTA MESA f .. ,. .. h ~ ' I .!!; WUTMlllST£11 Sf~um 0,,,,, r' fOUlllAlll VA~UT (,,,.M r.J<1 a-1c COITA .. 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"MTQW LAllllOOn VA~TOI (I ) :tfii)Ay lK ... 111 nw OWTO" (ll) ""' "tllrMQ•~ m "nfT'll( PUTl'Q wmt FW'' (I) "' . "SlllO l ..... Tll STOii[• <"I -lllw<• I\ 920 ~ Ill ODCllS (I I 0-100 'UCllC • M ...,. <"I -•llolrliOO IOI~ SADOlCBACk ... ' I ... !>at!>UO SAOOHB-CK \ l '., • ~I .U QllOS (I) • Jt ICllJl\OOF IKI -.. TW\ 6 JO IO tO 'PCllJCl AC.aJIY (11 _,,...,,,o '°" I .. , Sat !> .. O COSTA MESA 1 l AGUNA Hill 5 lAGlN .-!S MAU l90fll'I MllT11lll 'Q 8• ~11111 s 0 '., le '1CI ... (1'15) ~ ~· ...... 1200 200 •tO Tl( SfCllf !"I JU Ml 1 'I~ I IS ...,..~""='~~~--._''-6-00-81>0-=IO=OG LAGUNA HI.LS MAH lOll• Sllllllt 'PCl.ICl 10 ,., loo ..._ ~ (I) I>,, ,.. .. fl( 11• "'' ~t~ 1U"tt •. ~ 110~~ ,.~ 9~ --,-00-H-OOSl:-.;..<K.;...1 l AGUNA ltl.l S MAll .. ' 1 Io '•• loo a tut~ OOllt ICllO tGldllS I !Ill ODCllS t 11 I). I 1,.. If -..u.r (K l • • '" '411 • '~ 710 u s 100 ,.~ lt...:ll-:~~~~-----.,~.,,.:;-::,.7,~~~w LAGUNA BOCH lllO<C"9 CJll Ill IUISOll fll t ... .. ~ SOOIH com Clll:MA c IR , ... THI 1>w. 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COMe eACK! ~ •I j ..__. ~·r·-- -...ill!.I' ---i:~-..o I I ( { by Pat Brady by Harold Lt DOux lSTHE COUNSEL.OR BACt< FROM LUNCH YET, GLORIA? CONSIDERING THE FICT lHAT HE'S HAVING LUNCH WITH iWO YOUNG. ATTRACTIVE WOMEN.I 'M NOT SURE HE'LL BE BACK FOR A COUPLE OF IF THEY 'RE 0..IENTS. YOU NEEDN'T TELL ME THEIR ~ES ... euT DO 1 KNOW THEM? OURS. A86EY' - • • -·. - - .. / Katherin'? Gibbs produced the best . . . Sec~etartal school grads tell their accomplishments By JOY DEE ANTHONY Dell "9c c.nu putdellt "If she's wearing purple eye shadow, she's not from Katy Gibbs" declared a Wall Street Journal anicle about graduates of the institution some say is "the Harvard of sec- retarial schools." Alumni and prospective students of the Katherine Gibbs Secretarial Training School headquaners in Bos- son got together at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel last week totoast their successes and talk old times. Janet Lee. a graduate in 1940 and now principal of Charles A. Lindburgh Junior High in Long Beach. said she swapped some intcresti11&.~l9ries with fellow gradu- ates at the hotel function . Her own story of Katherine Gibbs is one of unmitigated praise. time when I had to work and so forth," Janet says. Though she had alwar.s wanted to be a secretary and didn t set out for a career in education while at Gib!¥, Janet says that bec.ause of her training, "when the opportunity ·came along I was prepared to go after it." .. I learned after I got out the value ofsettinghigh standards and living up to them," Janet says. Her firstjob ~as as a Ne~ Yor.k secretary at a salary of S 110. a sum which brought envy from her peers. That was "really good pay'' in those days she says. Page Kenyon. a 1957 Gibbs gradu- ate. never inteqded to remain a secretary. Curren'fl y' the Costa Mesa resident is in business development and sales for Stuart Titl e Insurance Company of Santa Ana. KATHARINE GIBBS SCHOOL Smith seeks ma]Ority of Gearhart.·stock Smith International Inc. of Ne¥t- port Beach announced that it intends to commence, as soon as practicable. a cash tender offer for up to 3. 7 miUion shares of common stock (approximately 23.1 percent of the outstanding shares). par value 50 cents a share, of Gearhart lndustnes Inc. at a price of$31 per share. Smith presently owns 5,310,014 shares (approximately 33.2 percent of the outstanding shares). If Smith ac4uires 3. 7 million shares in its tender offer it would own approxi~ately 56.3 percent of•the outstanding shares of.Gearhan. The offer will not be conditioned upon any minimum number of shares being tendered. Earlier today a state court judge in Tarrant County. Texas, lifted in pan an ex-pane temporary restraining order entered against Smtth on April 18 which had prohibited Smith from. among other things, commencing a tender offer, purchasing Gearhan materials wruch will be filed with the Securities and Exchanse Com# rnissfon promptly. ,. S mith l,ntern1t1onal. head· quartered in Newpon Beach. is a wortdwi4e suppUer of prbducts and services to the oil and gas drillinl completion and production and ~ining industries. , · Gear:!!1rt IQdustrics· tnc.. head· quarteml in F<s'rt Worth, Texas, is a high technology company that per· form\ wireline and other well evalu· ation services for the oil and ·..sas explor¥ion and production industry. In addition the company manufac.. tures wireline equipment and sup- '°J>lies both fo r its own use and for sale to independent wirelioe service com- panies. "The trainmg I received at Gibbs as far as discipline 1s concerned really enabled me to get throu~h college at a She recalls fine prnfessors of litera- ture from places like Harvard and MIT. "They gave yo u a smattering of ev-erything." at the school she says. and that's what really paid' off. •· 1t was a grueling experience:· she adds. ' common stock or obtaining control of Gearhart. Microwave firm shows sales boost _ _. Ear nings not chicken feed Los Angeles-baseq Pioneer Take Out Corp .. a leading fast food res- taurant chain. has announced .its earnings for the years ended Dec. 25. 1983. and Dec. 26. 1982. Revenues were $44,604.000 and $44,802,000 for 1983 and 1982. respectively. Income before taJCes amounted to $2,402.000 for 1983 vs. $1,850.000 for 1982 -an increase of 29.8 percent. Net income was $1.41 0.000 for 1983 vs. 1,042,000 for 1982, an increase of 35 .3 percent. The company reported that the incrc.ase in income was due to efficiencies· that were implemented early in the 1983 year. Today, she says, the school emphasizes fvturecareers in manage- ment far more th.an they did in the days when even female graduates of four year coll~es had difficulty in finding nontraditional jobs. '·we are dill'erent from what people out here th~ of as a .secretarial school." sa)" Leana Dowaliby, Gibbs' long distance recruiter and hostess at the hotel event. She stresses the communication skills and the sense of pride and confidence earned at Gibbs. Though many leave sec- retarial positions for managerial slots. others stay with a boss as he or she moves up into a corporate presidency. Pre-n u ptial pacts works h op M ay 10 Right now. there are around 300 alumni between Los Angeles and San Diego. Dowaliby expects the Orange County area to continue to be a strong draw. The school is currently con- sidering new locations to add to the list of 11 sites now.in operation. Back east. sa ys th e school's admin- istrati ve assistant Nancy Steiner. the Kathernine Gibbs name is very well kno\\n. Graduates are said to have exceptional skills in Business English, shorthand and typing. Employers pay the school's placement agency to get a first pick of each year's crop. T hough the Boston school 1s the only Gibbs t~ainingground with dormitory facili- ties. there are commuter schools in New York. Pennsylvania. Virginia. Connec11cut and New Jersey. Modetat entrance leads to the ••ffarTard ·of Heretarla.l schools.•• the Katherine Glbba Secretarial. Tralnlng School. Orange County attorney Joy Dickerson will ·conduct two work- . shops th is spnng at the Women's 9Pponunit1esCenterofUC Irvine on joint tenanc} laws and pre-nupual agreements. The free workshops will be conduct May IO and June 14. Each runs from 3 to4:30 p.m. job. An anthropology major, for instance. may find the going tough in the business world unless secretarial skills can be used as a starting point. For these swden ts. an I I -week crash course mat<es an entry level position possible. c The women's center is located at 2811 Main St. in Irvine. For ad- ditional information or regjstrauon. Students with colle$.e dcgrt=Cs. Stei ner ~ys. come to Gibbs to help them get that first foot-i n-the-door Older students use Gibbs as a way to reenter business after years away from the job market. A vatlable to all enrollees 1s a word proceS'Sing pro- gram. a two-year li beral arts pro~am which is now1nlhe process of gaining call 856-7128. ' Able Com.puter pro111otes Olson, Melton ., Jack Olson is the ntw director of national sales for Irvine-based Able Computer and Karen M elton has been appointed Western region sales manager. announced Al Rote, group vice president. Olson was formerly with Wespercorp. serving as the genenrl !llanager of the firm's personal computer division. Melton has been with Able for three years. most recently as the Southwestern district sales manager. In her new post, she will be re~ll.Slblc for sales in 11 Western states plus Alaska and Pfawaii. Able designs and manufactures communications, general purpose and network products that can be used with systems by Digital Equipment Corp. • • • Charles E. Butler has been appointed vice president of marketin$ for MSI Data Corp .. while Joseph R. Falvey is the new vice president of North American sales for the Costa Mesa-based firm . Butler. who came to MSI as the vice president of finance and administration in 1979, will be responsible for foreign sales. marketing. field service OLSON MELTON and marketingadm1nistrat\on. Falvey. who joined MSI in 1977 as senior sales representative for the company's Northeast region. will be responsible for all U.S. sales and support activities. as well as MSl's reseller and federal government sales programs. • • • · ~merlcao Data Industries. loc., an Irvine-based developer and supplier of turnkey data processing systems, has integrated two softwaf"c systems -RE- TAIL/3000 and IDEAS/3000-into a sin~lc packaJe that can handle all ~tail and distribution f~nct1on~ required of multi-store retailers. The package, which retains the name RET AIL/3000. was developed for several companies that bad purchased ADI retail software and needed distribu- tion capabilities as well. • • • Steve Selman, operations director of Vera Imported Parll1 Corp.. has been named vice president of operations, responsible for' mana~emcnt and coordrna1ion of the company's fou r dismbution centers nationwide. The C.Osta Mesa resident joined Y era Corp. as branch manager of the d1stnbution center in Rancho Dom10gur1 m 198 I. • • • KlDI Advert11tn1 and Pabllc Rtlatl~nt of Newport Beach has hired Darlene Lavender as 1un1or account executive. Lavtndcr will serve on the ae<:ount team for the Mlt1lon Viejo Co. She p~v1ou~ly held Positions as mcdta director and account roord10ator for HDbbert Adverll1tn1 ud Publication Rel.atlona of Col.LB Mesa: a!I media dirt<:tor for &..allt htre Music of Newport Bench and ""' marketing director for Chandler Advertising West in Irvine. ••• J. Fernando Niebla has been selected Small Business Person of the Year b:r the Los Angeles district office of the U.S. Small Business Administration. Niebla. who serves on th e Board of Directors of the United Way of Orange County, owns lofotec Development, which offers system engineering for aerospace applications. software systems, space satellite and space transportation systems and computer systems in general. The firm -begun with SI 0.000 and.one employee in 1978 -now employs I SO and ra nks among the top 200 Hispanic companies in the nation. • • • Irvine-based Allen & McGarvey, loc. has been hired to handle public relations duties for the National Technological University in Fort Collins. Colo. The not- for-profit institution is lhe nation's first electronic university, providing satellite-delivered. graduate-level BUTLER FALVEY engineering courses to students nationwide. ••• Cathy DIDomenico 1s the new office manager ofTbe A11oclatloo, Inc., a Costa Mesa ~hotographic compan)'. Di Domenico's new job coord1na11ng custo,tner services 1h all departments. including scheduling pick-up and delivery, office services. and invmce.._purchasin~nd accounting functions. ..... • Western Digital Corp. ha!. announced Its earnings for the third quarter and first nine months of fiscal 1984, ending March 31. Net sales for the third quaner increased 105 percent to $27.568.000 1n comparison with the same period last year. Earn10g!. per share were 11 cents. compared with 6 cents _Qrcv1ously. Net sales for the nine- month period were S71 .445,000. for a 122 percent incruse. Earnings per share rose from 4 ce nts to 29 cents. • • • Fullenon-based Pioneer Bank has established a loan production office at Tbe Koll Center 10 Newport Beach to service the southern portion of the county. The Koll Center 1s located at 5000 Birch St .. Suite 344. Newport Beach. • • • The Newpon Beach public rcltHions firm of Gloria Zi1ner & A11oclatt1 received a Protos Award of Eltccllence from the Public Relation• Sodery of America'• Oranae (ounly chapter The award was presented in recognition pf the firm 's work on R. Thomas Ashley\ 'uper Auction '83. held 1n C'o\ta Mc~a hm AuauM. Allen 8 . \Jry ·wa\ in charge of 1h4.' ~hie~ account degree status. and a one year sec- retarial course . "Our students come out with reall y employable skills." Steiner said. For example, a strict attendanc.e policy which ousis \hose who skip too many classes teaches students reliabihty. A dress code asking students to wear what they would in the corporate .world gets them in the habit of looking their best. This indicates to prospective employers that Gibbs graduates have.class, Steiner feels. Irvi ne firm v entures into health care field VTN. Corp. of lrvme announced this week it has entered into negotiations with Al vin W. Rattan. sole shareholder of Continental Paci fi e Enerprises Inc.. to effec t a business combina- tion between VTN and Contine ntal Pa c ific Enterprises. The company also an- nounced it has entered into a JOint marketing program wtth Continental Pacific EnteTpr1ses directed towards projects in the health care industry. The co mb1nat1 o n proposed by Rattan essen- tially provides for acqu1s1- t1on by VT N of all of tht'. outstanding shares of Con- ti nental Pacific Enterpnses and certain related entities in exchange for VTN com- mon stock. The proposal is subject to. among others things. an acceptable valuation of the two companies by an inde- pendent in vestment bank- ing firm and an opinion as to fairness of the proposed transaction The proposed combina- tion would be sub1 cct to al>proval b) a maJOnt} of d1s10 terested shareholders ofVTN . The companies have im- plemented a Joint market- ing effort directed towards projects in the health care tndustry. including hospi· tals and medical office buildings. On March 22 Rattan purchased 850.000 shares of VTN's common stock from its three principal shareholders. James J. Trindle. C. Richard Nelson and Kenne\h W. C'~rlson. Rattan also has an option to acquire an additional "94,000 shares of VTN's common stock from the principal shareholders at a pncc of $4 per share. VTN provides com- prehem1ve 1nte1rat<'d engi- neerina. arc h1tecturnl. plan nlng. survc} mi and cnv1ronmentl'I S<'•cncr' ~..Vices to client\ 1n both the puhhl and pnvatt' ~·­ tor.., The lemporary restraining order was origjnally entered pursuant to a suit broug.ht by Gearhart and certain of its sh':lreholders. against Smith in Tarrant County on April 18. Litigation in this state court action. as well a5 in the federal coun action brought by Gearhart and certain of its shareholders on April 18. against Smith in the distrj..~ourt in the Northem District oTTexas. is still pending. Further proceedings in state court are scheduled for Ma) 7. Smith said the tender offer will be made pursuant to definiuve offenng Talk Saturday on purchasing computers Coastline College will present a one-day seminar on Saturday. May 5 for executives and business people contemplati ng buying or leasing com- puters. .. Computer Fundamentals for Ex- ecutives and Business Persons .. will be offered from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Mesa Verde Learning Center. 2990 Mesa Verde Drive East. Costa Mesa. Lecturer Dennis Murry. a manage- ment systems design consultant and computer applications engineer. ~•II discuss computer terms and tech- nology, business apphcations and the future of computers. The $50 rcg1stration fee incl udes lunch. EIP Microwave Inc. reported net sales for the second quarter ended March 31 , 1984, of.S4.457,000, an increase of 12 percent over the same period last year. _ EIP Microwave manufactures microwave test and measurement instruments, which are predominant· ly used in the defense and tele- communiC4ltions industries. The company has manufacturing facilities in San Jose. Calif., and maintains corporate offices in Newport Beach. Earnings per share remained cons. / tant at 14 cents a share. while net income grew approximately 2 percent over last year to $322,000. • Incoming orders for the second quan er were $4.6 million. a 28 percent increase over the second quarter last year. Backlog was $5.1 million. up 46 percent over the same penod last year. This includes a large militar) contract for S2.390.000. which provides for production quan- tity shipments beginning m the first quarter offi~I I '}85. Sales for the six months ended March 31 . 1984. were S8. 582.000. up 1 percent from the comparable prior period. Net income decreased I percent to S642.000. while earnings per share remained c9nsui.nt at 28 cents a share. The overall outlook for fiscal 1984 remains good. the company sa~d. Income order rate should continue to increase over last \ear. and source product line should make a strong c-0n1nbuuon 10 the second half of the fiscal )ear. a spokesman added. . 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' l6 ts 16 8g 13 t I : UP • • • ~ ~ 6 I . , 7 • 4 I DOWNS t + + I + t t ~ + , uo 1 Uo UP • UD '• UP ' Up 1• UP , UP 10 138 13 3 lJ 3 l~ 0 h~ 12S L llSI Cnp P el 11'. -'1 , Off 17 5 ) ft • 811 17 l 3 ' rt 14 3 7 ." ·~ fl 13 6 J • l g11 13 3 s '• ff 13 0 7 l 011 1'1 5 7 I~ .,, Off 11 5 2 M • OH 10 5 Siaa11 busl.JJess owners urged to get Involved State.:conference In Sacramento start1ng n~s. and SB 98l, the late pt)mCOlS l)fe-¥1ilU'1lnln1oCtiOO ... inst11L1tt ThJ IW~~mms lhcDEBDand =-=---=~~--~-----~~~----=,_:...' ___ ,,......: _ bill. aaency or a state rqulatory qeoey to local ecooomac development corpor-May 9. ves owners some le tslaUve clout More recently, AB 1226 allows recover lcpJ co 11 and fca up to •lions to particlpete ln the staic'a bus1ne owners tocoll~llhe ~tofa S7500 ifl~C actabn wa taken without secondary loan mu ket . SACRAMENTO -The Lbrd's ference on Small Business. bad check plus three times us face "subs&anual JU$taficatioa" •by the To auend the conference, o~e must Pra~ contains S6 words. Orpnued by a toosc-kmt group or value,~ well as court costs. from.the aaency, and AB 16$0, which est.ab-own andoroperate a mall buaineu lJl Lincoln's Gettysburg Address has smalf bu.siness activists who wtrt ofTendina customer in small chums lishcs a sccoodary market fo r small the tatc of Callfomia. 268 words. The enti re Declaration of involved in the t 980 White Houst coun: . business loans. For more infonnalion about the Independence 1s 1,322 word s Iona. C'onfcrcnce on Small Business. the Th ts bi ll became law as of Jan. I. The Oepanmenl of Economic anJ bien.nial State Conferenc:t on Small Federal rcaulations 1ovemina 1hc State Conferences on Small 8usi neu Twooth~rc«ntsuOClCSSC1are.AB 13. Business Development's loayi::siness. contact Chuck Rozum, sale of cabbages arc 26,91' words were formulated to allow en· whicb allows small businesses -Portfolios contain $1 0 maUion. ' 1984 president, -.1 714-S98·282 1. long. trcpreneurs in Califom1u tq define Excessive regulation 1n all indusJ problems afTecuna their businesses, tncs. not just qsbba&c commerce. 1s establish solutions, communicate the bane of small b usiness. Large this data t.o legislators and lobby for companies can afford to hire extra corresponding ICjjslation. · staff to ·grapple with.,.govclJlment At the' third California State Con· req uirements; for small firms, ex-fertncc on Small Business, convenin& cessivc fonns and rcaulations mean May 9·11 dunng National Small that the owncrmanager adds ad· Business Weck at Sacramento's d1t ional hours to his or her workweek. Woodlake Inn. a full agenda of issues What can small business owners do currently fa cing entrepreneurs about federal and state regulations throughout the state will be addressed and other legJslauvc problems that by some 400 elected and appointed are hamperi ng their businesses? delegates. Get mvof\:cd 1n the political pro-Throughou t the winter. 38 dtstnct ct·ss and fight to change burdensome co nferences. s1m1lar in organ n a11on regulations. The opportunity has to the state conferen ce. ha\e been never been better for business owners held statewide 10 permit local bus1- 10 att ract the attention and aid of ness owners to vocalize issues that legislators. particularly in 1984. an t~t"Y would hke to see cult1vatt"d at the dect1on year. acramento gathering and to elect There are many wa)'s for busmess delegates f~m their area to attend men and ~en to interact wtth state and· re present their views. M UTUAL FUNDS N•W YOttlC IAI'> NI W$ 10)4 IUO 9ond •~ NL h'IVntoo GrO\IP Mut ,., IO,fO 1191 NO.C II.,. 1241 lvetl Uf ~t -ni. ..... N -· hl're • .. u s '~" s I OS NL 10$ •o • S6 02 Mui ... , of Om•na QoltOll l),. IO S $ ff!I p:: • t•..._, ....... n C•r<lfll 11 It 12.'1 ConffO 961 'f>IL IOS §l' t U 7 21 Am« t a NL Quah IUS IS >f ROI IN """"* Al..cl• ranee 10.71 10 94 Ost11y 11 69 IOS • •IS s )0 Grwtl'I S ~ S 60 ~en r llflen ll ell Oo ~!i :i•i;. 11~10Nt ~~cine .g:,,~ :8~ HrY 1•1~11rn ~~~e ~ .. 1~t1 MnO 10>1 11 11 '1Kv 1. •• nart F d NL Eircll •2 31 NI._ IOS ND uo .. ., MllQuel 17.• NL Pulnem Funcn ~ NI Dir NL P::rtdm 11.5' NL IOS Pr09 '1S 1 10 ""411 $111 S2 t s NL Conv 1251•1l 7S H • Nii' ::.~ !Jttl'.r'I •S NL Maoet JS,lt lt ll In• Mii 10 61 ll 2• Ntl A via t 73 t Sot CatTa IHI 14. 15 OI el r= ( ~. • 1~f~r/u'lfli I~ n ri:. 84 1: ~ ~t :~: ~~~ rn 3'0 Nalllld ll.. NL (9'111 '64 univ CNr .. 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E• tOt 911 Nt!Gltl 7 St llS Ta• E• 11.1' 271S f'"' Ct P t •el AllMlf 9 lf f 74 omoollle GJoucl -· 10 19 10 61 Keufmn 10 NL Nat Bo I W 9 91 US Gld rn•Nf."! f NL ~:~·;.CF 1,41 ltf# ~~ I tt ~~ +~~~ 3tn ~t "~rt~ F~no1n' liB N~~T, F1SI Ufl Vlllt !~ttittt Tr:,: ~~ u~~h·Rl Amer Caoue1 tn ~J N F1~eP 1610 NL oncom rwtll I " VOv•O 4 n fl~ ~t CotnlUl''I' 4 • 2 " ~J~ 2 •• -I and federal lawmakers in an effort to Examples of issue areas are: rev- ach1 eve thei.r go3ls beyond writing cnue and taxation. finance. local le tters and contri6utmg to campa)gh government. agriculture and water cofTers. resources, banking and commerce. Th<:se include attending can· bu sin ess and professions. energy and d1datcs' fo ru ms sponsored by public utilities. health and welfare, chambers of commerce. becoming housing and urban affairs. industrial 9 1 acti ve in trade orga nizati ons' or relations. insurance. and transpor- 9 1 professional cl ubs' political acti on 1at1on. J g11 10 s ~· 10 s Off 10 3 • Off 10 0 • Off 9 S • Off • Otf '• 8tf U com mittees, and panicipating in Three major le&is.latjye s~cesses 8 s community meetings held by local (there were others) resulted from the • CorP8 d • 41 1 OI CollCMd 26 11 N F1n~~~t1 Pr:t. al. ~~o~ld 19 .~ :~~ ke~Q 17 r. II 90 Que!aln':~ ·~-= ~t ~'!.1~ ,\~ 4J.S~ i~~: :~~ :rn !g~~·~u~ 1ttl ~t Vr\4 ,.~ L WIFd IS~ 17 s Tu£• ~SI ... , t aGr unav¥.I !eel ,, ,, lilt •<II .. 4' NL oolev ~ l NL nclT • 13» l Mun 8 1 • I 4 Nt:lltrW "f OCllTa 14 IS t3 U~a r tM ~ d Am 11 30 12 35 pCa~ll • ' NL lndu\t • NL. ~'" fl ' t) llrOV •• NL lt9YCt •3'1 IONIL• u " fS,}t Grow 7409 Nnl ll"'f ap I S6 1693 l,,com , NL. mm 4 u•rd 7 NL SFT EQI 9 5 V, a J 43' Har1>r If 14 H rifer on Fulld• WrloT 9 1 ll ec" 2 ~Div ff N~ ~ftco Secur US,t.A t;rouJ> Ht v.o ·11 ff Cm~ct unavru "'' lnvn lori OI RI I 14 nlll .97 N Eaull 'a Nt Grw•ll n.I ~! MJJn 8 I 1 1 I Inv unn~ §rid Ao IH9 'iu USGvl t 7 I 1r1n IH I N Grwlll 11. N 'nco 10 OTC t • Plto una ••ll iteo 10 3 I ~IJ'\I~ Men. NY Mun I OI N lnco 2 1 NL ;011 4 Pace 20 2 Qua1Tx u11eval1 rwlll • 23 Cu\ 81 r untvell NV Vent , .. II Munte 11 N[ • H j Pro•1d • 62 • " Sunlltt l"l•vr ll lllC9f'I\ .. 01 .. ff "' R2 r uNV~I e•wt GI 14.n NL SIP•ul .,, •• ,, h II ' Vt ntr 13ff IS 2' FA Sm. 1514 NL. Intl~ ISS7 11 u t •r unav fwl Inc 1 NL Cacolt i~ ILJI '"fl! 5" I •E •C.11\ 14 39 NL FA Int 100 49 NL. Nat Re\ 6 9' 1 us KI r U!ltn I k:flOla ~6 NL GrW1n I U111tle0 1'' AtN111ct n I en Willer 90-10 •1 •i " ul 10 r une••M ~II~ .• , L tnco Acum ·11 I A 8al I • vGt r I i. NL Oo1n 1 • I u• H r unaveM In r I I L SHd IS I NL C.wltl l 5 I 11 7 • 171 7 ~ s '. ~ ff -1 Off Ott Off • Ott -2 Otf • Off ' Otf elected officials. first Caltfom1a State Conference on B One highly successful method Small Business: the passa$e of SB 5 7 5. SJ uuhzed by entrepreneurs to affect the equal access to justice bill . AB I ~ leg1slat1 ve change in recent years 1s 10 13, wt11ch reduced government I o the· btcnnial C'alifom1a State Con-regulations that impact small bus1- ~mc;p • vGt 12 21 12 '9 ~-E• 1 943 u \ r unt vell I I 1 4 Scm r Fu~ =o ~ M..i1 ~ VMJ-U~ ~...NL • $16 M4. ¥6 I U "' ~ L 8on<t 1 I lndVel 10 10 NL WI a S 2t S 77 lnlt r una••il Nuv"" un•~U om SI 11 N u ltd Fund•) f'd Inv 1 NliRK 7 11 126 Wall 9 60 NL Tar.Fr r 1 lt6 NL OtMue t NL vt4 S. 4 N ,t.ccm 1.~ ,, Grw111 I I Seer TE olltr 6 2l t 5' Mau une ve11 OoHnl\tlmt< 0 •oGr 1326 N &ond f 1ricom 1i !8 11 °' 10 " NL. Fno G111 • ,, sos L9911Ma1 I' 2, NL "'IM 'J H , M 1ncom 'rj1••R 1mc111 4 • ICA I ")7 Ta•Ell U 4 10 ,s ,,.O\lf\der, Grouo ~·p • • NL ~~ I 7 '"" Fd ., NL con lllC I , 1m NE co I 7• 14 •7 WrlOW 10 3t NL. Grwll• unav•ll ~et1lnn1 I~ U Nt QlllC J MMI S7 NL Ho Inc 1 ~ ~~n ~ : H °i:r· ~f'Jp 'J.. ~ :::i~ t:vr~.°" Grp N fl I 'o •ti ~~::,:; F]' tea' i . 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'I> 1' EIPa \ 3 • • E•oer8e I) • I) • 1 leNuCI S• SI • 1Moo1 ~... "'• me.or rs 1 , 1111Con• I I ' nR\• 1i , J • ntw1SJI 16'• II atOil l2 , H , rmG I~' I; •l ~:i~~~ H , 79 •I F-1Emp5 13 2• 1Ft\NnFtn 7l 21 ,,FioC•Q \ 8'• t t F1•NFI 14 , U .. F turocD • l 16 F o•t\10 )1 s~ F-ran•Co 1] l) / ~r4n1i.E IG 11 I' rttSC. \I • ;a , Frt"''"\' ~ I 0 I' I H8 )i'i )0 I ~f,,f!f('°' 1i , 17 • nA _., ) .11 I , nOtt.-t\ 17 • I] 1 ] S f I •~ 1 1 §nR E \' '1• • ~ .. ,4 ror-S.C \ 1 • 'J • 'tvAo,, ~ 9 • GH .. :>lcJ 47 41 / (,wroovr 6 l& 9' H60\0r 9 • 9 > Ham011 11 , II voMt1on U I• • HaroGo 2t , 71l<o MeuoLP 16 1 11 HenfN t 10'lo 21 MavPI 36'"' 31 • ecne ' 1'>.. 1s MavnOI 71> .. 21 'll HeflrdF 33 1 34 MCCrm 1) • 13t. HOO•tr 21'1 77' McFarl II 1 19t"> Hor11R\ I > 1 McQuev n to 21' 1 IMS lnl 2•'~ 7• MIOU W II 111 -. ISC "'" IS MdldCaco IS • 16 lnfrall\O I ~ Mldlltn i'-I I\ n1e1 ' j" 3 Mldl8k I , I~'> lntrtEnr 11• Mllllor \o\ tn19rpt1 Miu VICi 71~ 1n1mlG1 9 M~· •'-• n8W1n 111 ..... 16 -11t"> lw•SoUt " 36 MonfCI ,,, I emsl>v ,., MomiC 39' 40 erico 13:i. IJ' Moor•P 40 : r, , v1J1ffv 1 Morr\n •9>o Jo\lvn 2•'? ~ MotClll )7 711. ICal•ar I J· 16 ''• MuelS.r 1~'! 1n ":~~ , Ji:.; ~~:.~c Jt •. •y • 1C1m oa1 ' '?l.. 7 •1 NelwkS ~l ; ~6~ ~=ai . SI ' S, NVAlrl 13•. i. 1 ICn1oeV 26' • 21 1 NocaOG 11 ' 11 llratot 3 ' 3 • Nlt f\A ~ '• '1 • llutelo.e ' J• : J'"-N•fl\B ~1:: ll~ . ~:~\u i·· I,. ~t:rt JS S 1 L•ntC , :U , JS N•NC 12 • ~-"' L.ltCllm 1' \~· Nw\IPS Ulnv• 37 1 No••" '6 2 1 1• L.1118•0 , n • J'-Octane• t > 9 1 MCI \ I~ I'• Oo•l•vM • '• S MGF Otl Ol\•oCa 110 110 • Is l1 11 l? Ol\F1rro I > 9 • 13\C.E 10 • 10~ OttrTP 6 6 > gelPI 1 • 1"-PCA Int • • 4 • t 1Rt t t 9'-PaC>\IB \ .25% ; II •• .. PcGeR 42 '6 Pa ulP1 1"-1~ P"rMf •1' •.i... PenaE nt 30 )O•. Pe111ar ' IS IS • Peoc>E ' 12 17' • Petrlte 211'> 19 ~ Pellll>On IS~ 16 'II Plonf11 I S· 16 1"-Pou l\ 41 '11'• Powell 33 33''11 PrttC.M 37~ 33t, PoS1evn J9~ 4C)t'll PrOGrP IS1 • IS11> POS•NC 2S''• 2St • Purt8en 2S1'> 24' • ~krC U"-14''> Ra~\ I•'" IS''ll lh vmno 2' 30 RHVI\ '47'1 '7 , RoadS 11-"' II 1 Rol>l>Mv 10-"' 10 1 Rou•~ l "-l'• Sadlier • • • hleco 29 29 1 StHelGO 2t~ 29 > SIPau• 10 o 10 • S<r•PH II > Iii. s .. v•f' ' I) > tl.., fil'or t 17'• 1e • •CMtr l• '~ JS •mtl t 7 l '" - "' '9 ~,..mut •S •S • t••<n• , • • • , Ct!Wlr 1•>. 7S wE tSY 11:.. I -. \lren 6 , 6 tel\Ovll 1~~ ib !!~~~~~ H': ~ ; n ; n~ ~5~~t l : ., ! 2r .. 2r.~ TIME oc • "" 7S 1 76 T amt>rd S2 • S2'- I , 9 f:'~~ 19"" 191, ) ' 3" TICmA \ ll~;; ~~:.~ '6 • ~ ' Tennant S6 S6 > t lora rv 1 ' 7>.. 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T••M 12 I • Hor Men 21 H NL Al\all'ltrt 9 t NL 111 lllC 2 13 to lllCO unavell "'" •!lr'IC 10 11 NL VS SIM 13 s " s H11llon Group Mtfrlll L.vn(ll.., Plan Inv 1l 07 NL ln•ttl UMVf il llld Tr ~ oGI" 16 1 Nl EC>tnlad l Group Bono r 9" NL. 88\tC IJ '" 1' .. Ptolrnd 12 lS NL Sod n uneveff MuHY !o,1FF0 ~,..,1 f."'m t Sl 10 42 ~Ill unavell J aoll 1''6 21JS PrecM11 193' NL Trull unevall Mulnl ti •uce I ll NI. ngRt 'J t• U 1' mrg r una•l •I Qll 8 d 10 71 I I 16 PrtCt Fund\ Vent unav•ll MuL.11 M ul• & Bur p urvt v I 74 I• •7 wl" r u<1a•e•I dTom Crwtn uneveH ~ EctlY 12 93 ~ MuSl\I a ~•P•IG ' ~ NL. f noUltt I ~ NL. llllC ........ 11 10 n NL G1n1nc unt •••' 1&.Gr I 39 I ::::~ autlv I NL. vrgrn r l NL. ovSK 9 '1 NL Ho Inc 111 l Of tt\Cotn • It NL. en In IU I 11 I ~ olCn I NL. vrgrffl 1~ NL. Nall u11ave11 H• Olt 9 7e I It ln11 1' 70 NL. .. lllnc •SS L Wnctv H Yid une••~ PA Ptr Is NV Mun rs3•a 11 lnTrm I~ ~I I ~I N Ert unavaoi Ytt' Jn 17~ It Sl ~';'~r,·a 7 ~ 1~ • C•e..•z.',v G•or:1) NL. ~~:~ Jun<» NL l~.· sl~~UP I 14 " ~. I I1 ' 1 ~.r:r" U~tllNL.. ,,.t!-'t"' U'lp 5-21 Wein Eo 'l '4 NJJ '"' °'-" 1' 01 NL. Am L.dr una•••I Grwl" 6 3S 6 f4 Munoln 61. 1 1 hFrSI • ·~ NL. lS'iv~'' S 7~ 6 21 W:0 I '5 11 *t•~ 1•11 NL. Eacn uneve• lrxotn )St 311 PecFo 16 11 lln Pro !ot<v.c•> PrOGrt 111 ... W V~lrulm'7 NL t •F'L. 10) NL. Fdllnlr unevatf Tr>! Sh 10 1• 11 OI Pl'lnta 11 ff M M<tdl 'it NL. l lFrm G• 9 '4 NL 'l!:f.w I 60 N~ r .FL. ... NL. GNMA une••ll 11\dUlfr• 71• Nl. SctTCI\ 9 FU'>CI 9 Nt tFrm 81 12 86 NL. ~ 1 Ot Ca•••n 8 u .,~ Ht tcm une •atl Int ·1nv11 "9t 16 )1 ~I>' Ve 11 I •• lllCQm I N t~ree1 •nv Vet~ 1 26 1114 g·~c.k· ,In~ 1''u 'r.:r'ICo, ""fn~ NL. :~:,,'E'!i~ 1 .. ~ •• ~,L. =A~~ ~'° t~ p,~ti'::' 'rH .. NL. r.~~~", ~~n ~t , ... r:.;,. 7".~,io.o al'l(!n fr toe• unava•I tn•P H•V I O NL Mdw8BV Ea.,.1v un•••tl ln•tl • 69 IS I-Pr..v~lf'' 4 ·•·d I •• • Fre unavtll lnv8o1 ......... , 10 n NI., GvlSc • 60 'H Steedrntll ~· ftuol• r· It ~ H·lnc I • I ,. us (,yl UN•t ll H•lnco une••·' MS8 Fd 19 Ny H VIO '69 10 Am Ind NL. ~ M()nlll I , "19 F •defttv ln•l\I NIH TF u,,..... MdlC;•t ' 3 Nt. HYM;.; IJ 70 14 s Auoc: NL Charge mav t OOIY Howtotellournewsa · s·accounts from your savings account. T iered Mon ey Market Savings Acco unt: rate up to 8.753 , yiclJ u p to 9.1 l %. It , .. 1 .1 --.1\ llll.!' ,Kuiunt th.11 n:.illy r.l!c.., ''l'1·n 11111, 11t11• r1t·rt·\I m11nc \· n1.1rkc t ...,,l\'111J.!" 1u1<11111 ... :\II • 11k\·' 1' .1 ~2 1Cl\..°' m1rnmurn dcr<1..,1 t I 1L· ·" 1\ '•" 111~..., .h 1..1111111. \'llU can m.1kl' dt'PP..,1 t-.. 111 "11h1l1 1\\.d .... 111\t111w \'PU chu<.)'l' But unl1k1: '1tlw , \ 111_• .... 11l1111 nr-.. '1 iu ·11 ).!l.'t higher m ~ukct 111tn· 1· ... 1 t .111· f," .1 h1~.:l wr ..... 1,·mg..., h.tl.mce M.untam 111 "'• r.1~l ,l.11h 1"11.mLL' hcr\\'ccn 52 .5000(~ ;rnd "'lq ~qi) !I•> .11111 \111J II 1.·.1 m K K4''.1 tnterc..,t pl'r tinnum ':'-2\' 1\\ re t ~·~" 1>1Jll \)l) l'ilm:-. 8 94°n in tcrc\t pt.·r . 111n 11111 "'1~' \\\' \.\' 11r mtirt: earn .9 11",, i ll.te ~·'it per .1111H1111 :\,1.·1.1J.!1· ,l.11h h.1LHKl''-unti 'tn" $2 .5()() 00 ,1ill l.111 1 .1 "'I ~""I '.11Ht'rl·..,1 r.Ht.' '·' \\t II 1'\ l 'll l.!l\l' \1 i\I 1. ht·l'k writing pn,·tlcgl·.., nt LIJ ,,, ) 1 h1 lk' ~'1·1 m11n1h \\ ln·tl' 1·l-.1· \.in \(Ill find tl ... a\ ltlg ... ClLLOUnl 1 h .11 111 kr ... t h1 .. 1' r'1.· 111 tll'\.1hil1tv and high markl't ratt' 11111·11·-.1' l1r1 ,J,,1hh ""' \\ hl'rl" \'Pll rt' \,l\'tn).! now ·\ 11 "' ''. rc111· '11·fc/, ~ >-rl''. c1 nnuu/h An H 6'"-r. rtHt' '11./d,"' II 0111111ilh ..\11 ~;-~''.,rclll''tHIJ,411''.,dnnu 11/h /1 '< ,, t 11111J11!l11t11111 '' ''mf,[e rntant u1lt ulcHcJ 1111 ,, '' '" '''t' ,f.t\ ''"''' 11nd, rcd11cd munthh Rcuc' tlh' ,,,, (I I It J {11l1• ,,/,, ~-h1111j!( . Passbook Money Market Savings Ac count: rate 9.503 , yield 9.9253 . f-n r tho..,l' l,f \'PU kcl'r1ng $10.ll0L' or murl' in --. .1) )'',, p.i... ... hu(lk ,l((1 1un t. !Lhl fu r the cnn\·cnicncc llf ,1 p.1 ........ hnnk \\'l:\'l. i!<lf .1 hcttL'r tc .. k ,1 Dl'po..,it that nHHW\ If) ,1 P.Ktfll h·dl'r1tl ra ...... hlHlk Money Market S,1\ lllL!" Aullllllt .111li \nu 'll t·.i rn 9925"., interest rn .innum Th.11 .... pr.1(11l.ill\' douhk· what you're · 111.1k111c nc 1,,. )(HJ II J.!t·t ,1 1";1..,..,hP<1k th.I! \\'nrk.., JU'-lt l1h• your • nld n n L' 01w 1 h,1t kc... you \\·1thdrn\\' o r J c ro~it money ,1n\ tmw y<1u like . \\'ith ;ill dw ..,;lkty and securi ty of cl ra ........ houk [f you r hal:rnn.' ever drop~ below $1(),lXX" 00. yo u 'II -.Till can) a 5 2 5°,, in terest rate . Rut at .1 q 50'7, rate in..,tl'aJ 6f ·s .5<~.lt docsn·t )~\ for a ..,<.·nou ...... an·r to h:1w anyt hing hut our Pa..,..,hrnik Monev Mark<.•t S tl\'tn}!~ Account a lntcn•'t ll1mpurcrncm '' '11n f,{c rnrcr~.~r cukula ceJ on u Jo'i or ~M dm hcN~ anJ 1..1cdired nwnchl-v Rare' <lTL' \Hn/l\l to /ll'TIOJll l h<LHl!l' • PACIFIC FEDERAL~ .• M • Jr .s / .. JI 1 I< )l\N ;,5r;r c lf•H r . • t'' , , I JI I Monthly Money Market Savings Account: rate 9.50%, yield 9.503. T here·!'> a h1g d iffe rence between our monthly monev mmket ... av mg ..... 1crount and other monthly clCCOUnt.., Our current 9 50'\, rer annum interest rate lt'.., a high rn tr you'<J cxpt'C t to fm<l only on longe r tt.•rm 6 or 12 month acfounts. But with Pacific Federal'~ mo nthly account. you can earn th ese mar- ket ra ce~ for as liule n. 30 d t1y"·J·ust by maintaining a $2 . 500.0() mini mum h nlancc uring that time Of cour~t.'. 1f you wa nt your money to conti nue co grow, you cnn auwma t1cnll y ren~hc account at the prevailing hig h market ra te each time your 30-day cenificntl' mmurrs . So don't wnstc nnv time collecting htgh mtere r Open a Mo nthl y Money Market avings ·Account vrt t P:-icif1c Federal .mJ Mart t:a rni ng long te rm rat C!'I on your own ll'fm'-1 Th<! OHl'rl'~r L·om/>H UUlcm rs ~11nple mceresc calculated on a 36) or ~60 Ja.,, ha.,,~ anJ cTed ued monrhly. Rates art' \lthJ"<t to J>crrcnlrL lhWlRC Call yo ur local branch or I-Ht\' PAC IFIC/or rnrrcnr rates Fedcral regulanom ni.c7wrl' cl mhc;umna inrcrc~r penalc+v for early-withd rawal 111 I I 11 \I I ~ 111•!1 t ~II I UC -\11 oflt 1111 I\ 1: .. ,~~ 1114t,,1•'4d•I I ll"J'\\11"•\ .!141 l.1h"1rn1 (,,,,\l o•,, (,'\•1:1.:, 1,H11\t 1'"11\1 IH.ll1'\\lX'l'M•'IH11llrw'""J llhJ H11lhw,,.,.f I i I II 'l •' ' \ I '( 'I ' \ I I<\ ll 1 ', l i t • I L. \ t I° t I \ 11 I 1 ', rrh \1 rn ., ' '\\1 '''" It I\\\ •• .! I \ IJ I~' j 'I I I"' I I 'i ' Ill 'T I\:( I rn:-..: H \ltl\1 'l R 11.•111 •\l111tnqum ..,,rl'C'I Hunllltlll\10 Bt·.1,h ( \"!~I t!l'4l ~~fl n.:' 1 1l\1H1 IJ'I \l\g\f""I\ t 11\t1•, Ill I, \,,.,J,. c ·\·1.,1'l'l•1,tt\1\1'l"'il {'l\.Ti\l<l\)(.)1w'i111 11k J ~i.li,IA\c<n11t l)1111r11>CA'lft°M 1 1 141'1~(,711 r I 11 I l \ I \ f,. I I \ I I • ' ti I ( \ '11 , .. , I : I 't Ir I .... , • • I On the , • Due to .... tr•~IHI°" todaya'• ~ ... no1.- peet In the beifY PMOt, Due to late tranamiselon today's titting wiM not~ pear tn the Oalty Pilot. . Due to . .late tramsmlsak>n today's llltlng wm not ap- pear In the Oafty Piiot. AMEX LEADERS NEW YORK CAP)· s.tft, Wec:lnesdey price •!Id net che'"'9 of the lo most .ctlve American Stoc~ Exche~ lu uu . tradi ng natlonall v al more thtn s 1 ~l~Lab8, ~Wi ~:r:: New Proc Vflf'~tlm1 Uni Hl'CS Gu ane NEW YORI( CAP) -""°'' active ov.,. ·ttw-coun1.-11~1 1UPOtled t>v NASO ,.;.,,,. voiu! "t "aed Cha AooleC • l,'1•. ~ 1,,. 111-MCI I , 1,703. ~ ~ '- Sffilll ' "~ 1 '. 1 lt ll. Tandem '511 ~ 1 ~ Intel ' 7ft, 37 + 1 io. Quotrn ~ 1 , 11•1• I ~ Tandotl • 11~ 11~ l'tl Com 1',.. ~ 1 A~ s u~, ~1.4 U1."I 1' • EnR\v W. 4'-•~ Goto Quor£ s ME rnLs Quon s That's an apt desert pt ion of both bus-i ness and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where compani,es are gotn~ and which peopl are helping them get there.just watch Credit Line· -everyday in th Business section of your new llilJ Pilaf - "'5 !mll ' ~ •na: CCllllltlAifiD MO~ CM' TflUl'Tlr8 I.AU NOTIC8 CM'.,...,..,.... bU ""°""CM' COlelTION a... .... U .. MllBllD On ~ %4th 1tM et 1t:30 p.m. ()p .. I SUIATWI. CINTllAL T.a.-.; ,__, ~ MOi°1911.09 kYlot Co., Ina., T .a. .... ,.._.. INI( AND TMllT CORf'. ~"CODI, .. SubltJMed Truat .. or euc.. ~ANTNOncaTO CONOlfdat.ct Atpof1 of Condition o f ••tnl•MtioMI c;.,1ral Tl>. taWCI co.iM/v ctMOr Tr1tal" Of 8ub1tlluted ""°""" OWMIRI ~ Ind Ttult Corp .. of ltVIM. Orange County and ~tlo .. ~~led' 'frut ... under ttit Tt\191... Of that canlln OeecS 01 YOU AM .. DIPAUL T UNDD A ........ Ill ttiedO. Of --Qn Mateh 31, 19&4. :'LL'i11.tT:~la~A~T~ !::~~~~err::: ~-,.:~~O::f'.:. ..... .... k 1117 ro THI HIOH!ST 9IOOUll '°" ewm.n• No '3·2.26S41. or Oftldal ACltC* TO f'IH)TICT YOU. OolW Awte OASH ANOIOATH!CASHIERS OA "9cor0. of ~ County, CaA-llWDTY,rTlllAY•IOl.DATA In ThcM 11nda Cf.ATlfllO CHECKS SPICIFIED IN tomia, and pu.tllMlnt lo tt\et ~ "*'O UL1. • YOU N11D M .._ / AISITI CIVll COD< KCTIOH 2124h J:tj Notice of OtflUlt end l l9Ctlon \0 UPUNATIC* CM' 119 MA'NM al8fl ~due trom banka ... w........................................ ... m :=.;1 cr,~me~~t~ .. , Ill :r,u";'m~'9f:~m~ ~oullfou~o:r~ lnlleet"*'t tec:urltlee (Mlrket • right, lltle and 111t"-t oon~ to IS..aat93&. Of Ometal Aecorc1t of uW&ra: v.aue I 130.2.25).... .. ......... ( ...................................... 139,985 and now Mid by b ~Mid O..CS 111. d C. ounty, wllf u"d" •nd On ~ 18, 1914, al 10;00 A.M . ...,. prem!MI, F F & e. etc. . .... """ ................................... 79 ofTrwt In ~ Pf'Ol*tY '*9ina"41f ~HO Mid Deed of TNtt .... IMPI AIAL COAll'IOAA TION OF Other ueetJ,. ...... I .. • .. • ... • ...................... ... • e.538 Cletetlbed pubflc 6uctlon '°' cuh, c:eafllW'• AMl:RICA .. duty ll)polnted TOTAL ASSETS.. . . ....... . . .......... 1'47,528 TAUSTOA. HOWAR.O I! MOl· Of*tl. Of oath aqulVtltinl ~ TNtt .. Utt<1et Md ~ to UA9M.mE8 INGO, ROSE MARIE MOZlNOO hN bMrl 8PP'O'ttd by tfle T"*-5 Deed of Tru.t recorded~ TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOM ESTIC OFFICES ....... 101 223 BENUICIARY: t HE BANI< OF d•va prior to .... ,, at ltle ffont an-15, 1te0,u inat. No. 19™, In b<>e* T I .. __ d .c I 5'025 ORA.NOE COUNTV • trance to tha IVblecl Pf°'*1Y 13743. peoe 784, of Otttc1a1 ..... ota uwman yepos ta...................... ··· · · ···· • RECOROE.O January 28, 1182 u 17791 ffllch Street, frv\,ne. CA .. .it c«Oa In the QfflCe of the County Total time and aavtngs depoelts......... . .......... 96.,19f in.tr, No 82-0321i>5 of Otfldal Re--tnal flOllt. tnle and lnttf981 coo-Rtcbrdel of Oflf'Qe Oc>Yty. s.-Of tOTAl OEPOSt'l'S IN DOM ESTIC A NO oorda In the offlca of Iha Aec:ofder ~to and now t1e1C1 by h U(lder California u«Med by RONALD W. FOREIGN OFFICES............................ . . .. .. . . .. .. 101 .2~3 of Ofenge County. Mid Deed of TNlt In lht prOPeftY OUV.U. M. UNnarrted man WlU. ~funds porch&Md and MCUrltlet SOid ondef Mid deed of lrutl dNcObel the sltualed In said County and State SEU. AT l'IU8UC AUOTION TO agreements to repurchaae In domestic o ffloes...... . 4, 900 tOllowlng property: ONctlbed ... • ttlOHHT BIOOEA FOA CASH <PeY- Other tta bllltle4 for borrowed money, Including note PAAC~I: 1 1.01 39 of tract No. PARCEL 38. 1n the City of !Nine. •*at nme of .... In ~.~ .. I f U S T 28 719 730 I, In the Cll)' Ol lrvlne, County of County of Orange, State of C• of the Untt.O 8t1t•) at the N6nh ... a ances O • reasury .............................. _.. • Orange, S111a ot Catlfomla. u pet fOfnla. aa ah<>Wn on • Pate.I Map front enlr•ncie to the CQwlty Other llabilltles ...... ·· ......... · · · · ... . .. ··· .. .. .. ...... 3.427 map recorded In I><><* 311. pag.-1 lilto in book 97, pegea 1 10 5 I~ Cou.rtnouM, z.oo ~ c.n1 .. Ortve TOTAL LtAelLITIES . . . 138,269 lo 3 lnclvllve, Mleoeltaneout Mapa. C1Ual~ Parcel Mape. Jn tfle office Of W•I. Santa Ana. C.Mfomla ... ~I. SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY In lhe oftic41 ot the counly recocO« the County Recotdet of said Coun-tltle Ind lnt.,_t con¥tyect tg and Comm on stock of Mid ~n1y. ty now t1e1e1 by It u.noer MIO DMd of No. aharea authorized 10,000 EXCEPT THEREFROM all Oii, gu, EXCEPTING THEREFROM all Oil, Trwt In tn. proper1y lllU•led In Mid N o . sh 8 res 0 u t s t and 1 n g mll'ltlf'ala and other hydroearbon oll rlgl\11. m"-al•. mineral rlghtt, County and State deactlbed .. : 0 000 1 000 aubalanoe1 lylng below a dePth ol natural gaa rlghll. and other A CONDOMINIUM COMPRISED 1 • • 500 IMt'wlthout 1ny rlgtit to enter hydrocarbons by what~ name OF: • Surplus ...................... :. · · · · ..... .. · · ..... · ·· 6,260 UJ>O'l tha surface or tl'le subsurface known that m1y be within Of under Parcel 1: An undivided lnterMt In TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL ........ · 7,260 of uld land above• depth ot 500 the Patee! ot land herelnabove a. and to Lot 1 of Tract 106H. In the Retained eatnlngs...... . t ,999 feet, u proYlded In Instrument• of acrllled, t~her With Ille perpetual City ol Costa M .... County of Of. TOTAL S HAREHOLDERS EQUITY.... . . . 9,259 r«:Otd right ol drllt1ng, mining. aitc>blnO ange, State ol Callf0tnla. u per TOTA L LIABILITIES ANO SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY. 147,528 PARCEL 2 Non-.. ctutlve ap. .,,d operating therefOI' end 110tlng map reQOfded In Boot! 453, Pages The undersigned. Jack L Tauler. President and Daniel J purtenant easement tor the In and removing the same from l8id 48 to 60 of Mtsoellaneou.a Maps. Fedrick Exec v p of the above-named bank each declares 19, purposes u set lonh tn and Ol/ef land or any otllllf' tend, -tncludlng 1n. EXCEPTING THEREFROM Units ' · · ' lhe ltnd described In Artlc(e V, Sec· right 10 whlpstock 0t dlrectlonally 1 to 8 Inclusive as shown Ul>O'\ the himself alone and not tor the other· I have personal knowledge of uon 1 of 1h11 certaln 0ec11rat1on ot drlll ano mlM from l•nds other tnen Condominium Plan recorded 1n the m atters contained in this report and I believe that each Co11en1n11. Conditions ano Restrlc-said land. oil °' g•• well• • tunnets BOolc 13485. Page 1680. of Official statement In said report is true Each of the undersigned. for tlons, recorded May 20. 1971 In and anatta 1n10. througtl or ICl'OM Recorda himself alone and not for the other. cerl1f1es under penalty of book 9647, page 387. Olf1ciat A. the aubsurtace of kid land. and to Parcel 2 Unit 7 as lhown 1,1pon perjury that the foregoing 1s true and correct coroa, as Imposed by Notice ol bottom tuch Whlpa1octled or Olrec-the Condominium Plan refetred IO Executed on--Aprll 26. 1984, at Irvine. Caltfornla Covenants, Conditions and R'9tr\!:· ttonally drilled wells, t1.1nnela and In Pwcel I above J ack L Tauler President ttons recorded on March 26, 1973 In shall• un,der and beneath or The t1treet eddr... and ~•her -· ' booll 10& !?, page 38, Olflcial Re-beyond the exlerlOf ttmll• thereof, oommon cte••Uon. If 1ny, of the Daniel J. Fedrick. Exec V.P. corda. of said Orange Cou.nty. 1.nd 10 redrlll, retunnel, equip, main· reel property <leterlbed above I• Pu blished Orange Coast Daily Pilot May 2, 1984 2374-84 YOU ARE IN DE.FAULT UNDER A laln. repalr. deepen and operate purpotled to be. 2183 l<rlttln LatMt, NI.IC NOTICE K-1108% NOTICE OF DEATH OF X-X Y G 0 0 DE A R L KATCR'ER, AKA KAY BARGREA VES AND OF PETITION TO ADMINIS- TER ~TATE NO. A-1%%9%6 To all heirs, benef1c1aries, creditors an d con tu1gen t c red i t ors of KAY GOODEARL KATCHER, AKA KAY HARGREAVES and persons who may be otherwise interest)n the will and/or estate A petiuon has n hied by JOSE OOR NINI tn the S uperior Court of Orange County _requesting that JOSE OORNlNl be ap· pointed as personal _ rep· resentative to administer the estate of KAY GOODEARL KATCHER. AKA KAY HARGREA VF.S (under the Independent Adnunistrat1on of Estates Act) The petit.ton is set for heanng in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Dr . West. Santa Ana. CA 92701 on May 23. 1984 at 9:30 AM. fF YOU OBJECT to the granung of the..peuuon. you should either appear at the hearing and state you ob,ec· tions or file wntten ob,ec· lions with the court Qt?fore the hearing Your <1ppear- ance may be in. person pr by your attorney. £F YOU ARE A CREDI- TOR or a coflljngent creditor of the deceased. you must file your claim w1th the court or present it to the per· sonal representative ap· pointed by the court within four months from the date of hrst issuance of letters as proVJded m Section 700 of the Probate Code of CaJJ- fonua. The time for fllmg clauns wtU not expll'e prior to four months from the date of the heanng noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the flle kept by the court rr you are interested m the es- tate, you may serve upon the executor or adrrurustrator, or upon the attorney for the ex· ecutor or admmistrator, and file with the court with proof of service, a wntten request stating that you de· sire special notice of the fil· mg of an inventory and ap- praisement of es~~ssets or of the petrnons or accounts mentioned m Section 1200 and 1200 5 of the CalifomJa Probate Code HESTON & HESTON 19762 MacArthur Blvd. Ceaterpoiote, Suite 300 Irvine. CA . 92715 8Sl ·Zl83 Published OrangE• Coast Daily Pilot Ma\. 2 :l. Y 1984 . -23il -84 Plel.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME ST A TEMENT Th~ following person5 are doing ous1ness as PYRA~10 DESIGN 2755• Long wood Court Coste M8$8 Ca 92626 Jltl Ann Gonules 27~ Long- wood Court Cos11 Mesa Ce 92626 Thia ous1ness 11 conducted lly an ind1v1dua1 Jiii Ann Gonzales Thts statement was flied with the County Clerk of Oranoe County on Aprll 6 1984 F24300e Pullllsned Or1nge CoU1 Delly Piiot May 2 9 16 23 198• 2341·8• ------------DEED OF TRUST DA TED January any such \lt8lla °' mines, without, Coala Meaa, CallfOl'nla 92827 P\BJC NOTICE 14, 1982 UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-however, the right to drill mine, The unO.tlgned TrustM dls.- TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· StOfe ••pk>ta and operate through cl• ml any llabllity '°' any ln<:Ofrect- HOTICE OF TRUSTll'I SALE ERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUB-the aurleoe or the upper 500 laet ol neu of theatreet addreu and other Loen Ho. ICHECK LIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· tl)e subtorfaoe of the land herein· common des!inatlon, If any, shown T..a. No. P-GIUI PLANATION OF THE NATURE Of abova descr.lbed. 11«.eln. ' UNIT COOE p THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, Together with lull right 11nd Salo .. le will be made. tNI fl"IT IANlA CL.ARA c~-YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· power. among ~thers, to transfer Of wllhou.t covenant or wa1rat11y, ex- A TION VER • assign to oth~ Of to llM Of utlllze preu or inUJlled, ragardlng tltle, u duly eppo1nted TruatM unoer the 1230 S Baker, Sant• Ana. CA. on any other pr09«1y owned °' posseulon, °' eqcumbrancee, to loUowlng deterlbed deed of 1~1 92707 leateO by the Grant0<, any and all pay tl'le remaining prlnelPal tum of WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION "(II• arraet ad or mon watllf' rights to lntweat In watw the note(•) Neured by said Deed of TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR designation of p ty II lhOwn rights no m•tle< how acquired by Trust. with lnt.,..t ti.eon. .. CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR abOve. no 1"8rrl n ia gtven •• to Its tne Oran tor, and owned Of used by provided In Mid note(t), advances, CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN complelenets ()( ectnesa)." Tn. the GrentOf in connection with ()( II any. under the twm• ol Mid Deed CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924h (pay· beneficiary und Mid Deed of with respec1 to the pr°'*1)' con-ol Trust, twa, chargea and ex· able at the ume of sale In lawful Trull, by reason fa bread! 0< de-veyed hereby, whether su.ch w•ltlf pen ... of 1he Trustee end QI the money of tile United Siii•) all fault In ll'le atlona aec:ured rights thall be nplrlan. overlying. 1rt.1at c:rNted by uld Deed ol TNal, r>ghl. tllle and in(wef1.conveyed to thereby, neret e e118Cl.lt roprlatlv e. percolating. IC>f tl'le amount reaaonat>ty eati- and now held oy n und91' Mid Deed ellvered to lhe pruc tlve or conlractual. mated to be: S93.400 00 ot Trust 1n the prope<ty hereinafter ten Declaration provided, however, thll the excep-The beneficiary under Mid Deed oescrlbed mend IOf Sale, a notice ol tlon and reservation made herein ot Trua.I heretolore executed and TRUSTOR. EDGAR E SCHECK. breacn 11.nd ol election to cauM the ah•ll not reserved to or !Of the ben· delivered to the underllgned •writ· LINDA R SCHECK unders!Qned to Mii said property to elll ot the Grantor any rlghl to enter ten Declaretlon of Defa1,11t end 0. BENEFICIARY BANK OF THE satisfy said obli04tlons. and there· upon the surlaoe of the proper1y mand IOf Sale, and. written Notice WEST atter the underligned ca1.1Md M id desGtlbed herein tn Iha ax.,clM ol of Del•ult and Elec:tlon to Sell. Tha RECORDED June 14, t983 u noti<:e of breech and ol electlon to such rights underalgned ceuMO uld Nolle• of lnatr No 83-251170 ol Olfleiat A. be recorded June 29, 1983 as Instr. The l1rea1 address °' oti. com-Defau.11 and Election 10 Sell 10 be coros In the ottlOe of the Recorder No 83·276365 of Official Records In mon designation ol said property: recorded In the county Where lhe ol orange County theottiee of the RecOfder ot Orange 17791 Fiich Street. Irvine r"I pr~ ls located. said deed of trust deacrlbea the County, Name and addreu ot the Date· ,Aprll 9. 1984 following propeny Said aale will be made, llul beneficiary at whose requell the IMPERIAL GORPOR~TION OF The land refe<red to In this wllhcx.it covenant Of warranty, ex-sale ta being condueled· Atch AMERICA gurantee 11 sUualed 1n tile Slate of preu or implied. regarding tllle S1reet AuoctltN c/o Upland Mort-u Mid TNstee, Caltforntt. County of Orange and 11 poueu1on, Of encumbrance.. to gage Serva Co .. Inc 391 N Cen· P.O. Box831,SanDlago,CA.92t12 d~lbed as IOllOWS pay the remalntng principal tum ol trel Ave UolanO CA (619) 292-8480 PARCEL 1 Lot 84 ol Tract No lh• notl(a) lleC\Jred lly said deed ot Dtrecilons 10 the above prcperty By Eatretlta Chamberlain, Aul. 1218. In the County ol Orange. Trusl, with Interest as tn said note may be obtained lly requ.sllng Secret1ry State or Calllornla. as per map re-provided, 1dvances, II any, under same in writing trom the beoeflclary Publllhed Orenge Coat Dally Piiot corded in Book 37. PegN 47 to 49 the lerms ol sa10 Deed 011ru11, tees, within 10 days lrom the first pub#-Aprlt 18, 25. May 2. 1984 incluS1ve miscellaneous maps. tn char gee. and expenses ol the cation ol this notloe 2 I 13-84 the office of the Counry Recorder of Trustee and of the trusts created by Said .... will be made without said County ia1<1 Oeed of Trull covenant Of warranly. eKpress Of P\B.JC NOTICE PARCEL 2 Lot 1 In Block c of Said Siie W•ll be held on Weones-tmpl•ed. 8S 10 title. possession Of Tract No 1219, in the County ot day, Msy 9. 1984, at 2 30 p m al the encumbrances 10 satisfy the unpaid IUPERIOR COURT Orange Stale ol Calllornta, as per Chapman Avenue entrance to the balance due on 1he note 0< notes Of CALIF<>"NIA map recorded 1n Book 38, Pages 26 Civic Center Bufkllng. 300 E.ut secured by tald Deed of T""t. lo COUNTY Of OAANOI and 27. mlacellaneous matie. 1n lhe Chapman Ave .. Orange. CA wit SO, plus the ro11ow\J\9 eatlmated In the Meltaf of aCOlT DAVID 09 office of lhe County RecOfOet ot At lhe time of 11"19 1n0t11 pul)ll-costs. expentes and advanc. at RtAMC:O, A Meftet(a) • ...-..<•) said Ccx.inry cation ol this notice, the total the time ol the Initial pub41Catlon of who•~ M decWMfrM fronl YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A amount ol the unplJd balan()e ol the lh11 Notice ol Sale Inter• due the cuatody llftd ~ ol hie DEED OF TRUST DATED March 15, ollhgallon aecure<I lly the abOve de-lrom N0"8fllbet 28. 1983 SConlacl perent Of perenta. 1983 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION scribed deed ol truSI and •tlmated TrualM, Trustee 1 ... and CO.II CAil TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT coata, axpenHa, and advances ts SContact Trustee AD t11M MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE $34,683 87 DATED Aprll 30. 1984 CITATION IF YOU NEliD AN EXPLANATION The total lndellledneu being an Upland Mortgage Servlee Co Inc Freedom lrom Parent1I Custody OF THE NATURE OF THE esumateon whlchlheopenlngbldlt TrustM andCQntrOI PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU.YOU computed may be obtained by call· 391 N Cenlral Ave (ABAHOOHMENT) SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER Ing (71') 937-09811 or (2 t3) Upland, CA 91786 (Rei ADOPTION) 501 Clltt Drive. Newport e.ach, 627-4885 the day befOfe tile Mle (714) 981·1076 To DONNA LOUISE DE FRANCO Calllornla Dated Aprll 10. 1984 A J Andrews. Foreclosure Sec-and to all persona aalmlng to be the "(II a street aOdr•sa or common T D SERVICE COMPANY retary father Of mothef of Mid minor per- dealgn•llon ot property ta al'lown as aald Trustee, Published-Orange Cout Delly Piiot ton(1) 1b0ve named. abolltl. no warranty la given u to 111 By Vicki J H~lns. Assistant Sec-May 2. 9. 18. 1984 By orde< ol this Court you. are completeness or correctness)" The relary 2372..S. hereby cited and (reqolred to) (may) beneficiary under said Deed of City Blvd. West Or•~ C• appear l>elora the Judge Prealdlng Trust by reaaon ot a breach °'a. 2668 Plllt.IC HO TICE In Department 37 of the above enll- lau.11 • 1n the obllgallona eecured 714) 835-8288 · tied court, toca*' 11 700 CMc thereby heretolOfe executed and Publllhed Orange Coast D•lly Piiot FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Center Orlve West, Santa Ana, on delivered to the undersigned a wnt· prll 18, 25. May 2, 1984 NAME STATEMENT 7120/84. at 8:45 A.M ol that day, ten Oecltrallon of Default and De-2112·84 The following person Is doing then and there to Show cauM , 11 any mand lor Sate, and written nottce ol business as. YOU have. why aald P8'IOrl ahou.ld breach and Of election to cauH ,,,. Tc NEWPORT HORIZONS REALTY, not be declared tree from ll'le con- underlllgned to Mii Mid pt<>perty to Plllt.IC NO I E 833 Dover Oftve, Suite 16 Newport trol ol his parents llCCO<dlng to the satisfy said obllgahona, •nd thllf'• NOTICE INVfTINO 8101 Beech, Caltl 92663 petition on flle he<eln after the undersigned c.uNd Nld Notlee 11 h«el?'f given that the Ronald Alln Lowe 432· The pellllon flied hllf'eln II IC>f tl'le notice of breectl and of eiecilon lo Board of T rvateet bl the Huntington Plau, Costa Mesa. Calif 92627 1 1 1141 ol tr~ng ~· ~bject child r' r~ord:: O:,~';:.~ry 19611:~8: Ras ~ech Union High School District Thll business Is coriducted by· an ~~,~~16~;984op on ci:~s 1~ the ·otttce of ~he R.:ord!; wlll r~~~~;~ ~~i~~r su.cff:o in~~~1~1 A Lowe LEE A BRANCH. County Clerk ot Orange Coun1y; Sf ocK AND LABELS meeting or ThtS statement was filed with the ~~~~=~ri~~~~::~H ~i ~~~ sale will be m1de tNt equ.al to the specifteahons.on Ille In Ccx.inty Clerk ot Orange Ccx.inty on 8AA8A"A E AUE"8ACH • wttnvul co119nant or warranty ex-the ottloe of said Oistricl Apr 9 1984 .OOl y t • Btvd press or 1mplled, regarding tllle BIOS Shtll be Clearly mtrkld F2430M ~he •no": c.: l14ZS-3S51 poSS41Ulon, °' encumbrances. 10 COMPUTER PAPER, C ARD Pullltshed Orange Coast Dally (l1'l.:..T722•• pay the rem•lnl'!;~lnci~: ds~ o: STOCK. ANO LABELS Btd •561 Bd· Pilot April 18 25 Mey 2. 9. 198' Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot the noll(S) secur Y aa o dressed 10 Allyn E Rowley, 2o97-94 Ma 2 9 l6 23 t98• Trust. with Interest as in Mid note Purchulng M1tnager. Huntington 'I ' · provided. advances 11 •ny, under Beach Union High Scnool District. M LIC NOTICE the te<ma ot said Deed ot trull lees 10251 Yorktown Avenue 11unt------------------------- charges. end expenses of the lnglon Beach CA 92646 and re-FICTITIOUS BUSINEll Pllll.JC NOTICE Trustee and ot the trust• created lly ce111ed at or before 2 00 pm . NAME STATliMENl said Deed Of Trust THURSDAY May 17, 1984 11 whtch The IOllowlng persons are doing Slid Hie will be held on Wednet· time and place bids will be publicly business as day, May 9, 1984, at 2.30 pm atthe opened Intl read In Bldg c. Rm FOLK ART HEIRLOOMS. 14711 Chapman Avenue entrance to the 361 Bromley Wfltm1nster. Cahf 92683 Civic Center Building 300 East Each Old ahall remain valid tor a Juli@ Lenaa & Richard Marnn Chapman Ave Orange CA period lo 30 days altar the date Brown 14 7 11 Bromley West· At the time ol the tntllal pullll· specllted for the receipt of 1>1ds m1nste< Calll 92683 cation ol this notlC8. the total The Board of Trustees shall l>e This-ousiness 1s conducted by an amount ol the unpaid oatance Ol lhe the sole ludge ol the qualUy ol indllllOual obflgatton secured lly the above Oe· equipment ottered and rese<ves the Julie L Brown scribed deed ol •rust and estimated right to reject any or all bids ano to This staterTJenl was llleO with lhe cosrs. eJCpenses. and advances 15 waive any Irregularity therein County Clerk ol Orange Cou.nly on $ t36.971 86 '"~ Signed Allyn E Rowley Apr 6 t984 The tolal indebtedn~'"ll ng en Purcnasing Manager FN2113 es11mate on which lhe 0 ing bid 11 Dated May 1 198• Published Orange Coasl Dally computed'mey Ile olltatneo by call· Published Orange Coast Daily P1to1 P1to1 Apnt 18 25 May 2. 9, 1984 1ng ('15) 945-6418 the day bet0<e May 2 9 t98• 2093-84 the sate Oated Aprtl 12, 1984 2370-84 FIRST SANTA CLARA CORPOR· ----------· MLIC NOTICE I ~:~~ Trustee MLIC NOTICE ---F-IC_T_ITI_O_U_S_9U_8_1N_E_l_8 __ FICTITIOUS 8USIHH8 NAME ST A TEMENl Tne tollowlng persons are 001ng business as (a)NALS (b)NAIL ANO LIGHT SYSTEMS 138 Town & Country, Orange. Catlf 92668 Haldon 1 LTD 138 Town & Coon· try Orange. Cahl 92668 This buslnest 1s conducted oy on unlncorpor111ed assooat1on other than a partne<sh1p Harold Nemetz Th11 statement was tlled with the County Clerk ot Orange County on Mar 30 198• F242317 Published Orange CoHt Dally Piiot April 11 t8 25. Mey 2. 1984 1975-34 P\m.IC NOTICE By TD SERVICE COMPANY agenl I UP£RIOA COU"T NAME STATtMINl By Kalhlee'1 M Palnck Ass•1lan1 OF CAUFORNIA. T~ lollOWll'\Q perton IS Oo1ng FICTITIOUS ..,, ..... 11 Secretary COUNTY Of' ORA.NQE bus1nen as ... .....,"' 1990 N CaltfO<nia Blvd . Walnut In the Malle< of the Lou Ann La Porte ArllOnM Inter-NAME I TATE•Nl Creel\. CA 94596-3787 Appllcetton ot nallonat-Be1uty Consultant. 1845 The tollowlng person la doing 415-944-9015 ROBE"T y p OUOHE Anaheim Ave 16A, Co111 Meta, business H n JA L TU TORT • PES 3401 Castor, Put>llahed Orange Coast Dilly for Change ot Name Calll 92627 " Pilot April 18 25 May 2 1984 No A l22568 Loo Ann Le Porte. 184S Anaheim Santa Ana, Call! 92704 2102-84 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE4 Ave t6A Coaat Mesa Caltf 92627 Jewe' Be<natdlna l<eutOer. 2021 FOR CHANGE OF NAME Th11t>u.aineu19 cond\JCled l)y an Yacht Vmdex. Ntwl)Orl Beach, ROBERT JAY PLOUOHE hH l11ed 1nd1111dual Calll 92660 n11allC NOTICE • petition In 1h11 court lor an Ofder Lou Ann La Pone Th11 bu•tn•" ta ~UCted by. an ruu 1 Thi• statement wH meet with lhe 1nd1vlou11 ------------allowtno paut one1 to cf\ang• Jewel 8 Keulder FICTITIOUS 9UllNl l l hit/her name from ROBERT JAY County Clefk ol Orange County on Th11 statemenl was nted with th• NAME STATIMINT PLOUGHE to ROBERT 'J SMITH !opr 9 198' Ml.I~ NOTICE TM roOQwlng perl()nl .,. d()lng IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Ill noM-14 Ccx.inly Cieri< of Orange County on 1 t>u.siness H persons lntllf'•led In lhe m•tt• ftllbtlthed Onnfe Coeet D..., Mar 30, 1984 ,ICTrTtOUI llUllHH 25th STREET PROPERTIES. Clo 110<...id appeer bef0f8 this COUf1 ftUot Aprtl 11, ZS, Mllr 2. t, 11M ""'* NAME I T A TIMI.NT Sheldon s Goooman, Inc: ' 17291 In Department No 3 II 700 Civic ...... Pi•t>lltlled Orange Coal Deity The tolloWlng persons.,.. doing Irvine Blvd Ste 1~9 lu1t1n, Cam CentefOrlveWMl,SantaAna CaH-1------------Piiot Af>ril 11· 18• 2!5, May 2. 1t'4 t>u.llMNH000 BEAUCH"' .. P 92680 , IC>fnl• on May 14, 1984, at 915 DlllDUC NOTICE ttN~ weSTW • '"'"" ' Mitchel R Goklt>Mg 5802 Sun-o'cloek AM and then and tl'lefe1----'-~--------- 2902 "-dhlll, Suite A, Costa Meaa, mitt Dr VC>fba Linda. Calli 92886 1how cause, II any they have why ITATaMI NT Of' Ca. t2&28 Jan~ E Goldbllf'O. same u said pellllOn tor change of name AaAHOOHMUrT Of uaE Of W•twood ~t 8 l:.;,' ebove thou.kl riot be granted flCmtOUI 8U8*11a NAME erel J*'tn«tfllp, 2902 R.otllfl. utte S'*<!on S Goodman 2 t2• 0..ta IT IS FURTHER Ofdered thll a The tollowlng pet~I hive abart· A, Coat• M••. C• 92628 Lane ""''*m· Calif 92802 copy Ol lhll order to Show C8UM be doned the UM OI the FIOllllOIJI BuSI· a.au.cnamp Ente<prl-Realdan 0 __ ... Co •·• ONWon. 8 general Plr1Mflhlp Oy1n L uvvf'Wtll same H pullllthed In the Orenge ast Daily nu• N1me ROYAL QUEEN -S lbOlle Piiot I newspaper Of oaneral HEAL TH SPA. '3b' El Toro Rd . El 4000 MacArthur Bou.levard, ult• Lee Howard. 231172 Vta N1v11rra . circulation. publlahed 1n th•a county 'Toro Ca 11;1630 700, NewJ)Of t Beach. Ca 92~ Ml••IOn VHljo. CaUI 92691 al ie.at onG• I ,,,.... IOI' IOI.II con. The F~tillOW 81.1111\-' tilatnll ii Thill bualne.t •• conduct.O by • s ,.~. ~-.,..1P uaan Howtrd same as •bo~ '411(.Ullvt well• prlC>f 10 11\t day of tttreo wit l1led 1n <>ranoe ......,n1y 09f*al ,,_.net Aobert S Sklar 304 Celle Bat• 11 1<1 he111ng on Oeeefflbef t2. 1t83 r230252 ONudt•ITlfl £.nt91'prlMI Orange Cah1 92669 Oiled Maren 30 1984 Mtr!Owe £\leMOl'I. 9112 !I Alto ~l~al~ucnamp M1rat1a 8 Sklar Hmfl II above f"RANK DOMENICHINI Of Vllll Plark Ca t2867 T'hll ~ tement u liled wim tM I Th11bu11nns11 conducted bV a J1.1d~ of tne Corinne !v.nllOfl. 91G1 El Ano '1 w C n Q~ll P•t1nerthlP Superior Cout1 Or Vtll• Perk, C1 02867 ~rre c:;:. of Oranoe ountv o ShttlU~ S Goodm•n AOeERT JAY PLOUQHf (IN Thll 00.IMH w11 condu.clttd by ""' ' ,2..aa?4 Thll st•tament Wiii .tied ..... h Ille PRO PURI an lndlvlduel Ganftft a Wltfi* Counly C~k of Oraf1911 CO\.lnty on 24111 Bttdroc;ll ()rive fhla 111t.,nenl was l14ed wtth lhe 11401 Von Karman AW. •4 10 Apr 6 tOllA El Toro. CA 9:l630 County Clerk of OftnQt ~nty on 'MJCIOO 834·20'° April 4 1984 • IN!ne Celll 92715 I I Publish~ Ora~ COHI Delly PuDllStled Or•nge Coast Dally ~ilot Put.II~ Oranoe ca. t D••ly • ,.:,11~·~b ~·~· g cf:' 19~: y P1101 Ap<tl •ll 7 .. May 2 II '™ Al>!ll , 1 t8, 25 Mny 2 198• I Pilot Apr i 8 25, Mey 2 0 1984 t or •Y .,,, • 114 10011.u 1t11~-8• :i>O'e &A P\B.JC NOTICE '1CTITIOUa IW ..... NAMI ITATRISN'T T"9 IOllowf"'Q pet9IOn8 we d°"'Q ouainett •• WORLD MT AIR PROOOCTION, 1210 S DouglH, Santa Ana. CA 9270• Bftndl Joye• Halt, t210 6 ~ Santa A.NI CA 92104 Miehatl T8'1'y W11harnt. 1210 8 OouQlaa. 8anta M a. CA 12704 Thtt 1:>ua111 .. • 1e oonducted 11y • 091*11 pat1Mftl!IC> 8renda J Hall Mid\MI T. W1t111m1 Thia SlllM*lt WU Iii.cl ""'1h Ille County 0.k of Ofanot County on APf'I t 1964 ""'1t1 P1,1t>lllhed Or-"'Qe I Coast Dally P1101 AptU 18. 25. Mey :l. 9, 1N4 21()CM4 - :':':. ... t.~ MnllfA" UC • ftlMAnGll Of TUM OP ..,__, • T'HDMCWlll M' llT •VOUllWUIV .... YOU MOULD C'ClllTACT A &...----9CMm f,: AM Ya. --·~·· Ir Nob .. ~ ..,,.,. Ni .. , • laD ~ ,.,, ,rlclay, ttl925"'cS.yof'M .... 1"4.• COWtT ~endY°'flNIYhelle 10:00 A.M. •1 tfle front .,.._'° ......... rtQM ~~~ 'fWf ecoeiun1 ~I• J..11> (Second irtocw) -8011 In OOod ...... by ~ .. °' !Me~~*"""' ... Cl\' of Mwn ... ,... .......... pa. ......... 1n01on 8Melh1 CCU\'>' of°'**' t01tt MCI •1111•-wftNn, ... ..... of Cellfom&e • ..,... CUllilta • .,.,.,... "°"' -... ttlll ~ ot AttomtY 9t t.ew. wt'°91 ....... .,_. W 19aafded, Thia~ ~ 11 8071 .. ., AV9r1Ue. II 115.640.21. .. of 31""'4, end MS, Hl.lntlnOton e.cti, ~ .. ~ Ynftl ~ eclOOUftt ~ end WtloM t~ """"** II .,,.,.~.you mey not i.w to (1141 Ma ••••• *'II .... pul)4IC pev .... _.... ~~ of auotlon '° .... h4gMlt Mctdw fOt ycMK eocount. ~ .. .._.""' ""'" CMtl, In lawful money of .... Unhed "*'' ... demanded. tMj JOU ..... ......... ~ _..... ...... llfN ~ .. lfftOYftt ....., aibowe. ... end, .. "'-c.tlln t9a1 .,,. Anet erw.. monthl nm tN dlllit er1Y Ill~ In fie Ctty Of Hunt· ~detlon of ttlll docUIMftla- ingtCH' IMCh, County of (~ dN ot ~.,.. StataofC~.~.. l*lfaMreon). ~ \M~lofl IOwt: being ~ ~ '*"'"' • LOI 11 of T'~ No. t2, • llf\qlllr\ lonoer pwtod, VOU l'laW onfy Iha on a !l'lap recorded !ft loot! 10, llOal rWit lo •tOP the ~by 7 Of MteolhNOua M.,_. r.cordt of peytng "'9 9111"9 ll'AO\ll"lt CS.. Or.,. County, Cllllfornja. m9ndid by YOVt ~et. The c:ommon dellgnetlofl o1 U. T ~ ,.,_, out the amoun1 you ll'IUlt aald teal Pf~ la: vacenl tot on pay, or 10 artange fof peymem \0 Cedar 01~ s1r .. 1, . Hu"t1ng1on •ten> tfle f~. or If~ D'Ol>- BMich. c.lllC>fnla. erty It In f«tcto9Ure fOt any oti. Said .... .,;M ~ made wlt"°'-tl .....on, contect: AMfNCAN SAV· COV91\Mt or 1#11Nat\_fy r-oMd INGS ANO 1.0AN AS&OCIATK>N. title, poas...,on. 0t tMufnOflN* 15725 E. WMUer llW .. WNttler. tosattsfythe obtlgattonuecuredby CA 10107, (7t•) 7 7a-71t4, and pursuent 10 the powei' OI .... 8 1·2104c31 70 (E) conferred In that certain deed of II YfN Mv. ~ QUMtloM, you tr1.1et ~•led Augutt 2, '982, ex-lhoUld contect a lawy9r or the OOV· ec1.11ed by Wltuam Allen Mobley. an amment agency Whloh mty have In- unmarried ~n. u 'TruttC>f to turec:I VOUf loen. American Tltle Compeny, a corpor· Remember. YOU MAY l.OSE atlon, a TNSIM fOf Oefbet1 Fr • LEGAL RIGHTS " YOU 00 NOT tin Catron and Wanda I. Cat , E PROMPT ACTION. ""'8band and ~ u 1o1n1 tenenta, NOTICE IS HEREBY GlVEN: thal u e.n4flciarlel. recotded Auouat SUNKIST SERVICE COMPANY, la 5. 1982, in 8ook S2, Pege 272358, now dUIY appointed TNll .. under a Otfk:lal Rec:or<I• of O<ano-County. Deed of Trutt dated 11115177 ••· California. .C1.1ted by: PATRICK WILLIAM Notice of Oefauft and EJectlon t HANll"IH & MARCIA ANNE Sell the deacttbed i-..1 Pf HANlFIN, HUSBAND AHO WIFE u under Mid Deed Of Trust .. ,. Trua10t. to ~ oblloatl<!(\1 In corded Fel>Nary 1, 1N4 In Book favor of! AMERICAN SAVINGs & S4, Page 045539. Offlclal Recor LOAN ASSOCI ATION, aa of Or.tnge Coumy. Calllomla. Benelk:lary Recorded on 12/0fS/17 Ttw.Hottatta gNell In oom •• document no. ft04110C* 1'481- Wlth the wrlttwtapplk:1tlon m• 10 pege 109 of Otfldal Recordt In the th• Tru11u by the aald otflct of the Ateorder of Ofanot e.n.tlc:ietlet. -County. Callfetnla, lnefudlng 1 Of\ May 3, 1984, Which II tn. dal note(a) fOf the tum Of 1112,000.00. ol the lnlti.I publtcatlon of Jtllt Th•t the t>enetldal lnt•eat tlce of Sele. lfle following M\OUntt Mid Deed of T ruat and lhe ot)ll.. ~I lhe tolal amount Of the getlon• aec\lr9d Iner.by are ~ unpaid bal•noe ot tha ot>llaatlon ... ently Mid by the benefldery. That • oored by the at>Ove-delcri&ed PfoP-bl'eech of, and dehluh In, \fie obll· erty lo ~ sold and-reuonably•l). gallon Jot wNch MKS o..d of TNlt m11ed coet•. exi>en.... and ad· la MWtlty Ml OCCUITed In that Iha vanoM. reapect/v91y paymenl Ml not bMtl tnede of' Unpeld be1enoe Of ~Ion! • Fallur• •IH'Mke the 61161'3~ s 10,400.00 menl of princ4p9I and/0< Int.,.. Trust .. 1 .. : • S75.00 and all aubNquent payment•, ExpenMS: • S236. 10 together wllh late c:Nrgn, Im.- Total amount:. S10,71l.10 Pot.Ind•. tmpoond depoelta, II 1ny, Tha "'~ wu ~ed under the tanna of MKS "°'• or 1nd 81.1b1Ututed u TNSIM under ONd of Trust and all 81.11>Nquent tNa Deed of TNSI by a IUtJstttutlon peymenta wNch beCame clue Ii.. dated January 2e, 1te4, Md ,.. aftw. lndudlng wry lat• ctlWgea Of corded Februlty 1, 1"4. In Book 01het1Um1peyal>'eunderlhetenna 84, Page 045538, Oltldal Aecofda of Mid Note or Deed of TN9t. ot Ofange County, Calltomla. That by reuon ti.eot, tha prw- Dated: Mey 3, 1te4 ent beneficiary under IUdl Deed of SAMUEL CUBETE Trutt. hM executed Md delf\lered aAMUl.L ClMIEn, Attorney .. to said TruatM •• wmt~· Lew I lion Of ~ end Demand fOf I071 ...._AW.. .W s.19. end hea ~ wtttl Mid Hurlltfttteft 9MCf\, CA. mC7 Tn»IM, euc:tl OMd Of Trutt end all ST A TE OF CAU FORNIA ) the dOCllnMntl ft1denctng the ol>U- ) u. getlons teeured thereby, end ti .. COUNTY OF ORANGE ) declared and dOM '-eby declWe On May 1. 1984, before me. the all suma MCUted thereby lmmedl- underalgned. a N01ry Public In and etely due and peyabtt and Ml IC>f said State. penonally ac>PMted elecled end dOM llereby elect to SAMUEL CUBETE personally c.-the trust propeny to be 80fd known to iM to be tl'le penon<1) 10 .. tlsfy Iha Obllgatlont teeured whoM name(•) ta tubacribed to the thefaby. within lrislrumenl and acknowl-DATE: 03128/84 edQed to me that tie •11tc11ted the AMERICAN SAVINGS ANO LOAN ...... • -AS-SOOA TIOH WtTHts! my ~ and OfflCfal 11¥ Vlfglnll M Sllek91' AWi VICe M&I Preeidenl JanlCe K Oa1tuge By Robet1 C. MllllllalO, Aulltant Published Or~ Coa11 Dally Piiot Secretary _. 1 _ M1y l . t . 1& .,_. ~lthed Orange '-'C>Ut Dlil'Y not • 2375-64 A,prll 11, 18. 25. May 2. 11"4 P\B.JC NOTIC£ l98M4 NI.JC NOTIC£ flCTrTIOUl.,.._al NAME ITATl•NT Tn. toKowlng persona are dOlng bu.tlness at: (A) CLOSET CONCEPTS (B) CLOSET DESIGNS (C) CLOSET PLANN ERS (DI CLA SSIC CLOSETS, 2176 Rural Ln.. Costa M .. a. Ca.92627 Laonard Anttlony Roacttto. 2176 Rural Ln • Costa M .... Ca. 92627 S"8Ny Mictlele Roaoltto, 2178 Rural Ln., Costa M .... Ca. 92827 This bu91neu Is conducted by: NOTICa TO AGEfTI AND ltlANUFACTURUI CAU.IMG '°" M>I FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DISTRICT P 0 Box 8510 FOUNTAIN VALLEY. CA. t2728 PROJECT: BID NO 84·19, MICROCOMPUTERS DA TE AND TIME FOR RECEIPT OF SEALED BIDS: M Y 9. 1964 3.00 PM SPEOIFICATIONS ON PLACE OF BIO RECEIPT: DIS tndllllduals (h1.1aband & wtla) Leonlltd• A. Aoecltto Shel'ry M Aoacltto .,-OFFICE, 17210 OM St., Fount Vall.y, CA. 92708, PURCHASING DEPARTMENT Thll statement wu nled with the County Clertl of Ofange County on Aprtl 3, 198' FOR THE GOVERNING BOARD, J"n C. Murptly, PurcflUlng Agent '2.42132 Approved: Plmela Aloe, DlreciOf of Pullllahed Orange Coast Dally But lneea Sefvlcee Piiot April 18, 25, May 2. 9. 1984 Published Orenge Cou t Dally Piiot _________ 2_1_0_1_-&_41 April 25. M1y 2. 198' P\8.JC HOTIC£ FICTITIOUI ...,.,_ .. NAME ITATIMEMT The lollowtng pettona are doing t>u.alness u : - (l)SOUTH COASTAL COM · MERCIAL PROPJ:RTIES (b)SOUTH COASTAL 80 MM E:RCIAL (c)COASTAL COMMERCIAL (d)COASTAL COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES, 1127-A Bakllf' St .. Costa Masa, Calll. 92828 Roger K. Lau.le. 28028 Vista Ort~ EHi. Capl11rano Beach. Calif. 92624 James B GaJlac:het. 10&2 Tl.liar•. Costa Mesa. Cllil 92826 Thia bu.linesa •• conducted by: a general p1rtnerah1p RogM K. LAule Thia statement w11 llled with the County Clerk of OflllQe Cou.nty on Apr 2. 198' F>U5Q2 Published Orange Cout Deity Piiot April 18, 25. May 2. 9. 198' 2092-14 22~ NOTICI TO AOINTa AND MANUl'AC1\IMRI CAUlifO FO.. ltOI FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DISTRICT PO BOX 8510 FOUNTAIN VALLEY. CA. 92728 PROJECT: 810 NO. "4-20, STU- DENT LOCKERS AND 1.0CKS DATE AND TIME l"OR RECEIPT OF SEALED BIDS: Mty 9. 1984. 200PM PLANS ON FILE AND PLACE OF BID RECEIPT· OISlRICT OFFICE. 17210 Oak St .• Fountain Valley, CA. 92708, PURCHASING DEPART· MENT FOR THE GOVERNING BOARD, Je•n C. Mu.rphy, PurehUlng Agent Apprcwed: Jacil Mahnken. AN! .. tant Superintendent. Person· Ml/Admlnlatrall-.-. SeNlcaa Publllhed Ofange Cout Dally Pltot April 25. Mty 2. 198' ---Ml--JC-.-NO-T-IC_E ___ , 225&-84 F1cnn6ua .Ul*IH NA .• ITATl•NT The fol!Owlng pettc>M ate dOlng bu."""9 ... BUSINESS COMPUTER SUPP· L V. 1000 Quall HK>. Newport Beach 92e&O Steven Stutz. HI Starllower, lrvl"9. Calif 927 14 Avety Martinez, 2790 Hatbor Blvd • C:O.la M .... t2&:M Thtt bu.alnMI la condueled by' a Qel*'al partnerahlp Steven Stuttt Thia a\1\ilment ~u flied with the County Clertl of Ofange County on Mar 30, 1914 FMna Publlthed ~ CoNt 09lty Pilot AptM 11, 18, 25. May 2. 19&4 197344 "8.JC NOTICE FlCTfTIOUI .U ... 11 NAMllTATIMINT The fottowlng peraont are doing bvalneMU (A) TH! H MS Cl.IPPERSHIP. (8) $CA'\L£T o·~:~· 1221 Cout Hwy, N9wpert , Ca ~et) PelrlOla E LIMY Pr0\1111, 1818 BedlOfd, ,19, H4twpor1 8Nch. Ca tM&:f .!) ~ Y'<IOnM C.Cllt 61atlet, 1200 WMt BalbOll llYO . Hewpon Beedt, Ca t2"3 Allot .i.an V1ynet 511 ~eada. C0ton• del Mar. ca. 92825 Thia l>wlneaa II concsu.ctect by: • genetll pennet'ltlll> Allee JMll V1yner Thll llattmenl WU Med With the Cou.n1y Ci.tk of Ofangie Count)' an Aptll 2. lt84 ~ .. ~ °' .... c..t Delly "let *i't; ... tt. a. ... ~ P\ltllC NOTICE ~ ACTmOUa IW ... H ...-ITATIMIWT Ttte1foll0Wlng l)WIOl'lt are doing t>u.mnea as: l·K SEAFOOD. 2120 Newport 8tvd., Cotta M .... C.ltf. 92827 Roy Ikeda, 350 Monta Vllta. co.ta tHM. Callf 92127 Maldtco ltceda. 350 Monte Vltta, Coate M ... ~ 92827 This bualnMI II condu.cted by: .,, Individual Roy Ikeda Thie t1at9'Mnl WU flled with the County Clerk of Orange County on Mir. 30, 198' Paa.I Put>11tMO 0ranoe COMt Delly Piiot Aprll 11, II, 25, Mey 2, 1tM • 1974-14 L08 AMGILU COUWTY ~A&.C<MtT 110 ..... GNMA,_.. .... ~C..9'1 Plaintiff C A AP I HTE.RS SOUTHEAN CALIF()f\NIA AOMIN· ISTRATIVE CQf'pOAA flON ~ant: THOMAS I UAAIS. fn. dt'MUellY . .,,q CSQtllQ_ ~ .. 1"""'8 COHIT OOAft and 8Et.I. IRON WON<I COMPANY C..No '''* eu•a. ttemCllY911...._ .. ....._ TM .... ...., .......... ,,.. ....... ,.., ..... ...., ..... ,...,...,...., ..... ...,... ..... ................ lfyou.W.to ..... -.-of an anonwr tn ttN ,,_..,, )'Oii ~ dO IO prOff!Pll'y 90 lhe'I yo..tlf written ,.on•. If .,,., • mey ~ tlltd on tvne. AVlaotUatad tia lklo a.Mnda . . JimtaC.~ Thie 1tatemen1 wu fllacl wtV\ the County CWtt of Ofenge County on Aprll 9.1N4 ~ Publtahed Orange Cout Delly Piiot May 2, 9, 18, 23, 1"4 2317 .... HCrftf(MMMWM U.. 9TATamlff 'The ~ peraon la doing buatn.IM: P£0PLESl<IL.LS 6 CONCEPTS. 245 BroadWay A, Cotta Meu. Calif. 92827 Roger W. Fricke, 245 Broedwey A. Cotta Mesa, CAllf. 92627 Thi• buaineU la conducied by. In IMMduel Roger w. Ftleloe Thia alatemenl wd llleO with the County C1efil ol Ofange County °" Apr. 9, 1984 ...... PUbllatled ~ Coat Dtllly PllOI Aprfl 18, 2&. May 2, t , IN4 208M4 flCTfT10UI .,... .. NAMe ITATl....-T The lollowtng per80M .,. doln9 bu.alneuu: LEISURE TIME VIDEO, 1600 Adllml Av.. Coate Mele. Ce 9282e OOfotlly Ann Houghton. 530 Pier· pont, Costa Meu. Ca. 92e28 Thi• bu.alneN It conducted by: an lndMdu.al Ann Houghton Ttva atatamenl w• Ned wtttl tl'lt Coun1y Cler'k of Ofenge County on AprU 5. 1te4 ,,_ Published Orenge COMt Delly Piiot April 18, 25, M1y 2, I, 1N4 2<>11...- '1CTITIOUa~M N~ITA'l'RmWT The following persona .,.. doing bUtlneesa: OCEANVIEW PARTNERS LIM· ITED, 2025 W. Balt>oe. Ste C. New• port Beach, C1111 92963 Jamee R. Ou.Igo, 1924 W. Oceen-- front. Newport 8iech, Calif. t2ee3 Thia bUllnea " condu.cled by: • llmlted partnerlhlp James R. Quigg Thia 1111ement wu n1ect Witt! the Counly CWtt of Ofenge Counly on Mar 30, 1964 PMm2 Pvbllahed Ofange Coat Deity Piiot April 11, 18, 25, Mey 2, 1te4 197&-14 NILIC NOTICE '1CTTTIOUa Ml ... M NA• ITAftMIMT The lollowlng person 11 doing bUtineu u : COLA PRODUCTIONS, 2705 Sparrow Circle. Cotla M.... CA. 92828 Doug E-Dahl, 2705 Sparrow Cir· Cle, Costa Meu. CA. 92&28 Thi• bu9lneN la conducted by an Individual. Doug E. Dahl • Thia statement wat flied WIUI the C0unly Clertl ot Orange Cou.nty on Jan 17, 1984 '111111 Published Orange Coat Delly Piiot Feb. 12. 19, :M, Maren 4, 1N4 and corrected copy May 2. 1984 -S73--84 NI.IC NOTIC£ Mexican dis · es classic ~ ween oiled sheets, oiled side faci ng fillet. With wooden Restaurant executives go ,m 11et pound 1tghtty unt11 it is a nat piece, about 11.-inch -------------------~hi . to the source for recipes lace top sheet of plastic with wax paper and tum meat over: Re ove second sheet of plastic. Re-use plastic sheets until all fillets hav~ been pounded. When Copa de Oro executives go to Mexico to pick up new recipes, they do a lot of homework en route. For instance on a recent six-day tour, they visted 42 different restaurants in fourcities-Mlxico City. Cancun, Acapulco and Veracruz. "We didn't just taste their food," said Rene Fuentes. superintendent of operations. Th~ native of Mexico City said "we used our California chann to invade their kitchens not only to sec what they cooked but how they cooked. O ur chefs worked along with them to learn their techniques." Since their return, the chefs have been reproducing these dishes and adjusting flavors so they will be more acceptable to the Costa Mesa restaurant's clientele. "Our food," says Fuentes, "is much more than tacos, burritos and tamales," which he describes as "home- cooking in Mexico." Copa's "la grande cuisine," he said, is patterned after traditional d ishes served in the finer hotels and restaurants in MexicQ. "which has been very sumnful with our patrons.·· Although the chefs are working on 50 new recipes, only I\· few will be introduced for celebrating Cinco de Mayo. "Revamping a menu is an educational process. Br, making a few changes at a time, we get better acceptance,· he said. . And while the focus is on innovations, the successful choices will be maintained on the menu. Fuentes shares recipes from the latter category. • SABAN A t pounds beef fillet, trimmed well (4 8-ounce portions) 4 table1poon1 olive oil 4 green onioAt, 1aatffd briefly Salt to ta1te Wblte pepper to ta1te % large plHUc 1andwlcb ba11 Cut each bag to make. one large sheet. Put about 111 ounce of olive oil on top side of each sheet Place I fillet To cook. brush about I ounce ofolive oil on large grill. Remove wax paper and grill a~ut 2 minutes on each side. Do not overcook. Garnish witn a green onion. Yield: 4 servings. HAUCHINANGO VERACRUZANO 1pollDd,8 oance11napper, deboned and butterflied ( 4 1- oance portions) 4 oance1 1llced bell pepper 4 ouncee onion, 11lced 4 oance1 tomato, 1Uced 1t green olivet, sliced 4 tableepoon1 capen t ODDCCI wlllte wine "" ounce l~mon jalce "" teaspoon oregano "" tea1poon 1weet baell 'l bay leaf · 14 tea1poo11 cayenne pepper 2 tablespoon• cUantro, cbopped "" tea1poon garlic 1alt Salt to taste ,,_ tea1poon white pepper 2 tablespoon• batter, melted Hauclllnan10 Filling, recipe follow• In saute pan. simmer bell pepper,onion and tomato in butter about 5 minutes. Add olives, capers, lemon juice, cilantro, garlic. salt. white pepper, bay leaf. cayenne pepper, sweet basil and white wine. Simmer about 5 minutes. Set aside. .In separate frying pan add I ounce butter. When hot. cook stuffed snapper until done. Before cooking. dust snapper with fl our. Serve vegetable sauce over snapper. Makes 4 servings. HAUCHINANGO FILLING 2 ounces bay 1brtmp 1 ounce pa1Ula cb.IU, roaeted, peeled and cbopped Simple flavoring perks up chicken If chicken brin~aroans ofborcdom at your house, try surprising your clan with Scandinavian baked chicken. This 1reat tasting new tteipe could be just the solution you are lookina for. There's nothln& ho-hum about Scandinavian baked chicken. Your family will be excited by its special, piquant flavor and you will be enthusiastic about how quick. easy and C<.lonomical it is to make. Its aecret is simple. Aftercoetingchicken pieces with flour. salt and pepper, you just Jive them a final dip in some creamy commerctally prcpattd blue cheese salad dressing. • The result is a tantalizina new chicken en tree that's sore to cam you notice for your culinary skills. Yet it practically prepares itself. SCANDINAVIAN BAK.ED CHICKEN '"" coapoadbroller-fryer,cmt., 14npffov • · 011' of salt ud pepper ff. cw, blae ~ •reulaJ Cinco de Mayo, the fifth of May, is an Spo0nabout I cup chili mixtuRinioeiidt ideal ti me to invite friends for a Mexican toft\lla cup. Serv~ with salsa. Makel 8 ttnia-. fiesta . Reclpescan be doubled. The natfonal holiday in Mexico o~ · • ....._.Beef: Place I 'h to 2-pouad serves the anniversary of the Mexican army bondess bed' chuck pot roast in Dutch oven with ~feating the Invading French in l862. It is a heavylid. Season with salt, pepper and I slice joyous occasion, with much merriment and onion. feasting, celebraft"nf the victory that even tu-Add VJ inch water to pan: covertishdy and .ally led totheendo French intervention in cookslowtyo.n topofru,eoriallowoven(300 dqrees) 2 to 2'h houn or until beef is lender. Le1 Mexico. cool slightly injufocs; pour off and raerve I cup A Cinco de Mayo party calls for juices. Skim off fat. Shred beef with two forks. Mexican foods as colorfuJ and exciting as the Makes 2'h to 3 cups. country's art and music. •--rertWa C.,.: Deep-fry 8 (7 to 8-inch) The highlight of~is fiesta n:ienu is Chili tlourtortillasat 37Sdqrea.tentJydeprellina Burrito Cups-deep fried tortilla cups filled centers with wooden spoon until lOrtillasfonn a with a spicy shred<icd beef and bean cup. Gently tum and fry each until tolden brown o n both sides. Makes 8 servinp. mixture, fla vorcd with tomatoes, green Variation: Chili fill ins can be served in chilies and chili powder. heated, flour tortillas. Wrap t6t~infoil; \Another buffet dish that can be served heat in moderate oven (3S0dep'ees) S minutes. -ala4~ain-di$h-isMatiuted Beef P~a~.l~~tlRea e1C!t1lt~tem-·ffl11e;L._ __ __,. and Been Salad. This do-ahead dish uses 1 • fold opposite '!des 1nto cenkr, then roU up. leftover cooked beef and canned white beans Makes l 6 bumtos. . flavored with lime juice and cilantro. Note:One~(about 16ou.n~!,cootams I I deo 1 dR fried Bea about 1¥lcupsdrainedbeans. nc u uacamo e an e ris on the buffet. Serve guacamole as a dip with raw vegetables and chips, or dollop it on the burrito oups. Serve refried beans, the staple· in Mexican homes, as a side dish, or use them to fill burritos, tostados or enchiladas. ,,, A Mexican mcatwouldnot be complete without something sweet for dessert. Serve crisp Mexican Cookies with clusters of -~ grapes, sliced apples and kiwifruit. CHILI BUllR.ITO CUPS' 11.arge oaloa, c~ 1 tablHpooll OU 3 'i'. c.ps dralaed, cooked or caued ptato, tid.aey or pi.ak beau !"" to S caps~ Beef• 1cu(14""to11 ouees) a.matoH 1 CU (I OUCH) tomaa. pute 1 cu (4 euces) dlee4 'sren ~" 1 cap reMrve4 beef Jakes 1 tablflpeM c~ll ,.wder "" teatpeoa salt 8 Tortilla c.ps•• Salaa Saute onion in oil until tender. Add beans, Shredded Beef, tomatoes, tomato paste. chilies. beef jui~ chlli powder and salt. Brin& to boil~ reduce heat and simmer I houroruntil thickened. · o.111 ,... ,._... llAIWfATED BEEP A1'D HAif SALAD · ""e11p0Uve..i 1.4 np wllJ~ _... vlaepr I tables,._ rret11 lime J91ce 1 cleve prUc, ••-H t tdklf ... mllleeA ,.... dlutn 1 ...... .,.... ......... 1 teufllasapr 1 ieu..-aalt . '.4 leelf I• fraMJ p..-,.,,er' 11.4 ...... ~Md, eat ....... ltripl - -l ,._"'ff ~C.-... w C8DM ....n dte .. .,. • ..rtllen ..... 1 me6ml ............ _. c•1111ll ftMaalM leaves lrMl*nees Thorou~Jycombineoliveoil, vinepr, lime j uice. prlic, etlantro, oregano, supr, ult and pepper. Place beef strips, beans and tomatoes in large bowl; add marinade, stirring lO coet. -c ~lloun:-tnle plat le;~~ romaine leaves; place beef salad on top. Garnish with radish roses. Mdes 6 servinp. Bauchlnango Veracru.z.ano, bottom, Sabana. 4 oance1 tomato, 11lced 3 tablespoon• tomato nace t ounce• onion, 1llced 1 table1poon cilantro, chopped 1 ounce white wine Salt to t11te ,,_ teaspoon wlaite pepper t tableepoon1 b•tter, melted In medium sauce pan, saute onion. tomato and ch1h in butter until done. Add tomato sauce. cilantro. white wine, salt and white pepper. Simmer about 5 minutes. Add shrimp and continue simmering about 2 minutes. Set aside and cool. Coat chicken w1thcombtncd fl ourandsaltand pepper;dip1ndrc· ina, ' Place in bakJngd1 h. Bakeat 3S0dcarce , SO.to 60..m.inutesor until te.t><icr.ror 4toc!l,joy. qomplete the menu with frt~h uparagu and Waldorf ulad. With bluecheeM flaTOrlnt chicken la eenatlonal. ' ... , ......... • f ·Do stew and free up.time On those day1 wheo you doo.·....,..::c like beinaa slave to yout kitchen, not pull out your crock pol and prepare delectable Mexican Lamb Stew usina chunk.I of fresh American lamb? In JUst 8 houn of ca.re-(~ coo~ time, you and your family will "1Jt down to a hearty, thick stew chock· full of veaetables and tender melt-in- ur mouth morsels of fresh lamb. Cubes of lamb are ~usted with ur. pepper, &alt, pr{ic and chili i>owdet and quickly browned in a bot skillet. In the crock pot. the lamb is combined with sweet tomatoes, spicy picante sauce, areen onions, fresh bclJ pepper. seasoned com. pinto beans, green chili peppers and a blending of pungent spices. •• ~ ......... ~ --~---- Fuh Saate with Brown Rice l8 light yet hearty. During the eight hours of cooking. the juices blend. the spices mingle and fill the air and the lamb slowly and gently cooks to an incredibly tender and Juicy finale. When ladled into bowls and topped with grated cheese, sour cream, bl4ck olives and served with wann cornbread, this steaming mixture of Southwestern flavor is truly a delight to the palate. 'Lighter foods satisfying mJk11 media or llet l\c1c1 lamb to crock pot~ add I cup juice from canned tomatoes. tomatoes. bouillon, tdmato puree. picante sauce. 2 teaspoons chili powder, green onions, 1/1 teaspoon pepper, 'I• teaspoon garlic powder and bell pepper. Stir mixture; blending weu. ruce coriiliinations yield a hearty taste Tt}e one charactenst1c common to the most popular cui sines across the country is flavor. Whether the accent is Sichuan, Tlw.. Tu..Me.x-0r-4own- home Amencan, we prefer foods that have a hcany "deep" taste. This is true of foods prepared at home whether ethnic or not. No longer arc we satified with bl and foods. Instead, we choose rcc1pes ltkc Fish Saute with Brown Rice. a lighter recipe for the 80s. Baja Chili Rice Skillet combines brown rice w1th beef cubes. tomatoes. kidney beans and Tex-Mex season· 1ngs for an effonless, one-sk'l!:t meal. Rice can be. used 1n afi' ariet)' of rec1pes,Ji:om~o casserole!> and hot accompaniments. all wuh the heart> "jeep" taste of the ·s0s. FISH SA UTE WITH BROWN RICE 1 medhun onion, cut Into 1.4-lncb wedges 4 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 can (13 '1'. or 14 "'-ouaces) cltlckeo brotlt l cap brown rice- % large clovef garlic i,i, teaspoon salt .,., cap nour . ''• 1easpooo cayenne pepper 11'1 pouads fresh cod fillets• % carrots. thloly sliced oo tbe dlago.iial l cap broccoli nowerettea "' teaspoons basll, crualted Cook onion 1n l tablnwom of the.... butter Jn med ium saucepan until tender but not browned. Add enough water to .chicken broth to make 22/) cups ltqu1d. Add to saucepan and bn ng to a boil. Sur tn nee. Co\er ttghtl)' and cook over low heat 45 minutes. Combine garli c and salt in a small bowl. usi ng back of spoon. finely crush ga rlic with salt. Combine with flour and cayenne pepper. Coat fish with flour mixture. Cover and re- frigerate for 30 minutes. Cook fis h in remaining 2 table- spoons butter an large skillet over medium heat 3 to""1nanutcs on each side or until cooked through. Stir carrots, broccoli and basil into nee. Cove r and continue cooking unttl all liquid is absorbed. about 5 mi nutes Arrange fish and nee on sen ang platter. Makes 6 servings. • 111l pounds frozen cod fillets, thawed. may be substituted. BAJA CHILI RICE SKILLET I pound beef top round or sirloin tip cut Into ¥1-lncfl c•bet l medium onion, "1.aly 1llced % cloves garlic, ml.Deed % tablespoou vegetable oU I can(l4 ¥. or H ouaces) wbole peeled tomatoes ~ cup dry red wlne l CJ&ll,brAn dee 1 cu (4 onces) cltopped grffn cflillet, drained 1 ¥. teupoo•• ground camln 1 teaspoon aaJt 1 cu (about 15 ouca) llpt red kidney bean1, drahled ud rinlff I 'i'. cap cbopped 1rffn pepper Suggested Toppin'/1: sliced avocado, 1bredde Cbeddar MEXICAN LAMB STEW 1 ~ ,...U lamb stew meat. well trimmed; c.t iD ~-Inda cllbet 14 cap Doer 1 'i'. teaspooa 1roud pepper 'i'. tea1poo111arllc powder z 1.4 tea,... ~u po1fcler 1 cu (lloucet) wbole tomatoes, qurtered, reserve ~d 1 teaapoo11 daldu bMllloo ~ c.p temato peree 3 tablespooa1 plcute uace I to ' lfffll o 1, cllopped I me4J•m bell tef r, clfc:ff . ~ 1 cu (ll oac Mexi-c9n1; d.raiae4 1 cu ( u otmeel) piato beau, dra.lae4 I . cu (' OllCMI) &rffD c~IU r.::::ralaed pa&Ncl*~. ...,. ereem, 1Uced black oll•es In plastic bag. mix flour, I teaspoon pepper, salt, V. teaspoon prlic pow- der and 1'4 teaspoon chili powder. Place lamb cubes inside; thoroughly coat •Brown lamb on all sides usina medium heat. Cover, set cooker on tow. cook for 8 ~ our olcoolcJng, add com, pinto beans and grceh chili pepper. To serve. sprinkle with grated chccte, dollop of sour cream and olive slice. Makes 6 servings. •1 f using a Teflon-treated pan. no oil is necessary. Use I tablespoon . vegetable oili!' using regular skillet. clleese, alfalfa 1p1CM1u and plaia 1 J..... • h h • :,:::~cf,..th onionandgarhcm -T11lS mus room as v1rtu.es oi1 in large skillet. Drain-and combtne -. . -. . wine and tomato liquid; add enough By CECILY BROWNSTONE hqu1d from m~sure uot.ll !llmon sm~th. Return mixture water to make 211'1 cups. • • c•111•,._~...., to sauce~. with rcmaina~ soup l}qu1d from measure. Chop tomatoes, rcservlJlg liquid. Probably most American cooks have read or heard the Rebea~.suun cream an~ re eat again. Add liquid to skillet and bring to a phrase, "There's 8 cooking explosion going on in the H~veex~rafmhwhat~mushreomsonh.andtoustraw boll. Star in rice, chilies. cumin and United States." and thinly shced a.s a garnish. Makes 4 strvangs (3 cups). salt. Cover tightly and cook over low Cooking schools have proliferated in every state. Note: This thick so.up has true mushft?om fla~or and heat until all liquid is absofbed.~ut Cookbooks arc publislied in profusion. And we now have an eaflhy color. lf you hke, you can ~lk 10 than soup 50 minutes. six national magazines devoted to the subjKt offood. and lighten color. V---- Stir tomatoes. kidney beans. and This cooking explosion expresses a new interest in ---------------------green pepper into skillet: Heal American foodstuffs-and those from other countries - through. Serve with desired toppings.. and in their new uses. Makes 6sen 1ngs. One of these foods is dried mushrooms. Once upon a ------------------------------------------1 ume you had to seek out a little shop in which td buy them. Now supermarkets carry them. And once upon a time it • was cooks of East European background who knew their goodness and made wonderful soups with them. Now MAKE MOM QUEEN ON MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 13TH I SERVE HONEYBAKED™ ' ~ ' ITS UNIQ!JUY DUIOOUS And '>(1 easy ltl st:rve. Because ii comes f ull·cooked a nd spiral-sliced. So party· time. d in ner·1ime or a nytime that only the he~t will do. make it HoneyBaked ... hrand ham. And you've got it made. ITS ONE GREAT HAM • '\m11~t:d & B.tked r,1r 'l() Hour' • Hone) ts. ~p1ce G la1t.>d • ~p1ral·~hctd for Sen 1ng Ea'it: • Wh ,1le & Half Ham'• Na11un1.1.iJe \h1pp1ng • G1h Ci:r11r1l.att:'.'> • PJr1~ T rct)\ "" SANTA MONICA -26JS W1lsh11~ Bl~d 1111 Pnncc1ont • 12l31 829-4607 NOttff81DG£-10157 Rtseda Blvd 111 ~onsh1n:1 • 121JI 70J·S900 ~ VALENCIA -"900 McBun PkV11)'.1Grancry Sq SbooPI., Ccn1crl • 180SI ">9000 Wt:STU.llE VIL1.AGE-m9 E Thousand Oatu Blvd (al Watlak.c Blvd.I • t80SI 497-9S9S or c21JI 991-6966 WOODLAND HILLS-20042 Vcncu,.. Blvd (at Wirinccbl • ~IJI 70)-8888 cPlus 22 ston:a l I" (A A"AHI 1'4 l 1"»11 .... OH '4Aa fl 11111•1 I "I 1"1 IA\ I Ill\..,.• Hl''11-.<,111" II A< U 1 4 HAl llA l411.l '"'JUU "lla lti Hlllll "'11(10 '11111UllllX.t OllA"<•I rAL<l 4llfJ rA~Al>f"A tlA,lHO '4111AlOI Ill\ I R\IDJ \ACll4'41 "ICI \A' Ull c.u ~4'd0\I \4' IA 841184114 '"'14 '4!1 .. l(A \I ''l \4lf 11111114"0 l Pl 4'U ~ .. u ....... ""l \l !U\1'4 .. , .. 11 ..... 1 \IU.v.r """'""4'0 Hllt\ , ONE TASTE IS All IT TAKES! Copynsht t 1984 H<,,,•t 81ktd H•m Int -------~--------~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~ many more cooks arc recognizing their vinues. Recently a soup recipe that calls for both dried and fresh mushrooms came across my desk. We found it had intense .fla vor that's unusual and delightful. MUSHROOM SOUP l ounce dried Italian-type mHbroom1 (about ~ cup) '>'a cup Madeira wlne 3 tabletpooDI butter l large onion, flnely cbopped ( 1 cap) ·-. 4 cups "1.a1y sliced muabroom1 (about ~ poUDd), Hibtly packed 14 ¥.-ounce can ready-to-1ervt clear cblcken brotb 'I• tea1pooa ult 14 teaspoon pepper '1'a cup lteavy cream In a strainer rinse the dncd mushrooms well under cold running water. In a small bowl. soak mushrooms in the Madeira for about an hour. In a ~uan saucepan over medium heat. melt the butter. Add onion; cook. st1mng, until tender -abo.lit 3 minutes. Add fresh mushrooms to onions. Cook, stifung occas1onally, unttl mushrooms arc very tender-about 15 minutes. Stir in chicken broth. Why not share your favorite recipes? If you've been enjoyins our Cook--0f.the-Week series and would like to join in. the Daily Pilot wants to hear from you. Send us-several of your fa vorite rec1pN so we can pick a couple to share with our readers. ' The series also includes a photo and short profile of our special cook each week. Send your recipN to rhe Food Editor. c/o the Daily Pilot, P. 0 . BoJ< I 560, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. and be sure to include your name. address and phone number. With a slotted spoon. carefully lit\ dncd mushrooms from Madeira and add to saucepan; let any sediment m Made1 ra set tie: pour off Madeira and add to saucepan. Add salt and pepper. Bring mixture to a boil. Reduce heat to low: cover and si mmer until thc dned mushrooms arc very ---------------------tender -45 minu tes. Pour soup through a strainer mto a 4<up hqu1d measu re. In a blender or food processor. puree mushroom and onion mi xture from strainer wi th 1h cup of tt1e soup CELEBRATE ... From Cl l tea1poo1as 1roud clDD1mon 1 tea1pooa srated lemon peel 1 aqure (1 ouce) aeml .. •fft cbocolate, grated O.Uled grape cla1ten, 1llced •pples and kJwifmt Butter · s: place on ungreased baking sheets. Mix sugar, cinnamon nd lemon peel: sprinkle on tonillas. BaJce in slow oven 325 degrees) 15 mmutes. Remove from oven; spnnkle w11h grated chocolate. Cool slightly on baking rack (tortillas sou Id be crisp). Serve with grapes, apples and kiw ifruit. Makes 12 serving~. Recipe can be halved. Tip: Tonillas can be cut mto quarters before bakmg for easier handling. REFRIED BEANS •1. cap 1~ortening or bacon drippings, divided S cups dralned, cooked or canned red, pink or pinto bean• si• to 1 cup water I clove garlic, minced •;, teaspoon cblll powder Sall Heat shortening or dnppmgs in heavy skill et. Mash I cup beans mto dnppmgs. Add a second cup beans and about 3 tablespoons water: mash beans as they are added. Repeat until all beans are used. Add garlic, chili powder and salt to taste. Heat. uncovered, until beans are 1h1ckened. stir occas1onall y Serve as a side dash. Makes about S cups. GUACAMOLE 1 medi•m avocado, peeled and 1eeded • cap Miry 1Mr eream (9Ptfolaa1) t tablespooe1 c~oppe4 tema to t tablespoo111 diced iree cblllta l tea1poo•1 lime jatce ~ teaspooa p.rllc ult Raw •eattables ud/or tortilla ctalps Mash avocado with fork . Add sour ere.am. tomato, chilies, lime juice and garlic salt: blend well. Serve with raw vegetablca and/or chips. Makes about 11/J cups dip. Grapefruit spirited Spirited frui t. CITRUS CUP PLUS a tar1 tee.di"' anptfr·•tt -~ c1p oraa1e JI.lee •.t. c•r. oraqe IJqae.r Gara Ila.: Wtkrcre11 1pri11 Cut peel from grapefrull so no white membrane remains; over a bowl. c-ut awa~ 1CCt1onl from d1vid1na membfa.ncs, sa vina JUicc. Sttr m orange Juice and hqueur: cover and chill At ~rvina time prnish with 1 watcrcrt pnp Make 4 serv1na . Prcuy ~rved 1n ihcrbct &)a ~ :Make~ 4 10 6 Stn.1ng ". Since IO~ itiPle inaredienU cu do doUblc dyty, • • tbc. unatl-lelle coot Wl11 QWCkly ~ver tbat bwrito1, • enchlladu and other aoutb-of·tbe-biorder favoriaea are : pr'lelical and economical 10 prepare for swo. · • Monterey Jack cbeete. with iu creamy catute and •mild flavor.A. ia~uaUy atbomeln a taco and alri_lledc~ MDdwicb. mroecuo UU<Je flavors ribl 011 lbe trill and beef eochJladaa. I UUwise,jalapeno ~ppen add zip to &looPY ~and : dillea reUeooa while \.Qrtillu can replace the bread ma ham and cheese undwich and enclole lbe refried beant in a I burrito. I ·. . . For Sa\K')'. Jeef T01at•d11, the tOrtiUa ii fried iA oil wllil crisp aad 90iden bn>wn .and topped with a 1e1soned ~at ~ixturt made extra easy with blrbecue sauce. SAUCY.BEEP TOSTADAI 5 Ill Jl,11 ---------• Ci 1: I --... 13 ,, .. .., .. -............ ...at.II • 511\\ .. 51 .. 1" 111-ll r ...., 11w s..-..·-0r .. c--o-.. on1 ~ 1 . .....,,_._._....., __ C...._tlGO,,,c • --~· .. QA .. I I 05-4980 l 37000 14, 50 'I i....--J• - ---- ----- --------------- - GET THIS BfB FREE· :~1 FROM.Pampers.& .=-~-Price. GET YOUR FREE* FISHER-PRICE 818 BY MAIL WHEN YOU BUY TWO BOXES OF PAMPERS ('plus $ SO f0< postage & ~handling) • Made of vinyl with non-shrink nylon binding • Easy-open Velcro· neck closure • Approxlm1tely 14 lon9 x 1n. wide (mulmum dlmerwl~ • Machine washable • A11embled In Mexico •Spill pocket PLEASE NOlE THESE ADDITIO"lAL lE'RMS 1 Oller QOOO ontv '" the U S A 2 "THE ATTACHED CERTIFICATE MAV NOl BE: MECHANICALLY REPRODUCED ANr MUST ACCOMPANY YOUR REQUEST 3 Um1t one o.b per name o• ilel<l•PS~ 4 Y'Xfr 0111•1 riqhts mav net N .• .lS~1one11 0 1 '"1nstenPc1 S Pteast• 1 ,.,. 6 tl• 8 .. eeks '"' <lf' '"ll' • 6 OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 11 1~• ..,. ...... ~ ~~ \\ ' "'-..) \ I • I CUl ALONG DOl TE' Ll"lE '""'" .. *"" ,,..., '"'f 'M.1~ f\ ~· ~ • •. ,, • .. •or ·.-Dri •• ~ ~.... It P t""Ctlk' DtU\i C. ' .. t P .. ~fl\1'!1 .,. ' _.,... '"""" ~ ~l "'t\ 'If~~.,. ,........ ~ ~. ""' ... 'b • ""t•, p,,.. •t "'"'° ~ ... rr,.r r \f"f' .. "' I S1ate Z•o C :>.j,. OFFER EXPIRE 5 lllNE 23 1Qt1t1 "'• • 1 "'· PAllll"EAS FME 911 Ol'FEl'I ""~'""'' • P O I Ol l .. S • CLINTON IA S2736 Pwnpeca Ftee &.t • • t •-,.,,,. , "' ·~ "' 1 u• • ,'tf 1 • c ' l ' I ~~~-~--=~~----~~~-~~~-~-~-~-~~---~ m 9-UVES. MOlST IN A BIG NEW BAG. \ • AND SAVE sot 9-Lives Moist-the extra protein cat food-now comes in a convenient. resealable 36-oz. bag. That means plenty of great-tasting cat food that stays fresh in the bag, and meaty in the bowl all cjay. Try the big new ~g. and save 5()¢. o-'---SEE HOW THINKING BIG CAN PAYOFF! Q 0 ~ SAVE SOC SCKl I I I I I I Try both delicious flaVor combinations: • Tuna, Choen & Egg • Salmon, Shrinp & Cheese CONSUMER n.de~ U\JS coupo11 ,. ' ~ , .... tifJiel\d ·~'" ••f!Pd l ~ t • ,, O<' Pu• ·ti~M ""1 olnf'• ,.., n \l·'ut•1 ltllJCJ MALI" # .. , t ~. 1w11\Q p. 1•(n1~ o• ,vu c fltf'U ' .. t ' 0"'4t' )UP4 "' P'••'"''•d ..,. ,,, M t.n "l'Wt"I ,,n UtQUf''t F •••utt n- itr '\n ~ llt1\ 111 ( Ot..tl)OM1: Coupon\ ,,,,., nnl ,,. lt•n1terrf'd ,,, rep•o I it"'' '\•'"'ta• rnu~I 04' p .. d by c "' 10"'"' Vo11t wllart••• p10!111ltlllt1 t••ll'CI Ot r"tttflecl hnO IO< ta •m 11 '~"'anl 01 lll'tf ••!ua plu• .. "•" d "II re. STAR ICIS T FOOOS INC PO ooi li!l'IO ~!>TON TflCAC, 11~>A I I I I I I I I LJ7 410 I STC>ftt COU!IQH I DJllM!I Ill tit&) (" '"1 ~ ... '"' ••• .... I ____________ .. . . r. • ------------------------------·------ Often fried and baked food that have been coated wi>h bread crumbs or batter end up fatty and heavy. The crumb coatina absorbs extra 011 that makes them difficult to digest as'Wtll too hi&h in calones. Yet many of us love this texture on the outside of "fried" chicken &Jld fish . If that's 'he case with you, here's a way 10 cut down on oil absorption and make the coatin& add flavor and nutrition along with thecnspy texture while keeping the chicken or fish moist and tender. A blend of ground almonds. hard cheese and seasonings is an easy coating to put together. It make' about I 1hcupsand c.an be kept in the refrigerator for aw.eek or fro~en up to 6 mo'nths. Conveniently, 11 can be used ngh1 out of the frecur to coat chicken pieces. turkey steaks and fish steaks or fillets. The sauce recipes are good on any oft he baked poultry or fiJh dishes, but the Soy Ginger comb1na11on is panicularl)' jood with fish 41nd the Tangy Mustard with turkey or chicken breasts. VERSATILE ALMOND COATING 1 cup toa1ted blaadted almonds, ground• ~ cup 1rated Pannesao clleese ~ teatpooD eaclli garlic 1alt, poultry seasoning, paprika ud dJll weed 14a &.easpooe pepper 3 poucl1 luilf cblcllen breasts, slllo11ed or % pounds hlrkey steaks or boned clticllen breasts pounded tltin or i poucls luillbat steaks Lemon jalce Apricot Butter Citrus Hooey Sauce Tangy Mastard Sauce • Soy GlDJer Sauce Combine almonds. cheese. garlic sah. poultl")' seasoning. paprika. dill weed and pepper. Coaung may be stored in air-tight cont.ainer in di), cool locauon. Dip.chick.en.. turkey SU!ak~or f~on i~ coat With almond coating. Place on baking sheet. Bake at 400 degrees: chicken breasts -45 minutes: turkey or chicken steaks and fish -20 minutes. Serve w11h Apncot Butter, Ci.trus Honey ~uce. Tang> Mustard Sauce or Soy Ginger Sauce. Makes 6 servings (I 'Ii cups coaling mix). 'Grind almonds in food processor or a few at a time in the blender: Apricot Batter: Combine 111 cup buner. softened with 1/4 cup finel y chopped dned apncots. Sm m I tablespoon shced green onions and I teaspoon capers. Makes about ~, 1 cup. -Citrus Honey Sauce: Combine 2. tablespoons hone}. I tablespoon cider vinegar. 1/i teaspoon df) in.ustard and 'I• teaspoon each grated orange and lemon peelSur in '•cup orange juice and 2 tablespoons lemon Juice. Place I teaspoon cornstar~ small saucepan. Blend in sauce mixture. bring to 00.1. cook sumng constantl > until slightly thickened. Makes about 'h cup. Tangy Mastard Sauce: Combine 2 tablespoons each honey and D1JOn mustard. Sur in 'I• cup cider\ inegar and dash garlic powder. Place I teaspoon cornstarch in small saucepan. Blend~in sauce mixture. bnng to boil. cook stirring constantly until thickened. Stir 1n I tablespoon sliced green onions. Makes about ''~cup. Soy.Gloger Sauce: Combine ''• cup so} sauce w11h 2 tablespoons each honey, wme vinegar and water. Sur in '• teaspoon ground gin~er and dash garlic powder Place I teaspoon cornstarch 1n small saucepan. Blend in sauce mixture. bnng to boil. cook slimn& const.antly unlit thickened. Stir in I tablespoon sliced green ontons. Makes about 1b cup. I I I I I I I - Seafood menu cooks In minutes. Se8.f aier'.s dinner saves time, calories F1shmg for a ne"' Jow-calone menu idea fo r two'! Drop anchor. mate). and sef\e your hungf) crew member a seafarer's s-election of cod fillet spnnklcd with dill weed and lemon pepper to gl\ e 11 a zest) Oavonng. Round oul the meal with cnsp) broccoli spears and new potatoes. Cooked in a pressure cooker. this min1-calonc dinner for two weighs in at only 266 calories per delicious serving . This caloric..conscious meal saves not JUSt on pounds. but lime. too The entire dmnercan be cooked together an a pressure cooker in fi ve mmutes .. So. set yo ur sails seawA rd for a think-thm meal that doesn't skimp on taste. MINI-CALORIE DINNER FOR TWO l (l pound) package frozen cod fisb fillets (about 354 calories) 4 to 8 small new potatoes (about I 08 calories I l I l O-ou11ce) package frozen broccoU •pears (about 70 calories) DUI weed ·~ teaspoon lemon pepper 44000 ll2b&& . Dasb salt l cap water Remove fish from refngcrator and thaw at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Meanwhile. wash potatoes and cut pan1al- ly through in 1/4-inch slices. Remove frozen broccoli from package and wrap in foil. closing t1ghtl}. Cut fish into 4 pieces. Sprinkle with dill weed. lemon pepper and salt. Remove cooking rack from a 4-or 6-quan pressure cooker. Put I cup water, fish and potatoes in pressure cooker. Place cooking rack on tQp of potatoes and fish. Balance broccoli packet on cooking rack. Close pressure c.ooker cover securely. Place pressure regulator on vent pipe. Cook for 5 minutes at 15 pounds pressure. Cool pressure cooker at once. -J Do Nol Attempl To Remove Cover Until Pressure Is Completely Red•ced. Makes 2 semngs (about 26§ calones per serving.) Note: For a lower calorie count. serve only h:fllf the fish. Save remainder for another meal. Larger potatoes should be cut in half bcl'ore slicing. OC chefs featured , By MARGE BITETTI 0..,,l"WC..flllll ..... If you dined recentl) at The Rnz. or Le Premier. and wanted to learn how to prepare similar fare in your own kitchen. the op- ponunity 1s coming! ".'.fhe 'Great Chefs of Orange County," ·a 13- week senes. will begin at' 4:30 p.m. Saturday. May 5, on Channel 56. &st and show creator is Kit Fremin. a former New Orleans chef and vice president of Pat Boone Productions. The first show. saluting Ci nco de Mayo. will feature the Copa de Oro restaruant. Costa Mesa. During the half-hour seg- ment a complete Mexican dinner will be prepared. In the following weeks. culinary talents will be demonstrated bv chefs from Ambrosia. Antonello R1stora nte. Alfredo's, Chantecla1r. Gemmell's, The Ritz. Hemingway's. Le Premier. La Palme. Le Chardonnay. lafa)etteand Five Crowns. A pnntcd collecuon of recipes will be available tO viewers by mail at a mini- mum charge. Whip up anew 1'•Y to fix eggs It's dehc1ous. easy to make and may bc·new to you. SWISS EGGS 4 1llce1 brud1 cn1t1 remove4 4 tablespoons butter 4 large e11s ~cup milk \ti teaspoon ult ~ cu p coarsely ' shredded Swlu cltee1e Toast bread and cut into about 1-incb squarcs..ln a 10-ioch skillet in the hot butter fry the bread squares on both sides unul golden brown and evenly coated with the buuer. lka1 egs. milk and salt to blend. stir in cheese. • pour over bread 1n skillet. L STOOL COUPON I .J ----------------------------------• Cook acnsly and as hecomc firm. scrape from hottom of 1>3n so nu1d m1itturc runs down. rvr at once. Make 2 servtnJ."1 • ·' , ... · ;,~YWENCK 1111 1 -......... • Oeneric -or plain, no- na~. or no·ftilla -• labeled food bas been ~nd fot ~!'!Y seven. or et111t years. Whela it flrat ~. it WU viewed IS • ahon.-run phenomenom tlled ~a few markctsa•an ldvertitina come.on. Much to the surprise of ldafty, lbe inCO$Jljto peck· With no pactu~ no naJl)es, no reca {>Cs. Just one color of pnnt· ill bas cau&ht on. More *'°-"' are ofl'erina aenerics tp keep up with competi· tt0n, and there is a greater variety of products avall-able. , Although generics ac- oduot for onl)' 4SO of an averqe 12,000 stocked i*ems ln a supennarket, the annual volume of thcx IDOdJ exceeds S 1.4 billion. And they sell with vinually no advenisi ng or promo-tion. Consumers have de- veloped a greater aware- ness of generics and arc more willing to sample them. according to a con- sumer survey conducted in Chicago. The survey also showed that shoppers are diKoverina the quality of perics varies from item to item. -enain gener'ic prod- Ucts. often nonedibles or beak edibles to be used in cooking (for example, pesta). have gained wide acceptability with con- sumen. Examples of the rhost popular generic prod- ucts are: paper towels, toilet tissue. liquid bleach, mus- tard and tomato sauce, Some consumers believe they arc takine a risk when buying gcnenc products. They suspect the products are of poorer ql.l8lity than name brands. ThiJ perception was verified in "blind" taste and touch tests (panici- pants could not see the products and could only $4lste or touch them) con- ducted by Daniel J, Mclaughlin, professor of food marketang at St. Joseph's Universi ty in Philadelphia. In the test, respondents were asked to express their preferences by taste or touch for national brands versus aencric products in paired comparisons. Some 500 responses were col- lected in all for nine food products ·and three non- food products, The summary resuJt for all tested items showed that H .6 percent of the respon- dents preferred nationaJ brands. compared to 37. I percent who favored gener- ics and 9.3 percent who were undecided or saw no dttfcrcncc. Supermarket representa- ti ves and manufacturers say they arc able to cut the pncc of generics in two ways: (I) by downgrading the packaging and labeling and (2) by modifying the product's ingredients and specifications -but never to the point where they sacrifice or compromise the nutrition or whole- someness of a food, Often, packagjf\$ 1s the sole source of savings be- tween a generic and a brand Fish supply to increase May is an important seafood month for fresh ulmon fanciers si nce the northern California season opened Tuesday. Con- f umers can expect to sec a rick.J ing of King salmon Into restaurants and retail markets, Supplies arc expected to be good, but pnccs can be expected to be high as consumer demand usually outstrips supply. Overall, seafood avail- •bility will increase as fish · lna vessels on both coasts are able to go out on a more consistent basis. Pnccs will drop slightl y as quantities of seafood increase, From the Pacific. awordfish and shark season opened Tuesday. However, the catch is of\en unpredic- table. Outdoor cooking fans might want to clean the barbecue for the arrival ofthesc thick·fleshed fish. Quantities of Dover sole, Ru sole. sand dabs, ling cod. true cod, EnaJish sole, petrale sole and flounder wilJ be good. Rock fish (Pacific snapper) may be- come scarce as th-e aovem· ment's fishina quota catch f'or the year is almost filled. Shellfish lovers can be happy txca~ there are tood quantities of crams1 oysteri, mussels. sea ana bay scallops, Uve Maine lobtter and live blue crabs. Also from the Eastern ldboard. there's aood 1vtllability of monk fish, scrod. dab sole, Eattcm Ouke and Florida 1wordfish. ~pioduct_ ~ iocrmed~i aerni in tbete l>foduetJ ftlpired bis brud-name 11ufac.. turtn te prodaace aentric or cut.,..tt JC>Ods lo compete with their own traditional .product line. Even ICWenilina firma are now comparina brand-name products to 1t11erics. ,. me packa&ina process. The old-style canons uted ror ref,..,.\ed r>rod&aetS such as malk and (nail drinks are simply filled and ~&led with the hsb product with no proceujna used to keep the food fresh. The ~ina time of the food i1 limued. The liquids packed in cartons (often called "Brik Pak .. ) that arc found ~ refritttaltd on lbe Delves have been ~ked ln a proceu called .. aseptic packa&Jna," Botfi the f~ and tbe container are sterilized before pack.lain&; then 1hc food and container are brouaht totether in a bacteria-free or aseptic No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Ev~rybody .. i (l!tcOI. Your Home! t i ts ft;..IUU t3.19 , .......... ," •2~1 • Roech KW.er J ~~ I Tab, Sprite,• REG OR CAFFEINE FREE CokeU Diet Coke ~kins Spray.!••. 79 kVG>' svetTll\11( • L. Borateem I •oooz 3.2v "---(I .Jelllee ...... •i. .. .... -..,~ .. ..., g.....,.._ •L9f ~---·~ ~I . ' DietPepd Prices Effective May 3-9, 1984 At All Stater Bro&. Mnets sbeddsl -Spread ~~.69 /"\ WHITE OR GOlD Ronrlco Rum •. .,.una )~-~ ......... ~ .......... --------. --~·--~· ....... _,....,.....,. tl. '\;. , ~-----· .. ~' -.. ·- Vi.Ya ! Towels -l ....... •1• •• .. .... .......... ... Plants ~~-~-~~ ;. About two out of three men an the nation cook in some form or help with home cookjng, according to a recent study of food preparation habits by the Gallup Organiza- tion. With many more women in today's workforce. th'5 new trend is based on necessity, as well as personal preference. ·· 'W~cn a meal has to ht planned in limited ti~e, man.y cooks hke to try a casserole. Here's one with a Mexican flair ~t's perfect for a beginner or for those who have more on their minds "1an cooking. · Th.is hearty fresh -meat-and-dairy products casserole is made with classic cream of wheat. A nutntious and 51tisfyio' dish. 1t's made in less than one hour and acts as a ··meal in one." when topped with shredded lettuce and tomato. .. I ~ caps milk I ~ caps water ~ teaspoon salt MEXICALI BAKE l cap cream of wheat. uncooked 3 ea•. lightly beaten I onces Cheddar cbeese, coarsely grated (about caps) l pond ground beef I medium onion, chopped I (4-ouce) can chopped green chilies, 1111dralned 1 (8-ounce)Jar iaco. sauce Mexlcalt Balle la a nutrltioua and aatiafylng dt.h. -- 1 cap shred ~ leuuce 1 cup dairy sour cream I medium tomato. chopped In medium saucepan. combine milk:. water and salt; bring to a boil. Gradually add cereal. preparing according to package d1 recuons. Rem<Ne from hecil; stir in~ and I cup cheese. Spread 1n greased 2-quan shallow baking dish. 1n medium skiTieL coo°Koeer: arain excess fat. A<!a onjon and chilies: cook until onion 1s transparent. Stir in taco sauce. Spoon over cereal. Bake at 375 degrees for 30 to 40 mi nutes. Let stand 5 minutes. Garnish with lettuce. remaining cheese. sour cream and tomato Makes 6 servings. Italluo Bake: Prepa~ the cereal mixture as directed above, substi1u11ng 111 cup grated Parmesan cheese fo r Cheddar cheese Spread in greased 2-quart shallow baking - dish. Prepare ground beef mixture as directed above. substituting 1 ~ cup grated Parmesan cheese for Cheddar cheese. Spread 1n greased 2-q uart shallow baking dish. Prepare ground beef mixture as directed above, subst11ut1ng I clove garlic. crushed. and 1 (8;-ounce) can pazza sauce for green oh1hes and taco sauce: spoon over cereal la)'Cr. Bake at 375 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes. Spnnkle I cup grated Mozzarella cheese, 1/i cup sliced pepperoni, and 1/z cup chopped green pepper over beef layer-i nstead of Mexican garnishes. Continue baking 10 minutes or unlll we ll heated. Potassium loss diuretic danger Du~ter<i "ho regular!} use d1ureucs. or water pills. as quick-loss diet aids arc sernng themselves up for a d1sappo1nung weight gain and uncomfortable side effects, warns the ( ahforn1a D1ctcuc Assoc1at1on (C'OA). "The overuse and misuse of d1uret1cs as a method for quick "e1sht loss 1s common." sa)s·Sharon Long. R.D .. CD.\ president "While some '-"Omen safel) use d1uret1cs a few days each month to relieve water retention. prolonged use· results in a drastic loss of potassium and has made potassium ddic1c nq a widespread problem. "The) deh~dratc your body, causing it to only temporanl) lose water weight," Long says. "Any dieter who uses water pills to COfttrol their weight will damage their bod\ in the long run.· · NUTRITIOUS ... From Cl '• cup flour Cook garlic in 'egctable 011 2 to 3 minutes. Add pork chops Bro" n on both sides. .'\dd beef broth. wane seas9nl'd salt and pepper Co" er and simmer 25 minutes. .\dd ~ions and potato. Cook 15 minutes more. R O\C pork chop!. to serving platter. Keep warm. Whisk 1 get her milk and flour Stir into vegetable mixture. Cook. \llmng const&lltl y. until mixture JUSt comes to a boil and th1rkcns. Serve O\.er pork chops. Makes 4 sen 1ngs I"\()() ~:alorics per sen mg) Chinese cooking quick, easy and fun < h1nl.'\l' lOo k1ng 1s on the upswing all across the rnuntl") It'\ OaH1rful. quick-cooking and fits right into 1oda) "; "bealthlul eating" lifestyle. [H'n for thl' no' ice. this chicken salad 1s an easy way tu begin tn l'OJll) the pleasures of Chinese cooking at home. Thnix·ual 1ngrcJ1en1s arc cas) 10 find m the Oriental '>l'<:t1•m o t thl' c;upcrmarket. but 1f you ha"c trouble. canned cho"' ml'ln nooJk~ subs111u1e for n ee sucks and fi"e spice po"Jl'r •'>a hknd of fenl)l!l..anise. gmger. cinnamon and clO\C\ lhat \OU <:an maltc tO taste CHl~E. E ALMOND CHICKEN SALAD Vegetable oil 111 cups li~btly packed threadlike rice sticks• (2 ounces I Five-Spice Dressing, recipe follows 2 cups julienned, cooked skJolen chicken 1 3 '111 cups shredded iceberg lettuce 1 cup lightly packed coriander ( cllutro) .. sprigs 3 green onions with tops, thinly sliced ,,.,,. cup sliced almonds, toasted 1 t.lblespoon sesame seeds, toasted Lettuce leaves Pour oil into a hca' ~ 8-inch or I 0-inch skillet to a depth of1/z 1nchc!.. Heat un"ul \Cry hot over high heat. Drop nee stick!. into oil. a small handful C\t a time. (Rice sticks Wlll expand to about follrt1mcs their SlZ~.) Remove tmrned1a1el) w11h ,1011cd spoon to paper toweling; se t aside. Pour F1ve-Sp1cc Dre\c;ing inlo large mixin' bowl. Add chicken. toss Add lc11uce. coriander, green onions. all but 2 tablespoonc; of the almonds and sesame seeds. toss PORK CHOPS 1~~ FOL.GER'S INSTANT COFFEE •I ii UT£R BOTTI.l SKAGGS ALPHA BETA VODKA OR GIN T-BONE STEAKS 2~~ WHOLE TOP SIRWIN EA . • 15-0Z. PKG LINDA'S TORTILLA STRIPS 1-LB. PKG. IMPERIAL MARGARINE MARKES BEEF TAQUITOS •ll SOZ. Pf(G A friend of· mint, an octoaenanan. sometimes cntenain1 at din-net. She cooks for four with ~.iea::~ because she has ctrtain d shes for which she haU""rkw-, out e~~ct directions. . . • One of them iu rack oflan)b lharaoes into the ovetl for a brief period and oomes out tasting delicious, lhe mcaJ oook.ed perfectly. Here's the recipe; . ROA.ST RACK OFLAMB 1-rtlt rac?k of la•b, a. oae piece (•bo•t %1.4 po••> Salt ... ,.,,er ltaltleQeoalHIUer IA etap liae dey ltread CRmbt t tal»lespeet11 panley leavn, mi.aced Have butcher trim fat from s ace of-the meat and l clole 1•r1Jc. mtmced ~ . saw or crack about I inch fro e bottom between each rib for ease in carvina. · With a knife, aently push down the meat between the tops of the ribs. leaving about I inch bone e~po~. Linc a 13 by 9 by 2-in~h roastin$ pan with foil. Pl~ce . the rack oflamb an lhc roasung pan, lying flat and mea~ side down: sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roast on the ~addle rack 6f a preheated 500-degrec oven for about 15 minutes; leave oven control at 500 degrees. · In a small skillet. melt butter. Off heat, stir in bread crumbs. parsley and garlic. Remove pan from. the oven, tum lamb over and spread the meat side with crumb mixture. Return pan to oven and roast lamb about 10 minutes longer. Makes 4 servings. WHOLE NEW VORK STRIPS · 2 9L~ •ECONOMY ALPHA BETA PACK MILD CHEDDAR CHEFSE DANISH HOUSE PASTRIES EA. • 7-0Z. Pt<G •RASPBERRY l£MON •CINNAMON 0£.Un:S • F1WIT DWT~ •BEAR CLAWS SKAGGS ALPHA BETA BLEACH thoroughly -'\dd nee slicks: toss lightly · Arrange lettuce leaves on a serving platter. Mound \alad on lettuce leave<; pnnkle w1th remaining almondc; Garnish with conander spngs. 1f desired. Serve 1mmed1· 1tely Makes 4 to 6 main dish ~r'vtngs (abot>t 8 cups) Prlce1 Effective at all Southern Callfornla Alpha Beta Marketa Copy1•9hl l'MM All "O"ll teMNe<I Wt ••H"t tnt 11b111 10 hm1t Q11•"t I·•• ~'"ft• Coueca.a O'> au hatott llt ""• S.-1 W•nt & l>Quo• Nol A•••••i:.,. "A 1 ••O••• FJVE-SPICE DRESSING ''• cup vegetable oil ' 1 teaspoon ult 1 teaspoon dry mustard I teaspoon seutne on• 11', leHpooD five-spice rowder• Thorou&hl y blrnd al 1ngrcd1cnt' with for k or w1rr whisk • •f rc'ih coriander. nee \llCJ<<,, .,e.,amc nil'and fi V<'·'>Pll t' powder are ava1labk 1n the onc(ltal ~ct1on' of mo't markets ••'\,k the.' r1<){ju(c manaitt'1 for ulontru . ' \. DO.UBLE SAVINGS COUPONS ,------•MW·'·'R+ :~~,:;l!---. I I .............. ,., \ I DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPON I I "'"•n' 1n1t tOlll>O" ••ono '"'II ~ny ont l'lltru•atlu•,,' C•"11 011 tnuoo" I 11\0 Otl OOIJfll f fHf SAVIN(j'i .. nM you p..1 ~•~• int 1rl'l'I I 1Hu .. , '° llCLuet •m1m" F•ll ctv'°H DR cou,,o ovu 11 ao I I MfU" 1.u 1tt ucu1 mut ., Ill• IUIJlCT fo 1 OC• Oii 11u o I flCl UOfl llOUP fOIAC~O HO OAIH 'llOOUCfl I H 111111•11• ru.CMAll A£Ou1m I ll .. , OI( •Tl• l't• MA•UfACTU~A I couro• HO LIMIT fllAU OOUIU COU,Oll 'IA CUSTO.U I \ CtUftlll ... l!lllll MAl J lllAU wU llU t I., ~ ~----------------- ,------~;liJ11i1 'ii;•·:.:~"!·~.-~ I ......... ., ... ,.\ \ I DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPON I I l'ttttnl tills t~:,:.'f'1W:""' ll'ly ont 1111'1vl1C1111t1 s ont1 ou tC!UllM I •llf gr ' SAVINGS .. ~.n y011 ~''"Ht IH ti !II I oHu .lot "•lKL~llTAllU 111 nn co11NH 011couma6vu 11 Dll I I 11uuH •n lfT 1 uo mill Of 1n• l lltilCf TO uecc 11 " .. o I fltlUOU llOUOll f COAlll IAllHllOIUl:TI I ~ ..... u. ,UACllAI( lllOUIMG I u•n °' 111• '111 u•uucr11~11 • c1ul'Otl ••11 llM11 ltAU IOUIU Clllrtlll 'fl! CUlfOllU I \...._ COU'9111 r1111RI •n , lit!IU Wit .. , • ..... __. ------------------. ~ ·. . ... • WHOLE PORK WIN l~ • 12-0Z CANS BUDWEISER LIGHT BEER • 60-COUNT EXTRA ABSORBENT • 41-COUNT TOO OLER • 40.COUNT MAXIMUM DISPOSABLE "8SORBENT PAMPERS DIAPERS •CHEESE CANNE.U.01'•11 •ZUCCHINI LASAGNA SlOUFFER"S LEAN C tJISINE Thursday, May 3 through- Wednesday, May 9, 118.f ON ELF.SS BEEF CHUCK SHOULDER STEAKS 1a~ •• Oii l'IOlll f'£JI ~ FOR LARGE HASS AVOCADOS VINE RIPENED CANTALOUPE ~ ARROWHEi\D 'SPARKLING WATER CiA\l:"i<1"i HI I <HI 11 1PHI \toll.., \\I I I<.., 1\1 l'lt·' ht 1 ~ l'lm 1 '>t<, ,,t..ffiur rRK'm TO~l"I M<tt't l<f ()l:Jt I K.>f't~ ~I t 'if\1- 0F ACl\ f kl 1'1 I l < >R l'ROMOTIONAI PfflC S F.rutt-filled chocolate· torte'-_ ideal for any fancy occasion When special prina iet·t<>sethen call for a m<>tt elaborate dessen, choose 10 impn::u1vc-lootiftl. fnlit· filled tOrte for the occasion. AltbO\lp veniODI of the classic European layered dessen may look int.imidat.ina to make, these tone recipes u~ a shon-cut ln4nhod. . Instead of the tradiut'>nal ••from .cratcb" cake layers, these simplified torte& are made with rich fudte browniet, easily prepared with refritieratedbrOwnie·~. Sineetbe brownie layen are so ea. !Y to prepare, the recipes allow time to makf the special fillinp. . Fruit filled Brownie Torte features.a unique combina~ hon -chocolate layers fq)arated by a tangy oranac- pineapple fillina. Banana Brownie Tone will be espej:iaUy popular with chocolate aficionados1 since the chocolate brownie layers are laoed with a rich cnocolate fillina. FRUIT FILLED BROWNIE TORTE it.....ce pacb1e rdri1era&ff ~ 11 bake r..ce browales Ft1Jta1 ~ c.pn1ar \ t tablespooas conas&arck '4 teaspooa salt 1 cep oraa1e juice 1 tea1pooa arated eru1e Pffl, U desired 11-ouce cu mudart. eraqes, well clralaed I oace caa crH•ed plaeapple, clrataed Fro1tlD1 ........ _, ............. .._ ......... -....... .. ----·---.............. , .. ,... . ..., .............. ·-............ ,...., .......... C...Cillll ........... -....... .. .-wL•lll 'S .. ~....alt~•m.•alll• .. Clllwllllc.r..--... .......... .... .-.. ............. ..., __ ,.."" ...,.. .. ____ _ ......... llllllri .. _ ..................................... ..., .... 11111 ........................................ _____ _ ~ Al1-..... ,_ .................. .,_.. ........ ..-.. ""'' .... _ .. _____ •lf "'-... ........... .,,, ......... ,. __ .,._._....., _____ _ ...... .._.. __ .... Ill .......... --.. ,, _., • ...,.... ••I• :..'.; .. ! .. w .. I ... " . " c..,......,r: ....... 8t ::.rz .... I• I " .... . .,, ........ ' rir ,..,,, ~··ou .. SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS! IAllCY ILOMDEll 125,000 WINNER! MAllY DAWSOll CHEVROLET EUROSPORT WAGON WINNER ! -.(svii-----W. •. 11111 1t w1um1so• CHEVROLET EUROSPORT SEDAN WINNER! L.TIJll> 'e*hl ., inch round or square cake pans. Divide brownie doulh in half crosswise. Spread half of douab in each om-red pan. Bake for 2S to 30 minutes. Cool completely. R.emove &om pans. . .... In small sa~lk .over ~ hea combine chocolate, marpr1ne and com syrup; stir until smoo'11. Add I cup 'powdered supr, water and va.o.i.Ua; stir un\il smooth and glossy. Place one brownie.Ja.yer riaht-tidil>up on 1en inaplate. Immediately spread chocolate fillina oves-top of brownie. Arrange I 1h sliced bananas on ~ of fillina (reseTVina rcmainina sliced banana for pm1sh). Place remainina brownie layer on top of bananas. In medium bowl, beat wbippina aam until soft pea.ks fonn. Gradually add powdered sugar and cocoa; continue beatin& until stiff peaks. form Frosuidcs_and top with whip~ cream. Gama.sh with chocolate dipped banana slices, if desired. Refriierate leftoven. 16 servinp. TIP: For chocolate dipped bananas, melt 1 ounQC (l 'square) unsweetened choci>lat~ dip "2 of banana I.lice m chocolate. Spring market filled with fruit Springtime hcraAds a wide vricty of fJab &uiu mat will iakc u.s lhrouab the summer. The fim lbipmaa• of California crapes. cherriC$ and melons should appear this week. and luscious peaches. n~tarines and pJums are on the horizon . F RUITS Strawbemcs arc one of the best fruit• values to be found this week. ProductJon this season is very high and is .p~ictcd to continue through June. And prices arc low! Appearing on produ~ shelves shonly wiU be the season's first cherries. Early varieties out of the Stockton and Lodi areas arc Burlats and Chapmans. The popular Dings and Lamberts arc to arrive in mid-May: Get ready for a great cherry season due to an excepuonaJ winter growing period. . Cantaloupes and watermelons arc coming from Mexico in great quality. The California crops will start in the middle of May. Prices should decrease as the melons become more plentiful. Tomatoes arc plentiful from Mexico and Florida. They carry a reasonable price tag and those from Aonda arc of good quality. Peaches have begun to amve from the Coachella Valley area and the Arvin area will contribute supplies soon. Pnccs on this seasonal item arc moderate. but expected to drop as supply j ncrcases. Nectannes. plumsandapncotsare slated for arrival m the next few weeks. Consumers can look forward to an excclleru season of these fruits ·because of the excellent growing weather. The Coachella grape season will be getting under way in mid-May. Perlettcs and Red Flame Seedless arc the earhcst grapes to amve. and some of the most pkasina to consumers. Dark-skinned Hass avocados have stancd their summer season. They arc a creamy. extra-rich variety that make a great addition to salads. Navel oranges are neanng the close of an excellent season. Look for low retail prices and super sweet flavor as production levels off. Valencias wtll soon be arriving from Anzona and then from California areas. These JUiC) delights should have high quantity and excellent flavor. VEGETAB~ Low pnces and great quahty are typical of th1s year's production of fresh \egetablcs. California growing areas are suppl\ mg leaf items aplent). Lcnucc of all vane1tes. spinach and cabbaac are amvmg m record amounts and supcnorquahty. Prices arc reasonable. The weather has brought on crops faster and m larger amounts than usual. and the consumer can sec the benefits m lo"' pnces Cucumbers and squashes of all vanet1es arc avallable at reasonable pnces. The Santa Mana area 1s still supplying a large quant•t> offresh broccoli and cauliflower Th"' are available at a lo"' pncc More good nc\\c; 1n the vegetable de{>llrtment 1s due to the low pncc and a .. a1lab1lity of green onions and radishes These items add a dash of color and fla vor to your favonte salad Rclu:f 1s hcmg fe lt from those hl&h pnces in potatoes and onion<; over the past months. This week mark.s the ava1labil1tyofthe longawa1tedCentenmaJ Russet potatoes out of Bakersfield. 6 White and Red Rose varieties have ma~ lhe1r debut and are cu1TCntl) available 1n your favorite produce department. These fresh supplies m potatoes replace the old. ured potat~from storaae. Brown onion~ out"of Blythe. El Centro and Anzona arowing areas arc amvmg now and the new supplte1 should pro .. 1de lower pnccs ~cct lt.ahan Red onions are av11labk as well Ice cream topping "ven otl ~u~t PINEAPPLE SAUCE I roNl•m or larre ripe plHa,,W I rep •• ar ( ~ cep water I " kaspeou vaallla Pa~ p1n~pplc. rut into thin nnp and core; slioe into ~mall wtttaes -there hould be 3 or 4 CU{IL ln a uccpan (no larger than 1 quan) over low btat 1ur toctther supr and water until "IJll' d1 Ive" Brina to o entlt t>o.t boil "'i\hou& Lim for 7 mmut~ ()fl hl"'at 'illr 1n vanilla: pour O\tr pintapplt and ~mt>r t1,m1v Cool l\nd t•h11l ~ncovcr van11la 1C't'crtam .... l .... . ..i.:_ ~ COMt DAILY Pll.'.OT/Wedne.day. May 2, 1914 TTY turkeypatts an for thlg~s • Who says th.at stuffed turkey 1s only for special occasions1 Today. rouJcd stuffed turkey' can be rved any time of the ycv. thanks to srowcPS who produce these tasty birds all year-round for a~ ever-mcreasin& consumer market. You 't need a holiday pany with many auests to fin1 off a whole stuffed California turkey. Even II family can do n when leftovers arc or casseroles. st1r-fned dishes, sandwic so ps and stews. But somctf y u may want stuffed turkey for a singJe meal -a dish that can be made quickJy man hour or two. That's the umt to choose California tur'lccy pans. Turkey thighs. for example. arc mealy enough to ht boned and stuffed. rolled and tied. then roasted for one hour. Best of all . b} pounding the boned thighs thm. you can stretch two thighs to make 1it servings! Redu~ htat·1a1mmcr l S mmutes. Add nuts and i. _ ea: mix wel . TUPFED CAUFORNlA Tvl\.KEY THIGH Spoon hal f the stuffina over eat h tbiah. l tarte)' mJP• (abo1t a pouda) Roll ul) ahd tic with stnna. Place rolled tbi&)ls in YI cup $pjtH oalo• sh.allow 1?9kina dish; pour wine ove~. l'tke. ~ cup btlJ111r wt.eat covered, 10 3SQ..d~ oven, l hour. S C.ble1pooa1 b•tter Uncovtt, co0k until tender, about JS \; cap e~lll clllopped applet aad nl1ta1 minutes. Remove to hc.tcd platter and serve 114 capt dlckea boullloa wi th reduced pan juices. Makes 6 servings. 11, ka1poo• curry powder Salt ud pepper 'i'I cup coanely cltopped wahaut1 l eu , bealea 'l'I cup red wlDe Remove bones from turkey thiahs and pound to 1h-mch thickness. Set aside. • In skillet. saute onion a,nd bulgur wheat in butter until golden. Sur m apples. raisins. bouillon and seasonmp; cover. Bnng to boil. =.coo~ California tu key booed, p0uaded and rolf- ed aromad a NYOJY etvlftnt. •••••(f!,iJ3•••••• Double Coupon Double Coupon p,,.,, 11Ill\•1.0uP.l'" 1l~"'4J .,t.., •"t ,, M 1nuf.u hrr·' "'"'"' oU ·~· .. ,,.,,..qr' ,tu ft.•f" ''" .. ·~ .,,f' ..• o .. ., ... ,.,. .... '"'' ''! lriiiut to •'W•\i~ ••• •·1#4' t ,, \l"H • • .,.,.., h .,,. _ ~ •.• , ... ,. -~ ,.., F•V-n • , .• , ~'.'Mt ..... ~~;-:;r.:-: :.t.,,7 r. ~.~,:--.-,-nrt •••""* '"'' c~ M°""9 ••'" .,. • .w Me"Wtectvit9ft U "'' otl ,.._.,.. _., .,, CIOllOI• '"• ....................... ~...... ..... .... .. ...... .. ... --......... .. . ,,....... ........ --,,......,.,..... c~ ... ••••• ,._ ... ~ .... .,et ••t ... '"• ... ••..,...it.-tu~~,....~ -:.:~~°:':~~~ .. -".\.'~-::...-.·.·.~.J;;~~ :: 1 • .' • ., ., ... • •• :~ •;· .7; ·~:~~·:: ·: . ,....,.,...," tow~ ~""" 1 th..-• '"" ttvi1.... ,,, 1 •1 • • tt th• , 11 1• •11 11 .. 1h" I ••• .. fff l;•t•t•,.. lv\#.-11. \ol O• 11 I t \••ytl•H I L1m1t One Item Per Manufacturers Coupo n and L1m11 l Newspaper Double Coupons Per Cwtomer Coupon EHechve Moy l thru May 9 1984 tO~C'CO "'.al._d.ttt, ptOOvtl' • LtmW't>ne Item Per Manwactwers· Coupon and Limit J Newspaper Oodble Coupons Per CUStomer Coupon • t uect1 .. May 3 thru May 9. 1964 • t••tc:e •"ti 4flt+ff tHMw<t\ ..... Lim it One llem Per Monutactu1e1s Coupon and L1m1t 3 Newspaper Double Coupons Per Custom e1 Coupon USDA lnsp -Golden Prem.JUm -Not to E:xceed JO~. Fat Save .32 per lb. . per lb. II Save up to .30 l ~ lb. Joat USDA liup Gold•n P1•m1um a..1 Loin :ri a, 39 :1~~ l M1z3·d 9 pe1 • per • lb Lb monterey )O C k • © . ' I cheea• ' .. ' .. ,., ' MoIJ.terey Jg~k --cheese~ S Plain W1ap ramlly S11• ~F~l.99 ._ ________ -"!""'.'!!!!!!--~----· ~-~ ... -· Buys Save 55 d ozen pllg ~~- ! ~~!~.~~~v~ Buy 6 Save 32 8 oz can Save 0 6 17oz can .49 EUec:11ve May 3 thN May 9 1984 White Rose Potatoes p er Lb .29 , ~------~-.... ~ Plain Wraprv ·Tortill~ Strips:~ Save .0 6 15 0% bag .89 01 Cld•t I ' \ - d.a~ ~ ' I l '. "' '.' "' Any Hershey's Candy Bar ' , \ , otibi~l0Co6 01 Ct•am 01 Ne sa11 Standard Srr~ ~ar or D1•t lJ o• can -~ar or l.Jglll 11 o• can Porcelain China ~:;,::•t·s 6 on9ly Save 06 16 0% can ;;39 Special Values tmpof1N rr.nr:ll 61". Supt•m• Brie Chese ·· Buy4 Save 40 Armow ramow • • 1 89 Summer Sausage ... :;· . sj;ariumg water .. .86 Puritan Oil ',.,' 1~85 Clorox Bleach . 65 5pag.h;tti&M~atbans .83 c .. ,,..,,,t •••• , ....... .~ •• , t ....... "" •• ~ ...... , ••u···" #II• t., •. ,. '""" ..... "". '", ... ' ...... .,,. , •• ttll ....... , • If•• •• , ....... ,_ .. 2.00 Savel 9 p~~k .2 Special Values llu•na Com1da Eonghom Cheese ~ 2. 75 'Pl;J::zta Burritos ;;; 4151 'il<!,lif!;ro~ci'iJ°iead .. 89 ··•rJ 65 ,. . Ralph• Sesame Buns Saucer• Save p!t4.49 Prices effective May 3 thru May 9, 1984 , .. """' ,1.0 •• • •• 011\ •••• •••• ,,..-. ~ .,, , •• ,..,, • • !\' • p • •o" • ..,.. •• '"''"" •• ..... , , ....... ~~·•.,ot•\ A ,,, t f If ,._, .., lf'llt\ ,_., t•P tt .. \. f .. 1J1 14, t .. f ••I_. eft \t .. t' p "\ t \ ttt • If ... ·~•••t ~ •fll Ofllll' ., ~ •• tllf ..... ~,,_. .. ....-. lfM '41 __..( f'l•lo91l t1 If .. t'" ... f•tMJ• ........ l6f t~ tJe\f Lower Prices. Higher Standards. l(ACH & fllO ....,_tOll UCH 1"0 .W.. ~1 HllS 11°' •• MTM. ~''••aw mt 11111 s 1 TUS11 ttOl MIMG, U TllCTOll ECH 411 II lOMA, ~ WAllO, UTll5TOll llJCH lllMillU & WMlll. '°""• WAllll 1~71 I 90QIQST, IUlWISJU STCltf: llUS t ·lO Dlly f.t s.ar Patty shells tasty ByCEClLY BROWNSTONE ,._ ...... ~-,..., tdllOf In the 1930s. one of the pleasures of .. eating out" in New York was ordcriog Chicken a la Reine ~chicken and mushrooms 10 a creamy sauce) in one of the city's great hotel rcs-t:at1ran~. The lt1re -6.f'.-- Chicken a la Reine: it was served in patty shells made of puff pastry. Remember. please. that dtis was long before cook- ing schools all over the country had taken on the ~~~""'"'i~.ooks how to make puft' pastry at home. As a matter of fact, puff pastry is still not widely made at home because 11 takes a good deal of time and effort. However. excel- lent patty shells can be had at the supermarket .....:. all you have to do is bake them. A fnend of mine and l enjoyed bringing Chicken a la Reine 1n patty shells up to date. giving it a touch of nouvelle cuisine. Here 1s the recipe for thi s nc" version . PA TI'Y SHELL CHICKEN PLUS 4. tablespoons butter ! tablespoons a ll - purpose flour 13'4-ouce can chicken brotll ~ C111p mllk 1 cap dala strips carrots (!by ~by 'i'l-lacb) 1 cap tbln 1h'lp1 green pepper (! by 'ii. by 1"t - inclll ) 11. pound mu1broom1, tblDly allced 11• poud I DOW pe.a1. tllllnly 1Uced dla1onally (I cep) 4 1maU 1callion1, llllnly 1Uced diagonally (about a;, cup) ! tablespoons dry 1ber- ry 1.4 1ea1poon paprika ! cap1 diced ( •;, lo .,... lDcla) cooked cbJcken or aarkey IO ·oance package frozen patty 1bell1 (6), baked according lo package dlrecllons In a small saucepan over moderately low heat. melt 2 tablespoons of the butter; stir in flour. Off heat. gradually stir in chicken broth and milk, keeping smooth. Cook over moder-~ ately low heat. st1mng con- stantly. unti l thickened; re- serve. Jn a I 0-in ch skillet over high heat melt the remain· ing 2 tablespoons butter. Add the carrot. green pep- per. mushrooms. snow peas and scallion and stir fry until tender cnsp. Stir in the she rry. paprika, chicken or turkey and re- served sauce and heat thorough!)' Se rve 1n the patty shells. Makes 6 1><.·r- v1ngs. Cooking with class A series on cooking fo r one or two people 1s being presented at the Oasis Senior Center. Corona del Mar ._at 11 :30 a.m. Wednes- days ihrougll June 13. Volunteer instructor 1s Patricia Ridgers of Foun- tain Valley. She holds a bachelor's degree '" home ec;onomics and a master's in <;home economics in manp,cmcnt and nutn· tton. Classes arc free lfo"-· ever there will be small charge for food. For f urthcr informa11on. call Judy O'Shaughncny . Oasis superv1rnr. at 7S9·9472. • • • A workshop on the use of band pasta machine~ and attaehmcnts w1ll lX' hrld at 6:30 p.m. May 10 at Fassero'a lnternotuinal Cookware, Corona dcl Mar Co.,t 1~ S25. J or rtttrvat1on•. call 6 7'-2 '4' ' . Whether it is maturity on the pMl of the wtnery, a realittic reaction -to the current market or the in- fluence of a new, autive market- ina director. some bi& chanaes arc takina place at a premium Nape Valley winery. Vi~ Mt. Eden is a ,mall winqrowina estate.-On the Oakville Crossroads (near Silver Oak Cellars), owned by James and Anne McWiUiams. Agne is the panddaualuer of Bank of America founder A.P. Giannini, but don't let that create images of some marble palace of winc- makin~ This is a working, prac- tical winery with a track record, If not the lofty image that many of the wines might have justified. The owners do not play the wine publiC relations game, and the winemaker for the first 10 years (Nils Venge -now with Groth Vineyards) was an ex- tremely talented but basically quiet and pnvate man. I haven't met the new winemaker Mik e McGrath, but unless he's cut from different cloth. there is no ''glitter" per- sonality at Villa M~ .. Eden. not make a winery's wines any better. but they sure can help capture attention. In the past, Villa Mt. Eden wines have been on the pricy side, the tasting room at the winery was not open on weekends. and in general there was a "come take it awa) from us" attitude. All that is chan~ng. The winery tasting room now welcomes visitors on weekends. and there are even signs up to help you find the place. While pnces have been maintained on a generally excellent collec- tion of Cabernet Sauvi$0ons, most other varieties have sc.cn con- siderable pncc reduction. Cbardonnay 1980 ($9.50): One of sev...-al. current "best buys'\sjue to Ht-e-ne-w JHIC1ng philosophy, this wine used to sell for $1 2 and dnnks like $1 5. It is rich. toasty. well oaked, yet finishes with the cnsp acidity needed to accompany food . A superb Chardonnay. Chardouay 1981 ($12): As big a wine, and perhaps better balanced overall, but it lacks the rich. complex flavors of the 1980. My palate says buy lots of the 1980 for dnnking in the coming year. and lay awa) a few bottles of this one to see if the complexity de- velops. Ruell Road ($3 or less): Bargain hunters alert! There's only about a thousand cases of this one left. so contact your retailer or the winery immediately. No vintage date, but the blend is pnmarily Pinot Noir with the balance given to Napa Gamay. . This is what the Amen- can wine consumer needs more of. lmmediatc:Jy drinkable, very affordable, but with good fruit flavors that will serve well at the table. Case purchases high- ly recommended. Rancb Wbite ($3 or less): Predominately Gewurztraminer. with a Teacakes 'berried' A new version of a popu- lar recipe. STRAWBERRY TEACAK'ES 111. cups all-porpo1e Dour 1 teaspoon baking soda 1/4 te11poon lllt 1 cap H1ar 'i't cap coarsely broken pecu halves t lar1e ea• ~cap corn on t· or 10-ounce package frozen strawberries, tbawed bat udralnecl Grea$C ond lightly flour 24 muffin-pan cups (each 2'h by I 'I• inches). In a small bowl stir together flour. baking soda and salt. Stir-in upr and pecans... In a medium bowl, with an electnc beater at me- dium speed. beat together cus and com oil until blended; add und~ained strawbemes; at lowest speed and mov1na beater around bowl, bcatJUSt until strawbemes arc partly broken up. Add flour mixture; beat until batter 1s smooth and strawbemes are 1n small 1nqular pieces. Divide batter amona pre~red muffin-pan cups. Bake 1n a preheated 3SQ..dearcc oven until cake te ter inserted 1n center comes out clean - 30 minutes. Cool 10 minute . rccnovc to wire rock to cool completely. Makes 24 &oodly portion of dry Chenm Blanc and a splash of Chardonnay. The Oewurz dominates, and that spoils it for me for everyday table u~. While it mi,&ht work well with some &pacy foods, it is limply too flnori\il for aenttat use. Some mW.t like 1t for aperitif. bUt it is bone dry so the usual ••atau of white" folks may find it ausacre. G•••ntramlaer lHl (SS): Another "best buy .. under the new Oricina pbiJosoptty. but be aware that this is also in the dry, . Alsatian style. It is beauti- fully fraarant with tnfl ditional api~ and fini~hes crisp. Varietal flavort throuahout and a tinaerina finish. Ptaot Nolr lt8t ($5.SO): A4othcf .. best buy." has a 1<>raeou1, medium bodile l'inot wllh artit cherry-like flavors. Very enjoyable now, and should develop additional co:;xitics in the next few y . GtWtll'tk r "La&e Harvest" IHI ($6.2S the half bonle): The first re- lease from winemaker McGrath, and a real beauty at a very fair price. It bas considerable Botrytis in- fluence. and has about 10 percent a&cohol and 10 pertent residual supr. Combine in your mind I the llStH of Ocwurz spice with peach ,and apncot and undertones of honey and you'll be ri~t on tarset. Plenty of acidity 10 prvcnt the wine bcioa cloyinaJy sweet. CUenelSa ....... lt1t ($ 12): This is one of the bigest 1979& I've tasted. Eanhy, dusty c6mplex a vef¥ moutbfilllna. Notes of ch()Q()Jate and subtle berry, Dcfinitcty worth the price. There is also a 1980 Cabernet.. but it 11 for .. monstcf' lovers only, another example of the overly warm IYIO v n•· For tht hma&ld '--·&here 11 a 1978 .. Ttiifve.. c:ouponsforw~or Ca~ at $37. lfitueDti-wine, bieetanchpiri11dlata1 ty without overripenHS be--bein1 promoted by Gallo, the standard for this kind o( Butcb and Wine lmtituae it pnoc tq. the wine i• de-..stJll tryina 10 work 1aa way ltf'V1"" l'd rathetdrink the throup a Ca1ilanaii Stale 1979 at a third the prict. Atsembty comminee. Should you hav~ trouble I've called the bill .. aati. findinJ the wines, contact consumtt" and .. anti~ the winery direct.ly for the pc1itive .. in tht put and so nearest mail oullet. Wrue have a o&Wbicr Of ochct to: Villa ML E.dtn. P.O. opponents 10 tbit con· Bo~_ 14 7, Oakville, CA sumer boo~. 94~2. The latat VOi« to Jpcak CONSUMER UPDATE out apinst tht ban that -The proposed special could cost consumers ""=""=""=~---_.;:...;;._~.;....,;.~~~~~-- U.S.O.A . Choice Genuine American FRESH 0 -BONE CHOPS ....... LB. 2.3. Tender Crisp SLICING CUCUMBERS ... -....... EA.· .19 re1•a•Tm OlllllW LAIMllLOIN UMllGION G~~E~E 2 69 AMERICAN L& • HUOHISC-D811f •1SKn POINT CUT ,. L& 1.29 J • ••••• POWSWA91lll•tS . L& 1.69 Bc*e. 8'oll. Fry or BBQ, Frozen 3 99 U.S.0.A. Choice Gem1ine American FrHh C•&ID CUT SWHDPISll nu.rl'S ............................................. LB. e LAMB SHOULDER ROAST .... LI. 1.69 CANTALOUPES SWEET, JUICY / c LB. Col1f~rnia. Buttery Rich Limit 20-Lbs. HASS AVOCADOS.. . .. . ...... EA. .29 BULK PINTO BEANS. Natural Bulk . LB .• 29 BANANA CHIPS .... : ........... La. 1.29 • ftlllft& llAllY U l & 2114'8 _n . -, llAllY _,JOHNSON'S A ~OO . ··.;·· llAltPA KODA " ~· CA811AOI MOCHIKO iO.~ otl s,.\.£\ { ·~· m&•Y OIL JOHNSON'S ,,., .::.1 P1~rzic 2A9 ~Gs 2. 99 200·Count Johnson's 6<>-Count JOHNSON'S SWABS 1A9 BABY WA.ii~ ClOTHS2.'J9 \I \< 2 16-0Z. 59 • \. CHINESE 5 SWEET · . ' " L& • FLOUR RICE • 7 5-0z In Tomato Sauce Moruchan Su 25.•-0z. WEl-PAC MACKERAL...61 RICE VINEGAR .... 1.19 p\_~tl AHUGE 99c ASSORTMENT OF 4-INCH POTS EA. CHICKIN OI' THI SIA CHUNK LIGHT TUNA ~~-:;.- 6.S·OZ. CAN 59 IN OIL OR WATER LIMIT 4 • Hughes Plain JUMBO EGGS GRADE A, LOOSE HLMOND YOMA'IO SAUCI 1s.oz CAN LIMIT 4 .29 A9 c EA. AMllllCAN alAUTY SPAOHITTI BO~U~ZPAK e 98 LIMIT 2 A 4 Oz Bo• Onnks 3-PK. HAWAIIAN PUNCH .79 IMP a I AL ·~ .... &••• u ..• tt..v I LB PKG . OUARTeR STICKS • 5 9 LIMIT 2 5 01 Cheese Bolls or 6 5 o~ Curls 1.M Tree Top b4 ·0t Cider or LIMIT 6 APPLE JUICE _·.:...-_ ... ...,.._...-...:..:. 8-PACK PICNIC BUNS ----.. --......... UICIAU I 7s.L1'9f. 80 Pr POPOV VODKA \~ l ·LB. PKG. CHEESE FOOD I -Lb Pkg ARMOUR BEEF FRANKS toke·To Lok• 9 Ot SHARP CHEDDAR CHEESE 13·01 Pkg GALLO SALAMI CHUBS 1~0t. Frigo RICOTTA CHEESE 1A9 .1.59 .2.99 1.1• 12-01. Cans 27 9 12·PACK . LIMIT MllSTIR BRAU · • Chobl11 llonc: or Rhine ........... 6.M 3-LITER GALLO WINES 3.M I G ,...<*-llANQUIT ~~~! CHICKIN ~~~~L; 2.39 !?·Poe" ~l.d F~ JEU-0 PUDDING POPS 6 5 lo 7 .5 en Asst<f OLD CHICAGO PIZZA 2.59 1AS ...... •1•11• CLASSICS LASAGNE Ott I 99 SALIS8URV e ; • ,. . J f OrMQe OoMt DAILY PILOT/Wednted9)', May 2, 1984 VONS HAS LOWERED PRICES. NOT ON AN ODD ASSORTMENT OF LEFlOVER& BUT ON TfiE THINGS YOO USE MOST. PRICES HAVE BEEN REO<JCED THROUGHOUT THE SlORE ON THE ITEMS THAT APPEAR MOST OFTEl"f ON \'OUR SHOPPING LIST. ITEMS THAT CAN REALLY SAVE \'OU MOfotEY. ADD TO THAT VONS WEEKLY ADVERTISED SPECIALS AND YO<J'VE GOT A PRICING POLICY SURE TO SAVE YOO MONEY. BONELESS ROUND STEAK !"lilt IV•(., 11F H ' '>IRlOI.., I 11' "I I "'"" <#l I• BONELEss--219 ~~lf l~J!lLOIN I D 101,., ru1 FRESH ·29 £ANTALOUPJ?e RIPf""E l.l ~!P!,;~N .. J 99 .; / BEST FOODS MAYONNAISE WE DO ~I~ •t•l •II C!t Ill Large D'An1ou !'tar<; 4 100 L..Jrge Frnh Papayds .79 Grt>rn On1c.111' .15 f fl'"ih Bean Sproul., .29 Roma1nt' lrtturr 4 100 Hdd~ Avnc cldll' 3 100 3 Pack St1c1v.lw'mr., 149 Whole Watt'rmt'lon .15 Artlctloke'i 3 100 Bonched 111!> 299 4·1nch Blooming MlJmS 169 GEN.MDSE. ~ ' . Ptrme-P Ice Chui "' Wll$0n Tennis Balls .. Sun Tu Jar WWI Spigot I.. • 4 I Gatdtn Hand Tools ...... ~Bowl Set . . . .99 199 999 377 .88 277 399 12 0<.J""ff f 'I "'II ~ r'.\ ~ I "llC.l ~l/[ 11it(,1JI "Ii ...,1/I I 11 I 11 '"" JUST FILL THE BILL,WE a&1 au om -DELI Vons Cooked Ham Carl Bvdd1g Meats M1\s1on Corn Tortilla<; Claussen Ko-sher Pickle\ Borden Single Silt.r"> Pill .. bury B1.,cu1ts 139 .59 .29 119 149 149 .18 ~Ei• l\I •) ;11 :tla Fines\e Shc1mpoo 177 Vti~hne lnten-.1\e Care • 155 Bayer Aspi1111 Tylenol Extra Strength Foamy Shave Cream Oeicatrlm Capsules Q Tip CottOI' Swai~ Mutrl·Tonk Shampoo 177 409 157 299 107 177 Ultni Brite Toothpaste FREE Vl~1n C With ROSf' H1P" 3 77 Swve St\arnpoo L • 97 Sur-t> Roll On De nint • 97 Boneless Rump Roa<>t Sf'tl Chuck Steaks Ground Beel Patties Ln ndon Broil Steak., Sh.,utdrr Clod Roast~ ~ ~1111 Lean Ground Beel , Pork Lo1r1 Chop$ <> r re\h Game Hen!> ""\td1um S11t' Sparerlb-; fr01tn Hen furkeys R.ln~ Thick Bacon Fresh Italian Sau.,~ ' f rnh ~rk Sausage DAIRY Me~ .. Lea M119a11ne 189 109 499 198 198 198 139 169 109 139 .79 41a 219 189 ~ • 59 Troplctna Orange Juice l 5 9 JerKymald Cottage 0ittx l SO Dannon low Fat Yogurt .45 Blue Bonnet Margarine • 65 Meister Br~u Beer 289 Clan M11cGrego1 Srntch 8 99 Chrt<;t1an Bro'> Brandy 5 89 Booth'\ London Dr) Gin 8 99 Wtnd\01 Cancld1c1n Wh1\k~ 9 99 Cella l..!lmb1u!><O W1nr 179 C•1th Sark S<"ntrh Almclden Mt {'hobh't 1598 699 299 289 HOT BAKERY fJ 6.99 6 119 Cinnamon Roll\ 119 • GROCERY Geisha White Tuna Tree Top Apple juice Lipton Cup-0-Soups Green Giant Corn ChO<'k Full O'Nuts Corlee Del Monte Reh~h Pifl,bur~ Brownte M111 109 149 .79 .52 249 139 129 AmerkMI Beauty Spaghetti .39 BAKERY m Sliced tnglish Mufflns .49 Cinnamon Rolls E.nrichcd 8fud l" .69 Plain Hamburger Bon5 • 55 Vons Assorted C,ake Donut..s 1 OS WERIT fl D .69 . Evans Enriched Rice Prego Spaghet~ Sauce • 79 Fruit Drl!lks. \ • 69 Blue Mountain Dog Food .33 Pttuna Cal ~ Vons Liquid Bleech .22 .59 Sunlight Dish Detergent 159 F1mlly Scott Ti ssue .75 FROZEN El Sara Lee Coffee c.N! . 219 Banquet Chicken 239 Grttn Giant Cob Corn 12~ Egge> Home Styte Waffles .69 Sare Lee Crolsunts 179 ~ .,..,, ~ --.... --"' .99 fwueady Betteriu Kotf'~ Mini PM'I J49 101 PftlC'fS fFTfrTl\/f TIHJR'> IHHU WI 0.. ,.,,A.Y ! llfRU ""A.Y q 1'1114 Knudsen Sour Crum M•jor Food Supplier to the ·,984 Olympic GanHIS ~- ,. ...., .. .._. ~ NUtlf .. fC* IHCM -...... ,,.... ... 001f4 MIU , .. I t1ttl llltttf IM OIMet Aff . ~TC* MACM IMfflNOfC* llACH ,, .... ltw4. ., ........ IAJf NAii CAfltlfUNO _, OMIM C.,...,IM a hi 0... ~ ••• , ..... l .., .. UtlltltteMeM. '°"'"Mt YM,Ul ,..,......, . ....., C4'9111tAMO 1UCM IRVIMI -~~ _, 0....,,... Dr •• ~ OPEN-FACED CHICKEN PARMAGIAN SAND· WI CHES 1 pacb1e (1 % ouees) frozen prepared breade4 cllickea patties 1 jar (15 ~ OUCH) lpa· 1bettl n•ce 4 slices (aboat % onces) monarella cllee1e ~ teaspoon crusbed buUluves ~ teaspoon cra1be4 or· e1uoleaves ~6respooe1 1rai-a- Parmesu cbeeae 4 slices Frencb ~ud, touted Prepare chicken patties accord.in$ to r'!licrow~ve package instructions using a glass baking dish. Re- move paper towels. Pour s paghetti saucr over c hicken . Top with m o zzarella c hee se . Sprinkle herbs and Parmesan cheese on top. Heat on HIGH 2 to 3 minutes or until cheese melts. Serve on top of French bread. Makes 4 servings. Dessert low in calories This dessert has a smooth. creamy texture and fresh citrus flavor. but minimal calorics per ser- ving. LIGHT O RA tJGE MOUSSE 1 envelope llDflavored gelatln 'h cup sagar 1 tablespoon corastarcb % caps skJm milk 1 eg, separate4 'I• cup fresb orange juice 1 teupoon arated or- uge peel •1, cup Instant nonfat dry milk 1ru•les 11, cup Ice watet • Chill small mixing bowl and beaters in frcncr or refrigerator. Combine gelatin, sugar, cornstarch. milk. egg yolk. oranic juice and orange perl in 2.quart &}ass mix 'n pour bowl. Beat until smooth. Microwave (hi~). un- covered, 5 to 6 minutes or until mixture bqins to thicken and boil, stimng once. Chill about 21/i'hours or until thickened, but n ot set. Beat eaa whit(, nonfat dry milk granules. and ice water tn chilled bowl at hiah speed until stiff peaks form. Fold into chilled ora"IQ' mixture. Carefully pour into I .quart serving bowl or 8 individual ser- ving dishes. Chill about 2 hours or until set. Oamish with intcd orange peel if desired. 8 scrvinp. 100 calorics cacn . TIPS: 2 percent milk may bt s ubstituted for skim milk. increasing calorics to I OS per servinJ. ~llt'C a few-n:e cubn m water until ice cold. This is imponant for proper whii:>- ping. "'AST RESULT" Sil VICI DIRICTORY ~·or lt<•sult S(•r vlc.c l'ull 642-56 71 lat. JJ2 . I ·A's have sinking _ feeling· John silen c es 250th victory By RICHARD DUNN ..,..... ..... o.llr,... A once-questionable An&el pitch- ing staff is suddenly coming up with great performances -anJ all the riJht ingredients to help the Angels shp into first place in the American League West • Jumping on the bandwagon Tues- day night was Tommy John with a two-hitt~r through eight innings. and a no-hitter throu~ the first six. as the Anaels clipped visiting Oakland. 4-1 to take the first of a bnef two-game series before a crowd of 27.009 at Anaheim Stadium. _The win, the Angels'_fu.unb iruncil last five games. places therv in sole posscssion of first place in the American League West. the first time they've solely claimed that spot this season. John completely handcuffed Oak- land's bats through the first six innings, registering seven ground-ball outs and strikfoJ out three with a diet of off-speed sankers and breaking pitches. · ___ __. But the etTon didn't seem to (Pleue .ee SINK.mG/DS) . ........ ............. ......-~ Edlaon •a Lori Shaw comforta Kathy Blefeld w;~o dq'd (•he wu later to be relnatated) and Oce&ll View'• Debbie Orr wtu the hlCJlja.mp title.._,., DS. , . --- Orange Coast, Golden West survive scares Pira tes over come s tubborn Cypress; . , Rus tlers blow 8 -2 lead before winning complete-.ame effort of the season featured sax hits. one walk and four strikeouts. OCC broke on top in the first · i-ng~ardMr doub4ed-t<>- left and Jef Garcia dr9ve him in with a single up the middle. -=-Are~ comnf untty ~rbaseball teams, facing teams not in contention in the South Coast Conference. each found themselves in tough battles before emerging with needed road victories. The Pirates broke open a close game at Cypress with three in the '.eighth to dispatch the Chargers. while Golden West let an 8-2 lead vanish in the bottom of the eighth in Walnut. before recovenng with two in the ninth to edge Mt. San Antonio. The wins helped the two teams keep pace \\'1th Santa Ana. which was victorious at Compton. In the Pacific Coast Conference. --saaaret5ack fiaaabye. -- Here's what took place: Orange Coast S, Cypre11 1 The Pirates started th'eir four-game week (three of which arc q.ainst non- contend:rs) with the win at Cypress. Coast led the entire way-~fter scoring a single tally in the top of the first. but didn't pull away until 1t notched three insurance runs in the top of the eighth inning. JeffOsterode. 7-4. gave the Bucs an important 'comple'e µme. allowing only an unearned run 1n the bottom of the seventh which at the time closed the gap to 2-1. Osterode's fourth It became 2-0 in the top of the fourth when Larry Cratscnberg worked a one-out walk, Gardner laid down a bunt sinale an d Mike Senne brought Mm home with a single to center. Cypress tall~d tts ·unearned run in the bottom of the seventh on Greg Villarreal's one-out single to left with an error moving him to secoAd. Brian Flatten singled him to third. a"nd a late throw on a double-play try allowed Villarreal to score the Chargers' only run. Kurt Rambla of the Laken b~• on the rim u he flChta Dallu' Jay Vincent for rebound iturlnC NBA playoff 1ame. Coast wra~ped it up with three more in the eighth inning as an error and double placed runners at second and third and Garcia lifted a sacrifice fltlor one run. Two wa k loaded the bases. setting the stage for Damon Berryhill's clutch single to right to game won after building an 8-2 lead after scoring four runs in the top of the sixth. ~Jo who had sin&}ed._ and the Rustlers attmingly put it away in the sixth with a four-run frame. drive home two more. • Gardner finished thcdlly with three hats and Garcia and Berryhill bad a pair of RBl apiece to key the Pirates' attack. But Mt. San Antonio refused to roll o" er and ndtiettwn1nrsm1te-l"lllfiw the sixth and a five-run explosion in Jhe ci&htlt which knotted matters at 8-8. ~ H~lights of the inn" included an 1-np y ster run- producing singlei from Light. Morello and Shane 'Flores. The key blow for ML SAC in the tytn& ci&bth-innina ratty wu a bun- c\earioi tri~ by Keith Lock.hart whi,eh broU&ht Oo4den Wes\ burler Steve ·Sutton on the scene. Button yielded a pair of waJks and a single in the eighth which resulted in the Uc, but retired the Mounties in order in the ninth to wrap it up, earning his seventh" wtn against one loss. Coast continues its crucial week wtth pmes each day Thursday through Saturday. The Pirates host Fullerton Thursday. visit Compton in a makeup game Friday and are at Santa Ana Saturday. Undaunted. the. Rustlers proceeded to score t~ce in the ninth, 1~irta \he bun before Les Uabt dropped a perfect bunt for a hit to score the tiebreaker and Kevin Els,er forced over another with a walk. After Mt. SAC taJlied twice in the first. Golden West answered with three in the second as Light tnplcd in two runs and scored oo £Jstir's RBl- sinale. Another run scored in the third when Bryan Patrick tripled in Ron Golden WCst will try to stay 10 the thick of thinas when it visits Com- pton Thursday. The Rustlers then host Fullenon Saturday. Goldea Wett 10, ML SAC 8 The Rustlers appeared to have the Riley a tough man to please . But La k e r coach can 't find fa ult with 117-101 t rium ph INGLEWOOD (AP) -Coach Pat Riley of the Los Angeles Lakers 1s a difficult man to satisfy. "We've only accomplished one thmg, we've held service." said Riley Tuesday night after the Los Angeles Lakers whipped the Dallas Mavericks. 117-101. to take a 2-0 lead in a National Basketball Association Western Conference semifinal playoff series. "Now we have to go down there (to Dallas) and get at least one game, that's what we're hopini for." Earvin "MagJc" Johnson scored 27 points :Ind had 11 assists to lead the Lakers. who blew open a close game at the outset of the second half ud went on to win easily. The best-of-seven series now moves to Dallas fpr the third and fourth games Friday night and Sunday afternoon, respectively. The Lakers held a 55-50 halftime advantage before ext>lodingat the beginning of the third quaner. sconng the first 14 poants of the period an less than four minutes to go ahead. 69-50. The Mavericks weren't closer than 13 points after that. "It was the beganning of th~ third quarter that we made the run ... lt was a great run and 11 was ke)ed b) the defense and the offensive ~xe-cutaon:· Riie) said. ··Dallas played extr<.'mely well in th<.' first half. I was delighted to be up by five poants. · "I thought 1f we continued the pressure some good thangs would happen for us and that's what happened at the begJnnang of the third quaner. We JUSt came out read) to play at the bcganning of the second half." Dallas Coach Dack Motta gave credit to the Lakers. "We're a step up from where we belong 3t this time and we're definitely a httle over our head here:· fie said. "To beat LA. you must funcuon on all eight qhndcrs. It's no fun to get your tail kicked and have people laugh at )OU. I've been where the Lakers are and it's definitely more fun. "My JOb as to create a no panic and no sclf-<io\lbt sttuauon. We'll show up (an Dallas). we'll be there." Johnson. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Kun Rambas had four points each in the Los Angrles flurry with Mike McGee sconng the other two. ~ As they did in their 134-91 tnumph an the sen~ opener. the Lakers led all the wa). Bt11 11 wa.sn't until the start of the second half that the) were able to put the Mavericks away. Dallas narrowed the gap to 93-80 early in the founh quaner but Los Angeles then scored nme straight points to seal the verdict. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar added 22 points and pulled down I 0 rebounds for the Lakers. Both he and Johnson left the game for good with 4:31 remainini. Four other Los Angele players scored in double figures. Rolando Blackman led the Mavcnck.s wtth 27 points. Jay Vincent and Mark Agui~ added 15 and.1'4 points, respectively, for Dallas. Dallas got as clo~ as two poants three times in the second pc nod before the Lake rs set tied for their five-point halfttme advantage. Los Angeles never \ed by more than seven points in the second quaner. Giants gamble and tumble . ~AN FRANC IS< O <~Pl-TheSan Franc1scoG1ants were g.nmbhng on thl' basepaths :fuesda~ night. and who c9uld blame them'' Run~ have bttn av.tull~ hard to rome b~ an the losina streak which reached ntn<.' games. a San Francisco club record. w11h the 3-~. I I-toning setback to the Los Angeles Dodgers. · Three runners "Crl' gunned down as the) tnC'd to advance an extra b3'iC. anJ some vel) good p1tch1n&. cspec1all) b) rehev <.'~ Frank Walhams and Greg Minton. went to waste in los'i No. Q JUSt as 11 did when Fernando Valenzuela bes1ed 8111 Uiskey 1-0 on Monday ntfhL "lfthcre·san' 4'11\Cr lining. it's that we're aetung some good p1tchang But "c don't need consolation We need wtns. ·· Manager Fran I.. Robanson said. NFL tec:ims draft with an eye oil free-spendfng USFL The DodJers. "inners m nane of their last JO games and I 7 of their last :? 1. made thr-1r record S.O in onf'-f\Jn games tha!. season The) wtnt ahead 3-1 when Ste'c Su belted a two-out. two-run tnple an the l Ith off Gary Lavelle. 1-l SCot Thompson got a pincb-lut RBI sullle 10 the bottom of the 11th off Orel Hersh1scr. 2-0, before second baseman Sax began a game-endina double play. Carlos Dtaz came out of the Dodaers' bullpen and earned has first save He faet'd Ouh Davis. also a p1ncb hitter. and Davis hi\ a sharp aroundtr dirtttl)' at Su. who "as pla) 1n& dose to second base. NEW YORK (AP) -While the National Football Leaaue still t'annot be ocn.ain that its dran choices will not be prey to frec-spendina U nited States Football Lcaauc leams1 sorm-pl.aY'f1 hive made melr 1mentions clear. •• 've always wanted to .Play an the NFL." said defensive end Keith Millard ofWashinJ!on State, who was picked in the finu round ofTuesday's NFL dran aner beina taken by the USFL's Arizona WraMJers last January. "I didn't want to make a masta~c so I waited." "l'v already neiot11ttd with the USFland thal's out of the question,' said linebacker Carl Banks of Michapn tates, who the New York Giants made the third pick in the draft. "I will discuss 1 reasonable pncc and uikc the muket pnce for a hncbeckcr." ~nts hke ~tan te1nbera. who enamttred teve Youna S40 million contract wt th the new leaaue, u est there may be bidding warrin·1he next few weeks. W~~r or not that happens. the USFL influence on the NFL draft was obvious. With the new lcque havina siphoned ofT the likes of quancrbaclc Youns and running baclt Mike Roner. the NFL went primanly for ~ad-and-butter players - defensive players and linemen. For the fint time since 1974, no quartcrblck was picked tn the first round and there was only one first-round runnina back choice -the o n -lruuredOtta Bell ofNotrc Dame. taken by BulTalo With the 26th pick. · One m8Jor concern amona club officials was to avoid what happened la t year. when the U Fl natchtd up two first-round picks -runnana back Gary Andcn.on and quarterback Jam Kell)' -"'ert snapped up by the USFL aner they had been draflcd by th<' San Oacao Chara('rs and Buffalo bills. The two top packs. wade receiver lrvana Fryar 31ld has t-'ebraska tcammatc, auard Dean teankuhler. \o\-Cl"C Sl&ncd ~fore the draf\ by New England and Houston The fourth pick, wide receiver Kenny Jackson of Penn tate. was s1aned by the Philadelphia Eaales almost immediately. .thwanina the USFL's Philadelph11 tan. who had bttn 'wooma him since January. That was also the f'Uj()O that Flonda hneback('r Wil~ Marshall, one of the few blue<h1p pla)ers ten. went une1Cked until the t I \fl spot tn the fi"t round, when the O ucqo Bears took him. Hou1"ton had wanted to sian MaBhall wtth the sec-ond pick and t>esan nqot11tion\ with him. but ked off. leading to rcpon' that he wantC'd SI m1lhnn a \'Car or h d already '1aned with the USFL's l ampa Ray R3nd1t\ .. "'We moved Sax over tha1 ~a) JU'St bcfort the patch," Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda u1d That's hQ'A-thi"JS have bttn gomg for the fint-plat"O team. 18-8 and 10 aames ahead of the lut-pu G1ant1 101ng anto today's final pmc ofa lhrtt-pme ~nes. ~ .\s for the Gtants, as Lavelle said."( don't know what elK could 10 wron •· 1·he fir5t th1na that v.cnt v,.TOn& Tunda)' night in the founh 1nn1na w1th the ~"" 1-1 Bob Brt'nly, w,;bo s1n1ltd. tncd to reach third bast when third blwman ~rman R1"cra characd a slo~ roller off the t ofJohnnic LtMa\tcr and th rt"" to finl. too late to ,rt tbe runner. Ftrst baseman Grea Broe fl~ to third. Cll teH ' er hu\tltd up the hne to co~ thud. too t.ht thro". Mocked thl' b.tJ and ta cd Brcnly 1 \ . I I I I I I ' .. Preaa AP ...,.se-. a The Ansell have requested a bcarina oo their request for a prclimi~ iltjun~ lion to stop the city of Anaheim from doublina the rent rates on 27.SOO outfield seau. The req_u.cst was made in Oranae County Superior C.oun to halt what an attorney carted .. cxtonion.atc" hikes in local fees and taxes the American LeaJuc club m)lst PlY for use of Anaheim Stadium. The club requested a May l S bearing before Judae William Shefftefd on its request for the prchminary injunction. The Angels contend'the increase JS retaliation by Anaheim because the ba.scball team filed a S l 00 million lawsuit to stop the city from turning a stadium park.mg lot into the site for an office complex. The rent increase was announced three weeks after the suit was filed in August of 1983. • Coun paper$ filed by team attorney James Howell s.aid the scats will be necessary for at least 16 games-in which promotions arc expected to lure 40,000 people to the stadfom. "h 's an attempt to fo~ the Angels to give up valuable contract rights by \hreatening either economic disaster or civil d1sorder." Howell said, labeling the hikes extortionate because the team alrcad) has a rent contract and noting that fans could become unrul) af denied saits. Anaheim Cit) Manager William Talley defended the increases. "We arc asking fair-market rent. not as much as the Rams arc paying. We don't believe the Anaheim tax~yers s~ould subsidize the Angels. We are entitled to fair rent. Talley. commenting on the club~s retalaauon claim. said he has "always found the Angels' statements to be as suspect as their pitching." ll11a1 ~··8dli_.. Goeli •111, on Coede ftri : ·~~--you. A IOt of 1>111$•• on our._,. do..._ out or fw. GolnG to COlde kulh'a II ~ lb oolr'O to the Ovlll ()flee In ... With Howe.' Salnta eztend Phillips' pact NEW ORLEANS-The New Orleans Saints extended Coach Bum Phillips' contract for three years. and professed an antenuon to continue playing in the Superdome instead of moving their National Football League franchise elsewhere. There have been reportS for weeks that an impasse m lease negotiations W1th the Superdome would prompt the Saints' owner. Texas multi-millionaire John Mecom Jr., to move his club to another city. Most prominent in the repons was an offer from Jacksonville. Fla .. reputed to be an the neighborhood of S70 malhon. ·"We are the New Orleans Saints. It as our antenuon to remain the New Orleans Saints." said Saints President Eddie Jones during the lull before the team's first pack in the NFL draft. Jones said he was opumasuc that lease problems Wllh the Superdomc would be worked out. TENNIS EX MIXED CELEBRITY DOUBLES featuring Kenny Rogers ;r tJ a• l c nen• • oe announced ~ ON SUNDAY MAY 6. 1984 AT 2:00 P.M . Volleyball Exh1b1tion Buttel Cocktail Ae-cephon &ngle ticket prices for Tennis Exhrb1t1on ONLY $15 or $10 LOS CABALLEAOS TENNIS & VOLLEYBALL STADIUM FOUNTAIN VALLEY CA CALL 714 957 8768 for ltckets or 1nfo1m.11.on Gara, Qa1a teem on •batoat Larry Ova and Du ~1e.hrry a '1toppcd Milwaukee OA fl~ btlS, lea.din& K.Jmas City to a J.O victory over Mil~ Wl'ltee Tuesday nipl in Ammcan l.eque bueball. The Royals' left-hander, wno hurled 811) inninp. improved bis record to 4-0 as Kansas City ina~ iu tbree-pme lo ina streak. Th( Brewers bad won five of their previous seven pmes. -Quisenberry, wbocamed bis tevtnth sav.c, tame on with two men oo, allo~ asi ~to Load the bua1 then ao• Te4 8'mm...- to hit into a pmc-.endina double play . . . In other pmes. c.rt Wllkenoe stroked a two-run siQSle and Gaey Wanl bit a solo home run to rally Teic.as to a 4-1 4!Wictory and salvqc a split of their doubkhcaderq&Jost Toronto. In the opener, WIWe Vpsuw drove in two runs and the Blue Jays ~talized on six Texas errors tP. 5COrc seven uf\C'amed runs an,H defeat the ~anaen.. 10-4 ... o.n Barbaro Garbey drove in fo ur runs with thrtt hits a\Dd Claet LemoD slammed two home runs as red-hot Detroit crushed Boston. 11 -2. improving its record to 19-2: MUt Wiicox, 3..0. scattered seven hjts -three of them by Jlm RJce -while walkina one and striking out fivt in ei~t innin'5 ... ·Mike BoddJcker pitched a sax-hatter and fanned nine in notching his first victory of the season· as Baltimore extended its winning streak to six with a 3..0 decision over Cleveland ... Jerry Dybd.D1ti drove in tbrtt runs to lead the Chicago White Sox to an 7-S victQry over th·e New York Yankees ... Jack Percoete'1 seventh-inning RBI double snapped an 8-8 tie and helped &ive Seattle an 11-SVictorv over Minnesota. Show, McReynolda llft Padres . MlLWAUK.££ -Cenatr Boti t.:aaici m scored I 0 clut.ch poif\ts ha the fo\anb periOd and led Milwaukee \o ri8-94 v~ over the New Jel"ICy Nets in their National Basketball Association playoff pme Tuesday #1. enabUna the Bucks to even the best-of-seven senes at one victory each. 1 The third pme an the Eastern Conference semifinals will be played Thursday niaht in Eut Rutherford, N.J. After New Jersey scored six nraiaht points to sli~e Milwaukee's lead to 82-81 with 4:S9 left in the pme. Lanier sank four straiabt free throws to aive the Bucks an 86-81 advantqe less than a minute later. • Ollen advance: l•l• Cet e-.eQ The Edmonton Oilers, behind Gnat ~ For'• stingy goaltcndin&t, rode into their , second straight Stanley Cup final with a l-1. serics-swcepinJ victory over the Minnesota Nonh Stars Tuesday ni&ht. Fuhr. who missed the end of Game 2 and all o(Oame 3 with a bruised elbow, stopped 23 Minnesota shots. He specifically sparkled in the second period. robbing Minnesota's Neal Bnttea from point-blank range and snuffing KeJG Actoa from just o utside the crease ... Mlke Bot1y'1 second-period goal 97 seconds af\er goaltender BUly Smltll stopped a penalty shot lifted the New York Islanders to a J.. l victory over Montreal and a 2-2 deadlock in their series with the Canadiens. > _Gray t~pau up aentor year . Huntington Beach knocks Seahawks from top of Sunset Edison Hi&b sits alone atop the Sunset Leque . =.• standinas. with a big assist from Huntinaton The O.ilen stunned Ocean View Tuesday to knock thc-~wk.s out of a share of tht. lcgue leadership. Mtan*bile, in another Sunset encounter. Westminster b~ied past ¥a11na to rc~ivc its C IF playoff hopes. Herc's how it happened: Bada1coa Beac~ a. OceU V~w t Edlidyoff spun a three-hitter ita dealina the ScAhawk.s the damagjng loss, walking lhreeaQc;I striking out four. In the process, Ocean View did not )'lave a player reach third base. Pat Gordon did much of the damage for .Huntinaton Beach, stroking three hits. includinJ a double in the midst of a five-run fourth inning for the Oilers. He also drove in a pair of runs and upped his average to .507 this season. Catcher Eric Sharley delivcr«i ao RBI-sin.ale in the founh and Huntington added single runs in the sixth and seventh for good measure. The Seahawks hun their own cause with four errors. The only hits for Ocean View came from Adam Buder and David Tinkle who had two apiece. 1 Wettmla1ter 11, Marilla 5 LOS ANGELES -Center Stuart m Gray, who never lived uptoexpectationsat UCLA. said Tuesday he will pass up his Right-hander Eric S~ow yielded four Ill seniQr year in college and makt himself hits over 6)/1 innings and Kevin available for the June 19 National Basketball Associa- Mclleynold1 keyed a three-run founh tion draft. inning with a go-ahead double Tuesday "It's something I had to do." said Gray, a 7-footcr. The Lions kept pace an their pursuit of a CIF 4-A playofTbenh; cruptinj for f~r runs an the first inning and never trailed in handtng Marina its I I th loss in 12 Sunset League starts. Westminster moves a half game ahead of Fountain Valley in the race for third place with a 7-S record (14-7 overall), paced by the hitting of Guillermo Roses (2 for 4 with 2 RBI), Robert Martinez ( 1 for I with 3 RBI and 2 walks) and Al Hemaodez (II for 2 W1th 2 RBI and 2 stolen bases). night, leading the San Diego Padres to a 3-2 victory over "I made the decision last week. I've been thanking about the AtJanta Braves. After allowing the first batter he it for about three months. faced to get a hit and later score, Show, 4-1 , breezed "Theguywho'sfoingtorcpresentmc,KeithOlass. through the next fi ve innings. But when he put two men knew how unhappy was. It was a difficult three years on base in the seventh. he was relieved by Goose (at UCLA) for me. I just bad to close this chapter of my Got e, who sttuc~ out the Ja11-ballcr in thLJc..-a:n.J.a-1.ifc.and stan .somc&biAS cl&er'' ------·--Marina~ "ihthad Rccdt3 for 3 )irmt f>avr Emmmons (2 for with 2 RBI). but except for narrowing the deficit to 7-5 in h? top of the seventh with three runs, and went on to record his eighth save ... Elsewhere in the National Leaeue, Dave Parker'• hia,b-hop single over a drawn-in infield scored pinch-runner Tom Law- le11 with one out in the ninth inning to send Cincinnati to its fifth straight victory. 2-1 over Houston. !he Astros had tied the game 1-1 an the top of the ninth on rookie Mark Balley'• RBI single . .. Sl:lto Lezcano belted two home Sbow runs and a double. and drove in five runs an leading Philadelphia to a 7-4 victory over Montreal. Kevl.a Gro11, l..Q, gained the triumph in rehef of starter Marty Bystrom, who was recalled earlier in the day from Portland of the Pacific Coast League and allowed three runs in six innings ... Keitb Hernudez's two-run homer sparked a seven-run sixth anning. and the New York Mets broke open a pitching duel of coo.trasunistyles to take sole possession offirst place m the East w11h an 8-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs. The win. New York's third in a row. gave the Mets a one- game lead over the Cubs in the division ... Tommy Herr had four hits. three RBI and two stolen bases to lead a 16-hit St. Louis attack as the Cardinals crushed Pimburgh. m-S. ihe Pirates' fo,l.lrth consecutive loss. For the benefit of the US. WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL CLUB VOLLEYBALL EXHIBITION: The Big Dippers with Wilt Chamberlin Kiki Varideweghe & a host of others Plfl"f\~f' m,t t•, \ rth6ft0' ,. l" t~u "'~:C:· "''"" o•y~ll'• to '""' U S ~~ \/0'1111,tl~'I C:• 11 I ( 1 Ju "(Md 0fl'' Rflc.Jll'' f\t.t fl' ~ (,, ._,_, tmf'· J !;,, Wom_,,' VO·•i,Li,., f lut 1 7 /70 N•w'11)1H' ~"""' ,. •11' , .. , V•'1 .. , r• '~7·n.,. ll .,,,... \f't'Q ..,.,. ,.,. IO 0 W"9 1 t •lllh ' ,, I/ IP \I~ I o ) IM''IPlfO '"""'' 0 .. 1, ,, .. 1 m AO"• IC ,n 1 l4ftfo'l<t C>"I "•'• J m y dCW'el()I' I f to•[I l!le US Wo,...en • VOi eybA IC u!> l>oO •n• "'"' GOlO l t ~-P'11;1n111 ---- Lazer• tie aerlea with 6-4 win WICHITA -Stuart Lee scored three r2I goals and set up another Tuesday niJht to lead the Los Angeles Lazers to a 6-4 victory over the Wichita Wings and tie their Major Indoor Soccer League Western Division semifinal at l-1. All four of Lee's points came an the fourth quarter, breaking a 2-2 tie and givmg the Lazen a commanding 6-2 lead with less..ihan three minutes to play. The deciding goal came with 4:04 remaining when Lee stole" an errant pass and chipped in a shorthanded goal over Wichita's Kevin Kewley, playing an goal as a sixth attacker. ~ No ewnta ........ RADIO .. • .. . Noon -MIB*l 1 · Dodgers at SM ,,.,._ cilco, KA8C (190). 7~ p.m. -u..8*1 I • Ollkllnd .. ~ l<MPC (710); • --- @ .. --:,.;; l .·• , ·; I 1... • I I • • I ' . . .. . BICYCLE REPAIRS Servicing All Makes And Models 751-4882 Costa MN& was unable to ex ten Lions. Ullman falls into second at trials LONG BEACH -Pete Dickey of Grttnwich. Conn. edged Dave Ullman of Newport Beach to win Tuesday's 470 class race an a field of 26 boats at the United States Olympic sailin$ trials at Long'Bcach Harbor. Pete Melvin, Lighthouse Point. Fla .• finished third. followed by John Shadden, Long Beach. and Chris Raab, Sunset Beach. Benjamin has 20.4 points for a narrow overall lead over Ullman. 21. 7 points, followed by Shadden, 26, Melvin, 26.1, and Dickey. 31. Russ Silvestri of Tiburon won Tuesday"s race in the Finn d1vis1on sailing tnals to take the overall lead in that class. L. Steve Ben Jam an of Oyster Bay. N. Y .. came in sixth ~\ the 4 70 yacnt race Tuesdax, but he retained his overall lead in the division. -- Buzz Reynolds. Summit. N.J .. finished second to Silvestri in the 28-boat Fann race. followed by Craig Healy, Point Richmond; Bob Annol. Newport Beach, and Roben Anderson. New York. N.Y. Silvestri now leads the d1v1s1on with 14 points. followed by John Bertrand of Anaheim Halls, the ttiird- round leader. with 28. 7 points. Reynolds moved up to thard.-n the overall standin~ with 34 points, followed by Kimo Worthangon, Mar Vista, 43. and Tom Lihan, Fort Lauderdale. 50. The winners an the Fann and lntemataonal 470 class tnals. which have sax days of racing to go, will represent the U.S. in the Olympic Games. The racing resumes Sunday. Top SirlOin L Ex-ar stars picked Delicious .Top Sirtoin, grilled to you~ taste. $4 4 Served with homemade soup or cnsp 5 green salad, choice of tato (baked potato or rice pilaf avai~le 4 to 9 p.m.), • fresh roll and butter. "'d Snapper 3Served 3 to• p.m. Delicately griUed and enhanced with melted S 15 butter. Served with tartar sauce and lemon wedge. Includes vegetable, trench fries. I homemade soup, crisp green salad and choice of dessert (pudding, .ntllo, ioe cream or sherbet). Find out what you and your neighbors ca.n do to pre- vent crime.· Write to: Attorney Genera.l's Crime Prtfvention Center, P.O. Box 13197, Baoramento, GA 96813. Learn how to protect yourself, &nd ... Costa Mesa's Randy Brouwer. a graduate of Biota College, and former Edison High star Mike DeBcnon are rri.embers of the Athletes in Action ~ball team which will be tounng an the Orient and the United States this sum- mer. A minimum of 60 games arc on the schedule. which includes a three-week tour ofTaiwan and Korea. Also. many games will be con- tested with members of the Kansas Jayhawk league. The season beains June 4-6 when AJA nosts the Taiwan Olympic team for a three-game series in Law- rence. Kansas. It continues with a tour of Kore.a June 14-28. Taiwan June 29- July 6 and eventually winds ur with the National Baseba.I Congress tour- nament Aug. to. Brouwer. a 6-0 shortstop. is second on Bioljl's all- time hitting list with a career average of .38S. At one time he had a hitting streak of24 games. Sovleta repeat boycott threat HAMBURG,. Wcu Get· many (A P) -The Soviet Union's sports chief. say- m.g the United States h.ad violated lhe Olympic Char· ter. repeated a threat to withdraw from the Los Ansetes Summer Games in an interview released Tues.- day by Stem mapzine. "We aren'ljust disturbed about the bad air (in Los Anaclcs). The most Import- ant problem In our eyes is • the violation of the Olym- TICKETS WILL BE HELO AT TH E GATE Am•..,• n-om \he Cr1me Pr.veM1on 00&11uon U\.t publl0&\1on e.nd Th• Ad Cou ncil lW79Th• Advett111nc Counc11.1nc pic Charter. We kept to the rules an Moscow,' Soviet Spon Committ.ec Chair- man Mant Oramov was quoted io a Moscow inier- v1ew w1th lhc Wnt Gfr- man ~kly. Stem said &he interview wa.s conducted an MOllCOW around Euler ' .. • . • • ·. • _, - .... The NFL owners bac ed R.ozelle once, utit'sdou tfult ey'lldoltagatn----- nd1culc by one orits fraternity, ao be it and Rozelle and the membership can expect mott. · There has not been aJl that much class demonstrated bJ the New OrlcansSa.irns in thears.quabble with the Louisiana Superdome over ttrmi of a new contract. Tile, forin1taoce. theawardinaof -Su.,ef'Bowl tiw.. This pmc i1 more poliUQJ than a national-elecuon. FonumoJc. it "very unli~ty the !.otADeeJesColiseum will evtt set anolher Super Bowl because ofits aJlqiance with Al Davis qain1t R01Clle and the &c11uc in the Raider caee. This cu be described as ven1taace rathCT th.an politics but the lfthe Nauonal Football Leaauc !>ecomc1 a lottery of franchises, there 11~p~rent.ly precious linle com· nuss1oner Pete Rozelle and the lod&t brothers can do about it. Rozelle points to the $90 million O( lhereabouts. the NFL squandered in 1._i fees in tbe ca.se oflhe Raiden movml'A"om Oakland to Los An· geles. The owners backed the com- mish this time because lbey felt he was entirely justified in attempting to substantiate the comtitution and bylaws of the teaauc. However, such another fiaht and anothcr$90million mi&ht not be tolerated. As a matter off act the mere suqestion of such action miihtaet Edison • ... ~ breezes,· Orr wins Chargers' Biefe · survives dq in 40Q at Sunset ,erel~_~s By ROGER CARI.SON OI ... DellJ Noe • ..,, The expected runaway by three- timc defending Sunset League cham- pion Edison was just that at Tue~ day's track and field prclims. i nter- spersed with three league finals at Huntington Beach High, and the Edison girls escaped a bullet as the league's coaches stepped in to tum disast01 into a second chance for 400. meter starlet Kathy Biefeld. Biefeld dq'd in her 400 heat, false- starting and standing hopelessly aside while the heat was run, but instead of.._ being sidelined for the league finals and CIF, she has been given a berth in Thursday's finals. behind another runner in U\ne 8. The coaches met afterward and listened to a proposaJ by meet manager Dave Kurrie. "It was a snap decision. there was no bickering." said Kurrie. We did what was best for h~ andlhe-"Sunset League ... ''Thin85 like that happen." said Chappins about Biefeld's miscue. He said earlier his only concern of the day were potential disqualifications. "Just stay out of traffic and be careful," Chappins said. ''Odd things can happen." The oddity occurred. but the coaches found an cra~r for the mistake. The finals are Thursday at the same site. beginning at J. • The rest of the meet went as expected with Debbie Orr of Ocean View capturing two championships in impressive style, winning the high jump with a 5-4 efTon and going 37~61'2 in the triple jump. Diana Squires of Fountain Valley won the discus with a I 03-5 toss. The rest of the meet was a showcase for Edison as the Chargers vinually dominated every running event. SUNSET LEAGUE GtAU MEET ( 11 H """'""9ft e..dl Hiii! i l"INALS T J-1 CXr tOV), 37·6\f>; 2. Z1nelll COV>. 34·2. 3. Mltlef (0V) 32·11'1'), 4 8HS (H8), 32·10li<, S Ali.n (M ), 32·1 HJ-1 I. Orr (OVI, S·4, 2. Coleman !Ml. S·2, 3 Ma~klV CHIU, S-0, 4 CrablrM IFVl 4·10, S (lie) Tllui (HBI anO Jonn (FV), 4·1 OT-I ScluirH IFVJ. IOl·ll, 2 R.v COVl. 91·0, 3 Weilelln (Ml, 96·4, 4. Mandllh (FV), '4·3, S. Grfff (El. '3·1 "ELIMS 100-(1\ffl I) I. Fttrniev (El. 12 39; 2 Ward (Ml. 12 90. 3 Grlltlve lFVI. 12.94, 4 Klemke (Ml. 13.10, S Lo lFVI , 13 12 (hell 21 1 H.ooenon (FV), 12 19, 2 Davidson (El. 11.90. 3 Hutwv (Ml. 12.91; 4 McGovern (HBl. 13.30. 700-(hlll I) I. Hen<lerM>n ( FV), 2S 27, 2 Ki.milt (Ml, 200, 3 01vl<1son tEI. 26.JS; •. K Blefelcl IEI, 26.53 !heel 21 1 Fttrnllv CE>. 2S6S, 2. Grllalva (FV), 261?; l lenelll COV) 27 .0, 4 HoeMV (M). 27.75 400-theal II 1 Shew (El, 1:00 70, 2. Harrv (FV), 1:02.64; 3. Cook (FV). 1-o2.t7; 4 LHlkO (Ml, 1:06.00. (heal 71 I Btcker (El. 1-o2.12. 2 RotlerlM>n (Ml, 1'04 00, 3 P19naneltl CH8), 1-oiuo, 4 ICtMeV (FV), 1'04 70 A<ldlllonel tnlrv K Bi.fe!O < E l. IC»-lhetl 1l 1 Snvoers IE I. 2 'l'1 61, 2 J Blafeld !El. M04, 3 Workman !Ml, 21S SO. 4 Torrer (H8), 2:30.70 (heal 2l 1. Corri! (WI. 2:27.S7; 2. Feser (El. nt.66, l. Plmm CE>. 2 JO 56. 4 Bonet (HB), 2'36 0 l,~(hHI II 1 Rild>OI (E), S'.30 70, 1 N1<10n tEJ, SJl 00, l McCraCktn IWl. S·'3 47, 4 O'Conntr IFV). S-SO 14. (heal 2) 1 Snvden (El. S:44.0, 2 J Bi.tekl IE). S 44.79; 3 JOhnson IW>. S:44 79; 4. Torrtl (HBl, S·SH3 IOOLH-lhetl 1) I SChVVl"11 (E ), 16.tJ, 1 Welker IFV), 16 II, 3 AronM>O l El, 1710, 4 Cr.blrM (FVI. 17 70. S F"'1Wt (HB), 17 77 (hnl 2) I Btu IHBI. 16 71; 2 Buchtnan IFVl 1123, 3 Lt (W), 1111 JOOl.H-<hHI 1J I CrablrH (Fii), so 70, 2 Wtlllt< (FV), S2.06, 3. AronllOll !El. SJ.20, 4. ManllH\ lW), nt (hell 2) 1 Ben (HBI. so 90, , La1kw tM), Sl 30, 3 8uchln1n (FV l. S2 70, • F""'11rt (HB), nt Roulle to sed oi.at on hi1ear. There(orc, tht brethem stood 1dJy aside while bcina thorou&hlyembar· ra sect byoneoftheirown. Roben lruy. eropnetoroftheCohs, moved out of Baltimore and Into lo· dian.apolis in a manncrquittun- dipified. He backed the moving vans up and fled Baltimore under the cover of darkness. Ccrtainly, Jrsaydid not ask J>Cl'· mission from the NFL to change franchise locations in the middle of the niaht. lfhe had and had been rejected, Jrsay would have held up the same finger to Rozelle that was displayed by Al Davis of the Raiders. So, ifthe NFL was held up to ~- Probably forpurposcsof s.qi.attz.ina the dome people, the Saints have been openly neaot:iatint with officials of Jacksonville, Flonda. It is not out of the question these people should know better ha vinaaoncaround and around with Irsay but an NFL · franchise is an attractive item for any community and if there seems to be any.hot-howcverlong-at obtaining one, a city feels compelled to pursue it. In his negotiations with the Super- dome, Saints' owner John Mccom bas been making periodical mention .. S Po~r ~ CoLU MN 1s1 oftbeJacksonviE5·ne 'bilityand&be New Orleans po ·on it iftcl.iaed to believe him. ti more 1nicktrcd at Irsay and lndianapoUt until ii wa1 too late-darkness fell. Of course, ifcommiMioner Roullc screams too loudly about politics, he will be reminded that political clout 11 a popular and traditional pul of the NFL and certainly Is not a come lately aspect of the operation. • Edlaon HICb '• Trtncll Fearnley and Cheryl Bender.on of Fountain Valley will duel DellJ,... ........ ..,......,. • ......, for tbe Sun.et Leaeue 100 and ioo title. Tbanday after beat win• on Taeeday. multi are identical. • The l98SSuw8owlandattmd~ inacatnivl.lwtll be held at Stanford Stadium, arrancieot edifice with plank tcatuod locktt rooms which are located across the street from the green1w1rd. A rcpol"t says that $7 million will be ~nt to refurbish the place but sptndinaS7 million to remodel Stanford Stadium is tao ta· mount to Oauin.adown the Super Chief with a candJe. aearly, it isdifficuJtto imqjne . occ' s Andrews doubles at prelims1 Quinonez also - impressive winner in 10.000 meters l Artbetlo lMSACI, 51.lO. !Nit J) 1. Alldr ... ' IOCCI, SU'; 2 SIMll (MSAC), ~.13. J. ~ (F ), SS..31. LJ-ol Cob«I. ~). n-o; 2. Otllerel (Fl, 22·71h, l. Getrelt CSA), 22·1'4; 4.. ~ (OCC), 22·1, S Holldev (MSAC), 22·1; 6. NllllOlllevlc: (Fl, n-t; 1. MllM CCMI. 21~ L CMilene CCI. ?-t-.; '· a.nilll CMSACJ, 21·3; lt. H~ IGWCJ, 2MYl; 11. Sullvt11 (OCCI. tt--6IAI; Todd A d d G Q . 12. Krloer (Fl, 20-1\lo. n rews an us u1oonez Pv-1. 01e10rt11 <MSAC>. will .. <MSAC>. H11 were the Orange Coast Coll~c stand:.... 4"H1' J, Y..'!!i~'l ....,. 1u1 outs ueSday afternoon at c South J~m.n~' 1 ;r.~; \~~-roe~· Coast Confercnct track prehms held SP"-t <GWC>. so-e: 2...,. <Cer>. at UC Irvine. ..,.,YI, l . <Cw>. ~1 4.. ~ <F>, •2·1~. S. tne <Fl. Cf.t; 6. Sol.-. lOCC>. Andrews took both the hurdle 41-llV>; 7. c111ve, <GWC>. 41-S~: e. Moftt~ · h h hlJ ~ · IF), 41·• t.' HtwlllM CSA), 41·l; 10. Setltene events in eac cat w e uinon~ <MSAC>. 4CHOYa, 11. Frlldfte <SA>. •2"1: 12. won the l0.000.meter 1naJ in arown <C•>. 3'-21.'1 33·03 I more than 22 ,,..,.,..nds 1n oT-1. lldlon <GWC>. 1•4. t ~ . . .l . ~""' IOCCl, 13'-J; l. f'9dfle (SAi, 137 ... ; 4.. Sola front or tr1s closest competitor. 1occ1. 131-0; s. Montov• <Fl. 1»-0; '-Chavu (GWC ), 12'-4; 7. Brown lc.rl. 126-f; I. HtwklM ISAl, 12S-l, t , Ola.tnOf'I C~C), llS-11; 11. s.uttl CMst SW91ms let UC Wtllt) M9N 100 -(Mii 1l 1. Cf'lfflt' lMSACI, 10 '6, 2. Whllt(MSAC), 11.177;3Kylfl (SA),1113 (heat2l I. Urll>I (MSAC), 10.61, 2 Clltslt"9 !Cl. II 13. 3. Nasb (Ctr), 11.3:1. (llMI 31 I McCov (Ct(), 10 n. _2. Hudlon (MSACI, 11.0, l Swearv (F), 11 24 200 -(Mal wlMtrsl Alkins (MSACI, 21.63, C"-ll• (MSAC). 21 n . White IMSAC), 21.tl, McCov (Ctr), 21 IS, Uribe IMSACl, 71 20 (other ~tf'leol -MooOv IMSAC), 21.13. Clllst•no ICI, 22.03; l Smith (SA), 2'2 2S; Van Dam IGWC), n.35. .00 (hell I) 1 Brown CMSAC), 478. 2 Wiiiiamson (Cerl, 49 7, 3 Btrnft IMSACI, SO.I (Mii 71 I Alkins (MSAC), 41.S; 2. Smith ISA I. S0.2; 3 McNe11 (Carl. S0.2 (heel )) 1 Sltwert (MSAC), 41.4; 2. Mood\' IMSACJ. 41.6, l Trani IGWC), 4U IOO -(""'I) 1 Bovrl !Fl. l'SUO, 2 Knuosen <MSACI. 1'S7.t7, 3 Mchan IOCCI 1 SI 10 !hell 21 1......wwwm LC.l..-l.s.a.10t 2 ~<fl. HU3;~ l.Mlll <OCC ), l:SJ.Ot lhl•I 31 1 Gl.lfll IOCCl. 1:54.61. 2 Llmble (SA), I SS.37, 3 Clarv (Fl, 1:S7.IO. 10,000 tflnal) -I Qulnone1 lOCCl, l3 Ol.1, 2 00-(SA), 33:2~. a. Peru ISA). ,, 40 1. 4. FlddH (OC), 34:02.7, S e.t1er (GWCI, 1''095 . 6 HerntndH (C), 34:23.2. 110 HH -(Nit 1) 1 Anclr-s IOCCI, 14..71, 2 Porter IMSACI, lSOS. 3 S111b tMSACI, UM (NII 2) 1. ButM (MSAC I. lU(I. 2 Mar11ne1 CMSACI. 1S.2f; 3 M.dt (Fl. 15 S3 (hell 3) 1 Stevens (Cer), 14 7', 2 Hollld1v (MSAC), IS :!3 3 Van VIie! IFJ. IS.'6 400 IH -(heal 1) I Burns IMSACI SS 2S. 2 RY.,. COCCI. Ss.27, 3 M.rlu (MSACI. S7 94 (hffl 21 1. GrtVO !Ctr), 56 20, 2 "G6odsetl ICvPl. SH I Koslll• IMSAC). 11S-I; 11. Vellofte (Cer), 11S-ll 12 Wltv.nc:I (Cvo), lll·f. JT-1 v.,._ (GWCJ, lfl-4, 2. L.ucllft (Fl, 117·6, l. PhllllPS (OCC), "4·4, 4.. KOllM IMSACI. 112•tY,, S. Ortis (Ms.AC), 174•5; 6. Kobel <OCC), tn·4; 1 &.mllh (MSACI. \67·7; I. And.--(OCCI. IU·6; '· 8iodtbur99f" (OCCJ, 161·7; lO. A~ IOCCI. IS6•6"'2; 11. OlcMrton (MSACI, ISS-l. 12. Mendota (GWCI, IS6-<I TMm ~ 1. Ml, Sen ~. )7, t. Orenot Cout, 11. l. FIAlrlon. 16; 4.. """'°'· 14. s Senta Ana, 10. • GOIOtn ww. t; 7. Comoton. '' I, Cvweu. 3 . WOMaM 100 -(Mal II 1 Newton (MSAC), 1U7, ~ Compton l,MV.Cl, 12.10, l. Ove (C..), 12.11, 4.. Chin (Fl. Tl.20, S Hwtwle (OCCJ. llM. {,_l %) I JOl'mon (MSAC), IUS; 2. Ortis IC..), 12.AO, I. Carter (F). IJ.OS; 4.. JOMton (C), 1U. 200-(hffl I) 1. Newton (MSAC), 2U; 2. Ortla (Cer), 2U, l. Aslburv (Fl. 2U, 4.. Wood (SA), I 26 0. lllMI 2) 1 John.ton (MSACl, 24..2, 2. ltaolntoft (MSACl. 2U. 3 Fm CC.I. 2'.I; 4.. Gonae. <Cert.~ CGmllfllft'tMSACJ, • 800 -(Mel 1) I. llllll• IOC:Cl. 2:11.AS, t. Boeovldl (MSAC), 2:11.ll: a. ldllMwl (F), 2:23.20; 4, Ptimer <ear>. nuo. ,,_, 21 \. c.r... IGWC), 2:1US, 2. CM9 <M$AC), 2 U.i2; l. .'- tc>CCl. no.u, 4.. ~ tC). 2:2Ut, ~ Slllt1911 ICtr), t'.30.27. 109 1H -l"9t 1) 1. ~ (OCCl. 16.t, I. ~ IMSAC), \U, l. VlcllM$ lMSAC.), \6.1 .. 4.. FrtM.lln (G~I. 1Ut; S. ~CllQ <Fl, \ .... ttMet 2l 1. Jiau (M$AC), ISM; 2. YOUN <~l. IStl; l BludtO (Carl. lU, 4 Mc<:MCI <OCCI. 17 • Team oua!Hi«s -I Ml Sell MtoNo, ll, t CerrllO&, I, l (ht) Ortn11t Coest, Fuller'lon. s. S. GOIOtn Wes•. 2. • Olel s.n11 Ant, Comoton, Cvll!'eU. l Corona del Mar readies t~\Jefend track crown Sea Kfiigs roll up the·qualifiers at Sea View League j)Telimirfaries ByCURTSEEDEN Ol ltle DellJ "°4 ..... Corona del Mar H1gh's Sea Kings took another step toward main- taining their two-year domination of Sea View League track and field Tuesday. putting all of lheir chips in the nght place for Fnday night's showdown. Corona del Mar. which swept to a 7-0 dual meet record. and 1s on a two- yea.r unbeaten streak in that cate~or.y. figures to get most of its compet1t1on from Saddleback Hlgh's Road- runners. who were 91-45 victims of the Sea Kings during the dual meet season. .. We qualified just about everyone we wanted to:· admitted CdM Coach Jim Tomlin. "We're JUSt going to have to hang in there and score points on Fnday." Although Saddlcback's legion of sheer speed poses a threat. the defending champions appear to be solid favorites Fnday. Fnda) 's finals arc set to begin at 3 p.m. with the gi~ls' discus, other field SINKING FEELING. • • FromDl surprise John, who allowed onl) ap unearned run in the seventh inning. "I knew when J was warming up before the game that I had good stuff." John said, "so it docsrf't surprise me that I threw so well ... The only two hits John allowed were a sol id s1 ngle b} Da' e) Lopes 1 n the seventh and a one-hop single banged into centerlield in the eighth by Rickey Henderson with two outs. .. If it had to be anyone (to break up the .no-hitter). I was glad that it ·was David (Lopes) who got the hit ." John ~s sayina. "He's a good fnend of mine who did a lot for me back when we were Dodjer1: We still haH some blue in our blo<>d ... And. 1t w.ts a monumental win for John~~ 250th -which ranks him 35th on tffe all-time hst. Just one shy of tying B~Gibson for 34th with 25 1 victones. ~ · "I thin every wm from now on w1 II feel like fJiOre of an accomplish- ment, .. do tin said." It's a good feel in~. You sta~mng up guys-with big names. "If som ne would've told me in 1961 when s in h 1th school. t hla l I'd win 250games (in tfie big leagues). I wouldn't believe 1t." John. who evened his rl-cord at 2·2 and lowered his ERA lo 2 08. says he i.1111 feds like he can pitch for another four or five years (he'll tum 41 on May 22). "The ke y 1s stayma h"althy and p1tchin1 on a &ood hall club." he said "It's an outside poss1b1ht)' of winnina 300 aa mes." John struck out four and walked two in recording h1 2.SOth. but he really didn't have a no-hmer on his mmd -even 1n the Sl\th. "1 never realty cxpcclcd to act it Maybe 1f I was 1n the ninth inning I would ha"c been th1nkm1 mort about 1t," John ~1d "But I wu Just 101na for the ~hutout and the v.in ") thin~ the lon&t''lt l'vt cvrr gonr before 1s 6 2/3. I would have liked tp ha ve had it though -I'd be lying ifl said I didn't. The hard throwers will tune th eir fastball up (in the late innings). but I don't have that." John was aided with some fine defensi ve plays -once in the first inning by Gary Petus on sinking pop- up ofT the bat of Lopes. and b) Dick Schofield in the third inning. when he turned a slow-hit grounder between third and short into an out -nailing Henderson at first b> a half-step. "He made the one pla) that was outstanding." John said. "He got me out of a big hole." Meanwhile. the Angels' thundering ofTensc was tamed. briefly. through three innings by Fullerton Hi~ product Mike Warren (3-3). but did produce a run in the fourth when Warren hit Bobby Grich with a J-0 fastball with the bases loaded. allow- ing Fred Lynn. who had s1nlled and advanced to third on a single and a hit-batter. to score. ANGS"\. lfOTl'.l -~ 09Qlcft ll"ll0llow M 111 IS ol lllt lttl 16 HMt• al'd n ot hi\ ia,1 2S _ G•rv '-"l• is hllllllll .1t4 (20·"1 In hit °''' 17 oamli wllh 14 run\ KOl'.0 -Pro«>el>lt l'lldllno f'lltlCllvP tor 1onl91!1 p(1s Ille It•"-*" (3-1) aoaln•t O.klalld'• ,,..,. McCattv <>·ll Pl'IOr lo Tut•dtV'l Qtrnt, Oekltnd CIPl11n Owa-Muf'tilly tnO Anoe! outtltlder l"r'M L.,.. tan9*1 1n • llofnt run hlttlno contnl In 1 PtOOl'tm PVI '°"'"" bv lht Malor LMOUt ProtN>llon\ Cor~atlon LY'WI won '"' Dalllt, t-1 eollecllnt '3,000 anO now\ movet on to f\lr"'9r c~tl tlon eotln\t tilt It• Klttlt·L•rrv l'tmlll winner Ttit eventual chlmolon wlA eolltel '50,000 Tfl« Ante!\ ,,. now J-' t0tlnst Oel<ltncl tl'llt vMr fM IWO ClUOt Nllll t ~ ~ Mfle\ terhtr In !tit VMr 11 !Tit OMiand C~ TM AllOtl\ ,,.,... more o"'w111 ,_ "'"' eoa1ns1 0.1111nc1 1m1 1111n en. 0111« tMm In IM Amttl"n Lffllvt, tnO hive KClftcl mor1 rvt1• ( 1,4f4l t111n tn'f Olfltr ,..,. tot Adel 0.ClncH Ht l\H I 12 NIN hlllifle \lrMll ti llonlt tnCI ownt five 111M-wtml"I ltll steono II\ lflt lteOUt ni. firs! '°""° of the Mav ''BrMll 0tnc1111" ~lltlon wlll 1199111 tonlefll ., • 50 Tilt r1n11 IN" .-t11ml11trv eotNMllllom wll lie helcl ,,,.,.., t, tl MCI )0 lon19ttt's winner will""''"'' to ,,,. Bl'eP Oenet (hl,,...tlllo round on JUM " T9"WtW MM WH litl9CI In 1111 ntl\111 M IO t WI erCl'I In h•t rii>hl htll "I lllCI wllat IMY u IOQ"o 1ret1 It tluf1 IO .. ,,. •nO lo t\jfn on mv 1001 'o I totd 1,,,.,.naw J4M MCN1mer11 ~< 10 D<lnO Ill ~lift ( ...... I tnd sl\\ll 11\tm OUI. Jotln ••Id events at 4:30 and the first running event at 6 p.m. The Sea Kings' Dave Anderson turned in a I :59. I to win his heat in the 880and a 4:29.5 in the mile to take that heat, too. to lead the Sea King challenge. Tomlin was delighted with the performances of some of his other athletes Tuesday. among them Ross Flemer who took second (to Irvine's Ken Simms) in the 880 with a 2:03.3. Simms won 1t in 2:03.2. In add1t1on. Flemer qualified m the 440 with a 52.3 in his heat, and again it was Simms winning the heat with a 5 I. 7. CdM 's Ray Gage qualified in the 440, finishing second to Simms wt th a 53.0 and also took third in the 220 , -. , -/ ., Tommy John behind teammate Scott Seal who finished second with a 23.3 and Saddleback's Teddy Baker. who won the race. (Seal also won his heat in the 100 with a 10.4 efTon). "He's (Gage) one of those kids who may have had a further wa) to go than the other kids. but there he 1s." noted Tomlin. SH View LN9U• Pl"tfilT\s (It ~ Hll'ller H19111) 100 -(Pleat I) I Baker ISi 9 9. 2 Bell~ lUI. 10.S. l Harwood (E T), 10 t 11\ffl 11 I Lovelacr (SI. 10 4, 1 81Hllclo9tu !COM ) 10 S (heel 31 I s .. 1 lCdMI. 10.4, 2 Btnlamln CUI. 10 I , l S1mm1 Ill. 101S 220 -(l'ltll 111 Ball.er ISi. 'l'16, 2 Stal IC<IMI. 23.3, 3 G191 lCdMI. 24 2 lhetl 21 1 Mc:Grelli ICCIMI 2'2 9 2 Lovelace !Sl 23 2. l F~lll IE") 73.2 (hffl JI 1 a.cter (I), 13 1, 2 8tll\ CUI n 2 3. BehkcloQlu l CCIMI. 23 S . 440 -lhnl 11 I Simms 11), SI 1. 2. G ... ICCIMJ. SJ 0. ("911 2) I. Bec:lttr Ill, SIJ, 1 F""-ICCIMl, SU, 3 KOi INHl. Sl 7 (,_I )) 1 McGrath (CCIMI. 50 S, 2 OuOIM l~H), SU. 1 Ctldwell (II. S2 S 9'0 -lhnl 1) Al'l<leMon (CCIM), l:jf.t. 2. Ano.non IETI, 2«> I, 3 Rot>trb !Eil), 2:0l.2. 4.. Logan IETI. 2-0. 7 '""'' 21 I S.mms ti). 2:GU, 2. F*'-ICdMl, H3.J 3 IC!ne IETI. 2:06.12, 4 De L• Torre ISi, 2-0I I (!IHI 31 1 McGum ICCIM). SOS. 2 OuOftl (NH). 52.0, 3 Cttow.11 Ill. S2 S Mile -(hNI 11 I An<ltrson (C<IMI. 4.1t S, 2 HObOl tCdM). 4.30.7, 3 I("'°' IUI. 4:30.7, 4 Kublell Ill. 4.36 I (hell 2) Whllltv (U), 4:26.t. 2 BNrQ IEsU. 4-28 I. l Allen !ET), 4 31.0; 4. Havne ICM). 4.31 01 110HH -(hfft 1) 1 Patrner ICCIMl, IS I 2 -SumtTW<s IETI, 1S4 ) JOl'nson INH), 16 4, 4 "'""'-' ISi 16 7 !hell 11 1. Ftlfx CEl. lS.l, 2. Solomon (S), 159. l Brown (ETI, 16.3, 4 Maneftl>tr ICdMI 1' 3 llOIH -(hell II 1 Ftlht (Esl), 4'2 1. 2. Sl'loemeker ICM) 42 S. 3 Solomon ISi, C2 S. 4 Luciano (II a I. (hell 2) I McC•lltm ICCIM) 42 0 1 Mikulich !Ettl Cl I, l JOMC!fl ll:T). '3 4. 4 snetc>v CU), 42 t Irvine girls don't let down in prelims ln1ne High School alrcad} has 1he Sea View League girls track cham- p1onsh1p safel) tud..ed a-...a} lhanks lo an undefeated dual meet sea<;on. bu1 that fact didn't deter from c;omc..· 1mprcss1 ve mdn 1dual pcrformann:' at the league's prehms fuc'><la' al Ncwpon Harbor High . And the Sa1lol"'I· haron \Hkst'' delighted the so-ealled home cro-...d with a fine 16.0 1n her heal of th e..· 110 low hurdles and m1~"c-d b\ onC'-lenth of a second m lhC' '"\ll to-...\ a' Ir' inc\ Sarah Monon -...on lhc c"eni ~11h J 47 I "Thal was Manon's bc't 11mc ti, a ~OJ\d. but 1t reall> didn't surpnse me," a(\.m1tted New.pon Ha rbor Coach Bol> Van 1ckle What did surpnsc V~n S1ckk -...a, a quallfing effon by Buffy Rabbitt 1n the 880. Rabbitt finished third in her heat with a ~ 31 .6. .. he·, had a '1rus in rhe lungs and 1t'<. rm.'"' hard to run the 880 one '-'t·c..·~ after that." Van 1ckle said. It -...as a gooJ da} for the Vaqs. ml'an-... h1le. as Laura Chapel clocked a~ ~n 'to win her heat of the 880 and teammate 'hem Kemper won her hl'llt 1n the I 00 wt th a 12.2. Ne-...pon Harbor's Maggie HenllOn -... on her heal 1n the mile with a 5: 13 8. but 11 ~asn't as 1mpress1ve as her ~ l)C} 6 accomplish~ a few weeks ago at the .\rcad1a lnv1tat1onal. Chapel won the other mile heat -...11h a 5 11 5 to add to her 1mpress1ve dd\ Warriors' Scb:er~erliorn qualifies in three events SH Vt.w L .. 9" ~ t•t...._, ....... "~ 100 -( ..... 11) I ~rlflf !Est), 11', t lovd ISi 170 l Ort-Ill 12.l ("Ml U I K-(NH) "1 1 McFelltt\ (I), 12 ' (hell ll I Morton Ill. 111 f Ven E•ll 1!.l 12 1,) E•-(CM}, 12 12 no -(hell 1l 1 R~1 (UI. 27 1, 2. Hoell (I) 11 s ) Panlan ICM>. 27 1 llMel 11 I Monon (I) 17 • 2 Bondrt ICclMl 27 I, S I('"-tNHI, Jl.'-(hffl 31 I Grlfll !Est), 27 1 1 Frtnkln CCM), 17 1 J Htttno lCCSMl 21 lS Woodbndgr High'~ standout m1ddlt' d1~tancc runner Enc hcrmrrhom settled for third place in the 400 and second in the 200 Tuesday bvt lill ca 1l)' qualtlied at the South C'oa,t ~aauc track P"'hms t M1M1on V1c)o H1&)l. Schermerhorn. who clocked o SO O rn the 400 an\l a 22.l 1n the 200. al$0 qualified in the 800 wtth a founh· place time of 1:59.0 for the Wamon. The league finals are set for S p.m. Fnd4)'. also at Mission Viejo Htah s.vtt\ CM1t L .. .-llf'llms (It MltMlft ~ ""'91) IO'fS 11»-I Broolro\ IW) 109 ) ltoe<ll 1Uil 11) ) Pt\l-11>\ IW) 11 l . to0-1 t.lm• (Dtll, 22J.; 2 $dl«1'Wfll«fl IW) n 3 l aroel\s 1w1 n 4 • H•rvev • OH1 1' s s Btl$1$ \(V), n7 4Cll>-1 Roach ILH) •• ~ 7 ~m\ ,...., ~o ) Sclltrmtr'l\Ofll (W) 10 0, 4 M•rve\I I OH! SO 1 .-1 Cronin lMVl, 1 ~'I. 2 Mavnerd tC Vl I SI I l Sims (0Hl I SI,,' Sclltrmemorp (WI 1 s•o I ~1 l(efl\I IOHl 020 1 CP>t \Oe IMllJ Ul6, J Wllft~ IOHI 0\0 4 lt-o (\{' 4.U I llOHH-1 SNe><ro C\11 14 1, 1 Grt90fv (MV), 14 I ) llllv CMVl IS 4 4 (AOM (I HI IS S S ltutlentlefQ IUO IS 1 ))OIH-1 ltoecfl II.HI, JU 7 G,tf90"v IMVI A0 2 l Flt'9 IOHI 116 4 Marl•no IW 411 ~ •vrrtl IMVI "0 o.u lot-1 LYOl"l tLHl \a 7 l Cerltt (WI 12 t ) SC:hwarta (MVI ll 0 --1 LY'Oft\ IL H) ?• ~ 2 T~\l>n IMVI 261,) WllmOll (MV I. 761 4 W1ll•1m1 IMVI )6 t S lone (MV), '1 t I WUmofl(MVI S•• 1 !om•tl> IW J ~· ) Lone IMVl 1' 1 4 ThOmtK<\11 INIVI I 011 I lGnt IMVI 1 It) 2 \fT\•11\ IW) 2111 l P9twWI (l8 1 111 l 440 -1'-' II lttnWft (ET), S9 t. 2 C..,,._ Ill 1112 4, l HarrlnQIOn (CCIMl, 1 OlO. t Ot•• !NH), 1-o.l.7 111911 2) I "°"''CUI. SU. 2 Hoat fl). 1 02 2 l Evan• ICCIMl 1-ot S. 4 ,,_ (NH), 1~7 9'0 -lllMI II 1 a-el to UU. 1 Wrttflt W. 11'..S.. l M1111t IU UU 4. Cllirll ((_,, 1400 '""' 11 1 ""**"'Ill ""· t,,....., tCd~l UO i, l Rtbbl11 (NH) U ... 4 ~ IUI Ul.11 M ilt -IPIMI II I HenMlll INHI, 5 IU; 2 S.• <ecW.1 s "2. 1 ~10 <NH l. sn 1 ' wrltf\1 m. Ul 4 ll'leel 21 I C"-1 (I), S 11 S t o.ltlM lCdMt UI 7 l \CM.., tu. SJO 4, 4 Mo"1ll ICOMI SJH llOUi -(llMI 1l I Altlftey (NH). 160. J lOfn (I) 17 6 (hltl 7) 1 Motton (I), 16.J, J °'"' INHI 16 4 ) 0.fft (!Tl 16 t 11\tel JI 1 Or .... II> 16t 2 r~llJI 172.> ~(CMI, 11 s )lOLH -(rw.t ll I ~111,4' 1,1..Altlnr# INH I 47 1 J ._"'"' l(Ml, ... 4 Cklt\t ((TJ1 4' t llleel 11 1 T~ (I), 41 t . 2 lorn It> 41 t ) ~"' 1Sll1 ft J 4 L.a ..... f(t/'1\1, lt.J. \ I 1. MAM. LSAOU• STAMOfNGS ~LN_,. Win OtVtllOH w L. 1• II I• II ll 11 f II II U ' 13 9 IS • AJT OlVIStON If 2 ~ 01 I l\1 )~ • .. ,., ~·., ,. 10 609 • " 10 10 soo • ') II ll ~ ·~ ' " •29 10 9 14 ,.,, )91 II I I• 364 II'' T~Y'l k'"' .....,. • 0.kta no I Toronto 10·1 re.._, 4 4 0.lfOH II, Bolton 1 S.ttlmore 3. Cleveland O Cllk.aoo 7, Ntw Yor" S • Kan1.u City l, Mllwau"" 0 S..lllt 11 MIMU Ola e ' T9dol't''• Gamt'l 0.11.i.no IM<C•ttv l 1 t ot Anoe!• CRoma11lc11 l· IJ 1"1 Qeveteno c:r.utcl11!• l 11 "' Ba11lmort (BOOdl(ktr O·J) Bo1ton (Brown 0 21 •t Ottrou (&.r~uer l·O> Cnl Tt11H (HQu91l I ) ot loronto Clan<.Y 1·21. Cnl New Yor" (Rho 0·21 •• C'1•Ctll0 tHovt 2·2>. (n> Kan.a• Clllf I Btoc" 3 11 11 Mllweu""' CSullon 2·21. Cnl M1nneM1t1 1W111iem\ I l ot ~atti. <Stoddard 0·11 Cnl Tlwn4MY'• Garnn 8o1oton at Oetroot IC.an1t1 C11v et M11wau"te MlnntlOla 81 ~allla tnl c ..... L..-. ... dt SI. 4, I.IC lf'vlM 1 UC Irvine 000 002 OC»-2 1 I LOM hK'1 SI 210 010 OOa-4 10 I IC.en• •net Morgen, Tehll, Ko~crtwalll ctl •no llllllnger w -Tahlf, 3·4 1..-Kenl. 6·6 S-Kooeczew111.1 121 211--0onHIVH (LB>. HoPkln• (L8) 38 -Ceroua tLBI Hit-Dev" 1uc11 Cemmunttv c ..... Oranee CNll S, Cvwtn I 0refl9e (OHi 100 100 OJO-S 11 3 Cvortu 000 000 10<>-I 6 I Olltfode •net 8errvn111, Volloo end Fi.lltn w-<)st~ , 4 L-Volloo 78-<i••d..., (()CC I 1 ~ Wnt 10, Mt. Sen Anltnlt I GOiden West 03 I O<M 007-10 19 1 Ml S.n .t.ntoniO 700 001 OSO-I IS 0 Fortuono Wiik !'I. Button 111 end Flortl Gor.,...n. Hell 161. Torre\ 111 Ho•me• 191 and Zoltnlck W-8 ullon. 1· 1 L-TorrH 1·1 2B-Morello IGWCI. WOl"OYl (MSI lB-Llolll (GWCI Ellltr IGWC ), Petrick lGWCI, Lockriarr lMSI HR--<oolt (MSI National LH9Ut COMMUNITY COLLEGE WEST DIVISION Sou1tl Coast Conference W L Pct G8 W L T 011 ~' 11 a 697 C.Oldtn Well 11 6 0 kn Otego 16 I 667 I Sonia Ana 17 6 0 ClnGlnnet1 11 ll 4SI 6 0re"9t CoH t 16 6 0 Atlanta 9 ll 409 1 Ctfrito' IS I O 2 Houston I IS l4t • ' Fullt<lon 1l 10 O 4 Sa" Franc:1sco 1 11 192 10 ..-&ell~ 1 .,; ~~ EAST DIVISION Cvortn • 11 I 11', New Yori. 13 •• e •19 Comoton 0 11 1 I' Cl'llceoo 12 9 S11 I T11tld8Y'• Seer•' "' f>fliled4tll>l'lle 12 9 S71 J Or1nrie Coast S CvorH• I Montreal 11 I I S21 7 GOld4tll WHI 10. Ml S.n Anlonlo • SI. Louis 11 11 500 , I Futlerlon 2. C•rrllO\ 0 Plltst>vroh 1 14 333 6 Senla Ana 19, Comoton l TllftdeV'• k art\ • TllllndeV'a '"-"'" (2:JO sun.I NFL weft Team••\f·IMl'l'I Mlectklnt Ill T~y'1 H1t1-I Foolbal L-.ut ~ Otltt <tint nul'llbtr In oaret1"'"" ln<11Ut" round or1ttect. MConct nl.llTIO« I• over·•ll PO•lllofl '" orettl: ............. ltle). .,.,.n,. "'· oai.riom. ( '· ,, Scott c.... •. ()It..,.,,. (2. '71. Thoma• lanScOn, lb, Olllellomt (,. 36) •Od Mc:Sweln, db, Cltl"IUOn ts, .SI. ltvdelt ~ .. llCOll. II>, 1..$U I•. f4) Cliff lenton, le, Purdue !S, 1321 ten lennetl, 11b, Duke 16, 1•1 Oen lttllltl, Cit, er.eon t•. \6)) IC11'k OodM, lb, Ht118da·l..a\ 'II .... (7, f1j) Jatf JtC'll.oll. IO. A\ltlul'll (I, 20t). Glen How•, of, Soull'lern Mlail1alool (t, UJ) Derrlctl Frenlllln, db, Fr.sno Sta•• (10, MOJ. Tomnw NOtmtil, wr, Jte"t911 Stele Ill, 2t71 Oon HotmH. wr. Mll<i of COloredO m. Jiil ~ ... Grev BtM. ro. Notre Oarne CI. 761 Erle Rltll.trdM>n, wr Sen JoM Sltlt (2, 41) RodntV Bettinger, db, Mleml, Fie. (J, n1 S.en MQNanlt , de, $en Olffo Stall (l, 79) ltot>trl "Sl>ffdV'' Neal. rb, Mlernl, Fie (3. 111 Mltcntn BrOOkln\, wr, Ullnoli <•. U I JOM Kidd o, Northwe\l.,n cs. 111) Tonv Sltl0tt, c. SOutllern Calltornla 1•. lU). Sien Otvld, db, TUH Teel! (7, 111) SllCV Ravtltk • db. Tea•S·Artl119ton (I, 2091 LtrOY How•tl, d•. Aphlachlt n s.,,. "· 7361 Joe Artll>Y. lb, Harvard ( 10, 2~> Crt'9 Wllllt, wr, Mluourl ( 11, 7991 Ruuell Otlfll, wr, Merv1a110 ( 12 l??I Ciika .. ...,. Wlll>tf M.trltletl, lb, Florid• (1, Ill Ron Rivera, 10, C1llfornle (2. 44) Sleltn Hll"'IOl'l•lta. oo, Mlcllloen ll. 111. Tom Andlew,, 09. LOUll'tlU. I•. 99} Nell.I~ ROOt<tlon ro, Centret Arken\e\ (7. 11') Brld Andeflon, w r, Arizona II. 2111 Merl. C•"'le Qt>, Monlctelr Sttlt (9, 244) K11fl VH trn1n, It, Idaho ( 10, 266) Slleun Gevlt. oo. Ohio Stelt ( 10, 1111 Merk Butllu,, di, llllnol• I 11 . 2971 Done Id Jorden, rb, Hou'· Ion ( 12 330) Cllldnllltl ...,..,, Ric11v Huniev lb, Arlrone ( 1, 1) Pele Koch, o., Marvtenet (I, 161 Brien Blt dO\ 01, Nortn Carotlne (I, 211 Boomer E•lu on, qo, Mervlenet 12. 3'1. Stenlord Jennlr19•, rt>, Furma n (3, 6SJ John F er,.v. ro, Sacre· mento State (4, 92) 8arne v 8uu•v db. South C1rdl1ne Slate IS I 191 Don Kern, te, Amooa State 16:._\s:;j Leo Barker .J!!.. New Miilco ~"" P . 8ruct lfiTmen. 01, IOWI Stat• (I, 204). Brue• IC.ortnki, C, Ho!v Cron (9, 231). Aaron Jeckion. lo. Nor111 CarOllna ( 10, 262) Brtnl Zleoter, rb, Syr · ecuw ( 10, USI Sltve McKHver, rt>, Cantre l Siii•. Okie (I I, 2'91 Sieve Aaouel. IO, HOlv Cron (It, 3161 Ot'Vlland arewns Don Aooen. db, UCLA (1, It) Ctvl• OeOeen ). San l"rar>c•.co 1 I 11 1nn1no') F1ilMfrton et Or\nOt CoHt New Yori\ I , Chicago I --~ -·-~--~~ ~~PIO'' ',r PllllaOtll>l'll• 1 Montreal • Ml S.n Antonio al Cerrito' R~s..._dl>, ~·~· Sl.'..!.!;}..?;.~B!uct ........ ~..r-c. -n'Wll . .,.:f ~~\<r.'· s;.,., 'Oo"idtll. St Louil 10 Pllllburg,, S Sa nte Ant at CYortn C1nc1nnat1 1 Hou \IOO 1 FndaV's G.rne l2:l0 o.m.) San Doeoo l Atlanta 1 Orange CoHt el Compton TldAV'l Ga~ °""'' IHonevcu•t 4 OJ •' Sen Fren CIKO (OeVI\ 0 3) Sen 01190 1T,,urmo"d I 21 er A!lanto (Ptrer 0·01 Owd Chiceoo IRaoncv I l at New Yo<t. (Lu rv 1·11 tnl Monlrtel IRorier• I 11 "' Pl'l1i.oele>n11 (Dennv 1·11 Cnl SI LOUI' ILaPolnl 2 )I 111 Pilllburon (Rl!ode" 2·71 Cnl Houlton CNlet.ro I l l ot Clnc1nnet l!>olo 1 I) In) Tlwndav'• Gamn Houlton at C1nc1nna11 ~n 01990 et Allenta, In) AMERICAN LEAGUE Aneets 4, A's l OAKLAND CALIFORNIA ab r II bl R.Hno.,.Jl 4 0 I~ Moroen ?t> • 1 O o Pell~ ct (erew ID Lvnn rt OtCnnlt> RcJk\n on Downing II 8en1ou1 11 Grich 2t> Ntrron c Scnolllo u eb r II bl l ? I 0 4 0 1 ' ) 1 I 0 Loon rt Kngmn dl'I L•n1tro lt> AIMOn lb Muro1wct Eu1anc Htatl'I C DH1ll n Burg,,, o'1 Pn111iO\ \\ T.tat1 • 0 ' 0 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 ' l 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 JO I 1 O Toteh kor• bv lnnlne\ 2 0 I I 4 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 l 1 I 2 4 0 0 0 l 0 ' 0 ,, •• 4 OalrYnd 000 000 100-I C.llftrnia 000 111 IOx-4 Gemt Wonning RBI -Grlcri Ill E--<arew En 11n DP-Oakland I LO~akland 4. Cel1forn1a 1 HR-Gr.cl'\ 41 SB-f>tlll\ (9) SF-~tncH Oatdend Warren L 3·3 Conroy !)orenltn Callfemla IP H A ER Bii SO 6 0 , a 0 0 • 0 0 • 0 0 , I 0 , 0 0 JO!ln W 2 1 8 1 I 0 7 4 LS.nc"t1 S.l I 0 0 0 0 0 Conrov 01tc~ ro 1 batter •n Int 11'1 HBP-Oownong, Grocl'I l!>v Worrtn1 T-2 70 A~27 009 NATIONAL LEAGUE Dod9en J, Glanb 2 LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO ebrh~ abrh~ ~· ?b 8Ruu.ic• Mionoo rl S 0 l 2 Trillo 2b S 0 l 0 S 0 1 O Oliver lo S 0 0 0 4 o o O JClar" rt s o 2 o Her'"'" o Marv111 11 R111tra lt> Mondv on Land\ty lt> 8 roci. lb Yeeoer c N1ednlur o Wllilf.ldrl Al\dtln U Hoo1on o SclO\Ctt C Toteh 1 0 0 0 OB•l<er If l I 0 0 3 0 0 l L ton1ro cl • O O O 1 0 0 0 YnoOtd )D • I 7 0 0 0 0 0 Brenlv c 7 0 I 0 7 0 0 0 S Tho•n Ph I 0 I 1 4 0 0 0 LtMW U 4 0 1 1 • 0 I 0 CDevl\ Oh I 0 0 0 O O O 0 Lerch o I O O O 1 0 0 0 FW1llml O I 0 0 0 • 1 1 O Minton o I 0 O O I O o o ltocnrd' on I O O O 1 1 2 0 La vellt P 0 0 0 0 ll J 1 l T.tah JI 7 t 1 Scon bit tnnlnes LM A...., 001 000 000 02-) San Frencluo 010 000 000 01-1 Game W'""'"O RBI -!>•• 171 OP-LO\ Anotle\ I LOB-Lo• An1191n 11 '.>II" ~ •anci\Co 9 lB-Su SB-LtMu•er t)J S-11ooton 2 IP H A EA 118 S.0 Hooton ' 6 ' I 7 0 0 ll • I I I I I ' : N1,ontupr HtrV""' W I I) CD101 S.I 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 .. S.n Frencllco Lt rcn " I I , 1 I 0 0 1 FW '&""• M into,.. J 0 0 1 Lavt llp L I ' T Jl8 A ~ . I/ \/6 2 7 MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Amerlc1n laaout BA IT 1N(, 40 O' oa•• C.••t>t• Ot lto•• 4118 T· ""''"' eu Ot ••o•• •01 Garcia Tor onto J/9 UP•naw T o•.,nto 311 E "Oi. M•nne\Ota l7S RUN!> 'R1o"e" 6ell1mort 7J Tremmel! Delro I 7) Wl\1t1~1tr Ott•o•t 21 Uol,,ew Toron•o 10 LYM, ,..,,...,, It RBI ~ rornan Oa"'e~o lA EM11rrav Ball•mort 7) 0.ClncH, Anoell, 12, 0.wn '"9, Af1991l, 10; Lemon Dt trO•' lO HtTS C:.11rc111 Toronto )9 C.6•11. Tor nn10 l~ T remmell O"troot )) ,PtClnc.e•. Aneet•. JI; R•Ol<fl\. B11t•mo•• JI 00U8 l ( S ,_,., A ..... \, 10, GBet• Toronto 9 8Be' Tto\ t Matt·"O•v Nflw Vork • UD•~... t n•Ol\IO • TRH"LES RLaw Cn1<11110 J \ner·ll•n KanlH C1h J 10 ~rt lltO "'"" 1 HOME RUNS Kingman Oekl11nd 10 Rfpl\tn 81tt•mort 8 A01111' ~·"'" I l(ntle C'1•C•DO 1 4 ••• t1t0 wotn 6 STOLEN BA~S Buller C1evt11nd ll C.arc•• Toronlo 1) Btrnerard c1e•el1f\d r1 fll'eitlt, A,,...,, t RHt~tf\On O•ktiond • PtTCt!ING 13 Otcl\lonl l •ere lltd w11n 1000 STltt"E'OUT$ 81vt..,,,.n Ctevelend l6 MMOore !.H iiie )I ~. A,....I, )11 Werttf'I 0 1kltnd 11 4 11rl hl'd with 11 SAVES QuistnbtrrY KanlH Cttv 1 C•11dlll Oe"!Ano ~ l emo Tornr\lo 4 I e•t tied wltn ) Pacific Cout Com.renu ~n Olego Mela Sedd .. O.Ck Patomar So\itnwf\terri Groumont W LT 08 ll s 0 .. 12 6 0 10 • 0 9 , 1 9 1 2 MlraColle ' Sen Diego · 6 II I 6> 7 16 0 11 TunOIY'l korH Mira .CO\ta 3. San 01t00 1 San 0 1890 Mn• 6. Petomar S Groumont S Soull'lwHtern 0 Thunder• Gamet (~ o.m.> SouthwHterl) el Seddltb•c" Grournont at MlreColt• Patomar at San Q1ego Hiotl 'Choof Wntmlrntw II, Mer1M S Mer 1ne 000 200 3'-S 1 I WHtm1n\ltr 4 " 040 1<-ll I 3 Han\on. Rtecl'I Il l, Guedea ISi OH ISi and Blokdvk. Connel Weetrow,i.i I 1 l a nd H•rnanou W-Connot L-He"'on 2B-RH<I IMl Off (Ml OeM • IWI He<nano.i CW! 3B-Mart1nu IWI H~ heel'I e, Ocain View 0 Hunrlnoton 8Hch 000 SOI ?-t 12 0 Ocean View 000 000 ~ l 4 L•dvott eno Sn1r1tv JonH WillOn Ill e nd Kirov 28-RcnhnO IH81 GorOOfl CH81 Newoort Cl'lrbllen 2', St. Mic:Nll'l 0 Ntwoort Cl'lflJtlan 001 lC I 111101-26 16 I St Mlcnun ooo o o o -<> 2 a Howard Frt0tr1Ckl0fl CSI l "d Hontlf cull Fono and Valltc1Clo 7B-Kovack• CSMJ. Let CN() 38-<irer>cn (N(I. How erd (NCl HR-Lff (NCI. Howa rd (NCI SunHf LHOU• Edo1<>n W L 011 9 7 9 l • s 6 s 3 9 1 11 l 3 6 ') . ., Oc:e1n V•ew WHlmtn\ltr Founteln Valley Hun11no1on Beech Ma').n• TutMSIV'l kartl Huntlnoton BtKh I, Ocean View 0 w e,tmonlltl' 11. Marine S T.,.._y, Gema EdtlO<\ Vl FQ\lnfaln Valley II Mlle Souere Peril 111 Ft'ldtv'• G1me Octtn View t i Founlaln Valle• (3 1s11 S.tvrdeY'I Gamet Wellm•nll., vl Edlwn al Milt SQuere Par" 17 Merine a t Hunrlnoton 8eecn <noon HIGH SCHOOL CIF rankings 4·A ptos. Sd\M, lffeue AKOl'd Ph I Notrt Deme CSOI Qe1 Rev 20 0 100 1 Ltkewood. Moore 16·2 90 l C1m er1110, Marmonte 21·2 11 • N09elfl, Sierra It· I 70 S Miiiiken, Moort 11 3· 1 S1 6 Culver C11v Out n 16 l I '9 1 Buen• (hennei 19·4 40 L EllMl'I. SIH!Mt le·S 1' 9 LB P04v, MOortt 14 6 16 10. Mater OtC, .t.nettu' IS·4 ll J·A I Cerrito\, Sen <iabrftl Vell"v 1 Lomooc. Nortntrn 3 Sono<o Frffwtv 4 Eooewooo Valle "'''' • ~ Hart Footn1H 6 !.eotll Ane C enturv 7 Loa••. Emoore 1 R111ntft1 Nortn•rn 9 f\oere,,ia Emoore 10 Cial'lr. ~" Gaor.el Vall~v 2·A 1 C•oo Va llev Soutn Co••' 1 Norwal" Suburban J Hawtl'IO'"f Pioneer 4 Cn•no H•C•t ndt S !.."'• l"e Wn1tmon1 6 Ceiebal.t\ Front er 1 Ca.on San Andrr1u a C11nvon. GotOtn 9 (i1~nn Suburllen 10 .t.rrovo Monton Vetlev l ·A I Ttmole C1tv Rio Hondo 7 B1•n0i> Mont. Cem1no Rea• l La Selle, Senta F • 4 FIHmore, Trl-V•llev s wrinner Chrl•ll•n. Otvmolc 6 LA Lutheran, .t.10111 1 A tascadtro Lol Pad•tl • Pe lQ RoblH LOl Padt"t\ 9 Cna minaoe Se 11te Ft 10 SI Bernerd Cimino RHI Stnel ~· 19·2 99 18 2 ,, lt·l 1S 11 l S9 16 S S9 16 4 •9 U·l I 78 IS 4 19 14 4 11 IS 1 17 19 1 I 11 s I)·• I) • ll 4 ll ' u 4 ll 4-1 1)-6 13 s 100 ., 81 69 s~ .. 18 11 23 9 IS 7 9' 11 2 91 I J 1 I 11 14· l 69 IS 1 I 6' 14 2 I .. IS S lt IS·S l9 u s ,, 10·• I Crouroad• lt 2, l. Ntw-1 Cllth· lien, IS· S; l Coal• Cnr1,111n 17 S 4 Lefl1nowe11 Cnr11111n 11 S. s Orenoe Luthtnn 10 1 6 Fllntrldge P rto f 7 1 I= tllh B•oll\I II s I • ltto Hllfl«I Preo t 1 1 t Et Puo ae llobl•• 14 4 10 ltou mono. 11 4 NV ' 1 NHL ol:noffl CON,IEIHHCI "MALS T!Ht4ev'\ ktr91 taianoe'h l Monlrf~I I Sf roe' ••t<l l dmonion l M1"1'4"ot • 1 F nmonton ""'"' •• , ••• • 0> ThurtM't''' G•"'- NY l•l1n<Mr\ el Montreat t.eturdl't"• O.nw M~ltttl ti NY lllande'I T~V'•~ NY I\ ""0•" et Monlrflll t 11 nt rt\ H t • I • re Sout'14trn Mtlll0d11I (4, 9') Brien Brennen wr 80\lon C04teo• 14, 100 Devt Plf91<orn. ot North Oallote Sla lt !S, Ill) Terry NUQtnl, Qb, Color•OO State (6, 15.e) t' Jtm Dumont, 10. Rutver• (7, l'°I Don Jonn, wr. TUH A&M C9, 228) Ear~I 8vner. rb, East Cordllna (10, 2t0) Cetn Leonard COitman. OD Vend4tt'blll ( 1 II Ron SOit 09 Merv1en0 Cl, 191 lllelM Wlntt•. dt. Svrec11w (1 JS! Cnrl\ koll. di, F'ur44• (3, 66) Creoo Curry, db, THH t•. 931 Georot Wonslev. rt>. Mlu lu lool Stet• (4, 103) GotO.n T e tt, wr, Ttnnt\IM Stele cs. 120) Kevin Ca M, 01. Cotor1e1o Stall CS, 1301 Ow19ht 8evtrtv rt>. IHlnol\ (6 1'71 Euoent ~nlet db, LSU (I, 20SI 1100 Slowt 01 ltlinols < 11 290) Steve Haine · wav. 11> Wlll Virginia, lb C 12, 317) Oalu Cewt>oY\ B111v Cennon Jr , lb, TOH A&M CI, ?SI victor Scott Ob, Cotoredo C1 .01 Fred Co<nwell It Southern Ca1oforn1e Stevf ~••e 10 Bolton Co!le9t' C•. 1101 Sreve Perluer QO Wu t11noton, IS, 1131 Norm Granoer I'll'. rowe TS TJn Euotne Loci.. herl 11> HOU\IOn (6, IS21 JOt Lt vttl\, 041, lowt 16. 1661 Ed Martin lb Indiana ~tell 11. 1931 Mlkt Re•tlle, rt>. Bethune· Coo>.man II m 1 )OM HU'll, 00 FIOnda C9. 1321 Neil Meunt, oo. Nlilrc Oeme 19 2491 Brien Setoncn, It Montan11 ( 10, 71'1 Dowe Auontman. di, Auburn Cl I. 3041 Cert Lewi\, wr, Houston t 12. 33'1 OtllVer arenc:M Andrt Townw no de M1n1u100• 12 461 Tony LlllY Ob Ftorida ll. 711 Renov RoC>C><n• db. Arli ona 14, '91 Aaron Sm11n. lb. Ula ll Slate C6. 159> C1erenu Kay t• Georolt 11. 1161 Winford Hooo, 01, Geor1111 It. 7071 !>colt Garnett, dt Wasl'ltnoton 18. 2111 Cl1rl1 llrtwtr, rt>, Ariton• 19, 24SI Bot>Oy MIGllO. te. TUH ( 10, 2721 Gent L•"9 rt>, L°"1sl1na State < II, 19t} Murrev Jarmon. wr, .Oeauoo 112. JUI. o.trllt Utm Da vid Lewis, le, Cellfornla (1. 201 Pelt MandltV, wr. Nor'lhlrn Arlrona C1, 411 Eric Wiiiiam\ 01. Wt1lllr19lon Stele (3, •21 S•ev• Bt1ck o.. Oreoon tl. 741 Ernest Anocrson. ro. Ollt•hOm• StaJt <l. 7Sl Dt vt 0 ' AddlO rb Mervtencl (4, 106) Jonn Wllkowllll Qb Columbo• (6, 1601 Jimmie C.rter, lb1 Ntw Mexico 17, 1711. Renwick Atkin,, ot. IC.t ni.a' 17, 117) Dn10 Jone\, c. Texu 18, 2141 Roell Hotlln,, wr, Wesl Vlroin11 (9, 7461 Wllllem Frluen, oo. Nortn Cerohnt Central I 10 ?591 J1mes T"••lon. db Lou1111n1 Tech ( 10. 2731 Mlkt Su on, D Sen O•llllO Stele (I 1. 300) Ciltn Str1no. c TenntUff (11 327) Gr-81v l'•ck•n Alonon•o Cerr•ker, Ot Ftorooa State I I, 121 Oonn1t Humohnv dt Auourn Cl, 711 Jonn Oor•ev It>. Connec••cut 14, 991 Tom Ftvn,,, Ot>. Pitt IS. 1261 ltenov Wrlol'lt, ab W1Hon•1n 16 _1$31 Oeryll Jone,, db, Gtor o•a t7 190) Garv Hoffman, ot, Sente Ciera t 10. 7671 Mark Cannon, c, TtxH·Arllnolon < 11 1941 Lennv Tevlor . wr Tenneuee (17, Jill Mar" Ema"' lb Bowlono GrHn 111, 313 HCM11ton Olen Deen Ste1n1<uhltr , oo, Ntor Hka I I, 11 Doug Smith Cle. Auburn (2, 791 Bo Ea\On, Ot>, Cel·Ol\lll (2. S4) JOlln Meed•, ID, Nicl\011\ srete Cl Sii Mark S•uaewey. d•. Tennenee 1• U I Ptlrlca Allen. db, Ul1n Stttt 14 1001 llot>ert Lvte•. lb, Tut1 Cl'lr1,11en CS 1141 Jonn Grlm,tev, lb. Kenruckv 16, 141/ Eric Mullfn,, wr, Sten toro (6 I• I I Wiiiie Jo'Vner, ro, Maryland 17. 1101 Kevin 8euot1, wr. Ptnn Sia II U. 1911 Jtlf Oo11e1<1son. db C otoreoo C9 226) Mll<e JollnlQn de. llllnol• ct 217) Mlllt Rvneo lb Toledo 19 7S21 K1ma1 Ctty ~ Boll Mee• di, Pill I I, SI Jonn All ot. towe (I, 111 Scolt ReO.Clc 10, Penn Slele 17, 341 Herrnen HOrd rt>. Soulrtern Cotoraoo IJ 611 Marlt Robln•on, db. Penn Stett 14 901 Er.c HOiie Ot TuH 0 1171 Jett Peir•e 11> TuH A&.M IS 1)41 Rulu' Sttlftnl wr GrembMO Stele 16 lt61 !(''"" Ron . db Temote (1, 1131 Rtndv Clerk db Florid• <8. 2071 ~coll Auer ol Mkll·O•" ~lelt (9 2191 Otve Huter• It Coiorooo 9 7401 Al Weno11"ow~. lb Pill 10 251 Bot>Dv Jolln,on ro S.n Jo" Stett I I ?8SI Mtr" La"9 ID TuH 112 3141 Lil A.11991tl llllcl9rl Senn Jone.. oe NorlFltHlern C2 SI I Joe M(Cett •b. Piii Cl, '4) Andv Per"•r le, Ule n IS 1111 SteetY Toren. db, Notre Dame 16 16'1 Mllcn Willi• dt, ~"'~'" Metl•O<Mt 11 1131 Sam Stale wr'-w"ttrn Stott Coto 11 7741 Gero,,.. Wiiha m• oo St Marv'•. I 11 1'71 ··"'' H11 SleO"-nl , de. Eetl Caroline IS IJ;ll ~oe Rtdactiow\tW, 01>, Bollon Coli.lo• (1 IMI Ed Bredv lb llllnoil Ct 115) <ieoroe Revnold• o Penn Stt le Cf ,421 Norwood Venn 11 EH i Car041na 110. 2Sl) Joe Doolev c Otuo Stete C 10, 1741 Mlch .. t Haroer ro !>oulllern Calllornle I 11 , mi Ow.vne Love rb, H0111ton (I 1. >Oii Roo ,,.,,.,,, 111> oi.1e110m• !.•ate en. 3091 ~ ll1u 10 llllnof\ I 17 3211 Miami~ Jae ti.It ShlPC>, It> Ol\lahOma I 1 141 JAY 8rOC>llv II>, Mieml. Fla (2, SJ) JOI Certer rt>, .t.11t>ema !', IOfl 0 H n Mew, aD Loulllfll,. IS, Ile! Rowteno Teturn, lb, Onlo ,,.,. "· 16SI Bernaro Cerv•lllo 00 Hewe11 11 lt4) Ronn.. Lenarv lo McN")t ~·••• ce nn Jim toYle ot 1 uttnt Cf ?SOI JO!ln C htti.v tt Oii latiorna Stett '10 fl> Bud Brown db S011t,..rn MIUl\\IPPI 111. lOS) Wllllt l'T\ D•vene di Clamaon I 17 »01 Mote W•lnortd IO llllllQl\ ( 12 "31 ~VMtlfl9l Keith M•tlard. di WUh•llOIOI' Stat• I m Alfred An<l•oon •0 8avlor () 671 •1i.n ltiet rC> 8evlor IS 1401 Ow1011t Collin• wr Plll <•. I~) JO'ln Helnt1 111 T•··· (7 11 11 Lovo ltWI\ 00 Tt•tl AC.I II 1 .. 1 Paul Svare he!< di Cal POii' Sl 0 •I ?011 K•llh Klekl wr Ari.111 .. , tt , 1HI Jtmtl soenc.., t0 0t 1enome ~·••• 110 26'1 Oll-t P1C11111 , ft> Clem.an Cl 1 ?'St Le.,.rence l "'°"1.wn wr Mlemt I II, lOelt Ml'-1 JOft4t l'1l Hor Ill 41ro4ln1 Al. T 112. }111 .... ·~ ,.alri.t\ lrv•"O I' rYer wr Httll'e&lle II II 'd w 11.,m, io T .. a, 11 4.ll Jon wm1111\\, •b Ptnn Stele U 701 Pau• r a1rc11110 09 Ke"M' (5, ll4) l.r.-~. 00, F1Hme11 <•· ISi) aruce KelwMvtr. oa. K-"Nt 0 , tt4) Dtf•lfl Wltl!etM, wr,,.... Mt•ico (7, 19'1). Je~ Ktvtott, 01. A.rttona ,,. .. ca. 11n. Smt1 9olan. ot, NortMr11 lllh'IOI• <•• 231) 0.¥i. Wlndl\lm, lb, .McktOll llt f• "· '51). Cflelllt Sleetlr, oo. W•-"ltlO· Ion s11••· Her.., Howell. ••• UCL.A ( 12. 31') .... 0...... ltilnl\ J-0..1....,,, de, WICl\ol1 Stete (2. 411 T.,,., "°"8, '*· Peofoie 13. 61> TvrOl\e AnlllOn't', l'tl, Nor"' Cerollne 13, '9) Jot! HKeellbett, c. tow~ 14. t71 Jiiter ,leld1, db, Tua• II, lt)) DOii fl'IOro, di, llllnol\ i.. 16') C~ T.,r~I. rb, SOUtllef'n Mlu ln lDOI ''· 210) Illar HenMn, D, Slol.I• , .. , (t, 2l7) llleul Grev. 11>. w..1.,n Ktnluc:ll't' (10, 2'41 Mldlel ~OMll. de, lolM Sl•le C II, ?fl} litron Nel\on, 01, Arltone ( 12, »•> • ..._ Yn Oleflt\ C•rl lanlla, lb, Mlcl'llgen llete CI, 31 Bib 1tooer11. ot, ONo Stell < \, 27> Jeff HcK•., lier, ob, Wt\! Vlrvlnle (3, Sf). COIVed ~ .... MIMourl 14, 111 Garv -..-. ltl, Northwnler" LOUl\lent <•. IOJ) Cllnl Herrl1, db. EHi Caroll"-(S, 1 ISi Jim Scott, o.. Cltmaon 16. 1431 LIOntl Manuel, wr, flac:lllc '7, 17\1 01vld JOrdln, oo. A\IOvrn t10, 2SS) Haywerd Golden. Ob, Souttt Ct ro41ne Slete I 10. 2571 Frenll. Cto11ou1, ro. uc;LA 111. ltll i...wrenu Green, 11>. TtnneuH·Cf'\etttnooff Cl?, JI 1), fff• Ywlr J.n Ruuetl Carter ct>. SOut~rn Mt11100111 (I 10) Ron Feuro1. di. Art<an"'' (I. lSI Jim SwMnt'I', c. Pitt (1 311 <ii.M Oen- l\IM>n, "· Mleml, Fie 11. 391 IC.vie omon. lb, Te .. , Chrl1t1en Cl, 6'1 8ot>Oy Bell, lb, Mln o11rl I•, 91) Tron Arrn11ron11, wr, EHltrn Kentucky U. 1211 Tony Paloe, rb, Vlr9lnle Tech (6. 14fl Herrv HemH1011, oci. P9M S111e 17 1761 ll1Mv,Grl9oi, It, Vlr9inle ti. 2031 Breu Wrogllt, D. SoulMH ltrn L°"lslane (I, 2171 Tom Beldwln. Cll, T111U (9, 2l41 Ronnv Cone. rt>, Georola TKll 110, 261) Oen Martin, 01, low• Slate (11, ?"> David Rot>erM>n, wr, Hou11on ( 12, llS) .-...~Et ... t Kenny JecklOll ""r, Ptn.1 $talt Cl. 4) Rll\IY ltunett, 01, Sou•,, Cafotine 13 .O> Eve n Coooer db, M1Chl111n I•. Ml Anetre Heroy, rt>. St Merv''· C1tlf IS. 11'1 Scott Raridon. ol. Ntl>rH"e (6. 144) Joe Htvtl rb, Ctntret O"l•llom• (7, 1721 Manny Mal"'kf\ Pit. C10!1at (I, -100) JOM T110m.t1. Ob, Toes C11r1,11an 110. 2S61 JoM ROD4tl'IM>tl, O!,. EHi C.rollna ( 11 ..... , P1ul Mcl"edOen. k, Y0009\U>wn Stare ( 12. 311) Plthllurtll ,.....,. Louil L<POS, wr, Southern MIHIU IPC»l (1, 231 Chrl• IC.Olodtlel•kl, It , Wvomlno ('2, S2l Weeolt TllOmoM)n, ... r. l"lorlae Sltlt I'. lot) Terrv Lono, oo. EHi Caroline 14. 111) Van H1191'1t\. di. SoulhWHI TuH Slelt IS. _,,,, OTrtr9ToW!r.d!J. l'l~"'fir.TUr Scott Cemooetl, qt>, Purdue (1, ltl) Renetv .811muuen. c, Mlnnesola II, 2201 Rlcn !rtnt>tro. rt>, COlo•tt (9, 1'71 Kirk • McJunkln, Of, TexH 110, 27•> Elton VHIS, rb, Tulane (11, l031 Fernanda Gtl,.sol4t, rD, W1Ulem Jewell ( 11, 3321 St L8'11\ CM ..... , Clyde Duncan. wr, TennenM (l, 17) Douo Dew~fl. !>Q, Tuu l2. 4Sl. Rici\ Mcllfor. Qb, Tu" ll . 801 Merlln llavl4tu, db Bowling GrHn (4, 1011 Jeff Ltldlno, lb. Te•H CS. 1291 Jonn GOO<lt. ••· You111n1ow11 Stett IS 1361 Roo Ct•r1t,, lb Southw'll Te1t1 State C6, 1S71 Quenlln Watller, wr Vlr111nle 11. ltSl Fele nJ"o Nooe. 10. 1iew111 ca, 201) Boo Ptulllnil, l>I<. ClemlOn Cl, 21ll Jonn Welktr, rt>, Tt•H ct, 241 1 Mark Smvtht. di, lnd11na I 10 7•91 KYie Meci.ev ab, East TUH Sltlt 111 1961 Paul Parker oo. OillellOm• C 11, l2SI S.n Ol4teo CM,..,.. Monv Cade, dD. Texu I I, 61 Mlllt <iuendhno, 10. Nor111we\le1"n (?, lJ) Llone• Jemt•. rb, Auburn IS 111) IC.11tl'\ Gulhrlt di Ten• A&M i.. 1451 JflM 8tnclrou . wr Aleo.ma 17. 17'1 Rey Woodwerd di Te1tt1 Cl 199) BOODv Crt ll!NeCI rt>, Norll'leH I Loul\11na Cl. 719>. Zeck Barnes, dt, AJaoame St•lt 19, 1301 Buford McGff. rl>, Mlu lu iool t 11, ?16) Maurice Heroer. wr, La Vernt Cotl4tot !12. 3311 San "r•nc.IKt 4,.n Toad Shtll ID. 8 rtOl'l•m Your19 'I 241 JOl!n Frank It Qll,o Stete 11 S61 Guv Mctntvre. oo. Georo1e ll 731 M•ct'tffl -C1rt~. df, Soutt\trn Me~ ti. !?It ntt- Fuller, 10 -r .... A&M cs. 139) Lee M11i.r oo. Fulltrlon Stett 19, 2391 Derro<k Her mon. ro. Cornell 19, 2481 Oeve Mof,11 wr Iowa I 10 71SI Kor" Pendlelon wr 8• onam Young I l 1 3071 S.."'8 Sffl'l.tWtn Ttrrv TeylOr, db, Soulhern lthnoit (I, 12> Oaryl Turiwr, wr, MIC11l11tn Stele 11. 491 Frtd Young, lb New Mtx•CO Slllt () 161 R1c1t,ey Hariood. dt So\itn Caroon• II 161 Jo•n l(el\tr It> .t.r1rono (6, 1611 Sam Slater or Weotr Sti lt IT 1991 Jonn Purer c Long 8HCh Stele ca 2161 Adam Scnrtl0tr1 oo. Teall\ t9, 201 Rendell Morr I•. ro , Ttnneutt C 10, 1101 Steve Gtmre 01 UCLA Thtodls Wtndl'lam. db Ule'1 Srare I 12 3191 T1"'" &av aucc.•-• Keith Browner, lb, ~ Cetttornie 12, JO) Fred Acorn, db. TexH Cl. S11 Mlc11 .. 1 Gunter. rt>. Tul"' (4, 1071 Ron "''"'' ol, Penn Sttlt Crtrll Wuhlnoton 10, tow1 State "· 1471 Jav Ca rroll, tf Mtnnt\Oll 11 1691 Fred ROOinlO<' dt. M11m4 F ie ca. 1te1 Ric" Mellor¥, oo W11111noton (9 11SI Jim (ielltrv Oto., Mlnne10t1 I 10. 1S4l eiev r<.let. qt>, Notre Oeme (11 28 1) T"•d Jemlwn. wr. Ol'llo Stall 112. 3 IOI We~ AldMllM 800 Slater 01. OillellO!'ne 12, 311 Sieve H•ml1ton, Ot. EHi Caroline (2, SS) Jav Sc!wotdl1 QD UCLA (), Ill Jimmy Smtih, rD, Eton "· 101) Jtff Pegun, ID, EHi Carolina IS. 12SI Curr Songer, ot, Tenneuee 16. 161) Merk Smith wr, Norl'1 Carotln1 C7, 19S) Jtff Smflll, db. M1u our1 ( .. ??31 KtllPI Griffin. ro. M11m1 Fla t 10. 27'1 Anttionv Jo~s te Wielllle s1111 I 11 3061 Corllt ncl TndmH wr MIUOUrf ( 12 llSl Hlotl sehoot SHAINE ALL·STAR GAME l•I R•M Bowl, June 24, 1 om.> N""" Rostw Querftl'01c1t,s -Brend4n McCrocll.tn <Lovola), 6· I, 100, Rick Burton IC•nvon. S.uou•>. 6·0. 190 Running bec~s -Eddie JoMlOn !Sante Marta ) S· 10, 110 Ct1r1' Richard• (~n Ftrnanool, S-10 llO PaU4 Howitt IMonrov111, S·9, 1'3 Herold B•rktlt (Ante· 1ooe V1114tv) 6-1, 710 Wide receivers RendY Tanner (8 1,noo it.mall. S·l1, llS. Alvin Moore (Rtltdol, 6·0. 162 T1ohl tnO -Dorrvl tnorem IHerll 6·l 117 0tlen,1ve hnemen -Jonn Gu..,rero IO•nt•dl 6 4, 315 Biii Stolle• (PHt dtnal. 6-l ?OS, Chrih Ltt (Rll\edel 6·3, 236, Rtl oli Alna 1Chal\n4'1 l\ta ndll. 6·4 n 41. DertCI< L•rlon CEI Camino RHll 6 2. 100 Oelen11ve '"°' W1H1• Griffin IMonrov1a) 6·S 210. Robert Owens (C n1<on. Sauou\I, 6-l llO Otfen1lvt linemen -Steve Mehr (Harli 6·7 230. (ireg Thornton ILOVOlt ). 6·1, 22S. M1chu 1 Hevtl llltnlurel 6·1 19S, Chuck <iuerrero fl(ennltdv Granada H•ll•l 6·0 710 L•neOecktr' -Sten M<Cov 1Ga~na1. 6·2 190 801> Ell•• CFont1n1) • 1 710 Me•k Nl•on <Ttml>lt C1lvl. 6·1, 120 Otfen1lvt Ote"' Artie Hotmt• IEiltnhOw..,I 6 I 11S Seen Btunl CS.n l"ernenool S· 10 11S Herrv Jonnson 8C." 1 6 I 191 Oarrvl Hell ILomoocl 6 J Ito 1t1c11.er•oun1tr Sltlft Ad1m• CCtart· monl I. 6· ?. llO '"'-Coecl'lt• -Jo.I Scnacrller !Rtledel anO' C1r1 Swett !Harli ottANGI COUNTY ALL·STAlt GAME (11 OCC, Jlllv •· I om.I Horttr RH• Mlk• Muri• ISunl\v Milll) lb 6·l no llon Krleoer tVeltnela ) oo •·l , 110 Oevt WlnltfS CVtltneil ) O( 6 1 ?ID Andrew w .. ,,,.,._ IL• ~~•br•l rt> • l. 2l4, Lvle Ole ll<l ltllt) wr, S 1 UO J1me1 Wttt !Sunny H11t1J ot 6 J. 23S J.if Elaanmann IBrH Otlndel, rt. • 0, Ito Andy Kltn"tnOttrd llC.atellal It 6·l , '15 Cnr11 $ello ll::werania) lb 6 I no. ltlCl>trd W~••'"" (Fu,.ton) ob 6 I ltO, Vtno Vtn Clet Oen ClrM·Otlnclal It) S 11, ltO. T9d Pr111100 ISerY1ttl rO, 6 0 lH 1to11 ltabllne IKennedvl. db, • 1 lfS. lll(llerd Stoen fServtttl ot. 6 ). ,.0, Mall Eoff Cfl,,.re11te) di • l . 210 Arnold wens•-• IGerdtll C#rtvtl ot • 2 210. Oev1 ~-' ICvortt\I ®. S 10 170. Creto L.e).llltv IL• Hat>fe). 00 •·l. 10. ltot>fft a .. o (Lt H•l>f•I en> •• I lfO Jonn FrlM<t ILoar1l. ol·Ot, 6 s. 70 , '-o~rt Bnlkk• ILIK Altl'Mlltl. lb, s •. JU. Jon ~1lo.llVM1n1en CLoerel. rb S·11 lU 1oone Ho.,.erd IS4lrv1ttl db j •IO ''° JONI c;.1rc1e CC1o.renr11. wr. S·t 1'° Tom Gebrltl IWMt14tr Cnrl\flel'I), M> • I 210 kott Cestfff IAneNlm!. ol. •-1. 110. Cl'lt'll Vernt41 ($t,111llV H1110 di.• t 2U. TIM C1,,.ot1 !MtlCMM•ndl rt> •·I Ito, Cl'lont· K'l'V!I Ko IS.v-.t Oii. S 11 Ito, Jeff ~o.,. CL.e Ht l>rel "9 6·3 ''° IObOV Bomer (V1i.ntlel CD•''" S 10. 170 Co.tr.II M<U Merr1.io llle~lel c-.. . UC VW. .. c:.. ,,_ ... U111t ~ 1 ...... An111on <UCll cMf, ltrlll.kow, 7•S, 6•2; Amor CUCll dtf. HaV«t6, •• ,, .. ,, .. 3, ~m (UCll def. lttvnoldton, .. 7. 6·2, 6-3. ~ lollt HlnO IUCll o.f, Holl. 6• l, .. J; Dowf\a (U(t) o.f lte411111, ••1, 6•7, .. 2. Hl~tUUCll Otf. Glu1to, 2·6, ._,, 6·1 .,.,.... Man $Ollll Hlno•Down• (U(I) otf Hevent·Prll&kow, 6·3, 7-S; ltltllllt•lt•• .,~ tCPSLO) def LlllCIMY-0V4tfltnd, •·I, 6•f, Mlller·Youno (UCO dlf Holl· G1u110, •·•. •·> Cenvnunltv c ..... SOCAL T8AM CHAMPIONSHIPS ~c ... ,,, •11 ".....,. ~ Ewl119 IOCCI dlf, Sole. •· 1, •·l. 8.onte COCCI dtl Pottt, •-2, 6•0, 8trNfif (0CC) def Strevn . •·2. •·4, Perk..-tOCC> o.f 8011~ ... 2. 1·•. lttfllO'lll COCCI o.f. MaOdeltf\I, 6•2, ...... MlllH COCC) def. H11nt, 6•2, 6 2 le.._.ctr s. C\lftta 1 ~ Perr !Cl def Selmon, •-O. •·2, WeHln ISi otl Berrv . 6·0, 6·1, Wt\I ISi oel MollllOO 2·6, 6·4, 6·4, Stton•n• !SI cltt. Ancterwn, •·O, 6·2, Sllel>lltrd lSI def. LUllO., 6-0, 6·0., Frentt CS) def Mar•, 6•7, ... Q. Hltfl tc:hM Ulltwflltv 10\'t, C .. ta MIMI 1'111 ~ Wer~r ICM) 04tf. Gll>llllVIClf, 7·6. O.f SMnoubl, •·2, otl. Cllelo, H , o.f. E11r11e. 6·2. Quael'I (CM) IOSI, 3·•. ,.4 won, 6-l. 6·3, Nuecllt.,laln ICMI IOll, 0·6, 2·6, 0>-•. 1·• Ma CCMl '°11, 2·6, 3·6, otlault, S·7 '*"*' Strolcll·Quach (CMl '°'' 10 Smltn· llen11.1tttll, 2·6, I ·6. 10111 will! Wt1s.rman· Chol, 7·S, 1·•. Sur·Ahn (CM) IO't 0-6, 0·6, IO\I, •·6, I 6 ew-dell Mer lJV,, ltVkw 41., SIMM• Brown~Qtf' CCI O.t Cllrlne, 6·2, otl Knloht. 6·2. def Tar fer, 6·3, Clef Otis, 6·0, 8rl9gs (Cl won 6· I, 6-2. 6·0, 6·2. Bennett !Cl IOll S•7, won 6-2. I0\1 2·6, won 6·1, R1lvotlanl CCI '°'' O·•. won 6·2 7·S, 6·3 .... ........ TUOOA'rl •HULTS (I .... ft • ._..,..._ .. n....-.> ,.IT ttACC. 400 yetcll Penc:v Son Cncot (Cr9f) l0.00 •.AO UO ltallrold WaJdl (Hert) S..00 UO UMlo..., CWlll'O) ZA Atao r~ Ooed T'*f Scotti. Dot • ._, Jltt« &utr &and, SI 91ed\, Flllt.1'1 l!m, lteo $11e9C1We90ft, ~Kinda C~ TllM: 204 U IJlACTA c•4> Mid '60.60 SICCMeO •ACI. 'J50 vard's lntlltrale !Oerda) 4.40 UO MO FMlvr. l'lvl" (PilUnlonl UO 1.60 Mau.t Man (Gfft) 4..00 AltO rac.<1· HI Ya Sire, 8IKll. Man'lbt, Jtlta .. rrtra. Arteila, •1111 Ed<lle Jon, Goodie Im ltldl, Boone Cl'leree. Time 11.24. TM•D •ACI. JSO verct' Humbue Counlv (Bero) lUO CHnc.tl (AO.It) Oo On H~ (CrH04tf') HO >20 s 40 ).20 J.to F1n, AllO rac8CI. EH V Sand,, Porle Hite Tru lttCMll TlMe 17 7J l'OUtlTM llAC•. JSO v•reh Has Falllll (Gerdel 1o.eo MO 00 Tl'lel Recllltll ((ilfl) 17 40 1.00 'Lane• E11ore11 (Mvltsl 4.90 AIMI raced. Cut• Bar E 11.0tnt. l'vls Two EHY N Rich, Sluhn Jet Row. Rlcit Pocket, A~ A14t Time IU6 U •XACTA 12·1) Plld '26'00 ""™ llAC•. lSO verd\, Ro,lt L.u Jon <Berd) s.oo 3.90 3 10 Go AturH (Gift) 11.20 UO Move Cientlv ccruoer> •.20 Alto raced. Solttv Into Sum~. NIU To k , 81narn ltDCllellt. Tract Of TllrM, Pared! .. ~Id, Ker-Lucttl' Cat, &onnlt 8oCIHmtl. Time. 1192 . ll •XACTA 110-1) Ptld 519200 MXTH ltACIE. liO vercn Hulflbl<a (8erd) 2UO 6-tO • .0 , 40 Thlt Cllldn Gol II (Trv) •.20 PertKllMVlf'Y""IY IMllCMI) AIMI rec.cl: Merry For Cesl'I, Blue, Slmotlclh Jet, 88"\IOp 8811, And Truly, EHv Idea Time: 1761. s.oo ~v Re1nv ~ ____ jl,l~V.,.llJIMTl:DHU•u•uc::.iaL..~l5~0¥'¥'<911W.ciM~ "'Rrnm.n-ROitet~{Cf dfi Cox:-HK;Iµ, Van Hemoen CHert) 20.60 7.20 UO •·7, 6·3. def llaftfltld·BYM. 6·),( "3· Mr Me<ry Chick (Mllcne•> 4.40 uo Je nlcJn·Smltll !Cl won 6·4, 6·•. W>tll 4·6. Fretta tCreeoerl 3.90 1·S. "''° raced. Runnl1111 Dial, L11mete1, lstancl.I 20'"· El Tare 711') ~ Brown (E l def Lt, 6·1, def Phem, 6·4, def Z.nlo, 6·4, def Hou11on, 6· I, Root>ln• <E l won 6•0; IOst 1·6; won 6·7, 6·0. -Studtt>elttt te W<HI • l. 6-l. lo1H-6; won 6·3, Hasllov• Ci) lo$1 •-•. 2-6, 1-6, l·6 Dtulllei Fle99·Solcer CEI Ciel Mutlttf'l·Mark1r19 6·2. 7-S. d4t! Schrnldt·Cuev 6·2, 6·2. 8eroer-Alvre IE I. •Piii 3·6. 6 4, won 6·3. 6·7 . Ntwpeirt Hertler 24. S.dclttNlck 4 Siltltlts Mlllef (NHI Otf Chln·Fu 'fl. 6·l . 04tf Gunttr, 6·0, dlf Sutlil·L•, 6· I. def Ha , 6·0, Oon.tt I NMI won, 6·•. 7·S, •·O, 6·3, Anc:1frson CNHI IOst, 1·6 3·6, won, 7·S. 6·0, Cobitrtv ~~HJ won, 6·0, IO\t, •·•. won. 6·• IOsl. 2·6 I . o.ubl4t\ Marlln·Grfffy (NH ) 04tf Gr"'1al>tf Nouven, 8· I 6·0 Otf Vu ShlOO. 6·0, 6·1, Va1tn111t le·Walr°"' tNHI won 6·2. 6·0, won. 6·1. 6·0 Cole9tw~ UC lnlftt S, Cel Staflf F llllemNI 4 ~ 81ankttlthlo CF I Ciel Trenwll,,, 7 S 6·1 .Me.liOIY (UCJJ .CltlL Ool1>en1-A-l. .6· I. Rnorer IUCll Ott Keleou. 4·6 6-l . 6·4. Benno IUCll def SalH , 6 4, 7·S. Petton 1uc11 o.i ll119at\k1, 6·3 6·l Giordanc11a !UGI) oe< O\ltrkomo, 6·4 • 4 OtuOM1 Blen1<1nsn1o•Kalebu (F l oet Trenwotll P•ttOI', 6·•. 6·2. D0tt>tro·Sa1u IF I Ott C#loraenetl•·0..001, 1·S. 4·6, 6· '· O• ttfkamo·Buoe1'"' (Fl oat Serreno·Ovo· ~ ,., •·l SUNSIET LEAGUE "NAU (el EdiMn H19111 ,Int ltwnd Slnllt• Nordl>4tl'Q (HBJ def Rooert1<>n, 6·0. 6·0, RtlltY (WI dlf fite .. ., CM) 7·6, 7·6, 0o CFVI o.1 Rasei.n tE I, 6-1, 6· I Hu\led IM I def Qultlo CHBI. 6·0, 6· I, Nouyen CFVI def Fowler lH8), 2·6, 6·2. 7·S. MarQUtJ (till) def Hawoewa (FV). 6·3, 6·1, C1011t CFVI 04tf Gurnoel !El. aGore. 11ne vellal>lt, Wor19 CM) def Quatcri CFVI. 6·2, 6·0, Lode.wood CMI Ott Ouren CFV), 6·), 6·1, H04rntl CE) def O'Rourll.e CWI. 6-0, 6·2. Lowe (M l Olf Collman (WI, 6· I. 1·•. Pottoer IOVI Clef G0401eoen CEI. 6·1. 6·0, Ttvl1 CM) dlf f>taH CEI. 6·1, 6·2, Ho (El def Mullen (WI. 6·2. 6-l. Hen (OVI def, Dvt IE'· 1·6, 6·l, 6·•. Get>rltl IHBI def Lll>tO (W), 6·0, 6·0 SacMdlt~~ Nordt>ero dt1 ltelttv, 6·0 6·0. Hinleo dlf Oo, 6·0, 6· l, Mllroue1 def Nouven. 1·S. 1·S, WOll9 def Ceolk, 6·3. 6· l, Lockwood dlf Hdlrntl , 6· I 7· S. Pollger dlf Lowe, 6·3, 6·), Tevl1 otl Ho, 6-•. 6·4, Georltt def Hen, 6·0, 6·0 '""t lteund ~· 8tdl4ty·Gen1 !H81 won. 6·0, 6·1, UVC'1•r•·hnt«ll (W) def Ntwlon·Kerr CM) l>Y d4tleull. Hen·McC•rlen CE I def /Hmen·Johnsrone CHBI. 6· I, 6·0, Noueman·Nguy1n IFVl def P1umbltv· 81etmen CE). 6·1, 6·0, M•o•·OH OOI (Fiii def Nounn·Clooo (OVI. 6·2, 6·4, 8t'Ol11nd·Ki41y CHB) otl Chen·Krtoo. 7-s. 6·0 . .t.Wlson·Kt mfll <El def Mlkla1·Blven1 CM!, 6·•. •·•. 6·4, O'Connetl·MoloSC'l'lo CE') def Slmlleler·Blumenteln, 6· I. 6·3. S.C..W lltllnd Dtutllts Btdlty·Genz def. Ul'Cllere·Btneoot, 6· l, •·2, Nouamen·No11vtn det Han• McCerttn, 4·6, •· 1 6·l. M.toa·Dhoo1 Otl eerotunc:t·KtMY. •·2. 6·2, O'Connell· Moloscl'IO def All1wn·Kemlll, •·2. 6·1 ~ . ' • • Women'1 ~ HIGH SCHOOL EdlWft t, "eunttlflf' Vak't' 0 Fount•ln Vellev o(J) 000 ~ 0 0 Edison 000 001 x-1 S 0 Rowtttlt end Puc:llel,kl, Ceroenttr eno Prone• W--<eroenter 12 I L-ltowleltt 28-Erli>dall IE I CK .. n \flew 6, H11n..,.,.., l8Kl'I I Hun11no1on 8eacll 000 100 ~1 J , Oceen View 000 ISO ~-.... • I Foog 1110 Albert; Otkltv end La.,.\On W-O•ki.v 11·6 L-1'009 18-Monrot IOVI HA-Monroe (0V) Meflff' Del 7, Bl~ """'' 0 8 1lllOO Amil 000 000 ~ 2 4 M8,ltr Deo 270 OOl w-7 6 1 O'Neil and Tl'!Ornas Ztmor•. Sulllvan r•> eno Sanden w -Z.more L-O'Ntll " ... C«Mwnlt't ~ SOUTH COAST COH,.•INCI TouaNAMCWT Ctl Utll-8M Gtlf Ceww, lilflf' 11) l Miiie An•. .... 2 Ortnot CoH I cioeoonl. 14, P1u1.on, 7S, B1u, 7', Wffvtr, 7f, Prl•ftt, 1', M(IC.M , fO), M6,) Cyoren . )ff • S:ulltrlon, 402, S Mt Safi Anlonlo •fld CtrrllO\, 405 IKl'I Mecsall11i Carv ~I <OCCI and JOtwl Ahleredo 1'-n•• An•>. 1• H ell Hltfl ~ SIA VllW LIAOUI CM~Sttl" C•t s... Lllh •ey 0.-. ,., nJ ,...,... . I Clitl Huntef !Ut11¥«1llf1, lSf, 1 wer4r"" Corona Cltl ~). 1,,., > Ille> l\#lfWV I • ""' .. I and Lt lfinion ltrvlM I. 1'.1, S S<otl (81 fOfO), l•t, 6 I.~ t~woort H1ttior) t nd Coooer (1',1111ei.), 1'S, e Tl'lrt\Mr (Hewoorl Hefb«) lfld LlncJ (I Sllftfll) I .. NOTE HUIM., "'""' flllt wllh ON·,,,... y1ctorv OI\ '" ,1 utra l'IOOt tuM!eY eno LtvltllO'! atJO uue!tl't' lot ClF lndMOu•'- • TrlPOI &onu,, Frtnell Force. Dtctl• Cl'lllm· olon. Nufl'ltr Five. Ber Tiit Coacfl Time 2043 IJ ~XACTA (4·SI N ICI 514190. IEIOHTH llACE. 3SO verd1. ~~ (PlkAln~ -1M -UO UO Windy OHll (AGalcl J .. 20 UO Be fld04ell ty C Her I) 2 .60 AIM> raced Otel In Celh, Kettvs Coff.,, Ten .Ane Hell, Svrttta. De .nln 8tett L Time. 17.74 n llllCK sex 1•·2-S·4·Ntl oeld '12,461 20 wllh lwo winning tlcllttl lllvt llOf'Mll c er"'o"'er POOi· n•.'2• n NINTH llACE. lSO verd\ FH I Six Oenctr CTrv) 760 SOO J.0 Sltt+i And Seu• (Ca rcsorel uo l .90 Selec1 Stint ICreeoerl , 4-60 AllO raced. SwMt Altltude, Malden' Sono. Clllceoo Buo. Me 1n 1913, Marv Me Krlslll'8. Prll'IC'eH Chl,.EHv 8ooktr Time. 18.21. r U IEXACTA 13·11 011<1 134.80 Alltndence. l .S22 N&A P'avoffl CONFERIENCI HMIFINAU (8t\t-tf·Se'ltnl Tllftdtv't kens Lllttn 117. 0.HH 101 ILaktr\ laed "'"" 2·01 Mltweukff .. Ntw Jeri.tv 94 Cs.riff "'° 1·11 TeNIM'• Genw\ New York at 8ollon (B0tlon i.e os \tfles. 1·01 Pnoenl• et Uteri (Ulell le•dl Mf'ifl. l·O> TlwrMllV'••G.rne MtlweukH ., New JtrMY ,rtdll.,,. ~ Utken el Ofllln 8011on 11 New York Utall at Ptiotnlx S.MM't"I GNN Mltweul<ff at Ntw Jer .. Y SuMl't"s 0- L.H'" 11 Datle\ 8 011on 11 New York Ulell 11 Pl'lotnlx Tu.wM't'. Ml't' I Gtl'N Delle' at L.Hen Cit ntals.t1rv) N-Jersn 11 MllweukM f>llotnl• et Uleh (" ntcH.af¥) WedlwMIY, Mll't' t 0emot ("_..,.,, Ntw York ti 801lon Tllundty, Mey 10 Gema t N-rvl Utlren el Otlla\ Mll""tllltff 81 Hew JtrMY Utall t i "'-nl1t ,.r1de't', Mll't' 11 Geme (N-rvl 8 011on el New York _ S.tvrca.v. Mey 12 Game• (If "'"'"'"') Oelle• at L..tlten Pl'lotnlx •• Uleh Sundev, Mev 1l Gamet (N llKOIMN) Ntw York el Boiton N•w JerltY 11 MllwaukM &.aktn 117, Maverktr5 101 DALLAS -A11Ulrrt "· Vl!Kenl IS, Cummings 17, Blackman 27, Oevl1 1, Elll• 4, Heroer 6, Nlrnohlus 4, C.ernell 7, Turner 2. w .. 1 ). Tolell' 40 91 20-2S 101 LOS AHOl!LH -Coooer S. ltern«>ts 11, AbdUl·Jabbar 21. J0'1111oon 11. McGee 11, Scoll I, WorlllY 10, McAdoo ll, Niter •· $9'100' •. KuPC.hei. 0 Tolel1 tt·ff 1'·2' 111 kare by Qu1,._ 0 11111 • 24 26 n 29-101 LO• Ano11ts 30 1S JS ,7-117 TllrH ·ooint ooe11-<00e>er Gemetl F'oultd out-flOne lttOound\-Oellet 40 CElll• •J. LOI AnoelH •7 (Al>dvl·Jet»er 101 Anllt1-0ellH 21 IAoulrre Sl. LOI Aneete• 30 IJOM\On 11) Total louli-Oell•• 23, LO• Anottta ?S Tectinlcet\-Lo• AnoelH, 111~•1 Otltnse 2, Datt" Coacll Molle , Coooer, Elli\ A-lS,2" .. TuftdlV'• trert111cttens IASllAL.L ....... &,....,. ATLANTA 81tAVal-OotloMcl Ket! Oevlav, DOC'*. lo •1cl'lmond OI ll'lt tnltr· ,,.llontl LMO\.lt. lltllltllled PtKYal Per'H, olldllf. to ttlt active roster frOl'fl !NI fHtrlcled lit! CINCINNATI ltlOS-knl Ptlll Ho\IM'- h06dtr, ovttltlOef, to W\cWte OI 1119 Amari• c:en A nocta11on. PHILADEl,.PHIA ltHIL.LIE~tcal._ M.erl1 IYtlrom, Pllcllef', from Portland Of ll'lt Peclllc Coe.ti L. ... ve Ptac'9CI ao Olar. care ... °" 1119 ll•daY 01.MOIM tltt '00T9ALL ....... " ..... L.tltWt IUf"Al O llLLs.-Nel'ftlCI fltlt C:errol °"*'•In i.econorv coecl'I. M•rntct Ooll Lawr111«. !IM t:oactl, d4tf9fl\I,,. coordf• llalOr. New Oltl.IANS SAINTs-9 •ltollCled lht C0111tac1 o4 tum P?lm!M, 1141.o coadl. fOf ttwte mot• 't'-"' UNetM ltlM ,_.... LAHM l'ITTStUlllOH MAUL••s-Tracltd Sllewn l'olli, wlO. rtC91ver, 10 lht CllleattO I HI! for e11 un\OKlfr.cl ltH Clralf Cl!Olat. HOCK.IV ... .... ~ ....... l'HILAOILlllMIA ~L. VIH~ .. n•d Oerrt'I JenM't, '°4M....., PffT$1U•OH P NGUIN$-Aa!Mlr .. Motl Mat1IN, ....,,..,,,.,,, tr..,, tht WTtl• lllNt J•ft totl\1111111141 t tf.ot "'91 Miit lllah4V Ctrrvtt. ~tmtll tt ni.-. -..O.U HC.O SlllOlllTMAN'S lllAltK-AllMlll!'Oll lflt herd of St••arft w\Mfl08CI P•lftcla J. t llf'M trt lntf. tor JO 0.V1 I -1~--·-~ • An earful 'teDa Jlan.&er third bueman Buddy Be iom face-to-face with umpire Al Clark afte~ Clark ruled that Bell had =peel fly 11 a&alnat Toronto Tue.day t. UC! wins regular-_season finale Orange Coast, Saddle back to meet in SoCal semi lnals UC Irvine's tennis team completed its regular season at 2J. IJ with an 8-1 victory over v1s1ttng Cal Poly San Luis Obis11<> Tuesday. noted mostl y by the return ofBruce Man 5on Hing. who canre back ro rhctineup afteraoout wiTh wrist inJury. followed b> illness. UCl's next ve nture 1s the PCl\A championstfips tn Stockton '>'here the <\nteatt'rs. rankC'd No. 20 in the nation. art considered the team to beat -'>'Ith Long Beach State tht' most notable challenger. "Everyone wants to beat us badly and we're not healthy." says UCI Coach Greg Patton ... We've got one day to relax and two to loosen up. My 1nspira11on all )ear has bet'n to win the PCAA and 1fwt'don'vr)Jbe 1n therapy for tht' next fhe week'i." 1'...-- ln communll}' college plav. It will be Orange Coast pitted agatnst Saddleback 1n tht' semifinal round of the Southern California Dual Team Championsh1psaftNeach advanced With VIClones. The P1ratcs qualified wit h a 6-0 victory over Rio Hondo in a match called by mutual consent after stngles. They'll meet Saddleback Monday afternoon at a st1e to be determined. The Gauchos also wrapped 1t up without pla ying in Karman -· finallst 4 for honor • Manna H1gh ·s Enc Karman. a three-sport star 1n football , soccer and track and field, 1s amon~ a group of I 0 finalists for the Californ ia lntcr- scholasuc Federation's Scholar-Ath· lcte of the Year. And, in the girls' d1 v1s1on, Newport Christian High's Joanne Yearley. a volleyball starlet. 1s tn the same situation with a berth tn the final 10 for state honors. Each was chosen from a fieloof 41 0 candidates from througho ut the state. Erle Kannan °{ doubles wuh a 5-1 wtn over Cuesta. In high school action. Sea View League kingpin Corona del Mar swept to its 45th straipit victory with a 231h*41h rouJ at Irvine. paced by stngles stars Scott Brownsberger and Mike Briggs. and baclCed again by the strong doubles play of seniors Frank j1inman and John Hostetler. "Without H tnman and Hostetler we'd be JUStMlOlW team:· says CdM CoaCflDavetrerem. "And. they're getttng better. We want to repeat." E'stanc1a solidified Its No. 3 position in the Sea View with a 201/1-711? victory over El Toro. highlighted by the singles play of ~mor Rick Brown and the doubles team of Jon Flagg and Greg Spicer. Brown. usuall y a doubles enlr)d"Ovcd into the No. I singles slot and swept tht' Chargers. while Flagg and Spicer teamed up to dominated El Toro in that area. Un1 vers1t> High rolled 10 its 10th Sea View conquest in 12 outings. downi ng Costa Mesa. 20112-7112. One bnght spot for the Mustangs '>'as the performance of No. I singles player Matt Werner. The Mesa senior swept past his foes. 7-6. 6-2. 6.0. 6-2. Newpon Harbor evened its mark at 6-6 in league play with a 24-4 victory over Saddleback. Darrell Miller and Thad Donat each posted singles sweeps. · The UC' lrvtne women's squad wrapped it up in stnglcs. winning fi ve of six matchups, to edge Cal State Fullerton, 5-4. Sunset race gets tighteJ The alread> tight Sunset League softball race got even tighter Tuesday as Edison knocked off league-leading Fountain Valley. 2.0. ~hind Julie Carpenter's no-hitter. and Ocean View took care of Huntington Beach, 6-1. In p1tch1ng her fifth no-hitter of the season. Carpenter walked two (one intentional) and struck out eight in outdueling Fountain Valley's Step- hanie Rowlette. who had a two-hitter· working until the bottom ofthr sixth. "All 410 candidates qualified for this award and all deserve th e rec°'ninon of their peers. '>Chool adm101strators and commun1t1es for their filnc athletic and scholastic accomplishment," sa}s State <IF Commissioner Tom B\ rnes The winners will 6c announced Thursda} and prescn1ed '>'1lh recog- nition at the CIF ta ll' track finals on June 2 in Los Angeles. Baron pair win Sunset honors Ed1\on scored m pair ol rufl.,5 tn the \1.xth "'hen Debbie Prosser led off \\1th a smglc and tool.. second on a sac:ntice b) Vania Semrau. Dena Balo..er singled Prosser to third and both Prosser and Baker spnntcd home on a double down 'tile right· field linl' b~ Lau ra Engdall Fountain Valle~ still stands atop the un~cl heap '>'1th a 5-2 mark. but Edison and Ocean Vie'>' are close behind at 4-1 Among the boys finalists Adam Cole (San Marcos). Gregor) Ennis (Tracy), Michael Haupt (San Diego 1ira Mesa). Joe Hillman (Glendale oover), Michael Kerkonan (Fresno n Joaquin Memonal), Todd U>ciccro(Bellarmtne Prep. ·an Jose). Charles Nichols (Rio Mesa). Lee Plemel (Laguna Hills). Nicholas Sparks (Bella Vista, Fai r· Oaks). tn addition to Karman. The girls finalists include Lee Brock (Buena). Deborah Lawrence (La Jolla). Diane Lewis (M1lhkan). Tracy Mulvany (Chaminnde). Teiko Nishi (North Torrance). Jill Pearson (Branham. San Jose). Kamela Nadtnc Peden (Fresno Clovis). Sally Ptnkner (Oav11), Amy Torczon (Tat\) and Yearlcy. Scoit McKeough. who led Foun- tain Valley High to the ~unset Lcagul' -.olleyball championship. has bcl·n named that loop's Player of the Year. Meanwhile. Baron Co3ch Gregg Svalsted was honored as the Su nset Coach of the Year. All·SunMt LHCM.lt flltST, TIAM ,,_Yet, ld\ool Mlkit Crowelv tMarlnel Jolin Sln~r IEdli'>nl Oavt Fr11etle (f:dlaon) 8ren1 Hanson !Founttln v111tvl C1r10l Brlcitno ( Founltln Vtlltv) Run McKenai. !La Q\lln1e1 SICOND TIAM Jefi Ro5tnlhal IL• Q\llnl1l Alex Sllotlent \Mertnal JOlln ThOmH (Ed•M>lll Ken Ba1e1 (Edi.an) ToltrPowlt' !Foun11ln V111tvl Sieve Gollllet> !Fountain v 111e .. 1 Clan Sr Sr Sr Sr Jr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr Oct'an Vie"' mo'(~d tnto l'Onten- 11on. thanks to the strong pttchtng of Jackie Oaklc) and the hitting heroics uf (ham MonrOt' Down 1-0 1n th e fourth to Hunt- ington Beach (0· 7 1n lea&ue), Monroe cracked a homer to left field to tie the game Then 1 n thr bottom of the fifth . Monroe came up with the bases loaded and dbouled to lefl to clear the ba~s. and when the ball eluded the lt'ft ftel~. sht' came all the way hOU'l('. Oakley. now 17-6 this season, 't1eldcd her first earned run of the Season 1n the founh. She struck out ntne and wal ked three. Cast of 9; 000 to open Olympics LOS ANGELE.~ (AP) -Be11nnina Wllh "a 20- aooscbump" opcn,ng., 1hc Summer Olympic '$5 m1lhon ceremonies promise a cast of9,000. I 00 baby arand planos. and a closina fircworks how)() spectac~lar that orpn11cr!I JCSttd Tue5day that San Fr11nc1.c<> residents wtll sec the llaht .. David Wolper. commissioner ai:id pl'Qdu<:cr of the certmon1e1, siud the clmavaganzn will provide the bc't Hollywood has to offer 1ncludina the latest 1ntcmot1onol fllt·~';:~~~~~~~l'<i will \UI\ undt'r wrap unul thr --l -, .... Olympics, includ1na a novel way of hgh11ng the torch and several "name" entertatnc~ 10 the C1oc;1ng Ceremonies. ''The or.;nina tonc will be maJcsuc. 1nsp1ratlon1l and 1 cmot1on1l. · Wolper \Old. "and the cloi.1na ccrcmom~ arc ao1na to be very cckbrotol). with JOY. entertainment ond cxc11cmcnt " · For hccr numbc,.,_ the l ~ AnaelC\ ccrcmomrc; pale in comp:inson to the 25.000 pcrformen an certmon1c at the 1980 Moscow< lame\ Rut. "While we can't beat 'cn1 in "ope. wt• can ht·at 'cm 1n emotwn." \\ nh,.:r said. The Ultimate . Experience Experience the excitement of finding just what you're looking for-in classified. It's the ultimate! \ Daily Pilat phone 642-5678 people read classified • • 0 , ... D f~TH No11(fS , PIC1ill0Ue ..,_. .. ~_,, ...-na~ MUCY rflit ~ penol'I II ~ Bl:AT!UCE deLACY. bom -:'A;,~ fHOINE!J\INO, *' May 6, 1887, pMled away• w.,,. A¥t. 8""9 Ht. HuntlnQ1on week befcn her rtth btrth· ~. e.at t2'M7 ~~~~~ =~~~~~~,~J: c»IAcy lived Mt adult Ult TNe ~la oonduG1ed by 1111 in Puadma, movina to lndMdual Newport ~h in 1981 and A. V. Patino ll._.... L-~til 1ft76 .. __ Thla ttat~t wu filed With tne ~ t~ un " Wucu County Clef'k of Ofiange County on ahe moved to The EpAa-opal Mtr. 30. 1984 Home in Alhambra. She ls PublllMd Or Cou~ survived by niecet and Pllo1 ~u 11. 1r.¥:. May 2. 1194 nephewt, Pepy Caudell of 1177-84 Costa Mesa, Barbara Munn r' . of Palo Alto. Mary Olton of -o--------- Clarksburg, Vlrglnla , NI.IC NOTICE DeWar of Santa CNs. -Vir-'1e1TT10UI .u..._11 gtnia, Beaudoln of San NAm ITATla.NT Franciaco. Philip Magu1re of The tollowtng C*tOtl• are doing L oi Anaelea. Whitney ~8~N SERV~~ GROUP, Maguire of Virginia; 22 17842 trvtne Blvd . Suite 204. grand nieces and nephews Tuatln, C• 12080 and 18 great-grand 1'\.leces Anthony P\z:z•. 2300 F111rvie- and nephewa. Memorial 8~~-~=~~:etrf . .,, Service wW be held at Saint lndlvidvel Michael'• and All Angeb Episcopal Church, Corona del Mar on Saturday, May 5, 1984 at 11 AM with Father John DaVlS officiat- mg. Interment will be pri- vate at Forest Lawn Mem- orial Park, Glendale. The family requests donations in lieu o f flowers to s&int Michael's and All Angels Ep18COpal Church. Co}Ona del Mar or The EptSCOpal Home, 1448 So. Marengo. Alhambra, CA. HAAaO" LAW•·MT. OUVI Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 G1$ler Ave Costa Mesa 54(1-5554 PIE"CE IAOTHEAS lfll BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Bioad .... ay Costa M~sa ~;.>-9150 BALTZ BEHGt~Oh SMITH I TUTHILL WE STCLIH CHAPEL 4 :'" £ 171h Si C.o~tJ Me~.1 (461\371 PACIFIC VIE W MEMOAIAL PARK C..Pme1ery • Mortu..ir~ C.hc1pe1 • C.1ema1 or~ l'i(lO Pariltc V1t-.... o ..... •""wN'l•t BP 1cr ' .I.I •• McCORMICI( MORTUARY 1 95 Lag ~na Cal'lfO" pt Lagu'la Bl''IC'" Ca 92&51 49·1 94 ,., rtilJC NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE fl'U9LIC HEA .. INQ MAY I, 1 .. • 7:30 , .... Place. Board Room of West· minster School Dl111lct. 14121 Cedarwood, w .. tminster Regarding· Dlatrlel lnltlal Coltec· tlve barglllnlng agreement bet...en the Wntmlnster School Dtatrlct and Chapter 34 ot the c S.&.A Publlahed Orange Coast Dally Piiot May 2, 1984 2382·84 P\lllC NOTICE ACTITIOUS llUSINEIS NA.Me ITATIMENT The followlng pertonl are doing buslMaS .. AnlhOny Plauc:o Th•• tlatement WU flied with the County Cler1' ol Orange County on April 10, 1984 '2M21M Publlstled Orange Coast Dally Pitot May 2. 9. 16, 23. 1984 2342-84 P\lllC NOTICE . FJCTITtoUI 9Uaatdll NAMI ITA TU.1ENT The following persons are doing buslnenu· COLLEGIATE COMMUNICA· TIONS CO .. 2701 S. FaJrvlew •N8. Santa Ana. Ca. 92704 Larry Thomas, 116f Packers Cir, No. t08, Tustin, Ca. 92680,..- Thls bualneu Is conducted by-an Individual Larry Thomu This 111tem41nl WU liled With the County Cieri\ of Orange County on AprH 2. 1984 FN2511 Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot May 2. 9, 16, 23 1984 2383-84 P\&.IC NOllCE P\B.IC NOTICE FJCTITIOUS aUSIHEH NAMl STATEMENT The tottowino petson 1s doino business u THE CLASSY TOUCH 5 142 Wamer Ave Suite 212. Hunltngton Beacn. Calif 92649 Tracy Jennifer Wilson. 3922 Fln11terre 0. . Hun11ngton Beeeh. Call! 92649 This busmess 1s conducted by an lndlvtduat Tracy J Wilson Th11 s1a1eme11t wu filed '1¥1th the Covnty Clerk of Orange Covnty on Mar 30. 1984 P~llshed Ora11ge Coit~ PHQ.I pril 11, 18. 25. May 2. 198A 1971-84 Nil.IC NOTICE FICTrTIOUI IUSINlll NA• STAffMENT The following persons are doing business as Newpon Bay Entarprleet. 2400 W Coast Hwy Suite K. Newport Beach, Ca 92663 Gary T Heu. 21762 Cabrosa, Mission Vle10. Ca 92691 This buslnas Is conducted by an . . MIRROR /BEACffCOMBER CLA S IFIED OfFICE HOURS T elephQne Service:- Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 ~ Business Counte;:-·:-\ Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M .-5:30 P .M. DEADLI l'l'BLl(:ATIO~ \londa~ Tue"da~ \\ edneMlu' Thur!lda\ Frida' ~aturda' Sunda~ Sat. \ton. Tue~. ·\\ f d. Thur!\. Frida~ Fri. llll ISLf E DEAOLJNE 1 I :30 a.m. t ::io p.m. ':30 p.m. l:30 µ.m. i::m p.m. :~:00 p .lll. :H>O p .m. Beautiful 3 Br. 3 1,Az Ba, Bayfront. pier & float for 65' boat. Best buy at $895,000. Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba. playroom, fireplace. beam ceilings. Xlnt. financing. $420,000. UYlllE lllYI UYFlllT OHH Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai Kai, 2 Br. 2 Ba, 40' patio. $695,000. lllYllE THUil Panorarruc bay & ocean view. 4 B-r. 4 Ba. patio, pool home. Fee price $775,000. PllllllU MME ICUIFlllT LJD SALES. 31832 Via Palo. Trabuco <Anyon. Call! 92678 lndtV1dua1 Ocean & Jetty views marine room 4 Br Gary T Hess ' ' ' Thts statement was flied With the 13 Ba. 3700 sq. ft .. car parking. $1 .285,000. ':,~:7~~;:.f Orange county on UYSllE PUCE UYFlllT Leoo Emlle Deri08f', 31832 Via P110. Trabuco Canyon. Calll 92678 Jane Frye Harrison. 31832 Via Pato. Trabuco Canyon, Calif 92678 This bulinesa 11 conducted by a P bl .. ~ 0 Co F2A22S7D 1 Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br. 2 Ba up, u is.""' range ast 81 y , 1101 April 25 May 2 9. 16. 1984 2 Br. 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1.350,000. oer-11 partneflhlp Leon Dertger 2244-84 Thia statement was Wed W1th the County Clerk ot Orange Covnty on r-----------Mar 23, 1984 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR F241747 ___ Nll. __ IC_NO_T_IC_E __ _ Publllhed Orange Coaat Dally Piiot April t 1. 18. ~5. May 2. 1984 1970-84 FICTITIOUS aUllNEH NAME STATEMENT 341 Boy\1d1· D1 •vt· N B 67S 6161 Nil.IC NOTICE The tollOWlng person• are doing buslneu as· CALIFORNIA WIRE ED M . 2737 S GrO<ldy Way, Suite F. Santa Ana. Ce 92704 FtcTITIOUS auatNESI Michael c Grimm . 3117 NAME ITATEMENT Barbados Pl. Costa Mesa. Ca The following persons ere doing 92626 business •• c G 7 e MEDISCREEN WELLNESS SER-hnst1ne r1mm, 311 arbadoa Pl Coste Mesa. Ca 92626 VICES. 8343 Via Estrada. Anaheim. This business is conducted by an Let Us Help You Sell Your Property! Calif 92807 lndlVldual Sherry Hobbs. 8343 Illa Estrada, Christina Grimm Anaheim, Calif 92807 This statement was llled with the Thll buaineu 11 conducted by 1 County Clerk ot Orange Counly on generet partnership Ap1ll t 1 198• The Ody Pilot off en you this exact size ad on cu "Picture Pace" weekends fOf just S25 per day. or 2 days for S45. Randy Edgertow 315 Nonh-t F24331t 101st Circle. Vencouver Wa 98665 Publlsned Orange Coast Delly Sherry Hobbl 2~ 2 9 6 984 Thia 1t1temen1 w•• flied With the Pilot April '1. May 1 1 2246-8<1 Coun1y Clerk ot Orange County on 1 Submit a picture, or we'I photocraph it for you at a minimal charce. Mar 29 1984 f2422:51 -----------Call Cla11if ied Published Orange Coast Deily · Pt&.IC NOTICE Pilot Aorll t8 25 May 2. 9. tll84 2099-84 PtalC NOTICE FICTITIOUI 9USINEH NA• ITATIMENT The lollOWlng perwona are doing buslnMa u Det.nM Syweema Engineering, 2009 l Moontlde Clrcte, Huntington Beach. Calll 92S.6 Gery Lynn Back. 200ll 1 Moontlde ClrCI~, Huntinot0i1 Beeen. Call! 92848 Thi• bulinesa 11 coo<1uc1eo by an lndh1ldual Gary Lynn Blcil Thi• ltllemBnl WU llleO with the County Clerk ol Orange County on Apnt 16. 1984 na.a Publtthed Ortnge Coast Deity Pitot A,prll 25, May 2. 9. 16 1184 224~ 1.-.1HGS 10 co \ ht l~· ... , .. ? lfld \he ' .,altt l)la~,­ l ,,a<I IM ., '~J.,.,- h lhf -· N o ~a ttf>r whrtl you rP do1na your homet o w n nPwspaper ThP Daily Plllt lits 1n FICTITIOUt llUSINEH NAME ITATEMENT The lollO'Nlng peraons ••• d0tng business at WORLD LEASING. 1600 Dove St . Suite 330. N_po,, Beach Ca 642 -5678 92560 Robert Lawrence Wallace 1830 '::~::;~' C. .d \\, ~"A -.? £ ~~) 16th St . R202, Newport Beach, Ct v .._, <.rcJ ~\ ~ <r 92663 ,,,,., ~, CIU 1 '°'1_6,..."--. This buamMS 1s conducted by an 1 O ..... , 1• •"• • "• lndlvtdual ' • • • · ' • • • · • t • Robert L..,IN all ace • ' • , • • " County Clerk of Orange County on _ _ Thi• statement ·WU llled With the [ r, ( T N o~c March 30. 19S. FNn1I j j 1 j j e,ubllstted Orange Coast Dally Piiot AP"lt 25, May 2 9 16 1984 2245-8<1 P\&JC NOTICE ,,....... Put>llshed Orar1ge Ca.•t O&lly Piiot April 25 May 2 9 16 11184 :1248 •• R L I L 0 I 1 I' I I ., .. u•• T ... -1r '450 Aat tak• thla -2Br kid /I* prloed S 111,IM to rent fast hYrry 2 bdrms. 2 batht In Uni· 539-6190 BEST Rlty f .. versify Park Terrace. 4 Br 2 Ba pool 11100/mo, CloM to tehoolt. shop-yard l pool terVlce. ping. South of freeway. 2131602-e9&5·dayt UMIULn llOHlllU YllW Ill 1._ S935t mo. tnc:td• ;«denef. Adult home plua guest • ._ 3 B< 2 Ba M ... Verde. apt . bra•thtaklng lo· I·--------Ref's reql#ad, no pet.a. cation. very unique Avail 8-1-&4. $750.000 1645 L.abrad«. I --.u.I I I •• ~I \ WlLllfle/llYm Owner Agent 559-6221 Realt0<1. 675-6000 TWI ... /104' H. Brand new luxury eondo Ill .Ill Fa.I..... 3BR. 3BA. Jae. 2 Flr9- IOUIFlllT Slll,000 Lovety 2 Bdr condo with a den & balcony Pertec1 fOf young couple Of va- ca t 10 n ho me Sand, ocean and view ot Balboa Pier Traditional Realty 6:1 1·7!170 A nearclean C unit In an plaoes. Yard. $1050. mo. elCoellent lnalde locaition. See: 2530 Santa Ana Ave Vacant and avall•ble. 851"'822& Oall 10< detallt. E'SIOE. Clean 28R 1ba. "4-1211 paUp. 1gl ;«age. M25+ dep. ~91/67$-3432 • ~ Extra-large 2 br. 1'A ba. _ • S575 mo. + 1ut + S200. No ~tt. 5"48-SM90 WH4wi4111 hi ..... Handtome 38r 2'~ba 2br 2ba detached hOuM condo. 1700 eq ft. many w/2 car gar Quiet loc. on extru. Nr bu• & ehop9. greenbelt, auper land· s t050/mo. 642-4e23 acaplng. Mini bllnda, mlr-1 ___ __,,.------ •• 1 rorad cioeet & door1. lm-IP&GI maculate. $129,000. Agt RENTALS AVAILABLE TIAllTlllAl Jim O'Connor 786-7500 Uke thlt 281 2Ba home 5 lrg Bdrm, beautllul for-~---..,,..-..,.-__,,...,...,.,,, crpu bltlnt kid• okey mal llvtng rm & dining rm. l!!p!rt hie~ l $525 Ready today call paneled den w/lrplc and By owner: 8lg Cenyon •llM1M* sit down bar. 1parilllng Monaco. Small down, Nr 6CC 38' 28A unit pool. country kitchen 11% fl•ed rate. Will con-w/288 Balcony l perege w/braaktaat area + sider trade. M0-1538 $600 4 tam« angta bonus rom. S479.000 F~ Sa .... by~. 1 ... 539-6190BESTRtty1-6"-6200 Barbata Aune .,. ..., """''-.., tu•ury condo. VIiia Sharp 2 Br. ea.tilde, B a I b 0 a . B a r g • I n balun <*lllng w/d hll-up $121,000. S181< below Child & P9l ok. Se75/mo: mar1tet t-948-7893 7~ ~~~~·=.,...--,=-.. ...,.---.,...usr.-.: .--.l-Ma--.. -.-.. -.--1~--i Best beach. 5109 Sea-.&Mk It youf' aoo:. C»- lhore. Open dally 2-5. thedral oelllng1. 8'.nd LIL UL Ill OWnr 545>2647 675-2348 new 1 B< condo. walk to 3Br. 2Ba, Oln Rm F/PI.. beech. Pool/fac/tennle. Obi Ger wtBa .. + 2 Br. IALllA LIE llPLD $600/mo. 730-8000 off. Apt. NOW BY OWNERll I Walk to &hope, bNCl'I. Bal. 861·8124 hme $375.000 673-8017 pier. ferry/reat1. 3B</2ba But lt1t~ ft41 ea. 2 18 Bal Bl 673-2943 -.-·--.-----i""'-.-CtnH ••I 111 0 WEmUFF 3 Br cond o. 11% Be. carport, renovated, Ilka Immaculate 3 Br, 2 ba. new $875 + dep. 011 PllYAIY 2 Pool, jac. formal din rm. 2131596-1498. No 1gl1 Completely remodeled $325.0<X>. 771-8171 dya, . Br 2 Ba home New land· 6'~-5289 eves $575 3Br 2Ba hae won t seeping S3 t 5,000. Prln· last! Frplc dbl gar f/yd clpals Only. 483 MOfnlng •• It lean 11 otl'lef• not In ad• call Canyon Rd Open Sat. UlllA al.I 539-6190 BEST Alty ,.. 9.5 759-1642 '72 beautlful VIiia Weal Cottage: '485/mo, EZ dep Home 20•80' 00<ner lot. terms. Na, qu~ ttrMt. Highly upgraded 2BR 841-6208 fM luxury In Ot~a COM ; New 3Br 3ba hme R-2 lot S395K 640-4254 • I C•1t1 •na --lff4 IEUMLIU 4 Bdrm. 2 bath, flreplaoe, new roof. new lurnac:e, new d1shw11her S 135,000 Re04ntly painted Owner wlll finance wtth tmall down ••1 1.a.,. attr. .... ,1n 28a, lge IMdlnlng/kltci'I EXECUTIVE HOME 2'h aren Light Interior. O..t ble>e*t 10 bM<:h. 38R. buy In Orenge Co. 3BA. Every Converuenoe. $25.000 Young adult• $1400/mo. 833..0145 welcome Agt 540·5937 ______ __,,..,..,._,,,1Stepa to aur1 lg 2 B< Acrtaft 1125 w/frplc homey decor 16 XCAes -vi;: or balc:Ony vi.-kid• ()!( ger Canyon Lake. $'.45,000, S600 539·6190 BEST f .. terms 679· 1975 Stop ioottlngl WuMr & 20 ACRES • Babblll\g dryer w/thla 5Rm home brook view $48 500 appls dlhwthr dbl Cl" . . ' . fned kid/ OC9en term•. 879-1975 ms 539~90 BEST ... lac .. • Pnt ..____ UITllM •Ill com I Bid ·sst5 086 ut. u .... Great potentlal fOf reno-NOft;;' ~ with 4 reald. Lit prQ Sit 2BX 4 tam vetora here Two hOuMI unit• Ocean view 1 1.9% hm/llng... ok dbl gar on lardt lot In c1o ... 1n uaumable flnan. Owner k Id 1 t t n • at Se Io Eaatalde location. One 3 837.9030 53M190 BEST Rlty 1- Bdrm and OM 2 Bdrm. Only S 195.0001 Jutt put 0.t e tltt on marketl 759--160 I Pnerty 1110 1.8 TimGtf m: near jri::liliiiif:1 CraWforovme ~9:81fa. S 12,500. firm. 8 7 rot n. flfd Atl AmON CsU A OAIL Y ""OT 1 AO.vtJOt M,1 ... ,. eMUt 11h acre, SpraqJi River Valley. Oreoon. SH.000/obo. 980-1047 I a $2.17 per df y Thel't Al.L you pey for s ..... 30 dayt In lht DAI.Y r Pl.OJ SERVICf DIECTmtY '*" tN tfWJNf MIRROR llnd lht HUNTINGTON aeACffCOMBEA fNW'I w~·· no txtr• Clhergel CALL TOOAVll ........ YtNt o.tly Pltot 8efVjce Dnctory AeprtMntatMt 141-4111 ut.111 SYDNEY o •••• F• Ad Action Cal a Daly Pt.t AD-VID 642-5671 Aprte!!h,Vaf. --... Leetlf.... .. • .... 11• c.ta... na. ........ 2\t1'1aB!o.-&~ ._, 111 l.09t: ... ......,,_,.. rNx. wr.-w1• ~~,...._~,.. . .-um. ... .,.. ... ·-· _.. IA. l•Flll IMI grey, ~ 6 wtlt, ..._ K11ut1 'P of bOle ,,..,... Mat ..__ ,.. u.tllWBH• Vl9w. s• to bwh. ~22•v.:;ihe~\1 ~ :::.· New2-"l,bld0·00odtwy Vwct.ar-.t7W232 ..-llnd own toote ..-.Qll~ , · • quiet apedoue 2 Br H50 mo. Call Tom lower u.nl1. e.s'o-~ • 9CMU. rom eoo e.f. up LOST Perr-.tt. c:Nrt-.n111111ry. 11 per ht to l••lllU ,.rs;:" 1~ Ba, pvt petlo, pool, e.M-8001.at 7M-2701 to 3900 •.f. Wiii build to .._.. &eme. .vk &6de .wt. Bell YIClht Qub. PIT-iO ..,_ M d- Avell 6/3. 842·0H5. ffl"'tl sap t . s t • p 1 to 1vall. lmmad. S.M net. · · · Hwy, NB, ... 18!6 a1-47IO ~ M .. c:erpott, lndry , no pea ~ = ::•I · wtc1y ,..,..tl1t AP<N-IUlt ~; Some ~ C M A.w.d ~221 310l . Plldlrc COMt b Ftmllif ...,._ *6. ID(~ Mt=,,._ OCMO/bay. Bllr co-op. LOST .,.,... .....,F dot ft nd M 3 POOL trplc prvt patio f~at lnct. No pee.. •l11Wall1-411J A&H 751-6189 *of Birch l Metol In &llTm/ULD llDIJ•ftm ... • ay, ay dlhwshr x-1g 1 Br on 54 55 btwn 9&3 dally Summer Rentata OBIM ...... B1' N.B. 55t-3423t 7M-030I F=... ~ ON per.on8 ollloe sic-- . ARIES(March 2 1-April19):Whatappearstobe .. utterconfusion" Eutlkla$535557-2a.41 CUFFHAVEN 28r. 1ba, PlarRettty fi\7 w:&iff &.-RB. L.oet t.lny wHte ......_ .W..,ul/Umt.7~ ttton. 1lary com- will ~tually prove to .be method1c~I. basic and necessary. Ride with Gwde!Hlke 2 br w/and9d fir~ gar. etc. ldeel 538-932' Barbera S1 30 ft M• Dog. old Hunt. ...-9'fr•t• wtlh ••n- tlde, keep plans Oex1ble and options open. You are J._Oing to be patio. wtapac:le of 1200 ft fat retired couple. No Agent · eq 541~2 Bwl'I. ~ ~7 111&1• P91lell09. ,......,n 1· _ pleasantly surprised and could actually receive unusual gift or honor. Pim. Ctlarintltg lhunerect pet1 ......... 650-4t73 Yatatlea a d Red Willllt left on bur •L•l1YEEll -~ ... ) . TAURJJS (April 20-May 20): Travel is favored, changes occui bldg nr Pac Amph ~ OCC Eutbluff. TowntloWe Apt. ....... 2117 1r>~'tS::: ~irJ'~ b•nch, South Cout Int......, In tN o.c. tlll· Hiring • The which .enabl~ you to recoup apparent loss. Emphasis on payments. ~~,C::~.·:0 .~. 3br 2ba.. 2 car gw .•• no a.act1 842-2134 PIGa. G"'9\ to port .,..., The COPY T ... Of .,. ,... collecuons, 1n. terest ra.tes, residuals and profits. Get ideas on paper .• ba ..... tJh-& .. ~..:r;:,w'4d~_:;,, pee. $826. Mon--.,r1 +5. -I •• _.. · '45bui~. STOPPIMIM)obtor)'OU. tannt. 400 Metrt 8L h k ..... ..,_...,, -'44-1010 Ira-••~ --2 •• OC Airport: eoo-Rnard Lott Cocker PIT wort! • ~ liiboa ( ... CMM Ot ~ cc .co~r"&''t notice. make necessary telephone call pnor tc In dbl gar. w/A11try, Nit w ... 1s1M4..... 1200 eq n, 4-8 aep. of-Spen ·mht F 111e br turning to M ttme 1n M). 11:Ma6 dea~~~~J (May 21-Ju~e.2.0):.You'll be domg what should be don( :;. .. ?r..oTvai~a;;;. No -· : . '' • ttrlldlpl..... C::.,':.~ ~::IMM~ . Need9rned: Mi>-1494 . :-x.::1'::= .. (llPI) at co~t tame. Focus on m1t1at1ve, personality, family relationships. ~e-1238 (6-tpm) : ........ 8;;9"~ autte . ._ *550. ~ P•unh Mil ~:-==~ l<hdlepert198St-M33 horn~ 1mprovement. You'll rcttive "token of affection." Fears. Large 1 Br 1 Ba ~ ,....,. 1111. e78-&409 wtlOleaofnuttlt~ Elcp. COOk9 suspicions are erased and you'll have reason to celebrate. carpet• drapea, ~ht a IN NEWPORT BEACH EXECUTIVE SUITE WI• 111.L.. It helpM. Cell u. • -_, CANCER (June21-July22):CheckGeminimessageforvaJuable aunny.*'435.951• 23 "Jir:~f'T.~01W:r~~~ .. talltt NewportCntr*550tSn5 Ancl"'"'*'07AM-9:30PM 157-oeo. Atk for .,..~ Cl* bee* .. hint. Answers arc found behind scenes. Streamline procedures, get rid L1tge 1 Br. Apt. crpts. ct~bhouaaa · & h•.•lth IUn 1t11 64o-~70 • dey. 1 ~ • ..-. 8Mron °' a.yt. ~: lleo ,...,,_ of super:fluous f!laterial, realize tcchmque can now be' perfected, =· -~·~~ apaa, 8 tannll oourta, T 2500 eq f(C&\dO. VIW 01 Full •rvlcuulte/Newport ==-~'..:'m~i :':.;: AVT~ MriiW~= Romanttc fantasies <yt close to fulfillment. pett. a.48-3818 aft 3:30 pOOll, cloae to buatnw. Bay, t'Mmmlng pool & Ctr. T_wo offlcet-.vtlM May the prtce of one. S~ a ~ i. IOok· lftllMt!l!#·LMNtwa 61 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on "success story." You'll take OC Airport. Fathlon baautllut greenbelt. Witt 1. The Ew:utlve omce. l•HI •Na• Ing tot reepo1.-.. Md ~ ~--:::; greater .charg~ of ~our. own destiny, wishes ~11. ~ ~ulfilled and ~ ~:~~i..Ts: :~~t lhop9 ;;1~:~ ~." ~i. ~~~4c:: Ot, 111 .. eon• ~ ~:: 11am--2Slm: •1-+tn romantic rclat1onsh1p wall v ow stronger. Respons1b1ht1es increase and ca11 aft epm &45-3487 -1..... ~ 131-elOI EOE so do chances fo.r a,reatcr financial ret.ums. ~lnQtaa 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-F CMetten w 2br/21M>e o.c. AIRPORT AREA r..,...,_ VJRGO(Aug 23-Sept 22)· Emphasisoncareer business abtlitlto Hewet 2 Br. wtth patio & manta & Townhou1H lrvtne twnhae: pool, Jae, 535 to 11'3 eq ft, Iota of llM112 B0ABY8dlTTEA nMd•d1. Ill I&., • • • • • ? • • gar• g e . "o P •ti. from S&eO (Mk about tannll. $395 + utllt. ptttg, Janf\Or1lll & al·utlle ran me typ•. pre fiall l pltlme dey ,...... rca~h. more people .. Ass1~ment can now be completed, ind1v1dua in $530/mo. 631·5553. furnished .C,tt. com.ptet• ASAP RoMnwy 957.9ea1 1nct. From 11/eq ft , mo to DlllTl/llllLI YOUR home NB/CM Fm. ~ A«ltt In pos1t1on of au~honty will h~ve fav<?rable reactton. You'll be rid of Nice quiet 2 br 1 be. bit with TV."'*'-&uten.Ma. Fern 25-35 of deer'I mo OK. 557-7010 Outc:all OH\.Y IM-t1tt --. ftmt.twr. M&.1'17 ~· Or..-......... burdLeJBn, finan~!~l prosOcpects wall be bnghter ttlan onginally anticipated. Ina. No peta.' ldeel fOf may be rented) tOnor 'J'°" n-emkr. 2Br 2~ 8'n In 1~. Office: 526 ft. 1420 mo. SEX THERAPY· Counre6-1Mi8ii& WUta P 111111~ ~r RA (.":yl. 23-t. 22): You'll gain "enlightenment." Spotlight mature coupte. S550 mo. term or long«"· am-June 3. '340 + eac. +'A Utll pct Air cond. Ground lnQ "tor 9aue1 Cono..,. ~--~C... ..._ ,,,,_• __ •,...~,..,...=-=--=- o n emotions. spirituali7c. aspirations, higher educauoo. Yo u 'II make Avail. now. ~2 ~.:8 ~·it San .io.QUln u1Ma. Sandy• a.45-2134 °' ftoot. 1056 e Cemlno Dr. av APPT: 64Q.4.4M home. Mon...ft\. !r-i Oecoilltiiv'M ....._ &~ ~tt~~!~~~l~~~a~t~~~~l~dsenseofd1rection.personalwonh s 'a:-c!Wlor:-' f44.1M _ F=:~::blgh•ln ~l~n~~dim°! "IP•UIP& ~N::S-OHLY ~~:17:a' SCORPIO 'cOct. 23-Nov. 2 1); You pin additional knowledge ::!.o!W.pvtp~t~ HBNoktd1/pet1.N-amkr T54-1040MrTracy. Ila• "4~7"41 ....., .... which relates to resources. financial capabllit1es. strength of associate, g1r + park space. Spi(ious singat. ont ~3= ut~la. C:.;:,nturn. *hi•""...... ~ ~ ~= tor &Ito s-u aaore. ~ panner or mate. Intuition is o n target. individual who aided in past as S850tmo. a.4&-9794 & two bedroom 1pts. • « · 1 MO FREE RENT • · -· I ' .. "'"' Wu heve Wiid c.lf. drMt'w back o n scene and can again be an ally. mall 1 fk. iN1 Maple F/M non-amllr 21-35 w W~tt!:':.~ ~ TOP ISS I .,,.... Mc. Od dfMno tWOOfd. SAGl'M'ARIUS fNov. 22-Dec. 21): Leave details for another 11me Ave. uPtt•lrt, refr:r· no 12br t2b•11P_: 'P!'?.·.F'· Suite 1, NB 631-3e51 ~ pr.-(213· ~,...~ Suc:ceatflll ln<Mpendent ~at Hub Auto 8B::° pec1. 1 peraon $39 . ac. enn• .•• c. ~mo . . . ~... ,.,.,.,. ..... bank hM the f= ~ 120 Hnot . • perceive picture in its entirety. Emphasis o n public relations. Sierra Mgmt. 641·1324 +in uUI C.M . .546-3240 WATERFRONT, 800 eq ft, T· I ... II ope11111g1 Jn our 2..e4 w Cleud. . S 2 Br 2 Ba F n/amkr to lhf 3br hoUM, C>P«'I offlcet, T cubldee. llft .,_ 8eedl ~.,. Of. llUtllf /Sim Oex1bilitt· humor, legal agreements. Permit o thers to have their say -:::~:.~pool l rec N.B. Waite to bet\. $315, elegantly furnlthed. t&; cn;i;:;a:p:;t, 1/3. b: · 32 Houri, ta Y"t + hold bac on your own assertions. dec isions. area ss..5 710 w 1eth St 191 & 1aat. Reta. 631--0757 L.urae a.46-5015 L.A.IS .F.t V1ncouver. LOAN PAOC./SEC'Y 49e E. 17th St. C.M. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on basic issues. greater 1--1-~-From $429 Return Ilk ln-~lf-reliance. ability to get J"ob done by attracting allies. Adhere to THE GABLES 2 Br. w/gw F\JRNISHED Of Frmmte: '250/mo + 1 100 ........ 1'N6ed 144-~ Alellt 1n preparatlOn of 111111'1.,. I'. c:rpl9 drapes bltln1 lncd UMFURHtSHED. dep. Acrou from beech, latala Jtll · commerdal' ~ Front & bee* oMcie J*1 1actual data, h~ve neces~ry tools available and don't risk something o f yard w/patlo seo51mo. All UTILJTIS H.B. 752--0234 !Ye "'90 'fiOO at 81 i?ifo p;a&; & ~-doc:umen~.::,: time, w111 ,,.., • ..,..·type. value for nothing. Scorpio plays key role. 2439"A''Oraho9 PAID. HEALTH HOUSEMATES Hwy. NB $1100/mo ....... On. .... ;;;.--::::-environ-eo.ta ..... MS..117? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cycle tndicates success with 63µ120 Call 1-SPM CLUBS TENNIS UNLIMITED 213-Ne-5985 ment at aquMlent pr-. --=-=-='=""'"'-==.,..,.,..,=.,.- speculative venture. Emphasis on change. travel. variety. intensified Utlla peld 1 Bdrm qui.t · · · WILLLOOKFORYOUI 213-~14 n•n•H... terred ORJVERSXCOUNTRY romantic relationship. You'll receive unusual communication and it pitlo. No pets. ss651mo'. SWIMMING. pkai "Gain comfortable rent & Orange County Auto LOAN ESCROW ASST ~~r~~HTS means~ood news.·· Children could be involved. Watch Sagittarius! Avail May. ~58 much more! Sorry, the nice tealtng of finding St~ 1n°': ~ lat Center 11 expanding Alal9t tn preparetlon of 1831 ~tie. C.M. ·. P ES (Feb. 19-~arch 20): <;'heck i.nsurance policies. take steps ·WI lf'FD & 111111 · 0~~M~~~ · a=~~·~ TUSTIN ~5en ~!;,~ ~ "5e&-ea1, ~ ~T::"'n:. :,~Pr~~- to improve . secunty an . connectio~ with p~opcrty, h ome. Ma~e Want a aetectlon of grMt ~ 832-'134 • ...,__ groae. o.n be done 1n lngknowtadgeoftneome necessary adjustments. gain cooperation offam1ly members. Shon tnp 11Ylng7 we can offer eny-LG Ltiguna Beach ttome. c.amw Obi. Car Gwage Size property & lnOultNI may be necessary. results from rnqu1ries will be favorable. thing from a amall apt to ~.canyonvtew. *'400 lntala Jtll Bldg. Extenatve Tr~ k>Mapreiterredlnah a• Br houM. 11 looklng In ,........_.... +utll 497_ 1241 aft e -Program. See Su~ aacrow. banklng at aav· Min. 3 Y"t ax~ . ...... Uafualu.. In'" Uafan.I.... &tutatabJ!_af. . CM. NB'Of HB think ofu1 r--.. -· 19040 Hrrt>or. F.V. lat ~· Info. Cell 1nge&1oananY1tOnment Aero Spece pref'd. Xlnt ~ iilJ flm fat that c:hok:e of NtwpOtt led So M/F 3 BR hOUM In Coata 1240 eq ft. 879-4343 at 521..-1. typing lftllts. good ftgure ·-Ille~ Ult 1u JaU C.~. U7( ... JlU Ideal living S ' M..._ Non arnotlftf. $300. Agent 541-6032 E.xc1Mrnt banefttl. com-aptttuda. Lh. optional. ·--· 1a •• 1 for quiet EXEC. TSL MGMT a.42· 1803 1700 16th treet & Utll. Mat1t 54()..1199. ,_... .._._, Orange County health ape petltlve INlrllM....,.. Apply Mon-Thur 7em-5pm 2 BR. 2 BA.-V«ialn... Fwln1 11 1 1Yr ,•f~!_,.~eext2rBur Ch11mlng 2br, 1ba. front NB REALTY eTS-1"42 (at Dowr) ... aauw tof aale. on... maaaegea commenauratewtth Mier .......... Ooaa vi.w A all 8/1 o• """"""" h "'' IC $700 mo L.1112 5113 M/Fem to lhlle 2 Br. 1 Ba. leatala n• and uuna. Annuel groea • ..,..a. Cell 11~.mo.MS-~ · $550 pou buy w/rent ~w~~PT~T40 ~ Wll•IUYILJJll -• Apt, Balbor 111and. ..... SHOOOO net profit Panonnel:Ul-tllOO, 2101 Do"9St.Npt8dl 539.,e190 BEST Alty fee 839-3152 eve ~pm. 1 '2 Br. apta avllll. pool, Nt.,ot1 Buda No. W 50mo yHrly. Non f200 a.I.. front ofllca, lrg befor. t.,;ea, $4*>,000. --------(Ac;roeatromOCAlflliort) •LIKE NEW 2 Br 2 Ba 2 II petlo/bal No SSO lrvlf't Ave~ ~er 875-9564 JefTy d r Iv e · In r r 0 o or . Cutt bua1nesa tong term -u,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;m;-- Twnl'ls. Newport Terrace. laat1 Aa1 Cttt1.... 2714 ~~--,;;6-$825 · (4t 16th) M/F ltlr 2 er 2 Ba, vOI· $480/mo. 829 Terminal IMM Price s'uoo ooo UllWWW 11P'1 ""'.l~IHliiiil;;ilWiiiitUHiiiili;Rniii11"iJW Frpl. Pool/Jae. Gar. + a BR it\ AX. Large yard. 18( f L isoolmo TSL Mgmt 754-0081 or leyball, tennl1, nr Way, C.M. 540-9352 dya. °""'*retiring 0r ~ fot..W.bar.Htr 1C>-e OM of Or-. Countlel mc:h mo<e $800 875-8048 Nklel Avail 8/ 1. S900. Ssoo d.po.it ' 642· 1803 645-1104 So Collt. nice. S385 64&-0881 avee not..,_.. conllder Mlllng. SURF l SANO HOTEL otda9t ~-. care11 •WATERFRONT1t mo.wt gardnat 54s.542e ell utllt lncid. a.42-3099 I t ltac~ fHI 558-8775, 752-6393 1600 alt. w/aml omce. 50c Febulou1 opportunity. L.19Una8wl'I Call R098 apportunl1y tor r1gtlt per· Dover Sharee LN. 3 Br 3 T LA Ht •• • Su Cltantt ... pit. 3 ph .... ~ Thia untQue bualnaa la 497-«TT EOE 90n ...,.,.. or trainee B1 Fam Rm 50' boat ... _. 1 Br t Ba upper dupi.x, 2 Br 1 Ba <4-l)lex bl1-ln1 M/F to lhare 2 Br. l'A ..... St, CM. 546-1853 otter•4 wltl'I fantHtl<: beau"' d O.o le S 3 o' 0 O I mo OalaniaW 2S2S patio, cpt/drapea, $450 cpt1 dra,_., w' ••h'*lt' 2 Br, cloM to Co1ta M... nr OCC term• 20% down 9'"'% '7 lor ~!!r~ !!.ir•e· t1Mr·'!,' · ' Incl utll a.45-4533 · .. ~.. "'' $500/mo. Pool. $288. 241-8868 2000. 2000 & 4000 eq rt • · Shampoo u•la1ant --.... -... T 14 /8 4 5. 5 5 T 0 & UUI..... . dryer hie up. encl gar. 223 La Paloma. 637-7918 3975 Bk"Cl'I, NB. Int. Amotlttnd over 30 bu1y talon, mu1t be ~ 80 wpm Sall') 645-5000 exl •10. 2er 2,,.,Ba d/W w/rJ hk-1Br Condo 1plll level, $875 536-0921 Newport Condo w/2 mu-s 50 aq ft Agt 541•5032 ~. lntereal Oflfy pay· tloanead 831-1390 open. Beneftta provided 58R 3 ...,.,,,. 1 up, nar, ,;pie, A'sct . lakea & 1tr11ms. frplc, 2Br 2B1 bltlnt nr beech INRI ter bdrm•. $400 per mo+ · · "*'11 fOf 5 Y99'1· • · Ring Lynn 547-5625 ba • ...,..... am rm.. " 17 mlc o 2 car gar w/opnr 12 utll. Garage. pool, ~tr t baloon piyment at the _ Dover ahorH arH. H.B. 982· 89/980-1193 r ·, se25/mi • g1r. bait area $875 No Empl. lady or student. non-amokers call Rob end of 5 yMtt No col-.. 111111 F /0 lllllW samTllT $1500/mo. Playa RMI F l L .. ~311519L mo. pet1780-1713833-3307 Lovetyroom,pool/kltprlv 642-3002or 979•5370 F ltOfegeyard.9000 tataral MCMMfY, aa the $18,000• Triton EKrow. Leguna Eltlte 87~ 1900 Aertant• .,. •• •"400/up. Bach. 1 Br. nr airport $300. 54M740 eq ft. Newport Ht• .,.._ bu91MU oener•t• ,,,. FIC P<*\lon w/r91ail com-9eactl 497-2411 ~5. I • .. L ••nil ...,.,,,. 18992 Fl Id SC Penthouse. nr beaeh. HB. S500{mo 548-9831 Mon profit• For Info call Mr peny to lnclUda A/P, pay· Charming BMtl "E" plan. U • IC• ' ...,v 2BR t!o'IBA prl patio & gar· .,vvo. 19a. Of a. Lrg Plaza atM condo, pvt *'1trance & bath. Utll1 thr Fri Mpm. Lewi•. 213·928·8~71 at rOll. GIL. Wiii be operat· F•1--•- ..,.,... ....i11ata, cul de sac, 3 -•· Walk to 17th Street 842-2834, a.42-3172 kitchen prlv, off 1treet $325 53•079• -·~ '' .,.. -or *"50 t tncl pd, · .,.. '" &-. t write lo 7808 Ftorenoa I"" In IBM PC We are a Private countrv dut> If\ BR, fam rm. 2'1t bath•. YOUR OWi shoWI, no 11aa • .., mo. "-'uxa 3Br 2Ba & 2Br 291 prkg. Jae. pool, utl 1 · ,..aew1Bta 1 c • ...,.2.,, . .., __ ... ., S1•""-O/C42 3710 E/643-2279 """' $300/mo. Biii 730-3599 Prof F ltlr 3Br condo an Ave. Downey. "'..., ..., growing company .,,... N9wpof1 8w:f'I aaakl Pl ......,. .. o. · In 4-plex crpt1 drpa ameni.a. oloae to all, refs.. SPIRITUAL READINGS • need an antl'luslutle time lunch/din,,_ ex-UN~~~MES I OOUITRY 2SB4R,,,101bma. 0 anci• co-tall. p•avt81o1 ... ~,..,.ue~e• Luxury hme In HB.$3prol $325,la utlla 846-3190 Adviea ln aflmatter1.Love. trtt~"' 41_ teem member In cnarge P4»flanced walt•rlwalt· ., ..., -· -••-• M/F pvt rm & bath. 50 · marriage .& bu1lne11. T .I. I .. ol boottlleaplng. Pis call , .... $6.35/hour, no ttpw HARBOR VIEW-4 Br. 2'1t ESTATE 8r8:30,846-Tt29 -ii-T••D +'It ut111. Kit prlv. Prof. M to ltlr Balboa Also counMllng. 1815 . LaaliaetThaAedBalloon PteaMc:Wle.4-5404· ' ba, fam rm. acrou from 821t1u s""'•N .. ~~ELOOR. 8.48.-749&...,.. Penn oc.antront turn So El Camino RMI. San W~N~~ ~ = LtCI a.46-1478 846-3024. aftM ~tor In~ ~& pool, gatden« 2 Br 1 Ba hOUM. gar, w/d ,., "ITU condo w/l*port Avail Clem uc·d 492·729e .... · · $)tR)O/mo, 64().4144 hkup, no petl. 1918-A 1 br. 2 br & bachelOr apta. Pool aid• room to qui.t 511 $400/mo + utlla No etedlt ...... no ~elty. Bootckeaper, PIT, hra "9x-........ Mtn•a .. Beautllul & park Ilka Wallace. S595 831-3871 Talevlled MCUrlty. encl. non amoller at drlnller, Cali • ..,. 875-9644 . •Splrltue.I Readftf & Ad· Oenlton Asaoc 6 3-7311 Ible Bat\k raca. A/P, AIR, EY9'a/wttenda $.4.J1r. Btwr- • -------• ...-Private Patio• 2 BR down. Ol•""w--""~. garage•. pool, Jae. tennil, llte cooking, w..,,11ng7 1ok. Rmm 25 Y110f. Advice In all lite t J Waa..._... aalH Jrnl1 Call AM 3-5pm Mite• a.s-.5790 NEWPORT CREST. Avall-vCovared Patklng .. , --0 olubhOUM w/full exfKCIM M ... Verde area. 75 wtt t• non-amkr. Of metter1; loY9. mernage. w.. 940-9053 B«Clla .~s ... .,.._. ,1 '"Pll garege, Avlll 5/2, 111 r-•~•-1• 13 u11t1 lncid 945-4158~ OY9f, M/F, odm. Quiet bullnaaa, NB. 831-t397 GA TE TE.HOE.A Ible """'~15th, and unit ... ,,_....,.. "' VICtorll. Call to .... No ......,. .. .,._,... v ,.. "'Dlnlnn '""""' --------NR OCC In C.M ..... ""·th & prof per90n. 720--0& l7 •& -'I II Ill aui Yll .. , Admit peopia to c.mp-w/2Bd. ~ba. cfOM to .. ., ... -d""l.S580/mo831~12 IUWlll ..... ,_ -..w•••• -d s•t"" C It pool. Move In condition. ...-wa1tc-1n-CtoMt1 ..., antrancie. Ref1. $325 Incl lllllTM Ull 11 LUii' groun ~r. a I l200lmo \ . ...-HorM-llk• Kitchen• 2BR. garage. fenced yard, YILUll utlls. 545-72"4 The Otenpe eo.t Deity Ruby's .. tooklng tor an-W•rtnet ..... lw. 1 bloci< lo Huntlnglon & ama.11 pet, cttlld allay. N• , & 2 ldrm luxury Raap. male. Nloaty tum. Pnot hee an excellent op-8f99llc. Mlf •tarting lnd4-OenerW oftlce I ·.. ..., ,... F~. $575 11t/1Ut $200 dep. apt• In 14 plane. 1 Bdrm. ratrlg. cotorTV. N' beech ft\11111\ ADS portunlty tot I cereer vtdualatot lultl pet1 tltN n!Tml ....... ...... -• mLmll flEE Avail May 5th. 642-3Te)' 2 Bdrm end TowMOmM & ocean. wldy 53&--8518 uunu onented M•)Of AQCIOUnl ~ Studenta ok. Muat Buay clrcutallon Offloe 1Bdrmfum .. FromS800 *3 ~.e . ~~~ AR£fR-E£ U.C."'1e<Wit.,·• SMO_, ~~•'llllltnO ""°' ••l>INtfWW t'lllWI' HewpottCr•toondo.28' 28drmumum .. FrOrn .......,,. ,..tto w ,garage falll. ponda. Ga paid. oom • n . at twentaPN tr1c:k recoro OrHt to IMrn '*" methode. tat an1W9ftn9 pl'lon. 2 a.. dbl gar, poot, ten-ownhOmefum .. Fromsaoc> ..,.,...., ..-• ...... --&822 From San t*OO Ftwy home. non·amllr, prof rm/ba •IF under 40 In potential, guarant .. d Great vtt1w on and of end ~~ ,,_. nit, U50. 152~2209 LA QUINTA HERMOSA $895 No~ 762 2 drtve Nottl'l"'on 8Moh to M/35 & over. ~&-5i,5e N.8. C M t.111831-9009 Cd•. draw 1ga1n1t com· BelbOa Pier F°' lnM)r· agea 1• ~per..- Newp0t1Tart 38A 2112U.. 18211P*'tlklaln,1 9525. Large qui.t 28R McFllddenandW•ton SEA&SUNLOOOE M•40.~roomor mlMlon.Oealretomove Ylew.applylnpanon~ '" 2·3().7•30pm. Sat 2 pew1clng comm Po(>I. bloc* weet of lkaoh. 3 1 ba, nft cpte, drpt, frNh McFedden to s.wtnd s 105 wklup. Color TV amall apl CdM/NBILB. Ml ... 11 Into manegerNnt a pl"9 9em· 11ern or 3pm.5pm and Sun ec<>o-10:30M\ USO/mo 213-59~2918 blOCk aool Edlnger. ptiint, lndry tacit no pett. VIII •. (714)893-519' 3028 W Cout Hwy, Npt Aef9. Lv MIG-t7M7M Send r.eutne to Ruby'&. 1 8eioo. ~ Studrlnt• t. hOfMmiUrl 1414"1 311W.Wlleon.'31·21T7 W-' .. tobeectl.a.c:tl.""'1• So.~ ................ "·-.. p 0 8o• tMO ancouraigedtOllPC>lyat ~ Tarreca 2ba 2ba. d•" t ~;-r,.,.. ,., .,..., . ._, own Mature M ... .-nt1 1 Ir Of Coat.a Me!U, 92629 u-. 330 w &.y, C "'· 2-'Pm n.atlo, ft.Iii, end unit 1700 MSO/mo. ~ 2 Ir, 2 ba rapee • over _..., pvt II trc, poot. tannle. Bect'I In CdM. xlnt ,.,., EOE • ..--... 22 1• tot Debra> 1.'t + i:iCunty. $4&-7858 TownhM. F'rJ)te, all bltna. lnctdl ut111. 53M 7 Jae ltlr Ba, OOlot TV, 497-'155 bff 6:)() Meture peraon, ,o '""" 940 w. 18th StrMt emp1 non--amkr 1326 Found bflt te lab pup on hf9 per ..-In Fountain ...,. .,. ()ce6nfront detUM ~atom '42 '22 t WM & -'Cndt urn Ind. 493-!MtO · ' Want to,.,.., In CM Of H8 405 Fwy, WaetmiMt« ~ ~. Ive In Vali.y P...aeure )Ob, PIT C.& le.._,. NB 3 81• femty Dl'L~ _pn 111. _. ••• ..._ y ,..,... p ama1t ,_ at ~unit .,... 41'0 ~ .. f!:80-f7'7 tot 1 ladJ Seine~ ITIUtl. enjCly ~ wortt -er. Mril111: e.Mn.3 Ml'CtY bMClt\. S3300Jmo. J...---..--...--w"ll"TT •-----'--.& ,... Pool. Jae.. T.,._ Avail ~-flQr ~ prtfd. My Ma"'VQJ 1 _.,.. dfMnO. ~ Flu twa al ttma Wll MMn• ~l/M>-121' a ..... • Id C ... 8/1 '525 et1.oltt UU let>or & metenala, YOUt Found PIT 9ut1 ~vie etc COM 720-0418 trlln. $4.50 to tt911, HAIR ~&HA lpmm ec.. or. ...a • ..... · _ . _ low rent. ~··· eeo::.3785 apelk ~· Spanllh If ~ OWJNwpt ~ OceMfront ei.gant 3 tty. c eth. celllng•, pe110. ~l•H• 41 • v MOO*, 3\t 6id ........... ~· eo.t.e ......._ &AWi 111 •• porrlble c.1 •1PM ~n1 or...._,, .. ld99t tot OO"PM· L.M. utll b r9nt ' rm 9't apt to kllch.. very clean, _ _ ouno 'f' ..a..,.... Ful tltM/part time Typno 112-t052 or 531-15$7 -=~~~!!!!!':~ pcl.ref.S2250.8$0-3823 J~ 1 Muatbedubmbr. S415/mo • dep llYllW Wkly rentela. S126 & up :•• ;'t1ntoec:'! r:ound Sm Reddlrh 30wpn~·Cllt CHIU> CARI HOUS! .. SO.C. UdO tree hOl'n« S bf r ~In 642-'097 150-4180 Iv meg Only 10 mlnut" ffom ColOf TV, tree con.. MtN USOl'no 642-5451 bfown buMy CM rw Hpt. 131.0140 fO! KE£P£A Ae9p '9dy ~ wlttl...,.. '°'°"""• lar ' & den, dll'I. rm, entry 1111, l..aQUM. ~own privet• hMted ~·a" _,'.!!P.!\ to Blv d · 64e-ttHO o r • 111 _.... ~ ~ clNtd l dO d•t1q MIOf\ lft ,,.... uc>t* '**· PoOf. No a..imu1 landtCIC*f ;at· oceel\ view ~ Dent ooeen t<ltcti ··-Young Prol/F ... kine 54a.11n ••-tiouu"••P"I tin P011er.:tl "'"'orcom-peca. 91800. t76-3tlQ ..-°'month Ho peta. den 11Pta. Pool & Spe.. Polnt'r moet ~ 116 N eo.t ~ norna or conOo to lhat9 · WNt• doe_..,, 1 D o c .ct ~ ,..,. ~ Wriblla. °' ao;.... oer ~ ;:J: .... 1m Two ,_.., .... , G•09'1 &41-1'30 or t7i.7~ per~ ':Ci'& ~ btuff. Uk• ,.. 2 ~a.cl\. In ltg Cenyon. Han>or ~ 9Md\ AMft#I .,....., Art OINetof wrtop •• I r.,q 176-61D7 Of, .... , ..... .. = "' Bdrm /Ofl/llge .. ,... Bf 6 2 81 •Iden, Wttl Mii n Ridge, Spyglaea. Linde Shelter .... 3666 delilOf' ettllla l 90lfd pro. " IO~lux •ti 161!. 2tat.1'6-2..... letge prl¥tt• ,petloa. I ... at """"*''"• area. OUCIKlnMOile'9doe Mwe Th!Nltng Of a,,..,~ 11 ~'• not llhOCICMng ""~• Ir ~t: ~ fDi \US:. :nd ger, ao:; !J1'de 8tUdfo ept. *37i From SHO/mb. Cell .... ,......,. ...... ~ br JvM 1tt. ew Of lo1t ltdlH ruby l be or~..,,. .. .,,. tot ..-.1 ... .,. "'*" tied ,ou rM)' be -,_, atOO'a Call tobeedla500.225Le Incl 11tltt Hice at'M. tieo-W1 or df.1¥t bY2'HfCere\.oolwtrlloenM wkndt 7't-1732 Of dlamondrtnQ.¥tic C M Ce1 Martt~l0 &4 11itJnOaltltodi9y'e.-.... pa11n' too much t~:OHSTAltyfM Patomtl37·7111ooMec:t &46-tl14~mom 2UISSantaCW.to-hOrna (714lt1f..l4tl 7~·211 1 •1210 a.42·TIOl.Alw9rd 6~ fladcoUMI 142 ... 71 142·5'1 I l lJ ' SllllTllY , \ .. y ~ Cout OAU~V PILOT/W~ay. Mey a. 1QM TODAY'S CROSSWORD PlJZZI E ,, Happefl a;•ln 8 Alaska r111er 10 Punish 14 Solo 15 "Take - -lromme· 16 GOifer's goal 17 Oevll 18 Police rank 20 -service ~2 Uselulness 23 Burnishing tool 24 Ships· ends 25 Apprehen- s1ve 28 Lew..grade 29 Runs 30 Caustic 35 Wrath 36 M ark of omission 37 -Jones 38 Skill 4 1 G<eek isle 43 Press 44 Su.b1ects 45 Tropltal lrutt var 48 Sparkle SO Make to lit 2 3 4 14 17 20 29 35 38 50 55 58 61 51 Add1tiono1 comments 55 Blossoms anew PMVIOUI PUZZLE SOL YEO 57 Wooded area 5~ "Waiting for the Robert .. 59 Noun ending 60 German city 6t E Indian we1gtits 62 Greek ' resistance 63 Relaxes DOWN 1 Tabula - 2 Vigor 3 Sheaths 4 Uninformed 5 Backs ou1 6 lnt1mated 7 Repent 8 Ruler 9 Increases 10 Young bovs 11 Kmd of pneumonia 12 Fatigued 13 S1rips 19 Bugle call var 2 1 Rad1at1on 5 dose 24 Classify 25Shthered 26 Pear part 27 Culmination 28 Hunted one 30 EdeA boy 31 Table scrap 32 Tile same Lat 33 Ballot 34 L.anolln sources 36 Bird 39 tmbioes 7 8 9 40 Clio's SISier 4 t Stereo sys 1emde111ce 42 Penitence 44 Asian fete 4~ Trims 46 An Astaire 47 Bakery item 48 Furze 49 M1slayi. 51 Hold off 52 Heave 53 Newt 54 DC solons 56 Miniature 11 12 13 --..,_,,__,, -- ct.ottiine INll1£4...,r..,,~1:;;~ ... ==.==111•••1· ... ~~,i.~1riu1t--~ '. .... _...., £e.; if=-~ wcf =;,: m=e •m ou.y ~ ......... .., ............. L~~~~~~Jf. ~o;..ruo;,':..dp.Ttump91(.._li00or n1111~C.M~ TIP ... ., • .it"!'&...,.."2yrt ..... •mTllT•llDI• Allcf~Mr.Cf.wfonl: beelottw.ea-1:..t00e '7e bOCiliip;;jM "°'9 '°'iiiiiied =~•~ ~;;. UC'OAoBmOHLY (714~ hm Oobetman. 1~ Y". SE 1t...,.wtnch1t1.lo mlBI .. __ u 11•1• s~·-• bl~. 1100. NO-nss : . UI '"'· MUO.'......-" ... , .. , --_..... 1xp1rl1nc• pr1terr1 . ,.....,. .--dJi ... t • "fop-.. ·-·~,.._ GOod .lob,.,.. MUST.,~~~~~~~ ........ MaM Dobttmen.. ... • Chelty 1 ton wn, 110. .. ....,, .. $3-.$10 ht. 97S.90e0 ' 1: n• ... _ bit, 175. call~ • Of'l"'CE RJAN. tit '*""9. M\/1'n OM9 DtAl213n1•MIACl:DU Piii• ~:::n~~ttbol~ The Loe•• Tlmel SO CAlll' DOG TAAi ::.t:' ~ Ule .• l4000. 5$ feo446 t1<)USE OF IMPORTl. lnO •· ·.. ClrwtatJon "'=' eutrenl• In home obedltnce 1teln· • 81 ,Otd Vttt !1IO I cyt, .:.:.,::.:...::;;;_;. ___ -rinnt &mllllT P /T :~::. =:~ty. ~ 1y '* pot1tton1 1vellabll Ing. RMt. rat ... 15~ off Top quai1ry Dupllc••o• White, pwr ~lbrft• M•Jor Newport 8e1ch amojter. Wiii train. In ~ ..... 1 A.a e thlt monthl 963--33.. O.tetner neo. 8" et 37K ml. "500. · 1200 'ff 1118. 47.&Ri ,,,..., company 11 toot<tng fof a Apply In J*110n: tltfd r~t•ll~ eem d 1 A·1 LawnmOW«, Hell & ,_., 952-4104 •"&.Jon en/r1. mint cond. 115.000 peraon to wo11t patt time 11a..2 Cowan St. 1rv1ne an hourly wege • gen-llJ!• ~· FV. -..a1~1 ...... obo.. MN190 u a pltklng atttndtntl --------ttOUI c~. Houre Ant!Ciiii 0: fui bed, f\Md ~~ m!I ",.,_;._ . .t.!_ IMI .82 Pcnche 9SI ~ maintenance pereon. RECEPTIONIST:' With 49"1·~. For more In-c*'*· n•t<Kll wood. ",.._ T bo an~522 or l~t opportunity tor Stereteri.1 8aclc91ounct rotmatlon. c:a1t 857-2381 s21s. Ca11 487-m 1 • • 117 f.iiMS. G:t Oi a; ~taiMm retl~ ptrt0n.) Woriclng 9ullctw/Oevel0pet exper. ext. 1204. Antique ROM Medallion ARTl8AN c..tom ~~· "*"'· l'ut!Y ,...tOted. Red II hC>un: Mon.--Frl. 1pm to helpful. Non•tmkr. Send Salee Pore•l•ln.Ntarly C0"1· ~= ~= ~9:.t'~~ on 1'9CS/off Wht Int. S IPd ....... ·~~ =i~~~:~ =rn; •. '0 s1:-ni: = llUEIYl&Ltl pletutt.Appralted.Call NewPrt0tgw731-87H l25·~;f~ '7FCfordlnl, .1.c re condltlona. Salary com-Port Beac:h. CA 92$80 NMd tntroetlc to da 241 -8221 ..., 497 -6832 O ~ • . tunroof. twdtOp. r-*'11 peoiatlon $4.25/hour ucnn11111 grow with ~9d !lillUffi. Jill .. ~H~~ : .. §ttl lid II• =/~~~:- Pl&aH contaC1 NOrm ...-company. Minimum 1 ~25' ila:""b; uoooeo. 54~1081 Thorpe 75g...7940 Avco PIT f2:30·5:30, Newport ye1r retall nurwy ex· tide wllce mak. QOld 4 = ~ '79 Attln Mlttln 2-clr adn, Liii. ;I Flna~lal ~. 520 Beach Mwioe>tr. AaJc for perlence. Full tlmne. YI'• old. S750. MO.l4!12 !etla ..... 1' I Burg. w/umlnt. 144,000. '1I n 1 Newport Center Drive, Pat 975-0208 Starting Hlary $800· • ~r;p;r."ten/tqc 833·6~27 H Newport Boh 92660. S1~ mo. Paid hofldaye Eatlte Sale: Stove. UMd 1 nuS126/&mort857·1«e1=-...-----r:ir"'ll'"& l.()W,,.._.. &734026 Equal Oppty Employer llllft /TYPIST & 11acatlon1; hoapttal In-month. co11 $500-Mll =:"-:-.......-----1 ;;:,w._. __ .,..~~ I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilActlve HI•• office on eurance available. Int•· S300 Have ealet allp & ' •, 178 2602. eurwoof, em/tm, ~ I• vlew1 by appointment pepera. CdM 780-1238 ttrtt 1231 iclnt oond 16900/080 ·~Kint cond, tow ~~ ~~ 11ng1e copy =-~~~:1~:oo'°' on~ll~n~Ul; 1 1 lft APPUIMll •«'' PanoeoniC NV !f25 a.w.53e3. IY9I 75·e.1sse ~ t1:;:s1':V:11 dlatrl~tlon tor Newport LES 957·1133 VCR. $475. 840-1128 '78 5301, auto, air. tow • · S.ach area. 3'.-\ to 4 RESTAURANT l&Ulln&IL Relrlg $25, waaher/dryet TVJohn'1Warehou1tSale c'*A !c' .. 1 ~~~~=· feJbw~ tl'IJ hou11. Sunday morning Crown Point Restaurant Womenawear,FIT&P/T. $100, 11•1559-6105 50t>eaut25"RCAXl100 111 ·ones 1d OWL. MW tng, Requires dependable ve-now hiring Sous <:Mt, Experienced only Salary Eva & Sun. digital eetl. IWlvel baM, '82 3205 S Pkg: blll/blll, e.ldnt t1450/B.O, mutt hlcte (Contact Mike) balcer. llne cook, atew· + commlsalon. Apply In new Mt warr8"'y. 'h price air, Alpine am/rm eua. MM 213/414-1307 557·8393 E.O E. ard. reoeMng Plf•On. Person. 245 '°'eat Ave. Refrigerator $150. Wlhr/ Free delivery. 846-1786 tunrool, Recatro ......... 1 V""" w/ new ~. dishwashers. broiler per-Laguna Bch. Ask ror Bob. Dryer S 135 ea. Olah· new Plflllla. S 12,800 Of u .,, conilder P8rliime, Gelato Clanic sol'I, guard mgr & prep washer S 100. Trash com· M~novox rm11 TV, beaUt aaaume IM. 780-3875 tran1. paint. Witt Ice Cream Store. COM per.ao.n Contlnental Sales Secretary/Cuetomer pactor $75. M6·5M8 60' cab $195, 857-1448 tr.cle + ~. 240-8131 kl helpful Pis Service xlnt opportunity · l '82 528E Aeootlblk, auto, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 11·3PM. 3 dys a week. :~lyn~t:Ci Dana· Dr wlthestabllshedco.,gen· Used Relr~·s S100-Sj~· Ptwtr 1Nt1 7 uaume $385/mo or ~Y 'llYW ... lm• 213-304-6812 Bid F Dana Pt . eral office eJCPlf req'd, All slies. lso buy re r g. fB h [yman atomlC 4 CYi at 117.950. 720~1 or ----~ PARTTIMEGEN.OFFICE g . Pfefer custC>fMr MrVlce Anderson Appl.841 Wllt exit cond . $8900'. evea552.,.488 loolcaaood.rurteaood A/P, Invoices, typing, flllng RESTAURANT background ~I not Cf'ltl-.19th St C.M. 6"46-5538 875•8669 or 5-40-4242 ID ,.,..121 S 15007ob0. 6'5-:f172 & 10 Key 548•34•3 Crown Point Restaurant cat Send brell r11Ume to Ctapattll Hll -__ now hiring Sous chef. Ad # 170, Deity Piiot. PO. _ 18' Lyman, motor need• 10 To ChOOlt From PAllT /TIME baker, line cook . slew-Box 1560. Costa Mesa, Commodore Mdl 20. New woric $875 873-8585 aft 5 leaae buyphont '72 Buv..1. ~-look, 1nrf, Super tMette, S2295obo. ard, receiving person, CA 92627 Sfwr $75, 857· 1448 INh •an T 14 Call for lmmad. quote Housecleaning Must be .u. GOOD dlshwashers, broiler per· r ' =.....-.41'-iiiiiipo.,,....,,.""' .... honest & reliable son. gua.rd mgr & prep u••n••H• UIV '" It .. -cUssiC SNOWBIRD >'ooN ""1l>Ol•a<J BMW ---'81 Rabbit Conv, wtitlblk PAY + BONUS. 966· 1300 -_.... JfflOn Continental Needed for exec: suite 1 yr old GolCNn Retriever. ~c:ellent cond. Reedy to lntr. 10 ml, 1 owner. gel P.P. 837-3348 PUT Tllft ~Ing exp helpful. Pia Free rent. ac:roN tram Fem. To good ho!M. ·aau. $800, ~75-5-405 cond. $7500, 573-3818 L-•• CO 111111 apply 24601 Dana Dr. OC Alrpcrt. 549-2185 9M·:l.J48 Erlct110n 28 ft Wh"I '81 Rab. Conv. 15K ml, llkt --Bldg F, Dana P1 • ,_. Start at $7.45, aeeklng 11 •1t••nUY •11 200 2 free adorable kittens. 5 steering. txtraa. tttiu..... nu, amlfm cua 1tereo. 5 H.S. grads, U.S. cltlzen1, Restaurant .svn • • weeks old, available In 2 4/18. Call ~3-3441 epd $7400. 875-0712 hard workers. Need auto flP'l 110. ST /lllTEIS Tyi>e 80. Grow with great, weeks. Blatk temai. and = lj!i 7011 15-40 Jamboree NB •82 Vanagon camper. Ilk• Call 3·6PM AppfY In person 10.2pm, ~np~~~~El~T~~~:· Ofangt male. 951•7798 -at -L 140-14" new. euto, AIC. AM/FM Hunt. 8ch 96"4-2890 Mon ·Fri no phone calls f it S 91 & carry bOet motor, S 1 2 ,. 0 0 THE BEACH HOUSE . U1RelndersAgls'~· ua lrt model 8600-12 lb, 1~ ....,,. naalln ca I I ' '., . P&IT/TllE 619 Sleepy Hollow Lane :00~'!:;'1;90};:: 621n beige sofa.dbte t;d h.p. new tn box. retail• ~Y~ 1•987-0338 PllllllUT Laguna Beach ewpo • r slpr. almost new '450. lg .$2.75 Mil l200. 1'94-5..154 • '83 GTI hl/perl !oeded, Excellent opporutunlty In a comfy chr S60, hand M · Salee-SeNfce-Leaalng allv/blut Int, low mt, pleasant working en-Restaurant SECRUUY carved stereo cab. INt liat, lltfflllbltll 11 lmrMC cond, $10,300. vlronment. Our Newport LORI'S llTCHEI 22"x8' w/Glrra~ red plyr lenlct 7020 far.,.M "81Mry &40-6438 Beach otfloe is looking has the toll0wlng Full/time departmental t8,?0~Fwilh1JerB·l ~ .. ~. W. llYDI £:w......i•~t Selectlonof N4IW ---------for m11ure, responllble .openings: role. Good typing & lele-· _........... ...,._, • .. _ bot <;A....,...,, Individuals to do interest· FOOD SERVICE workers phone sl<llls, entliuslastlC steal at S 1195: 499-279'1 WE clean your .,.,.1 • and Carefully Pfepalad Ing telephone work on for sandwich & salad attitude. Self-motivated. Davenport. 2 pc, l sh tom and replaoe lint<• 11 Uaed BMW'• alwaye In behalf of nattonal com· prep. F /T 5-1 :30pm pleaaant personality 10.x4', flowered la ' YOUI' $lip 1<46-0792 Stock e~~:s a Gm~. 118!1~k~~ WMA°rr~~·SSI WAITERS ~~~~~ol~~:~ $400. 642•7270 c. 9'£~ ~ng J~ 208!~~;.~!!!Ana Murdock. 545-5776. W11h car for wicker basket application: Mr Fuentes. .......... n.vtnlon 115,000. Cloted Sunday lunch service, 9-1pm ROBERT BEIN, WILLIAM I llf fllll'Tllf ....... (S,....l8) 7~"'· .,_,,8 •••111 Mon Fri Earn approx FROST & ASSOCIATES LES 957-8133 _____ .,_orvv __ "' __ ---------PART·TIME, Varied hours $17,; •250 •• --a.ry 1401 Quall St., Nwpl Bch ~ u bor vt ·•1 LARGE SELECTION OF ---------to Include early A.M ..,.... .. .....,. Kg s.z bad & beaut. all .. v-~ • ...,ar • ~ .. P S s pen 8 e ve ce sma dable· speak & read Eng· Rapldly growing O.C. 6 lobo. v --·-------VOLUME SALES .... d bl hi 1 ( 11 neat. clean & depen-• S 50 548-0139 boat 964_.800 anytime LNl llAll ID ~ truck, van ,. station llsh Apply 10·12noonor property mngmnt firm IUPW&ITll SE.RVICE&LEASING ·~ ~ weekends Must have de-All appllcantl must be IEO'Y /IEOEn brast headboard, Ilka nu wanted'°' new 40 power NEW & U ED BMW' I (flj) wagon) 10 aSS1st news· 2_.prrr 3077 s Harbor Making PIT Individual l111fatttlrtr'I S. 34' Power wtwat• & elec> 3870 N. Chetry Ave. • · • paper dealer In Irvine Blvd Santa An~ (HarbOf 8AM· 12PM Potenllil tor •11.11 trlc:al needed. Can U-LONG BEACH a area Must be depen-at C~rrl ) 979-0747 lull time within short • sume any month lhla (No.C.__,exlt.405) ltJp WHIM 5100 dable Contact Greg 809 term. Oppt'y to learn Save 50% & more on new 9507 ·-·T •c•s•--------1;:;:;;.;;A1;~.:;;;;;.;,;;;..._.;;.;;.;;.;; i;;,;;'"6..-..,;;,;;;,;,;.;;;,.,&-""""..... Hyde Monday thru Friday restaurants prop. mngmnt tech-top quality bed sett. all sum!"*. (805) 496-llH) 111-lllO •IWlll&'I SOUTH COlllTY YILllWllll "WIWILLllT IEllRlllU" •--------Hotel LAUNDRY: lull part time. between 9.30 and 10:30 COCKTAIL SERVERS nlques Call tor appt. Jo fully guar. Not 2nds or re-ltcycl11 OIZ "frad•lnt Welcome ,lm' ,E•SOIS Apply: 1209 W Hemlock am. only 642-4321 Exper prel High energy. Giibert 416-2911 bullls Twin set, Ju•t Ca-mp•..,,nolo comp. OPEN SEVEN DAYS HIRllG Outgoing, enthus1ast1t adults • part/lime even· mgs You must enJO) workmg with youti• and be a positive motivator n Way. Santa Ana. :==~===== l S69 95 •11 iz JI -·• Morning & Night Shll1s hard working, attractive ... s es 1va . equlppd dbl butted ractng SURF & SANO HOTEL llAlmUICI COOKS Free delivery 534•5080 bl.ke. New cond. $800.1-D-.-•• -.-.------.~.-.,.1=7 Laguna Beach Call Chet P-""'~·m all I"""""' of apt r~ PART /TllE Expenence pref STUDENTS Nice IOOklng sofa, love-642 '300 d•825 .. ,..,.. ,,,_. .... W .a .a 0 a.. BOOKKEEPER seat chair & ottoman -11 '71 DATSUN 240Z Cl'lemtn 497-4477 EOE pairs. previous employ-tsltlslJ 1., PIT. exper pref. In THI br~n Coat $565 se1i 78,000 mlle1 Call IOf an 1nter\11ew· ment Ill apt malnt or 9am to 5pm Driving, Apply In pers.o "· ~M·F s111t• •1u IOWll $275. 998·9338 Mizutani Super Seraph 10 $3500. 850-4593 11SEIPI SIPE•VISO• builder/customer service Fountain Valley & Hunt-2 5PM B 1 72 n • 1 d 23-24.. . " " " 'd 6 2 907 tO 4 t Beach t lty • · exter '· . We have openings tor spd, m nt con ·L • '74 260Z. $3500. Good 2nd shill. avg 30 hrs/wl< req 4 •4 • ~~w~~aper deh\l!./e~e-Beech 'Alvd, Hunt Bell bOys & girls between Real nice Melody Rose tbl appralMd $900~, $550 cond. Ask lor Scott Strong supervisory skills liable auto neoessary ,5 No phone calls please 12• 15 years old WOtklng & 4 ci'lra Coa1 new, $700, Eves 642·96 t 1 536-9184• ah 4:30 Engl./Span spealung pe< hour plus mileage restaurants evenings & Saturdaye. sell tor S300. 676-0514 Motobecane 26" Mlr-ot Hl-10213·1,a Volume S.-, s.vtca An<ll.Malng 1871 1 BMch Blvd. Huntl"i_I~ BMCtl SlJRF&SANDHOTEL IAUIER Apply 1n person at The Gourmet sandwich sales Earn money. trips & SACRIFICE Beaut. 01k lmacS150 °857-1448 · '77280Z.5apd,newpalnt. Ms McCullough 497 •44 71 THE DAILY PILOT is now Daily Piiot. 330 W Bay, Neat reliable car. A d•I· bonuses. Call bdrm, $400! Gorgeot11 · 19'•/brakes. Haa ll.lnroof (l1•)142-20H IOSHIS/IOST I Laguna Beacl'I EOE accepting applications Cos1a Mesa. See Mr terent concept 968-4777 Mr Rountree ~love seat! Solld oak. Mottrcyclt1/ $5800. Call 546-7326 Prestigious OraOQe Coun. --for pistrtct Managers 10 Clyde Barrow. EOE ICI· 7011 coffee tbl set, wall unit, ScHltrl 1011 '60 B210 2-dr. 5-apd, nu ly Mercedes Benz deal· lllEI OPElll5S super\llse newspaper Retail Mon -Fri 10am-3pm hope cheat. china cab•ll ·77 HONDA 750F Sur.-11111, 39mpg, wht/blu Int, WE CARE •••lls-4 erst11p needs "Hostess"l C 1673 3'392 tt 6PM carriers Must hav~ van, --I ICMT TUJIHS Din set. $200 543-2241 Spo.... 3800 ml. m...,.lnt $2895 650-1416 1mmed1atety Some al • a on wagon or ptek·up Good Pll (COH IOlHS) SALES CUHS " modellng exper1 ence wkdays,any1tme wk-ens salary, mileage allow-Ans serv exp pref Will Retail record. tape, & lwftoltMir41,trattn Sofa & loveseat w/match cond. Must seel $1500. '82 Datsun 200SX. A/C, preferred Outgomg per-Interior Oealon a~. company benefits tram Flex hrs. FT /PT vlefeo salei FIJll & part Full & part/time shllta. Wiii cl'lr & ottoman, brn tones. Craig 850-0575 amlfm stereo. Od cood. sonallt)' Apply.,, person FLAIR FOR OECORATING and bOnus opportunity Fashion Island 760-8305 time. Advancement po-train. C.M. 542·3013 xlnt cond. $275 974-2584 '77 YAMAHA LB80 runs S5600/obo. 5~0-8188 to 1001 Quail St. Nwpl Co-ordinate decors In of-Apply In person at Dally -1 t al Wiii t aln Apply in -Stiped couch/matchg chr. great. First $200 takes. btwn 6 & 5pm. w tor Pat Bill YATES VW-PORSCHE Bcri Jim Slemons Im· fices & home.J, will train, Piiot Circulation Office. PIX/RECEPT i ~~i:on: r · OPITHlll earthtonea S 150. 662· Incl. helmt 556-6729 lea•• l S ports/Resale Division pit fl t. Catt 71111848-9774 330 West Bey, Costa • • llUSIC PLUS TECllllCWI 2722 btwn 5"'"' '"30pm 833 9300 , ts . ~. ·n YAMAHA RO 400. 175 >C!, td cond., c ..... >,di I ,J 11 > I ij • ' 1 817 ·4800 49 l ·4S11 Hotel • for appointment Mesa Mondey thru Fri· 11 t Needed tor Newport .,. .. .,... day No phone calls e l l•Hlitl 2407 S Bristol. Santa Ana Beach Ophthamologllt. Wall hugger Recliner S 120, Total rblt eng Great cond. stereo, rown, J 1700. I'll FlllT IHI CURI Flextble hours. 5 day weell SURF & SAND HOTE;L t.aguna Beach. Call. llmtll E.O.E •"trlztl •n&tL SALES 631_4780 Mon-F1t 8•5 4 Din Chairs S25 ea. $750 OBO 979·8208 842-9612 Vtlft t Needed hand knitters tor I " " Comfortable Liv Rm QN'D 250 •73 1L E a:a AA .. Xie sweaters & vests. Full or NEVERAF~ Carpet & drapery ex-TEUPIOllESALES Cl'lalr s55. antlqu. High r~~E~ff~ELER" ... 11111111 · ....,lnterl~r-"s2ooo' pan ttme .Cell K & 0 Fine ltt.alo1l/Fr1t Of• perlence necessary in re-for MADD Benefit Show back Ch81r carved legs 6"" 4593 Red, 900 ml. $8990. Car new 87M73e . . ,. I~' J . t II & da•.,.,n _...._ter sales $1 10 All vlnt cond ~ oft"• Year. 67" n5t:.• Imports. ask for Klara. I Experd only Hrs· 9·6, -· • a .,...'V °"" C M location $4 & up ~ .... il"'V "" 786-2794 5 day week Call 646-39l6 --_ ·-·· 1 liberal commissions with Part/lime· day evening. 2553 Fordham Dr MOTORCYCLE RENTAL I '81 GL: 4 dr, orig. own., -----· _ • .f s.. -~+ draw Santa Ana · Costa Mesa 549-26'4 HONDA XR 500 1111 tow mJlel, Hk• new, tx· -----------------• ---• • -· No experience nee a.on -.78 Medical Receptionist. Eye l 3848Campus0rtve 558-3921(Micl'lelle) 754•1941 $50 a day Other atza traa.$11,700 . .....,....., Margie, 497_..77, EOE CA REER OPPORT U~ITI ES rtll ll \IU I'll OT. Oran;r. .. Count'\ • '""'"' • nmn1110111 r""''l'iP"'· ha•• 1ararl' uf full ""'I p1t1rl llm<' po,1tw n• t1\lt1lalilr \01 Ollf' nf thr follo"'trtl!. IC an npjrnrtun111 In ""'" with 1111 uul•l•nd11111 •tall. 1111rr .. ,1rd to 11r h1r\11tjl onh tltr hr•I "'lthHI 811''"11111;r. ondu•ln Doctor. part time, ex-Across from o c Airport Retail Jtwtlry 6214 available. 641·9826 Aa ... , Dtantit I ~j;~:;8~e8.f~~n~~~~d Newport Beach STORE CLERI T;~8cfo~s~& ~~s~k.Ml~~: 2.03 ct Marquis Diamond flltttr tall I 20 id d I M B S 964 6700 WS2 Nat. fancy champ.w; Medical Recept. Busy NB 217 A\len a e ar 7-Ele\len store needs full7 Hunt ch tan • color. GGM Cert. asking Liquidation, 5 amall RV 1. oHlce Seeks enthusiastic, San Clemente pan time clerks for all TELEPllOIE wo•1 $8500 760-2611. 2156 Newport Blvd. luck HIT ·\I)\""''"''(. • Out•ulr ..... ,... I 1.,,,f,,.d & llf'llul """ d1•vla1 1rrr11un oµrn1n1t,.• 101 rand1dlll'• "'1th 1"(1'f'rtrnt,. wn•I .. I'"""" I rad. rf'r(lrd "•l11t\ plu-. • un1n11-.-.uH1 Ill "'l't·"" Ill HI 1- -/• \11 '""''' It,.,"" uhlf' I l..rl. -t nlr' Ir• rl p<1•1l1t•11 '" '''I""' II• r nrrl'•'IH\ ( 1n1l1cl1o11r "'ill lw 1ru11\rtl I 11ll 11n11• houri• bl f P F I $5/h c M sh1lts No experience " Cos.ta Mesa. wttdya 9-5. persona e. pro person erson r day r necessary. we wtll train Up to S 10 hour Appl set· 2 lrg stone diamond ring, -...:....-----=eo- Busy phones. typing Sml construction 1hop Excellent company bane-ters for sales crew Salary appraised S 18,000. ma.Ice MOTOR HOME WANTED llll 'cl"'N'I 11ll ... llYUll Sharpl Muet Sefll e.t "r...onebll" off«I Cell '114· 498-2338. &-10 ...... 640·2023 needs mature lndtvtdual flts Including Ille & health + bonus. Mr S 957 -3046 res 0 n a b 1 e 0 r fer Private party paya c:Uh. SO~UTH Medical Rec•"'ttoriilt to handle lite acct'g, e<f1 I & ---859-4552 eves 7 141761-8350 ..,... typing. payroll etc Cell Insurance, er 1 un on Travel Agency Manager Costa Mesa Area FIT Call Btwn 4·6PM 540-6130 profit sharing. Immediate opening Min. 2 fllacLiat~ ••1 Trailtn~ cou1n 'll lllZ al llL 833-8917 9am·3pm Apply Ill person between 9 yrs exper. Dates 11 New· • VA f ao•.a Po s 1t1 o n av a i I ab I e, & 4pm at 717 Ca~ltal port Beach agency Table saw~ adlo arm saw, rift .._ lllZI 42,000 MILES, an extraal MEDICAL SECRn&RY Rotl'lchlld's Restaurant Drive, San Pedro I 548.n 42 14 inch band saw, f our Xmetb this Belt Offer OYef l20K and wttnd1 . For Newport Beach Apply in person 2407 ----Jointer, Belt dlak saw. eummer. Mu1t Mefltlotl "WIW'IJ.llT (714)494'r2338 Ophthamotog1st Exp E Coast Hwy, CdM Res· ROOFERS-REPAIR TRAVEL AGENT/2 yr Exp Drill press. Bench band Beautiful German Trailer 111--• Cl~!(}•• t31t. Resume to P 0 Box 2118 taurant exp. req'd Must be exp In shake, tile. FI T & PI T Computor exp. D S d c 11857 142... ~ u -Id & saw, rum an 11, a • " voiumes·•-,0 -....., Costa Mesa. CA 92626 1--co process compo-not requrlred .. 650· 1500 B h G 1 d 63n ,,9 .. " .,_ ~,,....., 172 El k!!!J0 eon·-lblt, s1t1on 6•2· 7222 _enc r n er. .,.., "" Aatt -.1Ctl/ And l.Mllng ....,.,.., ""'' O.OT,011 T•&VEL AIEIT 1•1 87 °-··h Bl d brown w /whl top. Mooe1s Mate11·ema1e PR SALES··llVHTtSIH " flliactllHHll 1 Parts IOlS 1 11 ....... 11 · $40001090. 49•-6154. I Can you Outside sales 661-9260 Be 11 t:::l Huntington Beech __ 7..,. ,...41 WE NEED NEW FACES Spare 3 hrs nightly? I Prestigious 20 year old ---aut ul custom ,... ...... I) Auto det•U equip: pol· (71•) 1•2·2000 ...... """"" I . fl 11 OR I \I • I lrrlo I ' f"'' t "P' , .. ,, •ui '''""f•H111111hd1tu•~ i'•U t •1111f" JIO"'lttUU l11puU1HK 1n,,il .uut ~t·ot'rHI t 1,.r~u1, •u h•HH'-t1ourh et busmess publlca11on TYPIST showcase P•r1 cond lanera. vaca. washer & 77 Sedan Oevtlle. Fully For placement'" mod ing Are you needs a tetephon«f' rep to I $1500/obo 720-1128 dryer $500. 548-9490 Maa•a 14 loadad, all xtraa, new 1 1obs '" Orange County Well groomed. 101n our sales team Wiii 60 WPM -~ $3 5 7•"9598 IEW YOH WEST dependable tram right nar1on Com· • liota1thtlt Carpet, lime grn. xlnl Aattl Wut.. 20 181 dlc Mazda, 5 a . air, tlr... 89 · ....,.. and sett motivated? "'v cond., 100 s yds $95 I I s ~~" '81 El ,.. __ d l 1 TalHt a••OJ pany II expanding with •St11tl1tlo1I ........... , • c ean. new.I res. ._.,or uv.a o. 0 m . I •11 Do you opportu~for advance-552-7094 eves -,._ • bat ofr. Can 549·9~8 White. lmmaculatel \l r ollt•t • .u•·• r rr11"1h ti• ,,.fnpu" ul i•U•i ·• 1 u1u1trftlt\• tu II• flt I'•'' lt_,tf• H Utft r• ... ,.,, pft·1...,,. • untt "' 11n1t '''''''' fr,.1n IU .! .t,.-h n• ,r11tl rP .. 11nu tu l'.1 t 't•·1•h1•n,.un .... Daily Pilai .,, . . . ~. ICI· v En1oy workmg with kids? ment Mon-Frl 8 30·5·30 •Purollas. tr4trl Flreprool 4 drawe< Sale IOf' vehlclt. 551~8285 '82 Mazda, 625 A/C, S 11,250. 847-6660 It you can answer YES Hourly rate & cotnmlsston File, brass hendlft & Ioele WI Ill Cruise control, en r1. NANNY wanted Brit or Phone 646•7021 • company beneflta Call NEVER A FEE $450 Call 548--0910 NABERS I I 2 30-6pm Mon thru Fri Barbara, 646•1623 I CLUI 0111 AM/FM cua1 xlnt cond, Irish trained or gir sages Frige works greal $7~ • 22.000 ml ~8500 obo. 4 & 6 Inquire 752-0700 SALES Beaut Crsr Bike S75 aaso All TIUOll 55 t_.436 CADILLAC IURSIH AIDES P/TOfflot A11i1tHt Experienced Furnlture1 I bll<e parts 642-3450 .-tr-... n__,le=--a-1-.,,...,...14~5 LARGEST SELECTION All SHIFTS • For small • Afternoon hours Call Sales needeo Also ex· -MAGIC ISLAND 1A70 280Sl of late model, low mileage Convalescent hospital 10 Karen 644-6800 8 30-5 • pertenced Carpet ancJ 3848 Campus Orl\le M b hi f I ., C ... 111..,.., In .,~·t ... ~ E -Drapery sales Full Time Across from 0 C Airport em era P or 18 1 Lo mt. 2-<>WT\9(, complete _, -~ •-11 Laguna Beach llCellent QA/QC very exp retiree Ask tor Mwcta 581•2121 Newport Beach Make olfe.-642..a.53 MN. rec. Mini! 75M 203 Callfornla1S.uttoday1 1ncen1111e progr1m Apply ok On-call msp '"your _ ___ SCM Copier, S75, Sec-5•0 1880 1n person between 9-3. area Resume tntertek. Sales 211 A\len1da del Mar 1 tarlal desk 575• 2 ChalM 1978 300 CO. 70,000 ml. • ~ 450 Glenneyre St 930 Indian Park. Rolling I ll!llOllE'S San Clemente LHlhlf Int. Good Con· 26oo Harbor Blvd. Laguna Beach Hills, CA 90274 • (new) Sl25 ea .. Ratin dltlon.$17,500.575""811 COSTA MESA illll~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' -- -Udo boutique now inter· TYPIST/llOT table bue $40, Bombe •n =::r::::---i ml"9 • I e11un comoL v1ewmg for e11p'd sales • chest $135, mirror $10 ... JH'hl PIOO/•fr l.f ti Equal OpporluMy Employer Newspaper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! I AGES 11-14 EAR~ lJ> TO $75.00 PER WEEK Wt llOW h•~' I~ OOfllll\CS IOI JOlllll Uffl btlYtr\ to wcurr rradl'n tor Tllf Ounc• Co1\I 011ty Piiot Our '".u sl.Jrt at J 30 I> m and ,wo1k until 8 JO pm w"•day\ On S..turday. •f wort a It• mo1t hour\ You w1tl nrn many trl(l1 ind p11zn aJon& 1r1tll urn1111 your own monty ' tlltf, 1\ no dtllftrinc or cottf<t111n 1n•ol•~ 1H 1ou ''' 1ntrrnlf'd l)IUW "" Mr hrt (714) 548-7058 FIT. OC. w/audlo cass 6•6-8280 (6·9amt6-9pm) lge ,.., gla111q. $50, Ow WI llY GOOOCONO. 873-8224 J.-;;:A~-.. -...,.;;w.w minimum wage to 11ert Shari:. person needed to lamp $55. 631·219 t USED CARS & TRUCKS Apply at Boolts on Tape Read the claslffled ads for work In fast paced New· -COME IN OR CALL fOR 729 Farid, Costa Mesi the belt deals in apart· I port Beach real estate of. SCRAM-LETS Fiii &PPUllAL $48·5525 aak for Biii ment rentals 642·5678 flee Must have excellent --1 typ1no 115wpm1 , die· •Ns•ns corm1er-0tU110 I --,-• 1 A I tephone skills Word pro-" nU\ ~ l ~al.ly I 01 ······ cesslng exp helpful r.--t ·Dtlll 18211BEACHBLVD. Salerled position a;:;;:~ tiUNTINOTON SEACH FOREIGN Ml ..... l 1 Mf-llJ1 PART TIME ~1otor Hour.-Availobl .. :\'ewport Beach 8rt>8. lhn•c hour! prr do . Earn opprox. 600 pf>r month. <:all J I :00 to t :OO 1''1 . \ "" for Rrur .. .mi-I«>~. CIRCOLATION UEPT fi42 -432 l OOE ORANGE CO AST OAll Y PILO T 11 W ffAV "1 • (USIA M(';A C.A Q7"7" 1 I" , ... ••M l 1tl tJf CtttHt hUY Walt ltn't 11 Ironic department WI WAIT Tiii 633•2gou A '9<:81 chamber ol oom· OWi --•••r mere• epone.oted a con· .... ..-. UROLOGIST .t .. t concerning the In. Aon ~ Ottice Nurse NB Exp genulty and 1Uperi0tlty Ol preferred X·Ray, Cyeto. our country The tlr11 Vasectomy etc S..4-8722 PflJe wu 1 FOREIGN or 7~9-1 104 eve1 cat ·t Wallrawweiter, hMI· SPA· aori'il>lt. 1111-eM· · 11t/ho11, PIT dye Tr11 1a1ned, ·aiiUaz1bo, OeekltlQ . Am•goa R11t1urant coveta. 1760 ...U102 842 278 C M _ TRs..SO poctc.c computet WELDEA Apply 7am only w/prlnltr & aoftware •• ..:m;;.""""ftl'li'.-.•I MecGREGOR YACHTS 110V ltt $150. lAdlel' t&31 Plaoentta, C M golf ctube. t>aig & .aoMI. Jt•• Wall.. ll S 1 100 Formal dfn. rm Nl, pecen, w/2·24" 11111, . Mei;X11rn110yruxp MOO H0-3$e1 aft. Tpm w/handlc9Wad & ltdef1y W I Reau"'41 1dnt ref SID /hr ;llU"ll"".RU:;:.;~~~~ Steve 987·35~ artman or 'PRACTICAL Nu;;;-;. i..w1a Vouton Luogag& perlene.d W/tldltly llV. Good Condition. WID Pa) f '" local refa &30·2088 C.Uh 780-elM_-==~ ·--- t STADIUM llOtnlAC S TA O UM 714-315-1919 soi...s.n .. .,.,tt .._, s~ .., , ..... ,..., .. .... WEDNESDAY. MAY 2. 1984 Cout Supervisors have hired a Newport Beach firm to promote Ontario Inter- national Airport 8s an alternative to John Wayne./A3 Five Orange Coast stu- dents receive National Merit Scholarships./ A3 California Newsman Jerry Qunphy decides not to return to his 11 p.m. broadcast. JM Nation Vietnam-era veterans are gratified by their wel- come as they return home after duty In Grenada and Lebanon. /Al World Chinese Great Leap For- ward kllled more people than Hitler's Holocaust. /A10 4 7 paasengers and crew afe rescued after their helicopter Is forced to land, Jn the North Sea./ AS Rome Air pollution poses a haz- ard to fitness converts and may slow down Olympic athletes. /82 ·>:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Food Create your own fiesta to celebrate Cinco de Mayo. /C1 Originally vrewed as a short-run phenomenon, plain wrap products are here to stay. /CS Sports Lakers take a command- ing 2-0 lead over Dallas with seconJ;l straight romp, 11~ 1101, at the Forum.f..D1 Huntington Beach High stuns Ocean View In baseball to knock the Seahawks out of a share · of first place.I D2 Entertainment The director and two stars of the hit movie "Some Like It Hot" remi- nisce on the film's 25th annlversary.183 ·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·!·!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•:-!•!·!·!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!·~ Bualneu Graduates of the Katherine Gibbs Sec- retarial School of Boston gather In Costa Mesa to toast old times.JBS oJ INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Buslnea Callfomta Newl Claulfled Com lea Croaaword Death Notled Food • Help Youreelf Home ·Horoecope In the Service Ann Landtr• Mutual Fur.de NatlonalNew. Opinion. POltc. Log Pubflc Notlcea Spona Stock Marketa Tetevtalon Theater• W•thet World News ____.. B4 A3 95"'6 A4 08-8 84 08 06 C1·10 ..82. \ 81-2 07 A8 92 0e A4 A10 A3 De 01-5 87 83 83 A4 'Minimal' contamination poses no risk to public, nuclear plant officials say By DAVID BISHOP ud ANDREA ADELSON A leaking valve caused a I S-minutc radiation leak from lbe San Onofre nuclear power plant early t~y but the amount of contammatlon ap- parently posed no risk to the public, authorities said. The. low-level leak of fission pses from a waste treatment compressor was spotted by plant operators at l : 10 a.m. when they noted an increase in radiation detected by monitors. Nu- clear Regulatory Commission spokesman Gregory Yuhas said this morning. A Newport Beach woman was crlticall;r lnjaied In tiiU three-car accident on Paclftc Cout Bt&hway near the Santa Ana Rl•er In Newport Tueeday Dleht.Jilary Fry. 38, la In the Preliminary ftndinp show about I 07 Curies escaped into the at· mosl>here, Yuhas said. .. The consequences of the release are minimal," he sa.id, and is about 100 times less than the canh's own natural radiation. The c:.ontamination did not disrupt the plant's operat.ion nor was anyone injured, said Dave Barron, a spokes- man for Southern California Edison, co-owners of the plapt. A ~n Ocmente city offical said he was informed of the l'ldia.t.ion leak by an Edison offical at 3:27 a.m., two hours afteT lbe leak and ao hour after the NRC had been notified.. San Ocmentc City Man.ager Georte CarvaUlo said he was told the low- lcvel leak_ posed no threat to the City of San Ocmentc and s11rrounding areas. "I don't think there's any ~rob­ ," he said. "h 's a m. inor incident tained within tne planL" Accordin& Lo Yuhas. since San A Newport Beach 'woman. bolpi- talized in intensive care at Fouaaain VallC}'.Commu2i Hospilal,isunder invcs1.1&1t1on -or llicn drivina folJowi~ a t collision on -Pacific ~st Highway.at the Su1L Ana River bridae about 11 :30 p.m. ... Tuesday nigbt. · The 38-year-old woman. M'1y fry, was driving her l 98~tsun 280Z southbound-on Pacific eoast Hi&b- way when she veered into the o~ posite lane, sideswiping a north- bound 1976 °'everolct Nova driven by Timothy Allen fry, 26, ofNcwpon ...,,..,....., ..... c...... lntenal•e care ward at P'oantaln Valley Com•11Dlt;r · Boepltal, while two othera ln•ol•ed were treated for leeeer lnjutlee and·a foa.rth peraon was~-(Pleue Me CJlA811/A2) Ex-Marine saves trucker's life on I-5 Driver's le s severed below knees; UCI doctors will try to re',lttach one From sea.ff ud wire reports The Irvine worker said truck driver A z2.year-old former Marine used Jim Martinez·s crushed legs were his milita~ training Tuesday to tie blc;edina profusely when. he looked tourniquets on a truck driver whose -inside the toppled truck. He said he legs were severed in a spectacular took ofT his belt and fashioned a accident on the Santa Ana Freeway tourniquet to stop the bleeding. that coated the highway with toxic Maninez was taken to UC Irvine chemicals and snarled traffic Medical Center in Orange where tbroueJlout Orange and Los Angeles doctors wctt attempting to reattach counues. one of hi s legs. which were both "The doctors attribute the saving of severed j ust below tt}e knees. A his life to the young man." said hospital spokesm.an ~id. the. ~os Orange Countv fire Battalion Chief Angeles truck dnver as an cnttcal Lee Chamberiain of Daniel Mon-condition. tanez's quick actions. • The 11 :08 a.m. acc·ident on the Montanez, an employee at Inter-Santa Ana Freeway_ al Western Av- national Frabricators in Irvine said enue in Buena Park closed all south- he was one of the first peoplc._aHhc-·bound lanes until 6:30 p.m .. The scene of the accident. which forced truck spilled 60 pounds of sodium the California Highway Patrol to bromate. a. S~-gallon drum of po~en­ closc off the highway's southbound ttally ex plosive hydrogen peroxide, lanes for seven hours. (Pleue 11ee 1-5 CRASH/ A::ll Pair save woman from rape suspect By STEVE MARBLE Of .... Dllltr Net ..... A pair of Costa Mesa men have been credited with rescui ng a 24-year- old woman who was kidnapped, raped and savagely beaten during an ordeal that began late Tuesday at a Newport Beach nightspot. Randal Crawford. 28, and Malcolm Scott. 24, also helped lead police to the alleged attacker, who was hunted down and arrested in the city of Orange. Oary Lee Manhaler. a 32-year-old unemployed model and executive recruiter. was arrested on suspacaon of attempted murder, kidnap. rape and assault with a deadly weapon. Manhaler. a bachelor with no apparent past criminal record. is bcang held today on $25,000 bail at Newport Beach City Jail. police said the spree of violence bcian 111 10:30 p.m. as the uniden- tillcd woman ~as leaving Bobby McGee's, a Pacific Coast Highway restaurant in Newpon Beach. MarthaJerstruck up a conversation with the woman. then suddenl y slugged her in the face and dragged her to hi s car, according to Newpon Beach Sgt. Paul Henisey. The man reponedly pulled the woman an to the front seat of his car and sped off. • "As he drove she screamed and he hit her several more times in the face with an unknown object." Henisey said. He said the woman slipped into unconsciousness following the :;cnes of blows. The attacker parked his car on Cabtsllo Street, a residential avenue off Newport Boulevard an Costa Mesa. and pulled th e woman into the back seat of ha s car. police said. "She was slipping in and out of consciousness at that point." said the detective. He said the assailant forced the woman to perform sexual acts. The woman'scnes for help brought Crawford and Scott. who live on Cabrillo. running to the curbside where they allegedly saw ManhaJcr on top of th e woman. (Pleue eee SAMARJTAN8/A2) Anez· Marine aa•ecl the life of the 4rl9er of thla o•ertamed truck yeeterday when he applied a tourniquet to the trucker'• maimed le&•· . Amphitheater neighbors ~wailin 'abou·t Willie Nelson By KAREN E. KLEIN OflM~"°'' .... If there wasn't enough wailing going on at the Willie (Nelson) and Waylon (Jennings) concen at the Pacific Amphitheatre Tuesday night, there was plenty of it an the resadentaal neighborhoods surrounding the con- ce n facility~ according to residents. "There,wasn't any ~oang to sleep around here last night.' Karen Millar said this morning. The count!) music concen went on unlll about 11 .15 p.m .. she said. "1th the loudest pan ~om ang 1n tht' last 45 minutes of the concert. Millar. whose husband. Ru ss. 1s president of a homeowners· group called the Concerned C11izens of Cos\a Mesa. said she had her house. on a block darectl) across from the amphitheater, completely closed. "The sound permeated through a very lightly closed house. l even had towels stuffed under the doors and an the cracks of the windows ... she said. She said she dad not know whether the group's no1sc-mon1tonng equip- ment had recorded a"' '1olat1ons of the 50-dccibel noise · lamlt dunng Tuesday's concert. ang firm hired b} the Cll} of Costa Mesa to conduct amphitheater no1~ tests The rnncert noise reached 1.6 dcc1hcl~ over the limit dunna fi ve minutes of the concen, 4.6 decabcls abo' e the hmit for 15 minutesand 7.6 decibels over the threshold during a JO.minute period. aCC'ordang to Costa Mesa Cit) i\ttome) Tom Wood. ~ ood said the Cit) filed a threc- (ount misdemeanor no1~ complaint against the owners of the amph1theate.r sn Harbor Municipal Coon Tucsda). Gou~ty plaDs to close loophole in campaign contr•bution law But at a heaH-metal concert Satur- day. the county's legal limit \loaS violated thrtt tames. according to Gordon Bnckcn and Associates. the Santa Ana-based acoustical engineer- The cit) plaf\S to continue c1t101 the amphitheater. Wood wd, when noise e'cccds ttw hmat 1n College Park and Mesa dcl Mar, the ncigh- (Pleue .ee COlfCSRT / A2) The Oranae County Grand Jury thinks the county's political-reform TIN CUP ordinance may hav•a hole in it. . But County Counsel Adrian Kuyper believes a proposed measure supplementing the TIN C'UP ordi· nancc will be sufficient to case those concerns . The proposed ordananc.:. bclng circulated 10 dran form. would Cl0$C a loo{>hole arandJUf'Orl tumbled opon dunnuheir rtview of a proposal that would' have permitted the Irvine Co to own and operate landfill near the City of IN1ne The loophole an vol vc'I the own tr of a corporation ma ma a campaaJn contribuuon to county afflCtftl J JEFF ADLER NEW S BACKGROUND under the 11178 TIN C'UP (Time I Now. Clean Up Poli11cs) ordinance. Under a kc) provision of the measurt', 1 corporation 1 deemed a maj9r campa1an contnbutor and mus' d1sclo5C 111 status if the corpor- ~uon ·~ Ownt't mcrn 11 l)Olilletll roll· tribuuon to a candidate exceeding $1 .403 over four years. Howc,er. the law as VBJUC about the status of the owner of .a corpor· at1on when the corporation makes the contribution. Kuyper said the ordt- nance docs not require that the owner be deemed a ma;or contnbutor. The measure proh1b1ts supcrv150rs from votina on matters afTccuna 1nd1v1duals. or firm that have bttn dccla~ maJor campaian con- tnbuton by donatan.a more than the $1 ,403 threshold When grand JUtol"s 1nvestipt~ neiot11t1on~ brtwten the count) 's laraest landowner and the rounty o"cr the landfill. they disco' ctt'd (Pleue 11ee CAJIPAJQHfA2) .~ -•• AS* Otange Cout OAJLY PILOTIW9dneeday, May 2. 19~ SAN DIEGO (AP) -Bankrupt ftnancier J. David "Jerry" Dominclli and two assoclltes. arrested over lbe weekend io Mtami, were in federal prison today awaitinJ. c;oun appear- ances in Domanelh's bankruptcy fraud case. ' Dominelli, founder and president of the J. David &Co. currency trading firm , was to ao before the judge who had found hun m contempt and issued no-1>ail arrest warrants after he fled ta the Caribbean in defiance of a coun order. His personal secretary, Debra Han. and her husband. computer specialist CaJman Hart. were to jOID Dom1Delh in a separate appearance before a fcdcraJ magistrate for a bond hcanng. DomlDelh 1s accused ofbankruptC} fraud and conspiracy. while the Harts. who accompanied ham on his flight to the Caribbean island of Montserrat last month, are accused of aidina and abcttina him. Authorities have btcp tryina to locate an estimated SJ 12 m1ll1on ID investors' funds m1ssina from Domi- netli's failed firm . Trans Atlantic Bankcorp of New- port Beach. with S l S million invested an J.David. is DominclWs ·largest creditor. U.S. marshals brought the trio on a commercial flight late Tuesday from Miami to the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center in San Di~o. where Dom1nelh was "processed hke an} other inrrate." Associate Warden Pen) Lyson said in a statement. Dominell1 was to appear this morning before U.S. District Judge J. Lav.rence Irving 10 answer a c1v1l contempt action. The charge stems from.Domanclli's failure 10 cooperate with Louis Mcu.ier. the bankruptcy trustee overseeina th~ Jiquidlt~n of the financier's collapsed investment empire. Later. Dominelli and the Hans were 10 ao before U.S. Magistrate Ronald McKee for a bond hearina. The cross-country trip from Miami, where the three were arrested Salurday after they were refused funher sanctuary in the Caribbean, had been shrouded in secrecy amid re~rts that Dominelli and 'Other pnncipals in the case had received anonymous death threats. Dominelli fled to the Caribbean three weeks after Irving declared J. Dav1d & Co. bankrupt on March 21 . After a two-week stay on lhe British crown colony of Montserrat. he was expelled bv the island's govemment ONOFRE LEAK .•. F rom Al San Onofre n uclear powe r plant contained "~lnor" radiation leakage today. Office of Emergenc:r en aces an Sacramento. The NRC"s office in Washington, D.C. heard about the leak at 2: 13 a.m .. he said. The leak "was above the alarm set point, but 1t wa~ not a big catastrophe," Yuhas said. The malfuct1oning 'ah c was on a stand-by compressor which wasn't running. The compressor suctions off air around the nuclear power units l-5CRASH •.. F r om Al and 600 pounds of an un1den11fied white powedcr. Cham berlaan said. Fifteen people -13 paramedics. one ambulance dnver and the driver of a car -were exposed to the fum es. ·All were treated and washed down at the scene and did not require funher medical treatment. Due to the toxic chemicals. the UCI Medical Center had warned all Or- ange County hospitals to prepare for possible v1ct1ms, but their services weren't needed. "We were klDd of fonunate be- cause the crash was down in what we call the hole -a pan of the frecwa> that's actuall y in a trench," count ) fire Capt. Dave Myers said. "We didn't have the wind to blow that stuff around." California Highway Pat rol spokes- and funnels an:r discharge into storage tanks. Contaminants are al- lowed to decay in the tanks for up to 40 days, he said. S1m1lar repons of a radaoactivt' release ha ve happened three or four times in the past four years, Caraval ho recalled. The pl i clad not shut down for an) per· of time, Barron said, and no p nt employees were con- man Rick Stevens said traffic was backed up into Los Angeles and presented one of the worst traffic sn arls in Orange County in years. Witnesses claimed that a-Ford LTD reponedl}1 caused the accident by pulling off a shoulder of the highway in front of the truck dmer. according to Stevens. ~art1nez swerved to miss the car, fl1p~d the truck and spilled the vehicle s toxi c cargo. Martinez was extnca ted by firc- fishters from the truck registered 10 Vivion-Chemical Co. of Vernon. During a helicopter flight to the hospital, he spoke with paramedics. Chamberlain said. Thednverofthe Ford.1dent1fiedas Peter Yiu. 58. of Los Angeles. was not cited m the accident. taminated by the radiation. Southern California Edison Co. owns 75 percent of the three-unit nuclear facility, which is five miles south of San ae·ffiente. The · San D1t'go Gas and Electric Co. owns 20 percent and the cities of Anaheim and Riverside own the remaining interests. Edison is the project man- ager and the Bechtel Power Corp. 1s the major contractor and arcl\1tect- engmeer. ' CONCERT .•. From Al borhoods adjacent to the 18. 700-seat concen facility on the Orange Count:r Fairgrounds. Wood said the cit y did not issue citations for noise v1ola11ons at the amphhheater last summer because it was the facility's first season of operation. An May 16 arraignment has been set for the city's complaint and a representative of the amphitheater's ownership group, Ned-West Inc .• of Los Angeles. will be required lo appear in coun to enter a pica. Wood said. Bncken and Associates also con- ducted noise tests Tuesday night. Wood said, but the results of those tests were not available this morning. The next amphitheater event is not scheduled until June 23. CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION LOOPHOLE ... From Al Supervisor Bruce Nestande was one of two superv1so~ designated to represent the hoard ID the com-pli~tcd matter T hey al!>o discovered that Nestande had recc1.,,ed S 1.800 from the Donald L Bren Co. ID 1982 and 1983: a S 1.000 pcr~onal contribution from Bren 1n I 98~ and S 1.325 from the Irvine Co. since I 981 Bren holdY 87 percent of Irvine ( n stock. The problem aro\c because while Bren filed a major donor statement on behal( of the Donald L Bren Co .. he failed ' to d1s<.:l o'lc ht'> relat1onsh1p with the Irvine ( o -e\en though the two compan1e\ Jrl' unaffiliated e>.cept through ham If Bren·s relat1on":.h1p with the vanous rnmpanaes had hccn d1<1- closed. Ncstande would ha'e been barred not onh from 'tll1ng on matter~ affecting 1hc In ine ( o .. bu t also from scn.1ng on the negotiating comm1nee concerning thl' landfills As It turned out. howe' er. follow- ing months of meetings "'1th the .Just Call 642-6086 Delly Pilot Oetlvery I• Gu•rentffd ~ ..,_.yf H, IV! """"'. ''"' J l'fS• "I () f'f" A t•I ... 1 i ""', -~"' '" • r,... """•tltlM•!J count} ove~the landfill issue, the Irvine Co. dr: pped its proposal and the matter ever was brought before the Board or Su pen 1sors The Grand Jury took the matter to the D1stnct Attorney's office. In - vestigators determined that Bren had allegedly\ JOla ted the law b) failing to disclose ht!> rclat10nsh1p with the In inc Co. But even though Bren was an telhn1cal v1olat1on of the law 11 was determined he had not cnm1nally attempted or intentionally avoided the disclosure.-requirement Thl' In inc C o. chief has since agreed to suppl} an affidavit saying his Donald L Bren ( o contnbut1on had noting to do v.1th Ir vine Co interests. Also. hc 1s to file a major donor statcmcn1 disclosing h1~ 11onsh1p "-Ith the lf'\1ne Co . l'\en th ough the la"' techn1call) docs not require such a d1S<.losure. The proposed supplemental ordi- nance as designed to pr('vent a repeat of such a s1tua11on It would require the owner of a corporation \C fi le a major donor statement when a cor- porate contnbu11on 1s made to a count\ candidate. Gra.nd Jury Foreman Ellen Wilcox said such an ordinance would close the problem loophole. She also point- ed out that Bren is not the on ly polat1call} active individual in the cou nt) who is a princi pal in more than one corporation. When the measure as brought before the Board ofSuperv1sors it will be structured as a supplemental ordinance rather than an amendment to the original TIN CU P leg1slat1on because the act was adopted as the result of a count-. 1ni11at1vc and cannot be changed except b) the voters. Kuyper explained. "We·re not changmg. d1min1shing or altering TIN CU P. This can be regarded as a nev. ordinance." the Board of Supervisors chief legal counsel said. The proposed ordinance as e'- pected to be considered b~ super- visors so metime dunng the next se veral weekc; What do )OU like-about the Daily Pilot7 Whal don't you like~ Call the number at lefl and' your message-wlll be recorde-d, transcribed and de-livered to the approprllHe editor. " ,.. The same 24·hour answerln~ servi<'e may be used lo record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letten column mHt Include their name and telt>phooe number for verlfi<'ation No d rculatlon calls, please. Tell u what's on yoar mind. l~RANGE COAST Clrculetlon 714/142-4333 ClaHlfled ad vertlelog 714/M2·5171 All other d~ertment• 142-4321 Daily Pilat H. L Schwartz Ill Publisher .. MAIN OFFICE ChHy Oowatlby t di tor and A c;c;1s1 ..ir t to !111• !--ut11 c.t11•r AoMmery Churchmen \.ontrollN ClrculeUon Te .. phone• "'"' )t,41~ Ill t, .... ~. ...,~ '""''""'"' ......... lt•ph•n F. CarHo Qlorla A. Pow•ra r•u '"' (f At)"'''" •r 1J .. i 11' ..... "''' Donald L. Wllllamt ? .. ,. 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"-Tllurl-oey et 7 43 e m end Mii '9elfl II 10 31 pm Temps ,_ t:."'r LllbClodl t.hlnpNol Mlenll 8Mcll .. !iO II 62 78 &7 81 S uRr REPORT Albany ='que ,._. ~ Allenle AllMlllc Oly Aue tin NI lA 55 37 75 51 72 52 41 31 71 43 711 51 .. 53 15 70 MIOlnd-Ocl.u 90 Eztended 711 &I em 1-3 3.4 :µ 3-4 3-4 2-3 1·3 s-°" ectlon llOUll>-... OIMCTIOM ,.,""°°' ,.. fall ""' , .. , ... ,.., Doctor says dental victim probably 'over-medicated' Physician restarted h eart of girl. 13, after s urgery a t Dr . Protopappas· cli nic By JEFF ADLER OtlMOellyNottuft The emergency room physician who successfully restarted a 13-year- old gjrrs heart hours after she had been anesthetized during surgery at Dr. Tony Protopappas' Costa Mesa dental clinic testified Tuesday that over-med1ca11on may have induced cardiac and respiratory arrest in the girl. Dr. Michael McCormack. an emergency room ph ys1c1an at " Costa Mesan · stabbed in family fight A Costa Mesa man suffered mul- tiple stab wounds while trying to break up a fight between his identical twin brother and a younger brother at the Aloha Palms Trailer Park in Costa Mesa. police said today. Richard A. Smith, 28, was treated Tuesday night at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach and released after betn' stabbed with a large carpet layers knife in the stomach. arm and shoulder, police said. His 24-year-old brother, Dale. was arrested at the residence. The victim's twin brother. Robert, was being sought today after allegedly fleeing the scene. officers said. Police said they found the v1ct1m ly1Dg wounded inside the coach when they amved at tht' park. which in the past year h;is been the scene of a hom1c1de. shooting and a child molest1ng incident. according to of- fice rs. One of the windows had been smashed in the melee aod consider- able damage was reported to the intenor of the coach. Police did not explain why the v1c11m. acting as the peace keeper. was attacked. Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo, told an Orange Coun- ty Superior Counjury it is his opinion that Patricia Cra ven "may have sustained cardiac and respiratory arrest secondary to over-medi- cation." Under questioning by Deputy Dis- trict Attorney James Clonit1$er. McConnack sajd it wa$ his medical "opinion" rather than ·'diagnosis" that over-medication caused the girl's fatal medical complications because no laboratory analysis was available From Al .. Scott copied down th~ license plate number and ran back inside to call the police," a police spokesman CRASH ••. From Al Beach. according to Officer Howard Whitmore of the California Highway Patrol. Whitmore said the two people were not related despite sharing the same last name and hometown. After bitting the Nova, Fry con- tinued in the opposite lane, hitting the bridge railing. Her car bounced ofTthe bridge railing. crashing into a north- bound 1984 Honda Accord driven Gary Swieso. 28. of Fountain Valley. Mary Fry suffered major facial injuries and was taken to the Foun- talD VaJley hospital. Swtcso suffered a broken nose and was tam to Hoag Memorial Hospital. A passenger ID his car. Ella Robcns of Fountain Valley, suffered a broken ann and facial cuts and was taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Whit- more said. Timothy Fry escaped unhurt. Whitemore said he did not know 1f any· of the injured peopl~ were wearing seat belts. to document the quant1t1es of medi- cation Craven had recei ved during dental surgery. But McCormack said he disagrttd with another doctor's diagnosis that gauz.e packing that had lodged io the girl's throat caused her breathing and hean to stop. "My reason for disaveeing is that I saw no evidence of airway obstruc- tion when I retrieved it (the two-inch square guazc)." McCormack testi- fied. Craven. one of three female pa-,.. uents Protopappas is charged with killing. died 11 days after she was admitted to the hospital's emergency room on Feb. 8. 1983. said. ··Crawford ran back into the house and got a baseball bat. .. Crawford reportedly returned to the car and. wa ving the bat, caJlcd for the attacker to get out of the car. "Get out of here. I ha ve a gun," the man reportedly called out to Crawford. Crawford. however. boldly opentd the car door and pulled the wounded woman to safety as the attacker scrambled into the driver's seat and drove off. "These two fellows obviously did an outstand1Dgjob, .. Hcniscy said. Using the license plate number Scott had supplied police, officers tracked down and arrested Martha.ler at a residence m Orange where he was staying with friends. Police said Marthaler's home address as in Wh it- tler. Police said the man didn't put up a fight at the ume of his arrest. "Actually, he wasn't gi ven lime to," commented one officer. The woman was taken to Hoaa Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach where she was admitted for treatment. Officials said she sus· tained major injunes to her face. Police don't know what moti vated the attack. ondee/s poce 00'-p'-t-1u.lS 0\1.d jU~OAS ' 5asRioo io 5i1 a Libe. Si~~ )f oi a~ .Age . 11g2 TllUt~ .AU'e., CWestclitJb P~a 650-2105 ---___ ... _ ·Cout Supervisors have hired a Newport Beach firm to promote Ontario Inter- national Airport as an alternative to John ·. Wayne./A3 Five Orange Coast stu- dents receive National Merit Scholarshlps:-/-a3 c-.lfomla Newsman Jerry Dunphy decides not to return to his 11 p.m. broadcast. /A4 Nation Vietnam-era veterans are gratified by their wel- come as they return home after duty In "' Grenada and Lebanon. /Al World Chinese Great Leap.For- war~ killed more people than Hltler's}iolocaust. /A10 ( 4 7 passengers and crew are rescued after their helicopter Is forced to land In the North Sea./ AS Home Air pollution poses a haz- ard to fitness converts and may slow down Olympic athletes. /82 Food «reate your own fiesta to celebrate Cinco de Mayo. /C1 Originally viewed as a short-run phenomenon, plain wrap products are here to stay. /C5 !:·:·:::::::::::·:·:·=~=~=~=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Sports Lakers take a command- ing 2-0 lead over Dallas with second straight romp, 117-101 , at the Forum./01 Huntington Beach High stuns Ocean View In baseball to knock the Seahawks out of a share of first place.02 Entertainment The director and two stars of the hit movie "Some Like It Hot" remi- nisce on the film's 25th Bualneu Graduates of the Katherine Gibbs Sec- retarial Schoo of Boston gather In Costa Mesa to toast old tlme~./85 INDEX ~ridge.. Bulletln Board "Business CaJlfornla News Classlfled Com lea Croaawprd Death Notices Food Help Yourself HOIM Hor~ Tn the S«\llc:e· Ann Landen Mutual Funds N•tlonat News Opinion Potlce Log Public Notk:lea Sport a Stock Marketa Tetevtllon Thea ten Weathef' World News -f • . 64 A3 8 5-6 A4 06-8 84 08 oe C1-10 82 8 1-2 0 7 A8 82 88 A4 A10 A3 oe 01-6 87 83 83 A2 A4 Smashup on Cout Highway A Newport Beach, woman wu crldcally injured lo tbJa. three:..car accident on Pacific Cout lftChway near the Santa Ana Rl•er In 1'ewport Tueeday nt&bt. llary Fry, 38, la lo the I lntenal•e care ward at Foa.ntaln Valley Com.m1llllty Boepltal, while two othen ln•ol•ed were treated for le.er . lnjarle9 and a fourth penon wu anlnjared. No injuries ln 'minor incident' at nuclear plant_ b By DAVID BISHOP ........ Ceo •• fl?t Radia tion Jeaked bridly from tbe San Onofre nuclear power plant arty Jhis.moming but the conwniutioa .. Was contained witbi.a die ..... , boundaries and did DOC dilnlpl die operation, a utility ~.- There were DO iD.iuria' liil"fdlC plant's operation wu not ctilruJleil, the sookeaman said this · ASan Clemente city~.:. be was informed of the radiatioa leak by • Southern Califorina E.cliloD oftic:al at 3:27 u n. and told t.be low-levd leak PoSed DO threat 10 me city of'San Clemcncund-sunouodiaa llftllL "I .don't think tbeR's any prob- lem ... San O emeote City Mauler Georac Carvalho said. .. it's a minor incident contained within the plant. .. Similar reporu of a radioactive release have happened three or four times in the put four yean, (Pl ..... OllOFD/A.21 Ex-Marine saves trucker's life oii 1-5 Driver's legs severed below knees : UCI doctors will try to reattach one From stall ud wire reports A 22-year-old form.er Marine used his military training T uesday to tic a tourniquet on a truck driver whose legs were severed in a spect aular accidem on the Santa Ana Freeway that coated the highway wnh toxic chemicals and snarled traffic thro u$hout Orange and Los Angeles counties. "T he doctors attribute the saving of his life to the young man." said Orange County_ fire Ba ttalion Chief Lee Chamberlai~ of Daniel Mon- tanez's quick actions. Montanez, an employee at Inte r- national Frabricators in Irvine, said he was one of the first people at the scene of the accident. which forced the Cillifomla Highway Patrol to close off the highway's southbound la nes for seven hours. The Irvine worker said truck drive~ J im Martinez's crushed lep wert-· bleeding profusely when he looked inside the toppled-truck. He said be took off his belt· and fashioned a tourniquet to stop the bleeding. Maninez was taken to UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange where doctors were atte mpting to reattach one of his legs, which we re both severed just below the knees. A hospital spokesman said the Los Angeles truck. driver ~ in critical condition. The I I :08 a.m. accident on the Santa Ana Freeway at Western Av- e nue in Buena Pl\_rk closed all south· bound lanes until 6:30 p.m.. T he truck spilled 60 pounds of sodium bromate. a 55-gallon d rum of poten- tially explosive hydrogen peroxide. (Pleue He 1-5 CRASH/A2) Pair thwart rape, kidnap; man held By STEVE MARBLt: Of IM o.11J "°' 1""9 • and drove toward Costa Mesa. "As he drove he hit her (face) repeatedly with an unknown object," a police spokesman said. Anez-Marine ea•ed the life of the drl'f'er of tbla O'f'ertamed truck yaterday when be applied a tourniquet to the trucker•• maimed teca. A pair of Costa Mesa men have been credited with rescuing a 24-year- old woman who was kidnapped , raped and and savagely beaten during an ordeal that began late Tuesday at a Newport Beach nightspot. Randal Crawfo rd, 28. and Malcolm Scott, 24. also helped lead police to the alleged assailant who was hunted down and arrested in the city of Orange. The all eged attacker parked his car on Cabrillo Street, a residential avenue off Newpon Boulevard. Officers said the woman screams for help brought Crawford and Scott running to the curbside where they alleged ly saw Manhaler on to p of the woman in the back seat of his car. Amphitheater neighbors wailin; about Willie Nelson Gary Lee Manhaler, a 32-ycar-old unemployed model and executive recruiter. was arrested on suspicion o f kidnap. rape and assault with a dead I} weapon. He is being held today on $25.000 bail at Orange County Jail. Police said the spree of violence began at 10:30 p.m. as the uniden- tified woman was lea ving Bobby McGee's, a Pacific Coast H1ghwa)' restaurant . Marthaler. police alleged. grabbed the woman. slugged her in the face and dragged her to his car. The man reportedly pulled her inside his car "Scott co pied down the license plate number and ran back inside 10 call the police.'' an officer explained . "Crawford ran back into the house a nd got a baseball bat. .. Crawford reportedly returned to the car and, waving the bat. called for the attacker to get out of the car. Instead. the assailant turned and told Crawford thatne had a guh and told him get away. police alleged. Police officers said Crawford bold- ly opened the car door and pulled the wounded woman to safety as the attacker scrambled into the d river's seat and drove off. By KAREN E. KLEIN Of tN Delly l'llo4 lleff If there wasn·1 enough wailing going on at the Wallie (Nelson) and Waylon (Jennings) concen at the Pacifi c Amph1thc;itre Tucsda) night. there was plent}' of1t an the rcs1dent1al neighborhoods surround•"! the con- cert fac1ht}'. according to residents. "Ttiefe wasn't an> going to sleep around here last night." K3ren Millar said this morning The countr) music concen went on until about 11.15 p.m .. she o;a 1d. with the loudest part coming an the last 45 minutes of the concert. . . ·County plans to close loophole ~l~~??.~!gri con~rib~~~~~.~d~~'"• thinks the county's political-reform S 1.403 over four ytar... TIN CUP ordinance may have a hole However. the law l'i vague about in it J the status of the owner of 1 corpor- Bu'-County-Counicl Adrian £ff_ auoo wbcn theconx>rotton makes thr Kuyper believes a propo9Cd mca urc conlnou\19n KU}'~T sud th~ordl- supplementing the T IN CUP ord1-ADLER nancc don not require that the owner nance will be ufficicnt to c~ tho be dttmed a m"or contnbutor. concerns. The measure proh1bais superv1son> T he propo$Cd ordan1ncc, being from votan on matters afTccuna circulated an draft form. wo uld close a 1nd1v1dual or firms that h:ive been loo{>hole annd~urors tumbled upon dcclartd ma.Jor campa1an con- dunnt tht'lt rcvtcw of a proposal that under the I V78 TIN C'UP (Tame Is tnbutdrs by donattna more than the would have permitted the lrvmc Co. Now, Clean Up Politics) ordttwtee SI ,403 th~$hold. to own and o pctJlc landfill near the Under a key provision of the When araod Juron tn\C1t1pted City of Irvine. mca u~. a corporation is deemed a ncaouauons between the .county's T he loophole involve the owner of m8Jor campaign contnbutor and larac t landowner and the count> a coryor~tion mak•na a campa1 n muat disclose at status if the corpor-over t and fill. they d1\COvcrcd contribution to ~ county official at1on's owner makes a polttkal con-( ee eee CAMPAIGN/ A2) Millar. whose husband. Russ. as president of a homeowners· gro up called the Concerned C1t1zcns of Costa Mesa. 531d she had her house. on a block directly across from the amphitheater. completcl> closed .. The sound permeated through a ver) ughth closed house I e\en had towels stuffed under the doors and in the cracks of the v. indows:· she said She sald she did not knov.-v.-hcther the group's no1se-mon11on ng tqu1p- ment had recorded an> v1olauons of the 50-decibel noise hm1t d unng Tuesday's conccn . But at a heavy-metal concert Satur- da)'. the-count)'.'s legal hm1t was violated three times. according to Gordon Brickcn and Associates. the Santa Ana-based acoustical engineer- . . . . mg firm hrred by the ett)' of Costa Mesa to conduct amphitheater noise tests. T he concen noise reached 1.6 decibels over the limit durina five minutes of the concert. 4.6 decibels above the It mat for 15 minutesand7 .6 decibels over the threshold durina 1 30-manutc pcnod. according lo Costa "'1csa Cu~ Attome}" Tom Wood. Wood said the city filed a three- count misdemeanor noise complaint against the owners of the amphitheater 1n Harbor Mun1opal Coun Tuesday The Cl t y plans to continuecitJ n& the amphitheater. Wood wd.. wben noise exettds the limit in c°"* Park and Mesa del Mar. the neiab- (Pleue ~ CONCSltT/ A.2) I /' /' ,/ ... ~Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednaday, May 2, 19&4 ~inancier, aide& to a~ar. in San J)iego federal court ·~ SAN DIEOO (AP) -Bankrupt financier J. David "Jerry .. Dominclli and two anoctatn, arrested over the ~kend in M11ml, were in federal prison toda)' awaiti~ coun appear- ances in Dominelh's bankruptcy fraud case. . Dominctli, founder and president ofthcJ. David & Co. currency trad1n1 finn, was to go bef'Orc the judge who had found him in contempt and issued no-bail arrest warrants af\cr he fled to the Caribbean in defiance of a court order. His perso~al secretary, Debra Han. and her husband. comp~ter spec1ahst Calman Hart, were to JOan Dominelh in a separate appearance before a federal maabtrate for a bond hearing. Dominelli isaccused ofbank..ruptcy fraud and conspiracy, while the Ha,rts, who accompanied ham on h1~ fli&ht to lbe Canbbeao 11.land of Montstrrat last month, arc acxuted o( aidma and abettina him Authorities have been ll'Yina to locate an et.ti mated S 112 million in investors' funds missina from Domi· nelli's failed firm. Trans Atlantic Bankoorp of New- port Beach, with$ IS million invested in J.Dav1d, is Dominelli's largest creditor. • U.S. mar~hals bro1i1ght the tno on a commercial night late Tuesday from Miami to the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center in San Dae&o. where Domanell1 wa~ "processed h'ke any other inmate," Associate Warden Perry Lyson said in a statement. b0m1nelh was to appear this morning before U.S. 01stnct Judge J. Lawrence Irving to answer a c1v1I 'tontempt action. The cl\arae stems ff001 Oominctb•s failure to cooperate' with Louis MelllCr, the bankruptcy trustee overteein& 1he liquidation of the financier•• collapeed investment empire. Later. Dominelli and the Harts were to ao before U.S. Maaistratc RonaJd McKee for a bond hearina. The cross-country trip fro m - Miami, where the three were arrested Saturday after they were refuted further sanctuary in the Caribbean) had bccn.)Shrouded in secrecy amio rc~rts that Dominelli and other pnnc1pal; in the case had received anonymous death threats. Dominellt Oed to the Caribbean three weeks aner Irving declared J. David & Co. bankrupt on Man:h 21 . After a two-week stay on the British crown colony of Montserrat, he was expelled bv the island's government San Onofre .nuclear power plant co!ltaintd ''minor'· ra~tion leakage tod.aJ. Caravalho recalled. A "very bnef. unplanned release of . radiation .. into the atmosphere CX.· curred according to Edison spokes- man Dave Barron. Barron said a "minor malfunction·· in a piece of equipment al the facility caused the rad1oact1ve relea~ at I 14 a.m. but he was unable to prov1dl' detatled information on what equip- ment functioned 1mproperl) or ho" I-5CRASH ... P'romAl and 600 pounds of an un1denttlied white powcder, <?hamberlain i.a1d. Fifteen peoplt -13 paramedics, one ambulance dnver and the dnvcr of a car-were exposed 1q the fumes All were treated and wasWcd down at the scene and did no1 require further medical treatment. Due to the toxic chemicals, the UCI Medical Center had warned all Or· ange Coun1 y hospitals to prepare for possible v1ct1ms. but their services weren't needed. "We were kind of fortunate be- cause the crash was down in what we call the hole - a pan of the freeway that's actually in a trench," count) fire Capt Dave Myers ~1d. ··wi.: didn't have the wind to blow that stuO around." California Highway Patrol spokes· much rad1at1on wai. rclca~d. "Thoc,e calculations arc being made now:· Barron c,a1d . A spokesman for th~ Nuclear Regufat'of). ( omm1\s1on was not 1mmed1a1el) available for comment after calls were placed tcr the com- m1ss1on\ San Francisco office The plant did not ~hut down for any pcnod of time. Barron said, and no plant employees were con- man Rick Stevens $a1d traffic was backed up into Los Angeles and presented one of the worst traffic snarls 1n Orange County in )Ca rs Witnesses claimed that a Ford LTD reportedly caused the accident b) pulling off a shoulder of the highway in front of the truck dnvl'r. according to Stevens. Martinez swerved to mass the car, flapped the trucynd spilled the vehicle's toxic cargo. Martinez was extncated b)' fire- fiihtcrs from the truck registered 10 V1v1on Chemical Co. of Vernon Dunng a helicopter fl1g.ht to the hospital. he spoke with paramedics. C hamberlain !klld. Thednverofthe Ford, 1dent1fiedas Peter Yiu. 58. of Los Angeles, was not c11ed in the accident taminatcd by the radiation. Southern California Edison Co. owns 75 percent of the three-unit nuclear facility, which 1s five miles south of San Clemente. The San Diego Gas and Electric-Co. owns 20 percent and the cities of Anaheim and Ri verside own the remaining 1n1erests. Edison is the prOJCCt man- ager and the Bechtel Power Corp. 1s th<' maJor contractor and architect· engineer. CONCERT ••. From Al borhoods adjacent to the 18', 700.scat concen fac1hty on the Orange County Fairgrounds. Wood ~1d the city dad not issue citations for noise '1olat1ons at the amphitheater last surnmer because it was the facility's first season of operation. An May 16 arra~nment has been set for the ci ty's complaint and a reprcsentatt' e uf the amphitheater's owne~hlD group. Ned-West Inc .. of Los Angeles. will be required to appear in coun 10.enter a plea. Wood .-.aid. Bm·kcn and Associates also con- ducted noise tests Tuesday nag.ht , Wood \a1d. but the results of those tests were not available this morning. The next amphitheater event is not scheduled until June 23. CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION LOOPHOLE .. ; From Al Superv1~r Bruce Nestande was one of two supervisors designated to represent the board in the com- plicated matter The) aho discovered 0 1hat Ne\tande had received S 1.800 from the Donald L Bren ( o. 1n 1982 and 1983. a S I .(XX> personal contnbut1on from Bren 1n 1982. and S 1,325 from the Irvine Co 'iincc 1981 . Bren holds X7 pcru.·n t of Irvine< o stock fhc problem aro'IC hccause "'h1lc Bren filed a major donor ~tatemcnl on behalf of lhl' Donald L. Bren ( o . hl· failed 10 d1s<.lo\l' h1<i relat1onsh1p v.11h 1he Irvine C •> -even though the two compan1C'., are unaffiliated eitll'pt through ham. If Br('n'<, rcla11on.,h1p with tht \ Jnou\ u1mpan1e'i had been dis· clo\ed 'c~tande "<>uld have hcrn harred not onl) from \Olmg on mailer\ affecting lhl' In inc Co bu1 al\(1 from ~n ing on the negotiating wmm111ee lonn:rn1ng th<· landfill'>. A\ 11 turned nut h<>"'l'\er fullow· 1ng month\ •>f mt·c11ng\ w11h th~· Just Call 642-6086 D•llJ Piiot Detlvet} la Guaranteed ..-~-,., . ,..,.,., .. ' "Cit ',.,,, r 14' I .ti.,. tr ~ ",. • t•' .... '' ~"" ,..,. °"' .. !'W' -~..a <.:ount) over the landfill issue the trvine Co. dropped its propo~I and 1 he mattcr neHr wa!> brought ll<:for(' the Board of5upcrv1sors r he ( irand Jurv took thc mailer It> the D1!>tm:t Attorncy"s office In· vcsugators·determined that Bren had allcgedl) "1ola1ed the law b)' failing lu di~lose h1<. relat1unsh1p w1ttl the Irvine Co But even though Bren wa\ in technical v1olat1un of the law 11 wa' determined he had nol tnm1nally attempted or 1ntcnt1onall) avo1d('d the d1sclo\ure requirement The In inc < o chief hao, '>Ince agreed to '>Uppl) an aOida..,11 saying his Donald L Bren ( o t0ntnhut1on had noung w du With In inc ( o interest\ A.lw he 1\ 11> file a ma1or donor <,lalc~nt d1..cl11<iing his rcla- t1onsh1p with the In.inc ( o. e'l'n though the la"' tethn1tall)' dot.'\ nol require \Ul ha d1')(. lo\ure Tht' propo\ed ~upplcmtntal ordi- nance 1\ dn1gnc·d 111 pre\l'OI a repeat of '>Ulh a s1tuat1on. It would rl·~um· thC' owner ol a u>rporat1on to lilt' a major donor !>tatcment v. hen a cor· poratl" con1n9ut1on 1s made to a count> candidate. · (irand Jury Foreman Ellen Wilcox ~1d \uch an ordinance would close the problem loophole. She also point· ed out that Bren 1s not the only po.ltt1cally active 1nd1 v1dual 1n the county who I!> a pnnc1pal in more than ont• corporation. When the measure 1s brought hcforc the Board ofSupcrv1i.ori. 1t will be •.trul tu red as,. a supplemental ord1nam:c rather than an amendment to the original TIN CU P legislation bclau~· the act was adopted cts the re\ult ol a rnuntr-1n1t1at1ve and lannot he ('hanged except by the \OtC'r\. "u}pcr c>.plained ··we·re not changmg. d1m1ntsh1fl3 or altering flN CUP. This can be regarded a" a new ordinance." the Hoard ol ~uperv1sors chief legal counsel ..aid. The propo\Cd ordinance 1~ ex· pt'ctcd to be considered h) super· '1\ors 'i<>met1mc dunng the next \cveral wt·ek<. What do you likt• l&boul tbt' Oall) Pilot'! What don't you llke? Call tbe numbl'r at left and your messagt wlll he rt>«'orded, transcribed and dellvtred to Ole appropriate editor. The samr 24 hour aoswrrlna 11nvkt may b~ und to record lttttn to the editor on any LoplC'. Contributors to our Ltllen column mul baclu.de tbd.r name and telt'pbone number for vulfkatlon No circulation calls. plu1e. Tell us what"• on your mind. < lfiANGr C.O AS T Daily Pilat H. l . Schwertz llt p Jl >l15hp1 Clrcul•tlon 7141142-4333 Clettln.d 8dver11alng 7141142-5171 All other d•p•r1ment• 142-4321 MAIN OFFICI! t h t r•4; ~ t1 lJ'f"" r A --. Rf• l!>ii() ~t ¥-(.;A ''"'" ""'' • •81 Or-o-Cou• P\.~ v.l!'i4•1 ~ ... , tlf'Jf~ ~Hlfll()fl~ ._,., .,_. ~tlfft'! Of A,.,.,.ftM ...... " '"'""' ,.,., be •1•0JCf'1 .. """" i'C« ... ~ ChHJ Dow•llby Aoaem•rJ Churchm•n Cur,tr 1111•1 ~ t O'lt Y'llQ"'! •"""""'' Clrcul•tJon T elepftonee "" °'""""en.~··· .,... ..,~ l ... ,,.N .... ..__ { [ f]llOI ,JI'" A , I .t ' 10 ltlf' Pqt1t t11>1 Stephen F Caruo r I • PA~ tQ•" Donald L. Wllllam1 I •I I ( ,, ,, f/flf f ,.,_ .. ,II'' VOL. n. NO. 123 ,. Coa•tal ...... • 40 =--D u '° .. ..,_. 12 11 ,.,_ ~ ,__, w:i:, Tlllll• ... 17 .. ::.. ~II)::';·--· ..... .. ;t ..... ..... '°" ... ·-·· 17 '~·-..,.,~ ........ .,.... .. 40 .. . ~Yf 13 " ''°"' ltOiM ~ 10 Ille .... o.,.r .. c 111.n llcwder Md IMll 10 ,..._ -in.. ONrt.lon,8.C. It .... IJlllt ICMNMC ..,. = ~WV ... 43 ~.c 71 63 ::,:;;i, ~'!:."it;'o •fool ~ 62 '4 ---In~-.. ~-. 17 H .............. .,. ... .. 41 1 10 t ... .:::c. tttd :w= low ~ t1 ,, Olel*llld llllf\ 1M OaMnllll.t.C. ts " "*"~-. QOll#nllULOtl 13 II °"""' ...... = ~ c-d.H.H ta ~ _....,....,,.,_ ...... Dlllmwl't WQl1b. M " tlOn IO::'""' l«d9r lot nof1hweel ~ 12 41 ..,.,. tol01lno19Md-•to• '*"* ~ .. 40 IMI Locet guett IO M •'*9 -polnj 0..Moll-. u 47 -IOlll*OI• '"' wllfl lllOfll MCI mom-°*°" 17 :u W.., low Claude llld vwiealie NtltcblCM ~ 41 ao !IPMO II II t~ .. 52 Tidea ,.,,.., 13 .. Fereo 53 21 ,......,,. IO lO TOOA'I Qrend ...... 13 H "'-'cl low 40lpm 11 GreMF ... 13 ,. 9-lclhlgh 10 n PA u ~o.HC 74 .. =Cl .. 42' '""'"°"" .. 43 ,,, .. ._ 4U•m 06 Honolual ea n :=,:::r_ 120S•m 33 ~!Oii ,. 12 • 31 pm 2 1 ~ ... 45 ~ ...... 10"'3 55 Jt1C1reon,M1 .. 12 Jecllt.-wllle ... .. ..,,.. MU locMy '1 131 pm., n.. ~-· 60 37 Thuredty 91 t 02 • m ...0 Nit~ •I ~Olly ... .. , ,.pm L.MV .. a to Moon .... et t H p.111 , AMI Thut.-Uttle "°°" ,. 55 .. 61 _., 91 1 43 am "'°Mia '991119' 10:31 ~ p..111. .. 60 LWbooll ., 52 Tempa MlmpN9 78 67 S uRF R£PO RT Mler'1I 8Mdl 11 7t ~ to st .. L4I LOCATIOll em DeMCTIOM AIOeny 66 37 Eztended Hutlllnglon IMdl 1·3 ,..,.poot =-que 75 51 Al-.Hiity ,H9wpon ,... , .. 71 62 40th8tr•.~ 3-4 '"' """*""• 49 39 22nd Street, Newport 3.4 ,.., I.At• == ~ rnotnlng IOw 1e10oe w.cig. ,.. ''* ~ 71 43 Cllouelt IW W"""-Wllh AllentJI 7t 67 LIOuN 8Nd'I 2.J ,..,. Allllnllc Ctty .. &3 111g111 r~om lt'9 IOw 70. 81 !fie Ban ci.m.nt. 1-3 ,., ~ IO low 809 ln*ld ..-Y. w.-1411'11P' ...... s ..... dlf.Cll()n ~th· AuM.,, 16 70 <>-ni0"4 tows mid 40t IO'tlllcl 50t - Doctor says dental victim probably 'over-medicated' Physicia n resta rted heart of girl._! 3, _ after s urgery a t Dr. Protopa ppas' clinic high-volume dental clime on 19th Street in Costa Mesa. 1s being tncd on three counts of second-degree murder Jn the patients' deaths. The pros- / ecutor alleges neghgence and the improper adm inistration of general anesthesia caused the three women to die. By JEFF A.OLER Of Ille.,..,,.... ..... The emergency room physician who successfully restarted a 13-ycar- old girl's heart hours after she had been ane~thetized during surgery at Dr. Tonr. Protopappas' Costa Mesa dental c in1c testified Tuesday that over-medication may have induced cardiac and respiratory arrest an the girl. Dr. Michael McCormack. an e mergency room phys1c1an at CostaMesan stabbed in f l!-mily fight A Costa Mesa man suffered mul- tiple st.ab wounds whale trying to break up a fig.ht between his identical twin brother and a younger brother at the Aloha Palms Trailer Park in Cost.a Mesa. police said today. Richard A. Smith, 28, was treated Tuesday night at Hoag Memorial 'Hospital in Newport Beach and released after beinf stabbed with a large. carpet layer s knife in the stomach. arm and shoulder, police said. His 24-year-old brother. Dale. was arrested at the residence. The victim's twin brother. Robert. was being sought toda}' after allegedly fleeing the scene. officers said. Pohce said they found the victim lying wounded inside the coach when they amved at the park., which in the past year has been the scene of a hom1c1de. shooting and a child molesting incident. according to o f· fi cers O ne of the windows had been smashed in the melee and consider· able damage was rcpartcd to the an tenor of the coach. Po llce did not explain why the v1et1m . acting as the peace keeper. was attacked. Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo, told an Orange Coun· ty Superior Court jury it is his opinion that Patricia C raven "may have sustained cardiac and respiratory arrest secondary to .over-med1· cation." Under questioning by Deputy Dis- trict Attorney James CloninJer. McCormack said it was has medical "opinion" rather 1han "d1agnos1s .. tt)at over-med1cat1on caused the girl's fatal medical compl1cat1ons becau~ no laboratory analysis was available to document the quant1t1cs of med1· cation Craven had received during dental surgery. But McCormack said he disagreed with another doctor's d1agnos1s that gauze paclUog that had lodged in the girl's throat caused her breathing and heart to stop. "My reason for d1sa&rct1ng 1s that I saw no evidence of airway obstruc- tion when I retrieved It (the two-inch square guaze)." McCormack testa· fied. Craven. one of three female pa- tients Protopappas 1s charged with killing, died I I days afier she was admitted to the hospital's emergency room on Feb. 8, 1983. . Protopappas, who ran a successful McCormack said he was in radio contact with Orange County Fire Department paramedics who were summoned when Craven stopped ~~e~th ing shortly after 7 ~!!l~_Feb. When the girl amved at the hospital b} ambulance. McCormack said he continued to treat the girl. having been informed she had been anesthetized dunng dental surgery earhcr that day. There was a ··susp1cton that (cardiac) arrest could have been related to med1cat1on ... lt created the concern that there was perhaps a scdauve overdose. possibly narcotic, but not necessarily." the physician !>31d of the assumptions he used 1n treaung Craven. ' Earlier Tuesday. a former dental assistant at the clinic. Jeri Brodhead, told Jurors she was "very fnf,ltened" when patient Cathryn Jones li"5 and fingernails turned blue and sbe stop- ped breathing during treatment c.n Feb. 11 , 1983. Coast resfd~nts join Learning Center board. At the annual meeung of the Exploratory Lcam1nR Center earlier this month, Nancy Hanes. Bob How- ard and Tom Peckinpaugh, all of Corona Del Mar, Tam Carlyle of Laguna Beach.·and Ann Mound and Catherine Th yen of Costa Mesa were named to the center's board of trustees. The Exploratory Learning Center in Santa Ana is involved in restoring the historic Kellogg House and de· veloping new programs for third through sixth graders in conJunct1on with the Junior League of Newport Beach and the Newpan-Mesa School District. The merger of the center with the fapcnence Center and the federal government'!; approval of a 98-year lease. signed by the the Santa Ana U nified School D1stnct and the center. were also announced. The Experience Center. fonnerly located in Irvine. is modeled after the ploratorium 1n Sao.Francisco and ncludes scientific programs and hi bits onde e/~ poce (JOA pAt·te.tKS QK(i jUl\IO~ 5asRi~ to 511 a LiQe. S~ }lot a~ .Age. 11g2 I/t.Ui~ .Au-e.,. CWestclibb P[aza 650-2105 I ........ \