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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-06 - Orange Coast Pilot·, f t ---- ' ( PRIMARY ELECTIQN. RESIJLTS """' 1 7 7 .... Democrat Herl ...... 205 deiegatOI Mondale. 72 deleil•tM Jackeon .. 29 delegatM Republican 119agon .......... 233,404 40tla Diatrlct (R1 -ham ........... 73.751 HIOH75 40th DiatrlctlD) S8th Diatrlct (D) 70tla Diatrtct (D) . Br-d .......... 30,081 ,.-. ........ 31,e.48 White ............... 12,352 St91>henlon ....... 7,36e -.................. 9,081 Thorpe ............... 8,853 Hunt .................... 3,594 42nd Dlatrlct (R) Lungren ........... 29,834 0or ................. 17,8Q8 Jacobeon ........... 6,831 ,Schmitz .............. 3,089 LOWM WEDNE SDAY JUNE 6 1984 Coast Firefighters quell two blazes at Mlle Square #'arkJ.A3 California A dying lather relies on his faith to keep him alive · long enough to aee his County voters overwftelminglyreject penny increase by nearly 3-1 margin By JEFF ADLER ' OI .. °""'........ ..; ..._ ~ition A---'the penny-trans- portatJon sales tax increase - crubed head-on Tuesday with Or- anae County Voters who resoundini- ly defeated' the much..-ballyboocd tax hike by 1 2'h-to-1 margin. - Volin& overwhelmingly against the tax, more than 70 percent of primary .. 72Dd Dlatrlct (DJ -,l ' 3Stll Dlatrtct (R) Irvine R1llln11t1 ......... 17 ,268 ... -.......... 88,275 ........................... 7 Gse.t. ........... 11.21• . c.nnon ............ T1 .aa Strollle ............. 16,11113 -. .. .-......... 111,flf Dutcher ............ 31,oae Superior Ct. 11 llarllor Cout Enright ...... : .... 178,073 -.............. : 30,W St-.1 ............ 22.204 c-............. 11;M7 Eng6retean .... 139,814 Hundley ............. 8, 191 s.ntla .... : ......... 59,045 • . . ! curr 1111111- ORAN GE COUN TY CA LIFOR N IA 25 CEN "· votcn rejected the measure while only 29. 7 pen::ent favored the penny- on-thc-dollar tax.increase and an u- sociatcd peckqc of county road and transit improvements. The t..Uot ~position won only 136, 761 .. yes volt:S comparea to 324;222 vot6-Qlinsntfe·ux;-aocord- ins to. final but unoff.cial vote tabulations. 'The measure would have raised ail estimated $5.• billion· over the -t S- ycar life of the tax for freeway, hi~way and trans.it improvements. 'We whipped their butt, .. declared a jubilant TOm Roeen. who beaded the anti-tax Citizens Apinst Unfair Taxation. ""The pcot,le won bia over the corporate ~ts who have bad the county in tbcar band for the last IS YcaJ?· What a ":ictoc] for the averqe guy .. The eucutive director of the pro;. tax Citizens for" Better Trampor- . iatio-.,: Al Hollindcn. termed the outc6ffiea .. disaster," the dimc11li)PI of which penonolly ~bim. He expreacd ~ not over_tbe dd'e&t of the -. but over the (Pl1ww....-at .. /A2) • . son compete In the Olym- plcs./85 County Demos support --F-€rgu-son--~ claims i Nation Sixties TV actress Donna Reed will be the new Miss Ellie on 'Dallas' program. IM World Presidents and monarchs alike pay re- spects to war dead at Omaha Beach./ AS Saudis attack two Iranian warplanes with U.S.- made weapon.!}' .I AS :<-:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·:·>:·:·: .... :·:·:·:·:·:·:· .Home Looking for a new house? Industry experts advise buying It before the No- vember electlons. /81 • !o!• :-: .; ·:• !· :· X•!. !•!. ;.;.: •: ·:•: •:•:•:, :•: •: •:·: .; .; .; • : ·:·:.:, F.ood Salute Hawaii's 25th an- niversary of statehood with your own tropical least.IC1 ·=·:·:·:.:.:-:.:-:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Sports Former Estancia High basketball coach Larry Sunderman accepts post to coach Orange Coast women's team.ID1 Entertainment "The Music Man" ls a . guttering production, but It's all on the surface at the Curtain Call Dinner Theater./83 ·: .... ;.;.;.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:->:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·~ Buslneu The Irvine Co. wins a water conservation award from the Irvine Ranch Water Dlatrlct. /A8. INDEX Bridge Bun.tin Boord --Calltornla N8W1 M A3 A&-7 A• D<-e M 06 BS c-. COmlea Ctouword DMthNotlcel Food HolpYouroelf Homa , C1-10 82 --Alttt Landort MU1UOIFuMI Natlollal-~UZI =~og PubflcNot- Spo<lo , 8tocil Mlrl<911 T-T'M9ter1 w-Wcrfd- • 81-2 06 92. A7 A• A9 81 A3 BM D1-3 A8 83 83 A2 A• Hart By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °'Orao;~::'nty Demo8-i'U"'"ii~ up_beltind ~ tlan in ~·, primary election. - In each of the partial or complete congressional districts in Orange -Cou.nty, tht delegates for the Colo. rado Senator won more votes than their counterparts supponin& former Vice President Walter Mondale or the Rev. Jesse Jackson. Assembly· victory NB b'usinessman ,gurvives battle for GOP nomination By JERRY HIRSCB .............. The topsy-turvy ~ for the 70th Assembly District Rcpubtic:an nomi- n11tion ended about 3 a.01. today when a tirtd Newport Beach busi- nessman Gil Fcrsuson took a deep breath.and sa.td be was the winner. Ferguson had led the race since 9 p.m. Tuesday when the absentee results were counted. But he waited ,... as 7 for 1 substantial vote tally lbefoft: declaring himself the winner. Countywide, Han won 19 del- egates, and Mondale won two, ac- cordina to final but unofficials results from the Orange County Registrar of Votcn office. Hart won full delegate slates in every congressional district except for the 38tb, where be won three dc~te_s_and-..Mondale won -1wo-:----<; With all the ballots-eounted1c. --- ln the 40th Congressional District, IPleue..., COUlfTY I A2J OCvoters stay away in droves Shaw oust& Stewart in Barbor judge ra<:e By KAREN E.11.LEIN · °' .. °""' ....... Ferguson colkctcd 22,006 votes for · 38. 7 percent. His closest ehalieqer wu K.cn Carpenter who garnered 18,394 votes (or 32.3 pcroc:nt. Ncw- pon Beach attorney Ron Cordova was a distant third, coUccting 9,046 votes for 16 percent. . Newport Beach City Coun- cilwoman Ruthdyn Plummer placed fourth with 3,825 votes for 6.8 percent. John Dean was fifth with 2,006 votes for 3.5 percent. Sl&nford Green followed with 896 votes for l.S pcrce.ntand Merl "Ted"' Doty was last Voter turnout in Tuesday's pri- mary election was far lower than expected -perhaps the lowest in Orange County history for 1 pmidcn- tial election year -with fewer than half of the county's registered voten castina ballots. After a bittei, costly fiaht in the race for Harbor Municipal Court judge, challenger Susanne Shaw, 37, turned incumbent Juda< S..,,.... S-. SO, out of o(ficc:. judi.cial ~ in West Ora~ Coun~y with 706 votes for I J?C~L Municipal Coun, sending his .On the pemocrabc Side, LI.gun.a challcnaer. Wcs1minster lawyer Red-N11uel businessman Steven Feldman mond P. McAncny. 38, a resounding won the nomination .with 44.S per- defeatbygathering 75.253 votes-74 cen1 of lhC' .vote. cap1urina .9.961 percent of the voters-to McAneny's ballots. He will face Ferguson m the 26 •32 votes or 26 percent. -----.Novcmber-#QCf&l.ekction ----< in the judicial races for Superior Jim Thorpe was second with 8,853 Only 49.5 percent of the county's 968,485 rcg,istered voters went 10 the polls, election officials reported today. . Changes apparent four decades later on No~mandy sand For each visitor. the perspective takes different form OMAHA BEACH, Fnmce (AP) - Sieck cows. arazc. the wjkl mu.stard around rustina German I SS mm can- nons on this lush a.rccn KCtion of Normandy coastline. But tbcau,hlett spark of imqination brinp the W<Opons bock to blozina lit< u they were 40 yeors oao In the Allied invasion of Europe. The coast, lush and peen now, • oppears to be on)'lhina but • historic bl1t)earound. Vet inches below the surface lie foraottcn concrete bunk.en. une.xpblcd mines and vivid memories. ... Thousands of vi.sitors are ckains the windina lanes' to attend CCl'-o emoni<s this -nwltint the <Otll an"i~,...-yof~-..,Juae6, l944 -<!Oy.t~AIJl<slondt\lmNozi, occuple<I Fnncef ) RETROSPE CTIVE For c.ch the pcnpec:tivc is dif- fmnL At the American Cemetery, week· end crowds e1udcd a carnival ••- mosphere. with ' picnic baskets. ponoble ,.....,,, ond T-shirts printed with cartoons. Bui an 84-ycar-okl Frenchwoman ftom the nciah~ sat alooe on a low nt~ leoni111 -on her <nlt<hn tOWUCS:: th< 9,386 white aoues Wd out in ae11 rows. "fonY yeon ...,,....,. ,.llecled to on Americon who ~ to talk to ht(. "It ..... yes....io,y. • - I Am>moncbes. Britislt pnd-' flltben nplainetl with unditluited pridt how enaineers W\k Ilion.• chunks o( conc:rtie \o\alinc a b.a1f.. million tons, tobuildo lwi>orto lond. munitions to destroy AdolfKitkr. Nearby-EaaJisb IChoollirla iA l"--0.DAT/IUOI - Shaw captured S7.8 percent, with 30,385 votes. in Tuesday's election. StcWart aamered •2.2 pcrocnt of the vote witii 22,204 votes., 1COOrding to final but unofficial results supplied by the county Rqistrar of Voters. Incumbent Judae J. Michael Beecher. •5. fared bttter in the • • • I 1. - Court Judge. Munkipal Coun Judge: votes for l~.5 pcrcc~t and Eucenc John H. Smith, Jr. and Newpon Hunt was third collecting 3.S~ votes · Beach attorMy Robcn H. Gallivan for 16 percent. captured the highcstpcrccntagt: of ".Ho pefully . we can . put the voters for Office 20. as did Orange acnmony of 1h1s race betund us and County Chief Deputy District At-get on with the job of working for 1Pleue-SRAW/A21 (Pleueoeel'l:RGVSOl'l/A.3) ' . J • All Aaerlca.a •etetall .ta.de &aid .. ol CfGllllla8t.Laueat .......... , ... ,.. .... ' ~ I , ,.... 1rorange Coat OAIL y PILOT /Wed'*tday, June 8. 1984 Bradford ·and B~ophy i~ Democratic nominations llJ ROBERT BAJUlER Of .. ..., ........ Two candidates t.ak.Jna their fir1t plunae a.nto bia time politiC!-Carole Ann Brtdford of Newport Beach and Mary Lou Brophy of Seal Beach - aimed withenna blHlS at Novemtler opponents after clincbina Demo- cratic Pl.tty nomi.DatlQllS T~~y. ,-.nd a proven vote aetter, mcum- bent Newport Beach Republican Assemblywoman Marian .Bergeson, swept to an uncontested victory in the new 37th St.ate Senate District that wends its way from Seal Beach to Laguna Beach and then juts non.h- ward to encompass Blythe and Im- perial Valley. Bradford. who claimed that Re- publican incumbent Robert Badham, who she wtll face in the November ieneral elecuon. has alienated voters tn the 40lh Congresssional District, said momentum is rolling m her favor. "I know we're ~omg to wrn m November." she claimed. Bradfo rd. a 47-ycar-old busi- nesswoman. said voters "deserve a - con~m10 who s.~ncb the whole week in Coqress rather than flying around the world at WJ)9ycrs' ex- pense." Badbam, who had been elcc\ed 22 consecutive YQn either to Assembly or C.Onvess from ba.s1caJly the same dittnct that includes Newport ~h. O>sta Mesa., Laauna Beac!1, Fountain V.Uey aod. ,.ns of 11unUnst01t Beach. was attending 0.Da) cer- emonies today in France with Presi- dent Rcapn and Wa.s not available for comment. Brophy, who like.Bradford u~11ized aroups of peace acuvasts to f'Cl15ter a strona sbowina on the Democratic side of the ledatr. accused incumbent RcpublK:an Jlep. Dan Lungren of being a clone of President Reapn and of vot1na apinst women. en- vironmentatsu, education and peace people. • "He's never met a nuclear wtapon he didn't like," the 46-year-old famity therapist said. Lungn:n -said in Washinaton today he enjoyed "a commonal1ty" with President Reagan. In ftnaJ. unofficial results from 0raqc and Los Analcs county PC'Ccincu. Brophy aot 41 ;199 votes and Lunarm cot 67,S49 Bradford rueived l0,061 '\Otes to swamp Democrattcopponent. retired library adminisu·11or Ken White. who sot l 2.lS2 V0lC$.. Repubhcan votm p~ Badham, who ran uno~ posed, got 73. 7.S 1 votes. lJeratSOn ru:c1¥cd SJ.SSS votes while btr Democrauc opponent Alice Ke~'SCf aot 24,937 votes • All I needed was one vote and I 'oted asbstnlec," Bergeson said. In the 38th ConarcssionaJ Dinrict race. Roben Dornan received 17,809 votes tcf easily outdistance Re. publican polillcos An Jacobson who aot 6.83 l votes and John Schmitz who received only 3,069 votes. Democratic incumbent Jerry Pat- terson received l l,648 votes and challenger Ruth Stephenson got 7,336. Count y Supervisor Bruce Nestande got 60,572 votes and won a new four-year term at the expense of James Mansfield who got 26 728 votes. And Fountain Valley's Roger Stanton. running oppoied for bis SdCond term on the board. got 53,052 votes. Orange Coast can expect cloudy weather Thursday • In the 69th Assembly race, incum- bent Republican Nolan Frizzelle got 33,01 7 votes. Democrat Howard Gensler also ran unopposed apd got 20, lJ 8 VOte!. ' ln other county races, Stan Ca~ received 11 ,646 votes to beat Marion Hundley with 8,191 votes to win the Democratic oomination in the 31st St.ate Senate District. Republican William Camp~ll ran unopposed. Rays of sunhght will be stramed through a thick cloud cover over Southern California on Thursday, wtth a few rays malting a break- through m the afternoon, the Na- tional Weather Service says. The clouds managed to dampen partS of the rcgjon Tuesday with ~ .. 'barely mea.sureable" rainfall, in- cluding pans of Huntington Beach. T~ere's a chance of mommg dnzzle aJona the ooast and in the mountains Thursday, the National Wea,her Service said. · High temperatures are eipected'to be in the lower 70s in most parts of Orange County. including the coastal area. Highs of between 62 ind 72 arc· predicted for the mountain ~rts. In the 35th St.ate Senate District, Republican incumbent John _Seymour got 66,275 votes. Democrat ian Dudman got 37,726. Both were unopposed. ---fi'*H---·-------------- couNTY DELEGATES BACK HART ••• From Al which includes Fountatn Valley, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Bea.cb and Irvine, the four Han delqates won 91 ,974 votes, com- pared to 68,523 for Mondale del- egates. Delegates for Jesse Jackson earned about 21 ,000 votes. In the Orange County ponion of the 42nd Congressional District, in- cludin& Seal Beach and part of Huntington Beach. the four Hart delegates recetvcd 49.966 votes. com- pared to 41 ,903 for Mondale del- egates. Jackson supponcrs received about 9,SOO votes. The 38th Congressional District is in central Orange County, including portions of Santa Ana, Westminster, Garden Gtove and Buena Park. H~. the five Hart delegates e<1gcd the Mondale supporters, 75.251 to 73,597. Jackson's delegates received about 18,000 votes. South Orange County com- munities such as San Juan Capistrano and Mission Viejo malc.e up part of the 43rd Congressional D1stnct. In the Orange County portion of this district, Hart's four delegates re- ceived 24,996 votes to 17.245 for Mondale's delegates. In the 39th Congressional Distnct, which includes North Orange County Cllie.s_ such as V illa.I>atk, Pl~ntia. Fullerton and La Habra, Hart's four delegates received 85.105 voles. cas- • ily ·t~ 1.he 70;213 vote<-rordeTcgates siiCJc-wi-ur-Mb11d4Je~ Mondale supporters. Jackson's dcJ-pecially the ones elected early in the egates received about 18,000 votes. campaign." Even though ~on~e ~aint.ains a Bruce Sumner of Newport Beach, a stro~ lead-n.a.uonwide an Demo-Mondale delegate, observed, "We crauc convenuon delegates, l~I knew this would be the toughest supP<?rte~ were pleased by Harts congressional district to win for the showmg tn Ora~ge County. . vice president.· Stephen Smith of Huntmgton . Beach, a Ha.rt delegate. said today, "I Ht? sa1d .South Laguna devel~per th.ink anythio1 can happen between David. Ste.in ran a well-organized now and the convention. My feeling campaign m support of Ha~. Han is that if Mondale doesn't get it (the raised mort than $200,000 in cam- Democratic Presidential nomi-pa1gn funds fro m Orange County nation) on the first ballot. he won't get Democrats. . . il After lhal it will be Hart or Sumner said he d~ no' lhmk the som~lse .• ~ .,. rusaan:ement~ during the Democra~· ...snlith said Hart defeated Mondale campaign will hurt the party s locally because he appealed to the chances in November. area's rouna, more educated and . "It's very. healthy ~o have the more affluent residents. dial<?'Jue w~ ve ha~ w!~ th.e three R~iog Hart's locaJ win, Laguna cand1~t~s. he said. I think th,e BcacJi Councilwoman Sally Bcllerue, co~pel1L10~ is v~ good. I don t a Hart delegate, said, "It wasn't a th1!'k t~e infighting has been that surprise. I think his concerns about senous. . peace and the economy arc very good, Sum'!er predicted t~t ~e Demo- and I think he can articulate them crats will patch up their differences well " and unify behind their nominee. Jkllerue added, "I think m the '80s. While not predicting it. Sumner said we need new ideas and to move he would not rule out a Mondale-Hart forward. I think Hart represents ucket. . that." . ~though .Orange County as .tra- Looking ahead to the convention, d1t1onally vtewed as a Republican she said, "The delegates are nol ·"Stronghold, Sumner n~ted lhal lh1s bound even on the firit ballot. It will cou~ty h~s the.second highest .Dem.o- be mterestinR to sec if Mondale's crauc registration of all ofCahforn1a. PROPOSITION A SHOT DOWN ••• From Al margin of defeat. "The message was pretty clear. They (voters) arc not gomg to tax themselves and there was nothing we could have done to change that more than a few percent.age points," Hollinden said. Rogers, calling Proposition A's defeat "an extremely gratifying wm," added he had little doubt the measure would be defeated. "Logic told me the IJVerage voter wouldn't vote a tax increase when someone's spending $2 million to ram rt down (their) throat." he said. He called the coalition of auto dealers. anti-tax crusaders and en- vironmentalists who banded together to oppose the tax and transponat1on- 1mprovement package a "rag-tag bunch." But he said tax proponents should not have been surpnsed at the outcome. Commenting on the record S 1.8 million pro-tax campaign, which translated to about S 13 for every vote cast. Rogers said. "if they bad &1ven Just Call 642-6086 D.;!t"~' le Ou.rentMd ............... 11.,oudO nal Nw ~ p..-,,, 6J011 1'/\ eel.._,,•7p m 8lld yOtll ~ wtl DI ~ everybody l 0 bucks each, they would have done no better." The anti-tax campaign, beset by fund-raising difficulties. spent about 28 cents for every vote cast. But Hollinden said the amount of money spent by the pro-tax campaign wasn't the issue on which the elecuon turned. "People are JUSt not willing to fork over additional tax money," he said. "Obviously another SI m1lhon wouldn't have made an tot.a of difference and another$ I m1llton less wouldn't have made a difference." Supervisor Thomas Riley. chatr- man of the Oran~e County Transpor- tation Commission which developed the plan and placed Proposition A on the ballot. expressed disappointment with the mc.isure's loss. "I'm trying to resolve where things went wrong." he commented. Riley added that as far as he 1s concerned the crushmg defeat for the measure means county supervisors and transportation commissioners probably will not try a second time to get it passed. "It certainly would take a lot of persuasion to get me going (on this) again," he said. Holhnden agreed. saying it would be ··foolhardy" to resubmit the measure to voters for "a long time." Supervisor Ralph Clark. chairman of the Orange County Transit Dis- tnct. said the message voters de- live~ was unmistakeable. "The message was l&ud and clear to make do with the funds available," he said. Irvme Co. President Tom Nielsen. whose firm supplied the pro-tax effon wtth the largest campaign contribu- tion in county history. said the campaign was unable to convince voters that the tax was necessary to solve transportation and congestion problems. "I don't kiww how you take this complicated issue to the voters," Nielsen said Tuesday. "We had all the money we needed." Wbal do you lllte about tbe Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you lllte? Call tbe I number at left ud your me11age wlll be recorded. tran1crtbed and delivered 10 tbe appropriate editor. T1te same U.Jto11r u1wertn1 service may be us~ to record letten 10 tlle editor oa aay topic. Contributors to our Lettert colam_a mast IDclode l tlr ume and telephone namber for verification. No clrtulallon c1n1, please. Tell 11 wb1t'1 on your mind. ORANGE COAST • hilyPllat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publlsh9f ClrcuJatton 7141M2-4ala Cluelfted MtYerit.ang 7WM2·1111 All other depMtmentt M2..u2t MAIN OfflCE 330 Wtll1 '8y II Co111 ~ CA MU.._ lo• IMO Colla ..._ CA •MM Salurd9r ~ ~ If '°" ., not ,..,.. .,_ oopy !It 1 • "' ... DlilOle 10 Lin Ml yOtll OllP'f .. ....... c1uu110on T1l1f1,_.. ChezyOow., EditC>f and Atelstant to the Publtsher AoeematJ Churchman Controller Mo9I 0tenoe eoum1 "'... ..... L-oi-......... ' ....... ,.Caruo PrOOUCUOn MallaOI' DMMdL .. 1sne O!feulahOn ~ ' LeaKy clouds t:o sficK arounO tO 11 .. 71 . " ,. ,., tO • • n 17 ?O . .. .. .. .. JO tt 11 IO • ., 11 " 71 .... n4 IO to .. .. .. . n ., --~~=.:e..-12 .. . .. ,. u • 14 ta 71 11 a n ea Tides lflowef• !Wot ""1i9• ...._ ~.,...,...,_r..., TOOAY A1n11110 ~ 111g11 1; 12 p m • 5 Alldloreoe 9eoond low 11,00 p m 2 t Atlente • ....,. _ ~ NOM UI o.ol fll C:.0-~ 92 51 Gt.et ...... 70 52 Hltttord • .. litll9nl n " II N ntlMM>AY Atllnllc City '1rtt lllgll • • 23 Lift. ! 31 ~t-13 14 HonoUu tf 91 ~ tt n n 11 ea .. 11 11 11 .. a .. Ar91 low 10 59 1 m -v ~· ..... • ~ ~ 5 52 pm • 3 &lrnllloglleln _..,_ 10:10p.M 2 0, ="'di 15 12 ~ .. M ~.Mt 10 57 Jadle«1"""9 .. •• .lunMy a " .. 70 8'11\ M9 loelay 11 1:02 0 f!I , ...... ::::: • Thutldty •• 6·• 1 Lm mid•• 'Otlfl II lutllngten Vt 1.02 p.m OMPS ' n eo t<aneaa cor :J :: t:..v:t : ~ t:.=- 11 .. .. .. 15 70 .. .. • a 15 .. .._. rlMI 11 tt.50 -.111 . •• ~a c ~-t.24a.m llldi-.lgllil\et Chal'letton:w v 1.51 O m Cl\arlone,N C 12 et LUOboclll .. 17 =~ a.wwws ea •1 .. .. .. 11 57 '15 Eztendecl Columbll.S C ColtwntM.Oll Conc:ord,N H OlllM-Ft WOtffl Oaylon 92 71 aa 10 M St " as ... 11 S uRF REPORT °"""""" O.Mol .... ----------OalrOlt Temperatures = Fwtlll'AI II St 17 70 .. 17 ., 53 ~ 21 .. l.e F-vc> :: !~ =~ 70 91 51 4$ 11 10 CON TINUED STORIES . .. • SHAW UPSETS JUDGE STEWART; •• From Al tomey James G. Enright and West Court Judge Ragnar R. Engebretsen, compeung for Office 11. Runoff elections for the 1'vo Su- perior Court offices will be held in November since none of the can- didates surpassed the 50 percent margin needed for victory. e n1o!t hotly-df,puted ftCC"WllS for Harbor Municipal Court judge, wtth Shaw and Stewart spending between $35,000 and $50.000 on newspaper advertising and district- wide mailings. Reached this morning at her office, deputy district attorney Shaw, of Capistrano Beach. credited the '"well- read. well-educated" citizens in the distnct with taking an active role in her election. The Harbor Court covers cases in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine. "I'm really happy." she said. "My heart couldn't take watching what was going on (in the courts) and so I decided to take my show on the road and put my money where my mouth was." The amount of mon(y she and Stewart spent on the race f tJured as a deciding factor in her elccuon. Shaw acknowledged. "The fact that I had money to help educate people was great," she said. "The people want somebody who's going to be responsible. honest and hard-worlting. And they got it." Dunng the campaign, Shaw charged that Stewart had perjured himself when be signed payroll st.ate- .men ts judges si&n to act l)aio,..J1te sworn payroll statements affirm that thejudge1snotany more than 90days behmd on a coun decision. Stewart was one of a number of Harbor Court judaes who routinely Competing for the bench were signed their statements as much as six s;·udgcs Smith. ChrisopberW. Strople, months in advance. During the Moore and Dan C. Dutcher campaign be defended the action tomeys Gallivan and Jonathan saying that it was routine and a way H. Cannon, Mayor of Garden Grove. for judges to get pa.id even when they Cannon ...a-w •"'e most .s:-... the are sick or arc on vacation. UJ~ LU' m~ ... Stewart spent .,;x months dcet'd1'ng campaign with his opponents accus- onc case ana ail1rt tbat"'t'.lme ing~f · ~&be raoe K sipted six statements claiming that spent at 1~000 on the cam- h1s caseload was up to date. . paign, more lhan any of the other A state attorney general's invcstiga-candidates, but finished third with tion found that Stewart bad not 77 ,293 votes or 20.8 percent of the perjured himself by signing the state-vote. ments, but the attorney ameral did Smith, receivina 85,847 votes - send the charges to the Commission 23. I percent-and Gallivan, who $Ot on Judicial performance for review. 21.8 percent, or 81,214 votes, will face Both Stewart, who admitted the each other in November's runoff practice was "sloppy," and the other election. JUdg.cs in the coun no longer sign their The race for the final Superior pay statements in advance. Court seat, Office No. 11, also was Stewart said Shaw's charge were hotly contested. . eolitically motivated and false. He Compe1ing for the bench were fiJcd a $2.5 million libel suit against West Court Judae Enacbrctsen, Dis- her in Orange County Superior Court trict Attorney Enright. al'ld Los An- Friday. geles deputy prosecutor Joseph Stewan was in court and could not Barilla of Huntinglon Beach. be reached for comment earty today. The race concentrated on Enriaht. Jn the West Municipal Court, who lined up the endorsement of which covers Huntington &ach, Seal many of the couqty's elected officials. Beach and WestminsteT, West-and Engebretscrf, who had the su~ minster lawyer McAneny, 38. port of much of the legal community. challe'\Je~ incumbent West Court Banlla did not campaign actively Judge her, 45, charging that he for the office, but bis presence in the was a slow worker and was adding to campaign undoubtedly made a dif. the court's backlog. ference. Enri&bt, who came close to Beecher defended himself saying i<>ing over the SO ~roent marpn that he works hard, sometimes stay-needed for victory with 47.2 percent. ing at the court until late at night, and or 178,073 votes, said Barilla's S9,04S t~at McA.neny ~as just trying to get votes probably cost him the j\ldae's h1mselfaJobasJudge. _ _ sea~ __ __ The race for Orange County Su-He and Engebretsen, who J.Ol 37.1 perior Court Office No . .,,20 drew a percent, or 139,814 votes, will com- crowded field of four municipal coun pete in a runoff election in Novem- judges and two attorneys. ber. · You can wish her a happy.annivers~ Or fumre an Her wishes come true. J. C.JJumr~,.;._~ J._w,l.,.~ MEMBER AMERtCAN GEM SOCIETY ~ 1~ NEWPo:~v1~COSTA MEj~ ~ 81nkAmenc11cs-Masltr Charge PHONE 541-3401 ' . Rq. The Diamond A band of ctiamonds that saysy.ou'i1man¥.Jiet an over agatn. J --· -' • NB Library ~riends will install officers Mondale says_ he has magi - The Friends of the Newpon Belch libruywdJ mttt Thursday noon for luncheon and installation of officers at the Shark Island Yacht Oub, 1099 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. Oaudia Baltzer will take over the prmdency of the aroup from Sara Ramsey, who will become parlit· ~entarlap. Others to be installed arc Belly Sprang,, 6nt Yloe 9res1dent; Donna Hammond. second vice president; Marilyn Ostman, third vice president; Jane Preis, tt:eull!'Cf; Lisa Hall, secretary, and MiJW Hammond. But Hart's Callfon:ita triumph leaves dele ate Issue In air Walter F. Mondale ... pleased to claim \ttctory'' in bit rue for the Democratic prnideotial nomination. said today that despite defeat in California. bii victonet elsewhen: had propelled him to an unbreakable majority of the party nominating deleptcs .• .. {·will be the nominee of 1be Dcmoc:ntic peny." be aasd. ''The ra~ f9r the majonty is over," • He Wn lined I nwnbcf of DCW IU~ indudioa Rep. Gillis Lona. 0..1.a., "° had becD poiMCI JO blCk I P<*lblc bid by 'Sal. Gary Han if Han bid woa u ew Jcrtey T~y u ftll u iD c.lifonda. Han 1.nd tbe Rev. JaeeJICbon bavo both said they plan on IUlyifta isl the race tb.roulb to the ution.a.J ClOnvcnlion roll C:all ~• mooth. Hou.~ Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., 'd tit would ll)eet with Han on TbLD'lday nd deliver a unity meuqe. ··we must ao forward aod we will," Hari aid today i.o Los A.qeles. Mondale.WU pUlblOj otunity wtffi'ilfti11 miibt in hjs brief tem&tQ that~ -u promiled Liil 'tllWk-11 ll:S9a.m. toaay1n SL Paul, MiDn • / lk Aid .. over 2.00I dcl•• ~ PiecleDd IO••" M1 mt." The AllOdaled ?mi 4k'91e ~ :•aeit Mondale ·::ti)' btloW &be 1,967 Mmineu'W ~. bot Mondale unvriled ~~on die t.m of bis strona lbowiaa y wtlb V1C10ne1 U. New Jmcy and West Virasn.ia. The Mondale l1&fr JCUJTiCd coday to ..... out national conveabon dd!t8ates now williils ao :IO~ Wltb tbtir support of the ·'°"11er YJCe Pft.lideftt.., ame upwitb Mayor AndrCW Younaol-AtlilA'lat Hda;p.J.Gaa;,...,_.......,"" Tbe Kan campt.ip coo. tinlaed ao dilpulr daat Mo~ bad ttaebed the ~ ~1y. Rm llid ~ exl)CClS "no dramauc f1'rilel iD !&be Diext..,.,,.. ii)',I. histonan. · The public 1s invited-and the cost of the luncheon is S 12. Further information may be obtained by callina 651-1122. ' b\tt be said. .. I.be eft'on to RCnlit WMX)mnuned dea._ea Liars Demo House spealrer :,.~~~~~~::r~-==: ' Wath 99 percmt of the C:alifanua oae m. Hart 1 • · t· counted 205 dc.tcs to 72 for Moadak aDd 29 b Soviet tlJeater tal~ at VCI UC Irvine drama professor David McDonald will speak on Soviet theater at a public lecture toni&ht in the Virginia and Norman Nix6n Theater on the UCI caJl1pus. osers in proposit1·on votes =~t=:~~0rr~:e~~=~ ,, • Combined With ttsults from the Other bar Mala, the Associated Press deJepte &UT\'ey showed: McDonald wiU discuss Chek,bov's play "The Three Sisters" at the 7:30 p.m. event. Admission 1s f~ and further 1nformat1on is available at 856-5433. Women'• soccer tryout. slated Tryouts for an Orange County women's soccer team will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Culver Drive and Mic~aelson Avenue in Irvine in the city's University Park section. AJI panicipants must be 18 years old by Seet. I and possess good soccer skills and strong athletic ab1lity. for more information, call Bob Kessen at 536-8f89. •• LOS ANGELES (AP)-Cahfomia voters narrowly approved ballot propositions to bar liars from elective office and to 'Slash the power of the Lea.islature's Democratic majonty. With 95 percent of the vote counted, Proposition 20. a state constitutional amendment its author called·a "political death penalty" for lying politicians, was approved by a narrow 52 percent to 48 percent. Tagged "tell-a-lie, lose--your-job." the measure would remove from office any person who libeled his opponent to wm election. Conservative Paul Gann's "l>roP- , osition 24, which would slash the HealtlJ f alr •et for coUege power of the Legislature's Demo-. cratic leadership and cut the state-Oran~e U1as~ College will p~sent a day-Iona festival house operating budget, was favo~ on health, educauon and rccrca,uon Saturday from 9 a.m. · by 53 percent of the voters. It/ to 5 p.m. on the Costa Mesa campus. Demonstrations, food, exhibits and door prizes will be available at the fair, which is open to the public. Women streas creatlrity The Women's Opportunities Center will present a workshop entitled ''Exercise Your Cr~vity" Saturday from 8:30 a.m. to noon in room SS\ 220 on Oic 'tJClivine campus. Jane Goldberg and Mimi Moore will conduct the session. The fee is S l 5, and further information may be obtained by calling the center at 856-7128. Ora114C County," Ferguson said this morrung. .. I am extremely pleased and proud of the volunteers and those who helped in the campaign," Ferguson added. Sc•ndlnarian Festival at plau The hard-fought Republican con- . _ ~ . · -4"t mad&-e-battJepoand-~o-r1Jle ~~oasfP~aza Village wtll host its seventh annual district. Sacramento's interests were Scandinavian Fcsttv8;1 of Dance Saturday from 11 a.m. to played out locally as Republicans 4 p.m .. at the shopping center, at Sunflower and Bear fought for the Assembly minority streets Just north of Costa Mesa. . . . leader's post. · The ~fon Bergst~om Orchest~ will provade music Because of the heavy Republican for ~wed1sh, No~an and Damsh folk .~nccrs. A registration in the djstrict, the winner drawmg for a me tnp f<;>r two to Copenhagen Will~ h~ld of the primary is virtually guaranteed ~t 11 : 15 a.m. and the winner must be present. Adm1ss1on the seat. Both sides of the leadership is free. fi~t entered the race confident the Newport buslnea women meet The Newpon Beach Charter Chapter of the American Busancss Women's Association meets at 7 p.m. the second Tuesday of every month at tbe Reaist.(Y Hotel For dinner reservations cal1 Dotty Goodwin ai 642-7259. Energy worbhop set The investment appeal of alternative energy technologies will be the focus of a workshop held at the Anaheim Marriott tonight at 7:30 p.m. ~ winner will make 1t to the Lcgislatw-c. A coalition of nght-wing as- semblymen led by Pat Nolan of Glendale poured more than S 125,000 -much of it the last weeks of the campaign -into the Ferguson camp. Ndlan is fi&blln& Assembly min- ority leader Robert Naylor of Menlo Park for control of the Republican Caucus. Naylor and his allies countered by giving Carpenter at least $50.000 in suppon. Probably more will be re- vealed when the post-election financial statements are fi led. Californians also approved, by 3-2 m8!JlnS, four bond measures to raise S l btUion fot prisons, jails. parks and 9fildlife habitat.s. - AU except one of the state's nine ballot PfOpositions was approved. Proposition 22. which would exempt top public pension fund officers from civil service rules, lost by 48 pereent to 52 percent. Proposition 21. to broaden the power of public penSJon fund managers, won by 53 perocnt to 47 percent. Proposition 23, to ajve tax breaks to proj)C'rty ownen who improve their properties for earthquake safety, was approved, 53 to 47 perocnt. The measure was supported by property owner groups, who say they should oot be penalized for making their! buildin~ earthquake safe. transportation measure which was defeated. Plummer and the Irvine Co. backed Proposition A.. The huge contributions added up to what looks like a spcndina record for an Crance County assembly race. Althou.&11 final financial statements won f be fiJ ununuty, iflOOU'-llte. Ferguson and Carpenter each spent aboutS~OOO.Cordovaspentabout $I 00,000; t"lummer and Green about $65,()()(}. each; Dean, about SI 5,000 and Doty about $1,000. That would put total spending by the Republicans at about $850,000 -near the county's $859,000 record for any elected post spent in the 1982 state Senate race between Sen. Ed Royce and attorney Frank Barbero. Marian Hcrseson. who is giving up the 70th District scat to run for the 37th state Senate District, also be- came an issue in the ~. ~n said she would not en· dorsc any of the catldidates but on Saturday, she came out for Carpenter and a mailer went out to the votm Monday telling of the endorsement. The endorsement set off a flurry of complaints by the other candidates who said Bergeson had promised to stay out of the race. Both Cordova and Plummer said they had under- stood Bergeson was "taatly" support- ing their .ress>Ccti ve candjdacics. The statewide 1Prooositlon 20 would reqvin that a t.riaf eoun decide ...:. and a~llatc counaqree-that a poht1cian s Lie played a 5.i&nifieant role m the election'• 01ncome. • .. tf you lie. you could suffer the political death ~~ -removal from office,•• said its spomor, state Assemblyman A.n Aanos. D-Se.o Francisco. But the American CivaJ l..ibcrtin Union and other opponents said the measure violate$ freedom of speech and wouJd be impossible to enforce. Gann•s PrOJ><>Sition 24 wouJd cut the Califonu.a I :?jslature's $106 million budget by s3 million. reduce Oemtxntic House Speaker Willie Brown·• gower an~ require two- 1.hircfs votes roran important lesislat-ive decisions. "They are both clole personal friends of mine that I bave mown for years. I would say noth.ina but positive thinp about them as Well as John Dean." Berteson said. "l bad no intet1tion of gettina into the.race until it was Obvious what was Mondale. l,9S9.05 Kart. 1.2l6.7S Jackson, 37'4.2 0th.en and uncommitted. 271. The prinwy mulls had littJc aood MWS fol Jed<enn. -..bo woo few delcptcs to add to the .. Rainbow QielitiGll" deleption be hopes wiU be a uumpcard at the am~eollioa. but be ecb~ Hait'' detcnn!nation to continue fillla•. s 1s the cod of a very tomM>u' bOt "Cdreebve campaian an the rtluJar season. .. Jackion Mid• t..o. Anaeles ... It doea not yet appear who lb.all win the ~. nor what the cost of victoty wiU be ... The ddepte totals this year a.re subject to cbaqe ri&ht up to the roll call a1 the Democratic Natfoaa.I Convention in San Francisco, Aru:e the ruks do oot b1iwS any of the delegatet to the candidates they were cboscti to support. • • Mondale started the ru.&ht off with what tie called an " .. overwhelnMs" Yic1ory m "'New Jersey. With':99 pen:it.Ql of the precincts ~rtin& Mondale bad 4S paceat of the vote to 30 percent for Hart and 23 percent for Jactson.. =niQI wi1A-f:f.~ton .and.~ fitover leadenruc;:t was warfare." said BetJicson. At that point. she c:omininiooed a poll and endorsed the candidate with the best chance of' beating FerJuson and that was Carpenter. • ''It was obvious Ron COrdova was far behind. f had pressure from everybody -hundreds of a.Us and most of that pressure was from friends wanting me to endorse Ron Cordova. ••1 had every intention of staying out but I couldn't stand to sec the ou\lide interests taking ova the .· . district.. Sotddhin& bad '° be doDC, .. the assemblywoman said Bergcson-furiousovera b.it piece sent out by her political consuJlina firm Nelsoo-Padbcrg CoosuJtina that said -Fers~n was controlled by union interest-fired the firm, which was workioa on her' state Senate race. The assemblywoman said today she "disavowed" their tac:ti<:s and that she would oot renew ber contrlCt -worth about S30,000 a campaian. GUP'erp.on The workshop offers investors and their counselors a critical look at investment opportunities. Tuition is $75 and includes admission to the Renewable Energy Technologies Symposium and International Exposition (RETSIE) 84. For information calJ (916) 753-8,834. Both Carpenter and Ferguson re- ceived tens of thousands of dollars from local corporations. The largest singJe corporate donor. however, was the Irvine Co. which poured $30,000 -$25,000 in the past 10 days -into · C~n~~eca~iFnrusio!l brought Gaido ousted from Irvine City Council Wednesday, June 6 • 9:30 a.m. Oru1e Couty Board of Sapervi1on, HalJ of Administration, l 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • 7:30 p.m., lrviDe Commu.lty Services CommJ11loD , Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine. • 7:30 p.m., lrvllle Vilified Sckool District board, Lakeside Middle School, 3 Lemongrass, Irvine. • 7:30 p.m., Coast Commu.lty College District Board of Tnstee1, District Board Room, 1370 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. • 10 a.m .. Cotta Mesa Traffic CommJ11ion. First Floor Conference Room, City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. • 6:30 p.m., Cotta Mesa Redevelopmeat Aaency, Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Poucl Loe ~barges of "elccuon buy+ng" from -----~- most of the other candidates. But Gary Hunt, chief spokesman for Irvine Co. chairman Donald Bren . defended the contribution, saying the company's hand was forced when the Republican coalition battling for the party's leadership started to finance the Ferguson campaign. "We arc concerned about ~llJe County and the district and not a fight for the Republican Party's leader- ship," Hunt said. The Irvine Co. endorsed Qui>enter at the start of the race with a $5,000 corltribution. But it switched its financial suppon to Plummer - giving her $4,000 -after Carpenter came out strongly against Prop- osition A, tbe controversial sales tax- By ANDREA ADELSON • Of .. Delr ........ Irvine voters ousted two-term mcum- bcnt Mary Ann Gatdo from the City Council Tuesday, returned David Sills for an unprecedented third term and elected attorney David Baker and former city commissioner Sally Anne Miller. The race pilled two mcumbents against two political unknowns and two civic activists. A third incumbent, Bill Vardoulis, chose not to seek ~lection to the council that governs the city of 76.000. "This took me by surprise," Gaido said. A post-campaign party turned subdued when absentee ballots showed her losina. "I never did pull ahead," she sajd. "It must be an indication that 1t's nme to do something else," said Gaido, wbo ironically appointed her successor, Miller. to the aty's Community Servicn Com- mission in 1978. Baker, avengina a 1980 loss apinst Gaido by winning 23 percent of the vote against her 18 percent, said a clear trend wasap~tby 12:30Lm. withonJyabout one third of the votes oounted. "fm excited, .. be said. .. What's 1mpon- ant is not just winning. but winruna wilh others ... two people who I can work with m the fut~.·· Mmer. who took 23 percent as well. said she was 0 numb" this morning after an all- night wait for final returns. issued about 5 a.m. / "You can't very well go to bed with 300 people m your house, .. she saJCi. The outcome. with Miller outd1stanona the veteran councilwoman by about 2. 700 votes. retlect.s an anti-Gaido sentiment b) busmess.. Miller believes.. Accord.Jn& to final but unoffiaal returns from the county Registrar of Votcn, Sills received 12. 732 votes. Baker 12,092 and M11ler 11 .960. Gaido h.ad 9.241 ba.IJots cast for her. Barry Kiad and Joe C.Ondon trailed the field . The S11ls.-Baker-Millcr slate won en- dorsements from the Board of Realtors, the Chamber of Commerce and the Newport Beach-based political action aroup the Exccu11ve Council of Orange County. They are 10 take office on July 10. Valley firefighters quell Mile Square Park blazes A car cover from a 1970 BMW parked on the 800 block of Sandcastle Onve was reported Stolen. The cover had the markings "Beverly Hill.ks Motorcar Acccssoncs Inc." • • • An S 1.800 stereo was pned from a 1984 Merc.cdes Benz parked at Mateo's Restaurant in Corona dcl Mar. BUDttncton Beach Entenng through an open sliding glass door Tuesda) night, someone sto,le two wallets from a home on the 18800 block of Smokev.-ood C1rcJe while the resadent and his a.irlfnend ~re watching telev1S1on in another room. The loss mduded $SO cash and the two wallets. worth SSO each. • • • • omC"one used a slingshot ·and marbles to shattered four wtndo~ panes Tucsda~ al a home on the 20200 block of Ra,cnwood Lane The dam• was estimated at S 100. • • • Entcnng through a dogie door. someone burglanzed a home T uc • d•> on the 19 lOO block of Joice Lane The loss 1ncl udcd Jt'wclry onh S280. Two grass fires broke out Tuc$d.ay evening at Fountain Valley's Mile Square Park but ne ver damaged nor threatened any of the county park's facilities. Fountain Valley Fire Chief Rich- lrYl.ne ' Four teen..qers were arrested about 5 a.m. today for suspicion of posseuion of cocaine and attempted auto buralary. when poUoe spotted a car they bcheved was suspicious at Park.side Drive and Parflvtew. Lane shortly after midniahl The foursome all rwde in Anaheim. The youths were 19, IS and two 1 S-year-olds. • • • Two Mercedes owners lost stettos valued at more than $1.000 to window smuhina thieves Tuesday. A can wtre broken into 1t 22 l 2 Dupont Drive was broken lnto between noon and 7:30 p.m. white the second was rut betwccn 9 a.m. and noon 11 17701 Cowan SL • • • A 1elc<:tivc thi~f stoic car stereos worth about SZ.000 rrom three Toyotu an par~ stalls belonpna to homes on Lakepanes. Stre1.mwood and Pineview. Then necdina tomt-- • thina to rryOffthe ~Yin .. thieve ripped off 1 Vl)I 19 3 Toyota Supra val ll I 14,000 fron\ another ard Jorgensen said both fires were located in a nothern section of tht' park near an old landing strip. The blazes burned through an area choked with weeds and high grass. The first blaze erupted at .S p.m. C8J1K>M on Pineview. The thefts were discovered Tuesday morning. Police say factory installed stereos without serial numbers arc nearly 1mpo iblc :0 trace. A. Torran"' man told potioe his money clip. with about S600 in ll, was t>tolen in the men's lock.cr room oft.he Mesa Verde Country Club over the weekend The man left his trouscn. with the money in them, in the lock.er room while be shoMred. • • • The cousin of o~ of the room- mates at 1 home on the 2400 block of Napoli Way moved out of the bou.e witb S8'S worth of clothes a.od je'ft'ehy. • • • !\. home on the 3100 block of Samoa P\ece was bu~ wtnlo the ttadeoll ftlt OC'I vacatioo m· Wttt. The tbie\let 1pparentJ)' bad a driver and toobu.lpukc.d U\ front of thf hou1e while theY.pried open a rear window and ..uae off th the and the second scveraJ hours later. Jorgensen said tlte fires burned less than an acre of park property. Fire officials were investigating the cauSC'S of the fires. v1tuablcs. • • • An automobile bra was stolen off' the front of a Toyoca Corolla perked on the 2400 block of Elden A venue · over the weekend. Loss was placed at S6S • • • Four hu~ps, valued at $'400. wete stolen from a vehicle parked 1.t Estancia Hiah School this wttk. ••• A ~1deot of the 1300 block of Alab&ma Circle told police I 0 checks ahc put 'n her madbox to be ptcked up were stolen over tbe •ukend. A primtr1f1y tNCk secn O'\hsiQa the neiahborhood shortly after ahc put the bills in her mailbox. 1'nrport B•c• About S 100 in cash was l&ken from 1 pu -that a buralarY pabbtd from a tt.Stdtncc on the-IO<Jblock ofTe>pu trttt on Balboa ls.land. Police said they found the punt and all ii. t'Onten\t uttpt the cash toued in a ~ill+w~~ca~~~ ~ l • • • • A gold necklace. earrinp and two gold rinp were taken from a resi- dence on the 2200 block of Holly. The jewelery, worth more than $2,000, bad been stored in ajewlery box in the residence's master bedroom. Poa.ntal.q Valley Someonf entered a house in the 11000 block of Poppy A venue thouah an unlocked window and stole a diamond.ring. diamond caninp and I pearl Oecttace valued It Sl.300.. • • • A clertat the 7-Ele~n uore. 100.lS Elli Avenue. WU allqicdly detecud on video tape ofkttpinaabout Sl5 in sa)c, while riQ&IQI •·ao sale" purdwa and .. over-nnp" at thc cash rcai ter. • • • A ~. possibl \W I f!At- bladcd ~vet, pried .D I . t()tlle conl.llncr and StCat a S 120 car P<>tishcr &om the Fountain Valley C&1 Wuh at 1003S Ellu A • • • A mi t placed a anzcn•s arrest on a' lO.yar-old mu '1Wbo climbed into hCt camper lD the 16000 block or Otc.andcr Cittle a.Dd went to p. • • • B~ tole S29S tn cub from a ~ ctn t, a purse and 1 sclkd tn\: lQpcdunn11paduatton Pin) 1n lhe. · l{KQ) ~ Of. Mom· Ci Avenue. - • • • Someont' entered throua,h a rear unlocked window to burgJanzt' a home on the 8200 block of Slater Avenue, a resident ~rted Tutsda)' The loss included $8 in cash and je~try worth $380. • • • Eoteri.na an open ~c. someone stole 1 blue t.lltte-$~ btQfcle from a borne on the 16SOO block of Thames Lue, a ruident reponed Tuesda) The loss was esl1mated at $30. LafU.Da Beach A grand theft resulted 10 the loss ot S400 in cash in tht 600 block ofSleep~ Hollow lane. the vi.cum rcponed to pol~ Tuesday morruna. • • • The teacher's lOWllt at Laguna Beach Hiah School, 625 Part Ave . was broken into and vandalized b\ unknown suspects somctune Mon·- day n\&ht. Mental hospital inmate charged in girl's slaying beriff Lt. Richard • I I , . • .. . ~ day. June e. 198• -Lary ~·ounJ~teadt1 a dio but will go to Dallas ~k man for Lonmar for Jocatton ~hootina on Production\. June 20 and return on Aua. .. The deal was set last 17. That will take them out LOS ANGELES (AP)-Mus Reed was staned 10 ni&ht," said Youngstcadt. of Los Angeles durina the Donna Rctd, the Academy play the matria~b of the "We're not su~ when she Summer Olympics and out A..,&td-wmninaacttts and Ew101 clan Monday na&ht, will start work but it will be of Dallas before the Re- st.at of her own televmon JUSt hounafter Barbara 'Bel around the even th •pubhcao convention. sen in the 1960s, 1..$ the Geddes announced he episode " Miss Bel Geddes, citing new Mi Ellie on CBS' hat would not return an tbc rote "Dallas" is currently personal reasons con- IOlp opera .. Dallas." for a seventh sca~n. said filming at the MGM Stu-finned months of spccu- ------.---------------------------. lation th4t she would not return to the show. She suffered a heart attack a year aao and underwent quadruple bypass suriery. She was not able to return to work unul last November. Her character was married to Clayton Farlow (Howard Keel) in the last episode of the past season. The couple then took off for Grcc<:e, which will account for her absence from the early epiSQdes next season. This past television season "Dallas" was the ........ _ Slzttee TV •tar Donna Reed, left, will replace Barbara Bel Qedd ee on 'Dallu. • hijhest-rated regular band.Jock Ewing. Jock was S-Outh America and at was pnme-time series on the the head of the Ewing clan. subseq uently learned he air. which includes J.R. (Larry died in a plane crash. Miss Bel Geddes' de-Hagman) and Bobb) Miss Recd won an Oscar parture comes three years (Patrick Duffy). According an 1953 as best supporting after the death of Jam to the "Dallas" story Jock actress for her role in Da vis, who played her hus-disappeared on a tnp to "From Herc to ~ter:nity." r~--~----~~~~~~~~~~--~~~-----~-~l --~~~~~~~~~-~~~-~~~~~~~--.~~~~~-- 1 I f I I f . I • • ..... - PICK YOUR RATES PICK YOUR TERMS PACK YOUR BAGS . ][ HILTON A free night 1 at the Hilton for people who 1''ant to earn more from their money. I mag.me !>nak.ing up illl 1he sun. fun and ix-ace of mind at the PaJm Springs Hilton Or talong in the romance and adH~nture of colorful San Francisco !\JI in all . you'U ha\t~ your pick of 11 different lhhon Hotels 1hroughout 1he state To gel \our free night1 at the ll1hon. ''mph <>Rt'!l ~our Home Feder.ti Insured Term \ccount "llh S1.000 or more hefore Jul\ l""th. 19X-i1 · · It's 1he perfect "a~ 10 \act11on for les~ \\ h1Je \our mon('\ earn~ more· --!hank.' IO Home FtdcraJ ~ U-achuonall~ higher mtere~1 and doth compou11dt11R \nd lh<· ln,ured T<•rm \ccoum leL' )OU pick }our o" n rate~ and pirk )Our O\\ n term:-. -from 5l da)~ to 10 H"ar:-.. S<1 }OU ha\e the Ot•x1bili~ to dt'cidt• tht' ptriixb for \\h1ch ~ou d hke to IO\t"ll Open your ITA, and be sure to enter Home federal'sJnsurecLierm Account Sweepstakes. You ma\ be packing · your bag.1i for • • • the vac:ulon Princess Cruises of your life 10 1he Caribbean, Mexican Rhicra or even Parb. France. Tu o luck) "inncr.i and 1he1r gue~L\ wiU !let ~ail for r~I and relaxation on a Pnnc~s Cruise IO the t'\otic Caribbean or Me\ican Rhiera If you win, you and yo ur guesl will Ma\ tn Princess Cruille Lines' outside bedded rooms for ~o And will en~O) th<> 'umptuous cuisine and on-hoard acthilit'\ of the "orld's fincM sailing re~>n. T UI A Three other winn<·r~ ..,. ~ and their guesL., will be jt•ttmg TWA roundtrip to aJI 1he Wamour and fun of Pari~. France And for 1,000 01her winner.. we have Pierre.Lardin Garment B<1gs to pack up and lake with )'OU whenever and wherrver )OU "lSh Call Home FederaJ's 1011-free number for more information. 1-800-862-0539. Or stop by any Home Federal office To enter the Insured Tenn Account Sweepstakes, come to any Home Federal office. Or mail this entry blank. 1-IOME FE.DEAAL OHlcial Rules -Caribbean. Cruise accommoda· allowed. T1111. if any. are ttle lions include outside bedded responsibllity of the Individual rooms. Airfare to departure point winners. Winners may be 11k1d Is not included. Grand Prize trip to erecute an 1nld1vlt of ellgibll- must be taken by December 31. ity and release. r-------------------No Purchase Necewry 1 To enler. handpnn1 your name. address zip code and day and nighttime phone on the otflc1al en· try form or a plain 3" x 5 card and bring 10 any Home Federal branch ottice or mail 10 Home federars Insured Term Account Sweepstakes c o Public Rel8lt0ns Oept 707 Broadway, Suite 1200 San Diego CA 92101 2 Enter as often as you wish but each entry must be broughl in or mailed se~rately All entnes must be received by July 27 1984 3 Wlnetrt Wiii bt stlte1ed In I random drawing from among all tntrtn m1lld and rtetlYed from 1n bf'llM:ltta. Gra~ prize win- ners (2) w1U rKtlvt 1 cnilst for two to Uta Mt1lcan RM1ra or "" 19M. first prize winners (3) wlll 4 Sweepstakes opened 10 res1· receive 1 roundtrip flight for 2 to dents of Cahforn1a who are 18 Paris Prlzt e11n1l1t1 solely of years or older except employees coach clan seats ind does not and the11 lam1hes of Home federal Include accommodations upon Savings and Loan Association. anival. flrsl prlza 1r1,1 must be Pnncess Cruises Trans World A11· completed betwttn October 1 hnes. Don Jagoda Assoc .. 1he1r and December 18. 1984. Second agents, att1hates. subsid1a11e'8nd prl11 winners (1.000) will 11ct1 advertising agencies This Mfer receive a Pierre Cerdln Garment void Wherever prohibited and sub- BIQ Drawing wllt bt conclucttll iect to all ledetai state and local by N1tlon11 Judging Institute laws wtum decisions are final CHI 111 5. for • 1111 If "''I°' .ttlMrt, miners relatlng to attl n1t9-send 1 1tampell se l·td*'"M st1kt1. All PNll Will bl IWlrd· 1nv1tope to: ed 1nd wlnn1r1 notlll1d by mill. Home Fedml'1 ITA Only ont prlre to a lamlly or SwH,..Mts WIMtrt Ltl1 household. Prtz11 .,. Hfttt'PI-P.O. los 3751 11r1bl1 and no uibstltut!ona are Srollft. NY nns lnsured Term Account Sweepstakes Entry Blank. Name Address City State Daytime Phone ( Nighttime Phone { Malito HOME FEDERAL c10 Public Relations Oepanment 707 Broadway, Suite 1200 San 01ego, CA 92101 Zip ) ) ~ L---------••••--•••• - May best car sales month in six years By t~e A•Hda&ed Pren DETROIT -U.S. automakers shifted into hiah ~ in May, posting their be~t sales showina for the month in ix years. Sales of Amencan-m.ade can rose 22.6 percent last month compared with a year aao, the automak.en reported Tuesday. Among tbe Big Three domestic auto produc.ers General MotorS Corp. sales were up 2S.4 percent f~r the month. f"ord Motor Co.'s were up 2.S percent and Chrysler Corp. 's, which do not include its bot· selhng mmiv~os, were up 8.1 percent. Hart plane catches fire PHILADELPHIA -The emergency landing o~Gary Hart's cam~gn plane was but the latest of a senes of airplane mishaps which have plagued the 1984 .Demo- cratic presidential race. An cnjine in Hart's Boeing 720 caught fire Tuesday shortly after takeoff from Philadel- phia en route to Lo1 Angeles. The . plane. returned t.o Philadelphia, and the'° passengers, including Hart., his staff. Secret Service agents and reporters, filed off and boarded another jet. Convict hunt frustrating WARRENTON, N.C. -The governors of Vif'ainia and North Carolina say they arc doing everything possible to apprehend four escaped death row mmateS, but arc frustrated by rc~r1S of sightings that produce only dead ends. North Carolina officials arc hoping color photo- graphs of the fugiti ves will spark fruitful leads as they press their search for a pickup truck believed stolen by the .escapees when six of them fled the M~k.Jenbui:g ~rrectU>~al.Cen~r last Thu~y. ·;.. ~ ·- Porn phone limits 11et WASHINGTON -"Oial-a-podi'' telephone sere vices may accept only credit card payment and some must confine services to night h,ou~ to keep "thil~n off the line, the Federal Communications Comrinss1on says. In its ruling, the FCC rejected Tuesday other suggested means of preventing .roungsters from using.the scrvicet, sayang they would involve substantial costs." They included user codes, blocked access from pay phones and advertising restrictions. Gunman wary of TV WlNSTON-SALEM, N.C. -A gunman who said be was being spied on by a religious television program and stations that carried 1t killed a TV station sales manager and took bis secretary hostage before he was tricked intp surrendering, police said. Ronnell Leveme Jackson was charged with murder and kidnappina after W:illlam NofberrRismtltcr;-general u:lennan~of W.FfM-TV-; was shot to death and his secretary, Michelle Holland, was held hostage for 6112 hours Tuesday, police said. SD mayor ln runoff SAN DIEGQ -Mayor Roger Hedgecock, his political fortunes damaged by probes into his financtal affairs. missed a chance at outnvit re-election and must face millionaire businessman Dick Carlson in a Novem- ber runoff. Hedgecock finished" first among 'n~can-~ didates in Tuesday's primary with 47 percent of the vote. He needed 50 percent plus one vote to avoid a runoff. Mlsslon Inn purchased RIVERSIDE -The historic Mission Inn, a once- grand hotel that was purchased by the cit).' in a costly effort to save the structure, was sold for $3 million to a private group that promises to spend $13 million to refurbish it. Dale Keller Inc., an international interior design firm specialiring in hotels, is purchasing the inn in partnership with Carley Capital Group of tdadison, Wis. BatlJroom gas cb.amber deatlJ ARCADIA - A 39-ycar-old man committed suicide b)'. riggjngarretaboratetiming-devic.ethat dropped cyanide pills into a bucket ef acid, turning bis bathroom into a deadly gas chamber. authorities say. Firefighters were forced to don oxygen masks to enter the bathroom where the body of Edward Leonard of Arcadia lay Tuesday. 'Beautiful frlendshlp' salt SAN FRANCISCO -Property acquired duri.na a "beautiful friendship" before marriage is not community propeny when the divorce comes, according to a state Court ·or Appeal ruling. The· rultna holds that P~la Leversee should not have to {>llY a sum to Dale E. Levefsee that includes a split of their house, even if they lived together in the house. Playboy 'bunny salt' LOS ANGELES -Patricia Lenz worked as a Playboy bunny for 6'hJears until she was told she lacked the .. tiunny ima&c" an was fired. Due to the firing, Lenz has sued Playboy Oubs lntematJonal. a whoUy-owned subsidiary o( Playboy Enterprises Inc .. for more than $250.000. The Supenor Court civil suit was filed late Monday. French olMe~er ~llled BEIRUT, Lebanon -A French truce observer was killed and another wounded in an outbreak of snip!-nJ near Beirut's port today, the Christian-controlled Voace of Lebanon radio station reported. It would be the ftrst death of a member of the Frcoch observation force. which was formed after the withdrawal of the roultinatlonaJ peacekeeping fofce m February and Ma~h . KldnapplJJt victim freed TARANTO, Italy - A 22-year-old woman kid· napped nearly seven months aao was freed today after payment of a ran.som wonb $480.000, police repe>rted. lbc family ownm of a wine exportina company, bad iuued pubhc appeals for the release of Annamaria FUico, an elementary tebool tcacber, and Pope John Paul U in March pleaded for her ~om. S.t"•rov •auve. 1JeaJt1J7• MOSCOW -A fellow member of the Soviet Academy of Scienca said today that Soviet buman fiabtt ' activist Andrei Sakharov Is alive ari<I healthy in the clc>tcd city of Gorky. Yuri Ovcban nikov, head of the bio-orpn;c chemistry institute at the acadt.my, wu alked about S.kharov's health at a news conference on an upcomtna biochcm.icat symPotium. Jilli~ alert In Jl•nlla MANILA, Philippin -PttsiCScnt Fmti...,a £: Marcos• aovemmcnt today dttlaml a miliwy alert in Manila and I J suburban area daamins aubvtnlvc aroups plan "to &Ow tc~am" in the reaion. A malhary 1nnounccmcn1 said M-.,. Gen. Prosptro Ohva1i heed of • the etropolitan Con.stabu~. had ~ conllabilai"y ind police untlS on "rCa alert' stalU • .. ' J• • I • • ..:..___..._,__..,1----------_ --- • • . Wor.ld leader's, onarchs tour site of D-I>ay invasion QMAHA BE;ACJi, Frince (AP)-Heroes of 0-Day, carryma memones of comrades slain 40 years ago returned to ~he beaches and cliffiops ofNonnandy today: join~na presidents and monarchs in commcmeratana the anniversary of the Allied invasion. - Gray-haired veterans of the June 6, 1944 invasion wept at the Jraves of comrades. The leaders o/ Amenca. France, En&tand and Canada J~id wreaths aod dedicated nton\Jments to the men who led the wayU> the liberation of France. . At least 250ki11ed Jn Indian battling NEW DELHI, lndla (AP)..._ lndlan IOldlera rakSed U. Golden T"1'\pkt comp*' tn Amrltaer today to ftush hUndreda of heavttY armed extrerntata from the hOl1est Stkh lh""* At .... t 250 Slkti militant• and 447 troopers were kllled, an army Command« Mid. Lt. Gen. K. SunderJJ told r9P(>f'.tera that at least 110 tr~ and 550 SJkh mllltanta were tnJured. Tw.Mt eoldlert were m~ng and presumed d4Jad, he '*· ; . The Sikhs have been dM'tandlng greater~ and reltglous autonomy tor their Met and for their tiOmeland In the northern state of nJab. Pre idcnt Rcapn stood atop the rocky limestone promontory at Pointe du Hoc to unveil two plaques hononna those who took part in the initial wave of the June 6, 19-44, assault by more than I S6,000 Allied troops -the first step toward frtting Fnnce from Adolf Killer's Oennan forces. And he-issued a catt1p .. wtpe &om the face of llie CiiUi ... the ~rrible weapons man now has in bis hands ... Recallint the 20 million Soviet citiiens who lo t their lives in the war, Reapn uflC'd the Soviet Union to show some sign ~·th.at they share our desire for love and peace.•• · Then he flew by helicopter to Omaha Beach, wherAe and his wife Nancy walked amona the aravestones of9,386 American servicemen and women, and stopped briefly to pray at the chapel. At Omaha Beach, Reapn met Frenct\ Pre$tdent Francois Mitterrand, who escaped from a German prisoner of war camp in 1942 and established a Resistance network. • Mitterrand earlier lajd a wreath at the monument to the Liberation of France in Bayeux, the city which was th~ first major point freed by Allied forces. In the semicircular arena 1D front of the bas relief fiaur-es of French people welcoming the liberators, Mitterrand stood alone while a band played.the French "Salute to the Dead." After a minute's silence, the "Marseillaise" rang out. He later joined Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and ~er husband Prince Philip at a cemetery in Bayeull, where 2,000 British soldiers are buried. Saudis attack lranjets With U ~s. weapo~ ' . " . WASHINGTON (AP) -A more bUilt Saudi F-ISs on U.S.-built Ira-Wtte Shot down. but a le1lior 0.S. sophisticated U.S. radar plane was nian F-4 jets was ditec:uiid by one of official io Loiidon ~lb Plaideilt sent to Saudi Arabia to help the thefourolderU.S.AirbomeWamina ~a.id later leltCbcl by UJS. Saudi~ protect their tan~ers and oil and Control System (AW ACS) plues AW ACS reve&Jed evidence OI Oliy facilities from the widemng Pcnian scnttotheSaudisafteracontrqvenial one downed aircraft. The tr.iin GulfWar,andsoun:cssaidtheSaudis sate three years qo, said U.S. of-F-45 were on a reo.·r· llMc attacked two lranian jets. with the ftaals, who spoke on coodition they m.ission and ~ batti • ,t.c:k ~ help of U.S. electronic guidance. not be identified. Iran when they W.p:d, widt s.ad.i The attack Tuesday by the U.S.· Initial reports said two Iranian jets F-1 Ss over SaUdi 1Crri10rial ....._ SAVE -2 -8% ·to 60% on.;brand_ name· -cinil-aesigner _ aPPar.e1 · Ed~il INSIDE EVERY ROSS DOOR THERE'S A GREAT MEN'S FASHION STORE. IF SELeCTION COUNTS, ROSS MEN'S STOA• la GREAJ". Every single day. you'll flnd exciting collections of every category of menswear. From dress shirts to swimwear. From dress hose to running shoes. They're all here Inside one door. ROSS priced. IF QUALITY COUNTS, ROSS MEN'S STORE IS GREAT. You c hoose from many famous brand and designer labels. Every single day. Labels you see nationally advertised. Labels you see In department and specialty stores for much. much more. They're here. ROSS priced. Every single day. START COUNTING YOUR SAVINGS. AT ROH -MEN'S STORE. Every day you save 20% to 60~ on the same men's clothes that sell for dollars and dollars more elsewhere. Compare. Then shop ROSS. SUNDAY, JUNE 17TH IS FATHER'S DAY. SHOP ROSS, YOUR COMPLETE GIFT-GIVING HEADQUARTERS. "°"ctn•• ... so. CAUi'. • :ThouNnd Ollkt • T.nan. • Wut Hof~• Tort1nce/Old Towne • Tolhnce/Coest Hwy. • Nonfflk • Olendorl • PUente Hiia • ~ • AMt9'de • FuJ. ~ton • Sent.1An.a • Cost.111\Ua • El 1Toro • OCc.tnSJde • Sift OleQo lC ..... mont DESIGNER KNIT SHIRTS. Inside each first quality shirt. there's a designer label. Choose important solid colors, handsome stripes in pure cotton or cotton blends. S ·M·L-XL sizes. Compare at S25 to l30 14.99 DRAWSTRING CASUAL PANTS. Cooling summer colors, easy flt for a man to relax in. Comfortable elastic waistline closes with a drawstring. Past season. Compare •f N5 fo HO 16. 99 MOO IOUnt M•TOL ST. AT ~~..,. _,,,. COMT "'-A.IA -,._ ... .,"' ... f10R A"°" tTORa .a.MIT ftU CALL TOU. l'Mla teoot U•9ttl · .sroa• llQU"S. -ff rt, to All -..... lat ..... All -... a ...... t t All -.... ..... ........ ,..., ,.,....... °"""'" Vliaa. ..... re~., Al9etloan .._... .. ~ • ,. ........ It's generally recognized as the world's finest for g>od s~ durability and outst.andlng perf onnance. White leather upper. sizes 7 to 11 and 12. 36 1A9 eom,..,.."'.... • .. ' Famous for its .trad!J:ional stytlng with soft leather uppers. and handsewn consblitt10n. Choose tan or pewter. Sizes 7 to 11 and 12. 39.99 TRAINING SHOE The brand with the 3 stripes. A comfortabte training shoe with nyton/vek>ur upper and rubber sol~ Navy/white or tan/brown. Sizes 7 to 11and12. 19 99 Compare at ••s • -~ .. FAMOUS BRAND RUNNING SHOE •One of the most popular running shoes available.. For superior comfort on the road. it features • strong breathabte nyton mesh and s~ upper. Bunt-in arch support. Sizes 7 1/a to 12. Compare •f H8 29 • 99 oracss rora LESS /, t ' • ' J I i l . . i t i .. ·. t r I I • I . ~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedneaday, June 8, 1084 COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE LISTINGS A-8 Stop Prowler Entry! Th e last Dependable Protection You W ould Ever Need For Home And Bus iness OvER THE CouNT ER And SAVES S 5 , Cati To HllVe The U~imate Benefit• Of: .,. ..,,,,,. ~ ., Black Velvet Canadian $gee We Will Meet ,, Or Beat Any > .. Current Locally ""' ~ Liquor Barn #¥inery-Of-The-Month For June CALLAWAY 25°/o Off Our Regular Low Discount Prices '4" Fume Blanc Reg $5 99 1so"" s3n Dry Chenin Blanc Reg S4 97 m ,., •2•• Vin Blanc Reg $3 97 m ,., '3" White Riesling Reg $4 65 m ... s5eo Chardonnay Reg $7 47 1so"" Gallo Wines Chablis Blanc. Pink Cll1bh. Rhine. 11'4 llose Yin llose or s3&9 Huny Burgundy 3 liter Tosti - Asti Spumante "" -: STORE HOURS: ... ...,,,,,. ~ Monday · Friday: 10:00 am to 8:00 pm ""' 1!!!. Advertised Price! ~ '" Get whatever you want. • i· 1 .For less. · Saturday: 9:00 am to 8:00 pm ~ Sunday· 10:00 am to 7:00 pm • 12 Pack 12 oz. Cans Crown Russe Vodka 80 Proof Budweiser Beer Longneck Returnables 24 -12 oz. Bottles Olct Smuggler 16 "'"' , n l•l .. s1054..-+Aa•n 86 1'1ff1 12 ytll Dunlivet ,_...., .. , ... , )fl.,_ Dewars . sggg "''"' 1H '"' Ballantines 16 1'1Ml 1 75 l •rt s141a Cutty Sark H ''"' ltlff s12es VODKA S . ff sen m1rnO 80 P1ool f IS ldt! Seagram's Imported ao P11ol 1 rs l~fl s10° Kavlana ftO Proof L1111 s3H Crown Russe 80 Proof 150 .,, s3gg lzmlra 100 Proof l•ltr s5&1 COGNAC Martell V.S.P. 10 ,,.., 750"" s1331 s140 150 ... s131s 150 ... Hennessy V .S. 10 ,root Courvolsier V .S. 10 Preo• 81cardl 10 ,.r.,1111v11" 4m011 1n1~" sgn RonRico 10 P•oo• WM••• otld 751 .. s5n Boca Chica 10 "'"' w""'" CoN ,,,., s549 lltftt tr Ou• • If t/ s2a2 Lowenbrau s5ee Specltl II II 11 11 " Budweiser s22s C1111 11 It II ,, " fl Country Cooler 2 .~5 II II Cltrva " llf1w0111y or Caffeine Free Coke Regular or 0111 Talisker ~z.~u· Laphroaig 91 • Proef 10 yu 1 no ... 791 Bow more 86 Proot 12 yu1 150 .. s1991 CIK I 101 s3200 Glenliddlch Shftmaslers ''"' 10 "" 150"" 171 i ;!·1 tf1:i f JI :J ! 3 \I •fJI louroon 86 P•oot 1 '51•1t• Codorn Ort If lrul Cla1J1Ct Moet & Chandon Wllllt Siii Lvness Creek b(ra llfy " lrvl Cvne $266 ''°"" Franzia Ea 111 Ofy P•n-Almon• oi Spum1n1t s1as 1SD "'l Mumm htr1 Orv Fr11111 Fllllct s1391 150 1111 hlener Klosterberg lhelltflt K111111t11 1911 Zeltinger Himmelrich ll1111Mt k•fNltlf 1982 Uerziger Wuerzgarten ll1111tn9 KllllM11 1911 Wehlener Klosterberg ll1111tn1 Sp1t1111 1912 Erdener Treppchen ll1111H19 Sp1t1t11 1112 ISO ... s4a& 151 "" s533 150 llll s5ea Ancient Age Jack Daniels sg98 10 ,, •• , s921 VARIETAL FRENCH WINE SAVINGS Tt••tlltt W••lltl ISO ml s109& , VARIETY & SAVINGS FROM REMY PANNIER Jim Beam Bouroon 80 Proof 1 15 •~•· Ten High Bouroon 10 P1oot 11111 s5H s532 Seagram 7 Crown 11tlld 10 ,,oc, 1so ... Booth's 90 p, .. , , ., 1·••· sgea Stanton's 10 Proo• I 15 l~tt s7H Flelschmann 's ao ,.,.,, t 7) l ,,, sgH TEQUILA Senori t1 10 ,.,.,, wM•., ot111 1 ,, 1 "' s911 Two Fingers 10 Prte1 t 11111110• l)D ... s1095 Gu11no Rojo ':~: 1i ;r.;,• 1~0 .. s 1019 Budweiser 3 Estrella C111trntl Stuv19non 1971 Davis Bvnum Fu111t lllnc (911 '5" 150 '"' '5" 1u .. 1 Montevlna Mantino Zlftf•ndtl 1910 s4u 1$0 1111 Ste . Chanelle Ct1110tnft•f 1f11 St. Francis Joh1nn•1Mr9 ll111lt"f 1911 11 '7" ,,. ,,. s431 ,,. "" RI unite s5111 U llllKYICI 11.anco " RtU1t > I~,. Los Herma nos lithf c"••~s 11m s2H Chtni" l t1nc t r Frt ncft Ctlomblrd , s 1,.,, Cella 'llmbruaco or lllnco C.K. Mondavi Cft1bk1 111\ont 11111 01 9u1~ dy J aylor California Cll1n1n lltnc ti frtrteft Coltmt1111 I ~ I "' s3111 •• ~., s4111 1 l~f'\ s4aa Vouvray IHllll 1311 Pouilly Fulsse Chateauneut de Pape Chenln Blanc !SO•I 1511 7$1114 1311 150"" 1211 Pinot Chardonnay Liquor B•rn hH French Win., From Every Region In Fr•ncel - Bolla ,.,,, .,......., "v...... 1s1 • Folonarl Bozzonl Bollin I Orvleto hl•t 1 'l~tr t1111nt1 (Slllw ltllltl 150 -" Cft11dt11111y 151 .. 1 ,_"''"' C1n4ld1 '" 1111 '2" s311 •221 '3" 1311 Liquor B•rn h., Import• From Chi/•, Argentln•. Huilg•ry, Rom•nl•. Au1tr•ll11 I do1•n• more Countrl ... Coors ' 811111 Miller s22ao s22ao liquor B111n H n<c Every W ine> V1trltttnl Posslbltt From over 220 Wln~ries! .. ,,,., Stroh's Light "'"'' s3500 Planters Miehe lob ... ,, .. s25ao Ory Routed ,.unuta 1728 Superior Ave .. Costa Mesa · Phonl: 645·1608 25878 Muirtands, Mission Y1e10 Phone. 855·1437 10932 Westminster. Garden Grove ·Phone: 638 ·4145 263 South Eucbd Avenue. Anaheim Phone: 991 ·6892 U• 17 Culver Dnve. Irvine Phone: 551·2757 th ,n, ~1111 1111o 1• 11• Jll .. hh JI""""' 1hll1·hl I hur11IJ1 f111" : • 1'111,J tl\rou1h \\ 1·11,., .if111 Margaritas ToQo 1/2 Keg \ .. -,\ / ~----.L-......:. Irvine Company wins conservation award Newport Corp. s_hows . 3rd-quarter increase Newpon Corp. (OTC, NMSNEWP), manufacturers of laser components and vibration i.solation equipment, reponed increased ~Jes and earnings for th~ third q~er ended April 30, said Walter J. Ludt Ill, vice president- treasurcr. Sales for the quarter increased by 37 percent while cami~ peT share increased by 43 percent over the respective 1983 period. Net income wa5 $1 ,831 , I 03, or 20 cents per share, compared to $1 ,236,433, or 14 cents, for the like period a-year ago.Sales were Sl. l 70,J.~ compared to $5,228,803 for the J 983 period. • Early Bird Dinner Specials 66. 95 Prime Rib or Fresh Fish Complete Dinner w ith choice of soup or salad and dessert 673-7726 ~THE PENINSULA BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA J J ' Comprehensive Care Corp. has entered into an aarecment to purchase a 75,000-squarc-foot office buildin&. near the airport in Irvine to serve as its corporate headquarters. 8. .·.t Lee Karns. president and chief ex-ecutive officer, announced. Plans to renovate and expand the building were approved by the Irvine City Planning Comm1ss1on May 24. Tu.stted for mall and edium $lze manufac-tutc:rsas well asdjvt ionsof laJ'ltf COl]>Orltion1, MMC 1s a soft~ apphcalion paekaac of 1nte1ratcd manufacturina and financial functions de- signed to assist manaic- ment in the control of a typical fabrication and ~ Annual Yield Da-ily Rat 'tou set the term: 32-180 days 181 days will get you 12.08~0 112510 Annual Yield Daily R.Jtto You set the term. 181-364 cfays. 365 days will get you O/o • How to tell our new sa · s accot1tlts from your ~aving~ accou11t. Tiered Money Market Savings Account: rate up to 9.003 yield up to 9.381%. If ynu wnnt .1 -.,l\'1ng-. account th.n rt•all v r:Hc...''· nrcn one..' of our ttl.'rcJ money m.1rkct '·" tn}.!' :-iccounc-. All tr take-. 1:-." S2 .500 mirnmum Jl'rt"ll L1kt• :my -..nv1ng~ accnunr. you can m.1kl' 1..lc...·~"1b or withdrn\\'ills :lnytimc you choo:-.e . But unit kt• ocher saving' :iccnunr-.. you 'II get higher m.Hh't trltl'r· l''l rmes for a higher ~nvmgs hnlanct' Mn1nt:iin :in ,1,·erngl~ dC1ily halnncc between $2. 500.LX .md $19.499.99 anJ you'll enrn 8.84l\, intl'rl'~t pl'r annum $20.000 to $49.999.99 cnrns 8.94'\, interest per nnnum. $50.000.00 or more earns 9.1~1 ''., interest pl'r , nnnum. Avcragl' daily balances undl'r $2. 50( 00 -..till earn ii 5.25'\, intt'rl'M r.uc We'll c..•vt•n g1vt.• you (ht.•ck writing rn' tlr~t'' ot ur tt) ~ chc;ck-, f'l'r month. \\'here dM.' can you find tl ~"''"'g"" acnwnt thnt offc..·r-. thi' t7rc of flex1htlny nnd high m.ukec rate int •rl·-..t, Pmbably nm where you're -..wmg nnw An 8 «;'\, rac~ "dJ,· 8-ll\, amuw/1-v An H 6'\, mtt· -v1dd, 8 9-r',, wrnu~&ll\I, :An lh\1'\, rar~ ~rdd<. q \HI '',, trnnu· ;1lh. Jntc.~~,r "c>mf>utaiion " 11m1f>I~ mh:·rc,r 1:11lc11lcm:d cm ~o Joe; or 3M Jay h<t~i dncl cr~dir.:J mmuhh R,u"'' en~ sacf>j~..r w /X""'"li chat~~. · I Passbpok Money Market Savings Account: rate 9.50%, yield 9. 925%. Fqr tho!-~ l)t vuu kcl'r1n~ SJCl.l\.\."'I t 'r more m .l 1 )'\, p~. ·honk acn)unt. JL1't fl)r th~.-(tlO\'\.'ntl·nce nf ,l ra~°'nl )1'., wc\·e ~Ot a hl'tfl'r tdt•A [)l'P' l'lt th.H 1nnrwv 111 n P:lc1fio Ft'Jeral Pn-.,h x'k ~ 1unt'\' ~ farkl•t ~.win~' Accuunt .rnd Yl'u 'll t·.irn ql.)2)''., intc..·re-.c J"l'r .rnnum. Th:ic"' rract1c;11l\' dl'Uhlc \\ h.lt V<'U re..' rnnkmg now )i.)u 'll j;!l't '1 ra,-.hook th,ll \\'llrl,_, )lht l1k.1..• \"l'Uf c..\ld onl·.-One th:n lcr-. \'l)U w1thdr.1\\ \)r dl·~Nt tl\lml'V nnyttmc you like \Vtth all the ,,lfl'ty .Hh.i '>l'CUrtty of u )1a:-.!.\book If your halancc l'n~r Jn.,r~ below $10.000 00. you 'll -.till cnrn n 5 2 5'\. mt~rc-.c r;-itl' Bue nt <l 9 5l '\, rate rn:-.tc...'ad ot ) 5·· ... It O()t•'n t pav fl,r a -.er1ou-. ''wcr tu h.1u· .H"lvthm~ hut our r~,,l-x1':>l Mont'\' Markl't .. a' tn).!" Acn,unc lnll•-r t ""mnpuumun '' ''mt,/" mtc:n. r \.tel\.1elcHt:ll cm a lh" or JM da' bum and ",.c:J11l·d monrhh Rac1.' arc 'rc/'>il!d w f>t'TI0J1~ chtm,1!1.' • PACIFIC FEDERAL I Monthly Money Market Savings Account: rate 10.5%, yield 10.5%. Thcrt;, .l h1g d1ffc..·rence hetween nur monthly m'mc\· m.irkl't '"''lnj..~ :iccount .-md other monrhlv clCCl)Uf)b Our currenc lO 5'',, per .1nnum interest rate Ir" .1 h1l.!h rme \'('Ill d t'xpect to find nnly on lrn1gc..•r cc...·rm 6 \ 'r 12 month aCL'l'llnh But with Pac1f1~ Fc..·'-kr.ll', ll"ll 'nthlv .iccounr. vnu can earn these mar- h~t r.Hc..·-. tl'r ·"' ltttlt· .1-. )() dav-..Ju:-.r hy marntainmg .152.11..\ \.\."'! mm1mum halnn(l' unng chm time Of cpur-.c..· 1t VtlU wnm your money to contmuc tn crow. vPu cnn ;umm1attc;-illv renew the nccount at the..• rn'\'tltlmg high nrnrkct r;itc l.'llCh time your )('-1.fav ('t'mtteafl' mntun.:--. ) dtm·c "a"tt' .uw ume collecting high mtcre'r Ort•n .l ~tnnthlv ~h,nc..'\ Mnrkl't ~·l\'rng Account .H P.K1h( Fcdc..·ral nnd -.r.ut t.>.unmg lnnu rt·rm rate~ \ m \'Our \ )\\ n tl'rm-. Tht mlc..'R''l lompuuuion L\ '>rmpl.: mtcrc.q L'altic/ar~d on '(I ~"(If -~ atr'V 1'ci ... h dlltl l.fl.!Jtt4.'J monthh Rctt • dTI.' ,uh11.'d co fl\.~1<·Jr • r.:han~~ Call your local hranch 11) 1 , \ -P·\C'J FIC tor ucrn.·nr nu h.·J .. Tt,/ r1.~ul<Hiom n'tJum·" '"h't<mlh.ll mt1.. r .,, (1\-·nalC) /or ~arl) tdrhclrcnnrl. ' Ii •• . 1 ,l . i I • !i • , ·r On the , • 4 _, ----~·-~--~ ------~ ~ WEDNESDAY!$ CLOSING PllCI Dow JoNf s AvERAGE : WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK <AP> J~. 6 . ~ 1 NYSE LEADERS NEW YORK (AP) .....,. Sele$_, WtdMlm price •nd j' c~n" of the 15 moil K Ntw York foci< Exc.iianv• Issues. Ira nt tloMllv a more th 11. llM f' I 10 ~ + ~uoerOil , , t f ~ISnev W , , ,._ xx on • n l~~&.Tn l: 1 Ve + 91111$~ .. • +l orOMo s T~otnc 7 ' ~ + If~~ I It . UP s ANO OowN s ~~~(A ~, .. , '·'' ·" ~ sl a I ='·;.i the most nd down the percent ror Ctlange reoar<lless ~ f()('Wt~. No lf¢W' t trHlno betoW s2 ere Inc ·l.ldtd. Net • percentage d'lenDel •r•t difference be'-'-9!! the prevlOUs c;IO$ price end today s t~· e>rlct. Name LH c Pd., C n eon + UP l i vi nvfi1e 'h rr-~P 1 st oNA 91AI · ~ P on!lllCP I~ y, P j lnCPAm pf v. ~ .p j amsnSesn 1h v. p J klnel I ~ 14 UD , I wE 1 'h 1 UP C 9 m a<I ' l\ '"' l..Jp c 10 I · p 11~ 111• Up c 11 ~I_ J ~ 'h UP C 12 r OG n ~ 112 UP 1 3 a tr 1 • "' UP 1 ac n ~ Up efr J.42pfM l ~ l'I• Up : asf~sFutf 24 l'I• UBP 1 .. onoB•.t 1 "" ~ . P ', Lear\ wt i 1 1. P ltf'Y PhO 1.4 Up MGHll of ~ 'n UP l xCeUo · 1~ UP 1 S,_. ~ ltt UP : relnl · l UP l en OSI s UP t<IMotr s l/t ~ UP ! DOWNS Laf j"" _c~'-Pct • 411\ = 1~ i 16~ -114 14~ -1 21 .... -, .... ,.,. -"• 2v. -\I\ ?2:J,i,e. -I~ 1js:= . 2" -14 1 \1)-l "" -'le 3 ~ = 1~ J -~ \Ii -"" "'> -Pl• l!l'e-"" "" -v. YI -~ , ~ -G WHAT AMEX Orn NEW YORK (~P) Jun. 6 TodlllJ ':.~~ ~~~ ~ ¥:~1 1nues m: C:!~'·----14. __ _ : AM £X LE ADERS NASDAQ SUMMARY GoLo Qu oTES , METALS Qu orf s That's an apt description of both busin ss and business people along the Orange CJoast. To keep track of where om pant es ar going and which people are helping them get th r ,just watch ·er dttLtne'-everydaytnthe Business tlon of your new Ill~ PllGI J '· ~ I Ll TTfRS ets fail to observe ob.a Wayne curfew To the Editor. Last niaht. a commercial jct took off from John Wayne Airpon over my bouse at 10:2S p.m. This cype of .. curfew breakina'' incidents continue so happen. I have reported these incidents to Supervisor Riley's office t>n numerous occasions and yet they "tOntinue to h1ppen. There is no point in a curfew unless it is continuously . .:II . observed. It is quite obvious why the mi: dents of Newport Beath have such a distrust of the Ora nae County Super- visors. if such a simple task as not alJowina a commercial Jet to take off after I 0 p.m. cannot even be enforced. J. K. LEASON N~wport Beach : Let's all vote for supervisors To the Editor: districts but change to a countywide Jf the citizens of Newport Beach or method of campaigning and elec- any Ora nae County community are tions. Thus. the power or franchise of unhappy with the policies and at-the voters and taxpaye• will be titudes of our county supgvisors. increased five-fold, countywidc, as then they should work to chanae the will be the accountability of each representational system of elections. supervisor. Eliminated w11l be the It's unfair to have "taxation without neptive "ward" system in which the representation," but even more frus-citizen has only one vote instead of tratina is when the board foists an five ~very foUf' years. This new unpopular proaram (airport ex-approach is a replica of the viable pansion, etc.) upon any area in which ~~terns employed by city councils st four of the five supervisors are not (Newport • Beach), school boards ·~J~t'llili~lfl,Jiti~~;b~e~t ~· ~~ -esa and most counties WJ residency requiremcntOr cac super-CHRIS M. ~Et::L :; visor in the five equally populated Costa Mesa 19 I r 10 - I .. • .. " Growing up honestly To the Editor: When I picked up my son from the- siners I could feel his uneasyoess ... He had witnessed a theft. To make matters wonc the thief waH friend of hi~ from school. As he fought within hilhsclf, he told me of the incident. Attei bor of the sitter bad left b.is I 0.s outside bis home and ran insi e for "just a moment." Within seconds the thief stoic the bicycle and rode off to his home. My son directed me to the boy's home and retrieved the stolen proJ>- crty: Then we returned it to the owner. Thank you Nathan for being so honest and doing what is right! rm very proud of you!! SUSANRAATH . Costa Mesa Paramedics are 6marve1ous' To the Editor. I want to commend the para- medics; my husband had a heart attack yesterday (he's aoing to be OK) but the paramedics came within a couple of minutes. They were so compassionate, and so kind, efficient and I want to thank them. I want people to read this and know Lh3t I think they arc absolutely marvelous. JOYCE HARRIS Laguna Niguel ~udos for retiring chancellor To the Editor. The time has come to publicly recoanizc a most outstandina mem- ber of our community who was born in Orange County, served 40 years in public ~ucation. the last 32 years ih the Coast Community Colleae Dis- trict, and who is now retiring as chanocllor of the district com_posed of Obldenwest, Oran&e Coast, Coastline and PBS Station KOCE SO. He traveled to EnJland to study their Open University, and returned to found Coastline Collqe. He sought and won a license to cstabUsh a public broadcasting station and built KOCE-TV at Ooldenwest. He has been described as a "Hi&h Tech 'Visionary?! by.. those-pro~J>nals who know him. - For many. many years, he attended all football pmes of not only Orange Coast, but Goldenwest as well. He bas been supportive and in attendance at the athletic propams, includina the sailina procram, and was himself the OCC Sailina Coach from 1960-63. He was the primary force for securing the OCC Boat House and Sailina Base. Crcwi and coaches .alike have said that "be was always very supportive of the erews and tegattas and was in attendance at all awards dinners." Under his masterful auidance, our small community colleac grew to become the most4ttended communi- ty colleae district in the entire United States. His foresiaht and 'uidanoc brou&ht the coast district into the forelront of leamina technolOCY. re- sultina in the nation's number one producer and distributor of television courses for colleae credit. enabling a workina population 10 continue to Jearn and excel, no1 only in our immediate area but throua,hout the United States where the colleae TV prosrams are used. To quote Carol Gandy. a fonner board president, "I 1hink thal Dr. Watson has been the leader in the development of tfle community col- leae concept u we know it in this nation. His innovativeness and foic- siahtedoess in rqard to the Coas\ College District has provided educa- tion to the community 1hat is excelled by no other community colleac district. Dr. Watson's retirement will create a tremendous void in the entire community college system." former Trustee Robert Humphreys, a 20.year board member said/'Without question, Dr. Watson is the outstanding community college leader." · Dr. Watson served as consultant to the Republic of Cbina, American Samoa Community Colle&e. Univer- sity of Hawaii, College of Micronesia, American Associa1ion of Communi- ty Colleges, and is prescntl).' serving on the Annenburg Council, EXEC €ommitt~Directonof the Public Broadcastina System. the Committee of Post Secondary Ac- creditation, and the Leaauc for In- novation. He has served our nation as consultant in the Department of Energy: Veterans' Administration; member of American Council on Education; past chairman of the American Association of Communi- ty Collqes: president. Association of Community Colleges for Exocllence in Systems and Services; president, League for Innovation in the Com- munity Collqe; president, Com- munity College Accreditina Com- mission. The above is only a very small ponion of bis accomplishments, and even thouah we have been close persqnal friends for over 30 years, this information was mainly unknown to us and had to be secured throuah the college. He doesn't "blow his own trumpet," so we must form a band. clang the cymbals. be-at the drums, and sound the clarions for a JOb well done by this man of immense intelliaence, quiet dignity. and great personal intcarity. Norman. we thank )'OU for what you have done for our community, and we SALUTE You! DON AND LU VENA HAYTON Corona del Mar M.L.W.w.a• ~ ChuJDow911by [dltot lllO to the PUblllfW I Orenge Coat OAILV Ptl.iOT~. June I, 1914 .. . ......... o.~-·lt• Llke the Marines, Ron1JlU thebeaclJ COi:nba-11 m a i=iti me e*T-\leit -. _....._emRo~~is 00 a :8-~:--n-r-11 percent under R-"" · ii dowD &o 7.4 -the figUR -~· ftOcn ranks with HMS Pinafore ~~~~=t:=z:: wes have beeD red1IO"d; and ~ WASHINGTON -On this 40tb anniversary of the greatest seaborne invasion in history, 1 want to relate a maritime exploit of somewhat more modest dimensions. lt concerns the SS Califomia, which may -take its place with the HMS Pinafore and the Walloping Windowblind in the an- nals of seagoing jokes. The California is a freiJhter that bas sccrr better davs. Boiltm 1946, it was mothballed (or yean. then re- furbished in the 1960s. Perhaps anticipating a ba'Ji:in because of its decrepitude. oftictals of the Agency for International Development con- tracted with the ship's owners to carry 18.000 tons of com to Egypt to be used as livestock feed. But like generations of used-car bu)'tt'S. the AID officials found it's sometimes bard to drive a bargain -or. in lhis case, lO sail one. As the California was being loaded with corn at Norfolk. Va.. last October. Coast Guard inspectors pvc the ship a routine. c~eck and J1c1 AIDEIS81 .. discovered numerous deficiencies." So reads a State Department cable seen by my associate Luccttc La&nado. fhe dcfic1enc1es included several cracks in the hull. This disturbed the Coast Guard crowd. who are rnpon- siblc for keeping ships scawonhy. They informed the California's owner that the ship was unfit to sail until repairs were made. Dcsptte the official seal of d1sa1>- proval. the buruucrats at AID bad faith in the California. The owner proposed to do enough rt pairs to keep the freighttr afloat -1f not self- propellmg -and send 1t across the Ruilners jog bank balan ce A vcrage marathon runner is pretty well fixed financially, although not as rich as the average sailina skipper. Take the racers in the 1983 New York City marathon. Forty-six percent of them earned more than S40.000 a ycaL..EnaughtoJl\l)' tennis shoes but not a yacht. Most vindictive Last Will and Testament in the record was left by an angry West German. To inherit. it stipulated. his relatives had to attend a wake for him on an upper floor of his home. He'd sawn through the supporting beams. The floor col- lapsed. Most mourners therein were killed. You can use a phrase all your life ~a.houteveqtoppingto think what it really means. Take "to lose your temper ... If steel loses its temper. it brcU5 rather than bends. no? The metalhc pointer thal casts a shadow on a sundial is called a "gnomen." It was once a well-known word. Not anymore. Students of t.br languaic speculate that digttal time- pieces oneday will make the word "hands" in reference to clocks as obscure a word as "gnomen." L.M. Boy' 11 • 1ymdlc•ted colf11DA11t Atlantic -under tow as an unmanned barge," aca>nhna to the cable. AID raised no object.ion to this biza.n'e' solution. So the mirumal repairs were made, and t.bc corn- 1.aden California set off under tow on New Year's Eve. · The ooean pass.qc was uoder- stan<iably slow -so slow, in fact. that 1he-Califomia didn't drop anchor in E&Yorian watea until four months al\d the com bad been loaded aboard. The dismayed Egyptians refused to let the California enter the port. .. The refusal was based on thC1r conccm that the com. which was suspected ... lO be darnqcd due to the Iona voyaac. -would be mi1ed Wlth sood com at the grain s.ik>s in the pon of Aleundna. .. another cable explained. The festerina com conU"O\'Ct'S)' went unresolved for sill ween Fi• nally, at I.be end of Mardi. \be Egyptiansasreed to let the freiahterbe towed into Alexandria's inner a.nchoragr -providrd the) Yrcre allowed to examine the corn. Apttd. Egyptian authorities then cha.ryd that some 300 tons of rotten com had been dumped overboard on the owner's orders. Tbe owner denied it. The Egyptians demanded a police investigation. Egyptian apicultural quarantine inspecton e~amined samples of the com and dcclaml it .. unfit for human or animal consumption." They re- fused lO let it be unloaded. A funbcr bitch developed; The creaking California showed signs of keeling over -which would have blocked the harbor. A confidential cable from the scene gave the stark de~ ·•Director of Port of Alcundria told Ambassador (Nicholas Vehotes) that ship listed 'another' four degrcn April 23 ... (and) requested uraient assistance in quickly rcsolvmg dangerous situatton posed by ship's continued presence m harbor. J•d .....,.... ii • •yadkatell colmu&t They li~ed through D-Day .. as soldiers fell about ·them OMAHA BEACH. NORMANDY. FRANCE -It's difficult to find American soldiers who actually ca me ashore here in the first minutes of[). Day. when the Germans were firing point-blank into their ranks with machine guns from the chfTs just above the beach. I talked W1tb five men who hvcd to tell their stories. They were with the First Infantry Division. the BIG RED ONE. pcth.aps the best fiahting fortt the U.S. ever had. These arc excerpts: MAX ZERA; Things that m tntin- ina had •PP:1rently come thtough sucussfully, failed when tt was rather imponant. AL SMITH: We were 1.000 yards out and I thous.ht everyth1~ was on schedule. 1 thouaht we'd had" made . Then we 1ot about SOO yards f tom wberewe'd touched down and It wa a disasttt. BILL WASHINGTON: I wasn't ..-orried. We 1tancd oft'-toadina from the ship into the small landina Craf\ about 1:30in t.be ~miat-I could see the flashes of fire th.tO"lb the smoke ~"*over the water and I tho-Jht i1 was our f\arne-throwcr &ea.ms ao1 after the Gmnln bun Turos out it wuourbOatsup front bcinlbitand uplodina,. \Vo had 30 tanks that ~ UJ>- poted to accomp1ny the beatalion and out of the 30 tankS. si.J of tbtm made ll lo the beach and only one or them stilt operatiQI b lhe end of the day .. CHU HORNER: We had two a uhcompani th'atwtrttotutthc .acact1 at H·Hour. We wen in land1na era tbit WCR ~en' ow n the 1lr lnil qu1lC I ft Of them fbundeftd I . ' AIDY Roo1n due to the htah seas. As v.c got back out of our landina craft and moved across the ~ach. our boat staned to back up and hit one of the poles the Oennans had planted out there wnh a teller-mine on it and the boat blew up ... with the Navy mw on n. JOE DA WSQN: The E & F compamcs Sot almo t 100 percent casualti . I do believe F Compan)' received 100 ~nl casualllcs CHUCK HORN R: The casualty ratio 1n a ... ar 1s usuallly 7-tc>-l . seven wounded for e''"'l one lulled Hett at ..., I-to-I. one killed for C\ICr) ooe wounded. AL SMJTH: We had our clothi._ imprcanatedv.ithwuyoil•n ta.as at tac and we'd bttn \tandma in the tandina craft for three hours cornina on to tbc b. The IUY' "''ttC cold and wet and miserable. We alto carritd about tOO pound~ 1nclud1na nfles. and tome of the au~ wett ·c JO 01\ : The ~nnan trolled the field orflre comp \Cl). UnhappiJ>. both the suppon fue from thC Na and from the Alf Corp1 fc U four mala 1nland and dtd 1bs0h.1tel) no '°l\cni _0UP of the I saw there v.as nothing I could do on the beach except dte. so I got off. BILL WASHINGTON: Joe's com- pan) landed nght tn front oflhe onl} gap m the chffs behind the beach and the) beon to spread out and wort m there. f!or two hours.. that little gap was all we had. Equipment v.u coming m and they were JUSt dum1>- 1n.t at on the beach and actt1 na out and being hit b)' duut fire and so on. fhc LrUCks. the JCC?I. the ambulances.. gU)'S. evccytbing WISrtllO&Smcarcd JOE DAWSON: detec1cd that narrow little path and there was one soldier who'd aonc up thCTe and he'd stepped on a mine. That clued us to where the damn thinp Wert. I aot near the top of the ridae and heard voaces and uddenl I hcatd a machine aun. I looked up and there was the machine aun. They couldn't see me out oft he b\ntkcr because I ri&ht about i:it feet beto them. t too two arcnadcs and pulled I.hem and just threw them into the machine aun nest and that tlenccd lhcro. CHUCK HO ER That's the -.-ay 1t~s done We ha\e a tendeAC), 1n order JO 8\'C hvcs,. 'O tr) lO F\ v..eapon and cqu•P!DCG' \0 rcptace men I don't think n• AL MITH: you were thc:R. you lund of cit alone and la YOU wondcftd CVC'f)'oot TM-'&rd tMend of~ dly.__I id to mYlClf. hid r done ~! Kid \he IU) •itb me. dOae ~?You know. And ~ decldcd tbat. no. 'WI. hadn't d ne moUih. What more covld we ha\-ed"oJWccouldn't tell dcten on the h. They ~ fl1El 1ICD ~t·~--~~ 11, i.aU the fint ' I the deficit. which Rcqan iD lld infernal optimism u.id woQld be smaller than expieded. may in fact be smaller tha.n cxpect.ed. The President bas Yt'ot\ed the Democratic camP&ian like a pick- pocket in a crowd. 'Re bu slipPtld a band in and taken the eooftOmy •-.. He bu slipped in another band Ud mat~bed tbc .JmaD.Ployment iaue. ·He has stolen tbe inBatioa' .isroe. He even dispatched Secretary of Staie · ~Shultz to Nic:anip&. CJlher robb1na the Democrats of the Centtal America iuue or confusin& them. At a rcocnt press confercn~. for instance. Gary Hart semitd unsure of what to say about the Shultz trip. He bad mack much of the adminit-_ tratioo's Cenual America policy. but -• he chd not know hO &o mat · -"' ~ anythina of \he Sbultz visit. .. But the most potent issue Reapn bas taken from the Dcmocrau is \M "antlcipation issue" -the antio· pation that under him thinas would ontyget worse. That might eventually tum out to be t.be case and there are plenty of economists. oot to mention foreign policy experts. wbo say it is, but so far Ronald Reagan bas con- founded them all. In the Jona run they miabt be riabt. but in the iong run. as someone once observed, we will all be dead. At the very least, we misbt be past Election Day. The one area in which the Reapn administration has been bereft of success is foretgn poliC). His Middle Easl peace i)lan never got. off the around: in Lebanon be engineered a debacle. In more than three )'ears be bas not bad a single mcctin' with bis Soviet counterparts. relations be- tween the two supcr-powen are acnmonious and all arms-control talks att on hold. In Central America, neither Reagari'"S spealang loudly nor his big slick has produced a success. There is reason enough to be nervous. But the problem for the Democrats 1s that the same people wbo are now wammg of a foreign-policy debede were once saying that the economy was about to go down the drain. Tbt same people who warn that Reagan will get the Untted States into a war in Central America were once sayma that unemployment would approach Depression levels. What Reagan's cnucs lac,k is that most valuable of all political com· mod11ies -CTCdibility. Reapn nttd onl} point out that bis cnt1cs, mclud- 1n.g some columnists. have been wron& so often -wb.)'.should they be nght now'? Pohucs is the captive of events. h hardly matters that Rcapn has either been lucky or that be has been right for the wrona reasons. It also docs not matter that his critics' theories ha ve been n&ht. but their limina wrona The presidential election i in No- 'ember, and foJ \he Ocmocnts it wtll not much maner ..-bat happens to the economy after that. The prudent lhina to say is that anythina can~ between no-. and the aeneraJ election -and th1& )'ear in paniculat, ~~ 1s essen- tial It is also pNdent to po1nl out that a whole bunch of people, namely the poor, have not benefittcd at all ftom either the R~n economic or tu p~. lo Cact. the)' milbt be ..-one off DO'N tban the) wctt bCfort. Tbat'I aot only a ootitic:al 1 c, it'1 a motal i as well. Thert 11 as much sym iwn u nostalaia 1n Rttpn's uip lO or- mandy. He 11 ~ &num Dl. bis . mt in · nay. aroUnd in their airp&aoes, mauh• ooe another ud ~to Wt._.... to llC'C:Ount for ues -the eco..-• 1nflatio u mplo)tnetn -~., '°*'ha''· While oat IDOtbiet, llClllft tacbbtad. fttr hard tod151odee bun . ·j ' I -j ' l . Orange Cont OAILV PILOTIWedMSday, June 6, 1984 Just in Time for Gratuation ___ ._ WAlCH SALE 30°10 to 50°10 OFF Concord Collection Baume Mercier Concord Corum · Seiko Lassale Seiko ·Art Deco Style Q'!§rtz -A'4D Rolex Specially Priced Limited to stock on hand VtSA-MASTERCARO .FINAL 3 DAYS CHARLES H. BARR Me-... of Americe Getll Society Accredited Getn Labolatory 17tlt&l"IH Westcliff Piasa Newport IHch .· (corner Goldenwest in ----Collectors Instruments & Estate Instruments - AP photog recalls D-Da,-landing EDITOR'S NOTE - Mwn Lttltrh•odler, for- merly /st Lt. M•rtin Leckrbandler, is tbe only l\P photo1r•pber still worki111 for the AP on an •ctfre basis who toolc part in the [)..Day landi~ with the 4th Infantry Division Sl112•I Cotps Battalion. He tiled this story. .,. ......... -' Then-Lt. llartlD Lederbandler 8tallda in Normandy after D-Day 40 yean aco. 9 · on music -Huntington Beach ......._._~:..,..__ ___ HRS: DAILY 9:30 AM-9:00 PM SAT •• SUN •• 9:30 AM-6:00 PM GUlfARS swimsuits sialed. Up the bill at a huge display ~ap, Al Riven..73, of Prov1denoc, R.I., point· ed to where he and the 29th Infantry came ashore. "I wanted to put my feet in the water there, but ifs all built up, and I can't." be said. ... don•t even re- cognize it. But I suppose that's normal. Time passes by." Neer him, a ~year-old man, speaking German, ex- plained to his wife how things had been on the other side. At La Cambc, 21,160 Germans lie under flat stone markers. At the foot 'of Omaha Beach cliffs., an elderly French couple spread out a picnic lunch. as they do almost every sunny!' Sun- day . .. Oh, all these ocr· emonies, thctre for the businessmen, said the husband, askina not to be named. 0 Tbat fruitseller up there is goina to buy a Rolls on Friday." His wife added, '1bere are people scooping up beach sand to sell. It's dis&ustina.." For some, tearin& around the neighborhood in vintage jeeps flyina bedsheet-sized Amencan flap, the ocremonies seem almost a lark. But. at mon· uments and ocmeteries, there are fresh wreaths and moist eyes. More than 200,000 buildings were destroyed or damaaed in Normandy, and whole towns WCf'C re- built. Streets like ''Rue The Devonshire Reaiment" and "Quai du Canada .. lie lined with vacation homes and tract houses. Only black air vents di.,. tinauish bunken over· grown with arus from the rolling bills around them. Those who landed at Nor· mandy sometimes have a hard time findina the old farmhouses of people who welcomed them. Sians of reconciliation abound. At tbe German oemetery, a tree is labeled. .. Planted by the children of France in f 97S." The aian· board for the Omaha Beaclr town OtOrandcamp reads. "Twin city: JUnd.ibecb, West Girmiloy.~ CLEANING HOUSE! But enouaJl pim re-minCSen ate still here. Nw Pon<n--Belsin, I line of smaibed concrete bunkers houte the rusted bamll ot tbe Oennans' tix·incb suns. Wbicb mack D-Dlly aucb a feat fot tbc laMiDI Allied troop&. Arvil Heben. a »reu- old Cftlineer &om Houl109 workiJ1a on the West~­ man ~ pnJlr'ltn ID BOftn. stucMd the bauay, moved bY What it mmt bave ble6 lib. .... j. -' I 1 'tTllley llY it ool'*i one ~uon to .. ht Mid ... But if )'OU .,_.. this cannon out IO &huw~~ live it ••" I wun"t then. BUt l c:aa feel it now." : Higher mortgage rates loom for house s h oppers By CHANGING TIMES ,...~ ........ The shifting nature of home prices and interest rates make some times better to buy than othen, and riaht now could be one of the better times for a while to come. There is fairly widespread aaree- mcnt amona bousina industry seers that once we fet past the presidential election, the gathering econ- omic storm clouds may break with a -Shower of discoorag- ina news for home buyen: higher mort-J:!C. ~e. fl t r~s- an economy ed&ing toward another downturn of slower growth or even. recession. Here's what makes the matket look good now: -Interest rates are reasonably stable. ln the short run, monpge rates arc not expected to move much hiaber than they are now. But the lonJer you wait, the greater the likelihood you'll be confronnna risina rates as the year wears on. One reason is that. in the deregulated financial · marketplace, home buyen must compete as never before with business and aovemment for lenders' money. As perked-up business borrowing collides with Uncle Sam's need to finance the deficit. there is &ood reason to believe rates will pontinue to rise. Jn fact the process bas already begun. The VA mortgage rate rose from 12112 percent to 13 peroent in late March. At about the same time the prime rate rose one-half point to 11 Yi percent and then rose again to 12 percent within three weeks, and then went to a current 12112 percent -Home prices have been slugish for a while. Despite a sharp upswing in demand over the past year, the median-priced resale home appreciated by less than 4 pcroent 10 1983, about the same as the overall rate of inflation, bringing the price to $70,300. The median price on a new home was 8. 7 peroent higher than in 1982, elevating that price to $75,300. But the sentiment among economic forecasters is that inflation will be at least 6 percent in· 198S. If you buy now and home prices continue to track the inflation rate, you stand to pin not only by locking in today's price but also by ,et~QJ into a PG'llion to ~...flam llit.dia ••WI appreciation rate. But be careful. Don't be in such a hurry to buy that you settle for a house you don't really want or abandon effons to negotiate the price. Exactly when prices will start picking up significantly isdifficuJt to say. Housing analyst AJan Crittenden expects a 12 percent jump in home prices by the cod of 1984. But Lewis Bolan, of the .ReaJ Estate Research Corp. thinks the process will take Jonaer. He doesn't foresee appreciable price increases until the late 1980s, when he expects inflation to climb to the8 to lOpercentrange. Until then, he says. home prices will march in time with a moderate inflation rate of 4 to 6 percent. -The threat of the budget deficiL lf Conpess and the president succeed in reducing it significantly, interest rates , .I • By ED ud STEVIE BALDWIN the top side. DriH a hole throuab the tloorfortbe drain, aDd imaall the drain plumbina foliowina the manufactw"er's imtnle- tions. It's best to move the asxmblcd ftoor to its fuW ~ plac:cat this point, so you won't have to movetbeenwe assembled tub later. Tap one stave into position so tbal it overlaps the joint between two floorboards. Use a rubber mallet to tap it halfway in. Adduccondand third stave, tapPinaeacb firmly against the previous one. Willa lbiu 1n p1aoe.., back and pound the first one fully IDIO the floor. Cootinuesuvina until you bavcoolyonespeceldl Measure the spece. bevel the last sta vc to the cxacl widda. and pound it in place. Place the steel hoops around the tub at the foHowina intervals from the bottom: 4 inches.14 inches. 28 inches and 44 inches. Stagger the lup so no two are •inst the same stave. Tt&hten the hoopslf'lduallyand in orderfiom • the bottom up. until a torque wrench shows 70 pounds of pressure. The benches can be placed as you like. Cut tbe bench boards to length. and use the cut ends as suppons fOr the benches. Tbuupporuaresccuredtot.bcstaves'lliP&l-' inch scrcws. and thebencbes are attached to \be sll"pporu ~ ina 24nch countasunk SCftWS. • Now simply forlow t.bc manufacturer's instructions to. install tbeplumbtna.and you're in tbc relaxation business. The ullunatelux.wy!Thercdwood bot tub could be one of the best investments you ·11 ever ma.Ice. It holds 1.000 pJlonsandis6fcct indiam~r. ll'sanattiraJwith rcdWOO'd ,,. dectin&! .. Our easy-to-follow plans for I.be hot tub include a matcriaklist,step-by-1tcpinstructions.assemblyd.ia-• aramsand ideas (oriurroundinastructures. If you would like to order the plans, please specify Project No. 2066-H and send $4.95. Our 80-l>l&C color cataloclistsbundrcdsofothercxcitingwood...Orkingand craft projects, and is available foronJy $2. 95. Mail your order to: Makin• Things for Home & Garden, Dept 92627. P. 0 . Box. l 59, Bixby, Okla. 74008. Suggestion starts summe~ sizzling Give your barbecue repertoire a new slant Now that warm days and rughts have ~turned. I can think of no better way to enjoy a meal than to have a barbecue. Your favorite location -beach, park or your own backyard -can proyidc the ideal setting for a sophisticated. but quack and easy to prcpa~ menu. Fresh. low-fat poultry. vegetables and fruit can be used ma magi native ways. Best yet. each seTVlng contains no mo~ than SOO c.atOries. PtLAR WAYllE 1 tabtespooa frect.Me - ~i 'ifJ ! ~_,.... mwee._.. pi111 .. ,1e Jake I tableQeoa pla ! teasp1w tresl lemoajake I lime, ~y 1Uce4 1 medlam ripe cutaloepe w ~ •• ,,._ a.., ............. ~1(-..., me&oa. Mlv .. , seeM4. ,eeW ... cet lat.e ..... cUes ! ............ ! B09ta Mary and Jlm Tllompecm welcomedlfaney Alley, center, to VIII& party c!coWd daatal8o lDclaclecl llonlca K~. Carol Webeter, RJta Copp and Bob Webster, atn,ht. VIMS and vigor wot th a salute ORIENTAL BARBECUE CBICKEN I tabia,._ mUd IOJ Ullee ~CWJ .......... ~.~ 1 ~ fresll lelDOll Jttce 1~ ....... ~~"1-e4, IM9e4 ... mt me. 1-lad cabel ll~&eaaa.&ea Combine ~Y saucie. beef stock and , lemon juice. Thread chicken cubes and tomaaocs on 6 bamboo skewcn pre.soaked "':___.........,,.----,::-'.'""'.~~---::-----:-----::---'-:-------in water or on small metal skewers and 200 multiple sclerosis volunteers dl~cha!'ddinnercet:Uficatc~dbot~~~~~paancandaourmct mannatc in refrittrator for 1 hour. Place , cucaC1es wasoutg01na Presl eot ,,_, .._,. on &rill and cook 1bou16 minutes. Mak~ 6 -tO_a_S::..t_S_U_C_C...;..e_S_S_O"-::f:-ID-a--:-iD-S-:-t-:-r-:-e-a-:-m--::i_.,..Il_g_a-::f~d.---ltwastheconsensusoftbccrowdthatAlleyncededafewl'll\tt'a)' appctittrse1'Vlnp. About 60calorieseacb. opponunities-asacommittcemcmberfortheOranaeCountyMS By ANN CONWAY Dllr ..... C.1 ILJ 01R1 Call them Huntington HatbOur•s "atmedelacrcme0 , IOC'ia1 caaies. most dedicated volunteers or just pWli aood scouts-they were all at Dr. :Jtm and Mary ne.,111'• waterfront home Sunday afternoon. More than 200 aatbcrcd for hosted oockWl1 and ·~did them ounelvea'• culioaryaeations tot.hate VI MS(Volunteersin Multiple Sc:Jeri>lis) and toutarea residents wbo are new to the orpnintion. • ¥IMS wu founded in the Hamour three yean11<> bycanl w ..... (her husband W bas theditcUC) to provide f\inclina for patient activities-primarily transponabon to facilitate 0 main· ltl"tlmina" for county MS victims. Hiahliahtinat.beatt·t~wuadiawinafbra 1984Ford Escott (dOnated by manbtf LIM C.-) which"' woo by a f\abbetlUtcd .._Pw'ftll(ttealUrttofVIMS)-''Tbeonlythinalevcrwonbtfott wuacanofohveod!" Society's Saturday aucuon and dinner at the Anaheim Stadium Oub she GIULLED swoaonse hasbcendoinamorcthlnbcrshareforthccau.sc.(OewpaFroatien Jllkeef l lem• and IUck M-'aJ are honorary chairperson .) l aa.Me.,1 w veaeteMe .u WayundMeanschairman R...,_wasa~adayof I et~) aw~• 1-lltdl beautyatAm•WarQforherintrcpidsakof60opportun1tyticketsin (._t 1¥. ,...., two months. She attributed bcrsuaus to .. shcennrimidauon and 11.,..... ,._.,...., pusbiocis." AlmostSS.OOOwasrulizcd from theaWardlnaofprizes.. • I.Am.-_..,.. · Eqjo=n afternoon marted by VIMS and vi&orwcre new In a bovol. combine lem~ice and oil. memben andllalllllTM...-.JeUM .... CarilandJlm Brush the s--oidftsb with the Ptn1•,DldB~S...anctO....,_n.SllerrJandEarlOtl~~ ruinurc. Tietwopanky to\het pof Ja,...andllalf'ClaftancUeandFlfftllllarrell. each steak with a tri Other bc?a.rd mcmberi attcndina were M..ac. ~~and llita Place the s rd fish on the snU for about C.,,.~nncnoftbec~t;~lmB,..._H t MU7 6 minutes on each idt or untd at flat ,,...,... ts the aroup•s new praadenl ea iJy wilb a fork. C'ut tht tnQS. Ptacc lht: AhOon bandwercStaale:rna•N..n.M.D-.deano l's fi boa a llCn'lfta P4after and pnn wnh ColkleofMedicineandMSNalionat RCicaittiPrilpamCommincc tc t l~ mcm6tr~ ~arid BaUSc:MffMr. DUA arid Er* a.Mi. Bartma each and LanJ Mnu, M&mes,e.n.MuJ Jue and R4liMn AIMff. Deirb PlNUPPU! FRUIT MED ·---W.iucroftbcmvcted •lJuUt" ~aoouigu and r~1• AM.,_.., Caril and Vic ~and .hiJ and 1\• · l liafl• rt,. ' a"le ==-=-===~.._-~ . 1 ..... llket ... ....... ~ mtM leent,.,.,.,.... I c..p1 ..a.w freA stra.W. rles ,., ...... ( ...... ) With a $harp knife, remove fruit from eacb piueapplc balf-bema cardU1 ooi to cut throuah the skin-lcavina a balf·iocb thick sl\Cll. Set the sbells aside. Remove and diseard the core from the fruiL Puree half of the pineapple 1n a food prooesJOI' for about l minute. Add the f'Nctote. ptnea~ juice and I tabtcspoOn of the lemon,uice. Mi• until well blended. Sbcie rcnwn1na pineapple into l-ioc:h cubes. Place the pineapple cubes. tirDe slices. ~-~ cantaloupe and~ in a latJe bowl ·Add the rcmainina lemon juitt to the m.nt and aen\lY. Add the pineapple puree andstirptly. Cover and mannate I 10 2 bows. To~ divldC tbe fniit ettnly unoaa the pttpUCd lbelb. l..iftC lrni• platter W'lth m a \ca\ and act the 61kd lbClll oe top. Ounisb •1th wbole suawbetrie&. ar 'tta. Maka 12 ICf'VUlp; .. 12 calories per lttV I I I l I I I I I • Orange Co It DAILY PILOT /Wed •y. June e, 198• . Exper-iment ~pr.oves dependence ~o.t bottled. up DEAR.ANN LANDERS· I read thanbeciuzensof Boca Raton, Fla., A •were asked by their II mayor to 10 on the wqon for one week /" I .... DEIS u pan of Alcohol LAii Awareness Month. Tbemayorsaid. "h 's •••••••••••• IOUll to be quite an effon for some people." Please let us know what happened down there. Sounds like a terrific idea that ought to be tried other places.. One thin& is certam, it will surpnse peoplnudiscover how depcndcntthey aTCon alcohol-ONE WHO QUtT l 0 YEARS AGO find one. How do you su.c upa woman? Oo}'9u evaluate , ber u a person or look for aood loob FlRST? If a woman 1sn'tprcttyi...orhcaven forbid, if1he'1ovcrweilht,doyou wntc her on immediately? l n other words. if the wrapping docsn 't have eyo-appeal. arc you interested in what~• inside? Are you willioa to take the ume to cuJli vatc a friendslup or do you want to tr)' her out in the k on Lhe fmt or second date? · Men who have hi&b..quahty, durable relat1onsh1ps take their timc. lf thcy are 1nchned to ao too fast , a classy lady knows how to apply the b,.lc.cJ. There are millions of decent women who~ just dyin.atomeeta.nk~IUY·Soifyou really are DECENT and lonely.1t'1yourownctam fauh.-EMMA1N ELMHURST DEAR EMMA:Jllopenery mo n.11 llMIJud coast••rs MID•elf deceit wlll cup tkll e-el1111U1 u4 &ape u oalaltba*°°•mlrror.A1latftlalaltla1Uala,.naci eo1kt cUqe ll11 llfe. ••• DEAR ANN LAND RS : I have alwaya suspected you lovecatundbated<>15. Your recent column bears tbisout. I ref er to the Jetter from a to-ealled authority who said, .. Doss that bark all niaht are tellina the entire neiab· borbOod that their ownCT11re tuy and ianorant. 'they can be trained NOT to bark at niaht if someone wUI take the time and trouble.·· Did it ever occur to you that dop that barltat maht prevent bulS)aries, hold-ups and maybe even murdeB? I would never feel safe in dido 't have a dot Wt barke(i wbenutranacrapproached.:rbat'~wbauwatcbdotil supposed to do, Dummy. During lhiscontt0vcny you n~onc:e prinud a letter fTom someone Whose tlcephu bttn rwoed by cat fiahtt. Shame on you. -ALBANY · DEARAL: Ne way am I ..... &optt. a. m1"leef aflptbetweacatuddo1loven. nuut ... wrtu.a. Yoar poiat ii well tuea. • • • Do you feel •WkWlrd, 1elf<0nK10UJ-lontlY! Welcometotbeclub. Tbere'shdpforyoumAnnunden' boolc.Jet, "The Key to Popularity." Send $0ccntl with your request •nd • 10111. sum Pt</. self .. ddreued en vclope to Ann Lanckrs, P.O. BoJ< 11995. Cb.ica10. DJ. 60611. I DEAR DNE: I ca.lled Bill ltoarad, die a/ayor of Boca Ratoa. U4I hwd. "It 11 aot pot1lble to aow llow muy Cftle •= driaklD1 for a week•• a reseltof tM edict. that~::.~i~l.=:::.r::::l;:'£ifu?:m Do~sponningpain pills stimulate aches? yoar awareaeaa to a aoclaJ caatom tbt ~rllCed u ./:'.I:'· alarming number of alcobollct. rm .,t I oal)' aMal Like Pavlov's dogs sahvating at the bell, chronic pain mu. The aamberof female problem clriaken wn.ld nock 1r. ..... 1 1 "' · fi yoarsocuoU.Tbeflntpenonwllouya,"Yoaarea't suuercrs may unwitti • ..,y cam to iccl paan rom drugs the very act ofpopp1ngap11l stimulates the fcelmgofpa1n; state petitton in the last 16 years -state lcgulaton acted 59 percent of his patients abuse pills. quickly. They passed a law bannin& the use of pound pets they take for relief. talkiag to me. I cu qalt u~ tt:i: I wut to," la ID troable. So says Dr. Steven F. Brena, director of the Pain DEAR ANN: May I respond to "Decent and Lonely?" Control Center at Emory UnlverSity in Atlanta. Brena "Leaming is an important factor m any chronic m medical research. New Hampshire and Maine ha¥C illness,'' says Brena: He likens the central nervous system similar laws. • to a computer: It can be programmed to be pain sensitivel The biomedical community, led by Harvard, avce<S lfyoubclievethercarenodcccntwomcnlcft.youwon't believes drugs become associated with the pain it'sclf, so ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=--~~~~~~~~~~~~~ arid the pain threshold lowered. He calls it learned pain. Lo the law, although scientists araue that most pound Any dependen~ - on a spouse, on society, most animals used in research arc abandoned and would be often on a drug -can be stimulus. elicitmg the killed anyway. The cost of breeding or buyina test animals phys1olog1cal response of pain. Many patients. for wiU triple arnmal research costs. they contend. Hawthorne Christian School "For the Right Start ~n Life" \ Join the Summer Fun at DAY CAMP!! ·. ~,,~&~~~/~<~~.~!!~?~.~· ·.: SIWI.,.. • Field Trips • Crafts • Swimming f l'ic~ · • Before-care and After-care Available JUNE 18th thru SEPT. 7th Enroll Now-Fall Semester Starts Sept. 10th Reasonable Tuition SUMMER SCHOOL JULY 5th thru JULY 31st "A Private School of Distinction Founded in 1942" IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16135 BROOKHURST ST. (714) 962-3312 400 million years ago, a diary was begun. Come meet the amazing creatures that are sti 11 writing it today. =======· Tonigh1al7:30on KOCEChannei&j L nv underwate r animals that keep a living diary of evolutio n. Clocks that sing and serve meals. The m·,·sterio us "alann clock" hid'den inside bamboo. A ·six-eyed c reation that probes the heavens. All this and a wo rld more await you to night in "Time and Lighc:· a Smithsonian \\brld television c;pecial. The host is author and historian David McCull ough. SM1TIDIAN \\ORLD A PBS Television Series funded by the James S. McOonneU Foundation. Co-produced b) WETA~ Wasbingt~ O.C. / and 1he Smitmonian Institution. {y' MCDONNELL DOUGLA~ SEAFOOD SALAD $2.69 A tasty combination of chilled shrimp. crabmeat and whitefish m our own special dressing. served with tomato (, lemon we<Jges. sauce (, crackers. • CHILLED SHRIMP $3.99 There are 20 peel'n eat shnmp. served 1n the shell. with fresh coleslaw, lemo n(, cocktail sauce . SEAFOOD COMBO $3.29 Tasty seafood snlod. 8 chilled peel'n eat shrimp. served 1n the shell. tomato (, lemon wedges. sauce (, crackers 3095 Harbor Blvd. (Just south of San Diego Freeway, across from Fedco). Cotta MeH (Drlve·Thru Service Available) INSTAllTCASH OuaUty old watc,_, acrap gold. jewelry. YWIAGITIMI In Boat Can ..... Ol&IT ........ RUFFELL'S UPHOLS"TIRY, INC. fw die Int If Y• I.II 1122 ...... llQ. COSTA IESA -541-1151 lllEDIATE CASH GOLD, DIAMONDS end VALUABLES n. l&llLI .IEWIUllS 873-o3e5 3118 New rt Blvd. example, arc rewarded every month for their pain with "At least we have eliminated the word •pct.' Now we worker's compensation. can get down to the brass-tacks issue of animals in Pain therapists haven't been much help, he says, since research," says Harvard's Dr. Ronald Hunt. they've often failed to distinguish chronic from acute pain. And that's a more serious issue. Animai.tigbts aroups "We've been looking at molecular processes," says Brena. .have challenged ccnain types of testing -liin& chimps, "and overlooking psychological and social factors." for example. And in some states lhey are tryina to repeal At Emory's Pain Control Center, Brena teaches the exemption from animal cruelty laws granted to patients new habits. Those who need sleeping pills, for researchers. · example, may learn rclaxatton. Meanwhile. the search for al~tives JOCS on. 1bc Retrainihg the-central nervous system to raise the cosmetics industry is spend.in' almost $2 million to pain threshold takes hard work. Group counseling helps replace rabbit testina. Though heart-disease stu~ di~ouraged patients see others who arcdN&-free. "W~ put require animals, in cancer rtsearc§'t tubes often provide patients in a new position," says Brena, ':-'wi...:.·jth·n~ew~-m~oltrel!. ~p~rec~ise~a6~s~~·~tia~. It-~--~ .~~-models" ~7': · . . ..c_,. ~.·:.ie~• 1 ·~f~ -~'4'.~!.°--·· ·-• · , says Cornell animal P.Blholoaist Fred Quimby,· et peeve:~l.Dia18-6i iib9 even these new tests will requ~ animal studies to prove It was a story made for the media. One Massachusetts they work. And medical moralists have yet to decide bow paper ran a photo of an adorable creature with caption: many dogs should die to save a child, or how many "Don't send this cat to Harvard.'' childs;en to save a dog. The issue was the use of pound animals in lab The mellowlna of America research. After 145,000 Massachusetts voters signed a "' bl a· h tit petition against the practice _ more than for any other Let's hear it 1or the beta-ockers. 1ve t cae versa c drugs to hypcnensive Type-A tigers and what happens? Not only docs their blood pressllre fall but these driven. angry, obsessive men turn into more easY&oin1 Type B's. Or. Heinz Ruddel of the University of Bonn belie\!~ Type-A behavior is physically rooted in a nervous system too casil)" roused to .. fight or ftight" Bcu-blockcn apparently cushion·this tendcn9'., ~min& anxiety as well as Type·A irritation. Plus, there s no drowsineu. ORANGE COUNTY RELAXES Ru~del and his Bonn colleagues divided 19 hyper- tensive patients into two groups: One aot a beta-blocker, Europe's most common blood pressure drug; the other, a diuretic, America's most common blood pressure drus. Each participant got a Type·A score before and after therapy. After four to eight weeks the diuretic bunch all bad lower blood pressures, but if anythina, were more Type A. The beta·blocker crowd, however, talked more slowly and softly and showed a significant decrease in the edgy Type-A behavior correlated with coronaries. WITH KDCM 1D!l.1 FMSTERED Should all Type A's -even with normal blood pressure -meUow with beta-blockcss? Rudd.el doesn't think so. But he recommends that doctors consider beta- blockers for the 70 percent of hypertensives whose Typo-A ways put them in double heart-attack jeopardy. Amerlcu Beal" Map.z.lH Servke Gold Card Membership* 12months for 1 211 a month . (c.to.vn payment required) • It's happening now The Grand Opening of Holiday Spa Health Clubs' new super club in North Hoflywood And all our locations are celebrating with a spec· tocular offer that you can take advantage of today. . Right now. Holiday Spo Is offering our Gold Cord. membership for only S24 a month. Every Holiday Spa has all the exercise facilities you could want lncludlng Llfecycles at all 18 locattons. And trained instructors to plan a personallzed program. So. c 'mon. Join Holiday Spa as we oelebrate the Grand Opening of our nf¥W North Hollywood super club Come In for a free guest tour today 12 monthly ~ts of S2A plus S2A down payment AnNJOI Pefcentoge Rote of i6 40%. 'Gold Cord. entitles usoge of oil 18 IOC011ons 1·yeOr renew· able membership Offer OVOilQbl& at portlcipotlng clubs & Holiday Spa Health Club for Men and\\Yb'nen Features separate gyms fOt men and womef\ ovotk:ibfe 7 doyS a Week. ANAHEIM 310 So Moanollo. 1 blOck So ot bnooln. (71.4) 952 101 . CERRllOSllAKEWOOO 11881 Del AttlO ~ 01Ploneef,3 blocks Eosl of 605 FreeWOy, (213} 924 i51.4 MISSION VIEJO 24401 Alicia Pkwy 01 Son OieOO FreeWov. (714) 770-0822 , WES~TtR 6757 V.Jestm1n$let~ ot GOldei"I West-'7~14) 8Q4,J387 COSTA MESA 2300 HorbOr BM:1. {BGh lMtty:Ofug), .• '14) 549 3368 ORANGE 622 East Kat lo 'Nest ot stln /'we.. (71.4 6YI 2AA1 ... I I Device helps disabled man communicate YORK, Pa. (AP) - Chester R. Reisi~ and Robert A. Hom kid each other like the old friends they are. Pals for almost 40 yecn, they lauah and joke and share projects. Recently, they com- pleted an invention tosether -,g~t-: a feat comtderi RCisingcr is totally di~lcd . It is their .. 8-H Com· municator," a risid piece of cardboard with the alphabet and numben on both sides, that allows the two to communicate. Reisinacr bas lost the ability to do much more than raise hit eyebrows. He does this u Hom moves bis fioaen alona the alphabet on the can1 In this way, Reisinaercan spell out the messqc he wishes to convey. Reisinger is in the ad· vanccd stqes of multiple 1 sclerosis. He can no lonaer eat. speak, swallow nor push the buttons for his television 'a remote control. But he can and does smile. lt was almost six years qo that the cardboanl in- sert from a freshly laundered shin bclon&ina to Hom became the tint primitive 8-H Com- municator. The current veraion bas been refined by the ~ of heavier cardboani, placina the letters on both sides and cuttina out a hole in the center for euier access to all letters. By simple hand move- ments alona the alphabet and a ruPonlC by eye or facial movement on lbc part of tbe ~patient, mcssaaes other than Just 0 yes" or .. no .. can be re- alized. .. It is not a penaca for all communicatlont under advene circumstan1~· Ays H~ro. "But i,t ii ·~ cable tn many lDlt.IDCet ~pie sufftrina coote- qucnc:a of strokel, df or accidenta ln which vi1ion rcmaint. but no othtt ph)'lical capabdhiea, miabt very well u&ilizo the 8-R C:ommunicauJr:• BUt Hom ..stnits the communicator it ~I amttC'\lrilb.'. .. We're noc pro· fH1iona1," he •)I, "But it works. What an elhtlar· ll on when a I 11 I I INTERM ISSION t 'Music Man' litters, but .t's not gold Disney Channel top pay servic~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -More people watch the Disney Channel than any other pay TV service, according to the A.C. Nielsen Co. During the morning. from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m., Nielsen said. the Disney Channel has a higher level of viewership than any TV channel, pay or commercial. ... Nielsen said the Disney pay channel had a rating of 4 for the period 7 a.m. to l a.m., Sunday through Saturday. Its nearest competitor 1s HBO, which bad a j rating. The figures arc based on the Nielsen Station Index for November 1983. the most current available. SPRING FOR H.E;R. A one-day festival of information on the health, education and recreation facilities availab~ in South Orange County. SATURDAY, JUNE 9 9 a.m. -s p.m. FOOD • EXHIBITS • DOOR PRIZES BREAKDANCfNG CONTEST -I p.m. SPECiAL CONCERT: "tnvlslble Zoo" -3 p.m. ORANGE COAST COLLEGE Fairview & Artlngton. Costa Mesa Adults-SI, KJds b-16-SOC; 5 & Under &eeJ . FOR INFO CALL 432-5880 NOW PLAYING '70MM SIX·T'RAQ( CXJIGIU!!IWD! PRESENTATION ... -......,_ -~,l....... ( ........... t-. ..... ~ 9'01* ... OW UI~ . ..__ ---.. .............. , __ IJUJJI , •• ..W •eno ·----. ....,_,.. (-......... eio-.-c--..... ••n Km:=,-:':-'wun ---v..., ............ __ ,.., ~ .. ltl ... _ .. __ • __ ._... ..... ,.._. IN MINUTES BE. GOLDEN BROWN GRAND OPENING SPECIAL •1.•••11111111.- Ir SOUTH C~ FIT~FIRM iloo I . llRllTOL • 141 llDI Sul .. 200 -mile Nortt\ of SoUth Co.et PleD COllt .... 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S )9: •$ IOJO - "ST• TIO • Tfl ' SEMQf FOi SPOCr (PS) • lo-0.,Sllo.e ..... ,_ Fer fnt l si-a °""' 1100 2JO US I~ 1000 w si..11• INe.1~ ..SIPl.U$ "fOOTUIOr (PC) ll~ Ul !IQ '1IJSCW Oii M tUJSOlf' (I) 315. 11111 'TtlllS ~ EJIOMJIT" (PS) 12311 §~ 1111 "m£m c. ,... (PS) 12311 l.» I•,_. I » IUO * PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES * ''Giie( ll'Oll l Tm II MDICA" (I) l'\11$ ...... -.er <I> SNOAl.. lNQAOOolDIT .. _DO fil mil( c. DOCll" (PC) ". n••m· <"> •••., Aocky 111" 11•21 s~ Si.IOne c.t Wtafhln -U.-• m ON HOU'fWOOD U MOVIE *** ·11ogut Cop" (195SI Aotler1 T.,,,Jlnll= (!)llDllS ... • TllCICE "' ntE tlGKT MOVE ... I IC • 111 .. -·-H TORO 1SI ., .. TO• CCNllll 19 ... ' I~ SAOOl.EUCtl Ul.,hw -U•nQ•M u1..,., "CIG .... ._. .. , 100 ti) II -1(MCll Rll llG" 4'SJ I 1-t• 1s1 •1sc ,.11; H~ '°' "~ 10J11 _sa_1_sao _______ _ TOiiif CfNJ£R ~ KW"" fll SADDL£BACK u ,.,..... ·~ acs ~ -1'-.STMlD" (W) m •tac 100 •• IHI JO• CCNT£R OCllT STT•o ,. '•• --SllOlS",... Ill 10 ••• " t ,., ... Sil sa;. 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FOUNlAlN VALLEY '1t•l'lll• M tlMCll Jc. 9'0CI ""' ~~ "~ W£STMINST£R ClfMA WEST • ID<• DOii• ~11110 ...,_... -., '109\l ..... •f' Gf..,., IN l:tlll 'lJ \DO 8'11' l w CKMA wm iiUOij,,, lll*ll lllOl ll'fl M•MM \fCI .-......;;.;.;---~.....;...;·~~,~·· ~~ ....... <'Cl 11'\ , ... U\ I ii\ 11 • I • I .: •' . I ·: l ,, I :· I I I I I I" I I ' .. • ' • I l I I ' . • I •. ,, I C I i . I I ; 1 I I l DAILY PILQT/W nesdly, u 6, 19a. GARt'IELD HERE WE ARE IN A Rf.AL FAC'fOfN. eovc;, AND (jlAL~. LE1'5 !>EE WMA"f WE C.AN LEARN ••. --·~....,,·· -- T HE t'A111L \ CIRCt'S "I never get to.hear Michael Jackson in Gra ndma's car. The only station her tadio can get is The - 'Music of Your Life' one." -'IAR.'tlADl"KE by Brad Anderson I ' " "He always wins! I've never been able to toss it over his head!" by Gus Arriola by .Jjm Davis ~ SMUf 1'Mt& ()~J;/~ 1lUNC'I Of:F BIG GEORGE UNCLE ROY 15 LEARNING NEVER TO WEAR L005f. CLOT~ING AROONO BIG MACMINERY "George c1n relax anywhere." f DE~~IS THE 11E'\ACE l l i ) r~ .. ~:I 'C'MON,DAO,JUST GET THE TV FlX~o 1 • by Ferd & Tom Johnson 1100' -'ll'LLl'\S ROSY FUTURE ON OUR SECOND_, l GAYE HER I WO ,ANOTHER Y~RGONE BY; PLUSH IE? PEA,l"TS YOO DO~ T W~NT YOU~ l/.lASTEBAS;..ET EMP TIEC' MA'AM" OM M'r REPORT CA~D .. '(QV ~AVf IT REAC,, ' -7 - TUMBLEWEEDS PROBABL~ 3~R~lb~T As l·WH ~HA ~A ~A by Charles M. Schulz f by Tom K. Ryan J BRIDG E THREt:• A CROWD Nt'ilher vulnerahlt-South dul~. NORTH •A5 QK 76 OAQtU +us WEST EAST +Q 764 + KJl082 7 109 :>853 OJl073 0 85 +K 97 +AJ IO OUTH +U ?AQJ42 o K4 +Q432 The bidding: South Wut North Eut I ~ Pa11 2 <. 2 • Pa11 Paa11 3 • Pae& 4 + Pue 4 · Pa11 Pua P1111 Opening lead. Four ol + · The fate) ha H" all th1• SHOE worst or il. Nol only do wr rail •Ktin.sl lMm whtn thty t.reat u unkindly, bul wP ofl~n t•kt them lo tHk when wt our rives are tht. culprit~. Soul• had a minimum opening bid and showed il by pauing East'! inlervttntion in Lhe auction North dr~ri~d hi~ game roinr hand with a cue bid. 4nd his side duly amvrd al four hearts Note that Wut rould have made life more difficult for his opponents had he raised the overc.11, and that a sacrif1re or four spades would fart• well 1( dttclarer guesses the rlub po'l1lion. West led a spade and declarer was soon down lie won the ace. drew trumps 1n three rounds and tried to run diamonds When that suit broke~ 2 declar,er ~tarted on H6'<' IT'~ 11 15" ~~ OID WU . OVEaSl.WOR ~1~? ))" ,-~ FOR BE1TER OR FOR WORSE CHAR US GORE• clubt. But thl' defe r a i1pade tach timt lhey won a club lrick, and dttlarer could muater only nine trkk Hc- comp,lained about h11 luck when actually thl' hand had behaved very kindly. This situation crops up frequently. Drawing thret> rounds o( trumps IS JUSL Ont loo many! Corrttt technique after winning lbe &Ct of spadts is to lake Just two lop trumps 1n hand. leav1nr the king in dummy. If one oppo nent show1 out, declarer will have to draw the remaining trumps and fall back on an even diamond distribution But when both follow. thl' hand 1s cold if diamonds arc• no worse than I :! Declarer abandons trumµ~ in fa vor of cashinit the kin~ \ at'~ or diAmonds. Hci Ui ruffs a diuvond hish. t'l'OU bat'.k to tht board wilh l king or heart.I. and thi take two ditcard on t diamond,. Truf'. thl• rin11 a possible ovl'rtrick, but t contract is set'ure. . Rubber brldft_ ·r1.1 ~.Nut the CHaU1 111 th foar-cfeal briclp ,.,.. 0. t.My bt" -·~ ,. doa't,.. Chrlee Geru "ft1tr·beal Btld1t" wf ttaeh yH tbe 1tnt.flt• u tac:tln tf tJd1 fa1t·,ate4 • tlOD IUll! t"-t provldet t• curt for 11ne11dlq rubbefl For a copy. eend 11.75 I "Goree-Four Deal." care • tbJ1 new1peper, P.O. Bo 259. Norwood. S.J. 0764t Make cbt dll payable t. New1peperbook1. by Jeff MacNell> 'IOJOW ~ EU~H. SHE'~ JlJST WRKING- UP ' ,.C- IS SHE OK? tS S~Go1NG 10 6E. F\LL RIGtff? t'l ''K l' Wl:\KERBEA:\ I ~ EAC.H ~ QOO 10 cmT'E ~D E~ l.,O(JR ~ UNtOOE.NE5S •.• DR. S-'IOCK )> DELIVERY R OOM RW\X, ROSE. ... I'U.. ~IX 'r{XJ A U1TU. 5fUf Cf f#MP'I ! ~~ ~ 1 ~ Af/•H• ''I• · r1 v··~' · ,, I I by Tom Batiuk i4DMrTTEDl.4 A 50MEWAA'T 1r«»J1c. &-mTEMENr 1 Ab we AU. 6'f HERE WE.ARI~ LDN6 ROBe> AND FUN~·L.la(ING ~ CIJTM ~Lb ON 1HE./Y'\ .' by George Lemont DELIVE RY R OOM by Pat Brady 'iOJ C&fT MINO IF IT'S IN A ~ (tJp, 00 C,W ? • • I •n ll' IP It' • e f. • • II d r l. • r l t I t I\ ;> Dying father hop~s to see his son pl~y in Olympics_ WALNUT (AP) -Don Hooker as dyini of ca~cer. but he hopes his faith in Ood wdl keep ham &Jive lO'na eno1:14h to see hit son Jeff ~lay IOCOer in th11 summer's Olympics lft Los Anstlea. ''lust watchina my son play, beifl& able to parucipete, it's the chance of a lifetime." said Hooker, who learned in JanuatY that he bad incurable cancer of the bver and pancreas. ••1 was told I had anywhere from tbat day .to next month..,.to live," Hookcna1d durinaa 1'e0tnnnterview at his home in Walnut. 25 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. Jeff Hooker built up his athletic record at Walnut High School and at UCLA and became a member of the fint U.S. Olympic soccer team. The eldet' Hooker -who has promoted soccer and officiated at pmes for the fledghn~ Walnut- Oiamond Bar Women s Soccer League -said be believes his determination and faith in God will help him live to see his son play ;n the Olym{>iC5. "Betnga Christian, it's a lot easier," he said. "I know where I'm aoing to go. It's a question of how Iona I'm going to be on this Eanh and what I'm going to do. "I wanted to see my (three) chil- dren grow up," Hooker added. "But this (cancer) pretty much put a clamp_ on that." Medicalexpenshavcgiven Hooker little encourqement. "They just said he'd go straiaht down," saad his wife, Penny. "Several times he'~ • • opina to arrest the cancer's spread, Hooker has visited several hospitals, includiq the Ci~y of Hope in Duarte, where he receives treat- ment several times a week. He even went to a Mexican cancer clime that gives patients Laetrile, a drug de- nounced by most doctors as uxless. Don B~ker bolda one of 801l Jeff'• tropblee. Colorin·g Contest ltS A Horse Of A Different Color OrangeCounty Pdhgrouods • CodaMesa • July6-15 WINNERS! One winner in each age group will be chol~n. Each winner will receive 4 ticket• to the Orange County Fair. Winning pictur~ will be posted in the Fine Art• exhibit at the f airgrounda. AME·~~~~~~~~~~~--:.~~~~~~~~ ADDRESS.~_..;.~~~~~~--------~~~~~~~~ .. 0 [~1~ Nur1 us •'. HAft90R Uwtl-lllT. OUVI Monuwy • C.iMlert Crematory 162S Gtslef Ave. Costa Mesa ~0.-SS~ PIERCE UOTHERI BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadw•y Costa Mtsa 642-91SO BALTZ BE"Gt:l40" SMITH & TUTHILL WESTCLtfF CHAPEL 4:'"E 171t1S1 Costa Me~:1 646 q371 PACIFLC YIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery • Morluar., Ctiai>el • Cremal.:>•-. •SOO Paeot•c V•ew Ori.e 1'11.-... oort Beacn f,.i J • :'Ot, McCORMICK MORTUARY 1 79S Lao m1 C.ariyo" ~o Lagu.,a Be1c" Ca 9265 1 49·1 94 15 c -· (') . ::::s --Dl -· en :::> en -· • =-7<' ;·~ CD 0. -g Dl :::> 0. ··>< < Cl) (1) -· ~ ""< • --u;· ::> -·o "tJ ::> ... co ;:r '§.CD :::> :I ~ "" ~· • en "" c» g -< ::> a> CD a if .. .._, ~Lit SC .... ........ ~ ........... ,... . .....-..... c.m.- .PubllNd Or-. Com& ~. Piot M-r 23. 30. June ... 13, , .. ~ 21~ ' ' l • .. ~ : I"~ •I l I I ' 'JT~ : I I . o I f t ' l I I I ,1 ; •• • -• -Orange (lqMI DAil Y PllDT /WednMd1y, Juno 8, 198' PlllllC llOTICE Ila.IC 11ma: Pl8.IC llOTICt Pl8.IC ll1TICl PlllllC l«lTIC£ l'lllUC l«lTICE •tcTmOUllMllM81 'ICTITIOU91UtMle .NO'T1CE OP' DEA,Tff ' OP K·111tt ACMlOUl ........ tl •1Ctmouleu1MM ..,.PU&IC NAlllln•TlllllMT.,.,. __ I NAmlTA'fWNT WILLEM.1NACATH£.RINE NOTICE OP O""•Tff OF MMlllatATBmlf'f -NAmlTA,.......,._ IAl.I=~"'°""" bl.I=..~ !WWI -· ~ ~ ---.... tk'Jlnt PORO. AKA Wn..t.SMlNA. UNNJE G. TENNEY AND TM IOlloWlnO '*"""" .. OC*IO ~..: ,....,,.. .... • ._.,I Ul•I ?NO SEASON CHILDA!N'S fllE-ICON TIKI worn. 2206 HwDOt CATHERINE AND OFj OF PETITION TO ADMJN· ~~ IAfl.•O. Si01 E. 8T£1N·lfVU OAOUP. 21Ni2 I~ Not~ 1' ~~:'°'NCMI ~.~:c::.?.~:lft SlrMt. INWI~~~~ PETITION TO ADM1111ms-1,1 lSTER .BSTATE NO . CoMtHwt,C«oMO..Mllr,Clill. ~:rr-100• \..llQUM Nlpl. =.-.'..:.~-..,::-:; A1tt11tMuJr.,,2411vi.ww1n&. 8Nd .• 'tolc.~C•.1212r TERESTATENO.A • A.·lllS'JI ·~~ o, a. c...ion 1&06 LA &tiin-.eri.r Or~.~ .• cia11-lli0f*':!~::=2,,,...,, ~ BMcll, c.111. IHIO HMlna Ctw SN! Chen, 2206 To all hei.rs, beneficiaries. To all helrt, brnefidartts, Lorna A ...... lanlll Ml. e..if. 12705 f~Otn!.. =. '¢:, oi:u.~ 100, :r.=. llM. IM .. 'l_~o·---"'" oa...ia D. Murr•"t. 241 • VI• HwW ~ .. COM• W... c.Ht. credlton and conUn~nt credltore and cont n1ent De¥idL...,...U31W.lronwoocl .,. ~ -· Matlna. NMrtipott 8UCh c.MI 12621 . .i._ WlL~ .,... A Of.~. Az. 88021 II coOl'llCled by: • on ,..-'\ortd *"" Whk:fl ... IHeO ' . Thllbu..,_.ll~by.ancndi~ of .&..a"Mn creditors Of 1..lNNlE G. ~C.WMll•,Mt?i!;Moun• oorpotallon eftyllubliln,I • lnC.aoll TllitbufltMM190CIMUaeid by· a lndlvkMll CATHERINE FORD, AKA TENNEY and peraons who talnA.,. .. Otenga;,Calll.12U7 Chm ~. Vfe.9 PrMldtint loeatM•tPubloS't.,.bt CttY ot ~alPKfoerllllp ~°*" WILLEM IN A maiybeotheTwlaelntef'Ml.ed PNO.Aandall,122311! 1161:11 ~t•lll'Mnlwum.dwltlllM=1i~~~~~ ~i~t=~wu lllad wnll "'-ec:: ~,;:. tlllld~ '!: CATHERINE, CECE.LIA ln Ole wi.andlor tt'*le: ''"='~u~~r:.1 &t& w. Coi.mty c... ot Otlt9 Counl)' Ol'I Sttta..,. ._, .......... ~ ~ COIMlttCi.tk ot Or~ County on M•!t 1:, tH4 FORD, AKA Wll..LEMlNA A pelilloo hal bffn filed Len'lb*t Ad , & ... Calif. tHal M•y 10 1114 00'*· c"9tt•~ In the__.. Ml!)' 11 , '"" PMIM1 C . FORD, AKA MINA by GLENN A. WYMORJ: in Jam•• w. 8m1111 , 1344 £, .... ~. L leltMtdw, ..:--' :v:=:.~.im.r. :1 bu. chll.-• DIMtt PublllhM Oranv-COUI Deil'f FORP and penom who may the SuPtda< Court of Or-l)'CamOt• A ...... 01er1994 c.tll. flillt hair 2 p1et1• .,.teua 1ir.. • Publllh«I Oranot Coul o.ny Piiot...,.. e. 13, IO. 21. '"' be olherwlW lntereat.ed ln atine Cou1«'-1 WiU<ll~lhat' 112eis1 _.,, ....,.,. c.,...., ~.. • ~.tnff D. oavtl . 20 b•1.' l IMldt. •~ Pllol JuM 8, 1), 20, 11, 11&4 W-2 •-e "."1 . JQMPt1 H, Millet, llOl W. Mao -·'°" ~ ........ .,. ...... tQWO .nttnM, git i;;IDT fall, .H11M H w-1 tht will and/or ettale~ . GLENN A. W MOR be Att1MJr 1PY4 -PvblleMd-o;'"'..,..-c'out Delt't Llcll!Wll'OI • 2 tot.. 2 c:halt. -",· A petitM>n-na. n tllt!'d appoU\\ed • penonaJ rep. 16G, lerll• AN,.Ceilf, t2104 Pilot M~ 23, 30, .kine e. 13, 1914 w.nr. dry. !)cl, blk•, ~CM. It*. "8.JCfllOTir.S • by ELINOR .~D 1£NNE ,,_.in'fUVf'\o.dn:>inilterthe ~~~::.::;:r:.:flltdwUhthol 212M4 b111.bd tn.rlgtlttotlkl • t' ' W p ,~ NILES Ln the Superior ~ al LlNNlE C. TEN· County CWk o1 °'"~~on ., ~ic:_--f\'Mf-be ~t'T ' •mllf'll)ncl £0urtof<lran.8f-Countyrr-lftY"'1ttiilldtt mi f:ndepen·· M.y-2~.1911 --.., -mMHwllhctlllonlyandp.idforal ~!!i"''I .. ~ -.:.r-~;!':IJ'n.u -..----questtn1 lhat ELINOR dmt Adrnlnisltation of-., ' ,..... -=----=::---·llhllllrMolourOh .... Allp.tl't~ ••s Tlt.8QlA 1121 1 .. 'Tllit ~ l*'9l" it c1o1ng NOl'CE*vmNG ..01 ADRIENNE NlLES ~ ap-tatel Act). The peddon iltet ,.:i=. 1~~-;r,21~~ ~ ~ w• IOld .. II. Md-~ ': ......_ e.&.-• .. 1 ~.., " ..:;~~~~": pt;lhted. u personal .rrp-for hearing in De-pt. No. 3 at w.e __ _,Pllll=:IC:=..;lll=TIC=E'-,.--:::-I :::=~ :~ ~/:' ~.i~ GlilmNt..-...i E. 11th. ,.f • Y LO fll 4_ >-S • .. w . materiall. equipm91"11 . .,.,._ rHent.at.Jvc to administer the 700 Ctvk Center Dr .. West, • c.attomi. llllfllloMt W•l•r Ou.ltt• lhll ~1 ot Mtti.rMfll bel.,.... CA 92t621 SOC~(~MfTEOla,,.. 281 1 PQ11•11on aNI tutll ottlef 1ac1u11 .. estate of WILLEM IN A Sant.a Ana. CA 92701 Of'! Control ...,d. leflta AM~. LaO<Hotd and ~9d l*IY· OetK 1s~1«1by:an::. • ~ ~. c.iit ~~: :-:e~~ CATHERINE FORD. AKA June 27, 1984 at 9:30 A.M. l---~PlllLIC=""-NO"'T~IC(::----1~~ Wt9 aoo. ;!1!,:~~=...:..~·d.1914 1\.. Llrid9L.duiMt~.1GVMw1 \1t5 S~i'R DAJVE. COSTA W l L L E M l N A lF YOU OBJECT to the NOTtclOF PubllsNKIOr.,,geCouto.ilyPllo· t wWi Wltl'I lh!, ~~~-~ 'M£SA, CAL~AN!A. will be 1e-CATliER1NE, CECELIA granting ot the petition, you .._2'U11 PUil.iC HlAIHMO JulMI 11. 1J. 1914 w-2< of Or C<Mityon ~ . uw.db¥tMCltyofCoe~~·t roRD. AKA. WiLL.EMlNA 1.hould either appear al the NOntt:Of'VIUC IALI -~ , 1 . ,_.. t...-lcN'le 1flfr0t _ =..~ =-~C~~. um~ C. FORD, MINA FORD hearing and •taW Y.oo 1)b_J&:· °'""~~~•'=°""TY oe4m~o'f.i~~:.-::::1 ,l!UDl-.d' Or~ CoUI Oell)t ..L...~~~~---JilWcc::''119 it*"°""d 11:00.a..M., ~ \5, tundertl)elndependentAd· tions or file written objet· Noliu •• tl4reb.-given tll•t (N•lfoMI l'ollulant 011ctiar1•,_~-~Pllll==IC~lll=l~IC£~--PWQI,~'~ JO, Jo!MI. 13, 1M4 ~iJ= or~ Y Ofl ~· ~ ~ lill1ie 111oey wMI .,. ministration of Estates Act). tions W4lh the ·coun be(ore l>Ul'tull'lt to Mellon 1oaao1 tMCMI IEllfl'llMlton l"t•IMt ~mll)fof 1· ._.. ~ 2733-14 .., ,,,.... ~... -"" .... ,~-~The petiuon lS set (or hear-the hearing. Your appea.r-Codt.StateotCal+lOl'nla.11\eunder• hnHILllbt'•lfldu•td" NOTICETOCRl:DnOfll Publltnecl Dfal'V' Cbl8t D•1y ~lblll=!fiin; ing 1n Dept. No. 3 at 700 ancemaybelnpersonorby :=u==~1~:~~~2~1~0.~ in~:'~:!~~."~~:1:1:·,~.;!: 1sC:.~.~~~~~.J PIB.IC NOTICE PJ101 Juoe 6 13 20. 27 1"" w.1 anct"'9nMll-~¥'f but Civic Center Dr,1 West, yoUr attorney. or June, 1"4, •1 10;00 o'docll AM. ot wut• O~g9 arw:i •PP4i.d IOI' NoUoe 11 herllOy gl¥en 10 lM no olhlf ~ 'Al'ff Santa Ana. CA 92701 on lF YOU ARE A CREDI-on Iha~ wr..te Mid l)fop-requwementt tor IM Clilcil•rpe ol credltOI'• ot LAMPPOST PIZZA. ~ FICTITIOUI .UIMaS ~,~WICl ... -1 . ...,.;:. ~. _, ~, June ZO, 1984 al Y:30 a .M . TOR'-·-n~in ·ent creditor. efty l\U bMr+ 1lored, and WOICl'lat'a 11o•"""'•le1 ru11off to S•n Diego CALIFOFIN1A COFIPOAATION NAME ITAT£MENT c.....n; tlJri'a .... \Ill',,_ " .... ..., loc•leid at P\lbllC Stor9, Inc. Creek Ind U!X* Newport Bay. Tr9n1! ... 0I'. who• Clliel 111.CUllW The lollowll'IQ per.on II CIOll'IQ Shall be r......-~ , .. , ... ~ --IF YOU OBJECT to the of the dece • you tnWJl 13241 .ltff•llV RoaCI In IM Ctty of Or+ tne bUll ol prellmlr\aty 11an office ICldrnl le 1585 Sunl9flC tl!.1$llMIN.. P1.llltc.P«JTIC£ °'**'· 11 _,,,.. bii v.. lolill r• granting of the petition, you file your claim with Lhe .,..... Cooii1y ot Orang.. St1t1 01 1ev1eW •nCI eppHc.ltlon of 1...-tui une.CllyolCOtt•MeN.ColJntyoi SECURITIES MON ITO RING , .. ,,-.. ......... ~~ •• yor ~llililddetln 1o-.,-~t should either appear at the rourt or pretenl it to the per-C•utofnl•. 1M •l)andor'MIO good ... ltal'IClll'Cll lnCI regul•llOl'll, 1"9 Cell· Oflf\Qe. St••• ot Celll0tnl• 111•1 • EOUIPJtiENT co . 17895-A Sky-..... • ft>... ..... till _. t-~ proper ...... . d b . 1 .. ,. orien• Of '*"'°"'' p10l)ltrly 0.-IOl'ni. Re(llOl'lal Water Chlallly Con· bulk t1.an1l9f i• •bOlll IO be made I( park Circle lrJ•M. CA 92714 N.t.Mt: STAT£Ml:NT A Mt of pl.ent, 1P41Clllce1ionl. MIO hearing an state you 0 ~-sona l"epreaen ave •p· ICTlbed below In !tie man .... of• ltol Boa1d, Sant• ... ,.. Region . ....,_ DREXEL B SHEAHAN AND N}l(K AonllCI Stainbefg. 11895-A Sky· Tne •0UOW1ng perlll>l'I 11 OOll1g «* corw..;t ~I• may be lions or Ille written ob.Jl!'C· pointed by the court within Douglu lljlarti.1, Jr -80, ltll bOOll. t•llvelypr090Mltqlaauewut•dl1-SHEHAN T1an1tcw-~ ttornt P~!~:.w-~·c~~1~4..,. in bu:=e;sCOAST CLE.\,NING, 114 Clbtllneel0 ol •,I.the~~~~ dons lA'lth the t'OUrt before four months rrom the date of clt~;._.ord retef.,... IM i~tjo ~ ch4rge r9<1ui1tme11ll !!'IClllCling el· lddrn1 Is 1011 £. Coutltry Clut indlvldual "' E 201t1 ;;::., eo.ia'M:.. ...... daiio;ni,.,upon the hearing .. Your appear· fil"$t issuance· of_ lettere as •t 1;;;' ..... Pl.lrch&W ""~11 ti. ~'.~~!!= :;c'~~ :;: ~:g.~·~t! ~~ly O" Ron S1e11nblll'g J 1...,Colia ~. caiw. '2e21 reMipt o1 a non1etun0t>te tee of am-e may be Ln person or by provided (n ~on 700 Of m.O. IMth cun only Md peld lor •I men I upon 01 otiject to Ill• Tl'le properly to be 1rentlerrM It .RW..~1 •• JliMI wrth lhe 1 ~ J~ca~~~~52~n 115:00." b6ck*• recaueat sMnt ll'lcl your attorney. the Probate" Code. of Qili-!he tline ol ~c.n9'r . .t.11 ~en~': propoNCI e11act1111ge requlremeii11 d&ICflbed In ~IMlf•I u : A.11 atodl " c<UiiOiiii"-'11~-.~. of Or~ COunty °" Thi• buslneu 11 conOUCl.0 tiy: .n :.-::~::be "'!teci, the tflwge IF YOU ARE A CREDI-{omia. The lime for fili!'I =.:·.~he~~ :' =.... ~~~::evi!:!: =~~.~~:!::: :..i.o:j ~~~,;.-::::: = = f:MMl1 1ncJtv10u•1 E.ch bid .,:=.,. ·tMOe on tna TOR cir a contingent creditor claims wlU not expire pnor SM autii-tt to prior cane.111111on 1n Jline 22. 1184. A" commen11 or ot>-LlcenM bullMll llnown u "LAMP· PubliahMI Or.nge oou1 Oaity ~ frMIM ~ form ll'lcl In 1ht www of the deceased. you •mu.st to four month• from the date 1M .-1 of Mtt....,,.,,t 1>et-1 iec1 1 r~..-.cl IOI' 101~1>!!~ POST PIZZA" 1nd 1oca1.ctil 3~ ""°'~.30,JuM&.1~1~~14 ~ty~1C:~.,.~~Y1: Pfovlded ln~ttMI oontreci doollo-fUe your· claim wi~h the ofthe~~ .. ~.. dbl -'}~··tv:~•t.o ._ C~~iitwioe · • >-=--•lt" ' -_: ·,., ..,. ' · ,. . fo,::::1 111an 1 ·"'' oi~~~J~~tive • ap· the file ke~t ~;the court. If PY~ Of..:.;= Co.it 0111y Piiot g•f~'t!:c1•;:._ ~:~;, intor-St~: ~~~:i':'.;. wm be conturn· Publllhed Or.,.-'7~ .. Delly "'9 emount of lhll aid. mede • pointed by the court within you are interested in the es· June 6, 13, 1914 r-lfllllOl'I 10 ... , It 1n o.termmtng matM on OI' aftw Iha 22nd daY' o ----,..,-,,.-c===----_J PWot Jun• 8, 13, 2()~"1 • ........ ~ to.Jh!LettY.Rl.Co9J•~ iou lhs.from·tht date of ta:...-vl'alrft'\A.~Upon the W-Ii prepet ... ,. Clllci'IMge requlr.. June. 1984 II 10:00 A.M. •I ACTIOll •"llKJCNQTIC[ w-21 ptopoNlalldbeOOMkMreduntlila rmon -·~--··-7 -•¥<.• rnen11 and. k>r lt\11 pufpoee, wll ESCROw INC. A.TTN: MAflllLYfl ---'~O.:::"-"'-"==:::-:--l·-------,,,----1ec.compenled by IUCll cuf'IW'• lint issuance of lette:ts as executor or administrator. or l'IOkl • pYl>lic helflng II follow•: WESTMOFIELANO. whoM eddl ... FtcTmOUI .u.-.t:ll P\BLIC NOTICE chltk, cuh, or bidder'• bONI. provided in Section 700 of upon the attorney for the ex· DA TE: July 13. 1984 It 640 N. Tuteln A.,..., &ill• 101 NAME ITATIEllt:NT TM ContractOI' aMll. In the P8f· the Probate Code rof Cali· ecutor or administrator, and .. .,. "" NQTIC[ TIME. 9:30 1.m Sant• Ana, Callkll'nl• 12705. . TM t()ILOwtnQ pertonl .... doing flCTITIOUI BUltNIESI tor~ ol IM"°"' and ~ fornia. The tiine for filing file with the court with l"+.IUU\I PLACE: Ctty CouncM Chamblll'I. Tll.t lhll lu\ d•te lOI' llllng clalmt buW-as: . NAm ITATIMENT meri11. contorm 10 the L9bot CocM . . . .lten .T-uno 3300 Newport BouMrY•rd, Newport Jn thll Merow relerrect lo ner .. n II (1)THE SHOPS AT MONARCH Tt>e lollo'#lng perlOfl II CIOtng of IM St• of Cellfornla and otrw c)Aims will not expire pnor proof of ief'Vlc.'e, a wn NOTICE M TRUITIEIE'I SAL.IE Belcll, C.illornla Jun. 21 . 1Mol. • BE.ACM 12)TH£ SPA Al MONARCH bullneu ••: l•w•ofllle St•I• C?' c.ltOl'nlll IPPI!-to four mo~ths fro_m the date request ~tating _ that you d_e-On Jun. 20. 1184 11 lO:OO i.m. •' 1n1ernted peraons 11• ltlvtted to So t1r .. It known to thll Tr- SEACH (3JTHE SPORTING CLUBS EL RANCHITO FIESTA CA TEA-cable lhef'9l0. witll lhll uceptlon o f the heanng noticed above. sire speaal nouce of the fil· ShMrlOl'llArnerictin fllpr ... Trull 111end 10 •11pr ... tti.r -on ...... Ill bulinnl nama and ld- ATMONAACH BE.4.CHi'!THE STU-ING 2101 F>teeent .. Aw Ol'W>/ of .,c;ti ¥1riatione M FM)' b11 YOU MA y EXAMINE . f . to and ap-Deed s.Moea. inc. 11 Trus!M. or tt>IJW ,._. '-'•ting to lh9 above dr...., uted by lhll T1_..,or IO! OIO AT MOHAl'llCH BE.4.CH (5)THE 8. Costa Mela, GalM. 92670 raq..ilred under Ille lpetlail ll•tutel ing 0 an inven. ry SitOOPaot Tn.i•t• or Subllltuled waste ClllCh•rge. Petson• Mlling 11\e Piii th•M Y'N'I er•: SAME Tl.RAACE AT MONARCH BEACH S1!v1dor c. A¥11.1. 265 AoM Lr.ne. purw1nt to wtllcfl prOQMdlngs the file kept by the court. If praisement of estate a.eta; or ---' n-A I pr-t•l\onl lhoulO con~ !Mir T'hl9 bulll: t11NI« 11 1Utllect I< = E T ••~•RCH ~--'°' __ .. _,,._... · ._. · h ( h · · ·-•• .. Trulf;ee, ol the! ._,..., .....,_. o ... ,,......,,, oo '"' ,..__ 11.teid la-ColOl-oOo •~K~m Comtnertl• le) TLIEJ.TA A -~ Cost•"'""· Cellt. 92827 f ·---.,. .,. • .., ........ you are 1ntere-si.t:U in t e es-o t e peuuons or -.. ... .,...... T 1 , -''' by S••••o N ... .........., '" ...... "' BEA H' tvy Glieinn. Sult• 100. Tll11 bu ..... "~ by In ~ Mded by tlllJ fUI ll .... U . SUM. Orll 1111..-nenll wm be l"IMrd. COO• s.ctlOll 8t0tl. Lflgl.ll'I• • CPI 92t11 lr'IOI~ ~ 1 :::"'Leber Code tale, you may serve upon the mentioned in Section 1200 SiKllWd Ind Pl!)'llis s. 51.ictWCI. bUl, IOI' IM accuracy ol lhll record. O.t..-:t; AprW 25, 1184 Stein-Bit.I Or(IU9, Inc , ciu-SaN•Clor c . .Avili ~!«..-t~ lal>ot ll'lall be,.....,; executOr or administrator, or and 12,00.5 of the California Husbend •n<t Wit.. •nCI recorOed '" lmpor11ftl t•tlf'!OnY ltlOUIO be DREXEL e. SHE.4.HAH lorn ... m.82 Ivy ~ (Wit• 100, Thl1 tt•1-• ••flied Wllfl Ille only In ttw-pr0¥kleel by ..... upon the attorney for the ex-Probate Code. ~'','°,,,u, lnllr'Ui'IMlfl•••'0t1no;_,s..s,e .. ~ IUDtniUl(I In Wflllng. Oral tl•I .. NIKICI SHEAHAN .C.W.tltl71 -·~, "N biOll'lallbeconsMi.edunleM and JM Wbi l .,,_ · ~ ..... ._.. meri11ahoulObebrie110 9liow 111 Trant!.,• ~n• Niguel, 11 ~.o by Col.Hitt CWk of OrMOe County on 1111 ~ blW lorm fumllhed L'C'IJtor or administrator, Wiiiiam • e DD e <:Ot"J&i.9' Ot.nge Coun1y. C1Ntorrt111. lnleresteCI perlOl'ls time 10 be PubUthllO OrlnOI Cout Delly PllO c:or~:':-)': · • MllV 23, 1N4 flMNl3 by tM c1t':1; Cotti MeN encl 1, file with the court with 7S7 W. ltb Slnct anct purauant to lh•t oertlln No•lce ,_Cl Jo.tN 1, 118, • ...... mad• In accorCl•nce wftfl Ill• proof of service, a written Su Pedri, C. A~ ~ of OeleYlt enO Elec11on '° ... "*.. '1lMi r~ Of wiiie dlach111gi ' Chnt Dowr'ley, ..i!!l Pretklef'l1 ~ OrMtiJ8,.,"-',_ OoJly -of tt'le p,--.. ---h d 833 1313 --•. under _recorded 01130114M11111n.t-related C1ocumert11, fact 9'1'1eetl, Ille Ari--.. !'lot Junel. 1i. 20.-J. , ......-· . ........,. request stating t at you e-• ~ l'Ml'lt no. 14.040966, of Official~ Thlt 1111emen1 ••~ wllh lhll '": W·9 "";1''t. blOder mutt 119 llOenaed Ind sire special notice of the fil-Published Orange Coast corcla of MIO County. win under and Bo.rel'• propoeed r9<1uir~l•. Col.inly 0...k Of Counly Ol'I ~ "'°~-,,~u--~ ... o·ng of an 1nvento,..., and an... OailyPilolJune6. 7, 13, 1984 p!.11'.....,,I lo,.ld Deed ol TNtt Mii lll>d•"eorTM'T191'1tland pell!IOl'llr ... to. f98.4 -1-W.nrr-.-..., ·~·-· J r-•I putlk auctiol1 tor cur+. llWlul clliv . .o mey be inlPKted •nd nt5IQ rtaJC 111U1.w. TM C41y CounQI of the of prat5e1Tlent of estate assets or wrH-15 money ol Ille United Stites of ·copied a11M Aegoonltl Board office, e.r.rd L Sch,....,~. l'ICTmOUl 8UllNEIS ~~ 8~ ~:e:'a":' lhll right 10 of th~ pel1t1ons"~~ .acoou12n 00 ts Ametlc•. 1t 1ri. North lront .n· ~=.~r;:'!~n•c:~o8w1i:ti:19 •!t~ c~ °""· hll• ;. NAME ITATlMt:NT EILEEN p PHINNEY menuoned in ~ ..... uon """'°' to the counly cOurll'IOU ... 71•-684-il30) belween 11111 l'loutt ,... T"' ,_,..........,, IOfl 15 Cl"""' 200 5 ( h Cal ( 100 CIYlt Ceiitet OnYlil Wffl. S.nt• -..Ck. ca-. nllO • "'"'-"''V P9I ~· ... Cny c..-11 ol tfle City 01 Cos11 Mal and I . o t €" 1 orn1a Al1a Cllilornia 111 th•I riglll !Ill• 018001 m lind" 00 Pm . MonCl•Y Orang11 t:oa1 Delly bu .. ..._1 • Publ!aheel Orange Coa1t o .. i,. Pilot Probate Code. · veyec1 nd 1n1~n Frld1y 3 30 Juroe 8. 13 1984 l(EYSEFI & ASSOClATESr 2742 June 6, 12, !984 WT·•> Bruce R . Borad. Esq. _ = 1~,'~~:.: MIO ~·ol T= Please ttt0ing the toregolngk to the, · • W O<engetho<pe Ave . Fullerton, p O B ll In !fie .._.._..., MtulleCI 111 MICI 11tet1hon o lll'IY perlOfll nown o • C1hl 9263.3 . . OX ,.. __ 1 !'.'.7"s .. , · ,, .. ___ 1,__, u ; you wno wwld be 1n1cwnted 1n tn11 R1tn1rC1 M Key•••. 2952 Arnold,CA.95!!3 ~y ..... 1 ................ maner Mon1e1ey Fuller1on.Ca111 92633 Publi•hed Orange """'1 ---"Pllll=='~C"l«l=l"l~C[~---PARCEL 1· Thll por1IOl'lCounOf Lol 1 Pl.lblilhed Or1ngeCoul Delly P!lol This bullneu II Con<IUC!lld by .., ol Tr.cl Mo 10411.'" ,,,.. ly of June 8 t984 ,nd1v1Clui1! Daily Pilot June 6 . 7. 13. 1984 K-11181 Orange. Stile of Cltitforoi.. u Rocn1rd M Keys.ti• TW-1 NOTICE OF DEATH OF thoWf'I °" • m-.p •tc:Olded m Book W-11 PlllLIC NOTICE Tho• 11etemen1 was !!ltlCI with tne 1 ----Pllll~-,C-NO-T-l'"-~~~IADA FRAN¥ . HARRIS, ~~.·~0•1M 4,', •. ·~~ .. 1 c:i:; 'ICTIT-•o •"llNESS Coorl!y Cterli. o4 O•e~ County on w. ...., ,......, """' f't.Eltc NOTICE • ..-lrAtiMENT Me y 22 1984 --~==~=~---I.AKA FRANKIE HARRIS County,~ MIO defined n Un11 1---.:..:==--'=='---~ fo!kJwW1v l*IOM .,. doong f2M512 Pl.B.IC llOTtCE NOTICE OF DEATH OF AND OF PET1TION TO AD-13 on• conoom1n1Um 01an rCICOl'ded NOTICE TO CONT,.ACTOfll ~·-1•1-· PYl>lllflld Otarige Coall 0111YI---~=~==---LILIA P. RArt11REZ ANO MINISTER ~TATE NO. ~~:;;.~:~::·~O:o~3!2~~ SCH~~L::,.~~,!_ Uni-=,,.~ r~~T~ ~?!,:· P~Ju.oe B. 13" 20·'11· 1984 1:-1118t OF PETlTION TO ADMIN· A·l.t1 Iii-ty tied School 01s1r1ct CA 92701 • '---.,.,.,,,..,,..,,,,,,,::::---NOTICE OF-DEATH OP IST ER EST A TE NO. to au beire. beneficianes, PARCEL 2. An uf\OIYldeO l/1Slfl BID DE.A.OLINE 10:00 m. Ol"I June Yod..-. ...11'.,,_111s Eatet11. i-ELIZABETH D. MILES Al.3138 creditors and contingent lntlJfest !n ana to in.et portion of Loi 19. 1984 92 PlBlJC fllTIC£ ~ 1 of Tract No 10'491, 1n the Courlly PL.ACE Of BID RECEIPT· Ol1lrlcl Newporl Beach. CA 680 !----'-'====~---AND OF PETITION TO AD· To a ll heirs benef1e1ar1es; crcditOrs of ADA FRANK ol Orange. St•t• o1 C•titornl1. u Admlnistr1t'°" Office. 2941 Allon ~IO ~y11~· ~;~Antigua f~!~~:A~~==• MINISTER ESTATE NO. creditors and conungent HARRIS and persona who al'IO'#l1on•"'14>1ecorde0 1n Book Avenue. 1rv1ne CA. Dudley 8 Fr111•. 931 Emerlld The loliowing persoo IS Clo+ng A·IZ3311 t•redito rs o r LILIA P . may be otherwise interested ~M:..~eco:J. ~ ~ N:~g~.!:~~~~TION ee.-. La1j1un1 S.acfl. CA 12653 bu .. neu as To: all heirs, benefi?3ries, RAMIREZ and persons who in the w~I! and/or estate:. Counly, snown and del"*l u NOTICE IS HERE BY GIVEN ttla.t Geor119 L A1gyros. 82 Unoa isi.. SE.4.VtEW WEST MANAGEMENT cred!tors and ftOntLngenl may be otherwise interested A peuuon has been f1l«;d ··cc.ynmon ., .... on a condOl'Jikllum tfl4 •bove-n#MO 5ef'lool Dfltricl of ~bu=~ ~Ac!o~ed by • :~=·-=:i~~~?~11• creditors of ELlZABgf'H D. in the will and/or estate: by JOYCE BUSTRUM 1n plan recorded Aloe 3. 1980, 111 Book Or•nge Couoty, C11i!Ol"nl•. llcilng eenera1 pertnerlfllp Piu1 H Ry1n. "IMO C•mP"'• o.. MILES and penons who A peution has been filed the Superior c.ourt of Or-~r.!:; ~~1• Offtcitil Allcord• ~~~drie!:.,~. ~';.,?~':, George L . .Argyr01 Suite B. Newporl S.ICfl, CeHt ma. y be o.therwiae interested by RAUL RAMl.REZ in the ange County requesting thal f.o.c.pt •-1rom 1 portion ol MIO "'OISTAICT", wtM ~ ui> to, bul Tl'll• 1t1tem9tlt ••!Lied W11h 1M ''"° ., nd/ UM c_ "• °' 1n the w .'". a or estate:. Supen·0 , ~-u,1 of Orange JOYCE BUSTR <JO:' ap-1ene1 one-hall or all mll'lttrals. . not 111er !flan tM •bO-•l•teCI Coun ly Clef1il ol-Or1nga County on Thtl bu11nn• !I conCIUC:l.0 by In fU--' \...0 d ti fl d ti Maled blOI tor OW d of M1y 14. 1984 mdtvlCluil A petition hasJ Mbee!LnES "." County requesting that p:>inted as persona.I rep-~~t::..,, :w!: or ~~~:i = time. _.,. • f~ PeutH Ayer. by ROBERT · 1n RAUL RAMIREZ be ap-resentauvetoadministerthe at>OYedelcrlbeolllllduponlt.oon-COl"l=~~~~P..ce 4ACKION, tCIDDER & IUCKUNO Th11 111t9mlll"ll w11 llMICI with tl'lfl the Super:iOI" Court of Or· pointed as personal tep-estate of ADA FRANK r1111on. however. thal tlla Grerllor OI' 1C1eiiUlledabove. end lflell be open-=~-=-g~'::z: ~~"~.c;':e~ 01 Df•noe Counly °" ange County requesting that resentatiVE.> to admini.ster the HARRIS, AKA FRANK.IE 1aucculOl'1 in ffitwest 61 OWMl'ahlp 9d lfld publlcty rMd elOu.i 11 tlla (714)MO-UOO 'MM1' ROBERT J . MILES be ap-estate of LILIA P . HARRIS (~er the. lnde-=~:::::::~"=J:: ·~•=t=,~~~~tlll'lll Publlsn.d Orange Colst Delly PYbl•lhed O..enge Coas1 Daily pointed as personal rep-RAMIREZ (under the Inde-pendent Administration of tor 1uct1 tubll9ncet within ti. bid • certllled "' cutllel'"a ctleck Pilot May 23 30, June 6. l327~i1~4 Pllol June 6. 13. 20. 21. 1984 W-5 resentative to administer the pendent AdminlStration of Estates Act). The petition is upper 100 fMl ol Mid land, n r• p.ay1~ to Ille DISTRICT OI' a bid estate of ELtz.ABgf'H D. Estates Act). The petition i.s set for hearing in Dept. No. 3 HlwCI tr; L.aut•bef Oerdlnll. • t>onO In !he lorm eet torth Ir+ Ille MILES ( nd th Ind pen ()() c· · Cen n..... wl60'#, and Mery .l•M Oerd~. • conlrecl Oocu!Nnll in ..., 9m0unl Pl&.IC NOTK:E u .. tr ~ e · set for hearing 1n Dept. No. 3 at 7 1v1c ter ur .. slrtgle woman, motl'ler 1n0 daugh-not i.u thMI 10% ol tM ,,,plmum l---'-=='"'-==---1dent Admuustrauon of Es· at 700 Civic Center Dr .. West. Santa Ana, CA 92701 1...-.1n deed 1ecorded Aprtl 5, 19~5. •mounl of bid., 1 gu..-ant• lfl•l -----------FICTITIOUS .UllNIESS tates Act), The petiuon II !el West. Sania Ana. CA 92701 on June 20, 1984 at 9:30 A.M. In bOOll 3020, ~ 331. OfficlM Re-tM bidder wlM ..,, .... Into the ft>e ,:~~•::~:!doing for hC~ngCein Dep~NoW. 3 al on June 27. 1984 at 9:30 A.M . lF YOU OBJECT to the COl'~ng ltierefrorn ••semeril• :'w~toc~,::.~\;:,. ~~.1~ PlllLIC NOllCE ftCTITIOUI .Ulttlt:ll N.t.ME ITATt:MIENT TM lollow•og peraoro1 are do+ng bvalnntlll FOSTER'S GARDE NS. 11871 Ce.u.11 TnM Lene. lrvtne. Ce 92715 Stewin W Foster 11871 C•llll T1ee L•M, lrvtne Ce 92715 Th11 buslneu is tor1Clucted by •m 1nC11vldual St~W FOiier Tfl11 !l•t9fT'91'll wes 1!1«1 With the Coo111y Cle•~ o! OrenQe County on M1y 21 1984 ......... Publ1Sr.ed O•ange Collst Diiiy PllO! Mi!ly 30 Jun9 8. 13. 20, 198• 2804·8~ PlllLIC NOTIC£ 0011,,.51 es 700 1v1c nter JJI ·• est, IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of lhe petition, you 1or...,1rvw•rs. patlo•llO c.rport1u ure 1o 11t1lcw 11110Mk! contrect. M.cti ERNIE OWENS DESIGNS. 319 Santa Ana. CA 92701 on granting of the petition, you should either appear al the atlO'#fl Md c:teflMd. on tM 1bove HCUflty will be JMeUed. ~;~"! ls~~~b.111s;:~~ Floor, June 20, 1984 at 9:30 A.M. should either appear at the ~aring ~ sta~ you ob~-rel~= ~:::t IOI' 10 ~~~~Tei'.":::~': ..:J: Ernest MIC o-na. 3310 Piro. lF .YOU OBJ~ to the hearing and state you objec-lions or file wnlten objeC· llitfler erotryw1ya, petlo °' c..-port• •"Y lrr9gU!arltlel OI inlonnalltlil9 In N-pOfl .t.p1 209, Newf>Ot1 Beach. granung .of the petlUOn. you tions or file written objec-lions with the court before O¥ettNt poitlon ol rM '*"'"-bOW 1oy bid•°' In Iha bidding. Cal•! 92662 should either appear at the tions with the court before the hearing. Your appear-OHcfibed common ,, .. whicfl " Mo blddcw me.Ji wttlldr.-hit bid N;.,.,-;,::• A~;·~C:~~.;;.:~~~~ ~earing and Sta~ YOU ob~-the hearing. Your appear-ance may be in person or by :r.~::; 1•!., ':'.~oi:~~"~!~ :~ ~:,:'= 1~ ,;."'~: = Cilll 92660' t1ons or file wntten ob}e<'· ance may be 1n person or by your attorney. ilCOIOed June 3, 1980, In bootl A pertOl"manoe bQnd .iii be r•. Tn11 oos•neu •• conoucteO by ti uons with the court bef~ your attorney IF YOU ARE A CREDI-13924, P-0-1207, Qtlk:iel Record• quired pnor 1oekec:utlon of lh9con· gene<el p1•1ne<Sl'l1p the hearing. Your appear-IF :f.LI ARE A CRED• TOR or a contingent creditor ot uJCI County •••cl Tt>e l>ood lh•ll tie In tM lorm E1ne11 Mao OwfJfls be person or by . . h d ~---' The 1tr"1 .Od1H1 or otl'let corn-se• lorth In 1Meonl1Kt ctocumen1•. This 1111emen1 wis tlle<I w+1n tt>e ar\(:e may in TOR a contingent creditor ol t e f!C't!BM:U, you must mon designation o1 ..io prOPIWl'I' o11e0 lhll 25111 d~ o1 Mly', 19&4 County Cler~ ot Oranoe Cooney on your attorney of the deceased, you must file your claim with the 0'243 P1eilic Awnue •B-103. COiia GOV ERNING 80AFIO Mey 22 1984 IF YOU ARE A CREDI-fil!' your t·laim with the t"OUrt or present 1t to the per-Men. CA 92926. BY: A. St•nler COl'llV F2"11Jt5 TOR o r a contingent creditor ,~·url or present 11 to the per-sonal representative ap-Nim"-and •ddr••• ol th• S.Crerwy ol 1"9 Bolld Pubhsned OranQe Coal! Daily __ _. " . . tientiltc.~1ry •t wt'IOM reQUHI Ille Publllhed lfl 1"4 Ot.nge Gout Delly p11ot .June6 13 ro 27 of the·dece'""":"-', Yll_U must sonal representative ap-pointed by the court Within ••L• 11 being conClucl•CI Ptlo1Mey30.ll84and.lunel.1114 w-4 hie your cla1~ w1lh the pointed by lhe oourt within four months f.rom the date of ShN1son/Al'nfll'lc1n Ekpl'911 Mort-2&e?-t4 ' ------------1courl or present 1t tO the per-'°"'months from lhe date or hrsl iuuance of letters as g&QeCOl"POl"•tlon. 1:i01 E Hlghl•nCI 1 · · . . A..,. Sen B...-narCllNI, CA 92"°4 sonal representative ap-hrst 156uarx'' of letters as prov1dl'd" 1n Secoon 700 of Olrecooni to 1n. M>oYlil ptoperty FICTITIOUS BUIJNESS JX>inted by the court within providt.od in Section 700 of the Probate Code of Cali-m•y bl obt11neo by requesting NAMIE STATEMENT four months from the date of tht• Probatl' Code of Cali-fomia The lime for filing lllfTMI '" "'"lf'l'll from ll'lfl benellclary The 1o11ow1ng perM>1111r11 do+ng first 1ssua.nce of letters as fomia The ume for fihng claJ.ms will not expire prior =~=!~t~:'~::: IM lwil P\.ltlM- bv1<neu •• proV1ded tn Set-oon 700 ~f t.•laims will nt"it expire prior to rour months from the date s11e1 .. 1e .,,,.u t1e mecle wt1tiou1 CATALINA COMMUTER 19300 the Probate Code of Cali-to rou' -"nth• from the da•-of the hearing noueed above. coven11n1 of warr1nty. ••Pf ... or uie JOfl95 Rel S1n11 An.111. C111I I .. _ -~ I .,107 fom1a The lime for fi ing of the hear•nir noticed abow. YOU MAY' EXAMINE lmpliad, u to tn .. , _po1i111 on °' l Ill · pri -..,, . entumbranc.1110 .. t11ty Ille unpalcl RolllllO N o...11•. 2989 G•~-c aims w nol expltt or YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. Ir be!Meedueonirienot•MCureOb)o PlllllC NOTICE PlllLIC NOTICE ""~1 ........ c.111. 12Q7 0 t e eannenot ... -.. auuvic. you a~ 1ntettsted 1n ~ ('S-tale. you may serve upon the 113 ........ -the .. 1 .. wood Ctrcie. FoJltetlOfl, C•111 92 5 to four montha from the date the file kept by the t'Ourt. tr you are interested ln the es-aald O••d ot Tr\111 lo wll~ . Aobetl A froat. 417 Bro1dw1y, ( h h · .~ ~-7 "'" .. ~-~ ' -YOU MAY EXAMINE dmJ-•-rnateci coeta. •llP"'-ad· Thlt l;lullnels ill conOuct.O by • tate you may serve upon the exa-utor or. • ... U'ltor, or \'MOM •I tNOnwot IM lnlUaf pub-DOUGLAS I!. PAEILI A.ND ~a.I per1nerafllp lhe file kept by thf: court. If ex~uto.-or adminlS'lrator, or upon thttat\Omey tor the ex· llcetlon of tNa Notio. ot a.le: Elli· JESSICA. PAf.ILI Tran1l.-..(•l Aol•nd N. Duke you are Interested in the et-upon the attorney for theeic-erutor or administrator. and lflat.0 lNI•'• !Ml and coat• In wtloM ~ llOdr-. 11 750 E. Th!• Ml'lemet'+I ....... _ 'ffllll tM ,,.,_ you may-upon the nd f'I Ith the -·--~th IM ""°""' of 12 1e' 44 l>N• HMmony Lanre, Cft"t or ,ulllrton, County~°' OrMp Counl"t on .. ....,, -'" ·:-ecutor or administrator. a 1 t' w ~"""' ~ w 1 lntefeet at tlle l:l.IJ&% pt, ennum County Of °'""08· s 1.i• '11 Cflllo May 23. lllM FMlllt exea.itor or admlrustra\Or ·or file with the court with proof ot aervlce, a written on IM unpe1c1 prlneipal belanoe of IOtrlla, up0n the atton.iti_Y for the ex-proof of 1ervk:e, a writ&en requetl ''*tJng that you de-ot/0111310 ..,., ..,_.,.., ~ Thll prOC*tf to tit trarill••M .. ptl(lt~. g:~~ 71~ Dall', «Utor" ?" admirmtrator, and n>quest stating that you de lire •y:al noUc:e of the t1J .. t1'1e btotfldery rt'tffj .. M autl\ortqd ==~ ... Al_:ot« In w.a tile with the court with r h f 'I l r •~··•a Of obllg•tac.t lo P9Y'" anv. Pkl•.,., ' ·5 "'-. sire spedaJ noiict! o ' e 1 ne o an nven--J ...... p-MCN9CI ltt• ctl.-gaa. p1u1 •UornitY wlll 01 tl'l•t ln1•1ot ~ proof of aervice, a wntten Ing of an inventory and ap-praiatmentotestalCIUlellOC' ...._Many knownMEWINO'SINT AtOM.nll request st.aling that you de--rauement of ntate .._11 or of the pedlionl or llCC'OUnta vou M11 °• OIFA\A.T utl)lfll A loceled 81 t4IOI J9lf9')' Ad. •A, -----,-,-:"::c::----l-~;;:Pl8.IC;,=;:;;;';;l«l;TICE:;;~;;--sire special notice of the fil· :r the petition.I or tcX."OUntl mentioned in Section 1200 ~..:.' n. ~~~ i~ ~.°!. ~~y ot Ot9f10a, ,tc.TITtOUI llUIMll Ing of an Inventory and ap-mentioned 1n S«tion 1200 and 1200.5 of the Callfomiai TAKI ACTION TD NOTICT The bl.Ill ll'eMNt wtl M ~ rtaJC MOncc MA.Ml ITATOllNT prailementof eatate.-wor and 1200 5 of the C.llfomla Probate Code YOUR "'°'9RTY JT llA'f • rnat«I on or...., tM 22nd Oe't Of ,~....-.. TM~ wton 1e doing of the petiUons or aecounta ProbateC:ooe. PHIWPsCllLOS8ERG, eou»AT4,.,,....Cu.&.L•'fOU ~v,'.:"'t.a~ttJ~00c~R'1to:~ T--NAMI IT~NT. -· ~::r.sT~ flTZOt:MLD (b)THE mentioned in Section 12~ Well• & Barber ESQ. :-J.:r~·'::"'.::::: ATION, .............. 23'00 .... --· CAl.ATIVE CAfllT£L. 2Ql t:k*'I and 1200., of tM c.a.tlfonua 1541 Wllst.lre Blvd. l!&M RJ•tnl4e Drtve AGAIN9T 'fOU, 'l'OU llMOUlD Aoctlhkl 8t'fCI s~ 2N. II Toro. ~-· S!Jlll A¥tl Probate" Code Los A1,tlet,CA. 19111 Nortlt Htllywoff,CA..tllOt CONTACT4U.WYIR. C.:::':e!M1o. tor dalma v~==~~~o.;.:A~1;',~ eo.1~ 1. eoa1a MeH. c.111 92t21 ANDREW Ci. PO'M"ER, (!Ill 4 3•1 411 (Ill) 111 .... S • 0.led;M~ I. 1114 1n IM a.aw~~ 111 ,...._CA,12121 A! CIWM LIMOl'lt. 241 1 £Iden ESQ, Publlshtd Qn.nae Cont Published Ofance C.oul ==~~ .luM21, ltl~ :::a:. wng11.1.110hk• •111· 1. Colt• ....... Celi! a2121 SANTUCCI It POTTER O.Hy Pilot June ~.6. 12. ti84 O. lyPlloc Juneft.1.13, 1984 1201 l.~ .-,.,.., ·~~t':::::::,:;:.::::;. ~.~i.~i.dbr'..., Tti11tiu..,..11conc1uctec1by:1r1 141 N'wpor1 Cealu Drive, TW-14 • Wl'fl·l8 .., ... ,.dll'IO,CAf24CM ...._ UMd by n. 1,~I) lndM«Mll. • ~ umont SN•lte 1118 ~~ c• tt••• -~~4k~:'~~::O..":"~~~'.c9.:~ JOr m. .. nw. ....,..,. ....,., Met)' ... wnoM fhill 11•181Mnt .,, •• ltlecl Wlltl IM ewpon t-=m, ---fJIPAIJS TfllUIT OEl!D .,,._ 0.ted ..... ,~.Lt!-4 TIMI 91...,.,.,,i.,... II.cl #111'1 I~ Cownfv c.-of 0tanpCoun1y on C'114) &Jl·l4J4 -Keep your garden in Shipe by VICU, 1HC , ~~ar;-ll ¢oun'Y CllWtt ot 0r-. C*intY °" ,,.,..,. 2i. 1964 Publlshed Orange Coat reading Friday's garttenin1 pag . • Trwtee Tr1t1.,... PlllLIC l«lTICE M~J. ttta ~ ftllbilhed 0r""99 eo..i"': 0.ily.Pllot~yJ0,31 ,JuM ...,.... :.!i'e:"'itreaict9nl .....,..._~.,.c..-~lllol ~ °':'t co;:,~ Pt10i~e.1s 20 ,,. 1te4 8.1984 r..a P\lblllftedOr.,,.COMt~"°'! Jl.lnel, ._,, "lcll~>O,Junlt 1S.. ,...._.._ ::-11¥-IO lBM-M _ Wt'v.V i..MltJ.t'14 ..t4 \..,---------4----- \ \ ~\~~~-'-~~/-~~ --------'--------. -__. ..... _~ -~---- • COAST EOOfi ~ . , P•to Roblea wine fHtlv•I drew over 5,000 thlraty pM'tlclPMt•. C8 o Hawaiian with celebratio . . . . . . .. Hawaii is eelebrating its 25th anniversary of statehood this year, d youcanjoir:i the festivities right in your own baclcyard with a op1cal pany menu featuring cconom1cal make-ahead rec\pes. Get things off to a cool start with chilled Hawaiian Chicken Salad. mix of fruit, seasonings, chicken and yogurt. This rcfrc$hing en tree L1111"'..umes a real tribute to the islands when you use hollowed shells from s)) pineapples as individual servina platters. · Guests will enjoy Banana Nut Bread that uses macadamias to add tropical twist to an old favorite. You might want to bake two or three oaves and freeze the extras for a welcome snack throughout the um mer. And fora special topper, make Tropieal Cream Chccsc Spread, using crushed pineapple that is leftover from the chicken salad. Herc is a delicious variation from the traditional pitcher of tea. Fruit juices, ginger and tea arc mixed to create a winning combination in Tangy Lime Tea. · To complete your Hawaiian picnic, why not try Coconut Custard Pie? Mixing all of the ingredients in a blender makes preparation a snap. And you won't have to worry about fixing a crust because this pie makes its own soft crust while it bakes . . c: ...._ f ,,... ' COO e4J nee (do aoi add b8tler/marprlH WMD coekbtg rice) ! Clips cllopped cooked wlalte clalcke• 1 e11p fresll pbaeapple clams 1 cap strawberry llalves 1 cwp celery slices 1 tablespoon lemon jalce 14 teaspooa groud slDler 14 teaspooe pepper ~ Clip plain yoprt '.4 Clip almond s1Jces l'\llow cooked rice to cool. In a large mixing bowl combine rice, chicken, pineapple, strawP.crries, celery, seasonings and lemon juice; mix lightl y. Store mixture in air-tight scaled bowl in refrigerator. Prior to serving add yogurt and almonds lo mixture; mi x lightly. Garnish with additional strawberries and pineapple. Makcs4 to 6 servings. Serve individual portions on lettuce leaves or in pineapple shells. BXNANA l'fUT BREAD 1 cup sa1ar 'fl cap sllortelllD& Zeus 1 teaspoon vullla 1 cap ripe ba.nanas, ma1)led ! caps floar ~ teupooa baking socla ~ teaspoon bakiq powder '4 teaspoon natme1 14 teaspoon c'lanamon . l cap cbopped macadAJOla nats . ' In a large mixing bowl t'team suaar and lhortening. add cas and vanilla. beat until fluffy. Add bananas. In medium mixing bowl combine flour, baking soda. baking powder. nutmegan~innamon: add to'bai1fna mixture. Sn .. r in • nuts. Pour into greased 9 x S-inch loaf pan (forsmaJlerloavcs. use two pans). Bakeat3SOdcgrecsfor4StoSOminutesoruntildone. Cool in pan IOminutcs then tumontorackandcool thoroughly. Serve with Tropical Cream Cheese Spread. f Pleu, eee TROPICAL/CS) Stacked Cblclten Encblladu are festln. I MeXican dishes spice up menus Mexican recipes are bccomina popular in the U.S. as spicy alterna- tive to everyday menus. F~r enter· tainina. Mexican food re<:eaves rave reviews. Whatever the occasion, serve Stacked Chicken Enchiladas and Mexican Pork Taco Salad. These recipes tum any meal into a fiesta. If you fancy Mexican fare but shy away from fiery, bot foods try Stacked Chicken Enchiladas. The flavor blend is Mexican, yet mild. Stack flour tortillas (found in the arooery rcfriaer· ated section) with altcmauna layers of chicken, sour ueam. and mashed • avocado. 1 prinklc with lhredded ~and cut into ~. Serve with a fresh Yttttablc · aalld. vanilla ice cream topPed with toasted almonds and yo~ favorite beverqe. Muican Pork TICO Si1ad coots down any hot 1ummer day, north or south of the border. You ~n make this dish ahead and chill; then am nae on tt!ed'Of chopped h:ttvcc to-ltt\'e.:lt makes an easy picnic salad -perfect before a summer siesta in the barn· mock! Round out the menu with crusty rolls or taco chips. dcsscn and a tall, cool beveraac. STACU!D CHI~ ENClllLA.DA 1 eftlelle (1" eucet) ed0 w ' aa.cemb t CllPI ... ry..., a.ID 1 ..... (S .-ces) cnam cMele ......... 4 Cllfl •leM ~ .. cMel• 1 cu <• wet) c11.,, ........ CMHel '"NJ ,..a ..... laftalM. aM• .. bM l tn Jiii • ..._,_,. ................. "'~a.,,••,,_ ...... 1 ~ (4 ~) ...... ..... ,., J9c:t dlieM Stir totrtbet M\K'e mix and sour t'felm; combine I VJ cupe with cram cae. beatina \UftU 1moolh. Add chtcken, V> cupf c,iliel ~ onion. rPllllilliiliil1ii1ii1 J'Uilf & ) ' J ' ' . Yeast breads rise to any occasion Bread has been the staff oflife for IJCS so it's no wonder that today we enjoy such a multitude of savory varieties. From basic yeast and fest ave holiday breads. to sourdough and fruit muffins. the selection is en~. Bak.ina your own bread can be a rewardina experience. and Sunset makes at easy with an alllnewediton of"Breads" (Lane Publishing Co .. Menlo Park SS.95). ~ven novice bakers can fill their homes with the delightful aroma of freshly-baked bread. Amona the l 90 rcdpcs arc breads to swt any cook's style, taste and schedule. Each chapter is devoted to one t~ -bas1c yeast. fancy and sweet. sourdouah, fned and &riddle, and qu1ck breads. Full-color, step-by·stes.> pbotopapbs illusuatetec~iques and procxdures so anyone can ex,penencc the pleasure and satisfaction ofbakinJ bread. Bread recipes foreveryOCCUJon, from holiday meals to aft~moon teas.. inclodesuch treats as Golden Swiss Cheese Loaves. Cheny-Almond Christmas Wreath, Sowdoup French Bread, Poppy Seed Loaf and Oatmeal Muffins. And. to help bake a perfect loaf, the book offers soecial features like a Trouble Sbooside, Bakina an Quantiey. Fana(uJ Bread Sculptu~ Ok! Fashioned Sou StarterandC'ustom Made Crusts. lfyou•re fortime.asveqwctbttadsa try. lavencd without Ft they take IC1s time to prepere and they come in many tasty va.rietJcs. H.ere s a delicious recipe tOrTueerineOatme&I Loaf you can maketn a jiffy. Tanac:rinc (ororaft1C)peelaftdjuioecombinewtthrolledoatsandchcwydatestomakea tasy and nutritious quick bread. TANGEJUNEOATMEAL-DATELOAF ·~ ........... ....... C..._.I..._) .. llMu•dll•Ht• ........... .......,.. l ~ llt' "I I• patM t•lpftae•.,..,. ..... la,tnMll=Jlkew..,....J ...... .._dJ' -~~d Jafllln..; ... ,...,W~~nlktlMtl ~Clf ..... 1 .... ,,,.-.~ .... _..._,.ner ......... , 1~~-·-.. POU'fbi>1Hiiiwatcr~ Clites ind I . . Or~ Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. June e. 1984 Pack,.Fudge Bars for picnic The bOl d nd hamburse-1'$ arc aonc. The po~to salad eaten. When they start lookina in the picnic ba ket for d~rt. 1erve these delicio11 OatmcaJ-Fudae Bars. Pack.able and portable. these tasty bal'$ combine a cookJe.hke oatmeal bar with melt-in-the-mouth choc- olate. So delicao\ls a combination, )ou'U be alad you have two dozen bars. OATMEAL-FUDGE BARS 1 pact.ace u• oaeet) pldea poud cake mis \'t et1p maraarlae or IMltter. softellell Ya cup packed bron npr Zea• % caps qalek~I or replar MCI l peebp c• eacet) •eml1weel eltoeolate cMp1 ~ cap ••ttltllH CODdu1ecl mil t teblespoou ~·rc•rlae or bolter ~ C9p CHpptd Htl Heat O\.en to lSO dqrees. Max cake mix (dry), v, cup marprinc, the brown supr, eus and oats: rtSCrve. Heat chocolate chips, milk and 2 tablesJ>oons marprine pvcr low heat, stirrina constantly, until chocolate chips are melted and mixture 1s smooth. Spread 1,1, of the reserved cake mtxturc in unircased rcctanaular ~n. 13 x 9 x 2 inches: spread with chocolate mixture; spnnkle with nutf. Bake until liJht brown, about 30 minutes: cool. Cut into bars. 2 x l YJ anchC$. 24 ban. .... _,., ,,_"""_., ...... ...,.. . ..... tllO ~-o. ... C-• oi.. •5131 s... ,,_.. _____ c.-.11a1111c ~"aGAllBlEI 054980 '-"------· -------------------------- ·LA it's _, J r ---------,----------------------------------, A • ..:1~ be --~ I .• ~abeerwith only Jia1f the alcohol? Tuday you've created new options m· the way you live, relax. and play. You've got new priorities in recreation and physical fitness. There are times when you want the taste and refreshment that only beer can provide, without the alcohol content of traditional beer. And now. you have an additional choice. Now you have a real beer choice. Anytime. One smooth taste of LA and you11 know you've found a beer that's a good idea anytime. As a matt.er of fact, LA tastes so good , that if we didn't tell you, you might not ever notice it only has half the alcohol LA truly delive~ all the taste and drinkability of a premium pilsner. That's because LA is brewed with the pure natural ingredients and uncompromised quality you've come to expect from Anheuser-Busch. I I I I I I I I I I I I I ~~~~WWI I one sliglit diffueoce. I ~ -~~ .. ·~ .... ": ;:::---......_"" , ~·-. . ·--..:::--· . ~· .... .-.. .. .J'"~ f . I All the taste with only half the alcohol L of our regular beers... 1 ---~~-----------------~-------------__ J How we take out half the alcohol and leave in all the taste: The Anheuser· Busch brewmaster has developed a special natural brewing process which produces less alcohol. All other steps, from our finest natural ingredients to our slow natural aging are performed in the same t:ra.ctitional · manner a.s other Anheuser-Busch beers. For the way you live today ... Ifs a whole new ball game out there. Aro LA is a whole new brand of beer for today's lifestyle. For people like you who enjoy the taste of a great pilsner beer, and the benefits of a little less alcohol Ifs a beer whose time has come. ' •• _______ i;;,:_ --~-' ServeCCherries with tasty dips For summer desscns, Nonhwcst fresh sweet cherrie1 offer numerous possibilities. One of the easiest and mosi natural is a big bowl of cherries served with an assortment of dips. This kind of dessert i5 appealing because it can b( made ahead and there's no last-minute fuss. . There will be something to suit most everyone's unc wi th these mouth-watering dips. To complement the sweet cherry flavor. Citrus Cream Dip is a ta~ blend ofligbtJy. sweetened sour cream. citrus peel and Juice. For Almon<! Cheese Dip, cream cheese is flavored with al~pnd extract and a hint of lemon. Fluffy Chocolate Dip combine! melted semi-sweet chocolate and billowy whipped cream. with rum adding a subtle flavor. Prepare the trio of dessen dips at least a couple ol hours ahead to allow them to chill. Then, at serving time. s1mpl) wash Nonhwest sweet cherries, leaving stems or. for "handles" and heap them in an attractive serving bowl CITRUS CREAM DIP 1 CIJ> dairy sour cream 1 tablespoon lemon jlllce 1 tablespoon powdered augar 1 teaspoon grated orange peel Daalua.lt. Freab cherries Blend together sour cream, lemon juice, powdered sugar. orange peel and salt: chill. Serve wi th fresh cherries. Makes 1 cup. ALMOND CHEESE DIP l paeta1e (3 oucet) cream cbeae, tofleDed t teblespoou powdered ngar i tablespoou milk 1 &eupooa lemoa Jaice '4 to 1M teupooa almond extract Nortbwest fre1b 1weet cllenies . Blend together cream cheese, powdered sugar, milk. lemon juice and almond extraa; chill, Serve-with fresh cherries. Makes 'h cup. FLUFFY CHOCOLATE C1P 3 squares (1 ouce eacb) 1emJ-1weet claocolate 1 tablespoon milk 1 tabletpooD ram• 1 cap beavy cream .. % table1poou powdered sagar Nornwest f resb sweet cberrtes Melt chocolate with milk over low beat; stir in rum. Cool. Whip cream; sweeten with powdered sugar. fold into cooled chocolate. Chill thorouahly. Serve with fresh cherries. Makes 2 cups: •one teaspoon rum flavoring can be substituted for rum. -Two cups non-dairy topping can be stustituted; omit powdered supr. CALCIUM NEEDS ••• · . From Cl calcium in the American diet." says Zachery. "They alsc contain vitamin D. which helps transpon calciun: throuahout the body. "l>airy products offer a wide vvfety of choices, frorr whole milk to aim. plus lowfat cheese for those watcbina their weight. Cultured milk products, like yoaun anc! cheese. are good for people who have a problem diJcstina lactose. the milk sugar," Zachery says. Adults need at least two servinas from the milk aroui; each day, while teen-aaers need four. Pregnant teen~n need five servings. Other food sources of calcium include dark areen leaf) vegetables like collards. kale or broccoh, sardines and canned red salmon (tncl'tdina bones), as well as tofu almonds and kidney bdns~ The followina recipe for "Mcal·io-One Chicken Casserole" cans for inpcdients from all four food lfOUpt -milk. meat. vqetables and fruits, and breads and ttrcals. If you have trouble tcttin& your kids to eat vegetables. this may be the answer to your problems. ' MEAL-IN-ONE CHICKEN CASSEROLE '!It et1p •cooked rice •r.cNe ( l t ouce1) 1Uody &Uwed f roaea peas 1 np ( ~) •tiredde4 a.Hdarctae.1• C9P dtopped --.,,. tea.,... celery teed •1e ...,,, .. HalOMd pepper IMI cepa •Uk l tea1,... prepared m11terd .... ,... .. u ....,._ carUt' powder t boileleu cbtckea hlJ brea.au Pa,nka pnnkl nccc ... cnly in bottom ofan:alcd 9 x 9 x 2·tnc~ bakina dish. mnat pea • chcest, onion ce.ltty lttd and IC'lsoncd pitpper O\lcr rice. tir totCthcr ma~ mu1iard, 1111 and prhc powd r. Pour o~cr nee mi.xwre. Amn,t chicken half bra.Jts over rice mtuure. Sprinkle wiill papnu. Bake In men ltQttid •~ e1hV1ttt11!1d-t1 Mlli. 6 rv1 n I • • Expand pasta-bilitles Hearty com binattons ('Up \J('C,Arrangc v, lasaana noodlts in 51Uce. Top with 'h the cheek mix&urc, I cup mozzarella cheese and Va VCfSatile, eCO_Il_O_ID __ iC-a~}-----. rcmainina ucc. Repeat makina I more layer. Top with remainina noodle$ and rcmainina sauce. Cover. Bake at 3SO dearecs for 30 minutes. Uncover, spnnklc Versati~tty and economy have made pasta a staple in with remaining mozzarella cheese and Parmesan cbce1e. many Amen can households. Even James Beard, 1 aiant in Bake 10 minutes more or until hot and bubbly. Let stand the food industry, sa~s of pasta, "I never get tired of pasta, 10 minutes before servina. Makes 8 servinp. any m~rc than I act tired of bread." . Lt.kc bread and most staples, pasta needs other PRIN(A VERA PROSCIUTl'O SAUCE • snare<S1cnts, such as a robust spaghetti sauce, to enhance its t tableapooaa olive or Mlad oil ' flavor. Herc are . a variety o( dcliahtful recipes usina t ~ caps ..._poully aUced fret' peea beUt U·&Da) p~pared spaghetti sauce and pasta for excitingly di.fftrcnt l cup freslt.or frcnea peaa dishes. ~ r.p cnppect oatoa:....-......;:..-.-----...,.--,·· I me«llUID cloves 1arJlc, mtacff MEDITERRANEAN ~CARONI SALAD 1 Jar ( U"' oancet) prepared apapettl uaee (1 '4 capa) 1.4 cap botUed ltaJlan dre11in1 1.4 tea1poon crw1bed red pepper Z capa cooked elbow macarolli 1 cap aUced c1e11mben, cat ID lla1f '4 cap cooked rresb con, cat from tbe cob (aboat Z small ean) or 1 cu (about I oCIDCet) wllole kenel 1olden corn, drained "' c.p cbopped red onJoa 14 cup qaa.rtered pitted ripe olives Lettoce leaves · 1.n medium bowl. mix well spa&heni sauce, Italian dress10~ and red pepper. Stir in next 3 injredients. Cover and rcfngerate at least 2 hours to blend flavors. To serve: Linc large platter with lettuce leaves; spoon salad onto center of platter. Makes 5 cups or 6 servings. VEGETABLE LASAGNA l package (8 ounces) lasagna noodles "' cup ollve or salad oll 'cups dlced egplant (~pound) ~ cup cbopped onJoa Z la.rae clovet garUe, minced Z cups thinly sliced 1accbllli ( ~ poand) 1 ~ capt allced m .. brooma .. °' 1 Jar (15~ oucea) apapettl aaaee (1'4 eaps) ~ c•p~vycream 1.4 cep claopped protclatto (lt.alWI bin) or bolled IMam ' Capt bot cooked ... ~l ' In lO.inch skille1 over medium heat, in bot oil, cook beans. peas and onion with prlie, S minutes, stirrina quickly and f~ucn&ly (stir-frying). Add mushroocns1· continue stir-fryma about 10 minutes or until al vegetables arc tcndcr<risp. · Sur in spaghettuauce. cream and ham. Reduce heat &o low, heat throu~. stimna occasionally. Serve over hot cooked spa&hett1. Makes 4 cups or 8 servings. 1 Jar (SZ ounces) 1pa1bettl aaace (2~ caps) '4 cap Barpudy or otber dry red wine. Z ca rlco ~ ~ _, ~~-~~* !';']--~;:,..., "' •' ~;--. . -. . 1.4 teaspoon wklte pepper 3 cups abredded mouareJla cbeese ( '4 poud) 1.4 cup 1rated Parmeau cbeese Cook lasaana noodles as label directs; drain and set ' aside. In ~uart saucepan over medium heat, in hot oil, cook eggplant and onion with garlic I 0 minutes, stirring quickly and frequently (stir-fr)'ing). Add zucchini; con- tinue stir-frying about 5 minutes or until all vegetables arc tender-crisp. Sttr in spaghetti sauce and wine. Heat to boiling; reduce heal to low. Cover, simmer 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. In medium bowl, mix ricotta cheese, eggs and pepper until well blended. In 13 by 9-inch baking dish, spread 1 TROPICAL FEAST ••• From Cl TROPICAL CREAM CHEESE SPREAD I 8-ounce package aoft cream cbeete Z tablespoons apricot preserves 14 cup cra1bed plneapple Z tea1pooa1 boaey ..., cap flaked cocoaat Combine cream ch~. preserves. crushed pineapple and honer., mixing until blended. Add coconut and mix well. Chil . Makes 1 v, cups. . TANGY LIME TEA 'l S·oUDce can of froiea limeade concentrate ..., cup at11weeteaed pineapple juice 4 te.aba11 --'cups bolllq water 1.4 teaspoon groroauiiiniri'glnm-----_ -In a 2-quart pitcher. mix limeade c~4 cans of water; add pineaP.plc juice and stir to blend. Place teabags in 4 cups of boiling water, steep for S minutes. Remove teabags; add ginger while stirring tea. Combine tea with fruit juice mixture; stir until well mixed. Chill at least 2 hours in refrigerator before serving. Serve in tumblers over ice; garnish with lime slices. Makes eight 8-ounce servings. COCONUT CUSTARD PIE Z cups milk · 4eu• V. capsagar V. cup all-purpose flour 1.4 cup butter or margarine, cat up 1 teaspoon vanllla l4 teaspoon ult 1 cup flaked coconut Ground aatmeg 11, cup toasted coconut . . "• cup toasted sliced almond's In blender container, combine milk. eggs, sugar, flour, cut-up butter or ma~rine, vanilla and salt. Cover, blend about I 0 seconds until well mixed (do not overblend). Stir in flaked coconut. Pour egg mixture into vcased 9-inch pie plate. Sprinkle a little nutmeg atop filling. Bake at 350 dcgrccs for 40 minutes or until knife inserted near center comes out clean. (As pie bakes, it forms its own soft crust.) Cool. Place in pie taker. Cover and chill to store. When serving, garnish wwim toasted almonds and toasted cocon\lt. Makes 8 servings. TIP: After you've baked a custard. pie for the recommended time, gentlr shake the pie to test for doncncss. lfthe area that stil appears to be liquid is smaller than the size qf a quarter. the pie 1s done. POPULAI llANDS, KINGS, 100'5 FllTEIS, IEGULAIS r • CTN. Of 10 PICGS. s 99 12 PACK 12 oz. CANS TOASTED COCONUT: Spread 1/4 cup coconut evenly in shallow bakins dish. Place in 325-dcgrcc oven for I 0 to 15 minutes. stimng frequently. TOASTED ALMONDS: Spread •;, cup sliced almonds in shallow baking dish. Place m 300-<icgrcc oven for 5 minutes or until golden. IEGULAI Ol LOW FAT GA110IM Cali.f ornia wines judged in county More than 2,000 California wines arc expected to be judaed at the eighth annual Orange County Fair Commercial Wine competition June 9-11 at the Balboa Bay Club. . . for tbc first time, red, white and rose aenenc wtnes will be judaed. In the fonificd wine ~ivisio~. aside. from Sherry wines, Pon and other fortified wtnes wdl be evaluated. Other cateaones include white, red, rose and blanc varietals. and sparkJina wines. . . Each is judacd m one or three. pnce class1~cat1ons: inexpensive, moderate and premium. AU wmes arc produced in c:atifomia and are commercially available in Oranae County rc&ail outlets. Winners wtll be on dtSplay at the 0ranae County Fair July 6-tS. , • • • Wine connoisseur OennJs Ovmtrect will have a C~bemet Sauvaanon WU!.lJ ton&&bt at 7:30 at The Wine Merchant, 2()9.C S. Coast HiJhway, lla&una Beach. Hc-wilJ introduce selected wines from the 1919 vintaat. Admi ion is $25. As Katina in limited! rctervallons ue ncet ry. For tt rvations call 494-946J. • Su\'c mom'~' shoppmj( values ad· verti~rd an th< • '~ ' f .· ' IEGULUor · .WFlllll Fiii 6PACK 12 oz. CANS . EA. 'Of/NTllT C#LJHl -. Awalable in 3 Aavors ·Cm1s • FlllT PllCI . • STUWIEllY STONE GROUND WHEAT CRACKERS 11 Yi oz. l 2 IA. .. I: I I l ~ • 1o .. ~ • • • • . . • . . . • • • .. . . • • • • f • . . .. ii . • . Pork adds new dimension Cen.ainly few &hinas att better than .. thtunbc table flavor of foods cooked on thcJrill. Burge~.~ ind1~pensable C'OOko ut food. arc pcfhaps evef)'one's favorite. The best part ltbout burgers is that • ou c.an dress them up to sun your cy And the fixmgs needn't be eJttravap nl. Lu h tomato. lettuce. and onion. for exam ple. are perfect accompaniments. Stuffed Pork Burgers use fresh around pork rather than the familiar beef. ~ickcd stuffing of mush- rooms and gl'(en onion hades in th center. With cookout 5"0n t band, these burgers t \.e to the grill in a delicious way. For more way) to prepare pork on the grill. contact the National Pork Producers Council for a new recipe booklet "Pork Hot-OfT·Thc Onll" features nine dehciou pork recipe plus basic barbecuing tlp for succcss- ftil cookouts. For your free copy, send a self· addressed stamped envelope to; NPPC. Dept. FR .. P.O. Box 10383. Des Moine • Iowa S0306 . STUIJl'Ji'EO PORK BURGERS l c.ablnpooo batter or mar11rtne Ii\ cap coanely cltopped fresh maalaroom1 • • c1p ellced 1reen olllon '• t~aspoo111rUc po.wder l.,.. pouds lean 1roud pork i c.a~spooa1 Worcesterihlre sauce l teaspoon dry mustard t,A, teaspoon pepper 4 kalaer rolls Leaf lettuce Bermada onloD slices Tomato sUces Prepared mast.ant Melt butter an a small skille t. Add ~~--~ mushroom s and green onion. spnnkle with garlic powder Saute unttl m ushrooms arc tender. Set aside. Combine ground pork. Worcestershire, df)' m ustard and pepper, mix well. Shape mto 8 pat ues. about 4 inches m diameter Spo(>n mushroom mixture onto center-of 4 pattie Spread to within 'h mch of edge. To p wnh the rcmammg 4 patties: seat edges. Place patties on grill about 6 inches over medium coals. CrilJ I 5 to 20 m inutes on each side or till done. Split rolls. Place lettuce. onion and tomato slices on bottom of rolls. top with burgers and spread wnh mus- tard. Place ·top on rolls. Makes 4 servings. TO BROIL: Place patties on broiler pan. Broil 'llbout 8 inches from heat for 10 to I 5 minutes on each side or till d one. ·8'EIW'Ef9R'ffllft3RS1 ,~'1 L GRADUATIONS ,. ITS UNIQUllY owaous Arid so easy to serve. Because it comes ful~cookcd and spir»-sliced. So party- time, dinner-time or anytime that onlt the best will do, make it HoneyBaked CHEESE A PERFECT NOSH br&Qd ham .. And you've got it made. ITS ONl Gl1AT HAM • Smoked & Baked for 30 Hours • Honey & Spice Glazed • Spiral-: Sliced for Serving Ease •Whole & Half Hams • Nationwide Shipping • Gift Certificates • Party Trays ANAH EIM-The Villaae Center. \222 S. Brookhurst (al Ball Rd.I • (71416JS.2461 CORONA DEL MAR-.J?OO E. Coast Hwy. (714) 673-9000 £L TORO -Bell lbwe1' P\au Nonb. 24601 Raymond ~ #2 (at El Toro Rd.I • (7141 837·3822 HUNTINGTON I EACH-19069 Beach Blwd . (at Garfield nest IO Ralphs)• (714) IM&-357S OIANGE -1~19 N. TUStin ''' Katellal • (714199?·9960 INCA AHAH!JN.~A DELM.U.EL TOllO.ENCINTTAS.FUSNO. HVNTll'IOTON EACH. I.A HASu. LAJCEWOOO. NOaTH HOUY WOOD. NOtlTHalDOE. a.ANOE. PALO ALTO. PASADOCA. RANCHO MIMOE.U\l'EaSlDLSACRAMEHTO.SAN DtEOO.SAHJOSE.SAHTA Pinwh eels, twist s, squa r es complem ent cockta ils, wine Cheest 1s the natural choice when it comes to appetizers. Above all other foods. dteese has a natural affi nity for wine. cocktails and aperitifs. Bits ·of cheese. which ean come in _all sorts of wrappings. make excellent. do-ahead appetizers that complement pre-dinner con versation. Monterey Jack. mozzarella. and Cheddar can be turned into twists. pinwheels, balls. squares and flak} tnangles that can be refrigerated before serving. allowing the hostess time to put the -finishing touches on d inner. L-----------------------I.Au.ARA. SANTA MONICA. SUNHYVALE. ~E. UPl.ANt> If planning appetizers fo r formal or informal gathenngs. recepuo ns and large parties. these cheesy finger foods wtll fill the bill. Each recipe makes from one to five dozen and when combined. yields enough appetizers for a s11able gef together. ~ HONEYBAKED ... ~~~~~~~u. Cheese Pinwheels. a combination of Montere) Jack. cream cheese. green onion and caraway seeds. get their creamy pinwheel design after being rolled m slices of rye bread. The savory filling can be made m mmutes and, with ~~ _. I NT R()l)LJC I N G -----r'-'""-&". ·Le CA F E!' EMIUM GROUND COFFEE· Sesame Wafers Noru there's a co(fl'c tlJLl t 's sw11c·thi11g ntorc'. A pre111i111n ground co ffee u 1ith fl auors of ci1111L1111<>11, 111oc/Jt.7 or amaretto. Nc1u LcCAFE. I-ro111 ( ;e11~ul 1-uods /11tcr11atio11a l Coffees. By CECILY BROWNSTONE U foodEtatot If you want instant suc- cess as a hostess this sum- mer, I suggest you offer Sesame Wafers at an after- noon or evening pa rty. They are definitely deli cate -thin. cn sp, fragile. In the Carolinas. where this recipe comes from . sesame seeds are called benne seeds. When the weather 1s humid. a friend of m ine has a way of stonng these · Sesame Wafers so they stay crisp. She tayers them in coffee cans. covers them tightly and puts them in the freezer. At serving time she defrosts as many as needed. SESAME WAFERS lh cup sesame seeds I,.<, cup all-purpose flour 1/• teaspoon bakla1..,ow- der 6 &ablespoons batter 1 cup flrmly packed ligbt brown sugar 1 large e11 ,., teaspoon vanilla Sprankle the sesame seeds over the bottom of a 13 by 9 by 2-inch baking pan. Ba ke an a preheate d 350-deg ree oven. stirring a few ti~s until browned - about I 0 minutes. Cool completely . On wax p a p er thoroughly stir together the flour and baking powder. DISCOVER THE COFFEE THAT'S SOMETHING MORE ... In a medium bowl cream the butter and brown sug.ar, beat in the • cas and vanilla until blended. ur an the flour mixture until /... FOR LESS. SAVE 40¢ LeCAF E \\ I II ' 'I II hi ' PRI N1 lllM GROLi. I> ( 0 11 f I -. -, 40¢· I I blended. Sur in the sesame seed until welJ di tributed Drop by level tea poons. 2 inchn apan. on cookie ~heeu that • ha vt bttn lined wuh fo il and the foil greastd. Bake an a preheated 32S-dearcc oven until h&htl)' browned -8 to 10 minut6. Cool. remove w1lfl a w1ik patula from foil. The wafers arc truly thin and fraailc: they should be 5tottd MJilll O.Wlll I . between ··~... or WO )( --.. ......... __ 4q~~ _ ~pc~n ·~~~tly 1c~~~ --· do.in ~.~ -/ i(t..~ J .. the add1tion of white wine. spreads easily. Flaky Cheese Triangles and C heese Twists are baked for eight to 10 minutes and thanks to a generous amount of Cheddar cheese, emerge from the oven cn sp and golden brown. T he Twists take o n a nutty flavor from toasted sesame seeds. while the T riangles get their spice from cayenne. The C hili Cheese Balls combine three types of cheese with Dijo n-style mustard, Worcestershire, garltc and chili powders and are rolled in fresh, finely m inced parsley. These bi te-sized cheese balls can be put together and go into the refrigerator for chilling in less than half an hour. lflooking fora hot appetizer idea. Chili-Olive Squares resemble quiche in texture and can be served right from the oven or chilled before serving. Olives., d iced green chilies. onion and Cheddar cheese make the squares a spic) accompaniment 10 cocktails. CHEESE PINWBEEU Z -::ups grated Monterey J ack cheese (8 ouces) I package (3 ounces) cream cheese '' cup white wlne 14 c.abtespooo flllely daopped grffD ollioD J/4 teaspoon caraway seeds · 11• teaspoon salt I I sllcn dark rye bread Co~~heescs....wme. ~een onion. caraway seeds. and salt 1n a m ixer. Beat until creamr-cmtt"'f1 im eruslS off bread : fla tten each shce with rolling pin. Spread each shce wuh about I 'h tablespoons cheese mixture; place two shces side by side a nd roll up, starting from one sJ ort side. mto spiral. . Repeat wuh remaining bread. Cover wi th da p paper towel and plastic wrap and chill untiJ ready to serve. To serve. cut each spiral rolJ into 6 "pinwheels". Makes 64 pinwheels. ' CHEESE TWISTS 1 cup floor 1 • teaapooo ult '4 np~ltortealag I 'i'J cups shredded Cheddar cheese (6 ouces) t tablespoons toasted sesame seeds t tablespoons cold water Combine flour and salt in a bowl. Cut tn shon enmg with pastry blender or fork until crumbly. Stir in cheese and sesame seeds. Add water. I tablespoon at a u me and sur w1th a fork. unul all is moistened. Knead lightly into a ball. Divide dough m half. RQll out on lightly floured board to 1/1-inch thickness. Cut with pastry wheel or knife mto 6 x Y.-1nch stnps. Place on ungreascd balung sheet and twist, if desired. Ba ke in 400-degree oven for 8 to 10 minutes or unu l crisp and lightly browned. Serve warm o r cold. Makes about 4 dozen. FLAKY CHEESE TRIANGLES ~cap flour Pinch salt 41 teaspoon cayenae pepper lh cup butter I cup grated Cheddu daeese (4 ounct1) Beaten e11 Combine flour. salt and cayenne in a bowl. Cut in the butter with a pastry blender o r a fork until mixture resembles coarse meal. Add cheese and knead mixture together to blend. Chall. Roll o ut faarl} thin and cul into 2· inch squares. Brush with beaten egg and cut each square into 2 tnangles. Place on ungreascd cookie sheC'l and chill for about 10 minutes. Bake an 375 degrtt oven for about 8 to 10 minutes or until golden. Cool s lightly before scrvmg . Makes about S dozen . CHIU CHEESE BAL~ l caps gra ted Monterey Jack ~eese (8 ounces) 1 cup grated Moiu relJa claeese ( C oaacet) 1 package (3 ounces) cream chffte 1 tablespoon Dijon-style muc.ard 1 teaapoon Worceetenblre u ace '4 teaspoon 1arllc powder i te11pooas clllll powder F lnely mllleed parsley Combine cheeses, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, aarlic powder and chili powder in a bowl, beatina until blended. Shape into I-inch balls. Roll li&htly in minced parsley. Chill before servfns. Makes 40 balls. CHILI-OUVE SQU~ I small oalon, cM>Pl>d (1 c•p) 1 tea•pooa nililced i ullc ( l or I llr1e cloves) l c.ablespooa vqec.abte oU •t. et1.p cuae4, •~ area dlUJes · 1 cu (111• oe1ce1) allced ripe ollns, cli'alDcd 4 tQt,beatea • ,. H p flH dry bread Cl'1UDbl '4 teupooa u lt teaapooa pepper ~ t a pooa Taba~ aa.ce 1 ~ ctlpt ~reclde4 ...., O.e4dar CllftM t tabl poou paraky Siute oruon and prtic in oaJ until onion is tender, about I to 2 minutes. Remove from heat. Combine rcmamina tnlf'Cdienti in a bowl. ur in onion msinure. Pour into 8·inch square pan. Bake at 32S dcgrccs for 20 to JO mmutn or until firm 1n •h~ center and a rid; msencd an center com out dry. oo m ot bnefl) brfo~ ·comni imo 16 squares: appro~ .. 1mat~I 21nch C'ach. MakCJ'l 6 1pprt11crs • • • I Otange Cout DAILY PlLOT Bi.llions squande-Fed .year-ly-ba ~t-ling-t-h.-e 8y DOROTHY WENCK ...... ._.., However. no food suppk- ment 1 approved by FDA fc and effective forth1!i purpOsc. · • ... ~C11p• .... I~ Wo~ing about weight ha bttome a national ob.- ion an America Rough. I)' 67 percent of the popu- lation 1$ weight conscious. accordang to market urveys, wnh about 38 p,crcent considered 'serious dieters" and l 5 to J3 percent .. cosmetic dieters." '"l In an attempt to ·~cure·· our problem we spend an estimated SI 0 billion a year on.,/ad diets, diet foods. devices. drugs. books. re- ducing salons and health spas, and other gimmicks. Yet, in spite of spending all this mo11ey. our fatness continues and even worsens. Why? Because none of these ''wishful thinking" methods can melt away fat and keep it off. Even when we do follow a method that works and lose some weight. the odds are about 50 to I that we'll gain 1t back again. The Food and Drug Ad- ministration. in the Febru- ary FDA Consumer. hsted some of the products cur- rently on the market for those seeking slimness. They mclude: -Prescription aorec11c -.en ts decrease appetite b) Stlmulating the pon1on of the brain known as the h thalamus. hesc m-. ;'\- newer drugs,· c em1ca fy related to amphetamines but having fewer side ef- fects such as mazindol, phentermine, and diethylprop1on. According to the Amen- can Medical Association's reference book, AMA Drug Evaluations (5th edition). amphetamines are ··not ad- vocated for the treatment of obesity because the risk of dependence is great. The FDA Bureau of Drugs has concluded that the amphetamines have no advantage over other anorectic drugs that have less risk. and a few states have prohibited their use for weight control." Side effects include ner- vousness. irritability. in- somnia. blurred v1s1on. dizziness. palp1tauons, hy- penens1on. sweating. naus- ea. vomtting. and some- times diarrhea or constipa- tion. All anorectic drugs arc recommended for use only in conjunction \\Ith other wet~t·loss regimens such as diet and exercise. (PPA) is the active ingre- dient in most non-prcscnp- tion weight-control prod- ucts. PPA is related chemically t o amphetammes and affects the cardiovascular and cen- tral nervous system simi- larly. but to a lesser degree. Side effects include ner- vousness. insomnia, head- aches. nausea. tinnitus (ringing in the ears). and elevated blood pressure. People with high bTood pressure or hean. thyroid. or kidney disease should not take products with this ingredient except ~n.der the advice and superv1s1on ofa phys1c1an. -Benzocame. the ac- tive ingrechent in A YDS candy and dietetic lozenges and gum, 1s a topical anesthetic said to work by anesthetizing the tonJ.ue. thereby reducing the ability to taste foods. It's one of two non- prescription ingredients found safe and effective by the FDA ad,isory panel . that reviewed over-the- counter weight reducing ingredients. Some animal and human studies reviewed b> the panel showed benzocaine- containing products con- tribute to wet~ht loss. How- ever according to AMA Drug Evaluations. "there are no conclusive data to support bcnzocaine's effec- tiveness as an anorex1ant." -Bulk producers are substances such as meth· ylcellulose that absorb hquid in the stomach. crcatina a feeling of full- ness. The advtsory review panel said that bulk producers arc safe but t~cir value in reducing weiaht hun't been established. Many of these products arc used pnmanly as built. lax- auves (a use for which they wtrc found both safe and cffccuve). _ Sp1rul1na is a dark areen powder or pill. de- rived from al~e. and promoted ClttCOSl".Cly for the ability of an amino acid h contains (phc)'nl~l~nme) to .. act on the brain s ap- bttate center to SWltch off hunacr pan~." The ~A i not aware of any ev!dcn<:e that phenylalanine 1 • fe and cfTcc:uve as an appctut upp nt. -Food upplement" uch 1 bee pe>llen and ~m herbal products arc '°metim promoted by ' anufacturfrs as cffi u~e _ _.,,........_-l,:'n' cau Ina ~'t~l ten • The fer. more efreclive wars to lose weight - catma less and exertisina moroo -arc also les ex- pensive than any of these questionable drug prod· ucts. • • • QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED: -Q. Is tlltre "ruJ• of Uuamb" for ,dtltrmhilag a mlD.lmam lev of Hloriu a ~noa lteffs to coaa•me la order to haYe a ufe welglllt '"' dlet? l'm aware that very low ttlorie diets ann'tsafe. -A One general rule $1)') men hould consume . no I than 1.600 calones and women no IC')\ than 1.200 caloric-s per day. However. a more pcc1- fic, conscr'\tative rule, that takes into account van- ations in body saze, says "do not reduce calorics to less than your daily basal metabolic nttd " Your basal mctaboli rate IS the cnef'I)' rt'Quirtd co maintain tM f unruoniog of ')our body. To calculate )Our ta.I metaoolic nttd . first dt>- term1ne your wc1&ht in kilograms bY div1d1ng your wei&))t in pounds by 2 2. then multiply by I if you're 1 man and ~·O.'il 1fyou'rca woman. to find the numbtt of caloncs )Ou need pet bour to maintain )OUt body at mt. To calculate )'()Ur dally nttd~. . multiply b) 24 hours. An l\erage man rtquircs onccalo~ pet kilotrtm of bbdy weight per hour or 160Q.-l800 calont:S ptr 24 hou~ and an •' naae "oman require 0.9 calon per ikilopam of body • tor 1?00-1 calories per !4 houn For e-.ampk. 1fyou'rc a man ~ighing 160 pound divtdc 160 by 2.2 to act )our Yt'f•&lu in luloaram of 70.27; muJUpl) by I thm by 24 10 IC1 a daih calot1t ~tmncnt of JUll ulldrr If )'Ou're a woman ~1n1 135 pounda. d1videl.2101tta weilhl tft tilo&!amsof61.3; nwltipl~ by 0~ IDd then~ 24 IO lel a. dady calorie ~ of just over 1 lOO calones STATt:a aaoa. Pa~. Towels Prlcee Dlectln .huM '1•U. , ... AtADStater...._~ UmeA·Way f ,goz ••.39 &°;tdd~0R SEVEN SEAS·VIVA ITALIAN OR BUTTERMILK RECIPE ·SINGLE UNIT PACKAGE J.LBS. OR MORE Fresh Ground Beef UHQ.( BENS CClfoiV(fll(D '• 12-0l••.76 ,~•3.33 ~4T »OZ tz.28 Rice ~ OECAff(JNAf(O Yuban Coffee GOU> 0.-M«Tt DlalSoap t"2-0Z ••• '19 LB SAi.LO ).Ql .......... $W'P'T$--·-~··" Sn rU•ka OAU011'-0l Slleed .._...... CIA<.LO l.QZ Selpm!CbaJt -~ VALLI\' NO lilJGAll aDOC!O Slleed •• , •• SAVE aatts11 11EEF fe1t0Jr PI ck Jtc Aililf SI.~ Steaks :. ~48 F•mllv ..,.. __ • __ BEEF A0u«> 80HfMa \o.~ Dlt§teaks . JH.bSteaks Spencer Steaks "4.0S Pstate Se1ed ........ ... ..... ~······ .. •3.49 .... W'l .. ta ... ... L-.,._aa.-....... ..,'7 kiet"D ro_,. ... 99 ...... .~ ... . Dreaing . R6GULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR SHORTENING Crisco 1s.oz sI.09 ~oz sz.59 12-0z sI.29 ~er ~~ UOl sz.59 / ' LARGE FANCY TROPICAL Fl.AVOA HEREFORD-ROAST BEEF & GRAVY '1 45 OR Corned Beef DUNCAN HINES-4 VARIETIES Muffin Mixes 975to13·0Z SI.ZS MINUTE MAID I Orange Juice . . BELL BRANO-REGUl.AR. NACHO OR CORN·COMPAORES Tortilla Chips~. 640Z si:.59 • 1tK>~ •I.35 o;~~Mw;cH·s "" &t2oz $I.S9 DUNCAN HINES FROSTING 4·VAR 16 S-OZ 't 3S OR 1 l·VAR 89e Cake Mixes ... .. 115101as.oz JOHNSON LEMON Pledge REGULAR PANTY SHIELDS Carefree WELCH$ Gra~Juice .. SUNNY DELIGHT FlORIOA Cltnas Plinch. ' ( =~r~ •w•i:.09) f Tab,Sprlte or ~~ CokeU Diet Coke I Mangos ,.1 Avocados l>~>E~~~PE~ASS Broccoli ~F<INC~TlNOCAGREE ... Plums ~F~ .. SWEFT~D f.42SC ~2tr Ul43• Onions uS~•SYtnlYfllOW Ul •cr AspmapsFesm ~N-0•~99 •a•1oi'M9 lk ttJl -a.99 '"92.99 H'3.X9 •:ix.., .. l J "' • Coast bAILY PILOT/W.ctneaday. June 6, 198• ,. Uncommon salad-greens-boostflavorin salads ALPHA ·BETA GIANT BREAD QUICK MUFFINS 49~. _ -- LIGHT, TENDER I ~ ~ For a quick ->snack or the perfect finishing touch to a I _ summer salad !.u pper surupa batch of golden brown. light and tender unshtne Muffins. Surpn!>e 10gred1en1s. pasteurized process cheese !tpread -melted and mixed as part of the batter -and chopped fresh peache!>. make the classic recipe super special Some basic muflin mixing and baking ups to remember include: --.. Thorough!) blend all dry in~edients 1n bowl. -Thoroughly ~ombine all liquid ingredients and add aJI at once to di') 1ngred1ents. -Sur quickly. mixing just unul alJ mgredJents are moistened. -Fill greased and floured muffin cups no more than 2/3 full For smaller households. make a complete recipe of ptquant flavored and chees> Sunshine Muffins (with or wtthout frutt). then freeze cooled muffins m a plasuc freezer bag. Remo"e one or more as nced_ed. Baked without fruit. lhe robust cheesv muffins arc the perfect accompan1men1 to chilled. spicy gazpacho ... or wonderful to spltt and serve as small breakfast sandwtches filled w11h 1hinl) sliced ham. cnsp crumbled bacon and cubed pas1eunzcd process cheese spread. SUNSHINE MUFFINS 112 po11nd pasteurized proce11 cb~ spread, cubed "'I cup milk / 11':1 cup margarine 1 egg, beaten 1 \'a cupa flour a,, cup sugar 1 tableapoon baking powder I cup chopped ~led peaches Combine process cheese spread. milk and marganne in saucepan: stir over low heat until smooth. Remove from heat: blend in egg. Add to combined flour, sugar and baking powder. mixing JUSt unttl moistened. Stir 1n peaches. Spoon into greased and floured med1um-s1ze muffin pan. filling each cup 2/3 full. Bake at 400 degrees. 12 minutes l dozen. Variation: Omit peaches. Subsutute chopped peeled apple for peaches Peanut crisps salt-free No !>all 1s called for. PE ANUT CRISPS 1 cup stirred all-purpose no11r '4 tu1pooo baking soda l,'J tea1poon ground cinnamon '-"cap batter ~ cup firmly packed llgbt brown 111gar l lar1e ea 1 tea1poon vanilla 1 cap roa1ted 11daned anulted peuatt, finely chopped Stirtoae1her flour. baking soda and cinnamon. Cream butter and sugar. Beat egg JUSt until yolk and whale are blended; beal 2 tablespoons of the egg il\to the butter-sugar m1.lturc; reserve rcmaininJ egg. LB. VINE RIPENED HONEYDEW MELONS 9 gc_EA. . 15-Ql.IAltT DURALITE FOAM CHEST Cooy•'9f'• ,..,. Alt "0'"' ~ we •.U•,.. '"• •·O'" to '"'"' cau•"M·H What do purslane, watercre s. sorrel, ~role, chicory, nasturtiums, endive and mustard have in common? They arc all lfCellS that can be used 1n saJ d for yariety and flavor difference. Iceberg lettuce and &everal other varieties of leaf lettuce serve a the foundation for most r;recn salads. But when the cost oflcaflettuce climbs out of sight or the desire to add fla vor excitement to a salad shoulS for attention, try the uncommon greens. h may lake some extra searching for these less common greens. They arc not available all the time, nor arc they available in every store. Some are free,just for the picltina. and others may require a \rip to a market thAt specializes in a wide varic'y of produce. But once you discover lhem and learn how to use them, salads will always be refreshingly different. . Each of the &reens listed btlow will make a prounounccq flavor difference in green salads. Because of their flavors, they are most often be.st mixed with the more maid green$, such as lettu<Je or romaine. Pur11aae has a piquant flavor. It 1s readily available Vt spnng and early summer. pecking through cracks in sidewalks or alona quiet country roads. Waterc re11 is the most popular and widely eaten of the cressts. members of the mustard family. Walercress gets us name because it grows in cold runn10g water. It has crisp green leaves that Jive up a pungent. peppery rather bitter taste. This cress is.available year round. wtth peak supplies 1n May. June anQ,,JuJy. Chicory has a tender. creamy-yellow leaf with a flavor both tangy and mild. Wltloof, often called French endive. 1s the best-known.variety. Chicory 1s available early in the spnng. • Endive 1s an ideal salad green for those periods when LB. SWEET 'N JUICY CALIFORNIA PLUMS • 31-0Z.. HUNTS CAN PORK AND BEANS lettuce t no tonaer available in the prdcn or wbe~ it is more costly in the market. There are two types of endive, a broad leafed variety often called eacarole and th curly leafed type, usually more tender. Sorrel has a faintly lemony and sO'!f wte>.Jt ~ ~ grown in window pots or purchased in the spnna tn s'pec1ahy produce markets. Ma1tard bas succulent leaves. Like endive, mu tatd offers both the curly and broad leafed vaneties. Mixing and matching flavors, colors and textures 11 important in making salads something special. More assenive Oa vomi clements should be used in smaJl~r quantities becau&e strong tastin& inarcd}e.nts will over power the mild fla vors. VEGETABLE SALAD l llilead batter lettuce • 'i\ baacb watercre11 or cbtcory 1 poad mind green•. sa~ 11 mustard, endive ud 1plucllil -· ._ ~ cap 1Uced celery 1 medium 11ccblal, tblaly 1Uced 1 Jar (6 Ollllcff) 1tuffed green olives, drained i tomatoes, cut Ill wedges '!' poud ma1broom1, allced • 1 cap (I ounces) 1arden berb bottled salad dres1LD1 i bani-cooked eggs, allced 1 ripe avocado, 1Uced Croutons Wash arecns. drain and dry well. Remove stems if woody. Tear leaves into bite-size pieces. Combine greens. celery. zucchini, olives. tomatoes and mushrooms in a large bowl. Pour salad dressing over all. Garrush with hard- cookcd eggs. avocado and croutons. Makes 6 to 8 servings. SKIPPY PEANUT BUTTER 1~~ EA. CRISP • SOLID HEAD LETTUCE • 32.0Z. 90TTU • REGUlAR • HIO<ORY NABISCO RITZ CRACKERS With a spoon. work 1n flour mixture. then half the pea.nuts.Spread ma but~ 15x 19x 1-mchJcllyrollpan: brush with reserved cg; spnnkJe wtth remammg peanuts. Bake in a preheated 325-degrcc oven until dough 1s well browned and peanut are hahtJy browned -20 minutes At once loosen edaes and cut into bars. ')at .. Tta CQlt~I.., Otl t M h1tt>le 11•"'1 S..r W•"-& I -Quo• l\fol Aw• •b • -A • ••0t .. Prtces Effective at all Southern Callfornle Alph1 Bet• Marketa Ket.>p up "1th news of r1t~ and '-'ount ,. go' t:rnment and their 'penc1 mg pion for 'our tux dollar . DlllJ ~llat ··"-------------------""!""'"----------------__. I •• , • 12·0Z PKG •LIMIT 4 MJB 100% COLOMBIAN COFFEE 1!~ •BEEF ROUND WILSON BACON LR BONELESS ROUND STEAKS 12·0Z. CANS OLYMPIA BEER I LB. •. FROZEN GRADE A • FANCY YOUNG TURKEYS .. Feature ;versatile vegetable in fresh salads, main dishes GA&DEN SAUD The ~lrt'h for •holesome. flavorful meals i ~na l ~ UI -:_~_..._..•'II•••-. Ammcans t~ fiber-ncb foods that&re inWlll'MDW in J ~ ..._., · ~ meetina many heahb nttds. Beans a~ an excdlent source t.t1f ....... .,. .._. ....-...... ~r fim and &re an intevaJ part or many dchcious &od a..-·a,.....,.._. nnMI-. ........ 1ntttt1t1na m;,pes, t ..... .,,, .. ..w • Beans &tt low in fat and cbolesierol, a good source of· ! &M'r J • ••• rlll 1pr thiam1n, !ron, B vitamins nboflavin and ni.acm. and hi&h •4 ........ *1......,.. in protein, fiber and compk.t cart>ohydntes. l"hc I • ....._ deH ~ ~ l".I..... /-"""'~ ...... _. b. . . ........._. '"-J • • • t =·~ ....... ~ ......... ••~r: _, uuu)'w•lt com mauon JJ1 ~.Ill(; Pl' masolain •1 ~ 1 bi fi g ':=:A· c __ ... bloods .,. 1 t I ...:a.. 1_._ I d la h n .....,w • com nc 1rst 1 ...... u•aUs. owr auu u_r eves. owtthnOa.&:>Ui;ro • e )"S unscr panp refrlteratt at least 2 houn to blend ftivon. WtrlJ:ll d.etnment.al to mOS1 dictcra. provides mc!I)', and may occasaonally. Toss with ....inac:b. Makes. 5 ""'""' or 6 sick even help prevent hrin attacks and strok~. ~ ~-- For uciting)y different flavor combinations. why not dash scrvinss. to these reapes? Ory mustard and pthc add zip to the mtdley of cauliflower, onion, ra(.iish and pork and beans found in this rmpe for Garden Salad. The vegetables arc prepared ahead of ume and rcfri&ef&lCd, then tosSCd w1tb spinach n~t before servin1 to yield a fresh dish without last- manute fuss. • • · • The deh&htful tno or svccota h. onion and pork and beans 'makes this recipe for Golden Chicken Over Veaetables a family favorite. Simply arrange browned chicken !ecs over the vegetables for a h&ht, savory dish. Baked Beans and Chicken takes at hearty flavor from the combination of pork and beans. brown sugar, mustard and Worcestershire sauce. Chicken thighs are browned.. then added to the bean mixture to produce 1 luscious .. ,.,__, . ..,.... ..................... -....... .. ---·---u.11 ........... 11,....~ ............... ·-·----,....., .... ...,,Clrt.Qilll..,._ ..... -.. "' ... ,..._. ........... ...,, .. ...,. e•-... a...Clllll*llt .._ ......... ........................ -..... ~ ... -.. -.-_ ....... ....,. ......................................... _.., .,. 11111 ...... -..... ......... 111 ................... _ ... __ _ c.r...~ ..... , ......... _ ....... ..._ ............... ...,,1 ... ,,, .... -............. .......... _ .. _ .......... ,,.-i,....., .... , ...... _..," ... SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS! JUJU MOOK CHEVROLET EUROSPORT WAGON WINNER! _L 1= GOLDEN CHICKEN OVER VEGETA.BLES it01e., ... ~ ·~*-SCkb ( .... !,....., 1 cu (ti ..-es>'*'._......_• t1 .,. we 1~cit .... >fre1e11~ • c.,fJMIJ~ ... ~--• ta~ I le,....,, ....-ieg · In 10-anch 'l&e,ove-rmcdiumhCat,fohotmarsanne, slowly cook chJCkeri unuJ brQ>Vncd on all sides (about 2.S minutes)~ remove chicken from JICilkt. To drippiop in sk.illet, uir in remaini~ in;redieots. Amn&e chLcken on bean misture. Reduce beat io low; cover and semmer 10 minutes or UDtil cJUd,ea is foe • tender. SlU'rina occasionally. Mak.es 6 main dish scrvin.p. .. C0111b\ne rcmainina SllJOC, avocado and lime juice. Wrap lOl'tillas in foil and beat in JSOdqree oven for 10 minutes. • PbK:e one tortilla on greased beking dish. SP'Clld with v. tile avocado rnixruR and sprinkle with 2 ~ chopped tomatoes.. Continue to 5\aCk, aJternaung la~ of fillioa with each tonilla. Cover completely with foil · • Bake at 350 de&Jees for 4.S to .SS minutes or until'~ Sprinkle with cheese. remaining tomatoes and chilic;.1. Wrap foil around edge of stack, leaving top uncovered. Return to oven~ bake 2 toJ minutes loager, or until cheese has melted.. Cut into~ 8 ~-- Mknwan: Microwave st.aCkcd enchilada, lootdy coveT'Cd with wax paper, on ffiGH. 16 minutes.., rotati after 8 minutes.. Sprinkle with cheese, mnainin& tomato and chilies. Microwa~e, uncovered. on HIGH 30 seconds. MEXICAN PORK. TACO SALAD 1 ee•elope (1 '4 owes> taeo ulM........, m.b 'ta C9f oil ~ C9f temato ueee J~.-....C..-.pel'k(abeatt ...... aceeke4) '-'I CllP .ucH W.C:.. ellns l....Uncdlld 1 pedqe (11 -.ca) fnuta m lf"ea beau . t tablespoeu -'lte ... vt.epr % &rfftl _....,mt blto l·bd piecU •4 (1Qt ~panky f cwps keberg ldtllee Ca.IMat ~ ~> 1 1ar&e tomato, cearsdy ~ Salt Pepper Combine seasonmg m1>... oil and tomato sauce m smaJI bowl; combine 1h cup with pork and black ohves. Chill. CUt zucchini into I-inch cubes; cook in I cup boiling water until tender<risp, 5 to 7 minutes. Drain. Cook green beans accord.in& to pac~ directions~ dram. Combine rcmaming sauce, vmegar. vegetables. onion and parsley; chill. Arra~ chilleci vegetables and meat on bed oOettucc. Garnish with tomato.. seasoned with salt and pepper. 8 to I 0 ~rvmgs. Peaches, plums plentiful, sweet DchClOUS soft fruit IS pkntiful. Cherries. grapes. peaches, plums and nccunncs arc here and in excellent quality. Lots of green vegetables are available and have lower rctat.I pnces as the heat brings them to ripeness 1n a hurry FRUITS The heat wave has brought on soft fruit crops all over the sate. Some of the season's best peaches_ plums and ncctannes arc ripening quickly and available at reasonable prices. Sugar content is high in SP.ringcrcst; Aavorcrcst and June lady peaches wiU be ava1lable soon. Nectarines are increasingly showing mo~ color and a~ swccter andju1etcr than ever. Red Beaut. Black Bcaut'- and Santa Rosa plums arc the top vanetics available ro·r their start of the scuon. They ma) be a bit paler than usual. due to the extreme heat m growing areas. Peaches and nectanncs arc ste~d) m pncc, plums arc very reasonable There is an abundance of apricots ri&ht now. Soon earl} "anet1es ~111 g.ive ~'a) to the Royal. the varict)' most preferred b) consumers due to its sweetness and large size Look for an orangt>-yellow color with a red blush for best quality. These summer favorites should conunuc in good producnon throu.gh ear1) September. Grapes are a great LJut for hot days. Be urc to have plenty o f the Red Aame seedless vancty around to sat1sf) the s-wttt tooth. The round. green Pcrlctte is p 1m.na a ht&her supr le vel. makma it ven· flavorful. In a couple or weds this year's crop of Thompson Seedless will be stan1na. G rape pricn are generally reasonable. Stockton and Lodi are the ma1or Bina chel'T} produana areas m C.ahfomia. Their quality is excellent and pncn reasonable. A wide variety of bcrri~ is available. Raspbemes. blackberries and boyscnbcme5 arc all grown m the northern pan of the state. Stnwbcrries ~tinue to .._ __ .--....,.4 1 rcprcxnt a &ood produce value wilheood quahty. More and more oft he tropical truts are ahowina up 1n marlcets at lower pntts. KlWJfruit from New Zealand 1s iamna its seasotl, as the tail end of California's crop finishes Cahfom1a and New Zealand kiwi tca~ns (()ft'lplcmcnt each other so they are not in oompetttion. The summer season as bcginnina for melon It may be a liahter season, aocordm& to produtt CJtpert.S. due to a grov.ina problem. Wattrmclon and cantaloupes arc the moM likely to be da.mqed. Many of lhc early vancua will cxpcncatt a smaller crop. caUS1 steel)tt prica. Quality of available mck>ns · VCf)' &OOd. i l • •• Orvige Coast DAILY PILOT IWed,,..dav. June s. 198• aso Robles.draws 5 -,099 to its wine festi~al More than ~.000 people con· v~r&ed on the small cny park in the center of Pa o Robles for the scc- ond annual Paso Robles Wine Fes~ t1vaJ. The idea of any reaional wine festival is to promote the wines and wineries of the region. Thts one cenainly succeeded in that area. The northern San Luis Obispo County wmenes were out in force, and local vendors hned the per- JERRY Mw iphcry of the park selling evn-ything from Polish sausages to frc h o>stcrs, clams and mussels. The park has an . old- fashioned bapd shell, and hve music to please a broad variety of tastes could be heard throughout the downto~n area tor mo'it ot the 5i~ hour . ( ai\'C )OU thl) repon not to male ~ou feel bad be-cau~ )OU weren't there. but to alert you to requc~t an 1nv1tnt1on for ne~t )ear'11 ba h. Also. as an excuse to d1scu s some too infre- quently mentioned local wineric). If you want to make surl' }'Ou're on the inv1ta1ion li st · for 19.85. drop a note to: Estrellu River Winer). attn: Sarah. P.O. Box 96. Pao;o Robles. C' A 93446 Sarah 1s on the fesuval committee and will make GROUND BEEF m VALUE PACKS Freshly 99 ~~~n~ ~ef • -..n 111 n ' Beef Cube Steaks l"\t\ll "..,..- ..... f "" ~ '-Ure )ou're not nel)ec.:tcd. !)pea .. ing of e trella. make sure to try the wine- 1) 's 1983 version of Whitt' Zinfandel. Last y~r· was a touch too )Wet"t. This year the balance 1s near perfect due to hveller ac1d11y. FarviewFarm Vineyards of nearby Templeton was previewing a first effort Chardonnay from very young vines. lt was done 1n a bacrel-fcrmentcd, toast) oak style and the bouquet was absolutely seductive. When the vines arc a httle more mature and the resulting wine picks uo more inten 1ui1 ch rac.:- ter, Farv1cw Chardonnay Is hkel} to attract a lot of attention. fwm Hills Ranch wu pounna Its Zinfandel Rose nmon~ other sclcc:t1ons, and it 1s sull one of my two or three favonte ro~s in the state. If you hkc fruit, fruit and more fruit , with just a touch of swee10ess and a color that'SJUSt {>lain pretty · to look a1, this is your summertime. pool!tide wine. HMR (Hidden Moun· ta1n Ranch) was offenna its I 983 Pa not Noir Blanc, and th1~ 1s one white wine from red grapes that i truly white I fit 1s to be fauhrd, tt i11 a little too light in color. A food wine {~lmon would be great) that isn't too austere for casual ippana. Creston Manor has a 1983 Sauvignon Blanc that isn't to be massed. Blended to a small percentaie of ~milJon, it is a masttr- pie-ce of balance and re- straint. Two winemakers from competing winenes touted me on iL ~artin Brothers m~es hardonnay, auvian<>o Blanc and the rare (in Cahtomia) Italian varirty Ncbbiolo. all of which att excellent. The wine from Martin Brothe~ that c~­ cites me, however, 1s t 983 Ory Chcnin Blanc. Cahfornla wineries that are looking for a style to c:ompctc Wllh many of the French and h Han white wines should study this marvel of dnnkab1l1ty. t 11 percent alcohol and totally dry to the l8$tt. this is a companion to food that can truly be quaffed as a beverage. The tllvorsart d~n a~d vinous and the wine. •S balanced to be rtfrcshina. Re$taurateurs take note. A new winery, Adelaida Cellars, offer\. both Chardonnay and Cabernet and both artwonhyofyour examination. Look for a sparkling wrne under the same label in the near futu~. Mastantuono estab- li hcd its rtputauon with award winntnJ Zinfandcl. but otl\Cr vaneties in the linc.,.cSpcc1a1ly Cabernet. sho)tld not be 1111orcd. In red wines. at least. the style is intense. Wine festival weekend also marked the grand opco1n1 of the Eberle Wine ry. located on Hiah- wa> 46 just \h~ miles ~st of I 01. Basically two wmes will be offered. Chardon- nay and Cabernet Sauvignon. BEEF ROASTS a , JU~ Beef Chuck Roasts 1"8U ... .,. l'f!I BEEF STEAKS a Chuck Steak 1 sh .·79 Blade Cut 1"8ll ....... It((( SEA FOOD Gary Eberle 1s no new- comer to the Central Coast wine scene. having been the founding winemaker at lhe a-rea 's largest winery. Estrella River. The cu rrent releases were produced at Estrella while construction of the new winery was II under way. The balance of the Eberle n-d S 169 team includes Jeanie nc napper.. . . Eberle (Mrs. Gary) who not ~lets .... only markets the . family's • """1( · • wines but operates a local t "'tT(r.. • .--~~··.f·;:;_ ···~l!-H(<~ ;..· ~~~~~~-1 ~.,.r;.--~ .. wil!'b,lJ:!~o-""41~~sallllliJe~~ope~o~1 • ... Ground Beef " l .,_ .... "1n I~ It Extra Lean J98 <? ... ~"''!"d Beef " .._.., '"Of" ft •• Lamb ShoulderJ49 Blade Chops ll!f~ h I)" H< I PORK a J19 Pork Spareribs I ~ I "•t ..... .,. f Quarter Pork Loin Chops ",, ..• .... ~ ... "" J59 Boneless Pork 269 Loin Roast ('<'(R l e • "''""A'( .. 'f ~"[Ji. .. t .... Beef Rib Steaks .. ~(,, ""' " ~ ...... ..... Bottom Round Steaks 229 J98 I J98 .\f\if "' NfJ f 'Uf' 'l foo 'ot I . Sirloin Tip Steaks ,f\, 1 "' °' Ii• I I kli>~f I " t 1• • Boneless FamllyJ98 Steaks '"b• t ""...., ,,, l ~ ·"Wt PAl"- PORK Boneless Pork289 Loin Chops -. Boneless Pork 2 09 Spareribs ' - Boneless Pork 3 69 Tenderloin . ' •• .. Shoulder Clod Roasts · "&_( '°''"""' bt [f 8',.... t ~ ..,l('I" Boneless Chuck Roasts 1464. t ".... 8 kill J89 J79 Eye of 279 ~~~.~d_. .~oast~ ~ .... r r Beef Rib Roasts 1'1!1 I ~,..,. !ll lf ,11(.1 r.,r BACOrtC.SAUSAGE Slim Price!. Bacon Pl•,.,. e ... ". f Center Cut Ham Slices • t ~ • McCoy Com Beef Brisket 8 VONS PEELED ~sg rn~10ES e GREEN &Par 49 PRUIT DRINKS .) I'!( 2~JOOZ PKG • CA'! PRODUCE II -.r .. ~-• ... n• Yellow Onions "IV. l"ltu,. (A 49 Large Mangoes '\llOC ' Mt\ ' f',I Jt Pkkllng Cucumbers "ltDlli"' '> /1 ~ c .. a•c Puc:hes or Nectarines DELI I l)': ....r( P•t<. '-l(f"1 ~( Af CJil Vons Beer Bologna 5 ~100 (• .59 .a .39 La .59 rt ~ ()/ "" •-•l'Pt:U Hfut '000 J09 209 Borden Cheese Slices •OI C""' T'\4..tnU: ,JlQl CT" 2 19 119 Precious Ricotta Cheue DAIRY . I .98 m .65 4 SELECTED \ARIET ES UMn 4 GROCERY c,a;~a~I~~ Evaponited Miik .49 • 'r •• J33 Vons Strawberry Pruerves J36 ' r ~ l-• ~ .. a "'' Italian Salad Dressing Vons Mixed Vegetables D .43 m BAKERY ••"r-"' ..... -. ... Vt"""" ., '~ Cinnamon Rolls J09 1 •'\C• •~ t:sr<l ~DflWD 00> • ~D J39 Cake Donuts l ""'"' """ .. 09 SQA "l ..... " Hot Dog Burls B DAIRY GROCERY It .59 za• •~ou-<t IOI Slim Price• C..ke Mlxu >C ((I<, • ., " Vons Tea"' Bags t•• 1"5Tt ' -" u• ~· ·n<r Fatiliter Vatl!n~ a T11t •1 vitkulturc student at U.C. T-Bone Steaks ... °'' ' ' "'II .._ Alf Porterhouse Steaks Dover Sole FlJJets . ·~ ~ tt 298 Fresh Eastern 398 ~! Scallops 11 111(.Al Boneless Top 249· ~.lf!~ln Steak~ Turbot Fillets I(((){(., Olf f>l HIO'>l(O tb2 29 "''' London Broll J98 ~8~~.l'~lf " Jumbo Shell-899 On Shrimp lll,lUU"fT Lil IOI' l<f.U"'l !IO"it 11 ~ POULTRY Cornish Game Hens II 'llOl~ .. Oii OI. ,N0 .. 11 u D. POULTRY Fresh Chicken 99 !?.f!lm~11ck • . .4U, J.~ ' Fresh Chicken J09 T!'!R,hs. 1 " Fresh 98-· Hen Turkeys 'U'>l(fl f"R~ Ult lb • 1'1:!4,~ , ... ~ 101• lll~ .... (. .. , FROZEN I Ol '°'~ l([f TUf!llH Olt Banquet Chicken Pie DOUBLE COOPON r::.r.=:.r.=11 l'f'VAv.:.t11~v-=;-:1 ·• ··~.. ... --.. •. .• . •. 'I::-.·.: .. -...: 1111 ·. . . • . 1••1 ·. . . 11 I :;r:~· .. --11 • ·• 11 · ~ I 11 .. --·. . 1111 .... •• •• :: . . . , .. , . , •• , Ii' I .. II ti i1 ~ ... .:-....-:-..; l"I ~::-.:-:-.::. l"I .:..:;.:':9':"'...: .. I ::.,-;~~..: 11 :;..~.:~~ 11 ::!:'19~~~ Ii II ---...... 1••1 -.. -.... ,.. 1111 -~~-· ~ I! ~!.l.. ,,,...,_ ....... • .... <.....-..... ..,. ' ........ I ,... .. -II _ .. , ... 11 -·· ·-I VON .. DUUUI f f'O(IPON II .39 VON .. l>O tllH I ( OCll'ClN VO~ .. l>Otllll I I OllJ'C>N LIQUOR II llH ITU 90T1 u eo ""°"' r Smirnoff Vodka 100I """ t. Cl<ttK 11£" l'IU4 OI' z1e Hot B.BQ. Bed POckeb I •t ~mUt IOnLl , Clan Mac<lrtGor 'Scotch gee see ~or tar ear r. C"4.1 Oft., r. UA' 25 Jlml'a Burrllm • J? 01 t<Jl-""'Ull"l JUI(:[ Mra. Smith's Apple Pie ze• •LT ITL ~N> •WCX> '"'fie'' OW ll<.ii<l3se Crlberf Chablla Wine I ,, Ul It ton1 r .cl"°" . Booth'• Qin 91s Davis. Danen will wor.k in lbe winery's tasting room through the summer months, and vows to teach Dad a thing or two when she graduates. The former "Miss Paso Robles" has such a bubbly personality she could probably sell me the ent1re 9,000 case prO- duction. Perched atop one of the rollinJ foothills in the area. the ·view from the winery tasting room is spectacular. The unique desi~ of the visitor's center will permit panoramic viewing of the region and observation of every working area of the winery from crushing pad to fermenting and aging cellars. Of the currently avail· able wines. I'm most 1m· pressed by the 1980 Cabernet Sauvignon. one of the more elegant wines of a generally overpowenng vin tage . Subtle berbaceousness 1s the flavor characteristic. and rounded tannins give the wine an amazingly "silky" mouthfeel unusual in a wine so young. A complete list and map of all area producers 1s available by writing to: Wineries of Paso Robles, P.O. Box 457, Paso Robles, CA 93447. L Spring this dessert on your friends It's time to finish up the f?TA meetings, the Women's O ub and all those great organizations that keep us so busy during the year. How many of them end the year with a Spring Luncheon highliahted by a delicious dessertlf . Here's a light idea that may be so appealing it will land you a job as chairman of ntxt year's luncheon. (And since you are so busy. it's an easy one. too.) BRANDY ALEXANDER Pl~ l pre-prened chocolate crumb cn11t 1 cup powdered milk 3 tablespoons melted butter ~ e..-p sugar ~ cap bolllna water 1 ~ cups wtalpped top- pln& ! table1poo11 brandy 1 tablespoon lD1tut col· fee YI teaspoon vuUla ex· tract Sbaved c~~lat• or cbocolate earls Combine milk and supr, blending well; add butter and water lll\d mix weU. In lar&e miJina bowl. com- bine ~ippcd toppina. brandy, coffee and vanilla. Fold into blended mixturt. Pour into cru t and frttu, 4 to 6 hours. Garnish with chocolate curls. r t"..-o• 1000 \ "'t• ..... 1 tu' \I'll " l'•''" .... __ ,. '10• \-.. .... , \~-,, No matter what you're dong. your hometown newspaper The Illy Nil fits In Can you top this? That's the question a ked muffin- tovers all over the country • tn its fim annual national recipe contest to d1sco\'er new ways to make the most of an Enalish muffin. F1nt Place prize in the contest is an 11-day tour for two to 1 England. birthplace of the Enilish muffin. 1'he winning recipe, the "Oktoberfest Sandwich " submitted by Linda Rohr of Moore. 5.C., answered the cballenae by pairing the En&lisb muffin with a Ger- man classic -sauerkraut and bratwunt. Rohr's CRation stans with a spicy combination of sauteed apples. onion, caraway seeds and sauerkraut. The mixture·is spread over bratwunt or knockwurst slices on toasted Bays English Muf- fin halves. and broiled with a Swiss cbccsc topping. Roh r's entry was selected from among more than 2,200 contest entries. "My husband thought I was kidding when I told him I'd won,'' Rohr said. "He didn't believe me." Rohr, who sells television advertising for a network affiliate, considers cooking a hobby that oould one day tum into a professional punuit . .. A friend who knows I . -~ike. ...mo l . ed by Bays English Muf- fins. She urged me to enter. , for which J'm anucful.'' Rohr said. OKTOBERFEST SAND-WICHES 3 tablespoou batter 1 small tart apple, peeled, cored aad daopped 1 medJam oaioa, finely cilopped ·Brochures give-diet gutdahce Your mom was right when she insisted you drink your milk and eat your vegetables. In fact. says the National Dairy Council in one of three new<- consumer brochures on calcium. it's advice you should follow throughout me. The brochures. additions to NDCs Consumer Infor· 111ation Series, discuss the imponant relationship be· tween a calcium-rich diet and healthy bones. The pamphlet titled, "The AJl-American Guide to Calcium-Rich Foods," exJ?lains that milk and milk-group foods arc pri- marycalcium sources. Two servinp per day from this aroup of foods will supply adults with most of their calcium needs. Leafy green vegetables, certain meat aroup foods (e.a., beans, salmon with bones, oysters) and grain fTOUP prepared with milk (pancakes, waffles) are hsted as secondary calcium soun::es. There also are sugges- tions for incorporating milk-group foods creative- ly into a well-balanced diet. A second NOC brochure offers a simple test to helP. consumers determine 1f they arc setti"* enough calcium. Tatled 'Calcium: You Never Outgrow Your Need For It," The brochure traces the role calcium plays at au stages oflife. It also supcsts ways people can mamtain strong bones throu&h diet. ex- ercise and other lifestyle patterns. t .. Many adults do not realize that they need as much calcium in their diets as children," said NOC President M. F. Brink. , Ph.D. "These brochures will clear up any confusion about the imponancc of calcium.'' The third brochure 1s called •• Arc y OU at Risk for Bone Disease?" and alerts consumers to the arowina problem of osteoporosi~ a , cripPlina bone disease as-- socaated with dietary calcium deficiencies. r: Other factors cited that n lead to weakened bones include hettdity, sex. aac (postmenopausal women arc most suscepu'ble). lack of exercise, stress .and • ,smoki.na. The brochure suaests ways to reduce risks ofbone disease tbrou&h increased consumption of calcium· rich foodS and lifestyle cban,ea. For more infonni..tion on thcte brochures "'OOntact your local Dairy Council Office or National Oauy Council, 6300 N. River Road, Rosemont, 111. 60018. l V. caps aaautraut, r e4 ud dralned l tablespoou caraway Htdt Ya c.p spicy browa mH· tar• I EA&lllb mamas, spilt udtouted 1 poud 1Uced -..ock· worst or bratwurst, Precooked Ya pond tblllly 1Uced Swl11 clteete· 2aprib.. Melt butter in a small saucepan. Saute apples and onion in butter. Stir in saurrkraut and caraway Stcds. Mi" well and cook to heat throu&h. Spread mu.- lard over toasted mufiTns. Top with an overlappma rina of knockwurst or bratwurst slices. Divide sauerkraut mix- ture equally amona sand- wiches; place in mound. Top with slices of Swiss cheese. Sprinkle with paprika. Place under broiler and heat until cheese melts. Serve with Oennan potato salad. Ser~ ves6. tlL a••• •••••• ••••• ••••• nour ............ ll. 2.19 PAMILY snAK 08 .---..CLOD-•OAR USDA BONELESS I 99 CHOICE BEEF CHUCK L& • J.lb. Pockoge RATH SLICED BACON .... :-...... EA. 1A9 •••• • ..... llOAST ,,, l-11/ 89 ~IA~·· ~ PICNIC -"Ollll-PORTION L& • --,...,..//\''""'~------------------~ k•lond Fronn BABY HALIBUT FILLETS ........ La. 3.89 ~~~ 199 o«ESSING I& • Former John c.mer Cut Fresh, PORK LOIN CHOPS ...... -...... LA 2.29 StuH.d ~O~ISK GAME HENS ......... ta. 1.19 ·FRESH LETTUCE c IA. S-.t Tosty Buttery Rich JUMBO APRICOTS .................... LB. A9 HASS AVOCADOS. . ............ 3 POii 'I SWMt Talty ~t RED BEAUTY PLUMS ................ La. A9 ANJOU PEARS . . ................... l8. .29 ua•la ILL ••a••e •ALn&Wln'YW N1•••-•n11n 12 .. ACK scanz•1a 12-0Z. CANS 3• .... • REGULAR OR LIGHT l.7S-L1ter 750-Ml.. PfNK EXTRA O«'f OR COLD DUCK . ..._.. ......... II-OZ. I" REG. Ott OILY •• INCL 30t Off - ... ~ 6-0Z REG 2" Oft UNSCENTED IA. 6-0Z SlZE .1•· IMPORTED SEAGRAM'S VODKA ................ 9.98 1.25--0t. Reg or Unscented SURE ROLL-ON DEODORANT .-................ 1.89 ~yozuke 7.75-0z. Con PICKLED VEGETABLES . .. ................................ •" I AJAX LIGUID ... 0~~~. r~. I 09 20t OFF • •MU UMRllll UUCI 32-0Z. TRADITIONAL I A9 ~HOMESTYlE ASSORTED lAYat VAfllETIES -E=-1 iYIAll MINE•ALWATm 2-llTER PURE 1.69 28-0t. Plostic 3.ftock. 8.A-Oz. Assorted l·lb. Con \ob'\ 0. Kamp"s 8·Pock AJAX LIQUID CLEANER .......... 1.29 SUNKIST JUICE DRINKS . ....... ·" CHOCK FULL O' NUTS COFFEE 2A7 CINNAMON ROLLS ................. 1.19 n•1aw1 ~=S EA .• 89 I •••U&Mi J8ta • 12-0Z " CAN . OllANOI JUta .... 1~ e 6-0a Slic.d Naturor lonut Pock l6-16.S-Ot. Stidu «Fili.ts KRAFT SWISS CHEES! ............ l.i9 VAN DE KAMP'S ASH. .. .... 1.M •·Lb. ~~ Smoked ~ HORMEL WRANGLERS .......... 1.89 J.Ot .... Chden cw ~ BANQUET MEAT P1ES ................ as 12.0. "'8-.._Slad JONES LIVERWURST ................ 1.19 ~ 16-0a J.000 ISLAND DRESSING ........ ~ .ff ICI TIA ..... -. ..... . ,,,,.,.. .... '"" '6.5 Ot.. ICE TEA GlASS ...••••••••. M lwtiol ........ 22 s.oz. CO<X.ER ....................... .69 Andiot ~ 14.0... ptlCHER ..................... 1.69 12.Ct rorntly • UPTON TEA It.GS ..... l .H UMIMY .. welAl.fll•-.U ........ ................... +tltl _.,......., .. _ ............ ..._.. . ..__ I ( ..... ,~¥:41va ..... ~ ................ ~WM err ..... , ---(.....,_ _ _......,., ~-···-~~ ::. -= ~~~c:-:1~.-:;:c::.-.. ~ !::':. ........ , , ............. ,....,.:.::.::--~, ·---~ ... --IMd ... ---=-..::-:..""!:::--..,~ c.,.... -• .......... , ........... &. .... ~ -----· -·-·~~ ....... ·~--·-......... --"...-. Ollet ... ,,,,,.. ,,,._ ~ ~ " "-....... I ...... C...., ---_....., .... ___ .... _ ····-...... -•IWS I SSW ,_. SIXIM 7 ... •La. _.., ,.., -.. --tao """ ' -- (I J.1. ·' (. \ l ( l r l I ' . -- • ./ ·' ·---11 • orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednaday, June 8. 1~ Riii Steak Saiew..t ~ Beef ~fnd ~1·· Fresh Fryers Manor House Whole Body Frying Chicken Great On The Balbewe! ( Limit 4 Per Customer } Purchase Over limit s129 This version bullds on a favorite -Potato Salad Time to think lightly. Time to ease aw.,...trom heavy chores. Time to put omethina new into life that will ~fleet the joy of nice weather. Tame perhaps. to try a delicious new salad. lOis one begins by buildina on a taste base that is very developed and liked by most peo°J'le. Potato salad. South Afncan Salad adds a special ingredient -rocl lobster. The beauty of the combination is that the potatoes, which people already love in.salad. serves to stretch out the rock lobster meat. One.and a half pound~f rock lobster tails added to the potatoes make a deliciou, and very ample meal for Sill. · Try serving the salad with Orange Rolls that start out from a box of refngerated b1scu1ts. You'll be surprised at how good some special seasoning can make them. SOUTH AFRICAN SALAD 1 ~ poaad1 of SoatJt Afrtcan rock lobster lalh ! pound• potatoes ~ caps diced ODIOD 1 teaspoon salt 'I• teaapoon wblte pepper I ~ caps mayoualse 1A cap heavy cream Drop frozen lobster tails into boiling salted water. When water reboils. cook for 3 to 5 minutes, according to 'size. Drain immediately and drench with cold water. Cut away underside membrane and remove meat from shells. Chill. Iceberg LeHuce FREE With the Purchase o1 One Jar Marie's Salad Dressing (With Cioapon Bel<7N) BOil pot toes; drain and peel. While still warm. cvt into cube in bOttom of larae bowl. Add onion, salt an~ pepper immediate! • Mix mayonnaise with cream unul mooth · · k Pour over potatoes and onion and leave an a thac top layer. Cool. then chill. · . b' At serving tame, cut chilled rock lobster tails into . ate· med pieces; add to potato bowl and toss t~ther unul all inare<11cnts are well blended. Yield: 6 servmgs. ORANGE ROLl'.S t pacu1ea ref rt1erated bake ud. serve bllca1t1 ( 1t la eaci. package) '4 cup blttter or. margartoe, sof&ened at room temperature 14 cup Hlar 1 tablespoon Angostura blrters Grated rbid of l orange Open packages and press biscuits with ~e finge~ i~to 3-anch rounds. Cream butter and blend an. rema1nma inarcdients. Spread mixture on each biscuit. Put one biscuit on top of another. . . Fold the two biscuits in the stack in half. pinching edges together. Put dough on ungreased cookie sheet: Bake an a preheated hot oven ( 425 degrees) for 12 to '' f!ltnutes or until rolls arc richly browned. Serve warm. Yield: 10 rolls. . Garlic favored through the ages By TOM HOGE ,,, Wine Md, ... Writ« Most people have fixed ideas about garlic. They either love the herb or hate it. 1 am among those who crave fhe controversial seasoning. and it was with delight that I finally read Lloyd J. Harris' exhaustive study of this cousin of the onion. ---· -("T.he Book Of Garlic." Panjandrum-Aris Books. 11321 r•••••----•, Iowa. No. I. Los Angeles. CA 90025.) Add b Soups Sauces Gmtes And Stews •. $149 ...... , c ... •• Among other things. the book tells of garlic's medicinal role over the centuries. Sometimes called Russian penicillin, it 1s one of the natural herbal remedies stall used by the Soviets. At one point. the U.S.S.R. is said to have imported 500 tons of garlic during a nu epidemic. One Head ol Fresh Farm Style Iceberg Lettuce FREE ~ the IVd'laM OI One Jll ................ .... ~_ Coupon Good Througtt June 13. 1984 L (Except Blythe & Calallnal __________ .. The ancient Babylonians were garlic buffs and one Babylonian ruler reportedly had 395,000 bushels of the herb delivered to the court m a single batch. Garlic was prized as a medium of exchange in Eaypt. nd the authonties there fecj a di.et of garlic. onions and radishes to thousands of workers laboring to build the great pyramid of Cheops. . When he passed through the Yunnan r~on of China, Marco Polo said he saw people eating raw hver, chopped and flavored with garlic. CenJuries later. the herb received a warm reoeption in France. particularly in Provence. where the peasants eat garlic on black bread for breakfast. The British gave garlic a cool reception and were said 49c to have sought some means of disguising the smell, but bunCh little was done. The Japanese are said to have developed an Round Steak ~~5:eeitew<rt lbsl" mm)Wlsh llone ~~\~:=79c mm)Watercress 1~= Chuck Steak~~~ .,99c mm)Large l99s =,~ ~99c lllOMangoes r~ 2 98c odorless fresh garlic. however. No mean feat. since it is tot estimated that one millionth of an ounce can be detected FreshPorkSteak ~lbs1s• lllOCheese Sllces5 "t:*1•• lllOGreen Onlons~4~1 on one's breath. Garlic as a key ingredient in gourmet dishes everywhere. but no one uses more of the herb than the Chinese. I believe. Herc's a Chinese recipe from Lloyd Harris' book for Pek.incsc eggplant with garlic. P-ryer Breasts Manor House Fresh Frymo Chicken Split With Ribs Attached 29 ·: hy Oefrosl lb $2" Rump Roast 11o1:., a.rt ti12'29 =Orange --.... Fish F:s :: .. ...._ Sliced Liver°'::.., lb 89' =• sh H llL---Cenltf ev1 •2s• IMr1 re a UVW' Alaskan SteakS 111 • Ground Tul1<ey Ot1iosrt11 ., 99' .Skinless Franks Smok,;;oma ~ 99c Sliced Bacon ~ ~ s14 9 Corn Dogs ~ ., spg ;~In Sliced Meats~ 2'~oz 39c Corned Beef ,~c.::= ~•149 ~1·· !DatWlleat •reaA~2~W 50 To•alO•S Soltd\ SW ~ 39c ••paghelll~~ ~99c .. I fur 8alang or fur Salad Dressing 59 I c . PEKINESE EGGPLANT 1 medl•m euPlu&, flrm ud dark a cloves 1arllc 1 table1pooo c..tnese black beam i tableapoon1 soy sauce ~ tea1poo1 n1ar l"' caps ~cke11 brotJt Veietable on. U Deeded Cut eyplant into 2-inch cubes. leaving unpeeled. Brown the eagplant in a heavy frying pan adding a few drops of oil as needed. Mix in paste made of crushed garlic and black beans (about 2 tablespoons). Add mixture of soy ~ucc, sugar and chicken broth. Reduce heat and simmer covered for 12 minutes. . .. . l -sllitts,.~ot w~~~.,·bringi~ ·thefan Horse racing, baseball using giveaways as a method of attracting customers Red Patterson of the Angels, who was around at the time, seems to recall the fint ballpark premiums were distributed shortly after World War II. Bill V eeck was holding forth at Cfeveland and lured youngster$ to see the lndiansby presenting "bat day." Unhappily, this never became a baseball tradition because the urchins learned it was possible to'demotish a section of scats, given enough kids and enough bats. Batspvewaytobatlsandcapsand plastic hats and T-shirts and so on and so forth. Baseball was the pioneer oftbe giveaway and still the leader but CHICAGO (AP) -Geoff Zahn wasn't worried about his 37-year-old Left arm. He was concerned about bis riabt leg. Followin& his performance Tuesday night, his womes appear to be over. After a 16-<iay layoff be(a11se of a pulled poin muscle, Zahn hurled the fu:st-place Angels to a 6-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox. Zahn limited the Sox to four hits in the ei&ht innings he worked, retired 11 batters in a row in one stretch and Yiel_ded only one hit after the second mrung. "The arm is fine," said bhn, ... I kept the arm in shape. I was worried about the leg. I tried to run and come back last week but I pulled it again and decided to lay off completely. "The doctors have no way of assuring me the leg would be fine and I had no way of knowing,". Zahn added. "I was worried going into the ~e. I w8$ in a &ood aroove w.hen I tnjured the leg and I tried to maintain il I was wild and hi&h the tint couple ofinninp buJ then f &Ot the ball down better." Zahn, 6-3, walked one and struck out three and bad the White Sox poundina the ball into the ground. other sportinc enterprises are becom- in& very larae an the field of distribut- ing merchandise at the pte. Straniely enough, second place probably aoes to horse racing. at least as far as Southern California is concerned. It is barely possible to attend a day at the races at Hollywood Park or Santa Anita without receiving a premium. Ite9"sat the races range from tote bags to sun glasses to whoopee cushions. It is unlikely a horse promoter could explain it. but attendance increases when the horscplayers are presented with gift items as they enter the plant Heretofore, a hotseplayer askedonly lOracestoday,apromise of I 0 more tomorrow and some form of shelter on day.s w.,.en it rained. Hollywood Part'Jtarted the horse facilitygimmick11veawayandSanta Anita was quick to follow, which bas been the pattern i uthlandhorse racinaforthree Santa Anita lookedwitbdi ioon ingas uncouthasthe · ydou eorthe exacta ... until oUywood Park adopted exotic wquina methods and attendance moved upwards. At any rate, the horseplayer of this day and age accepts bis plastic drink cooleranddigitalwatchandsecms delighted toaet them. Football has never entered the premium field, largelybe(ause ticket sales in this part of the world have been quite brisk. Any extra money Bui Tueu1 SPORT S COLUMNIST was spent on halfti~ enterta.anment and the United States Football Lea&ue came along and ntended the halftime show into the post.game slot. . lfthere isa USFL in 1985, a dramatic increase in free merchan- dise can be expected. Soccer distributesa pair ofshoc Al'Wli ,, ' laces AOW aAd then. Buke1ball bas oot bid eauaffordableenouah to be an attnetion to a client neectinsa filb oetonun visor. TheSan DiqoOippen announced • a cou~ of weeks aao that they bad becomcthe Loi Afteelcs Clippers and would become t.cnanll at the Sports Arena. Tile Clippers would compete with the Lakers who have a built-in clientele at tbe Forum and will very likelybethedefendinacbampionsof • the NBA next seasqn. . TheOippenannounocd they · wouJdsellcheaperseats tbaD those peddled by the Lakers which wu a stroke of mercbandisit)l~us. HoweveT, it is possible the new folks will have to research the &imnucb employed in amwalJ over the coun- try and rush th~ into practice. Thornton facing a difficult d ecision in choosing lineup By DENNIS BllOSTERllOVS oe .. -.. ....... With a pool of talent that includes l 0 All-Clf selections, South Coach ·Mark Thornton admits that be and ...his staff ate-v a long, way from detennitting a startina five for the OranF County All-Star besketball pme Saturday, June 16, at Oranae Coast College. '1'bere's very little dropoff en talent in this team," said Thornton. .. We've some good big kids and a well-rounded team.•• He was to get a good look at the squad in action today when his team enaa&ed in the first of three scrim· mqes against oommunity oollqc foes. The South was scheduled to meet Orange Coast at OCC today before p&ayioaSaddlebeck Friday ud ,apin C8lty next week. • PnlctiCn are beina held daily at Sa~~~Co~4-A Pia~ of the Year Matt Bceuwsaen from Mater ~Sou.!:"~~ .. Zahn has pitched very well for us," said Angels' Manager John McNamara. "We lost him twice. When we Jose him, we miss him. He's (Pleue Me AlfO&L8/D3) ~el hitter Brian DoWntnc falla to one bee after ~ bard and ml•tng, while White Boa catcber CUiton Flak look.I on. ADC• beat Chicago, 6-1. North. The Rebels, however, lead the overall series, l l • 7. ..Man is just a very good player," Sunderman to coach OCC's women.'s team Former Estancia ba sketball mentor leaves be h ind success ful program Larry Sunderman, one of the premier high school basketball coaches in Orange County for the past nine years, has quit his Estancia Hiah position to accept a job as coach oftlie Orange Coast College women's team. Sunderman, 40, guided Estancia into the championship pme of the ClF 3-A playoffs this past season where the Eagles fell to John W. North High of Riverside. Estancia Yankees inkex-CdM star Pries By CRAIG SHEFF °' .. Dlllr "'214 ..... Fonner Corona del Mar Hiah standout Jeff Pries bas signed a professional baseball contract with the New Y<1rk Yankees. Pries, who pitched the last three years at UCLA, signed for .. a substan- tial bonus" aocordina to Yankee scout Don Lindberg. Pries had a S·S mx>rd for UCLA this past season and a 4.01 ERA. He p!tcbcd in 89'/, inninas. allowina 97 hill. Ho had three complete pines. Despite those mediocre statistics. be was selected in the tint round of Tuesday's major leque free qent draft. .. He didn't have a real aood year, but he's aot a bi& leaaue arm* said UCLA a.saistant coich Cbris Krua. who recruited Pries out of Coroni dCI Mar High. "The only lbina critical of Jeff is he bu trouble aettina his breakina ball ova. He's aot a aOod one, but he bu bad problem& aettina it over. Hc'a cl0te to do1najt ttiou,b, " said K.Na. Pries• fut ball bas been clocked in the 90-93 mph ranae. accordina to ~ Pries bad another year of eliaibility remaini~ at UCLA. - Pries w\11 report to Oneonta, N.Y. in tho New York·Penn J.aiue. .. We are very, very hiah on Jeff," aays Landbers. ••in f8ct, tf be doesn't ri\Ue It tO the .. ~ I'll SW1 1lrimmina to Chiu. .. was 26-4 this past season. His Ht~ coaching record at Costa Mesa · (three yean) and Estancia (six ycan) is 191-86, including a 149-44 overall mark with the Eagles. He bas been named the Sea View League Coach of the Year founimes and was the Orange County Coach of the Year three of the last four years. Sunderman will continue to teach at Estancia. He will receive a salary~f $7,800 for coaching the OCCs women's.team. "We think we have the most outstanding coach that we could possibly Jet." said Orange Coast athletic director Dick Tucker ... His reputation is second to none and we were very pleased that be was interested in the job. He is un- doubtedly one of the premier coaches in Orange County." Sunderman replaces Dick Ryan who served as the women's coach for one season. Ryan will continae as an assistant to Tandy Gillis with the men's team. Sunderman will not help with the men's program, according to Tucker. "leaving Estancia was the toughest decision I've ever had to ma.kc as a player or coach," said Sunderman. "I've' bad seven yean with class people, starting from Bob Francy the principal. The people have been so supportive all a100J." Under the dim::t1on of Sunderman, the Ea&les have finished either first or second in the Sea View League all seven years., winning the title on five occasions. That includes five 2()..win seasons and reaching the OFs final four three of the last four years. While expressing ~tat Jeavin& Estancia, Sundcn:nan tS looking for- ward to the cbaJlenae of participatina inoneofthetopwomcn'scommu.o.ity collqc oonferences around.. "I'm n:ally lookina forward to it, it's an exciting conference," be said. "Basically, C09China is communicat- ina and I hope I can communicate u well with the l g.. and 19-ycar-oJds as the 17-ycar-olds. "But. I don't deny I'll miss those Friday nights apinst Corona del Mar and N4 n Harbor." He ::f° his wife and two cluldren. IO and S. reside in Irvine. -. . . Win eases pain for .wobbily Sax Second baseman makes 3 errors; LA snaps streak LOS ANGELES (AP)-St.eve Sax tried to look on the bright side of things. It wasn't an easy thin& for him to do. "We won the pme, that's all that matters., .. the Dod&crs' smitten &CC· ond baseman said bravely. The Dodaen won, all ri&ht. n1pptn~ the Cincinnati Reds 2-l Tuesday ni&ht despite commntina ix errors. The triumph ended a lhrec11me Los Angeles 1osina streak.. Sax. who was troubled last season matins the rouunc throw to first t.!c, made two ~ throws and also kicked a ground ball. hts first oon- tbrowina error th1 tcaSOn. He has made I I enors. "'I just threw them a..-r,, l just booted it. I have no ucu ' Su said when asked if his arm, which knocked him out of four pmts last Mdc., botherina him. . Los Anaeles Ma.nqer Tom· Lasorda took no chances late ia the pme. For the Ii t mnma. he pull<a Sax and reptaced him with Bob Ba:1lor. Alejandro ~na. 6--J.. managed to survive the Dodgen' worst defensive performance in more than a decade, since they set committed a club- rccord seven errors in 1972. The Los Angeles nght-bander. who once was troubled with ulccn and miaraane headaches -and after Tuesday night who could blame b1m -struck out nine to match his career hiah. He allowed the Reds only four llits in hurling his founh complete pme. The Reds, who have dropped Slll of thetr last seven pmes. had the tyina run on third base, both times via errors. in the ci&hth and ninth 1nninp. In the C11bth. Eddie Milner truck. out on a c:hcct swina to end the inruna. Third base umpire Dave Pallone made the call, and eventually tossed Cincinnati Manager Vern Rapp and first base ooech Tommy Helms out of the pme. Tbe Red.a ecorcd a.a u.M&rDed run in the third inrnna. the result of the fint throwina error by tn' the bottom of the-fifth. Ken Landreau.x tt.aehed first on a RddiQI CfTOf by Cindanall sbonleop DIYC c~ ~ ouemro-drop- ped to • th in the Los~ herii .. older bttaute of bis bittiG& problems. then tripled to ~\«ftter 10 drive ID laridl'CllUl and ptnt. Mike • • who bad two tluvw- Kinas' owner JCIT)' lklMoace IBI be was rducwn 10pve pra~uuw bccaUlt becoWd not fiDd .... m.ted to bockeY. The ~trMb may have mued lbia theory, tboulh I mean a P<J10 stick lial DO panicu1ar 'connection with bone raci111- ln all of this, of course; is lbe ancient theory tbat winnitll IC:alDI • draw better than im~t oaeuDd ii' you put enoup wim on tbC bOeRl pcoplewillpalrODize )'O:Uf ~ without a4ded inceutiva. The tbo'sbt bu \osic, 10 belUft. bUt Bill V eedc did not 1Ut.:ribc 10 It. . ..Winners," be said. .. &ive away more bets than lolers ... Thornton said. .. He does Just aboat cv8ythini well" Thornton, who bas led (';apistmM valley to tbreic strailbt bmmier ~ind~ bcnb1 in the CIF semifinals twice ud to die ..... once, band-picked tbe l 2-man tq1*l witb the be~p of awilbnll IC.ell Kader of Capo Valley and Steve Tbontto1t OI DuaHilli And. for a cmcb wbo is fond of die nmnina JIJnC?. he has liked what he's leeD IO far •. .. We're definitely aoioa to have a good~ 1Calll and tbat lalilll to a IOc>d l'UDD.lDI pme," be saict .. And with ~ teall). l'm su.rc we'll be able.. to run." Snc is certainly not a problem for the South.. a luxury that Thornton bu rarely enjoyed with C.apo Valley. ln addtuon to Beeuswaert ( 6-6), Thornton ~cbd El Toro•s Jeff Arnold (6-10), San Clemente's Dean Garrett (6-9), Rolf Jacobs (6-7) of Fountain Valley, Westminster's Jeff £.astin (6-6). Steve Mota~ ol Ocean Vn, and Cbris J OI Mater Oct (6-5). Olber membe's of -me IQuad-iD- clude Capo Valley's Bu.rt C..U ~a.Dd Mart Otta. Eswacia pards Jim CUrtis and Jon Johnston, and Mark Moses of La Quinta. .. They're not only all good eJ-yen, but p>d kids. as well, said Thornton. Pries was a standout at eorona dtl Mar1 ae.din1 the See K1np to the CIF charnpte>nlhip in l 911 . blame him," ~ 1daf\cl'Tf .. He i errors. lbCn hftcd a h.iih ft 10 did wb&t thought w right. The &hon left. that f9J ~ r·a •and [:;1;~ whole thl s frusuating..'' -4ro\ ~~ ·~---1 t ' l I • , I ' I JI 'I ' ' ' ' . ' Summer Olympics will do without an official column Froa;1 AP dltpt1cffl • DYERSBURG, Tenn. -The Sum- mer Olympics has iu official candy bar, automobHe, tennis shoes. soft drink. bread and so many other items that newspaper columnist Bill Hiles decided to nominate his weeklr, effort as the "official (lOlumn of the 1984 Olympics.' Hiles, whowrites for the [)ye:rsbufl;Sta-te-Oucttt\ called the Los Angeles Olympic Orpniz1ng Committee to make his bid-his tongue firmly placed in his check. "I (Jailed the number and· wast surprised!" Hiles wrote talt week. "'They took me seriously. "The receptionist referred m~ to the communica- tions department They referred me to tbe news depanmcnt. Finally. I was referred to the corporate relations department "Aft.er a minute or so consultation with the heads of1hat department., the lady who answered in corporate rtlations said, ·1 checked with the heads of this ~cpartrnent, and they say they won't have such a thing.· Hiles said "... after I rccbvered from my djsappointment. it hit me: ""They took me absolutely seriously. Not a single guffaw or snicker from anyone I talked 10. Not even a sing.le long pause while someone had a good laugh while holding a hand over the mouthpiece of the phone and collc-cted 1hemselvesenoug.h to taJk to this idjo1," Hiles \\'rOIC. ..... Maybe the reason I've lost interest in the 1984 Olympics is that a spectacle that seeks 10 maintain at least the appearance of amateurism among its athletes isn't amateur itself anymore." he wrote . Quote ofllHfday ' Blue Jays move clG.et to top Home NOi by Lhy4 M•lffy, WOile a U-E-Wiii« and All ..... Grtfl .. ~an I l·hit Toronto barrqc, and tbe-Blue Jays tc0red six runs in the fourth innina to beat .Detroit, a..4, Tuesday ni&bt The victory moved the Blue Jays witbJft 4'h pmH of the Tiaen in the.American Leuue East ... In other America"! ~aue action, knuckleballer ·~ Hoqlt'1 three-hit ptlCh· in& and Alu BauJ1ter'i solo homer in the sixth lil\ed Te-.as \o • 2·1 victory over Mi'nncsota. Housh burled • his fifth complete game in 13 starts while raising bis record to 5--6. He slNck out six and walked four . . . Rick Maum1. Jlm Gutaer and R•Y Howell drove in t'lt'..O J\!nS apiect to pace Mil· waukec to an 8=3 -victory ovtT Baltimon;, ending the Brewers' four-pme losing streak. The win also ended ·a string of eight straight Mil"Vllukee losses at Bal- timore and snapped a three-game llOMbJ winning streak of the Orioles ... Jim Rlce and Ton)' Armas each drove in two runs, and Rice's sacrifice fly snapped a 4-4 tie in the sixth inning as Bostonx edged the New York Yank.en, S-4. Reliever Mark Clear, the third BostonJ'itCher, raised his record to 4--0. alloWinJ three hits an no ~ns_ in two innin~. Bob Stanley pnclled the final 31/J 1nn1n,gs to earn his 10th save , .. Hat Md\ae and Steve Balboni delivered key hits in Kansas CiJy's 4--3 victory over Seattle ... Dwayae M•rplly sluged a two-run home run to snap a 2-2 tie in the 10th inn1ngaddgivcOakland a 4--2 victory over Cleveland. With one out in the A ·s 10th, Rlt:key Hendenon, who had already driven in tw O runs, singled off Cleveland reliever Mike Jeffcoat, 1-1. Murphy followed with his ninth homer, a line drive to right, sending the Indians to their sixth straight loss and I Ith in 12 games. Andujar first in NL to win 10 • • D.C. wants return of heM'ti"ill • • WASHINGTON -I< Pltlricl ot -Columbia Covncil pa.oel. 1tekin1 to end a l~)'.car. ipmfession.al baseball drouahi.. i.n the nation's capital, vol.Cd Tuescfay tO fftablish a commi'uion that would work toward brif\l,ina1 team to the city that was one oftbe fil'$leiaht to make u~ the American Lea.1ue. Thebtll, ~sted unanimously bytheCommittceon Housina and Economic Development, would set up a nine-member commission. The city lost baseball in 1971 when the late Robert Short moved the Washington Senatot1 tO Tens leS$ than three ycan after buyina the team. Sun Devils win 23-12 slugf~t OMAHA --Oddjbe· McDowell set a College World Series rceord with five runs scored and Barry Bonds tied a.ttc;Ord with five hits as Arizona State defeated Okla-a homa State, 23-12, Tuesday night in the highest scoring game in CWS history. At least silli offensive records fell in the four-hour contest before a crowd of IS,678, the larscst in 5eries history. -The Sun Devils, 5S-18. collected a record 23 hits, including home tu.ns by McDo~ell. Luis Medina and Romy Cuchjen. Colts planning ticket lottery· Capo's odd· pl•yer of_yea Reasor, Cook on second tea of All-South'Coast League Pitcher Bill Dodd, who led Capistrano V1Uey Hif the South Coast l..eque basebaJI title, haa been na Player of the Year as vo1ed by the loop's coaches. Tbe league's finl team WU compriJed OtaJJ left with five Capo V.Uey playen leading tbt way. Lii Hills. which recently -CIP.tUmi the .CIF-.2-A-cti pions'hi.,,, earned only two spots on the fint ttam, but three oo the second team. Woodbridae's Randy Cook. a senior left~bar pitcher who compiled a g...3 record, was tabbed for second team, the only Wanior to make either the fin second squad. Cook, who hada 1.92 ERA, also hit .3C the plate. Rex Reasor, who played both in the infield outfield for l.aguna Bc1ch, was the lone Artist hobo earning a second team berth. ~ Eamin& honorable mention from Woodbridge ' Rick IAe, Mark and Darin Daniels, Rudy Figueroa, ~ Fox. Matt Seymour and Jor<han Frank. , Honorable mention from La1una Stach were "t V_inoirad and Coby Naess. to allot SS,000 season tickets for the Colts' 4 Ill t First Te•m INDIANAPOLIS -A unique lottery m fi -. · I F ball • -· Player, 1t:bool C 1rst 1 .. at1ona oot L..Cague season 1n Bill Dodd, Capis.trano Valley Indianapolis was announced Tuesday by team owner Robert lrsay. 4:c Plemel, ~una Hills lrsay said the lottery would possibly be held later John Peace, Mission Viejo this Y.'«k and would be open to ihe public-. Burt Call, Capistrano Valley The Colts, who moved to Indianapolis from Steve Skupian, Capistrano Valley Baltimore earlier this year. received about 30.000 Allan Roman Capistrano Valley orders representing approximately 200,000 season Jim Devine, San Ocmente ' · h Dave Ward, Laguna tfills · Geor~e Headrick singled bome·a run a tickctccquests ior the team's nine-game ome schedule Tom Gates, Capistrano Valley in the Hoosier Dome. in the sixt inning and scored the winning ' . Brian McCormack. San Clemept~ _ .. ' ~":two outs l~ter on a Philadelphia error. ' Shavers accu....t ID ahoo .lc;;~::;:;;;i:~ ~;Z;..:;:{~_··.~·~ 8111L.lllmtl11r,the0ettottPtatone'$1IO,Gm•i giv1ngSt.Lou1sand JoaqalaAH:•Jara 5--3 , :~::: · -"'.; ·. i"' . .:.-~.-n: ~--· --~~5-~c!!:~-~--~'.;~. ·;-;··~-t-·~tf.ri~~m~-~h~. ~Tiu~csda~y~·f:"·~igb~ . .!....,?lo.v~g._~~..!.'lil_~.And~~•'• '>dillC'--:::-:°' . . ~ woman has m Steve Fcsj>c.:m.n, Laguna Hills ~ ...., , ---"'11~~ • . . • ~f::;l!IR.4Ali&'~..._.,._.,-...'"th?'~ 'cflirged that former heavywei&ht bolliing ChrisMcC1u~1 .CapistranoValley "·-."'I'm t•·...., pl:"J:Jn ~ -· ~-_.. at.u~nal . gue s first l~~e ~inner wnh the contender Eamie Shavers sf\ot at her"and Randy Cook, Woodbridge "''-1n:r .__ .. , u"' ~ ..,., • dec1s1on ... In other N~ act1v1ty, ngh1-.hander Andy her 9.year-old son, but that police and the Don Roberson, Mission Viejo make more than hlS fa ." Hawki.81 fired a thrtt--httter a~ San Diego blan~ .... city prosecutor aren't l&ki~ her compl4jnt seriously. Rex ~na Beach Berra ha. meeting with Owner Houston. 3-0. for the Padres second consccuuve .. He's""famous, so' nOWY wants to do anythinJ.~' Doug tona. 1una H~lls shuto~t over the As1ros. said Yvonne Wilson of Warren, who filed a complaint Dave Stevens, Laguna Hills Hawk.ins, 4--2. walked four and against Shavers after the allcged~·n idenl Sunday! John Sinclair, Dana Hills NEW YORK-Manager Yogi Berra ii of the New York Yankees met with struck _out th~ce as he ~on for the: Ms. Wilson said th.at whens nt to tht office of Player of Year-Bill Dodd, Capistrano Valley first Ume s1nCC' Apnl 28 and City Prosecutor Michael Scala on onday morning to principal owner George Steinbrenner and General Manager Clyde )(jng for one hour pitched the first comJ?lete-p~e swear out a warrant apinst Shavers, Scala tried to talk shutout for a Padre pitcher this her out of it. Scala declined comment on his discussion Tuesday before the night game against the Bos1on Red So•. y~ar . : . W•lt Terrell 5:C1'tle~ with Ms. Wilson. e1aht hits and added a pair of hits while K.el~ Heraudn drove in two runs as the New York Mets blanked, Pittsburgh, 3-0. Terrell, Blrd, 'Maglc' hea1 All-NBA team "We talked about making some changes," said Berra. who had not talked to Steinbrenner for a month. "You are always looking to make changes. You always look to help the team." On the team's recent two-week road trip. Berra was quoted as saying that he'd like to get rid of at least five players. ""There are guys that arc trying but just aren't producing," said Steinbrenner's 11th manager in 11 years. "I'm disappointed in them but not angry." Berra said that possible trades were discussed ""but ifs jus1 not easy to trade some guys. But somebody got to want them." Berra said there was no mention of his job status and that Steinbrenner would return to YankcC Stadium on Sunday. -4--S, brOke a four..gamt losing Hcndrlcll streak by striking out four and walked three in recordina his first victory since April 29 ... Cltlld Ralney combined with two reheverson a five. hitter and the Chicago Cubs, helped by two Montreal erron, slnlck for three second-inning runs to beat the slumping Expos, 3-2 ... Rookie GeraJ4 Perry cracked four hits, including his first home run of the season. and helped Atlanta to its stventh straight victory with an 8-3 poundina of San Francisco. The Draves totaled 12 hits off four Giant pitchers; siarting with Mike Krakow, 3-6. The Giants went down to a fifth strai&ht defeat 1 lff TllC~ 3 ~-" '"" ... 111 4 Scr11• N11rM 5 A1111m1n1 Ci.rt I lttSJlltl Allllllllltral• As a day surgery patient at a Humana hospital , you would probably only see a few of these people, but isn't ii comforting to know they're all there ... just in case! No one wou ld ever think of having major surgery anywhere but in a hospital. However . even comparatively minor elective surgery -the kind where no overnight care is needed -can result in complications requiring the extensive backup ot technology and trained personnel found only in today 's modern fully equipped and staffed hospitals. 11111( (llllllUl(S~ 0 ,, Uo to JO Uo 10 ·~ IJp 10 60 Uo to r~ UD !O 90 Up to 10!1 °"" 10~ Telfflalon, radio TalYlllOll . . 5:30 p.m. ~ MmAI I ' Angelo ot a..._ White-. Chonnll a. . S p.m .• .,-llllO 9AIKID1IALL: -ot Llkero.a-...12. ... .., ~ ~:30 p.m. -M.UU · Angelo OI a.._ i.os ANGELOS (AP) -liostOD's lam Bird I Earvin "Magic" Johnson of Los Angeles, currently tac each other in the National Basketball Associat Championship Series, were the top vote-getters for the NBA team, released by the league Tuesday. -llolt.KMPC(710). · s p.m. -MIO ~ "'--~n ot Ulkln. Kl.AC (570). Bird and Johnson were the only playcn named or 76 ballots. 7:30 p.m. -M-AU · Clncin!lllll at ~. l<AllC (?90~ Otfi"ers on the first·tcam all-NBA squad were au Isiah Thomas of Detroit, with 126 points and SJ fint-tt votes: center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar of Los ~IC$, v 116 points and S2 firsts. and forward Bernard K.ingofl' York. w;1h I I 3 points and 43 firsts. Laker 'blue-collar' mar. Kurt Ram bis does LA 's dirty work on boards, defense INGLEWOOD (AP) -Kun Rambis isn't a big scorer. He doesn't excite the crowd with flashy passes or high-flyin' dunks. He doesn't fly.swat opponents shots into the stands. He dOCJ the blue-collar jobs for the Los Angeles takers, includin1 rebounds and defense, and he does them welt. "Bill Russell used to say that hustle is a talent From that standpoint, Kun is one of the most talented people we have:· said Lak.ers Coach Pat Riley. whose team is trying to win its third National Basketball Association titlt in five years. The Laken lead the best-of.seven series against the Boston Celtics 2-1 , with game four set for tonight at the Forum. It's easy to lose the burly 6-ii\8 220.-pound staning forward in the shu c of Laktr superstan -Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Earvin '"Maaic" Johnson, Bob McAdoo and Jamaal Wilkes. Even Rambis knows it. "I know there's no way I' can fill their shoes in God-ajven ability," Rambis, 26, played very well since then, but that was best game. He had the same fire in his e)I "That's what we need, to rise to that le' every night. For him to say to people ti he doesn't have wha1 some of the otl guys have, well. he has some things ti they don't have. "His defense, his reboundina. the way throws outlet passes ... some of the sub thinp he docs get lost in the excitemen1 · The 17 points Ram bis scored against t Celtics was his highest total of the 1983-- ICiSOn. Not sul'J)risina!y, he shrugcd his accomplishments. "'It wasn't me, it was Magic," be said. just ker.t filling the lanes and he delivea the ba.I . It's easy with him." Rambis played in only 47 rqular-scu games. lverag,in1 just 3.6 points I contest A sore let\ foot kept him out action from the stan of the season uc early January, and he missed a few pn: after that because of a hyptr-exttndcd I elbow. Laguna Beach L. w111 hold nesta said of his teammates. '"But I feel that I can Laguna Beach Little Leaaue will hold help thtm do their jobs."' .. · third annual fiesta Saturday, June 16 He did even mgrc tpa~ that Sunday -~4dlt Fie14. bq,innin& ~t 6 p.m. . when the Laktn demohshed. Boston, . A barbecue, along with award pres< I 37-104, in game three. The formtr Santa tations, trophies and distribution of t Oara standout was a pt:rfCCI 7-of·7 from 1984 yearbook will ti.kc place. the floor in scoring 17 points. All playen in the league and th1 "That was the bHt I've seen Kurt play families are invited to attend. sinct the sixth game of the 1982 Cham-The major division championship gar pionship Series (against PhiladdP,hiaJ. will also be played Saturday, June 16 at when we won the title." Riley said. 'He 1 a.m. Delicious Top Sirloin, grilled to your taste. Served with.homemade ooup or-crisp green salad; chOice of POtato (baked potalo or rice pilaf available'4 to 9 p.m.), fresh roll and butter. Ntlflc ~ per , We think you 'll agree with us that surgery belongs in the hospital. That's why your Humana hospitals in Orange County have reduced their outpatient surgery prices by as much as 50%. II you're considering having your operation at one of Jhose free·standing surgery or emergency medical centers. we want to remove cost as a factor in your decision . Now . be honesl . wouldn 'J you feel better having your operation in the safety of a roodern hospila l. . a Humana hospital? o;Glf lloS....frl'~l••Tl •-"'11"'.....,._ ·~",...,. --3 • ••J.•. Oellcatolv grilled end enhanced wllh melted S 15 butter. Served wllh tartar aauce and lemon -'ge. lncludet vegetable, frenqh fries, ,---------DAY lll~Gf:At MSf'Otlll ~f'ott--··---'I i +lumana DAY SURGERY P I homemade ooup. criep green aalod and choice of delMrt (puddlnQ. Jello, loe cream -Humana DAY ' SURGERY I ~ot I trft orotfl\ltt 010 Ille Hllt'l'lllW 00 Swllll fY l)l'llM!I ~ tr10 IOf I Pl'l'll!l:llll rt11tr11lt -°'""" cornpltft !flt ICll°"'119 IHI IM~ lo 1 lllJf!l.tllt DI~ "1r9"t P 0 llei ~110 tllllllMQ!lll Mii ~ 9261l • : ~atN ___________ _o_·_~_... i 400<'"-~------------- or lhertetl. ---...... .. r:w,...,,. • . 17772 8ffCh ~ H11n11ng1on &Ncft . CA 926'7 1111) M? 1473 ( • -"' ..........,......,... ............... 31133 Wtsl 0r.,. ,,,,. Al\lhtl'n CA 9280ol (714) 827 3000 -.,,,. . ,,. -.- --ll6ooiftal .......... 200 WO!!Ptl•I t'1,Cll WHlm!ntflf. C., 92883 111•1 893 '!141 ' Cll~ Stitt_ lif---- 1 T .......... t I : I I I ""'" ""'° ,... • trtt )llll!llN °" "" ... Mdl¥1t I 1_1--~~;;!~~~~!:.: .. ~::-_::J I, I I .. ~ . I =e•• ........ ,,_...,,. ......... _ --~ • = r • J I I - .r m IOB. ,Una am.- had dcd the 1tor Oat· and red, tere like udi - ind ~ Lop all- alJ' ud .. am ith ew - :Us es. 1el lat 1er Ult he Ile .. . be 84 )ff )n ier of til cs :ft -[, its at n· be xr Orange Coa DAll:'t' PtL:OT1W..-i11tmr • .,..., ..,. -:; F 0 R THE R £ c 0 R 0 ~ --_., .. ----- ~ • I . . " . HATIOHAL LaAGU• Dtfll a 2, ..... I ONCllOeA'n LOI A#OaL.81 .,.... ., .... Mlilr«cf ••OIO lu21t JOtO o..1er ,_ > 1 o 1 .. 111or n • 1 o • "...,." • 0 I I ltR~rl ) I I I Plt'tltrrf • 0 1 0 ltUOOS lb l t I 0 UWllMw 0000 Mw1Hlll JOtO MAJOll LIAGU• ITANDtNOI ~LMtue WUT DMMC* OrleSM Ill JI O O UMldr1tef J I l o NIA ...... UM'L Krdldl -2 0 0 0 Outtrtr. , 1 , , CM....._SW M .. I COllWl:WY c:ou.au CIOCll'9 , 0 0 0 klOlc:lac :J. 1 1 , ......... , WIUfta9' ca..u1-cs ............ ..., W L f'ct. GI JO u .w 21 ti ... 1 J\l'J G'*-c Jo 1 o Husloel at Joo o r__., ..,_ he* ,.... FoltY " 3 1 I 0 ·~' , 0 0 I Botton at Lntn (Laken IMd ..... .,, I. T ...... ,,. ... 1'7f-TMY ~-(Or.,.. J.111 ... Ill 2 I 0 O 2·I> °"""" I 1 0 .m JlO UI toott.1 26 2' .A11 IYI JS ,. '72 l\ll 1' 21 .A71 3\ll w.,..... ~ 1 o O O , ........... , ...-... LA • .....,. I 1 0 m »7 W 1'77-Tvron. er_., Jil'9fte0it IO O O ·-• --Artt-1 I O 4'1 .. UO ........... CC...weu>, T..... J~ I T..... fl 2 S t LM#t '1 ~ • ..,_ ~ • C.:,.. 0 .a 1'6 "1 lf>t-ffo __,, a.dllMll ft --:: ---I 8otton et LM.tn (It nee.UN) HOwton 10 5 0 W ,_::;;;:-. Ortll f0rtfllt C:...tJ, &.*.._... ....... _ J &.ft ~..... M~ 0 7 0 :.m 1Mt-«r11n MIMI (Slicfd~ 25 2t .463 • 21 :J3 .. • Oelrolt Toronto leHlmcwt loalOll Mii'#~ .. New Yorll Ctevtlllnd •AIT DtvlMC* " Tl .u Game Wlmlne ltll -klotcla (1). ft '1 _,Ofl (If '*"..,..,' OIUet!ome 6 ' 0 MO ..... .-... ~ IGolOM ·w..I)' e~. a. COM:ttlClol'I, SdoKla 2. ••·NIA ~ ........ ClllQet 5 lO 0 m ·~ • . :tS 17 .67' •\'1 JI 2J .57• t\'1 25 27 Al i.YI 23 2t .di " n JO .m m'I 17 ,, .~ 21\'1 Stubbs. DP-ClllCIMall a, Los A~ I. , ... T T•AM S.11 Antvnlo s 10 0 .m m 1'11-f< ......... ly <CV...."61, -- J LC>e-Clnclnntll •, Los Anotln I "'9Mr l'lnt SeeeN T... •ASTllllN COMl'l•INCe _..-tWlliWtQ »-GIMrtro. S~otev m. Lawteu ($) llrd, to.ton 7S I 1J1 Alillllllk Wl>-CtwU ........ IOr"'" c.Mll, • " • •• ••so .JoMIOll, ....... n • 141 Pllllacleloflle 1• 1 o m .. 1 112 • .........,..; ~ Sctllllnw cs.tfl1hce&>. TlleNl't'tSC.... ........ Ollc:Ho I CIM:9llMtl Ttlornaa. Detroit S) 20 11' New Jwwv 11 • 0 m 15' V• i..-. Jllt"'MI L,2·• 7 5 7 I 0 2 Abdul·Jabber LMen 52 12 11t Pitt~ >' 12 0 .D 2., Jlt HO-J'"° DeehrllW '11 .. lbeall, ll'Kll Franco 1 0 0 0 0 I ""-·New YOfll 0 fl 113 W•lhlneton 2 11 I .w 221 • end field Ottllancl •. C~ 2 ( 10 IMlnei) T GrOlllO I, 0.froll • A~!-'w~z' 9 SICOND T&AM ~ 1....-0.~ Selt'rloti Chddlihdill, ,_. .....,.. ,.. • I 0 I t Monc:rlef, Mllweukft 27 l9 fJ 81r"""9Nm 17 J O .1100 4M ?91 flK woMaN T-2'09. A-M,m. Ervine, Phlledelohla 2• l2 00 TtmN .. v II • I 73) •lO nt MAJOR LIAGU• LEADERS tMtone. PMNelphla 20 35 75 New()rlMM • 7 0 m m '2A -:::--,...... ... ~vw (Gtlden Wal), Amertcan ~ Dtnttev, Ui.11 7 l9 S> MemPNI 7 I O '67 m 1'1 1'71-Ho aww• Mllw•ullat r. 8altlmore 3 Botton S, ...,_ YOfk • ~ Cltv •. S..ttte 3 8ATTING (115 It Dalt) Tram-..a. PeUOll, Porta.no 0 21 71 JedllOIWlll • 11 0 .167 2'7 ltl ~ -d. ,,_ ,,....,., GerNI Tena 2. Mlnnnote 1 T•W-1~ ....... (Wiii S·S) al Clllcaeo (Seever .. ,,, (n) Detroft, .350; Enelt. Mlnnnota, .JAi, Btl, ~ II °'""'· (II) ~ ..,., (~ W8't), Ttr1>11to, .MO; WlnfMtcl, New York, 337. !edlaonvlllt ,1 Ar~ (llt .........,.-<rOU-QIUl!lrv·track Otklancl ISortnMll 1·0) 11 C...,.._nd (Sutdlffe J·Sl, (n) Ktme1, NtW Yorll, .336. '""'*"'' o.,,.. ttlO-t(lrn EIMnflat1 <~ Wtstl. RUNS:""*"'· 89'1'"-t, •I; Tremmd, Mlchl9aft ol OMiand ~ Torooto (Leal HI at o.tron (Petry M l. (nl Detroit, '1; Mc>Mtlv. TorCH1tp, 37, Wtlllaaer, Mln'IPN• M T..,._ a.v, In> 1'11-«lm Nulttr (GeNtft W•U, Wt·• Detroit, 3'; UPSIWl¥tt, Toronlo, 35. S..Y'a ..,,_ bell • · Mllw1ukM (Sulfon 3-•> el lklllmort <McGrevor 6·•>. (11) R81: ~av • .a.tflmore, '9, K!Mmeft. LA IQRU el OILlllllOml 191> .. _... Lld\'otf (~ Wtal), Oekland .... O.Vft. S.1119. •l; L-. WI~ .. 811mlll0Mm 'ICllrttllll • aotlon (Hurst 7·•> et New Yortl llltllo 1-5),(n) Detroit, 3'; Rlct, lk>slon, J7 New OrlellM., New Jene., 1'1>-Teml LI.,... <Or.,.. Coall, HITS: Trammell, Detroit, 71, Garcia, CJllceoo ., HcMnlon IWlmmitw S..1119 IMoor• 2·3) ., Kensas City (Leftwandt 1-0), (n) Toronto, 70; Malllnttv. New 'Yori., 65; W , F~ °'*' MM*Y'• G-. ,,.._Tami Llvelt (Or'Mel C..c:U. ·TOf'Oflto, ~; ltll*en, 8ettlmore, ~ (If ~) San Antonio et P111.ouro11. lnl IW1mmlne Tu11 (Mason 2-31 al Minnesota ISmllllaon 6·61. (n) DOUBLES: Mattlnetv, Hew York, 14, MM'• l'-1111 lt-.d SlrlJll8' CMC1Wi ef h veer, Trammell, Detroit, 1'; Bell, Toronto, 13; Vennlck Noell (Fronce) def 8alau MIN TIIWMIV't Gwnn Meltl et Cllk:aeo, In) T1u1 el Ml-.ota l(..,nev, Saeltle, 13; Cow-. S..1119, 12, Taroc1v (HunNf'v), 3·6, 6·2, 7-6, 7·6; Mel• 1'7...-.0ICk Tlldltr (Or.,._ C01$J), fool· Gatti!, Ml~t•, 12; Garcle, Toronto, n Wllallder (Sweden) def. Ju.tn Aeull«• tlel TRIPLES: Mosebv, Toronto, 9, Owen, (Spain), 6·2, 6-1, 6-3. 1'77-0on ~ (C~). ~ S..1119, 1; ColllM, Toronto, 5; Law, Chi· Milt'• ~ ~ l'7t-No award T Ol'OlllO at Detroit Mllwaukff •I 8o11on, (n) 5"1119 •I Kanaaa Cllv, In> eeoo. 5; Upt.l\lw, Toronto, S. JOlln McEnr~ !U.S.> def. Jlmmv ArlH tm-Tenov Gllllt (Orllflee COnt), HOME RUNS: l(lneman, 0.kland, "· (U.S.), 6-3, •••• •·•; Jimmy Connon (U.S.1 DalUltllll Armas, 8oston, 13; Devi•. Saeltle, 12; def. Henrik SUndltrom (Swedt!'I), 7~6. 6·1, 1~• MllYM I""-'"--·i), Kittle, ClllQoo, 12; ltls*en, 8elllmore, 12. ,... ...,..,_. ........ NetlMlil LMtUe STOLEN IASES! Garde. TorCHllO, 2•. w_.. Quar1WflNlt ~ f»•:o,.·,_·· T .. _ W•IT DIVIStOH ~. <>Mltnd, 2•; 8ulltr, Cltlletand, Martina Nev,.tllove (U.S.) def. Keltly wetw POilo om .._msl.cl (Goidtfl W.t), :Ira _ ~w ~L~~--ct.~~G~·~~litl;MHlll.Mflll~Allelb. 17; 8er114i'~ ~vettt, 6~• -2; Hana Mandllkov• LM Alllmtt9I 1,.,_.oeer see (FUllW'lon), ............ x ,,,__ . ·~·~ :i,.;>.'......~~.'.M..:..;...;~::,n::-·-:".~~-~~~N o;;.-· . 30 2' .536 2\'1 J.~tiif.'"'°16rifo-, -~r-r.T.:t;t .. ~M~~t&;;;..~-~~ ~·~ (Goidtfl W~I. Clnclnnell 27 2t ..,, 5 s-o. 2.651 Loper, Det~oll, ~o. lM; Slltlll. Cartlnt lauett (C•Mda), •-6 .. , 6-0 l'eltST llACI. ... ~\.-Holnton 22 31 _ .. 5 9 Toronto, 7;1. 2.23; Olvl•, 8altlmor1 .. e-1. Ceml1*I IMnilmln !U.S.> def. UM ~ ...., ~ <T~j~•.IO 6.00 JA ~ · . San Fr1ncl.co 17 :M .333 13 1.5'; ~. Toronto, 6-l, 3.76. IU.S.I. 7"6• S-7• 6-3. Redueld COPV (Gwda) 3 IO 3.00 ~ .. STRIKEOUTS: Morris, Detroit, ff, Slltlll, Arc En Ciel IPeYIM> ll.OO "19--0lctl Slrlcklln (~ Weal), UST ~1 .-!~o, : "':.!'!:..New ~Ot'tty~ ~· Abo re<K &le Kelll.lnl, Tiny Onlv Once, bMQtbel Clllceoo PtllladtlpNa New York St Louis MontrHI PlllsOurVll -' .--; """•· ' ~. Jonny San Run, Don ~. Rush ltl0--Mar9o Ortis CF"'9rton), IOfttl9I 21 Z:J .5'9 2 J Smlllllon, Mlnntsote, 54. Dtherv, SumPln Sllck. w .. -Tr&A.o. '"~ °'"" <Goldtll w.1), 25 23 .521 Jin SAVES: Qulsenbwrv, Kenws Cllv. 13, Tlmt: 1U7 ... • --IOft1liel 21 2t .500 '"" c.udill, Oetllelld, 12; D..+J. Mlnnnota, It: ltl'l:-De GIMlon (Or; c.as 2S 27 .al 5Ya Slontev. Boston, 10; Flnotrs. ~IW•uk.M, '· S2 IXACTA (l .. ) Mid llU.60 DetM1tlel lie ... I), T·~--222 .420 I \.'! .. _.__. I --.... MCOMO llACI. 350 \'.,.lh ~ ....... ("'·-----) ..__ .. _ __ ., • _._ ,.. __ ..__... Mem11 Llr1' (Edwerdsl 1120 6 00 3.20 bell ,._,. .--,_, ' _. • .,...,.. 2, Clndnnell 1 8ATTING (115 •I Dali)• GWVM. San l(IPfvs Tr-• (lrooas) 4'° 2.IO ~JM Dunlap (~ Wtll) Mlft· Hew Yn 3, Pllhtlutllll O Dleoo • .36'; FraftCOnll, Montrtel, .362, A Klu For Ludl (Cr...,..) LIO bell ' ClllcffO 3, Mont,_, 2 Welhlnston, Allonre • .340; arentv, San Deep Me lsNnl Also r~ •• hdulno. o.r MA. St. Louts 5, ~ 3 Francisco, .331; Dumam, Cllkaeo, .m. Doues aue. San D"9o 3, .._ton O RUNS: MA!ttltwl, ClllcffO, JI; Wtvelm. DAVIY'S LoatEI (......._. a.di) Time 11.22. Alllnll •• San Fro.nclKO l San °'"°· •• GWYM, Sen Dltoo, 3'; -11 ~ lOS barrecuda, 1 vetlowt•H. 4 TH•D llACL lSO vards. T•Y'• o.,,.. Samuel, Ptltladtlohla, J6; Durt\em, Clll· rOdl lbll, l Mllbut, 70 Olllco bell, 20 l.nd UrdOC <Mltdlell) 7.ltO UO l.AO Qnc!Mall (Solo 7·1) at~ (Hone\'· caeo, )t; Rain., Montreal, :M; SCllmldt, beu, 230 macklf'tl. · • NallV• lldtdlofl IMvtn) :J.AO 3.00 CUii 7·2>, (n) ~ .. :w.. NIW~T LANDING (N••ltWf Just A Env Miss (Fr\'dov) 5.00 Atlante (Felc:ont •·5) el Sen FrandlCO R81: Durtl9m, 0.lceoo, .. ; Carter, a.di) -51 anoltrs.. '6 MnG bets, 51 Time: lUO. (llt~~vl-6)("'-~-c~r~~ ':' ~~ PhlD~~;,.~; =:-.:.'· ,. Darracuda, 5 ~. 25 •ouaTM llACI. -VWdl. ._.. or11 .,........., •·» •• Plttltlw'oti -"• -· ,.,,.,,_.,, -• i v 1• """--· ~ coov le.4l iA 2.AO 2..20 !RhOdtn •·•>. (n) 3'. Chlaioo IRalneV :J-4) ,, MonlrMI Hll's:..Gwvnn. San oi.oo. 71; Sandbtre, Thi5 w.eell'.s trout p1enta Good Thief Scotti !Delombtl 3.20 uo (Gutllc:klOll l-5), (rl) Chlceoo, 6'; Slmyej, Ptl~la. '7. LOS ANGILIS -Cntalc Lakt, Jodl· Go rt!:~~ (Hennon) uo . 1 .. ~~~~•lla. 1 1ne 1 ystrom 2·2) el St. Loula ~ .. r.nc:ona. • Montreal. 6'; Porlttr, Clnclnnall, son Lake, Puddlnestone Litle, Sen Gabrlll u IXACTA 12•51 Paid SIUO. ... .....,.. r .., 111:1"" Ceul Ind wnl forks). Houston (Madden H> ., San Dlevo DOUBLES: Sandbere. Clllca90, 15, SAN 811l.NARDINO -Grltl'I V•lleV """ ll.ACL 350 vardl. (Thurmond 3·3), (n) Franc:ona, Montreal, 1•; Carttr, Montr .. 1, Lake, G'"'90N Lake. Jenks Lake, s.nta Peu Mv Coov !CrMeerl lUO LOO 7.Ml T'lllln4aY'1 Games 1•; Cev, ~ 13; Wlllon, Plllladetollla, A.na River, Sanle An.t RIYtf' (IOYfll forlt). Ftv Lldlldv Solll l&erd) UO S.IO Atlante el ~. (n) 1~; Hutltlard, Alltnta, 12; OU~. San ltlVlltMDI -Fulmor Lake, Hemet Mollllr SYclrtme CGarcit) UO Clnclnnell et Sen Dleoo, (nl Frend.co, 12. lake. AllO raced DtUc:al• Aneel. Cotlled Nlce- Clllaioo ., Montreal, (n) TRIPLES: Samuel, PtllladetPhla. I; SAN DtlGO -Doane Pond, San Luis Iv. Peeov Genie. Rellels v--. Ask Houston at S.n F,.ncl.co, lnl Sandllef9, Clllcaoo, 6; GWVM, San Dleoo, S, Rev Rlvw. Dollv, Truly ShM AMERtCAN LEAGUE Cruz, Holnlon, •; McGee. St. Louis, • KIRN -A!Olr Crlft. Cedar Crwlt, Time. 17 92 HOME RUNS: MurM'/, Atlanta. 13, Ersltlnt Creel<. Kem River IC>emoc:ret U IXACTA (1·71 oald 1220.20 ~ 6, White Sex 1 Sc:llmldt. Plllledelphla, 13, DYrlllm, Clll· Dam lo KRI Powerllouse, !Sor .. Power· MXTM RACI. 350 yarm. CAUflC>aNtA CHICAGO ~. ll; Clant, San FranctKO. II, llOuw lo Democrat Dem, Isabella Dam 10 H•PC>Y Hooter CHarmonl 11.60 IM UO .. , "'" ... , "... Mdtevnolels. San Dteeo. 10 Bored Powerhouw. ICR3 Powerllouw 10 Dtckem Saini (MYIH) tlS..20 •..20 P9tll• cf 5 3 2 0 RLaw cf 4 O O O STOLEN IASES: s.mu.4, Pnlladtlollla, Lalli Isabella) DH-Confeltl Moot! !Peullne) oo !Stnlquz If 3 2 2 2 FIUI c • O 1 O 21; Wleelns, Sen Dleoo, 21, ltldus, Clncln-DH·tke The Vlk.a (T,...surtl UO MC Iron rf 3 0 O 1 Pec:lork 111 • O I o natl. 27; Demler. OllcffO. 2•. Rallle•. MONO -er~ R-volr • Convlc1 DH--OMdNel tor ttllrd Deena 3b 2 O O l Luzlntk dll • o O o MontrMI. 11. Creek, Convlcl Like, DMdman Creek. Time· II.Ii Ownnt1 dll • I 2 1 Kittle If • I 1 O PITCHING (5 dedslom) Soto, Clndn· Glau Cr ..... G\111 Lake, G,.nt Lake, Green It.JO.an lb • O 2 I VlAw 3' 3 o o o natl, 7·1, 2.51; l.vndl. New York, 5·1, :J.20; <!rftll. June Lake, L• Vining Creek, Llll1e Grich 2tl 3 0 0 0 Sleomn rf 3 0 1 1 Pt!H. Af\anl•, S-1, U4, LM. MonlrHI, Walker RiVtf'. LundY Lake, Memle Llkl. 8oont c • 0 0 0 Ftetctir 1o1 2 O O O t-2, 2.54; MaHtltr, Alllnta, 4· I, I 7t, Sand· Memmott\ Crftk, MMY Lekt, McG.e Ncdolo u • 0 l 0 JCruz 2t1 l o O O tnOn. Cllk:meo, ~· l , 2.7'2. Creek. • Creek, Owtn$ lttver (Benton T..... J2 6 11 6 Tee.ts JI I 4 1 STRIKEOUTS: Rven, t4outton, IS, CrOUlne MO Ille SPrlnls), tlOOlntOll Crtlk, S.C.. " ......... V..._..., ~ M , Gooden, l'ffW JlocL Ct9ek. ~P~.c:.om. o J.am'.I. C......... 111 IO:I 110-6 Yoril, 00; Solo, Cl~. PO, C'.rlton, P\ace, Tom'• P\Ke unrr..m lo It~ CNca99 111 • --1 ~. 61 Crtttl Lake), Rush ere.. Sher.win er.-. Game WlMlng R81 -8enloua (I). SAVES: Suiter, SI. Louis, 13, Gossao.. SI'-Liil•. TrumOull Lek•, Twin· lAlln E~lelcller, FIUI, PlccJolo. San Dleoo, 12; Holland, Pttllade!Pllla, 10, 8rldMPort (uPHr and lower), Twin LakH DP-C1llfornlt t, Clllceoo 3. L•Smllll, Cllka9Q, 10; Oroteo, N-Vork, Mammolfl. Vlrelltla Creek (lower), Vlrvinla LO&-< llfor•1• • c11•~·-• 2"'-..... I 9 LallH (Ul)Ptf' end io->. Walktr Rlvw Downlne~ ''i.nicau.;-"" 3H~~'. · ICllrls Flat Cemperound to town of w-., S&-f>ettls 2 (17). s-MC8rown. C-.. W4M1d Series Luvlrt MNdow• Catl'IP9rouncl to ~ SF-e.tllquez, DeClllCft. (at C>INltwl, Ne0.) 9rid91). TuetdllY'a ktr'I IP H ll. llt aa SO Arfiona SI. 23, OkltllOma SI. l2 INYO -8eker Crftk,. 819 Pine Creek, c......... Zahn w ,.., • • 1 1 1 3 T.,..,., ~ l l•llOO Creek (IOwer, middle, soulfl ano Miami <•·27) VI. Cat Sl•t• Fullerton Intake II), Georet Lake, 19 Cf'eek, ('2·20) lndlH!ldeliet Creek, Lake lnl, Lone Or Pine Crttll, O.k Crtlk lnonh ), 0.-l.Senchel 1 0 0 0 0 I CNcaee lkK1I$ L,2·5 52·3 7 5 • 1 New 19•n• <'6-25) vs. OkltllOma SI. River (Laws lrt<loe downslr to St-art (5'·1•> NOTE: P1lrfnes of lour remaining IMIT\S L-"9), Pine Crttll, ROdl ,... Lake, SIMohtrds Creek. Svmmn • TabooM RRMd 21-3 3 1 1 0 Aeosto I I 0 0 1 T-2:ll A-1',911. lo tit determined ti\' NCAA comm1t1... Crtek, TlnemaM Creek, Tul C"""- ::; Lavelle, Salmon honored Bucs' Mayne, GWC'sDunlap county JC coaches of year Saddleback College tennis player David Salmon and Oranae Coast Colleae swimmer Tami Lavelle have been named Orange County's male and female community colleae athletes of the year by the Sports Information Directon of Orange County. · Mike Mayne ofOCC and Jan Dunlap of Golden West were selected the top men's and women's coaches for 1984. Mayne coaches OCCs baseball squad, and Dunlap handles Golden West's softball team. Salmon led Saddleback to the stat=ch pionship in 1984, and &Iona the way captured sing) mpionships in the Pacific Coast Conference Tou ament, South.cm California Rqional Toumament..Ojai Tournament and thtstatc tournament. Voted the Pacific Coast Conference "Player of th~ --- Year" in 1984. Salmon vinually owns all ofSaddleback's tennis records. Salmon was selected from a strong field of community colleae athletes. Other nominees included: Jeff Gardner, baseball, OCC: Dan Thomas, wrestling, Cypress; Sam Veal, basketball, Fullerton; Luke Niode, swimming. Qolden West: and Glenn Thomas, water polo, Santa Ana. -----.1 s•VIWTH llACI. l70 varos.. lltaflu Action (Uldley) LOO lM 3M Mldnl9hl Palley (Catdoi.a) .... 7.00 Fleet Midi.., (Hen) uo AM ,..._ Molr'lw a-. """91Nt, ltldl'9Ck 8rotMr. ~ Poky lTme ~03 -- u axACTA <2·11 Mid SllUO ltGHTH RACI. 350 varcb A Zl.W'e HOPI (~cle) IUO 7..20 i20 Codll Of The W8'1 IFrvdav) UO 7.«I Lon Anvel (CrMNt') UO Tlrnt: 17•. U fttCK llX 11·2· 1·1-2-11 Paid S7'3.20 wllll 21 winning tldtm (five llC>rlft). Cattvover POOt. l20.llU6. NIHTM llACI. 350 vard1. ~us (Ladltv> 7JO •.OO uo Ont Clllnce To Win (Frvdav) uo 2.«I AnltloPI ai-lllelllnsl UO Time: lUO. S2 IXACTA IM ) Paid 121.00 Alltndenclt: 5,055. Up To U5.00 Per Window C.ah Trede The IOJlill iloncN-ol * F Southern Sec:liOa Hall olPeme Roc- opitioa Awad bavc t.e IO• oouiaced by OF Comm1..wr Ray Plulko. :The uld•raree, ,....., 4_ · number, arc indiviAlll Wllo hi~ contributed ilO die • .,.._...., Of in1enlebOlutic adtlelia b IM CJF I SouthaJt Sec1ion, Nonuneet b lbe aw.cl were JciUnect by ihe aF..ss omce anc1 me Ufe Pua Committee • The inducua inlO the ball iadUde: •James A. Fa&&I, a noted member oftbe CIF-SS executivr comaunee. •the late Clatence H. Sdaunt, coach aod athletic dittciot 6f Suta Barbara ffiih School •W•Uiam ;J. WonhiftllO'l. loat- time aolf CCJ«b at ~wOod Hilla. •lester -eu.·• K.oiO&. COKh : and' athletk dirtttor at· s.Dui A• Hieb. . • •Jack 0 . Rc>bnu, Pacifica Hilb priDcipe.J a.ad sporu official. •Geo~ E. Trotter, TUllia Hip baskttball Ooech. •Ceon Q. Fonnao. Loaa 8tacfl , Poly Hilh track coecb. •Eueme N. West, atblelic dired« &rid ooeCb at Hemet Hilb:. • PbillipJ. ••Duffy" Lewii. direaoc of athletics at La S.UC HP. •Fred A. Jobmoin, fooct.11 aad ~ball coacb at l.oGa Beacb Wiltoc ANGELS ••• Pra.Dl I premier ptl(bcr, .. l.ahn was injured in IPrina tnuw11 and went on lbe disabled list....fle ~D~t acti~u:d until April 11 . Theo he lDJured himsdf11&in int.be fioiJ innina of a completc-pJ:De shutout apin.st the New York Yanba He misted two turns before turD.iDa OD tbe White SoA who bad bad a J ().. pme win_.oina streak ~ the An&ds datint bid to lul tenon. Re was 01c&ed for 1 run in tbe second innin1 ou a single by Ron Kink and a triple by Dave Stqman. Then he stopped the White Sox cold .on one sin&lc the rest of the way. That came m the sixth by Carlton Fisk. who was erased in a double play. .. Endurance was the main con-cern." said McNamara; -He ~ ~ a liule hesitant in lbc IC\.'CDth mninJ; We-dc:cidcd_to let him IO one mo.re and that was it. .. . Luis Sanchez finished the pme wtth I perfect ninth inniQS. Zahn. n:ce.ivcd excellent support from the 1-20.~ in the Anacls' lineup. Rookie Gaiy Pettis, lcadift& of( had 1 doubJc, a sinale, stole &wO bases and .::ored three times. Juan Beni- quez, batting second. abo bad a double and a sina:Je plus a ucrifi<ic Oy, two runs batted m and two runs scored. AreEnily Ufted Out For ..... Eaay Cluning From lnaide. Lavelle, who has been named the South Coast Conference's swimmer of the year the past two seasons has rolled up an incredible I 02-0 record in ber 0CC caner. Trade In Your Old Energy Wasting Windows For A Cash Credit T awards The Purchase For Each Replacement Window You Buy (l1m1ted Offer] In On Your Old Windows This season she led the Pirates to the It.ate championship and now owns four state individual records and two relay marks. She is the owner of four national SllDdardl IS well. Other nominees for the top female award included: Boen Barmore, tennis. OCC; Michelle Gibbs. diver, Saddleback~ Kathy Oonnan, basketball, Fullerton; Karen Carbon, aonball, Golden West: and AJani Silva, aoftball. Sant.a Ana. Injury sidelines Homer again leaaucs. l n a way, I felt in the beck of my mind l was aoina to pay for it later." Hchas. ·•1n a lot of'wa~ it'• b«n a dream come true." be md.: .. It •s bttt1 a li vtf'\I be.II too ... Horot~s latest pbyiicaJ ailment came May 29 duriN a pmc in which hC bad rw linalcs and two doubles in a victory over the <::hlcqo C\I He IAid be didn't mncm wbco it happened. be j'"1 knew the wnst burti.DI when be awoke the ne'I momina. Homer, 26. ~ycd with the broken bone the ne~t ni&ht, aoina ().for.,.. in a pmc ii\ which Chicaao·s e"c Trout ' hurled hitless ball for 7~ inru°"' He then missed all fivt f&mCS in a series at Cincinn.att. rctum1na to Atlanta on Sunday. Dr Robert Well the team pbysidan, cumined the wrist Mon- day and tnl'IOU.Oced that it MS brokm and that Homer prCJbably would m • the rest of the . It's w sarM bone Homer broke last A ua. I S white slidina t.nto SttOnd buc in a pmc qainst the San Oqo Pld.ra. The Braves hdd a 5 me bd in tbt National l.cqut Cit rllCt at the time, but immecbatdy lost l l of thcar ne~t 17 pmcs and were never ablf to overtake the Los An&el OodlCrs down the trctch.. finishina lhi'Ct pm cs off the l>'tt. ' We Guarantee: Custom Air Tight Rt Security Features · Double Hung Or Sliders Energy Saving Maintenance Free 1 DO% Rnancing Available Call Now For A Free Pick The Glass & Frame Color [White. Bronze · In Home 01\0ffiCe Demonetration And Receive Ai No-Cost- The 1984 Olympic Pnter (No Purch•H Nece ... ry) Soutti Coast Windows 549-5101 3001 hi A Ste. 219, Coste M e J Or Brown .] Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /WednMday. Juno 8, 188• ( ~ j # t I r. -: . • .. i I • .. I : f ~ , -~--- THE OAll \'Pit.OT (LAS. IFIED OFFICE llOl'RS Telephone Sen ice: \1ond1:n -Frida' 8:00 i\.\1.-5:3ClP.\1. Busine Counter: \londa~ -Frida~ 8 :00 \.\I -:>::~O P .\J. OE \l>l.l 'E~ Pl HI.IC\ 1'10'\ \luntla' "-.ii . 11 ·ill .1111 1111•,da ' \I Oil I .m fl 111 \\ 1·d11 .... tf.I\ I 111· ... I .m fl 111 I l111r ... i1 ,,, \\ l'ff 1 :~11 I' Ill I rula \ I ltur .. 1:]11 p .111. "-a I 11 rel a' l'rid.n :\ 1111 p .111. "-1111da' ha :\:IHI p .111. C.\'.\CELLATIO'.\ & Ct >RRECTIO~S: .. · 642-5678 811111 ltr li lt l 1a1n ler l alt l1aan 111 Ill• ................................... ____ ..j Gtatral lOOI C111aa •ti Mu 1021 !_.t!J!rt lucla lOll OltlH OOVE SIOl,000 f OlllUL lllJU Ownei w.11 oeftlidef trade Invite tl)e whole family or offer J Bdrm, 2·~ Ba over! Lovely 3 bedroom, located 1n Of'le of the best 2 bath. large dining room, areas of Coron1 del Mar PIC1ure windows to the rose fllled yard Some ocean view tool 200 Block of Orchid Ave and only $395,000 ' Hiii LIT to1111' th goao 3 BR home.. S1G9.500 llWNIT IOI GMH BR 3ba a124,750 R1,...00ar4t1 lffr. 141-llH Traditional Realty 631-7370 ss• • • • LIH ISLE OR a 45 Lot oo 1ree lined HW LllTill I.I. Exc•ati1t IUI ln1tt U•l•nil1 IEllOll I IUIY n t1~u1 le1cll / I OLl,,UYll YI-YI 2 8 rm, den. 11% ea, P In an aru of large & re-Clo .. to t>eaeb I town modeled. bOfrull Ll.fge Av1ll July 1. $150/mo 70x100 flat lot w/clOM up 411T-3529l873-3ete view of bayfront ecilvlty. 2Br2e'a Arch e.c'hHiti Plan Included for dre-patio, CS.Ck, dlfk rm ma tic remodel on this ex-s om e o c e a n vu hitting duplex Into 2 $1000/mo Call Car atory 3 bdrm home 6'3-0611 Of 497 .3,51 Room tor pool and 11111 -have a yard Call for d• ~ 3 story, Alta \llttl ta1t1 ori thla unuaual area 3 BR. 3 81, oc:ietn value Owner wUI x-cno view 2700 Sq It S 1300 mo pit HC 499-5563 or 921·2508 DOVER HORES Poppy Avenue filled with Most deelrabla ln1lde • a gracious 3 bedroom. street on extra large lot, 4 "-All Rr HUNT W IEW lormal d1n1ng room home bedroom, 3 bathl. ex· Off oceanfront mint 18 Magmt1cent view estate PLUS separate oft1ce for qulsltely decorated, high HOMI ., Jee. w/bar & bttlns $550 cus1om 5 Br family rm & Dad and guest room and celling and open beam REAL ESTATE 539-CS 190 Bnt Alty tee 5 Balh new pool spa, on bath' Lots ol parlung Per fec t c ondi t i on 831·1.00 ·;z;-r• ltic'"•1! '•acre an refurbished -$435 QOO $675.000 _ • • _•_ 1m~9d move m, 1rade or ,~, J / IL . LllO IElln 3 aq A WntcUff 1ea~e opuon olt S975 ooo r.•1(11( JUI <ii' • '"." lll-l JDO · I .E. WaatH 1625 4Br. 4ba, pool/ape, d.,, tor "Int financing R & H 1Jl. j, / P P wants N.B/C M lam rm . dine rm Tr19k Investments 751-5989 -tb~rr•T U7U'lfU'..J condo. 2 • Bdr low dwn gar $2000/mo 786.0lln DRElll POOL-SPA ,... fij)-."1~.'N IEWNIT THI. 00• 646·3666 Ask tor Marcel 3-Br 1 Ba upper dupiii Mesa Verdes lmest lree 3141 E. Coist Hwz. CdM BR 3 ba. garage. ltntala lurn or unfurn Yrly o flowing floor plan wit~ _ • $110.000 Bltr 963·8377 summer 30' boat docl Bdrm 3 Ba and 3 car gar-I I h I ... ~ avail 619-223-71119 dge Secluded Ms tr sutt& Costa Mtll I 024 OCWFHIT SiMI 000 11111 1 fl 1111• --........ ' GtHHl 2202 4 Br. 3 Ba, near .,.._, has separate study with 2 MOISES Home/Duplex Open dally tennis/pool No pet• balcoriy overlooN.1ng 2-6 5109Seash0fa ownr E.sldeCostaMesa2Br Older pref'd St200/mc ( .~lllt't·llat ion~ anti i·orrt·i·tiou' llHI\ story 11v1ng room area SI0,000 UCH /agt 545-2847 M5·9721 unit w/gar& yard $650. 650-814~/675,...886 . pr 1 c e d 1 0 s e 11 a 1 Xlnl investment opporfunl-IWO-A LIE HPLU l•••lf I Wfllttr -.. 0,.. .,.. ... ... •• , ht· ma<lt· on 'clfllt' dt'acflin~ a' abo\ t'. S225 ooo 751 3 191 ty on this R-2 oftering •• ~ "~ -· I I , :.L'l. Zero vacancy factor Bet-alk to 1hop1, beaetl,..8aL ltlltab guard, pvt beachel, 38 > t'8M' a .... ~ fur u 1·an l·t•lla~1 C::. SElECT 1e1 cnec11 this .one out pier, terrytreafa. 3Br72ba JlOIU IUJ.n 2b fresh paint. new numht'r '~ h1•11 t aiH•t•_llinj.! \OU r ad. ......PROPERTIES NOW1759-1501 N . 218 Bal Bl 873-2943 ~ 'mS'C-r .. ~ 1 ... ~1.L&;~ ...... <?.~·.a_ 4:'¥~~; -~,--~...z:-~ 646-6219, ~6-0100 ch.,;·k 'our ad dail~ a nc.J report IOIELLllEHGllE IYIWlll C.rta1 •tl •ar 222 Close to b98utlful Hunt-Prealdentlal H*gtitl 2Br EUily youB 2Br 2ba mod t'rror~ immediatf'h . Tht• I> ·\I I ' mgton Beach. 5 11\tnutes 2ba corido 192,00G-ct.cor frplc bltlns child near Fashion laland, Np PILOT a~!o.UOlt'~ liahilil\ for the f1·r...,t from Newport Beach, In aasum Aslllng$l10,000 fine $875 llat 5396190 Ctr SlB50/mo 644-680I to11ely area of Costa 498-8977 0< 492.01194 -673-1 700 Eva & Wknd• ' . . . l --Best Riiy lee llH'Orrt'<'I ui...ertaon on \ mesa Wonderful hlmlfy S t •-B t 1912 · CLASSIFIED £. ··2 llvtng Ill 3 Br & 2 'I Ba COIPOUTI IWIEI u. nal I OLD CdM LEASE 2BR ILIFFI mo·-v..--5678 home Manicured lawn, Company transfer lorcea *I lllE* 2be condo. pool, sp&. 3 Br -.c den, 3 Ba. Pool. -----------------gun1te private spa, sale of this spacious 5 Br PlllPElln St250 mo Avail 711/8'4 Mtn Vie'#, lg gar. Bit-Ina ltaltl ltr Silt SHIH Ill lilt Malthulttes luKury 3 Ba home Best Mesa * * 675-6000 Beamed oell. wallpaper carpets and dellghtlul Verde locallon on quiet wm a .. HIE Olde CdM Cape Cod 2Br Pvt patio, frplc, $1400 -=·-· .;;;;•.-tr;.;;l;;;,1 ___ ._,;1~00~2 GtaeraJ 1002 neighbors S 149 500 street Move 1n cond. •l lJ,·OOO 2Ba, frpk:, lrg bacilyrd. 2 __ <8_18)798·9504 -Tom Alhnson Vacant & offered at • __ ' $206 000 Call 546-5880 h ller ..... car garage. wshr/dryr • Cape Cod . 3Br 2ba, hug. ll(SIOUtTIAl A£Al ESTU[ ~AVICES llOILHIE HH,000 Last opportunity to purchase rare oceanfront lot m famed Rockledge By The Sea, on e of the State's most beautiful oceanfront rommumt1es. Breathtaking views! H t I "' S1150. 640-7762 yard. quiet cul-de-MC A::·.~rg~ar,;~~~·;:,,ents o~ 141-0114 C01t1 Nn1 ZZZ4 shut1era, flower boJCet -------Jl1'"ilt Bt•t• l l brand new re modal REPOSSESSION • 3Br · • f ' 2 Bdrm Condoa In $1400/mo 2424 Slerr1 2ba-f1xer S 126,000. Low aut ran ~ 1 x Water oriented projeet, Vlata. Dys 673-1395 down Agt 546-7739 loaded w/upgrades In lakes, streams, water--------- SECLUDED USTSl.E adult pk, CM. $27,900 falls, pool & spa lncld. HARBOR VIEW 3 bf~ DI 1Br 1ba, pet OK $17.900 Woodburnlrrg frplc, fam rm, nu pnt1drp1 3 Br 2 Ba spa. Open Hou!H& • Wllrd Moblle Homes microwave, Ute counter-Grdnr. S 1295. 644-4205 Sun 1-5 2~4 Rochester 991·4990 or 645-1806 top, gar w/opener, plush H.V.Homes Somenet mdl Greg Astle Agt 631.,.888 crptg. $675.-$875. No 5 Bdrm , 1mm 80 • Baat. leacL l""O IHT HYll TIWI pets 545-31 t5 s 1 7 5 0 1m 0 Ag 11 • '" In A Beautiful Park 673 776 7 IUR IEICH 2oxso tt. 2BA 2ea. i1gh1 P1 r~:ai;~~~·peq~:'~85 1st • t . 60-t397 airy Interior look Large Impressive 2 ltory 3Br 3bt 4 Br 3 ba spacious llv rm . hvlng, dining rm and .. secunty 497-6287 hme stylish decor dbl g• MEWPOIT IHCH tam/din rm lrg bale k1tcheri atea Reasonable 2 Br 1 Ba $575/mo. tncd S 1 100 Mu• t I•• CO•Hll•IUI ~~~; ~536~~ ,t 614 rent Small pet OK yard & patio no pets. 539-6190 Best Alty fee Lovely location sunny CALL AGT 540-5937 19 5 o B · · Meyer peOiflSuia-lldo Ille. Jul' 2 BR 2 ba 11rept1.1ce poo1 lm u 1044 Acrea t 1125 549-3<484 $3500 August $4000 & upstairs privacy Only 3 Br 1 Ba enclsd garage. Agt 615-6161 S 126 ooo $ 15,000 Babbh~ ~rook view big patio. crpts. drapes SHARP 3Bdrm Shore• I llliii 1(.1 I I ( .\tf \ reduction on lh1s un-$47 500 Bkr 679_ 1975 lncd Xlnt area & sharp Beach house • Pooh Realtors 675-6000 believable VIEW home on -S660 • sec No pets S 1150 mollse 645.0423 the Ridge tn Turtle Rock Ct•t .. ry J.etl 548-5442 770-5629 PAllU•O YIEW ~r~;~,;n~i~a ~'!~o~-Crpta 1229 3Br Tba-Smt tenced yard WISTOLIFJ'I POOL I HllllOR VIEW ated l!'ac View 2 cemetery rots No pets Kids ok Olln llllITT Macnab-Irvine I I \, Ii I 1 ' I I I• I . __..-, $500 88 OBO 646-8376 $650/mo 547-578 ldys 4 Br, pool, ve<y country Walls ol glass open _ ~ ---, C 1 th --ded 5-very charming, eveq Liii ISLE beams Ille entry and a ., 'Ji i so r I Co••trcial ire e IS upgra rm eKtra gardener pool Mt P . Ba f V total entertammo delight' I I Proper~ 1290 home w/gar fncd yd kida vice incl No P.11 Yr~ rest1g1ous Y ront ilia, 6Br, 71·2 Ba, Large family home over-ea fy _ AOK s550 details leaseS2000 673-7544 pool, Jg boat docks, $4,850.000. looking large pool and II Newport aYfront prime 539-6l90 Best Alty fee S -a_ Z Opn 1-5 101 Via Lido Soud patio This 3 bdrm home otf1oe bldg $1.600.000 Eaststde 2Br lba. small IDtl Alll 1s ori lee larid $425.000. 786-1172 B111GrundyAltr675-6161 yard. gar, frig. S775 1st. 3br 1'14bacondOnearS.C Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom. fireplace, call 631· 1400 laco•t Prot 1350 last & sec. 645-3958 eves Plaza. patio. pool, 19• '.. Easts1de 4 Br. 2 Ba, dbl gar., S700 mo. 6"4-0'4'49' ~am ceilings. Xlnt financing. $420.000. \'An Ht H<>NT JW#JW"'4~ IPllTIEITS "I •v . • iar. bltlns. fplc ADULT COMPLEX 2 11"" ltOMI '> Inc. 3880 Michelson Drive 10 It S700K " un s 895/mo John 642-1518 condo. lmmac 2br REAL ESTATE Irvine 12 units $725K M/F 9 5 531_.5 6 IAYSIDE HIVE llYFIHT COHO 831-1400 u t I 1. lO&t 14 untts S850K • or 1 1''iba, pool, so S.A Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai •t ... r tlC• Tom Lee. Bkr 642-1603 EASTSIDEAENTALS S575. 54o.0374 Kat, 2 Br. 2 Ba, 40' pat.lo. $695,000 111,000 IOWI Affordable 3 Bdrm, se-Cea••• ••• PRIVATE 1mun LIDO ISLE FlllLlll curefy fenced. enclosed Uafual k.. 241C llVllE TtlUIJCE Neef the beach Lovely 3 3 Br 2ea, lrg playroom. e • garage. $650 Kids OK. I Br 3 Ba townhouse furn . only $400.000 BUI • FIUIOIM • Hurry! 2 BR lrvtne conao • ..montS: Panorarruc_bay & ocean view. 4 Br, 4 Ba, Sunk.en llVlng r.oom with GnmdyRTtr 1>15-6181 M O S T BEAUTIFUL IJM1K 10-month 1525 whll• patio, pool home. F~ price $775,000. ~~~eva~~~~cf:~1n~11~~tgr ii Rue Fontainbleau, Big DUPLEX IN COM WON Off Tustin Ave. lrg 2Bdrm PIO~Y remains on mar· PHIHIU llOIE OCWFROIT Ocean & Jetty Vlews, manne room, 4 Br. 3 Ba. 3700 sq. ft .. car parking. $1,285,000 UYSllE PUCE llYfllOIT Spe<'tacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up, 2 Br. 2 Ba down, 2 boat spaces. $1,350,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy \1d1· Drive NB 6 7S 6 1bl · c •ACHITUAAL .. W .. RD hme w/gar & tetaure type ke1 II Douglas W1rd room & Pflvate decking anyon ocean & harbor ,... ,... ,... patio, quietly toed ss2s. 559-9400 with garden view Com-vteW 4''> Bdrm, 5 Ba. 2 + 539-6 90 Bes A =--------mun1ty pool and tennis frplc. 4700 sq ft Priced 1 t lty lee , .... , .... Reduced to S 179,500 be Io w market at 6"/, ASSUMABLE LOAN Flat $475 rents this 2Br Uafuai.... ZSI! Ask for LOIS Egan $498.000 Open HOUM 3 BDRM IN EACH UNIT bale Vl8W appls 539-6190 ...., _______ ...., __ _ IRUll I ELLIS 144-1020 SllCUIEITE VIEWMOIE Only S 139.500 Freshly painted. remodeled and ready lor you to move Into 3 Bdrms with spac1ou1 kltchen/famlly room area, large deck and ocean view Call Sun/Mon 640-6015 John '450.000 645-8202 Bkr Best Alty lee 11111n8f 11&11 28t 2'.iBa. d/w, w/d hit· Luxury 2 yr old condo 2 up, gar, frplc, 1850 IUIUPO. .llSllllE CIEEI •VIEW Of llY• Br. 2 Ba. fplc, microwave, H B 962-77891960·1193 washer/dryer, 2 car gar SUBMIT ALL OFFERS Acron from Newport Plan 3 wllh FORMAL Harbor Yacht Club. lhll DINING ROOM and wet aharp duplex with a kick- bar. pnvate patio w/apa er features outstanding off mstr suite. Better hnanclng. Call broker checl< this one out FAST! 6'5-8202 759-1501 S895 /mo Includes • water/heat Avail 617 11.,..•lfl F1ralUH GOLDEN PROPERTIES hlka 752-1589 ••• ,..... 2102 Daa1 Ptiat Bechel« 9Pt, atove, r• Overlc;o;;lng marine 38r frlgerator. S<400/month plua den 2 frplcs many Leave menage 760-074G extras Included. S800'1 BALBOA BACHELOR • Sally Shipley or Joyce Dabolt Comml Bldg '349:000, No Laguna with 4 rffld. units Ocean view 11 9"1. Asaumable linen Owner 837-6030 539-6190 Best Riiy fee $445/mo yearly. Av1llable Feaataia July 1 1 Person. no pe11 Clean, quiet & MCured let Us Help You Sell Vour Property! The Daily Pilot otters you this exact size ad on cu "Picture Pace" weekends fOf just $25 ptr day, Of 2 days fOf $45. Submit a pichn, or wfl photocraph it for you at a minimal charce. Call Classified 642 -5678 TM T tAIU C.li'Q ~ £),. { _ f) 'C ~Q.f •Ht 1111111 ;J~ l'oU l.)'t. 'b P<r;, ta•• 1 ..... 4 ~ ClAY I l'Oll.lllf -----0 ,_, .. ,.",. te••e~s of "'• '°""' tc•o•b ed '#O'dt be 'l--•o ,,, .... '' f t "'C» • wo•:St I WH[P[N I 1 • I 11 I rrrrrrr1 I I I I I I I I SOUl•Llll b swan 11 DlanlflHtlll 1111 GE 759-9100 -------~ .. •t ~ • • •••• l1l1toa 11 YSHOllES Ptaiu ala 1007 The least expensive home _______ _......... available m this de- TIEllTSIEn PllOPlln LIST RENDEZVOUS CONDO located . al 000 Ocean• fr()flt 3BR 2ba, 2 MC. parking space•. elell1tor bldg $269,000 500 E OCEANFRONT 3 unite Oft the oceanfront, lo• corner IOI $650,000. Owner wlll c arry S-450,000 financing for 30 ~r• at 9% tuUy amortized QUALITY t>uil\ 3BR 2ba New !~nd llyle hom 2022 Mtram11 Priceo to Hll 1mmed S395,000 With aAUm8ble $250.000 10.n a1 10' .o;. 111-1120 Le.L A111~U Ye6~~ ~our at ;- D1H1Pt1ll . 042-5678 s11eable pnvate com- munity only 1 snort walk to lovely beaches and Harbor activity Ttie home is a 3 Bdrm . 2 bath with with master suite with hardwood floora and lots of charm A leasehold property with low convers100 and exc.t· lent terms $215,000 O&U. FH HTllLI liM-1211 @'Ila -· e,_: .. •5 ... ~~ . &j CD ~r >c ~~ . J~,, i CD i :s a • ·co Ii llit,P11at Cl ~I.ea A04'1talng .. 2·5'78 V1l117 2234 oceanfront loc Utll pd p,.JtrfJ l11111•11t Beata the restl 38r 2& ro-673-6372 Exper management co . mantle lrplc dbl gar $695 -r-'""'.t--. .. ~----:-.,.,.... 1pec11hzes In Orange & 539-6190 Best tee ft11l'Pi1 ... ..,."•1o--...;;;,;,;;;iiii San Diego Counties Sl50/ blic mob1' t:Om;, nc TSL MGMT 6<42-1603 Baat. lt1cla 2248 pets Mature ldulta Why sell-explore beneflta Not far to ocean. iOW rent Oulet, aecure of uchanglng LOIS high value 3Bdrm 2ba 1991 Newport 6464373 Doheny Alty 754-1712 lrpk: mod IOI kit flat seas DAU H - • Dts 539-61_:x> Best fee ALL UTILITIES PAID laatala, trt Under ptlOed 2Br $'400's Compare before you ,.,,t lt11rt 1490 takes thlS casual 4 tam Newly decorated, cu11om Ill IOI WE hme w/gar others avail design feature•. pool, Sacraflce S53,000IFHA 539•6190 Best Alty lee bbq, cov rd ger909, IUf· auumabla Apptox bal Baat BarMar rounded with ptulh land· S411 000 2br & loft 1b1 • . acaplng No petl 28t furn Dick Retq7141 aee-:..851 Why P•Y morelimmK 2er 365 w Wltaon. 642-1971 __ 2 ltory newer bltlna, encl =----=--r---...nr.1"" Oru1t t1uty gar $500's 539'"-6190 ..,.,. ack Prt~rty I SOI Best Alty tee llWPllT Piii llU secWfuRY-sXtes imat 44 Yrly 1 br. no .,.tt. •v911 Near O C Atrpori. 1 per-28r 6/f r condo by atrMm now aeoo. 813·8640 eon office, varied Refrlg. no pets. awlm, A,ut••ata a . rHponllblltla. Typing 80 tennis $825 875·9.229 ----' -----wpm. ahonhand or laat • C not .. daalred Nat'I co. CALL US REGARDING ttnl ••I ... ITU axtt beneflll. Send re· IA\llNE ~SES 4614 m SAM "· aume I aalary require-.JIIIIU._ Upetalra unit, qui.t .,.._ ment1 to Lend L..... GISO~ Cati 873·7942 22832 e G<Mden spring. un Dr. Ste 240, Diamond ealty ta Alft Bat, C• t 1785 I •1i'la;iiii!1ii9Pi.mii5Pi13iio.f .. 1"iti...,:.,:;¥;;:.cer;..: Oat ti C1aaty 786-1172 C;,S::..~·mn:~:t"· •11r 1tr nu ,., , 28t Apt poo1, 1aun-3 & 2 Bl Pt'lv•te 1t.-t, dry lac. From S42'4/mo unob1tructed view of $4l.033t · Lake Et1lno<a Owner 3aeO M~ OrlW 714 18&0·3111 or '"''ne 1IR 1410. Utll paid, 874-1921 Buy or tredl COLONY 381 2a., w. catpclf1, tndf\t, no pet , 150.000. 67'2Be' IOI 1973 Communttv POOi. t 313 w a.,, '4t-H1• W Highland A~. San UOO mo '9~•212• • 1 BA. t9frig, ranoe/own, a.rnardino Remodeled $4.30. mo 1300. ~~4m:9~~;11:1 bldg 2~~~~~. ~tatt 130pm, All I now Nett & ~. 2 Bt 1N' M• upper, laackn, feral N b~ pOOI 11015/mo ~u~· av~ "°";. .. o7tt1 ti lrtm UH Agt 140..U«I p.op°" lo -..•.,'" 2 1~ a• _ .. -.-W0008RIOOE 2bf 2ba 01 1 U 4 .., ,..... ......, C6ndo NM' 1ae on ombel1 You don' need Fene.o and etou fenced. w/cetPot' Xlnl loc n1 "d1•., fMI" • ._, lo 28R mobile, c:oua11 patk ....., ........,, t.mnia =-..... w"-11 JOU pond eto...189 ~ ·-1 • ,.,....,... r .,, ... ti the Dlll'y Bkr (i14) 979· 1v1a etr. 1735· dttyt 00·•900 ''°' Wtint Ad•I Call now ----~~--~==-==-=-~~-=~=::;~~~~.:;;) h"fl • f31 1304 I '420H71 .. SYDIEY 01111 ' "I• v .. ry baly 'rulalioe Off* ..... H Hh'y ~vt"1 t''"'9ul ,.adoa •••llahl• for 1tw rlih• ... .-.. Experientt dHirH kt will traia. Poaltioa inthtdH •H•eri•t pito•rs. filiaa. •yP' aa.4 41aea peoc•-1 . ppl' t .W.W lw .nt.. lik to •wk willt ~ .... ha a poliah atth-*· 40 ....,. wwk '" , ""· ,....-• F.W.,. Sarti wary ii 950/ .... t.. &...a ... ,.., lwHti Appl7 ill da • n. y, 2. r ... ~ . . . ' • . l Of_,. Coee1 0Al1. V PflOTIWldnlllllll. illlllil I. 'W IOTA&. &llllTllT NEWPORT BEACH IFVOU· •Arean~ dent81.usbtent *Are 9909" to~ In a fast pM*1 progr..-ve office *Have a trtendly out~ penonal.lly *Have • maitura attltllCM * Havt1 good *1>al ta1Ms •Ar• a non-smot<ar * Woutd atljOy a Ct\~CWMI' Please call 644--0595 HITIL &SSllT. l(-ray lie Flalbta. pt-trme S ea l Bea e n 1213)43 1-2929 IOTA&. IYlmlST Expertenc9d nygenlHt needed ~ble of per- lormlfl9 up.nded tunc- hons Ah SPM. 544-54t7 ~ lailyPHlt GRAPHIC ARTIST ~ County daily newap«pet" is seeking a quick layout artlSt with knowledge of typesetlinc ttpro- duction, reproduction, camera ~edy art. Must be able to get lon& well with sales reps and int.erpettt their ideas in layouis. Additional prospects may include flyers. brochures. maps and sales presenbon visuals. 3 years experience -neWSf)9.per preferate. Send resume or lett« of qualifi- cation to: ORA. CE CO T DAILY PILOT PO.Box 1~ Costa Nesa, CA 02626 Attention; Melinda Tbackery Kl>S·EARN GREAT TRPS All) PllZESI ,. I . I ' I,, I ' ; j l • I l I . l I . i l . I, Orange County ·daily newspaper is .. seeking fasl paced, flexible achiever to -coordinate display sales acti vity. M ust have exceptional organizational skills. Duties include tracking daily saJes, answering busy phones for ou tside sales s taff, coordinating theatre advertising. Some typing, fil- ing required. Newspaper or agency experience a +. Send resume or letter of qualifications io: Orange Coast Daily Pilot Ad Jt968 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Attention: L isa Smith ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT JJO W BAV ST ·COSTA MESA CA 92616 ~ .. I <.l"&I ()VI'!)" I U> .. I ; l "'P' O~l A TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 44 Connecllon 45 Hat makings PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED · 1 Achievement 46 Be present 5 ··--a 49 Arachnid dream?"' 50 Used to be 10 Power source 53 Be very 141Vehtele exasperahng tS 01 slars 56 Accom- pref phshed 16 Eal royally fi7 Ledger Page 17 Changes a 58 Aga1ns1 pre! conyersahon 59 Marquee 20 Scion name 2 1 Hold onto 60 Honest 22 Wakens 61 Undesired 23 Trees growlh 24 Dolphin organs 25 Swaggers 28 Bagpipes '32 S!utls 33 Amounts paid 34 Eggs 35 Spl1l 36 Turns about 37 Knife lhrusl 38Do1he same as 39 Maintain a viewpo1n1 40 Atlp ier. e g 41 Inclination 43 ScOlder DOWN 1 Rages 19 Reno ivories 2 A con11nen1 23 Be a"ngry comb form 24 Blended 3 Solar disc 25 Get rid ol 4 Closure 26 Meal dish 5 Singer Ethel 27 Crow's kin 6 Aemauis 28 Get on 7 Dance move 29 Bottom line 8 U S ta11 bOdy 30 Gel around 9 Vacationers 31 Epee·s 10 Aesel cous1ri 11 Neckwear 33 Sharp sound 12 In lhe past 36 EQuahz1ng 13 NY team ellecl 18 TV routines 37 Opening ,..,......,,...., ...... ,..,-' '' j i _,..,.L .• ,. 39 Be br1lh ant 40 Bundled 42 Ingenious 43 Recaptured 45 Be su11able 46 Says further 47 Aun 48 Louise or Turner 49 Black pref 50 Beverage 51 Poker stake 52 -row 54 And no1 55 Unlrealed 10 11 12 13 .. ' I • Mo lo r Ro ute Available Newporl Beach area~ three hours per. day. Earn approx. $600 per month. Ca U I 1,00 lo 4 ,t)o PM. Ask for Bruce Emsle). CIRCU LATION DEPT. 642-432 1 EOE ORANG E COAS T DAILY PILO T )JO W BA\' Sl ·COST A ME.SA CA 91616 '"' '""' "'""""',.''''"''<<J •IM DIMES -A LINE WANT ADS IMPORT ANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIES Sell your hemt f or $50 or /Ms In our famous DIMES-A-LINES ptJb· JJlh«J each Sarurday In the Oalfy Piiot. DIMES-A-LINE «d• mutt be pre-paid to mMI or bring thfHn Into ,,,. o.Jl'f Piiot offk». &e .ure to lnc:lcH:M your~ number or Mi- d,.... In your lid, Mv. a prQ on NCh hem & no ebOreviatJon1. . Sony, no--· IJM• --· ,.,,,. "' """""'" .,.. «JCiet>t•ble. DEADLINE: ' p.m. Thundey eo.ta ..... Olllce nDWMtlarltrwl Coeta ...... ta.aea I • M•cus ChanMI, bOal lo 38'. S150 up Wlr & pwr. 842·96&& lcyclt1 IOI SC&IO 10-IPCI bOy'• bte. ltwrrt lffcla •111 e11n SB9. &42·9333 WUheft&;:f. beds. an-Mll't~lt-r~l~ik't-1--~l-'t'-6 llqWi !um , ac:ceuonn. Sat. 8am. 1:ne Davon 1..n. lllElllHU'S SOUTH DDUITY tftl!I 6Ili •biAM0NbS. f\ubles. Emeralda. Sappt\ire1r Opals. .t.H at wholesale puces 840-8709 eves• 37''1 C1t11ts of RUBIES Y01Jr choice. only S50 each1 6•0·8688 NEI MAN Bar Scene. TOOT S SH0RE'sfarUa1 proof retall $7700 • OFFER. Eves 675-9837 RO LEX PRESIDE NT, bark lin1st1,-2 xtra leng1t·1a, $8700 retail. make otter. Evea 675-9837 Fan1 1n1 Concord Run • ISUZU good s 190 548-0865 !'WE WIU llT Pl.iCH MAilLU E. 1700 IE lllllllll m1 Ex l c:ond • acces s Volume Sain. Serv+ce S700for b11 640·7790 And L .. ling Motercyc 11/ 18111eeac:hB1vd. Scttlttl 1011 Hunt1"i1on Betch 'IHXU,AX ,90 (11•) 142·2000 1700 as 11 646-4850 1111•1 914 1 ·9:) vlmaha 250 Enduro. ·76 Ax7 GS. 5 1pd, new hi· Xtt cond $1195 0 80 pert eng, 111n1 cond, xtras, 832·7306 Sac $6500 525.9g55 ·93 v;rnan.1T. only ridden ·ao Mazd1 RJCL Whll• 2X, nev1r raced & ae-wfsnrt. Cu11 rims, llrn , cessorles S 1200/obo amllm cass alarm. Bus 720-1532 846-4221. S7500,,0BO I llY 1"LIUCl:S Organ. Lowrey, walnul ·78 Jeep CJ5. Mini cond LES 957·8 133 cab .. gd cond. S500. be•t 4~k ~ Many e111ta1. ""'"· -..... -· c:ond.$4700, e46-304S otter. 962 8688 $4300 960-2514 l<et1more WasherlEleetrlc THOMAS ORGAN Vtll '75 9 118 , btk/bfk , at•eo, Dryer, Heavy Duty Mdf1. Lawrence Welk model 9041 P lrelll 11rea, 5apd, S225 set Jon 645·8192 5 1100. 675-o 105 conollne 1 . lheepaklns, comp r• oond 113.000 771-2142 Philco. lrOSlless trig, e111.t S5rlill o:JI $23Q ccl SllCk , sir. tinted. cond S350. 875-8721 evs __ _ -12000/beat offer. (7 14) '82 911SC, IOIMMld, ntt MllEMtlUU'1 SDn,11 oou1n Y8Lll'fdEI "WEWILL llT IE lllERSOLI" Volu11"9 SalM, Stniel And Lening 18711Buch 81\/d. Hunll"iton BMch (114) 142-200G WE OARE ···••Hll BILL TATES VW-PORSCHE -.,., I I "' ' ' 837 -4800 4'9)·4"1' &DTDPLESS '66 CONVERTIBLE 12000 OBO. 842-7500 pu Chick IY9rl0fl iOOO «5 E. Coast Hwy Npt Bc'1 87).090C CONNELL CHEVRO LET "-,,. 11 , I • I\ ,. ' ' \\I 546-1200 Whlr1poo/GuDryet,Mar!I. G 2-9 Irons. Hogan, S 650-467"4 Iv message. cond . Beal otter. 11 , Solld State Serles, atiaH S275. 759.1455 A ltl I ft I.. 1100 131-0293 '77 ASPEN pwr I"'· Min 2'"' yrs old •lnl cond HK-91308 Cal. Rltle $400. 8 • t I la 1111 condition 11300 Cel $250 548·2434 646•4650 Alla ltaff _ 1109 .,re;;ic;, Ye11ow, 1dft11..--.-----"-14-.~n Whl1pool Walhflr & gu Wanted Olympie bars or ·78SPYOERConY1 SNU1. school c ar. As lll;lng Fed 1311 Oryer11lnt cond. 5325. Olympie wetghts luted) Fo rced 10 sell , St,&00. 78().9278 1 ,.,,-,==.,-===~ 548-"4289 an 5 892-5788 56700 tobo ,.1•4,.41 711 ._,.. s••, gd --•. '85 Mustang, grut Or.c ......, "" ...,.,.. g lftl P.P. 873·71 7~ fr" It Ytl 1622 ltl11, Cf•ttll 1011 Ai•l 9117 Am/Fm. Bucll:et aeata, 873·7677 P1a;fu1 ki1t1t11. blk & Whl 131 WHALEA. 1973, 40 hp ·83 Xudi 5000 fuit>o ;Old $3900. 548-9872 •ft 5 ·~ee""'M7"~'71..,.=~.,7..,,=~.,~,~,.,= lemalft. 8 wka. 845-7090 Elec 1tar1 Ev1nruda. ma-wfbrn llhr inl as'sume '14 Corolla. Wht w/blue 11795. 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It [ D 0 ., I PRIMARY ELECTION RESULTS ...... 205 defegat• ndale. 72 delegates keon .. 29 delegat• abllcan •..ttorct .......... so.oe1 White............... 12,352 42nd Dlatrtct (R) 42nd Dlatrlct (D) 70th Dlatrlct (R) llrophJ ............. 19,478 , ................... 22,006 ,..,........,,.. .. ___ C8rperiMf ........ 18,394 38th Dlatrlct (R) Oofdova ............. 9,048 Plummer ............ 3,825 Dornen ............ 17,809 Dean .................. 2.~ Jacobton ........... 8,831 Green .................... 896 Schmitz .............. 3,069 Doty ...................... 706 ~ ........ : .•. l,te1 Thorpe ............... 8,153 Hunt. .................. 3,584 72nd Dlatrtct (R) L~ ....... 12,•478 Firefighters quell two blazes at Mlle Square Park.I A3 ...;. · .. ~ , , ·:'-9:·:·:·:.:·:.:-:;:-:·:-:·:~t!·!•!'.,-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:<·!•: County voter$ overwhelmingly reject penny increase by nearly 3-1 margin A dying father relies on his faith to keep him alive long enough to see his son compete In the Olym- plcs./B5 Na don Sixties TV actress Donna Reed will be the new Miss Ellle on 'Dallas' program. /A4 · World Presidents and monarchs alike pay re- spects to war dead at Omaha Beach./ A5 Saudis attack two Iranian warplanes with U.S.- madeweaponry./ AS Home Looking for a new house? Industry experts advise buying It before the No- vember electlons. /81 By JEFF ADLER Ot .. Dlllf ........ Pro~itioo A -the penny trans-- portauon sales tax tncruse - crashed head-on Tuesday with Or- ' Ferguson claims ·Assembly victory NB businessman survives battle for GOP nomination By JERRY BIRSCB Ot•Dlllf ........ The topsy-tun-y race for the 70th Assembly District Republican nomi- nation ended about 3 Lm. today when a tired Newport Beach bus1- nes.sman Gil Ferguson took a deep breath and said be was the winner . anae County volers who resounding- ly defeated the much-bel.lybooed tax hike by a 2'h-to-l margin. Vouna overwhelmingly apinst the tu, more than 70 percent of primary S5tla Dletrlet (ll) .................. 66,275 35tll Dlatrlct (D) Dudfttan ........... 37.726 ••eout S7th Dlatrlct (R) Slet Dlatrl"t (R.) ... ...,., ............ 75JIN ~•nY•-----~ - SletDlatrlct(D) Sa~Ct. 11 37th Dlatiict (D) Enright. .......... 178,073 c ................... 11.~7 Engbretten .... 139,814 .................... 30.111 K.,.., ............. 2<4,937 Hundley .... : ........ 8, 191 Barma .............. 59,045 Stewart. ........... 22.:ICM ' , caum 1111111 OR ANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORN IA 2~ C E N 1 c, voters rejected the measure wtule only 29. 7 percent favored the penny- oo-tbe-dolla.r taxincrease and an as- sociated pactaae of county road and transit improvcmenu.. The ballot proposition won only 136, 76 l "yes" votes compared to 324,222 votes ap.inst the~~­ ins to final but unofficial vole tabulations. Galdo ·. ·out in Irvine voting .. Sills wins third term as Baker. Miller elected BJ ANDB.EA ADKISON °' ............. Food Salute Hawaii's 25th an- niversary of statehood with your own tropical .. Ferguson bad led the race since 9 p.m. Tuesday when the absentee results were counted. But he waited for a substantial vote tally before declaring himself the winner. With all the ballots counted, Fer,guson collected 22,006 votes for 38. 7 percent. His closest challenaer was Ken Carpenter who garnered Be'a Kambet Oile ID atate Colorado 8eD. OuJ Bart nlw fin~: ....... -~· la Callfotnla 1 m,iat at Benrly Wllalaln Botelm Lo. A.afelee. Bart bealtUJ beat Walter Moll- Irvine voters ousted two-term in· cumbent Mary Ann Gaido from ti.. City Council Tuesday, returued David Sills foe an unpc~~ third t.enn and elecled attorney David Baker and former city comnuaionei Sally Anne M.iller. The race pitted two incu.mbCiiu apinst two political unk:nowm and two civic activisu. A third iDcuJn.;. . bent. Bill Vardoulis, chose not to seek re-election to the council that 90vems the city of 76,000. feast./C1 · Sports Former Estancia High basketball coach Larry Sunderman accepts post to coach Orange Coast women's team./D1 Entertainment "The Music Man" Is a glittering produe11on, but 1t' s all on the surface at the Curtain Call Dinner Theater ./83 Bualneu The Irvine Co. wins a water conservation award from the lrvlne Ranch Water District. /Al. 84 A3 A&-7 A4 04-e 84 oe 85 C1-10 82 81·2 oe 82 . A7 A4 At 81 A3 BM 01'"3 Al 83 83 A2 A4 (Pleue Me PBRG0801f/AS) OCvoters stay away in droves Voter turnout in Tuesday's pri- mary election was far lower than expected -perhaps the lowest in Oranse County history fora presiden- tial election year -with fewer than . half of the county's registered voters castina ballots. Only 49.S percent of the county's 9681485 reajstered voters went to the polls. elect.ion officials reported today. Changes ·apparent four decades later on Normandy sand R ETROSP[CTl~E For each Visitor, the ~rs~tlve "'Tius took me by surprix. .. Gaido sa.i4. A post-<:ampai&n party turned subdued when absentee t.llots show, cd her los~ ... never <lid · pU1J a.bead. .. she said. • "It must be an indication that it's time to do somcthina else," said Gaido, wbo ironically appointed bet judiciaJ race in West Orange County sucoessor, Miller. to the city's C.Om ... Municipal Court, sending bu munity Services Commission iQ Shaw ousts Stewart in Harbor judge-race BJ KAREN E. u.EJN Ot .. Dlllf ....... After a bitter, costly fight in the race for Harbor Municipal Coun jud&c, challenger Susanne Shaw, 37, turned incumbent Jud&e Stephen.Stewart, 50 out of office. Shaw captured 57.8 peroent, with 30,38S votes, in Tuesday's election. Stewart pmered 42.2 percent of the vote with 22,204 vo~ accord.ins to final but unofficial results supplied by the county Registrar ofVoten.. Incumbent Judie J. M1cbael Beecht1'. 45. fared beucr 10 the chalknacr Westmmster lawyer Red-1978. mood P. McAneny, 38, a resound.Jog ~er. ave~ a 1980 loss .mat defeat bygathcrina 75,253votes-74 Gaido b~ wuuuna 23 percent o~ tho pen:entofthevoten-toMcAneny·s vote aga10st her 18 percent, said a 26 432 votes or 26 percenL clear trend was apparent by 12:30 in th~~ races for Superior ~m. with only about one third oft.bi Court J 'Municapal Coun J~tes counted. , John H. Smith, Jr. and Ne~rt .. rm uc1tcd. .. be said ... What's Beach anomey Robert H. Galhvan impo.rtant .is not just Mnnin&. bu\ captured the highestpcrcenta,e of wanning wtth others ... two pco~ voters for Office 20, as did Orange who I can work with in the future. " County Chief Deputy District At· Miller. who took 23pen:entuwe.U: (Pleue ... 8BAW /A2) <"'--.ee DlVllU/ A2) I I l f • r. ' . • . f I 1 .. By ROBOT BAUER ............... o candidates laking their first pJunae lDto biJ ume politics-Carole Ann Bradford of Newpon Beach and Mary Lou Brophy of Seal lbcb - aimed withcri'1a bluts at November Opponents after clinching Demo. cnde Party nominations Tue$day. And a proven vote getter. incum. bent Newport Beach Rtp_ublican Assemblywoman Marian ~o swept to an uncontested victory 10 t.bC new 37th State Senate Di&tnC1 that wends its way from Seal Beach to Laguna Beach and tben juts non.b- ward to encompass Blythe and Im· perial Valley. Bradford, who claimed that Re- publican incumbent Robert Bad.ham who she will face in the Novem~ Jeneral election. has alienated voters an the 40th Congrcsssional District, . said momentum is rol,ina in. her favor. • "I know we're going to win in November,'' sbc claimed. Bradford, a 47-year-old busi- nesswoman. said voters "deserve a congressman who spends the wbolc week m Congress rather than flying around the world at taxpayers' ex- pense." Badham. who had been elected 22 consecutive years either to Assembly or Congress from basically the same ~ she was "numb" this morning ·after an aJl-nigbt wait for finaJ returns, issued abouts a.m. "You can't very well go to bed with 300 people in your house," she said. The outcome, with Miller out- disuncing the veteran councilwoman by about 2, 700 votes, reflects an anti- Gaido sentiment by bustncss. Miller believes. According to final but unofficial returns from the county Registrar of Voters, Sills received 12, 732 votes, Ba.leer 12,092 and Miller 11,960. Gaido bad 9,241 ballots cast for her. The Sills-Bak.er-Miller slate won endorsements from the Board of Realtors, the Chamber of Commerce and the Newport Beach-based politi- cal action group the Execuuvc Coun- cil of Orange County. They arc to ta.Ice office on July 10. The race, which drew the smallest slate of contenders in the c1ty's I}- year history, was quiet and cordial. Despite an unending round of forums bcginmnJ in March, the lack of divisive issues among the candidates failed to rouse much pre-election interest among the city's 40,000 regi stered voters. About 49 percent voted. Miller. Baker and Sills each backed Propos1t1on A. a sales tax measure to pay fo r road improvements that was • defeated by voters. It had suppon from prominent business interests. In the city election. at least. the candidates app<:ared unharmed by voter d1ssattsfaction over the measure. Gaido, 41 , opposed Proposition. A and plans for a coastal foothills freeway near her home base m Turtle Rock.. A housing specialist for the county's human relations com- mission, she was first elected to office in 1976 after serving a year on the city's planning commjssion. She won ~lcction in 1980 by a district that includes Newport Beac~, c.osta Mesa Lquoa Beach; Founwn Valley aml pa.rtS of Huntinaton Beach, was attend1na O.Oay ccr. cmonic today 10 France with Pres1· dent Rcqao and was not available for commcnL Brophy, who like Bradford utilized aroups of peace activists to rqistcr a strona showina on the Democratic side of lhc ledaer, accused incumbent Republican Rep. Dan LUDIJ'en of bema a clone of President Reapn and of votina qainst womeQ. en· vironmcntalsu, education and peace people. "He's never met a nuclear weapon bedidn•t like," tbe46-year"'()ld family therapist said. LUn.Jl'CD said in Wasbinaton today he enJoycd "a commonality" with President ~capo. In final. unofficial results from Orange and Los An&lcs county precincts. Brophy aot 41 ,199 votes and Lunaren got 67,549. Bradford received 30,061 votes to swamp Democratic opponent. retired library administrator Ken White, who aot 12,352 votes. Republican voters aave Badham, who ran unop- posed. aot 73, 75 l votes. Bergeson received 53,858 votes while her Democratic opponent Alice K.c~raot 24,937 votes. • ~U I n;:eded was one vote and l bare 64 vote margin over Baker. . The first to declare her candidacy in January, Gaido tried without success to convince other candidates to aarec to a $25,000 spending limit. She exceeded the proposed cap herself. Sills, 45, wbo has been ~ppoint.ed three times by his peen to SC1'Vc as the city's mayor, was the top vote-getter in Tuesday's election with 25 percent of the vote. He did the same in two successive city elections. He ran unsuccessfully for the Assembly in 1982. No other elected official 10 Irvine's 13-ycar history has served three, four- ycar terms. A resident even before the city incorporated, Sills' campaign emphasized h1s role in shaping the master-planned community. He is an attorney with an office in Newport Beach . Miller, 45, a real estate agent and a l 0-year member of a city com- mission, called herself the city's "automatic transmission." A veteran of numerous civic campaigns, Mi.lier is an ardent supporter of a plan to build a municipal auditonum at UC Irvine.· Baker, 31 , an attome[· came to Irvine as a UCI basketbal recruit. As president of a community group that led adriveto bring a hospital to Irvine and spark:plug behind the city Harvest Festival and youth club, Baker had a ready-made campaign force. He also broke all previous can- didate contribution records. having received more than $50,000, accord- ing to reports filed Friday. Property manager Joseph Condon, 40, called for better balance between voted asbscntee," ~n said. ln tbe 38tb C.o • onal District race, Rohen Dornan m:ieived 17,809 vottt to easily outdistanCe Re- publican politicos An Jacobson who got 6,831 votes and John Schmitz who received only 3,069 votes. Democratic incumbent Jerry Pat· tcrson rc<:eived 31 648 votes and challenaer Ruth Stephen.son aot 7,336. -County Sufcrvisor Bruce Nestande aot 60, 72 votes and won a new four-year term al the eitpense of 'ames Mansfield who aot 26, 728 votes. And Fountain VaUcy's Roacr Stanton, runnina opposed for his second term on the board. aot 53,052 votes. In the 69tb Assembly race, aocum- bcnt Republican Nolan Fnzzellc got 33,01 7 votes. Democrat Howard Gensler also ran unopposed and got 20, l l 8 votes. · In other county races. Stan Caress received 11 ,646 votes to beat Marion Hundley with 8,191 votes to win the Democratic nomination m the 31st State Senate DistricL Republican William Campbell ran unoppo~ and received 39,310 votes. In the 35th State Senate District, Republican incumbent John Seymour got 66,27S votes. Democrat Jan Dudman got 37. 726. Both were unopposed. ? Kary Ann Galdo ""idential and commercial develop- ment during his ftrst try for office. A former Chamber of Commerce direc- tor who has also been active in youth sports, Condon was backed by a group of CoU* Parle homeowners who oppose the bullet train. Barry Kidd, 42, sales manager for Jardine Commercial Insurance Bro- kerage m Santa Ana, made no campaign appearances and did not even pay a fee to have his statement of qualifications included on lhe ballot . Ironically, despite Condon's low- budget campaign efforts and partici- pation in organized forums, he out- drew l(jdd by only I 00 votes. PROPOSITION A SHOT DOWN ••• From Al ma.rain of defeat. ••The message was pretty clear. They (voters) arc not goma to tax themselves and there was nothing we could have done to change that more t.han a few percent.age pomts," Hollinden said. Roacrs. calling Proposition A's defeat "an cittremely gratifying win," added he had little doubt the measure would be defeated. "Logic told me the average voter wouJdn 't vote a tax mcrcasc when someone's s~nding $2 million to ram it down (their) throat." he said. He called the coalition of auto dealers. anti-tax crusaders and en- vironmentalists who banded together to oppose the tax and transportation- improvement packaae a ••rag-tag bunch." But he said tax proponents should not have been surprised at the outcome. Commenting on the record S 1.8 million pro-tax campaign, which translated to about S 13 for every vote "cast, Roaers said ... if they had given Just Call 642-6086 everybody 10 bucks each, they would have done no better." The anti-tax campaign, beset by fund-raising difficulucs. spent about 28 cents for every vote cast. But Hollinden said the amount of money spent by the pro-tax campaign wasn't the issue on which the election turned. "People arc just not willing to fork over additional tax money," he said. "Obviously another SI million wouldn't have made an iota of difference and another SI million less wouldn't have made a difference." Supervisor Thomas Riley, chair- man of the OranJe County Transpor· talion Commission which developed the plan and placed Proposition A on the ballot. expressed disappointment with the measure's loss. "I'm trying to resolve where things went wrona." he commented. Riley added that as far as he is concerned the crushing defeat for the measure means county supervisors and transportation commissioners probably will not try a second time to get it passed. · "It certainly would take a lot of persuasion to get me going (on this) again,'' he said. Hollinden agreed, sayina it would be "foolhardy" to resubmit the measure to voters for "a long time." Supervisor Ralph Oark. chairman of the Orange County Transit Dis. trict. said the me~ voters dc- li vered was unmista.lc.eable. "The message was loud and clear to make do with the funds available,'' he said. Irvine Co. President Tom Nielsen. whose firm supplied the pro-tax effort with the largest campaian contribu- tion m county history, said the campaian was unable to convince voters that the tax was n~ssary to solve transportation and congestion problems. .. I don't know how you. take this complicated issue to the voters,'' Nielsen said Tuesday. "We had all the money we needed." What do you like aboat the DaUy Pilot? Wbat don't you like? Call tbe I number at left and your musage will be recorded, traascrtbed ud delivered to &be appropriate editor. Tiie same U-'o•r aa1wen.a1 service may be ased to record letters to CJae editor 01 any topic. Coatributor• to oar Letters cola.DUl ntHt lDClude tllelr name aod te!eptaooe 1umber for verification. No clrcat.tloe calla, please. Tell es wlaa.t't 011 )CHl.r mind. • ORANGE COAST Dilly Pilill H. L khwertl IU Publisher Clrculetton 714/142~ CleHtfled llCHertlMng 714/M2-1111 AM other depeftmene. Ma~ MMNOf,tcE 3lO Well .. ,.. Coec• ..... CA Mell 80llr-. lo\ 1580 C01te M9ll CA IMM Cclc¥ogrit 11193 Or""llf C:0... ~ Comf*'ly NO ,_ Mona a..11at011t ldilortll me11• at llOwtlt_. ,,.. ""tll'I l'Mt .. ~OIMllcl Wllticlul 9'NIOll Pf'• ,,,.._ ol ~ .. - C"-1 DowllbJ Roeemar1 CfHrchman Editor and Alsiltant Controflef to the Publi&Mf • , •• n,.c .... ,., Qducf !Gn Meneoet f I • . Leaky elouds to stick around = ~J " n u~ : ~ u .. II M ~ ~ IO .. ., ., n n .. .. =-'"'-'"="~ :! -·~•=:c-.. --· """ ,..,,... ...... ~ ...... '*"-Y .... .. .. .. . 11 .. fJ .. .. . re 12 : ~: Tldea TODAY 8-10 lligll I f 2 p m 9-ICI IOw 11 OOp m '"""9QAY 4·2Sa..m. 10 5ta.m. • 52 """ 10 10pm . Svn w4.t IOday IM toa pm.n.. Th\ltlctey•l:41a.m endeetaeo-ine1 l.02pm M0011 nNe 81 12 10 a.rn . Mta ~-1 a•a.m ene1,....11g1111t1• 157 p"' Emended • " .. °'91t, ... 70 u HM'tlotd ... H*la • .. HclnolUlu , , .,. ttou.ton 1182 ~ II M JeckMn,MI IO 57 Jecillto(Wlle .. •• ..lunMU 11 eo ~Cit~ 11 .. LllVeoM *> II Uttte~ : ~~ t:.=-n II lubbodl .. t7 12 41 .. at .. '7 Sf M 92 71 " 70 M SI .. 16 14 17 88 II f7 70 .. 17 11 53 .. .. 72 .. 70 ti 51 45 If 70 SU RF REPORT .,. 13 t2 ta : = t2 n f2 11 a ... 11 7Z 11 M ., ... ., Ill .. 70 '7 .. .. .. 16 70 " .. .. " N .. SHAW UPSETS JUDGE STEWART ••• From Al torn~y James G. Enright and West Court Judge Ragnar R. Engebretsen, com petiJl& for Office 11. Runoff elections for the two Su- perior Court offices will be held in November since none of the can- didates surpassed the SO percent mars.in needed for victory. The most hotly disputed race was for Harbor Municipal Court judj.t, with Shaw and Stewart spending between $35,000 and $50,000 on newspaper· advertising and district- wide mailings. Reached this morning at her offi~ deputy district attorney Shaw, of Capistrano Beach, credited the .. well- rcad, well-«lucated" citizens in lhe district with taking an active role in her election. The Harbor Court coven cases in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine. ··rm really happy," she said. "My hcan couldn't take watching what was going on (in the courts) and so I decided to take my show on lbe road and r.ut my money where my mouth VilS.' The amount of money she and Stewart spent on the race fiJUred as a deciding factor in her election, Shaw acknowledged. '"The fact that J had money to help educate people was veat." she said. ••The people want somebody who's going to be responsible, honest and bard-working. And they got it." During the campaign, Shaw charged that Stewart had perjured himself when he signed payroll state- ments judges sign to get paid. The sworn payroll statements affirm that thejudae 1s not any more than 90days behind on a court decision. Stewart was one of a number of Harbor Court judaes who routinely signed their statements as much as six months in advance. Durina the campaign be defended the action saymg that it was routine and a way for judges to get paid even when they arc sick or are on vacatio.n. Stewart spent six months decidin& one case and durin& that time he signed six statements c.laimina that his caseload was up to date. A state attorney aeneral's investip- tion found that Stewart bad not perjured himself by sianing the state· ments, but the attorney aencral did send the cha~s to the Commission on Judicial performance for review. Both Stewart. who admitted the practice was "sloppy," and the other Judges in thecol!rt no longersi.gn their pay statements an advance. Stewart said Shaw's charge were politically motivated and false. He filed a $2.5 million libel suit against her in Orange County Superior Court Friday. Stewart was in court and could not be reached for comment early today. In the West Municipal C.ourt, whkh covers Huntington Beach, Seal Beach and Westminster. West- minster lawyer McAncny, 38, challenged incumbent West Court Judge 8eecher. 45, charging that be was a sJow worker and was adding to the court's backlog. Beecher defended himself saying that be works bard, sometimes stay- ina at the court until late at night, and that McAneny was just trying to get himself a job as judge. The race or Orange County Su· perior C.oun Office No. 20 drew a crowded field off our municipal court jud&cs and two attorneys. • Compctina for the bench we 'udges Smith, Chrisopber W. Strop Moore and Dan C. Dutcb an ttomcys Gallivan and JonatbJ H. Cannon, Mayor of Garden Gro' Cannon drew the most rue in t campaian with bis opponents acci ing him of tryina to buy the race. f spent at least $70,000 on the car paian. more than any of the oth candidates, but finished third wi 77,293 votes or 20.8 percent of ti vote. Smith. receiving 85,847 votes · 23.1 perccnt-and GaJlivan, wbo1 21. 8 perccn t, or 81, 214 votes, will fa each other in November's rune election. The race for the final Super\; Court seat. Office No. J 1. also w holly contested. · Competing for the bench we West Court Judge Engebretsen, Di trict Attorney Enright. and Los A acles deputy prosecutor Jose, Barill a of Huntington Beach. The race concentrated on Entiat who lined up the endorsement many of the county's elected official and Engebretsen. who had the su port of much of the legal communit Banlla did not campaian active · for the office. but his presence in tJ campaign undoubtedly made a dt fcrence. Enriaht, who came close going over tlie .SO ~t mq needed for victory with 47.2 perecll or t 78.073 votes, said Barilta•a ~?J~ votes probably cost him the juage seat ~ _ j lie and Engeoretan. whe>-f?l 37 percent, or 139,814 votes, will con pcte in a runoff election lD Noven ber. or make an her wishes con1etnle. • MEMBER AMERICAN G£M soetm 1809 NEWPORT Bl.VO . COSTA MESA SINCE t9'& PHONE~· 01 Ring. ' • f r r r r r r re e, er Ill e. 1e s- le !l• er tb ae )t :e if >r IS t, >f s. >-r. ly te f- " n l, s 's -I- I· I· Peffereon........ 31,&.48 Stepheneon....... 7 ,368 .. . . .. 205 ttelegatea ale. 72 delegates son .• 29 delegates 42nd Dletrlct(RJ Lunoren ........... 29,ea. abllcan ·········· 23~.•04 42nd Dlatrlct (DJ 70th Dletrlct (RJ Brophy ............. 19,478 FergUMn: ........ 22,008 . Carpenter........ 18,394 Cordova ..... , ....... 9,-0<46 Plummer ............ 3,825 Deane-:................ 2,006 Dornan ............ 11;809 JacObton ........... 8,831 Green .................... 896 Schmitz .............. 3,069 Doty ...................... 706 Firefighters quell two blazes at Mlle Square Park./A3 A dying father relies on his faith to keep him alive long enough to see his son compete In the Olym- plcs./85 Sixties TV actress Donna Reed will be the new Miss Ellleon 'Dallas' pr6gram. /M Saudis attack two Iranian warplanes with U.S.- made weaponry./ AS Ferguson claims Assembly : victory NB businessman survives battle for GOP nomination By JERRY HIRSCH Of ... DlillJ......... - The topsy-turvy race for the 70th Assembly District RepubHcan nomi- nation ended about 3 a.m. today when a tired Newport Beach bus1- ncssroan Gil Ferguson took a deep ' breath and said be was the winner. Ferguson had led the race since 9 p.m. Tuesday when the absentee results were counted. But he waited for a substantial vote taJly before declaring himself the winner. . 70tb Dlatrlct (DJ , ................... 9.861 Thorpe ............... 8,853 Hurrt, ................... 3,59419 69th OOtrtct (RJ Frtzntle .......... 33,017 69th Dletrlct (D) Genaler ........... : 20,118 72nd ot.trlct (~J LongahOre ....... 12,478 72nd Dletrlct (D) ftoblneon ........ ,':t 17 ,258 S7th Dlatrlct ~RJ •roHon ... , ..... 53,858 S7th Dtatrlct (D) K.,.., .............. 24,937 Sl•t Dletrict (R) Cantpbell........ 39,310 -~· -··--..---. .. -Slat Dlatrict (DJ c .......... : ........ 11,6-47 Hundley ............. 8, 191 .................... 12,732 .................. 12,092 .................. 11,'980 GaldO .•••••••••...•••. 1.241 ~···········-· 2.725 KkSd-············:·· .. 2,874 Enright.. ......... 178,073 E11Qbretsen .... 139,81• Barllla .............. 59,o;cs . .. f IRST 1111111 Milttt ........... .••. II.NJ G ................. 11.214 ~ ............ 77.;ID Strople ............. 11,111 Moore.............. ..,.211 Dutcher ............ 32.0. •11aher : .......... 76,263 ~--~ 28,,.tU ...... -"_.. llarbOr Cout ~-············-30~ Stewart ............ 22.204 ORANGECOUNTV CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Rejection hailed as 'victory for ~he average guy· BJ JEFF ADLER Of .. ...., ....... .Pfot>os.ition A -the penny tram- portallon sales tu 1naeue - crashed head-on Tuesday with Or- ange County voters who resoundiq- ly defeated the much-ballyhooed tax bike b)' a 2'h-to-l lll&J'lin. Voungoverwllelmins!Y apinst the tax, more than 70 pen:ent of A'i_mary voters rejected the measure Ythilc only 29. 7 percent favored the pcnny- on-the.OOllar taxinat.ase and an u- sociatcd pack.age of county road and transit improvements. The ballot ~ition won only 136. 761 "yes votes compared to 324,222 votes qainst the tax. accord- ina tQ final bu1 unofficial vote tabutauons. · (Pleue eee PROP08JTION/ A.2\ Building your own hot tub Is well worth the effort say some relaxing wood- workers./81 Food With all the ballots counted, Ferguson collected 22,006 votes for 38. 7 percent. His closest challenger was Ken Carpenter who garnered 18,394 votes for 32.3 percent. New- port Beach attorney Ron Cordova was a distant third, collecting 9,046 votes for 16 percent. Newport Beach City Coun- cilwoman Ruthelyn Plummer placed fourth with 3.825 votes for 6.8 (Pleue aee FERGUSON/ A3) He'• Number One In atate Colorado Sen. Guy llartTaUee O....er u be areeu ntl:°rten ln C&llfoi'n.la heeday mpt at Be.u}7 Wilaldre Hotel ln Loe Aneele.. Bart beartlly beat Walter Mon- dale ln Callfornta. bat the former Tice preeldent wu ezpectecl to annoance Ile bu enoqb detecates to claim Denloctattc Party nomination today. See 8toJ'J on AS. Gaido out in Irvine Voting ' Salute Hawaii's 25th an- niversary of statehood with your own troplcal feast./C1 Former Estancia High basketball coach Larry Sunderman accepts post to coach Orange Coast women's team./D1 · Entertainment "The Music Man" Isa Uttering production, but 's all on the surface at he Curtain Call Dinner Theater./83 he Irvine Co. wins a ater conservation ard from the Irvine nch Water District. •• lW A3 A6-7 A4 04-6 lW 06 85 C1·10 82 81-2 05 82 A7 A4 Al 81 A3 BM 01"'3 A8 83 83 A2 A4 OCvoters stay away in droves Voter turnout in Tuesday's pri- mary election was far lower than expected -perhaps the lowest in Orange County history fora presideh- tial election year -with fewer than half of the county's registered voters casting ballots. Only 49.5 percent of the county's 968,485 rcgiste~ voters went to the polls, election offictals reported today. (Pleue eee VOTERS/ A3) Changes apparent four tlecades later on Normandy sand For each Visitor. .the perspective ------takes different form OMAHA BEACH. France (AP) - Sleet. cows arue the wild munard around rustina German l SSmm can- nons on this lush arttn scction of Normandy coastline. But the sliabtcst spark of imqination brinp the weapons back to bl&Zina life• &hey were 40 years aao in the Allied invasion of Europe. T)le coast, lush and pten now. appears to be anyttuna ~t a historic battlqround. Yet ind.cs below tht surface lie foraotttti conctttc bunkers, uMxplodcd mines and vivld memon . Thousand• of visnon are doaina the windina lanes to attmd cer· emoni tht week mark1na the 40\h annivenaryof0.0ly-June6, l944 -the da)'~ t~ Hies landed in Nazi· ocx:Uf'ied Frantt. · I .. RE TROSPECTIV[ For each the pcnpccuve Is dif- fe~nt. At the American Cemetery, week- end crowds uudcd a carnival at- mOsphcre, with picnic baskets, portable steiws. and T-shirts ptjntod with canoon But an ~)'?f'-okl Frenchwoman from the nciar\~rbOOd sat alone on a low wall. leanina forwant on 1'Cf crutches toward the 9,386 white croues laid out in neat rows. "Forty)Uf'l1190'rlhe~ to an American who 11~ to talk to ht'r. "It WU yataday. At Anomanchel, British srud· fa°"" CAplaint'd wnh undnpittd pride ho ena&Dem sank C:' chunk of concrete totaliaa a • milhon ton to build a haibOt to land munmons to destroy Adolf Hitler. Nft~. Enj1sh tchOoflirb an (Pl1111 ~ .. DAY /AlO) Shaw ousts Stewart in Barbor judge race BJ UREN E. u.EIN °' ................. Aftera bitter, costly f\lht in thc-t'act for Harbor Municipal Court judge. challenger Susanne Shaw. 37, turned incumbent Judge Stephen Stewan. SO, out of office. Shaw captured 57.8 peroent, with 30,38S votes, in Tuesday's election. Stewart pmered 42.2 peroent of the vote with 22,204 votes, accordlna to final but unofficial rcsult.s supplied by the county Registrar of Voters. Incumbent Judae J. Michael Beecher. 45. fared better in the I judicial race 1n West Orange County Municipal Court. sending bas clfallengrr, Wcstnunster lawyer Red- mond P. McAneny. 38. a rcsoundlJll defeat by gathering 75.253 votes-7• perccrtt of the voters -to McAncny's 26,432 votes or 26 percent. In tbe~d1cial races for Supenor Court Ju . Municipal Court Jud&e John H. m1th, Jr. and Ncwpon Beach attorney Robert H. Gallivan captured the htghcstperttntage of voters for Office 20. as did Ora~ County Chief Dcput) Dtstnct At- (Pleue Me SHAW /A.2} By ANDREA ADELSON °' ................ Irvine voters ousted two-term in· cumbent Mary Ann Gaido from the City Council Tuesday, returned DaV\d Sills for an unprecedeotc4 third term and elected attorney David Baker and fonner aty oommusioner Sally Anne Miller. The race pitted two mcumbenu apinst two political amknowns and two Cl\ 1c actJvists. A thud lllCWn· bent, Bill Vardoulis,.chose not to sect re-elccuon to the oouncil that aovenu the Cltr of 76.000. "This toolc me by surprise,'' Gaido said. A post-campaign party turned subdued when absentee ballots show- ed her losin'" "l never <ltd puU ahead ... she said. "It must be an md1ca11on that 1t•1 tame to do something else." said Ga1do. who 1rorucally appointed her (Pleue eee IRVDU/ A2l ' .. A.2 Oraf\99 Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 6, 191U Bradford and Brophy win Democratic nominations By ROii 'I' BARii R Of .. 0.-. .... tlillll' T'wo candidates ta.tins their flni plugee intobia time politics-Carole Ann Bradfonf of Newport Boa<h and Mtf')' Lou Brophy of Seal lll:ach - aimed withering blasu 11 November opponents aftet clinching Demo-- cratic Party nominations Tuesday. And k proyen vot.t..gctier~ i.ocum- benT 'Ne;;pqj17Beich Republican .. Assemblywoman Marian 8cracson, swept to an uncontested victory in the new l?th State Senate District that wends iu way from Seal Beach to Laauna Beach and then juts nonh- ward to cncompass....Blythe and Im- perial Valley. Bradford, who claimed that Rr-- publica.n incumbent Robert Badham. who she will face in the November g.encri! election. has alienated votC"rs 1n the 40th CongresssionaJ District. said momentum is rolling in her favor. ··1 know we're-~oing lo win 1n November." she claimed. Bnadford, a 47-ycar-old bust· nesswoman, said voters "deserve a conaressman who s~nds the whole week in Congress ra1hcr than flying around the world a1 taxpayers· ex· pcnse... · Badham. who had bet'n elected 22 consecutive years either to Assembly or Congress from basically the same dasuict that includes Newport Beach, Costa Mesa.. Laguna Beach. Fountain Valley and pans of Hu.ntiaaton Beach. was llttcndina D-Day cer- emonies today in France with Pres).. dent Reagan and was not available for commenL Brophy, who like. Bf8.dford u~ili.zed sroups of peace acu""sts to rcpster a strona showing on the Democratjc s:ldt Oftbe Jcd&el', accused incumbent Republican llep. Din Lungren of beinaa cloneofP,rcsident Reagan and · of voting against women. en· vironmentalsts. education ind peace people. "He's never met a nuclear wcapolf hedjdn't like," lhe 46-ycar-old famtly- therapist said. Lunpen said in Washington toda)' he CllJOYed "a commonality'' with President Reagan. In final, unofficial results from Orange and Los Ang,lcs couuty precincts, Brophy got 41 , 199 votct and Lungren a<>t 67,549. Bradford rec.cived 30.061 votes to swamp Democratic opponent, retired library administrator Ken White, who got 12,352 votes. Republican voters gave Badham, who ran unop. posed, gol 73, 751 votes. Bergeson received .53,858 votes while her Democratic opponent AJice Keyser got 24,937 votes. ··All I needed was one vote and l • voted asbsentce, ·• Beraeson said. In the 18th C.Ongn:ssional Dialrict rtee, Rohen Doman received 17,809 votes 10 easily ouldistance Re- publican l»Qliticos An Jacobian who 1ot 6,831 votes and John Schmitz. who received only 3,069 votes. Democratic incUmbent Jerry Pat- terson received 31,648 votes and .cballc:n&cr Ruth Stephenson ,OL 7,336. County Supervisor Bruce Nestande got 60,572 votes and won a new four-year tenn at the eJtpensc of James Mansfield who got 26,728 votes. A,.i Fountain Valley's Roger Stanton, ninning opposed for his second term on the board, got S3,0S2 votes. In the 69th Assembly rac:e, incum- bent Republican Nolan Friuclle got 33,017 votes. Democrat lft>ward Gensler also ran unopPosed and got 20, I 18 votes. . · In other county races, Stan Caress received 11,646 votes to beat Marion HundJey with 8.191 votes to win the Democratic nomination· in the 31st State Senate District. Republican William Campbell ran unopposed and received 3l>,310 votes. In the 3Sth State Se nate District, Republican incumbent John Seymour got 66.275 votes. Democrat Jan Dudman got 37,726. Both were unopposed. , • Leaky clouds to stick around Coutal Tides ,,_..,. -- ""'""" ------ ....... $:12p.m 11:00p.m, -·· 4•23• .... .c>;N&m. l ;NP."'- 10:10 P.111. 1111'1 -1oo.y • I-Ga p.m., r.-1'lolnday'M 1*1 1.m, Md ......... II •:oap.m. .. MDor1 l'IMI If 11:50 1.m .. Mt• T~lf1:24•.m.#ld_'9M1 .. 1:17p.111. .. " " .. u • .. .. .• .. ''1 .. .. .. .. • " .. .. " " .. .. .. .. .. " .. " .. " .. .. " .. --» Hwtfotd . -.. _ '' 'HcluMOl'I 12 ....,..,'II. ... ~ .... 17 Jelt.,,,... .. -...,_.,. ~·­Utll• "°'* t:.:r ~ t:::"'-_ .. _.. ... ---"""Veft ' _,. _.., .,_ ---Ptil1t1'J'M -::::::t-,.,._,,.. ,. .......... :::r"' ----~ .. ._ "~' ..... ...... .,., ... ---IN 41 ....... .-. 81 10 a..JuM.P.A. M 3' ltlM ...... • rs IMt* : ~ ::.1.: 11. ~-::~==--· .. 71 ,.~ Ill 81 , ..... 11 13 w~ 74 IM Wlol'lll• 81 tr ~..,.. II It ~on.De. SuRF REPORT . - .. " ... " r. " .... . .. " ,. ... ... .. " " .47 .. . .. " .. " .... n " .... ... .... " .. " .. .... " .. . ,. " " " .. " .. " .. .. " " " 12 11 .... " " 11 .. .. .. .... .. ,. " .. .... .. " .. .. .... .. .. ----------- .. fUCCCSsor, Miller, to the cny's Com~ munity Services Commission in ~1978. interest among the city's 40,000 registered voters. About 49 percent voted. attorney with an o ffice in Beach. New~ -li1J!li------~----------- Baker. avenging a 1980 loss agalnst paido by winning 23 percent of the ;vote against her 18 percent. said a clear trend was apparent by 12:30 fa.m. with only about one third of the Notes counted. I "I'm excited, .. he said. '"What's ::important is not just winning. but winning with others ... two people ~who 1 can work with in the future." Miller, who took 23 percent as well, said she was "numb" this morning after an all·ni&ht wait for final retums, issued about 5 a.m. "Youciln't very well go to bed with 300 people in your house:· she said. · The outcome, with Miller out· distancing the veteran councilwoman .by about 2, 700 votes. reflcc1s an anti· Glido sentiment by business. Miller believes. >:ccording 10 final but unoffi cial ;returns fi'Om the county Registrar of ; Voters, Sills rcct"i ved 11 , 7 32 votes. 'Baker 12,092 and Miller 11 .960. ;Ga1do had 9.241 ballots cast for her. • The Sills--Baker·Miller slate won ,endorsements from the Board of iR.caltors. the Chamber of Commerce )nd the Newport Beach-based politi· 'Cal action group the Execu1ive Coun-~cil of Orange County. 1 They art' 10 take office on July I 0. ! The race, which drew the smallest ~late of contenden in the city's I J. .vcar history. was quiet and cordial. bcspitc an unending round of forums ~nninlJ 1n March, the lack of 'divisive issues among the candidates .failed to rouse much pre~lectio_n ' Miller. Baker and Sills each backed Proposition A, a sales tax measure to pay for road improvements that was defeated br voters. It had support from prom1.ncnt business interests. In the city election, at least, the candidates appc:art:d unharmed by voter dissatisfaction over the measure. Gaido, 41 , opposed Proposition. A and l?lans ror a coastal foothills freeway near her home base in Turtle Rock. A housing specialist for the county's human relations com· miSsion. she was first elected to office in 1976 after serving a year on the city's planning commission. She won re-election in 1980 by a bare 64 vote margin over Baker. The first to declare her candidacy in January. Gaido tried without success to convince other candid.ales to agree to a $25.000 spending limit. She exceeded 1hc proposed cap herself. Sills, 45. who has been appointed three times by his peers to serve as the city's mayor. was the top volc·gcttcr in Tuesday's electio n with 25 percent of.the vo1e. He did the same in 1wo successive city elections. He ran unsuccessfull}r for the Assembly in 1982. No other elected official in Irvine's 13--ycar history has served three, four· year tcnns. A resident even bcrore the city incorporated, Sills" eampaign emphasized his role in shaping the master·planned community. He is an Miller. 45, a real estate agent and a I 0-ycar member of a city com- mission, called herself the city's "automatic transmission." A veteran of numerous civic campaigns, Miller is an ardent supporter of a plan to build a municipal auditorium at UC Irvine. - Baker. 31 , an attorney, came to Irvine as a UC! basketball recruit. As r.resident of a community group lhat ed a drive to bringa hospital to Irvine and sparkplug behind the city Harvest Festival and yo uth dub, Baker had a ready-made campaign force. He also broke all previous can- didate contribution records, having received more than $50,000. accord· 1ng to reports filed Friday. Property manager Joseph Condon, 40, called for better "balance between residential and commercial develop. mcnt during his first try for office. A former Chamber of Commerce di rec· 1or who has also ~n active in youth spon~ Condon was backed by a group of College Park homcownt;rs who oppose the bullet train. Barry Kidd, 42, sales manager 'for Jardine Commercial Insurance Bro- kerage in Santa Ana, made no campaign appearances and did not even pay a fee to have his statement of qualifications included on the ballot. lronicaUy, despite Condon's low- budget campaign cffons and panici- pation in organized-forums, he out· drew Kidd by only 100 votes. ~PROPOSITION A SHOT DOWN .•. · l'romAl ' ) The measure would have raised an ~estimated $5.4 billion over the 15· f::; Life of the tax for freeway. way and transit improvements. We whipped their butt. .. declared a jubilant Tom Rogers. who headed the anti·taX C1t1zcns Against Unfair Taxation ... The people won big over the corporate giants who have had the county in their hand for the last 15 years. What a victory for the a ve.rage .. gay ... ihc executi ve director of the pro- tax Citizens fi~Bettcr Transpor- tation. Al Hol den. termed the ou1comea "disaste ." 1hc dimensions of which personally surprised him. -He expressed shock, not over th e defeat of the measure, but over the margin of defeat. , "'The message was pretty clear. They (voters) are not going to la x themselves and there was no1h1n& we could have done to change that more than a few percentage points." Holhndcn said. Rogers, calling Proposition A's dcfeal .. an extremely grat1fy1ng win," added he had linle doubt the measure would be defeated. "logic told me the average voter wouldn't vote a tax increase when 'someone's spending $2 million to { .. Just Call 642-6086 - D•ll)' Piiot • Def Ivery 1 lt,Gu•r•nteed ( ~nc»r " )'OU °' --!"""~., ... P"' --•1P.ll'I L .. ,_ CQf1¥ _. .. -~...,~ .. ram it down (their) throat." he said. He called the coalition. -0f auto dealers, anti-tax crusaders and en· vironmentalists who banded together to oppose the tax and transportation· improvement package a "rag.tag bunch.'' But he said tax proponents should not have been surprised at the outcome. Commenting on the record S 1.8 million pro-tax campaign, which 1ranslated to about SI J for every vote cast. Rogers said. "ir they had given everybody 10 buck.s each, they would have done no better.'' The anti·tax cam~ign. beset by fund-ra1s1ng diff1cult1es, spent about 28 cents for every vote cast. But Hollinden said the amounl of money spenl by the pro-tax campaign wasn 't the issue on which the election turned. "People arc just not willing to fork over additional tax money," he said. ··obviously another $I million wouldn't have made an iota of difference and another$ I million less wouldn't have made a difference." Supervisor Thomas Riley. chair· man or the Orange County Transpor· talion Commission which developed the plan and placed Proposition A on the ballot, expressed disappointment with the measure's loss. .. I'm tryin§ to resolve where things Weht wrona. he commented. Riley added that as rar as he is concerned the crushiDJ defeat for lhe measure means county supervisors and transportation commissioners probably will not try a second time to get it passed. "It certainly would take a lot of persuasion to get me goina (on this) again ... he said. Hollinden agreed. saying it would be "roolhardy" to resubmit the measure to voters for "a long time." Supervisor Ralph Oark., chairman of the Orange County Transit Dis-- trict, said the message voters de- livered was urimistakeable. "The message was loud and clear to mak.e do with the funds available, .. he said. Irvine Co. President Tom Nielsen. whose firm supplied the pro-tax cffon with the largest campa11n contribu- tion in county history, said the campaign was unable to convince voters that the ta.x was necessary to solve 1ransportation and congestion problems. "1 don't know how you take this complicated issue to the voters." Nielsen said T uesday. "We had all the money we needed ... Whal do you llke about the Dally Pilot'! Whal don't you !Ille'! Call the I number al left aod yo11r me1sa1e will be rttorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. Tt.e ••me !4-tio•r 1111weriag service may be •ted to recenl lelltrs to tllle editor on aay topic. Coatrlb11tor1 to o•r Letter• col•mo m111t loclltdt their ume and teleplllone number for verification. No clrc•latloa call1, ple11t . Tell u1 what's on yoar mind. ORANGE COAST D1ilyPilat H. L Sch•-111 Publisher Clrcua.Uon 714/MZ-USS Cleo.-_...,,. 7t""'2-#71 AH •"* dopofi....,lo -1 MAIN OFFICE 130 W.. a., If . Cml• W.., CA ..... ..._ h 1MO.OO.. ...... CA ~ ~ 1183 °' ... e-PwOIWllf'I ~ Ml) -.............. 9IMOIW --• ....,_ ,,.._,. .... '"*f ... ~ wllNllll ~ JM'• ..._,.., Of OOP'l'llgtlt -· $ ,ow • 11111 -yfNl ~ ..,,..,.1 •. 111 Gml ~ "' IO~ *' _... l"U COll'J ---·-~ l ,, •• ,MnN CllU)' Dow_, Editor and "'11'8taAt to the PvbHstwr -....., CIMlrchman Conlroffer -, .,._~ n ----- ' .,.,..,. , . c.ir.r· ,,,_ --YOLll,JIO. 111 SHAWUPSET$ JUDGE STEW AR-T ·•· From A~ torncy James G. Enright and West Court Judge. Ragnar R. Engebretsen, competing for Office 11 . Competing for the bench were judges Smith, Chrisopher W. Strople., Lo&an Moore and Dan C. Dutcher and attorneys Gallivan and Jonathan H. Cannon, Mayor of Garden Grove. Runoff elections ror the two Su· perior Coun offices will be held in November since none of the can- didates surpassed the 50 percent margin needed for victory. .. The most holly disputed race was for Harbor MunicipaJ Court jud~, with Shaw and Stewart spending between $35,000 and $50.<XXl on newspaper advertising and district- wide mailings. Harbor Court judges who routinely signed their statements as much as six months in advance. Durio.a the campaign he defended the action saying that it was routine and a way for judges t9 get paid even when they are sick or arc on vacation. Stewart spent six months decid..ina one case and durin& that time he sipled six statements claiming that his caseload was up to date. A state attorney general's investiga- tion found that Stewart had not perjured himself by signing the state- ments, but the attorney general did send the charges to the Commission on Judicial performance for review. Cannon drew lhe most fire in the· campaign with bis opponents accus- ing him of trying lO buy the nee. He spent at least $70,000 on the cam- paign, more than any of the other candidates, but fi nishc& third wit.b 77,293 votes or 20.8 percent of the vote. Reached this morning at her Office. deputy district attorney Sbaw, of Capistrano Beach. credited the "well- rcad, well~ucated" citizens in the district with taking an active role in her election. The Harbor Coun covers CUC$ in Newport Beach. Costa Mesa aod Irvine. "I'm really happy." sbe said. "My heart co~klsl't take watchinJ wtiat wi&S going Ob (in·th""e cOuns)'lrid s0 I decided to take my show on the road and put my money where my mouth was." The amount of mo~y she and Stewart spent on the race fiJured as a deciding factor in her clecuon, Shaw acknowledged. "The fact that I had money to help educate people was great," she said. "The people want som'tbody who's going to be responsible, honest and hard-working. And they •ot it. .. During the campa1an. Shaw charged that Stewart had perjured himself when tic signed payroll state· ments judges sigo to get paid. The sworn payroll statements affirm thar thejudgc1s not any more than 90days behind on a court decision. Ste)V3rt was one of a number of . ' Both Stewart, who admitted the practice was "sloppy," and the other Judges in the court no longer sign their pay statements in advance. Stewart said Shaw's charge were (X>litically motivated and false. He filed a $2.5 million libel suit against her in Orange.County SuperiorCoun Friday. Stewan was in court and could not be reached for comment early today. In the West Municipal Coun, which covers Huntington Beach, Seal Beach and Westminster, West- minster lawyer McAneny, 38, challenCc_ incumbent West Court Judge her, 45. charging that he was a slow work.er and was addin& to the court's backlog. Bcccher defended himself saying that he works hard, sometimes stay- ing at the court until late at night. and that McAneny was just tryina to get hitl).self a job as jud&C. ~TliC~orOra11ge-eoun.ty-Su­ pcrior Court Office No. 20 drew a crowded field of four municipal court judges and two attorney~ Smith. receiving 85,847 votes - 23.I percent-andGallivan. whop 21 .8 percent, or 81,214votcs, will race each other in November's runoff election. The race for the final Superior Coun scat. Office No. I I, also was hotly contested. • Competing ror the bench were West Court Judge ~ngebrctsen, Dis- trict Attorney Enriaht, and Los An- geles deputy prosecutor Joseph Barilla o(Huntinaton Beach. The race concentrated on Enri&ht, who lined up the endorsement of many of the county's elected officials., and Engebretsen, whobad the su~ port of much of the legal community. Barilla did not campaian actively for thC office. but his presence in the campaign undoubtedly made a dif· fercnce. Enriaht. who came close: to goin& over t1'c SO ~nt maf'&in needed for victory With 47.2 percent, or 178.0?lvotes, said Barilla's S9,04S voles probably cost him the jud&e's seal He and Engebreuen, who ~t 37.1 _percent, or 139,814 votes, will com- pete in a runoff election m Novem- ber. You can wish her a __ happy anniversary. .. J J.; . > Or make all her wishes come true. J. C.JJump~~u6 J.w11f.r6 • MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 1800 NEWPOAT BLVD .. COSTA MESA SINCE 1946 @ Bank~maricara -Maater...Ctoiarge F'HONE $48-3401 The Diamond '"'9-t7Ring. A band of diamonds that says you'd marry her all over again. ' • • c : Jl { I • • I