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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-03-06 - Orange Coast Pilotf • TOMORROW: ---~1 $ Supel-visor·s sue airport plan fo~s~ Surprise action ts intended to ward off legal challenge over$ l 50M expansion By JEFF ADLER OfllleO.-, ......... In a surprise move this morning. the Orange County Board of Super· visors moved to head off any court challenges to its $1 SO million John Wayne Airport expansion plan by Coaat A county woman's final alimony payment was bigger than she ex- P9Cte(j./ A3 HB students toldU the.y break the rules on drugs, be prepared to suffer the consequences./ A3 Callfomla LA councilman Art Sny<ier and former wife both lose. Daughter will go to foster home./ A5 filing a pre.emptive lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Los Anaeles. The lawsuit, which named the city of Newport Beach, Stop PoUuting O ur Newport, the Airport Working Group as well as all six airlines now serving the airport or those on its Dark ·times fotHB . .. lib racy Transformer hit by lightning; readers issued flashlights By ROBERT BARKER OftlleO.-, ..... , .... Nation ------- Senate budget commit- tee, In bipartisan voting, recommends freeze In President Reagan's de· tense budget/ A5 PatTons ~inJtoABeaciLCcn­,_tral--'o...U-"'o---.-.braiy ar~ having trouble fmd ... A former cholrbo¥ goes to the electric chair In Florida./ A4 -... - World- v 1ce President George Bush tours Sudan famine areas, vows U.S. help,/ A4 ing enlightenment. That's because a lightning boJt in Saturday's freak storm knocked out a transformer that provides power to the bustling library near the comer of Talbert Avenue and Golden West Street. The ttbnry; wtflcn nis about 298,000 books and sees 2,200 visitors a day, is one of busiest in Orange County. It's continuil'frto operate without lightsbutfrhas-not been easy. Library Director Walter Johnson's staff requisitioned 20 flashlights from the fire department so library users could navigate around the book stacks.,. waitinJ list, is intended to settle the lepl issues surrounding the lof\1- delayed airport expansion, accordina to Deputy County Counsel Dan Didier. The suit, in effect, asks the federal court to rule on the legality of the ~irport expansion plan, the relauei environmental impact report and the Santa Ana Heights land·use plaq, all certified oy supervisors Feb. 26. In addition to the lawsuit. county attorneys plan to ask a federal judae to iuue a temporary restrainina order blocking Newport Beach, SPON o r the Airport Working Group from fiUna any airport.related lawsuits in state court. Didier said a hearins on that request was scheduled late today in Los Anaclea. - "The purpose of this litiption is to provide a tneans by which all interested parties may have an op- portunity to pursue their lepl ebaUeneies if they wi&b. in a forum where the panies may all be present. and where a prompt -and com· prehcnsi'Ve -resolution of any ie_.J 1uues may be reached," Board Chair· man Thomas Riley said in t nnounc.. inf, the ac1fon, 'This litiption will seek a declar· ation of the court confirmina the leplity of our. decisions and actions. The county ·will not 1:JC seekina damaaes or monetary relief apinst anxone." . ·This has been a lona. d iffacult and controveraiaJ procna. The in· evitability of litipdon laves this u · the one remajnina step which must be taken to complete this prooeu in a manner' which best terVet the intcrett of the people of Orante County, .. R.i~said. The chairman uid supervisors voted unanimously-lo favoT offilina (Pleue ... auaPIU8&/A2) Strong ·lead in .Laura -search 'Clean-shaven· man may have been tied to desert abduction By STEVE MARBLE Of_o.ai,, ........ A man seen at the same desert lMWQUi\(f WDm _ycat=otd taUJ'i -mrBrattbury-vmis6ed almosrlivc months aao is beina sought today in the nonhem California city of Santa Rosa, invcstipton stated today. The man, tbougbt to be in his early 60s, is not considered a suspect in the apparent kidnappina but is wanted for questioning. Santa Rosa police reported. · l n vestigators· said the man inravel· ing in a van similar to one used by the suspected lcidnappcr and was seen at the Joshua Tree National Monument campground several days before Laura vanished. .. It's not a breakthrough but it's o ne of the strongest leads we've had yet," said Eileen Winters, the missing girl's aunt:. ----- Nicaraguan rebels deny charges they are killing lnnocenfs./ A4 "The restrooms." he said Tuesday, "arc really black holes ... .But other than clolina early at -,... (Plea_!e ... LIBRARY I A!> -••••ton Lee of H~ Beaeh --OubllCJlt to MUCh library .tacb. . San Bernardino County Sheriffs deputies., whd have coordinated the search for the Huntington Beach girl since her disappearance Ort. 18, People Local Scrabble players will try to be letter-perfect this weekend as they match wits In the first round of a national tour-_ nament./A7 Food Correct appliances help simplify werk In-the kltchen./C1 Skating champion Peggy Fleming shares her per- sonal ingredients for suc- cess./C2 - Sports JoAnne Carnerreturns to the LPGA tour after a three-week layoff at this week's Uniden Invita- tional In Costa Mesa./81 This season, UC' Irvine basketball coach Biii Mulligan likes the Idea of a PCAA Tournament./81 Entertainment , The musical comedy and the murder mystery are skillfully combined in "Somethlng'sAfoot" at the Newport Theater Arts Center.JAi Btialneu MSI Data Corp. In Costa ·Mesa, Is named In $100 million trade secrets law- ault./83 ~, INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Bualneaa Cluatfted Com tea Crosawor<f Death Notices ~pe Ann Landera os>rnron - Paparazzi Peopfe Play Review Pollce Log Public Notlcel Sport a Televtalon Theetera weather ... , A10 AS 83-4 86-8 A10 88 85 C1-10 87 A , A8 A7 A7-8 A9 A3 85-e 81 -2 A7 A8-9 A2 OC backs Reagan_ on revenue cuts By JEFF ADLER Of ... .,.., .......... Orange County parted with coun- ties aro und the natio n Tuesday when the Board of Supervisors voted to support the elimination of federal revenue sharing proposed in Presi- dent Reagan's 1985-86 federal budget. Supervisors voted to brealc with other counties as well as the National Association of Counties, which has · called for a continuation of revenue sharing. In urging the county back the president's call for an end to revenue sharing. Supervisor Bruce Ncstande said local governments must do their share to reduce the federal deficit, which hovers near the $222 billion mark and is projected to go as high as $235 billion by I 988. Supervisor Harriett Wieder, who backed Nestande's motion, pointed out that -the interest alone on the deficit approaches SI 50 billion per year. Tile board's action came as Acting County Administrative Officer Larry Holms advised supervisors that Re- agan's proposed $54 billion budget· reduction package would mean a "substantial reduction in revenue" to the county. The largest loss of revenue would be the SI 4 million the Supervisors back private airplane noise ordinance However. one aircraft association says law cries out for lltlgatton By JEFF ADLER Of • .,.., .......... The Orange County Board of Supervisors aave its tentative ap- proval Tuesday to a noise ordinance that for the first ti me would ,qulate private aircraft operatma out of John Wayne Airport. · Supervisors approved the first readina of the proposed ordinance that would establish noise constraints for private aircraft flying out of John W~ne Airport . The ordinance. which is to be scheduled for adoption Tuesday, would affect about I 2 of the 1,000 private or gdncral aviation planes based at the airport. according ,to airport officials. - Although no private aircraft opcr· ators attended the meeting to oppose adoption of the ordinance, super- visors did receive a telearam from the president of the National Business Aircraft Association that threatened legal action of the measure is a p- proved. .. The discrimtnatory treatment of non-commercial operators who arc now beinf pro hibited from operation at your airport on the basis of rules · which arc more strinJCnt than those applied to noisier air carrier .oper· ations cries out for litigation," as- (Pleue ... NOISE/ A2) county annually receives an revenue sharing. The program. started in 1972. was slated to provide about $4.6 billion in assistance to about 40.000 local j urisdictions around the country this year: Revenue sharipg 'funds can be spent virtually withOut ~estriction. Holms told the board that because 'th~ county .. prudently decid~d to use this money for non-recur~nt expen- ditures.. in the past. no county operations are threatened with eliminatio.n ifthe program 1s cut. For several years, the board . in contrast to other counties. has budgeted revenue sharing money for ID tbe line of flre capital "brick-and-mortar" projects. such as the proposed construction of a new county jail. If the program and the board's funding priorities were to continue about two-thirds of the S 14 million. about S9.3 million. would t)c used for capital projects while the $4 million balance would be allocated to road improvements and transponation projects. Holms said. Holms. acknowledging the Na- tional Association of Counties "substantial" efforts to save revenue sharing. recomme nded the board authonze its capital lobbyist to work in favor of the program's retention. 9ome 2,000 applicaata form .. a llae tlaat 8tretcbed 1aa1twa1.,..... Allahelm 8tadla.m Tae9C1ay for a chance at 21 to 40 job openlnc-u a llreftOter wttla tJae Qruce eo..atJ nn Depu111eat. 8ome lD tie crowd caeped oat at tlM ..... oft!' tM ........ No Jolie wve achlally ........ th•day -appllc&Dtawere~;ere to nn •t a form to take a written teet for job • o"r tbe aat two,_.,.. 811t ••eryoae •'-o wu lD line ti recei•e an appllcatloa! 19"84, have.been combing Sanu Rosa and other cities north of San Fra·n- cisco since Feb. 25. A news conference was scheduJed this afternoon in-Sant.a Rosa to officiaJly ask for the public's help an locating the man. Jim Bryant, a sheriffs spokesman, said the latest lead an the e~tensive search for the girl came from iwo men who also were camping at Joshua Tree near the time of the apparent abduction. .. These guys had ap{>Clrently been out of the area for a whtle and hadn't heard about the kidnapping,·· said Bryant. .. They came back into town recently. read an article and re- membered seeing this guy. .. The man being sought 1s thought to be named John and has a pet dog named Sam. Santa .Rosa pohce said. ~ 1s described as being neat, clcan- (Pleue Ke LAURA/ A2) .,-------- Kids ask for park at Arch Beach Mission Viejo Co. site still has to be- accepted by OC -- Eltven.iycar-old Maggie Redfern doesn't know much about politics. And the pnnc1ples of land·use plan- ning art' IX"yond the sutth-gradcr's grasp. . r LISA MAHONEY Focus ON THE NEws But the little blo nd girl docs know one thing-hr and her fnend want a park tn Arch Beach Height . Pert'hjij on a hilltop on Laauna Beach. '90\lthem border.Arch 8C~C'.h Heights 1s a rommunny of t1ahtJy packed homes w1th little or no lawns. ccc iblc onl)' by two steep ams w1ndina r.oads, the nc1lhborhood 1 enurely rt 1dent110. There 1$ no 5ChOOI. community crnter or CU) park -or. for that matter, any pubhc property where children may play . But 1t doe n't have to be that way R1 ht ro from Maute' 8albol .\ "cnuc home 1s a I 0-acrt chunk of (Pl•M ... PAU/A2) .. By JI OllND Thi • High dted cigal'I in 0 Mon impc prod n -F ' 1"n thill Rea II acti Wil abo 1 stuc d¥S fne -T ... cor } bel cor 75( the giv rt! prt rec 19: an· rec • -~ ' to de la y tr S< c fa G Ct e .. S4 0 d p ti 0 I t • ' • .. • At**OrWlg9 Cout DAil. V PILOT /WednMday, March 8, 1985 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.......;~~~~~~ :.~~ ........................................................................ .. jAprilFoorsDaywill bring I ~ ! airport parking fees hike ! By JEFF ADLER I Of .. o.ilJ ....... • lt will cost more to park your car at i John Wayne Airpon beginning April I l. . : The Oranie County Board of : Supervisors agreed Tuesday to a rate 1 hike aimed at increasing airpon l revenues by an additional S l.3 I million annually. j Supervisors unanimously ap- proved the acrosHhe-board in-l creases that will see parking fccsao up anywhere from 25 cents per hour at parking meters to $1 per month for employees who buy monthly parking 1 passes. ln the ai~n·s short-term parking lots. rates will increase from 50 cents per hour to $1 a hour. while the daily rate will jump from $6 to SI 0. In long-term parking. the rates will increase from 50s cent per hour to S 1 an hour with the daily rate increasing from $4 to $10 a day. The new 1.800-space Nonh Clear Zone park1n1 lot. acros the o Dieao Freeway from the airport, will charge airport patrons $1 hourly and $3 per day. All metered spaces will double in price. j umping from 25 to SO cents per half-hour . For employCC1, the monthly park- ing pass will increase in price from S 1 S to $20 a month. Airport Manager Murry Cable said the parking rates average out to 13 percent less than the average realized on a per-space basis by other co'm- parable airports. John Wayne Airport earns $776 per year for e.ach of its 4,471 spaces compared to an industry average of$89 I per space. Los Angeles International Airport earns $79 1 per yur for each of its 26,500 spaces while San Diego's Lindbergh Field leads California airports with earnings of S 1,261 per space annually. With the rate increase, John Wayne Airport will realize $1,078 per space, the second-highest return in the state. Cable advised the board that tbc rate increase is "intended to mu1- m1zc revenue while remaining within 1ndu lry standards and cnooul'1lging effective flmht)' utahzauon by providina rate d10'ercntials between p.1rking lots at JWA:' All revenues derived from airport parking.socs into the county's Airport Enterprise Fund. which 1s used 10 fund airport operations. Senate backs ban on business Joans WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen- ate Budget Committee, looking for domestic spending cuts to reduce federal deficits. today embraced President Reagan 's proposal to abolish a loan program that ..wbs1dizes Americ.an firms doing business overseas. SURPRISE AIRPORT SUIT FILED •.• From Al the lawsuit following ·a 25-minute closed-door executive session with county attorneys and the county's special airport counsel, Carlsbad attorney Michael Gatzke. Riley also said the board is ··confi- dent" the court will uphold the project's legality and allow the "criti- '" cally important" expansion to proceed "promptly." Didier said county attorneys long had considered filing a pre-emptive lawsuit as ''one of a number of Litigation strategies" the board could pursue in its attempts to speed the expansion project along. Filing of the lawsuit will not delay the multi-faceted planning effort that was initiated once the board finally approved the project, hMlrid. · In t9!1, an earlier expansion plan was delayed and ultimately blocked by an Orange County Superior Court j udge after the city of Newport Beach launched a lawsuit challenging the l~Jity of the project's environmen- tal impact reports. LAURA BRADBURY BREAKTHROUGH ••• From Al shaven. about 5-foot-8 and weighing 165 oounds. where her family was camped. Bryant said investigators believe the little girl was grabbed by an overweight, bearded, middle-a~e man who may ha ve pushed the girl into his metaUic blue van. _ ··The part about being neat and clean-sha ven flys in the fare--<>ur description of the kidnapper but the height and weight lS ng}lt." said Bryant. The van was seen later-t:he same The missing brown-eyed. blond 01r1 day traveling on a backroad to Big e-Bear. Brvant said. was last seen when she wandered off to an outhouse a short distance from There· has been no confirmed sighting of the girl, the suspected kidnapper or the van since Laura's disappearance. Deputies have ques- tioned more than 500 people an·d followed up more than 1,000 leads since the apparent abduction. Tbe iirl's parents. Mike and Patty Bradbury'. said they believe their daughter is still alive and have never given up hope that they will be reunited someday. LIBRARY DARKENED IN HUNTINGTON •.. From Al about sundown, the library has made few concessions to the power failure. People are still checking out books -albeit manually-and can read by good old-fashioned daylight that fihers through the targe p1ctt.Jre gl~s windows overlooking Central Park. But clients can't use micror.tm or computer catalogs systems or other electronic trappi n11.s. h 's also tough getting a snappy response to a telephonr call. It seems that all the phones ring but none lights up and harried employees are having a difficult time selccti'ng the right instrument. City officials arc attempting to buy a new $30,000 transformer this week in Los Angeles. Johnson said a nearby lightning stnke at about noon Saturday caused a power surge that destroyed the transformer. .. The library was full at the ume and there were no problems. I did get a little apprehensive. however, wben people used cigarelle lighters to iet around. But the staff acted with eq uanimi1y and rolled with the prob- lem." NOISE ORDINANCE GETS NOD ..• From Al soc1at1on president John Winant wrote the board. •. Winant added that the association believes noise reduction can be achieved without "arbitration, dis- crimination and overprotecti ve regu- lation." He urged the ordinance be amended to make the new noise rules fair and equitable for all operators. both commercial and non-com~ merc1al alike. However. Supervisor Bru ce Nestandt faulted W1nant and his supporters for mounting such a "'bhstenng" attack on the ordinance. but failing to show up at the meeting. Board Chairman Thomas Riley pointed out that any pnvate aircraft operators wtr6 oppose the ordinance or want lo suggest amendments should attend nex t week·s scheduled public hearing on the matter. In estabhsh1ng noise standards. the proposed ordinance also would ban further use of the West wind 1123. Jet Commander. BAC-111. Jet Star I. Sabre Liner (with the exception of model 65). Gulf Stream ll and Lear Jet models 23. 24 and 25 at the airport. The planes all were deemed to be too noisy to meet the new guidelines. In endorsing the ordinance. Nestandc said he cannot understand why pnvatc planes carrying two to four passengers sometimes makes more noise than commercial Jetliners that carry far more passengers. Deputy County Counsel Dan Didier told supervisors most noise v1olat1ons by private aircraft o ften are the result .. of inadvertance or poor pilot technique.'' But D1d1er noted I hat when pri vate aircraft exceed the 98.5 dt:eibel air- port noise limit at Momtonng Station I, the deviation tends to be far greater than deviations registered by the commercial airlines. GOATS WIN ANOTHER REPRIEVE ..• From Al More rain on Coast's horizon A --wuthet tytttm mov.d through Scx.tthern c.ilfornlt Mt1Y today ec111enng a ltw ltolated ahoWflf• OY9r the Lo• AngetM Buln and mountain areas, and more rain was exs>9Cted thtouah Thur9day, f0teea.1«1 N6d. TM Nltlonal WMther a.rvtoe uld another ayatem that was lylng to the wett early today was ex~ed to bring show.rs to most of Southern Callfornla tonight, with snow In the mountains above 5,000 feet. Overnight ralnfall amounts wlll range from a quarter-lnc::h In the eoaatel at ... to a tlalt-lnch In the mountains. Along the Orange Coaat, lhowers are llkely tonight. Partly cloudy Thursday. Cooler with hlghs 52 to 60. Lowa mostly In the 401. Temps HIOfl, low IOf 24 hOula anding 111 5 am 38 27 00 44 00 ,.. 441 28 55 '5 79 73 22 20 28 07 •&\_~~ PM>MTI: ~~~ W•m -CCJAO...,. ~1 "-' f'l.lr•1 SN>w Oc~ ...._ StellC>n#Y a._ NaeOnlf W•-SeMce NOAA US 090I al C-o AA>eny Albuquerque Amanllo Anc:llOtaoa Alt.nla Allentle Olly Auttln .. IA 40 IS 81 44 94 35 30 21 17 37 ee 31 03 $4 87 31 01 38 2L 09 40 20 4 I 27 40 t:l 37 28 eo s2 54 28 75 40 41 ,. KlllMI Clly LNVllOM Ullle Roel< LOUllVllle Merni>llb Mi.ml BMctl Mllw-• Ml*-81 Plul Na.,.111111 Nw O.leanl New Yori! Olclanoma OIJY Omalla Orlando Pllll•delPlll• Ph_, lie PIU1burgll Portland' Me Porllend.Of. Ptovldencf Rllelgh ~ ~~--~-~--~-~--~~~~~--~~ a .. umora 81rmtngh•m Bltmatck ~ .. eo.1on ButtlllO Cuper °*'"Ion.S C c:n.ri..ton. w v Chenotte,N C g::; .. Cinclnnall ~ Cotumbua.Oll Concord.l'I H Dellel-Ft Worth Oey\on o.n-0..Molnet Detroit Oulvlh EIPMO Falrbanka Fwoo Flagatalf GrWld F\apkl1 Gr•tf.,.. Hlt11ord ,.._. PiOt!olulu Houaton lnd4aNtPOlia J~·"'' Jacl<-.wia .JunNu ~ Ill « 25 S3 22 48 24 42 Ill 81 42 38 22 51 28 34 21 30 11 27 05 70 23 23 18 22 11 « 38 211 12 34 12 41 20 3tl 13 71 811 11 54 34 24 S3 4 1 11 52 30 15 94 2• ~~ ~~Calif. Temps 85 eo SantaCrui TallOeValtey voeem11ev1y $3 43 32 27 43 29 86 :n Hlg.h. IOw for 24hOur .. ndlng11 h m. 14 68 a.k.,•llttld 68 o Surf report 48 20 Eu1ekl 48 39 28 16 Fresno 58 42 Aepld Clty Reno RJchmond St LOUIS 5 I 34 lll>Qst., 53 38 511 27 Loa Angttl.. 58 47 75 37 Oeklend 49 42 27 14 Puo Roblff 5-4 37 0 27 Red 81ulf 48 38 n 33 AedWOOO C•ty 50 42 3e 28 Sect.....,,to 50 40 12 86 Sallnu 53 42 48 28 Sen Diego 61 St 86 SS San Franc>ICO S 1 42 !! -0"2 Sant• 81rt>at• 56 39 Lo<: A TIC»! HunllngtCHI 8-11 RIWt ,,.tty.~ 40l11 S1reet, Newport 22nd Sll•I. N~ 8114boaWedQe Laguna 8Mcll San Clemeflle Weier lemp 57 Swell cJnec11on sou1n-1 llD 9".AN 1·2 - 1·2 -1·2 poor 1·2 - ' -1·2 -1·2 poot St "-t• Tampa Sell LakaC.ly San A!llonlO Siil Juan, P A StSleM•ue S..ltle Spollene S)"KUM Topeka "' SIOCl!lon 52 38 ;~ ~= ~~i!': '°' 24 l>OU•• _,,"II ·~ p ;-, Tl des 44 17 Big But 47 13 TUCIOfl Tulta Wuhlng1on Wlct\118 43 28 Bl1hop 52 13 77 6 1 e1y1n. n 40' Seoona IOw 53 32 Cllalfna 66 43 Seeond ntgh TOOAY 308p.m 1120pm '1 49 71 32 Long 8eMlh 58 40 48 32 Montovta 87 37 49 10 Mon11tey 55 4 I -----------Ml Wtlson 41 31 Wllk .. ·8•11• Extended Cont tderabla cloudtnaH wlln CNlnce ol allowltt Frkl11y and Salu,. <Illy Pllltly cloudy Sunday Collllrlued eoo1 Hiil"-se 10 ee Lowa 1n upoer 309 and 40a Newport 8eedl 60 42 OnlWIO 58 34 Pllm SC>flfl9S 118 •O Pueclena 58 44 "'-'tld• 57 37 San 8em11d1no 59 36 San Gabtlel 82 38 $All Jose SI 39 511111 Ana 00 40 F1r•t IOw Flfat Ngll S«Ond low Second "'II" THUlllOAY 300am 9051 m 337 pm 1152pm 0 8 8 I 01 52 Sun WI• lodll'f al S S3 p m • ti- I 11urtd11y 11 e 14 • m and Mlt IQAHtl l 5 54 pm Moon ,,_ tOday 11 5 44 o m Nie fhu~ay 116 Ill I m and riM9 again al 658• m PARK DELAY UPSETS KIDS ... From Al the Aliso Greenbelt promised to the just want to be certain they ti;rvc Hcnnan cnlmzed tbe second ver- city by 1ne county of Orange, the properly planned for the regional s1on appro"eti b} the Harbors. proposed Moulton Meadows Park park before they start "dealing out Beaches and Parks Committee in site. any land." Herman said. January 1984 as including some The promise was tendered back in Riley echoed those sentiments in a unlikely enterprises such as a winery. 1980 when Maggie was 6 and her letter to young Maggie. She and 28 Th:it plan was to go before county sister Carrie just 3. City planners ot her Arch Beach Heights children supervisors in February but was gleefully plotted and planned the sent the supervisor a petition about delayed because the National Fitness future park. There'd be two tennis the smaller park site. In 11 Maggie Foundat ion was considering o ne of courts, a tot lot. picnic areas. a jogging wrote. "I think it 1s about time that the sites for the nation·s first athletic trail. And. through a state park bond. the proposed park be built in Arch tra111ing at·adcmy. Herman said. there·s money to pa) for 1t. K' I · But the land. it seems. 1sn·1 the Beach Heights. Jds ha ve 10 Pay in The academy doesn't cxactl> fi t the county's to give. Not yet anyway. the street. which is very dangerous. 1 intent oft he plan. Unlike a golf course Maybe not for at leas1 a year. hope that the park (will) be built or equestrian center. 11 wo n't be a The 10.acre park site is included in before 1 am much older and go off to moneymakt:r for lhc county: but the 3,400 acres of Aliso and Wood college.'' ha' ing an academ) to groom young canyons, part of a land dedication . In hts lellcr. Rile) told Maggie that athktcs1s expected to bnng the area a offered by the Mission Viejo Co. in· he 1s .. sincerely ... intere!>lcd 1n boost 1n prestige. 1979 in exchange for the right to build providi~g parks for the people of this Laguna Beach Ma)or Dan Kenney the 20.00Q..home planned communi-county' and had. in fact. helped the says he's frustrated by the continual 1y of Aliso VteJO to its northeast. But city obtain a grant to build the delays over Moulton Meadows Park. the county has neve r accep1ed the promised park . But little Moulton He belicvec; county otlic1als could land dedication. · Meadows Park is just a sliver ofwhal help 1f they Y.anted to instead of The acreage 1ha1 Eric Jessen. the will be a larger regional park in the holding the maLter up ··in -;ome county's chief of planning for the greenbelt and the county can't give bureaucratic whatever.'' Harbors. Beaches and Parks District the city its share until "com-Kenne} said he's started to wonder calls .. the heart of the Aliso Green-prehens1ve planning .. of Aliso-Wood whe1her the county 1-;n't lf)tng to belt" is part of a proposed larger. Can~on Regional Park 1s rompktcd. puni sh thec1t} fors1and1ng 1n the way regional park that has been in the Riley said. of projects which count) officials works since the land was fi rst offered "You can JUSt imagine what people fa vor. ··rn general. you finall y ha ve to by the M1ss1on V1eJO Co. would sa) if we started developing stan weighing these things." Kenne~ Although county supervisors have small parcels of our park without said. accepted some smaller parcels that having some overall idea of the uses Herman sa} s such talk of rctri- w1ll become pan of the roughl y 5.000-we propose throughout the facility:· but ion reall y burns up hi!> boss. acre park. its core 1s Mill formally 1n Riley wrote. "lt 'c; ridiculous to rnns1dcr him private hands. But the count} has a darned good running this otlire b~ witholding park And after five )Cars. some people idea what the regional park will look land ," he said are beginning to wonder wh}. like. Supervisors accepted a concep-In the end·: when Maggie and the Those who ma) be in the knoY. get tu al plan of the park back 1n 1979 and. Cll} of Laguna Beach get their Jumpy when asked th e reason for the accwrding to Grace Secketa. proJeCt pro'T'1'icd park Y..tll probably be delay. manager. the basics haven't changed derided on the basis of pnont1es. .. I can't answe r that for }ou:· that much over the years. suggested a county obser"er who Jessen said. Tr) Peter Herman. he The proposed park still encom-preferred to remai n nameless. suggested. passes 5,000 acres and the intent is The count) will have to accept the City Manager Ken Frank also said still to maintain the property largely Mission VicJO C"o. dedication if the Herman was the man with the in 11s natural state. she.. said. Horse-$50 mt Ilion national fimess academy answers. back riding. hiking and bicycle trails i~ to be constructed in the greenbelt. Herman is one of Fifth Di strict are still in the plan. as are some And 1t'c; un l ike!~ that the supervisors Supervisor Thomas F. Riley's top campgrounds. Sccketa said. will dall)• when it comes to facili tating aides. He's Riley's specialist 1n south Such m1n1mal development would a prOJCCt Supcn isor Bruce Ncstandc Orange County land-use matters. cost about $7 10.000. she said. -· liken to "bringing motherhood :ind >\ Nav} spokewoman 1n ~an Diego confirmed the latest repnevc But. as wtth previous resc ue attempts. public information offi cer Ruth Lawrence said the situation will be re\.1ewcd again if the Fund fails to remove all the animals. restncted area. Top brass agreed to allo...., trappers tn after the Fund said n would take out a SI 0 million in- surance pohc} to protect the Navy against damages and to release the Navy from all liability should a catastrphe occur "What's the holdup'!" ·Herman Periodk changes to the park plan apple pie to Orange County.'' bloodlust or they're nuts:· responded ... There 1s no holdup," he have centered on what uses are Prehm1nan ske1ches of the 175- Cok said Tuesday that the Nav> said. The Mission VieJo Co.'s dedi-acceptable as ··revenue generation acre acadcm}· are to be un veiled for JUSl couldn't ignore the success of the cauon offer stands for 15 years. opportunities," Sccketa said. In the first lad) Nancy Reagan Apnl 15. fund resuce. "The success of the Herman said. There·s no hurr). first plan. uses designated were .. too MaybC' b) the time 1he academy 1s rescue impressed the Navy. We did it The county isn't dragging its feet on specifi c" and in some cases too urban, ready fora ts groundbreakmg. Laguna in a highly professional and compc-accepting the land. he said. Officials she said. Beach will get iLs piece of the pie. tent manner," Cole said. "The Navy 11~=~:~=====~~~~~:~::::~::~~~~=~~=~~~=====~~1 For the first time si nce the Navy and fund members first beg.an butting heads over the goats 1n 1979. rescuers will be allowed into a restricted area where th e remaining beasts have fled . Navy offical s in the past ha,·c 1 adamant!} refused to allow anyone into a shore bombardment area bC'cause 11 iS'l lllered with unexploded shells left over from warship target pra ctice. Tuesday. the Navy acknowledged that resc uers'had caught all the goa1s !"'" they could without going tnto the During the Just-completed rescue effort that end ed Monday, 870 of an estimated 1.250 goats were captured by a net gunner and jumper who loaded the animals into a helicopter. The rescued goats were shippod to the mainland. where the) are being put up for adoot1on. Fund President Cleveland Amory said Monday that Navy officials would be heartless if they shot what remained of the herd after such a successful rescue. "If they shoot them now:· he said. "Either they've got could not ignore the impressive reswts.·· Fund officials also said the or- g.ani1at1on will pay for a larger portion of the rescue effort. Until now. the fund has paid about 60- percent of the cost of the rescue and the Navy has paid 40 percent. The ioats are believed to have been on the island for more than 100 years after being le~ there as~ food sourC'e for merchant marines. The goats are considered a threat to rare species of plants, birds and a lizard that live on the island. Wbat do you like about tbe Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbe number at left and your meuage will be recorded, transcribtd and delivered to the appropriate editor. Designed, Finished Installed Just Call 642-6086 Tbe same 1'-bour answering service may be used to record letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors to our Lt'Uen ctLumn must Include tbelr name and telephone number for verlflcallon. No cfr~latlon call1, please. _Tell us what's on your'mlnd. ,_.,_, .. -, 01111 Piiot 0.llYery •• OuerentMd -~.ft.o.ty ti -J4 1'01 ,,... ff1.I' lN09' ~ I 30 0 "' c.t1 O.f0te p ,.. *'° yWUt t~ ~.., $-IUIMy l"IJ Sur.cay If I'°" 00 "CJI ,_.4 y'V GOf1y Dy 1 • m u• .,.,.,,. 10 ~ m IM '°'" coov ., .,.~~ Clrculetlon TMphonee ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H.L. Schw•rtz Ill -Pub II sher .... Fr•nk Zlnl Managing Editor K•r•n Wittmer Adve~tlsing Director RoHm•ry Churchman Controller Robert L. Cantrell Production Men ager Doneld L. Wllll•ro• Ctrculatron Manager ,. Clrouletlon 714/142-4333 Cla11lfled edYertf91ng 714/'42-M7'1 A" other ctepertlMfttt 142-4321 MAIN OfftCE 330 w .. 1 Bar $t ~ ,..._ ..._4 ~-8Q.t ~ CA !ln;t c~>4rf'"i"I 1?31 <>9"9" Coil\ P1Jo1 .. ""IO ~ No .._. .i-....iiw11a1oona .O.t0<•I mtn .. °' _,,.. ,,,.,,II ~·e II m.ty De •t:P<OOUC.O Wlflw>\/1 "O«•I Pl' ""'"°" ot GOO'f!IQN - S.COll<I ~It .,.,_1ege c.ld a1 t.111 'Mal Gillliift IUPS •0 ,llOOj SUoac:111>1oOt1 by'-'"• SA 76 mor11Ny b'f ,...,~ le SO mar11111y VOL. 11, NO. Ol5 _,_FINEST QUALITY SHUT-EERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARK~ TODAY ..• AT FACTORY DIRllC.T PRICllSI Call (714) 548-8841 or 548-1717 NBIWGOD MAl.,f ACTillY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 • I 1 Grads plan trips to Ba wall, Meztco Ten Orar\ac County hiah schools ha~e planned a graduation trip to Hawaii and Mazatlan, and reservations arc due now In order to auarantee space on the exeur'lions. Contacts for each school are Mark Clemens (675-3544) for Corona dcl Mar Hi&)\, Jane Rowen (855-8155) for El Toro Hi&)\, Andrea Loyd (754-1598) for Costa Mesa HiJ.h. Aiaa Paeale (493-1240) (or Dana Hills High, Craig Shtpcott (838-4692) for Foothill Hi&)\, Mike Boyce (830.8155) (or Mission Viejo High, Mark Zie,nhagen (544-3377) for Tustin High. ShF.llY Bundt (63 -7615) for Newport Harbor High and Phil Palumbo' (786-1285) for University High. Anyone cl5e interested in joining either trip should call 850.0990. LA supervl•or to apea~ Michael Antonovich, a Los Angeles County super- visor and newly elected California Republican Patty chairman, will speak in front of the Orange County Federation of Reputilicarl Women Thursday. The m~eting will be heJd at 10 a.m. at the Saddleback Inn. 1660 E. First St., Santa Ana. For more information call 846-8841 or 529-8428. Schools, moral growth viewed The influence of schools on moral development will be the topic of a free colloquium at UC Irvine Thursday, scheduled for 1:30 p.m. in Room 112 of the Social Ecology Building. Panelists will be Dr. F. Clark Power. assistant professor in the Program of Liberal Studies at the University of Notre Dame. and Dr. Robert B. McCarthy, headmaster at Brookline H igh School in Massachusetts. Funher information may be obtained b)I calling Dr. Thomas Wilson of the UCI Instructional Development Office at 856-6 188. Russ1an expert plans talk Dr. David E. Powell. a professor at the Rusian R~search Center at Harvard University. will address the Exchi}nge Club of Newport Harbor at its weekly luncheon Thursday at the Reuben E. Lee restaurant in Newport Beach. Powell has written seeral articles and books regarding Soviet li fe. He is a consultant to the Pentagon. the STate Department and the Foreign Service Institute. College orientations planned P.rospective coll~ students seeking more infor- mation before they enroll are invited to take advantage of the Early Decision Program for incoming .college freshmen at Saddleback College North in Irvine. A special orientation session is scheduled for Friday on the North Campus from 4 to 6 p.m. It will be repeated March 23 from 10 a.m. to noon and April 19 from 4 to 6 p.m. Call 559-9300, ext. 216 for further information. Tall Club sets Valley dance The Tall Club of Orange County, an organization for men 6-2 and over and women 5-10 and over, will hold its monthly dance Friday at the Fountain Valley Community Center, 10200 Slater Ave. The dance is scheduled from 8:30 p.m . to I a.m. at an admission of$5. Call 542-121 I for more-information. Car.eer sem1nar a co"lJege "How to Get Moving on Your Career" will be the topic ofa seminar Saturday at Saddleback College North in Irvine. Elaine Sklark. Saddleback decision program counsel- or, and Dick Roberts. community psychological services vocational consultant, will conduct the program, sched- uled from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Room B-1 0.1. The fee is $~5. and more information may be obtained by calhog 559-1313. Wednesday, March 6 • I 0 a.m. Costa Mesa Traffic Comt'nlsalon, City Hall. 77 Fair Drive. • 10:30 a.m .. Orange County ManJclpal Water District Board joint workshop. 1950 E. 17th St.. suite 150. Santa Ana. • 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa Redevelopme nt Agency, City Hall, 77 Fair Drive. • 7: 15 p.m., Irvine Community Services Commi11lon . City Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. • 7:30 p.m., Coast Community College District -Board of Tr1111ee-s, District Headquarters. 13 70 Adams Ave .. Costa Mesa. Thursday, March 7 • • 7:30 p.m .. lrvlne Planning Commlsalon. City Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Bo ulevard. • • 7:30 p.m .. Newport Beach Plannln& Commisaion. City Council chambers. 3300 Newpon Blvd. .. ..... .... . .- Final allmoaj RaYJDen<t was a real big deal By STEVE MITCHELL °' ... ..., ........ It was the bigest check she'd ever -seen, no doubt about that. "When I saw it in the mailbox, I thou~t it was a giant Valentine card , ·Linda Anderson said of the large envelope that showed up in her mailbox last week. "Then I thouaht, 'No way would it be coming from him: ' 'Him', is Jim Anderson, an Irvine barbershop ownec who, until about five years ago, was Linda's husband. where the assistant manaaer for. financial corporation di1COveted the monster mailer in the box. "I just about rolled off the couch when I opened the envelope/' she sald, lauJhina. . "h 's tne most creauve thin& he's done in IS yean." she added. Problems arose when she took the hefty chick to her bank. Bank officials there tossed out requirements like "turnina it in for collection," ·•special mailing. handlipg. etc." The bottom line, Linda learned, was that it woald take at least a week to cash the darn thing. So Linda took the · oversized note to Jim's bank in Irvine where , When it became apparcntthefr 12-ycar marriage wasn't going to make it to a baker's ·dozen. the couple worked o ut a divorce settlement whereby Jim would pay Linda $1,289. t 5 a month for fi ve years. -amidst-•m·MCS4UM.Ui1uen--;a't---t-:---i Time's up, and Jim decided to do something a little special to commemorate the final alimony payment. ''I was talking to some friends about it and we came up-with-the idea of having one of m y checks blown up real big," Jim said:- The 1-b y-21/z-foot c heck, mounted on poster board, was sent to Linda's home in Orange was cashed almost immediately. Linda's taking the whole inci· dent with a goodly amount of humor. In fact, she got in her own little jab durinJ a telephone conversation with a reponer. "If he'd shown that much energy a nd-creativity ycaFS age, we'd still be married." And says she, "I'd just lovF to see how they are going to send him that check back with his statement." World SaYIDC• employee Ted K.a.ru holda up •bta check.• Army, Coast firm defend weapon's effectiveness FEizzelle helps, dwarfs' b1dfor lotteryacttorr From staff and wfre reporti An Anny weapon system being developed by Ford Aerospace of Newport Beach has been called a lemon. But top Army officials and a Ford spokesman said the D IV AD defense system will work and its problems can be corrected. Speaking before the Senate Ap- propriations defense subcommittee Tuesdsay. Sen. Marie Andrews, R- N.O., said the new DIV AD gun is "a textbook case of what's wrong in the field of defense procurement a nd budget management." Andrews released test results from the latest DIV AD examination show- ing that last summer the gun failed to work as well as it should aod didn't function-in coid weather. "You're buying lemons." Andrews said. Tn aeferiSe, Army Chief oT Staff Gen. John-A. Wickman said, "I wouldn't characterize DIV AD as a lemon. "We've had problems and we're correcting those problems a.s we go along." DIV AD is Army shonhand for Division Air Defense gun. Known as the Sergeant York, the weapon is a twin-barreled gun that would be mounted atop a tank to protect troops from eoemy helicopters and fixed- wing aircraft, says Don Flamm, Ford Aerospace's director of public affairs. The Army has plans· to buy up-to 618 of the guns for a total of $4.5 billion. Flamm called the criticism of the weapon "undeserved and mislead- ing: .. with data taken out of context.'' "Our demonstrations have shown that the system does work. The Beacon tokeepplanes flying over Upper Bay By JEFF ADLER OflNDelly'l!Mlteff The Orange County Board of Supervisors moved forward Tuesday on efforts to ensure that commercial jetliners taking off from John Wayne Airpon Sta)'. on the prescribed flight path over Upper Ne~n Bay rather than straying over residential areas. Supervisors directed that airport officials begin workin~ with the Federal Aviation Administration. the state Depanment .of Fish and Game . the city of Newport Beach and The Irvine Co. to locate a site for a navigation beacon that would help pilots maintain the proper flight path over the Back Bay. The radio beacon. a 7 5 megacycle Marker Beacon Transmitter. would assist pilots departing the airport in making the sweeping tum that allo~s planes to follow the recommended y. departure path. which courses across the middle of the Back Bay. Board Chairman Thomas Riley, whose office receives complaints when jetliners noisely stray from the recommended depanure path, told the panel that the FAA already has made the beacon available, but a site for the equipment still needs to ~ found. State officials oppose locating the transmitting equipment within the confines of the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Preserve, but apparently have no objections if the marker is placed on adjacent Irvine Co. prop- erty.just north of the Santa Ana Delhi Flood Channel. The board actjon, adopted unani- mously and without comment. directs Airport Manager Murry Cable to report to supervisors when a suitable location for the beacon has been prnpointed. production tests demonstrated a re- t•ability that exceeds the contract reguirements," he said. Flamm said the Army has placed a strong emphasis on production of the DIV AD gun with requests to produce the weapon system as quickl y as possible. "The Sergeant York is being built on an accelerated program with concurrent production and testing. The development time has been cut in half," he said. Flamm said the accelerated de- velopment has led to "normal start- up problems" that Ford and the ~rmy are confident can be corrected. According to Wickman, two new series of tests will begin next month. On e will involve test of eight DIV AD guns to sec if they can meet the Army speeifications while the other will involve use of the weapons m simulalied combat to see whether they will knock out attackers. Senator Andrews. however, said the Pentagon should seek warranties on weapons to make sure they work. He is the chief supponer of a two- year-old law mandating such guaran- tees. Unfortunately. he said. the DTV AD system was contracted before the law took effect. • SACRAMENTO (AP} -ow.ts ....... group to jotn the ICIW'nblefor a ~of 9Wc I • C lottery bonanza in Ctllfomla. Aaaemblyman No&8n Ftw 11, fM'ow • Valley, told the A111mbty Gos•1llWllll OI .. 2 tlon Committee Tueemy tMI cttsala In Ml Southern Caltfomla district .. ~• .. ,,, ... wanting to sen lottery Ucketa. ''They h..w. a ~ hend6cllp In .. ,. market. Many of tMm.,. on ...... The(,.•OOll to the sta~. They are people -"O COUid do .. .._. of a job very etfectlwly a an orgenlz8tlDn --· And yet there are no apectftc 19g1M1tts of tt'9 ._ • 8llde tor them. to be allowed. • a ~ • partielpate, .. he said. Ft izzetle satd a bll 1mder contllde8119o1\ 119 .. committee would favor ~.,... •••t business to. smatt and minority compenl11 at .. expense of other ~fal-int.-groupe .,.. • the handicapped. Assemblyman Rtchard Alatorre. o.Loe M- getea, the author of the bitt, AB2, said he would ... with the ctwarfa, but did not onw to amend • measure. The biff's provtsk>na favoring ,,.._ bulinessea as subcontractors In nMllOr ~ contracts are In keeping with state and,...... lewl. he added. Juvenile Hall to· bill parents The Orange County Board of Supervisors agreed Tuesday to bill the parents of Oranse County youths committed or detained in county juvenile facilities $6.43 per day for care and maintenance costs. The billing program, authorized by a state law that became effective Jan. 1. permits the county to bill parents. but lilTri'fsl'harges to what parents are financially able to pay. The county's chief probation officer. Michael Schumacher. told supervisor the S6.4J-per-day maximum charge will be used to recover costs of food. food preparation. clothing and personal supplies., The charge cannot include the cost of incarceration. ..upernsion. treatment or rehabilitauon of the m1nq_r. Schumacher explained. He s.a1d the $6.43 rate was detenmned by rcviewmg the average daily expenditures the count}' has experienced at its Juvenile Hall. Youth G uidance Center. Joplin Youth Center and Los Plnos Forestry Camp. The oosts ranged from $6.43 to $8.03. The program 1s expected to bring in an addnional $31 5.000 to county coffers per year after admmistrati ve costs of $1 l 0,000 att deducted. The administrative costs include the cost of hmng four additional work.en to run the Probation Department's billing effort. 'Valley woman ar.raigned in Coast prostitution case Flannery, J I, was stopped at about 4:30 a.m. on Thalia Street. • • • A Summit Way re.sident reponed the theft of a watch and pendant together worth $3.600 Tuesday. • • • A wallet and credit cards were BuntinCton Beach Prying open a sliding glass door to enter. someone burglanred a home Tuesday on the 5200blnd ... of Edinger Avenue. The loss. c'umated :u S 1.600. 1ncludl.'d a \ldl'l' rct'ordcr. J·~weln and cash. . . .. blatk I Q80 Pontiac Trans Am was stolen from a rear parking lo t at the Huhtington C'l.'nter shopping mall. 7777 Edinger .\vc. The loss was estimated at $ ... 000 · • • • omconc pned open a window to A f'ountain Valley woman accused of operating one of the largest prostitution rings in Orange County pleaded not guilty Tuesday to felony pandering charges. preliminary hearing on the most recent charges was set for April 2. was operating an escort services that was allegedly a front for prostitution. She employed l8 to 20 women and had about 300 clients, poli~ said. stolen from a Catalina Street home. the victim told police Tuesday. The loss was estimated at $800. -... .\ • resident of thl' !< .,oo hlock \.)f Charford reported T ucsda~ that someone had stolen a blue ~tl'el semi· automatic pistol from her ·home somt·t1me o'er the past three weeks. The loss was estimated at SI ~5. burgtanzc a aan and brown l 984 Dodge Coli pJrked Tuesday in a carport on thl' 1ti700 block of View- po.int Line Thl' loss included stereo equipment \\tlrth $550. Marilyn Yvonne Ford Conley. 4S, is already serving one year in Orange County Jail on an earlier pandering .and. pimping convic tion ... ~ Coetalleea Tw<>' boxej_ o(J!113s_s~mble..d com- •-......---puter pans. worth an esumated $600, were reported stolen from an un- locked car parked at a residence in the 2000 block of Charle Street. The break-in occum:d sometime between 7 p.m. ~onday and 7:30 a.m. Tues- day. • • • Two children's pi"8Y banks and a .-hild's wallet. contaanina a total of $29. wett n:por1ed stolen from ... home in the 2900 block of Mitbro Street sometime between 8 a.m. and 6 ~.Tuesday. There were no igns of forced entry. • • • A purse., a wallet, money and books. valued at $980, were reported stolen from a car parked in a tot at t690 Placentia Ave .. sometime be· tween 3:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. Tuesday. One of the car's winduws l\ad been fom:<I down. • • • A stereo wonh SSOO wtu reooncd Conley, who reportedly uses sev- eral aliases, could be sentenced to eiaht years in state prison if convicted on all. seven felony characs she is facina. According to vice officen. Conley stolen from a car parked in the 800 block of Bear Creek sometime be- tween 11N'S p.m. Monday and 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. £rctrf was made by prying a wing wfndow. tnine A Teakwood resident told police omeone used a key to enter her ho me and take a rina vJlucd at $20.000. • • • Two television sets wert stolen from a Dew.berry Way a~ tu-1&y. .. -· . . Someone brolce into a Canyon Rid.ac borne takina an unspecified amount of jewelry. • • • A Blackfin Avenue resident re- ported $500 in merd1andbc missina from her l~kcd vehicle Monday. Newport BeacJa A $500 !pine \Stereo was stolen from a Toy~ta. parked at\ Newpon Center. Police said there was no Conley was arrested at her Foun- tain Valley home Feb. 16, onJy three days before she was to begin her county jail time. obvious sign of forced entry. • • • A Ncwpon HeigJlts resident com- A Laguna Canyon Road business had a $200 telephone answering machine Slolen Tuesday morning b~ an unknown suspect. • • • A Terry Road resident told police early Tuesday that he heard two gunshots 15 minutes apan. Police checking the arca1 however, could not find the sourt'e 01 the reported shots. • • • A motonst ree,onl·d Tuesday that has white I Q8-l ( heHolet S l 0 Blazer was stolen from thl' Q~l)O hlock of Cornwall Thi.' los!> \\I\'-l'St1ma1cd at $18.000. ' • • • '\ man told POhCl' T uesda\ that his C~senets suspect in Mesa theft_ plained to police that he has r«"eiv~ ·\ 'U'fX" ll'd 1h1cf led Costa Mesa a. string of annoying telephone calls in t • t pohlc ~m J "1ld chase over fences and which the caller hangs up without Sus· pect 1· n we SUI through \.lrds Tucsda} before he WU saying a nythina. • nahhcd 1n 1hl' 2600 block of Redlands • • • The hubcaps were :Stolen from a PlaC'C white 1981 Mercedes Beni 240 b gl • bbed Joseph Patnd. Gobstcr. 26. of parked at the Park Newport Apart· ur ar1es na Costa Mes.'\ WU~ arrested on a felony mcnts.T heautopartsarewonhSSOO. --= •• _ . . "r"arern1 .. ~~g1c;"5~0''fenf<cbp~~!_~)r ~~1'1~ aocordina to the car owner. ...;..... --... " .,,. • • • • · co1ta Mesa man was arrctted Dettttt"c-s 0clit-vt-~n m usp1cton of gn.nd thd\ A woman rcponcd. t~at somcon: • Tuesday' o n suspiaon of b'1fl)ar,W~ ha.-ve ~tolcn a~ n1uch as SSOO.oab-Cosm Mca policc--Wan Lo fiJefar an l tOfe her pu~ tontar~ng-$10 Ul a many as JO bl)'.front ho mes u'l worth 'of )CWtlr). Sther and Other 1lddll10nal Charge Of l'\!S~tlf\& arrest West Coast Hi wa nia~t s L ~n 8cach -whale d*5Cd in hts valuables 10 the 30 buritanc pohC'c after 1obstcr ran from offi~rs who workina clothes-a black wttsuit. allcae he's commm1tcd 1n the past had follo\.\ed his car tnto an apan. ~inch-tcven Scott WarTCn, l 1. al~ly eight months. -·-ment rrr\.ma lot In ~peratc 1nc1denu, poli~ ar-brokcinto homesdurinabreakstnbis A.. mallpon1onofthc.m1~!>1'n1loot aba~~o~d~&th~o ... ~~~s.Ju ~l~ tt~tted thrt"C m otorists tatty tOday on J10n'!..,a~ . .!~~.~t~:. m. aintcn· was rocoH~rcd at Wn1Tcn \ 18th Strt'l't hack fertce and -... .. n runn.i"• SUSJ>1cion or drunken dnvina. ......, WUt-. ... t"""'"" '"""H"-1 partmc t pol cc~ d ...... ,,.. ... Zcferino Securtdino, 19, was stopped Warttn was amstcd TUC9day in-a n • 1 1 throug.h ncarb~ )'ards. shortly bem l a.m . on Nonh Coast side a rc5tdence on the 1100 block of WtrTCn. who hs1~ h1m~lf .&\ M Gobsicr w~· booked 1.ato OnftlC Htahway. William Joseph tonn. l 2. West Bay Avenue af\er poltcc staked rmplo)ttofWatcrworl' Hull Clean C'o unt-. Jail ~Ith bail~' at $10,000 was stopped shortly af\er .2 a.m. on out the area where he was clean in.& a 1na "1cc. 111 bc:1ng held nt Nl'wpon tort he fdon' ~nrrantand SI 0.000 for South Coast Hi•hway. ~obcrt ~t hull. Beach C'itv Jail on S200 000 ooll :\llcg(dly rt.'\i\llng arre\t. ' . -... ' •• By JI Of .. I Th High died \ cigan in C Mon imp< prod n -F ' "" ••' thin • Rea , ac\i Wil abo 1 stuc d~s l fne -~ T . 1'1 cor I bet cor 75( the -........ 1 &!_v ret pre rec 19: an· rec - J F to de la y tr St c fa G cc e S• 0 d p t' c l \ • 1 ... or-. eo.t DAILY PILOT /W~y. Merch e, 1085 Jolmny Paul Witt Florida boy killer executed Contras reject .abuse charges WASHINGTON {AP) -The top Nicaraauan rebel commander is call- ina charaes that his troops have committed widespread human rights abuscs .. propaganda" being spread by Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista govern- ment. Enrique Bermudez. military com- mander o f the tl.S.-backed Nicaraguan Democratic Force. known by its Spanish initials FON. said Tuesday the Sandinistas were usinJ the charges to undermine PreSJdent Reagan's bid to renew CIA aid to the rebels. But the Americas Watch Commit- tee, a private human rights group that just leveled new charges against the FON. said it did not rel y on infor- mation from the 'Sandinistas. but rather developed most of its evidence by itself. In a 97-page report, the New York- STARKE. Fla. (AP) -Former based group said all sides 1n the choirboy Johnny Paul Witt was Nicaraguan conflict have violated executed today in Florida's electric laws of war, but added that the chair for killing an I I-year-old boy he government has reduced itsabuses in and another man then sexually the past year while those of "contra" abused and mutilated. rebels have continued un checked . Witt, 42, convicted for the fatal Reagan. in recent 'appeals for assault on the son of a University of renewal of U.S. aid to the rebels. has South Florida professor, died at 7: 10 praised them as "freedom fighters" a.m. He was the 12th man put to andthe"moralequalofourFounding death in the state's electric chair since Fathers." He has denounced the capital punishment was reinstated by Sandinistas as "totalitarian ... brutal the U.S. Supreme Court in..1216 and ... cruel. .. the 39tb inmate executed in the In a related develop·ment, The New nation since then. York Times reported in Its Wednes- OcpartmentofCorrectionsspokes-day edtuons that the White Hou~ 1s man Vernon Bradford sajd Witt considering a bid to .. fnendly Asian requested no final meal but that he countries·· to help channel aid to the was given an omelet, rolls and coffee Nicaraguan rebels. before being taken from his holding The Asian countnes under con- ccll to the nearby oak electric chair. sideration were not named in the ··He kind of nibbled at" th~ omelet. Iimes s_tory. which quoted an un- Bradford said. identified Reagan administration of- Lat e Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme ficial as saying the request was being Coun voted 5-3 to reject an emerg-weighed along wi.lh other means of ency appeal aimed at temporarily supporting the insurgents. sparing Witt's life. In the new report. Americas Watch Witt's only visitor Tuesday night said the rebels have launched m- was his mother, Dorothy Witt of discriminate attacks on civilians. Knoxville, Tenn. Bradford said she tortured and mutilated prisoners. met with.her son for nearly four hours murdered wounded soldiers. taken during his last day, in contact and hostages and raped women. non-contact visits. The report accuses the Sandinista Witt's mother repeatedl y had writ-government of massacring 14 to 17 ten officials seeking clemency for her Miskito Indians in 1981 and seven son. She said he was unhappy for others in 1982. But Americas Watch much of his life and was told by hjs said its evidence "shows a sharp father that "he was no good. and decline in violations .. by government would never amount to anything." forces after 1982, despite some abuses She said he had sung solos in church as recently as a year ago. when he was young. Bermudez appeared at a crowded Wilt and co-defendant Gary news conference in Washington along Tillmah were convicted of kilJ1ng with three FON field commanders as Jonathan Kushner in Tampa nearl) pan of the rebels' campaign to I 2 years ago. Tillman was sentenced persuade Congress and the American to life in pnson after pleading guiltyA public that th6..,.msurgents deserve and testifying against Witt. renewed U.S. tncking. The CIA The boy had been ndmg his bicycle funn eled $80 mil hon to the rebels Vice President Buab holda crym, Sudanae child. Bush vows U.S. aid for Sudanese KHARTOUM. Sudan (AP) - Vice President George Bush is re- ponedly assurins hard-pressed Sudan of more U.S. assistance for its famine vic1ims, While urging Marxist-ruled Ethiopia to take steps he says could stem the flow of refugees across the Sudanese border. Bush declined to discuss details of his meeting Tuesday with Sudanese President Gaafar Nimeiri. but a senio r U.S. official said the vice president told Nimein the United States would provlcfe an additional 83.000 tons of food for famine victims in Sudan. The official. wh o spoke on con· dation he not be identified, said 80.000 tons of the food woufd be for hungry Sudanese. rather than for the Ethiopian refugees who cross Sudan ·s eastern border at the rate of about 300 a day. Sudan is regarded as one of .the United States' most dependable friends in Africa, '°'!'.!iile Ethiopia has close ties to Moscow. Bush visited a refugee camp at Wad Sheritfe, near the Ethiopian border, on Tuesday and planned to visit a camp for drought-stricken Sudanese near El Obied in western Sudan today before roundin~ out his week-long tour of Africa with visits to Niger and Mali. In a brief picture-taking session before his meeting with Nimeiri, Bush told the Sudanese president be had earned ··,rcat respect in the United States' for ··opening your arms to people who are hurting .. despite his own country's woes. Sudan. Africa's largest country an<t as bie as the United States east of the Mi ssissippi, is in the grip of a severe drought and has also had to cope with an influx of refugees from Ethiopia. After touring the refugee camp. Bush spoke at nearby Kassala airport and appealed to the Ethiopian gov- ernment to allow food shi pments to reach starving people in the provinces of Eritrea and Tigre. where rebels are battling the Marxist regime. "They ought to give a little.'' he said. "They ought to realize there is a great hu}11an tragedy here ... Poll shows many have fear of the pill ·Patient injected with tozic preservatlve by accident 81 tile .b~laa..t Prt11 • • MIAMI -Tests showed no blood ruchina the brain oh re~lted news photoaraphcr who was accidcntaJly injected with a to~ic presei:va~1ve dwina ~rsery, but his family asked th11 doctors delay turning off h1s life·su~n systems officials said. Bob East, 64, who retired earlier this year followtna more than 30 years tt The Miami Herald, lapsed into a coma Fr:id•Y after doctors injected &lutaraldehyde into his spine thinking it was sp1~al fluid, according to lead suraeon Or. James Ryan Chandler. The operauna room mixup wasn't discovered until the ophthalmologist who-dropped off the toxic chemical in an unmarked bottle returned to retrieve it. The substance wa1 10 have been used to preserve the cancerous eye tissue which East was donating to research. Fed• won't battle CBS takeover WASHINGTON -The government will be an impartjal referee, and won't throw up any special roadblocks, ifTedTurneroranyoneelsetries to buy CBS Inc .. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Mark S. FoWler says. The commission "ought to bean impartial umpire in administering ... the Communications Act in as fa ir and impanial a way as we can," Fowler told a congressional subcommittee on Tuesday. In another development Tuesday, CBS News reported that CBS was subpoenaing Turner "to determine the nature and extent. if any. of Turner's contacts with the defendants in the existing CBS lawsuit against the Nonh Carolina group calling itsclffaimess in Media." 62 general• on damaged plane AURORA, Colo. -There wa s a bit of·•urgency and exci tement" but no injuries when a plane carrying 52 new or soon-to-be Air Force brigadier generals blew a tire on takeoff and was forced to make an emergency landina, officials said. The military personnel, on an orientation tour of Air Force facilities Tuesday, made an unscheduled visit to Buckley Air National Guard Base here after taking off from Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs at 7:52 a.m. Vlet vet kills wlfe, son, self YONKERS, N. Y. -A 3-year-old boy put a Band-Aid on a gunshot wound and snacked in front of the television for hours after his fa ther, a Vietnam.veteran with a history of mental problems. fatally shot his mother and brother before killing himself, authorities said. Jason Orgen told authorities he ··couldn't wake his parents up" after his father's rampage Monday throu~ their Westchester County home. Yonkers police Capt. Owen McClain said. Afr Force veteran Jack Orgen. 33, killed his wife, Darline. 30, and son. Jack Jr., 8. shot Jason in the chest and then turned the .25-cahber Baretta handgun on himself. McClain said. Palnklller good for 40 IJoun CHICAGO-A new technique for tnjecting timed-release anesthetics can block pain for up to40 hours at a tame-10 times longer than current methods, one ofi ts developers says. The te.._chnique involves enclosing tiny droplets of pain-killer within membranes resembling those of a human cell and injecting the "microdroplets" into the body. said Duncan Haynes. a developer and a professor of pharmacology at the University of Mjami. Agent Orange settlement stln flgb.t NEW YORK -Vietnam veterans. disagreeing on how to divide a $180 million settlement of an Agent Orange lawsuit. have embroiled a federal judae in their war of words. U.S. District Judge Jack B. Weinstein, in a 10-hour hearing Tuesday heard more than 20 witnesses -some in wheelchairs1 others wearing fatigue Jackets -condemn. support or seek to change the distribution plan proposed last week by a coun-appomted lawyer. Weinstein's approval of the settlement is dependent on developing an acceptable distribution of the S 180 million settlement fund among more than 200.000 claimants. - CALIFORNIA Wlllle Br~W'D, cyclut collide to a convenience store to buy candy from 1981 to last June. before WASHINGTON (AP)-Many of _w_h_e_n_h_e_w_a_s_a_tta_ck_ed_Oc_t_. _2_s._19_7_3_. __ c_o_n_gr_e_ss_st_o..:...p_pe_d_th_e_ai_d_. ----the 3. 3 mil hon unintended preg- nancies that oc,.eur each year. and millions of resulting abortions. could be avoided if Ameri cans knew more about birth control methods, a na- tional medical society says. control methods. particularly the contraceptive pill, and that this misinformation leads to many un- intended pregnancies, ACOG said. SACRAMENTO-A bicyclist was hurt when she and a Jaguar driven by Assembly Speaker Willie Brown collided at the entrance of a state Capitol driveway. It happened shortly after noon Tuesday when Brown was returnina from a speech to a University of California alumni group at a downtown hotel. Witnesses told pohce that Barbara Weiss. 26. of Sacramento. failed to ober. a red light. Brown. 50. a San Francisco Democrat. said, ··she hit me. The bike was going faster than I was. She was movi ng:· Weiss. an employee of the State Personnel Board. was described as in fair condition at Kaiser Hospital with a head cut. ' I • Mutete.rd • ViN South Coast Plaza 540-6153 The American College of Obstetri- cians and Gynecologists said Tues- day that a poll it commissioned indiC!l tes many un.wanted preg- nancies stem from ignorance and misinfo rmation about contraceptio n. Poll results indicate Americans exaggerate the nsks and urid~r­ estimate the effecti veness of birth The telephone survey of 1,036 women and 520 men, conducted in January by the Gall up Organization Inc .• also fou nd that three-quarters of all Americans wa"nt seit education taught in the schools before children reach high school. By a 3-to-I margin, people favored making contraceptive services avail- able to teen-agers, but most also said parents should be notified C}.bout their children's birth co ntrol requests. ~-/ ' lt!iirNa~e. -S~lt~ ~ ' Costa Mesa, California 92626 (714) 545-3121 545-3121 ,,, '=--~.~ Is Closlng Down ~#50% off everything in the shop* Tugboat crew feared .drowned SAN FRANCISCO -The Coast Guard has ended its search for six crew members. missing since the 115-foot tu~ Willamette Pilot Ill went down four days ago m rough seas off the Mendocino coast. The crew of the tug radioed Saturday that the ve~sel was sinking and t~ey we~e putting .on survival suits. The Coast Guard estimated the rubber survival suits would keep the crew ali~ for up to three days. Crime top• Callfornlan concern SAN FRANCISCO - Crime has beco me the foremost concern of ~~ans. ~ing such e~ono~1c issues ll5 1,1nemploymentL taxes and 10flat1on, according to the Cal1fom1a Poll. The poll. founded by Mervi n Field in 1947, reponed today that 24 percent of those questioned ranked cnme and law enforcement "as the top-ranking state and community problem ... Orinda become. a city ORINDA 7 yoters ha ve ~ecided this posh community, where the average home p,ncc 1s $238,000, WJll become Contra Costa County's 18th city. The measure to ir:icorporate the quie~. hillsid~ town passed Tuesday on a 4,687 to 3,393 vote. Onnda has 17,656 residents w1lh an average household income of about $39,000. Throughout March 1985 Mon. thru Sat. 10 am to 5 pm. WrltenfileNLRBcomplalnt Silk flowers & Accessories, etc .. etc. LOS ANGELES - Claiming negotiators for movie and television prodttcers refused to bargain in good faith. the striking Writers Guild of all sales final America~ has filed a. complaint wit~ the National Labor Relations Board. •e1cep11ons design tees, ong1nal watercolors Meanwhile, the president of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Tai is let11na ao ol the shOll 10 devote tier Producers a. ccept.ed a fed. eral m. ediator's. cal.I for a meeting today, but fiuild ener1ies to paint watercolors d d d I d f 1 ~==========================~ representauves 1 not 1mm.e 1ate y ec1de.1 they would attend. Nicho at J. f-Counter 111. head of the alliance represents.ng networks, major studios and 1 Always use dry string',~ and paper in .,,...r::::illM'l.,.~i' te. , ~ Never use .. ..., wire or any metallic 4 Don't cross streets or highways when k..ite flying. s AlWl}'S fly your kite away from TV .. _...__ .... and radio ~ .antenna&. material. 3 Don't fly your kite in the rain. 6 Always fly your kite far from power lines! Don•t try to retrieve kites caught in power lines! ~etAforma l!choft produc::ers. planned to ~ttend the 3 p.m. meet mg that was called just hours after tees went on~trikc Tuesday. __ _ Nde-free .one l•• naked FRESNO -Voters have defeated a proposed ordinance that would have made this central Cahfomia city a "nuclear-frtt zone" in which the manufacture, storqe, or transportation of nuclear weapons is banned. The rree zone measure pmercd only 44.4 percent of the vote in Tuesday's election while oppo itfon vote topped SS percent, finishing close to 3.000 votes ahead out of more than 25,000 cast. WoRtD l•land mmlater IJeld 1n drD6 •dn6 MIAMI -The chief minister of the TurksandCaioos Islands waumstcd afi~r he accept~ ~20,000 from undercover a,ents to assure a smooth now of druas t.h~ou~ h111slan~ ~lony from Colombia to the United States federal authonues said. The m1~1stcr, Norman ~unde~. ~s arrested TucSday with three. oth~r men1 in~ludmg two other hiah:rank1n& 11Jand officials. duril\I 1 meettna i.n .a M1am1 hotel room, the nnia Enforcement Aatncy said in 1 s~tement. Durif!& th.~ mcctina wiJ&.~ndsroo er qcnts 1)1,may. the four mea said that some 400 kil<>&rants o(tael1ne CO\lld bearn~rouah the Turft and Caicos Islands eath week, said Peter Grudcn. chief qcnt In the Miami DEAoffi~. , CouerntloJIUt. l•ad •balhil M1Jctlo11• W ASHfNOTON -Conscrv1tion11ts arc rcjoki~ over their latest Jeeal victory to 11vc the whales ... We're thnlled. we think u is terrific.·· Patrida F<\rkan. vice presidcn~ oflhe Humane Society, said Tuetday after u:s. Ouuict Judse <;harks R. Richey ordcrtd the Rcapn administration to impoee economic 11ncuons ap1n t Japen for v1olatm1 the ln1tmational Wballna Commission's btn on tak1n& sperm whales. Ric~ said Commerce Secretary Ma~tm BaJdn,e had a cl~r duty to ~nifv to President Rcapn thtt tbC Japencte whahna 1ndu1try had violated the IWC mo quota for sperm wheat.. ---·- ... - Se~•te committee pu freeze On defense budge Prince for a clay? 18-4 bipartisan vote shows 79 btlUon clit In Pen on spendln WASHINGTON (AP)-The Re- publican-controlled Sc!natc Budltl Committee, in a sharp rebuff to President R~n. voted tentatively Tuctday in favor of a $79 billion reduction in his military buildup over the neJtt thra ycan. On a bipartisan vote or I 8--4" the committee proposed frcaing de1ense 1pendi~ authority at current levels after adJUSliA& for inflation for the fitcal year that bqins Oct. I. That • would be followed by after-inflation increases of 3 percent for each of the two subsequent years. Eiaht·Republicans joined all 10 of the committee's Democrats in votinJ for the defense spending proposal. w.......,. The four "no" votes were cast by GOP senators. Pardclpanta In a MUCb for Prince look- allk• poee In Loe Aqela Taaday follow-lnl Jaqm.. From left, back row, are lteD.Detli Strode, Robin Roa.Jr and Tod Gulmont; front row. Peter Colllna, Ron llarrla, Adelmo RodrUue& and Lallom Keerin. Barria, Kee.Ga and Rodrlfaes were named rock npentar wlnnen. The defense spendina proposal is subject to possible change when the committee completes its work and takes a final vote on the entire budget packaae. Th,e action Tuesday was the first formal indication of the widespread dissatisfaction in Congress over the president's proposed fiscal 1986 budaet. which includes a $30 billion increase in defense ·spending and nearly $40 billion in cuts in domestic programs. General Dynamics told check's not in the mail The vote came a few hours after Senate Ma~ority Leader Roben Dole. R-Kan., said the administration must be prepared to negotiate with House Pentagon holds back $40 million until end of probe on f undtng WASHINGTON1AP)-The Pen- tagon is halting $40 million 1n monthly payments to General Dynamics Corp. while 11 probes millions of dollars in "improper charges" that Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger says benefit the defense contractor but not na- tional security. aways," entenainment, and political and charitable contributions to the costs of the wcaoons they build. Weinberger announced that in the future."all defense contract0rs will be required to ccn1fy. "under penalty of perjury.'' that their billings include no expenses "not made directly for the benefit of the government." Thal reciu1rement, he said. "will do a lot toward eliminating these im- proper charges." Weinbe~er said m a speech to an and Senate leaders to get a "con- American Legion Conve ntion here scnsus" budget that will reduce Tuesday. federal deficits. l\mong these. he said, were bills White Hou'sc spokesman Larr) sent by General Dynamics to the Speakes said Reagan "stands square- Defcnsc Depanment .. when a com-ly behind his budget.'' pany-owned dog was put in a kennel." The vote on de(cnse spending -marked tbe beg.innina of the Budget General Dynamics executives tried ~mmittee's efTons to draft an to explain about the dog in con-altemauve to the president's spend- gressional hearings last week. But ing bluepnnt. _ Pentagon spokesman Michael Burch Wtth the committee facing a senes rejected their testimony as "naus-of controve rsial proposals to cut eating." domestic spending, ·Sen. Ch~rles Grusky, R-lowa, said. "The defeme number is pretty key to tcttina a consen1us Or\ the rest of the budlct ... Sen. Ernest Hollinp, [)..$.C .• told reponers afterward that ihe vote wu a breakthrouah that wouJd lead co similiar action in other &reu of lhe budget, includina a freeze on Social Security oost-<>f-livil\J lncreun. · "We will be frettanf th11 budact across the board," Holhnas said. The Budttt Qjmminee onsidcred five plans. aJI of which would have allowed defense spendina lO ri~ each . Snyder's dau~hter sent to foster fiome LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Judge reponedly has ordered the 9-year-old daughter of City Councilman Anhur K. Snyder placed in a foster home ruling that hvinJ with Snyder or ht~ former wife. Michele Nova.I, would be detrimental to the child. Judge Edward Kakita ruled Tues- day in Dependency Courty that he prefers that the girl be placed in a group foster home. where she can receive treatment for emotional prob- lems. The Judge's scaled decision was delivered dunng a closed heanng after he studied a repon by the county Department of Children's Services. which included the results of psy- chiatric tests of the girl and a stud) of her home situauon. the newspaper reponed. "She's going to be placed some- where other than wnh either of her parents." Novars attortle). Paul Caruso. told ihe Los Angeles Herald £xaminer. Since November. when the gul accused Snyder of molesting her ~vef?l times four or fi ~e years a$O. the girl has been held 10 protective custody at a county shelter and 10 a private foster home. · The child's grandparenu, who had asked that she be allowed Lo live Wlth them. also fa1lcd to gain custody. The county Depanment or Public Soc1aJ Services bad alleged that the girl was a victim of sexual abuse, excessive diJCipline and cpild en- danacring, while living witn Snyder, 52, and Noval, 30. During a hcarine-in.Oecom6cr, two physicians tcs.tified that the Jirl showed physical signs of earlier sexual abuse. Kak1ta sustained the alleptions of sexual molestations. the newspapers repon.cd. Snyder. wbo has announced his res1gnat1on from the council effective July I. has denied molesting his dau&h ter. blamin'g the allegations on· his former wife. who. he said, co-m- municatcd .. her frustration, anger and mentally 111 fantasies to our daughter." The couple divorced m 1979. Roger Gunson, chief deputy of w district at~ ~nd child abuse division. said no decision has been made on whether to file criminal charges of child sexual abuse against Snyder because a transcript of the December hearing was completed only last week. Some members of Congress say the probe should be broadened to include the billing practices of all defense contractors. Critics accuse contrac- tors of using loopholes to add the costs of country club memberships. advertisements. promotional "give- General Dynamics spokesman Peter K. Connolly said the compan.>'. believes it is blameless but said that 1f any wrongful billings are uncovered the money will be returned at once. "It came out in our audits that they were billing us. as pan of their overhead costs, a lot of expenses that did not benefit the government." 2 bodies f OUDd Dr. WHll:;.-.. Walker in Guadalajara NEWPORT cE~~-L HOSPITAL Thal· 1andJ. ets ki· 11 GUADA~JA~. Mex.IC()' (A~) Camarena. The ranch IS located near 1333 Avocado, Newport Beach · -Twq bodies wrappe.-0 in plastic the v1llageofV1stahermosa about 60 .etlC6Utl IJJIM/ • U..a/.J !?I..-• 7"-'u bags were found at the stte(Jf a miles east ofGuadalaJara. · I Op.n 1dayi1 o.m. · 8 p.m. (71 •) .6.U-S-460 6 0 V • t ld • weekend shootout related to the 24 ltov le So le rs ~arch for a kidnapped Amenc-an Five people were arrested. accord-I~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~r~_,~,,,.,~~·fl9'~1C1~y~~~~Of'9~~~~~~~~~"(_ drug agent. but there was no immedt-!ng to the Attorney Generars Office ate identification of them available in a weekend repon which did not E•rly Bird Dinner Specl•ls 16.9S Prime Rib or Fresh Fish C~t~ DlnMr With cholc~ of A·RA NYAPRA THET. Thailand ( 1.2 To 1.8 miles) inside Thailand," (AP) -That air force jets strafed he told a news conference. three hilltops in Thai territory near He also reported that Thai forces the Cambodia border to flush out Vietnamese troops that intruded were trying to evict an unspecified while attacking a Cambodian re-number of Vietnamese troops who · Th · had crossed the border during an sistancc camp. a at army spokes-attack on the Khmer Rouge base man announced today. opposite Khun Harn district of Sis· Sixt)' Vietnamese soldiers were k · killed m the air strike and a battle with a ct province. Thai troops for the hills, he said. About 200 VietnameSe troops sup- Spokesman Maj. Gen. Naruedol ported by an11lcry attacked the gucr- Dcjpradiyuth said Thailand struck rilla base before dawn today and -T'UCSday when Hanoi's forces tried to some of them later clashed with Thai seize the hilltops in order to encircle troops about a mile inside Thailand. today. mention 1fthe missing agent had been Manuel Beltran. commander of the found. The repon said the federal federal Judicial police. said 1n a agents arnved at the r~nch as part of telephone interview the bodies were the ongoing 1nvest1gat1on of the area found Tuesday night at the ranch and around GuadalaJ;ira for Camarena taken 10 the morgue here. and Alfredo Zavala Avelar. an Agri- He said it was not known if the culture Depanment pilot who also bodies were those of the two men was kidnapped 1n Guadalajara. missing since Feb. 7 in Guadalajara, ~--------------~• Mexico's second-largest city 332 miles nonhwest of Mexico C'tty. Enrique Camarena Salazar. 37. a Drug Enforcement Administration agent, was abducted within sight of the U.S. Consulate here. RUFFELL'S IPHUTUY, llC. f• T1w llnt Of Y• lh I '12 IWllOll UO . COSTA llllU -!141· llS6 soup or UllMJ and ~rt 4 to 6 PM l ..,. ..... 1 801 E. BALBOA 673-n26 Tatum, the headquaners of forces he said. loyal to Cambodian resistance leader Naruedol said Vietnamese forces, ''The)' found evidently two bodies out at that ranch," a U.S. Embassy spokesman 1n Me,1co City said . I-;;=============;;!;;======================;;;;===;;;;;;. asking not 10 be 1dent1fied. "But we 11 Prince Norodom Sihanouk. launching a multi-pronged attack Sihanouk is a former Cambodian after a two-week lull on the battle-don't kn ow who those bodies are." lcader. fields of western Cambodia. also h ve people. 1nclud1ng a federal policeman. were killed dunng ttTe 11.1) hour shootout at "El Mareno" ranch aturday 1n M1choacan state where authorities had ~one on the ~arch for The Tliai general sa1d thnntrudcn seized Tuesday both Sanro Changan had killed two Thai soldiers and and Dongruk -the last bases of the wounded another 13 1n the assaults third guerrilla group. the Khmer on the hilltops at¥>ut fou r miles from People's National Liberation Front. Tatum and locate<t in Surin province. rr===================;:::=:::;::::;:;;;;;;:::;::::;::::;:=;-i Naruedol did not say if any Vietnamese troops remained in the area or if the air raids were continuing today. · ' "It is~bvious that these (nilltops) are between two to three kilometers r Yes. A.' ;i profcs,ion.il. one'<, c:mphasl'i on cx<.cllcncc l'! :i priority At Clark Kennedy Plorh1 we rt't o~nl1c thJt requirement .md focus our .mmtion 10 pcrfc..x tlon ~ Sptrlt.111Jnjt In C.orponue Hor.ti (~ jtn l'll ~ H<'\lhlll AH·nut' °'lllllt• A II »4 C c ll'lt.1 Mt"-! &*1& ('(.W n.IRn c ,.,.,,.,. '" ""'""""" Tek·rhoncr·1~1 <l<il OHIO ~ 1111' ALL llY UIOl'MJLll &! D. P11P1U llC&Ull 1'11 ~mt UOll." ~flt $39.00 BYIJGLASSB8 Mo,.. LhM half U'le "Y" &IUMit &t Mr r~ r. It no more (Bil~.&!• $1)41 00 1 No" 111an 1 4~unt •wre ftut you won t U'llllk .,. Al Mr ~pera 01otw""• y u·u nno t1111 .u.ruun Mee a.nd proi · 11on IA.ml '1'<1 y<111 • lft" rt from ~ pn f!C1 •Y WHr bouuque• llla vit m!lfl 't lill<l w om-.1 I rutu<in dl'f\&NTlf'nt.11 lll•r1 rt. htktttnll nf!w •••e aun nd f'OM l\/•IJ 111 t11r• 1r "". 1)1\1'1.ll•"nlA V111~ our Pr1vist• COUC!<'l.IOn 8outlq\I• w. ff',11 ~llN! a huge o.a11<1rt.mrnt ol ttyt'g)UI ~AllOl'lf't h•Of. mav.na.11 a.nd lrf'Mlnf!nta <11' .. \lllM ti) m1U.4Yo\U' "Y" wt<U' aa be.u1u1W tlnll dW'l\blri 1>0 '1111,, Our own 1111,,,r 1-0r1f'• 1 ll'm ~no 1very 1 .. 111 t.Ct n .• "t r <'•• -1 FIWll'l'GJ '•'•I.I wh1I• ~tac.e bctmaM orur1 nia Clo \ll nwn« IU'IO "' •lff' • maul.a And wtt-n 1111t.lf' "' "' " p&lr'!I on th,, irrot lo. II y:iu Mv. me""' bf u,an rno!l"Y f\tlY a. vw1t to Mr r ... .,... ~11Mvt'8 m~h. Who ICIJ w , Maybtl VCIU U Wtll<f 11r r' I I• " A 'I f-> GAltDCN CltOYE 71 4 5JO. I 43:1 99:15 CHAPMAN AYE (At Brao•horoO F\JLL£RTON Pl.A('()mA c-1nqo;....n CYP_Rt.SS 10019 YAI I IY YlfW ST 114 821 7ll7 L\K(WOOO n l ~2S 704 ~·Ut OU AMO Bl YD 111 l ... ~·· "' l\elltt .. -• & 0.1 """'' CAll0£NA '''-"'-1 127 111 W YICTOlllA t19Clth - , ....... ., ... ""' .. MA ......... 9tt• '"'--........ "A•• . -I PARTY CENTER r ....... rly .Wlllrlllll ae1 W. Bak r .I• t W. of Brl tol 979-8570 • ., 8)' Jl Ot .. I ,,, HIP ditd • ID ( Mor imp pro( Tl -F h act. Wi abc 1 stu d¥1 fnc -; 'I P'J COi I bet co• 15r the .. gi .. rct pre rec l9 an ret - j • to dt y tr s. c ff ( c e s c c r t I .. ' O.C will suffer · if we stick our head iii. the sand By the year 2000, more than. a million new jobs will ~ created in Orange County, according to a report released trns week by national trendwatcher Nestor Terleckyi. . If each new job supports, on the average, two people - spouses, childre n -Terleckyi's prediction m eans the county's population wilt increase by two million in the next 15 y~ars. In other words, if these proje~tions are anywhere near accurate, our population is about to double very, very quickly. The implications for public policy are awesome. Current planning is based on estimat~s rol;lghl y half as large as Terleckyi's. It assumes 500,000 new JObs in the county by century's end and real population growth of 700,000. C~rr~nt ~planning, it must be noted, recognizes that the county's existing support systems are inadequate to serve the needs o f even the smaller growth estimate. Specifi cally, we can expect -and should prepa~e for -. social stresses in the areas o f land transportauo~. a.1r transportation, housing, educC\tion. child care and recreation m the short term. . . Additional highways must be built. to move this influx around. Existing highways must be "'.1den.ed . John Wayne Airport will be expanded or an alterna te site will be developed to accommodate what promises to be a boom in air !ravel dema~d . Sinct many of these new jobs will be in construction and service industries. according to Terleckyi, a renewed cry for affordable housing wi ll ring out· most likely it will echo through the southern end of the co'unty>-where land r~mains undeveloped. Not only will more classroom S_Qace be required ~ut the deve loping population pockets will mean that schools will have to be built in areas where there are none now. And. when the temperature hits 90 degrees and four mill ion people head for the beach. look out. There is a tendency among those not intimately invol ve~ with public poli cy to look upon planners and developers as if they were all robber barons primed to rape the enviro~m~nt and destroy the quality of life. On balance, the opposite 1s .tru~. Growth in Orange County is inevitable, and so, therefore, ts change. The planners and developers recognize it, but they're having a tough time convi ncing us. . r Last year. they formed the core of the transpon atton tax movement that appeared on the ballot as Proposition A. They looked into the future and recognized that we need to find a way to fund ITM)re road construction -now. _ .. Orange County flexed its anti-tax muscles, put on its ''independent Westerner·~ face, planted its feet in a solid. po pulist stance and defeated the tax. While all around us is changing, we opted for status quo. It wi ll prove to be inadequate. . . . Jf we plan for growt h. the quality ofltfe can and will remain high on the Orange Coast. But if we stand like th~ Du.tch Boy with his finger in the dike, ifwe think we can stop lime, 1f we try to deal with change by denying it. we will pay a very high price for our shortsightedness. Let's feed hunqry rather than fill our tnissile silos To the Ed11or. Throughout history. the Un11ed tatcs has been the model count!) of self nehteousness and fairness. How can this be when we allow deep cu ts in federal programs for human needs and allow a $32 billion cscalat1on in our defense programs? Our service men and women. who protect our country every day. must accept wage freeLes. while many .others must sleep in tent~ or substan· .dard housing. If we do not have enough funds 10 properl) educate our children or take care of our senior c11izens. then where do we find enough money 10 waste on the. MX 'missile. the B-1 bomber and Trident submar·1nes when the lJ S. arsenals are already overflowing \\>1th over 25.0CXI nuclear weapons that can destroy eHr)' li ving urgan1'im on 1h1s planet some ~(J times o..,er'1 I have alwa\\ believed in a strong. ra11onal ddr n.o;t'. but when we allo"' uur m1h1ar~ 10 have e\Cf)th1ng th e) v.ant and our m'n people to go to bed hungf). then an inJusuce ha s taken plaLe and we mu'it act to correct the problem, L.M. Bovo --- When we don't pay attention 10 how our tax monc} 1s being c;penl. 11 becomes cas:r for o ur leadership 10 take advantage of 1hc situation or make us feel guilt} v.hcn we ques11on how much 1s enough. If the While House and Congreo;c; were 10 scrap JUSI one of the man) m1ss1lc programs -for example. the MX. which costs about S50 billion. we could pay our teachers a decent wage and provid~ n~w books for our children; our service men and women could make an income wonhy of their self-sacrifice; and we would still have money lcf\ over to pay toward our SI trillion deficit. II 1s my hope and dream that one day we will all stand together as. .a. nation 10 stop this injustice and become the great napon our fore- fathers intended 11 10 be All we have 10 do is pay a11en11on to what 1s goi.ng on and work together .as a commun11y to re-evaluate our national pnorities and ac1 accordingly. RICHARD HAMEL Commun1t> Organ11cr A.lhancc for urv1val WhatJs economical? Depends on the item Ad aicncy copywriter\ ha ve 1n• fluenccd the languagl'. all right. Take the word "ccont>m ) ·· Ml·an' "large .. JO soap nokc'i and ··~mall" 1n cars. • Our Lo..,c and War man "collect- 1na good-w1fe-good-hu5hand hncs husband never drinks out oft he vat.·· Do you have any offenngs for th" collecti on? ·\ folhng ohwt travels more <1lowl y at 1hc equator than at the Nonh Pole • • ·'If Nicaragua become$anotherCuba. It wt/J not bebecau~Ron~~ ReaganandGeorgeShultz were out to lunch while It happened . WILLIAM BUCKLEY columnist Ja AllEISll Budget WPORT .curbs . ~ needea f> "Yin ---ACH for OAS U.S. citizens pay plenty to furnish diplomat's home --------- WASH INGTON -Extravagance in the fu rnish ing of Washington's diplomatic residences is of no con- cern to American taxpayers -except when the diplo,mat involved is the secretary-general of the Organization of American States. The U.S. govern- ment pays 67 cents of every dollar in the OAS budget. which is currently running at $93 million a year. Nicaragua is 1 ~84 version ef the Cuban missile crisis At a time when an OAS spol<-esman admitted that "we are facing serious problems with 1he budget," the o r· ganization has spent nearly S 150.000 10 spruce .up the, secretary-general' residence in a high-rent district of the capital. Sandinistas want ---to ext~nd tyranny to neighbor states The reaction by the critics 10 thl· declarations of Mr. Reagan and Mr. ShultL suggests the conunu1ng failure of the Eastern Seaboard liberal men- tal it) to absorb the relevant pnon11cs. >\ fev. obsen a lions: - I) It 1s 11rcsomc and irrelevant to be reminded that other go\emmcn1s v.11h which the n1tcd States has no immediate quarrel arc authontanan and. 10 the case of China. totalitarian For the I001h time in this space. I recall the quahficauon made b:> Sen W1ll1am Fulbright a dozen years ago. which is prec1sel > relevant 10 current problems. He <;aid. '"The government of the United tates ha-; no quarrel w11h an} co untry. however obnox· 1ous it s doctrines. so long as it doc•\ not !>eek to export them.'' Apply that rule. and ~ou distinguish instanll> hc1 .... ccn Nicaragua and Chile. or the Phllipp1nec, -or -at lea't for the prc\cnt -China. 2J II as true. as we are con!>tantl~ reminded. that in 1948 at Bogota V.l' C0-'>1gned a dcclarat1on 1n which V.l' pkdgcd that "no c;1a1c or group of stale'> ha'> tht• nght 10 mh:rH'O('. directl) or indm:nl). for an:r reason whale, er. 1n th e intl·rnal or e"tcrn.11 affairs of an) other state."' But what 1s the correct pos111on of a s1gnatol") lo the Bogota Dcclarallon 1n a s11ua110n 1n which a fon·1gn po"' er ha!> prcc1sel) been responc;1bk for such inlt~r· fcrcnce. and moreover. when the mo11ves of that foreign poY.er arc not merel} to stop with the colo01za11on of a single power in ( cntral America. but to use that powrr as the base from which to continue tu wage 1ts gcncr- 'WILLIAM F. Bue KLEY ations-long war against the stabili ty of neighboring states? It can not he plausibly contended tbat Nicaragua is a sovereign. inde· pendent c;1ate~ governed by an in· d1genous mahUlf) JUnta. Nicaragua 1s a geopoh11cal cn s1s point not because 1l has wrec_ked its econom_y or tortured its ctt17cns. but because what 11 has done is 1ncoheren1 except to the e"<tcnt 1ha1 11 1s related 10 a grander cn1crpn5(.' than merely imposing totahtanan rule on its own c111zcns. Jt seeks. havmg done Iha!>. to aggrandize that 1yra nn ). to extend to El Salvador. Honduras. Guatemala -and, 1n- cv11abl). to the grt'al. huge state of Mexico. If thl.'. umhilit·al cord between the Sandinistas and Cuba were cut. Nil'aragua·s power would wi ther awa> a\ fac;1 a!> an untl'ndcd planta- 11on 1n the jungle. Hy the same token. 1fC'uha went a \Ingle }Car without the c;uhvent1om of the Soviet lJn1on. II v.ould <1uducnl) find itself worrying ahoul food and \hcltt'r an Cuba. rather than about the need to cxpon revol- u11on IO Angola. 'J It " 11rcll'!t!tl) but correctly rqx•atcd that 1t 1s the obJCCt of \tatelraft 10 abon cm1s. If the United \talcs had aucd promptly and dec1s- " cl\ 1 n 1960. or 10 1961. there would not haH' been a missile criSIS in 1962. nor 1he cn\u1ng dissolution of the Monrcx: Doctnnc. What Mr. Reagan and Mr hult7 an: attempting to do is w ad.,1r,c 1he American people that what 1~ gmng on 10 Nicaragua at th is moml'nt is in all important respects akin to wna1 was going on 10 Cuba durine 1959-1962: the consolidation of a Sov1e1 satellite on western Ameri- can soil. Why the American people? Because. 4) Congress has turned its bat k on the one indigenous hope of the anti-communist community in Nicaragua. namely. aid to the contras. To hold up one's nose disdainfully when one refers to them as .. freedom fighters"' 1s to be supercilious about the gravest human secular comm11- mcn1. namely the dedication to maintain one's sovereignty and one's personal freedom. 11 is infuriating to note that so many of the same people who fawningly ad mired the freed om -fighters who in Nicaragua armed themselves mu11nously against the dictatorship of SomoLa should be so condescending against those who seek to do the same thing against the Sandinista government. But the House of Rcpresentati ves. in the Boland bill, and -it now appears -the Senate. will join for~es to refuse Mr. Reagan the funds w.1th which 10 help the contras, to which there is onl y one appropriate reac· tion. It is: We arc. as a cons11tu1ional republic. pledged 10 fo llow const itu- tional arrangements. A generation ago. President Frankl10 Roosevelt took a 101 of short cuts about the Constitution in order to 10 volve us 10 the struggle against Hitler. and we arc extracons111u11onally grateful for his vision in the mailer. Today. Ronald Reagan is at the end of his hne in the matter of .. coven action." He needs the help of Con- gress. and so he 1s talk10g to the Amencan people and telling them what is at stake. If Nicaragua becomes another Cu ba. 11 will noJ be because Ronald Reagan and George Shultz were out to lunch wh ile it happened. Wllll11m B11ctley I• • •yodlc111ed colamn/11. There's a ski~~ to reading the personals accurately Approx1ma1el) 93 percent of hap· pily married wpmcn suffer from a chronic cond111on known as "matchmaking.'" The disease goes into remission from time to time. but if tho~ stricken see or hear of an ehgable bachelor. the symptoms re- turn. I. although·happ1ly married. am 1n the other 7 percent. That doesn't mcanrm not interested in romance. or helping someone who asks for advice in that department. So I read\ the personals in the papers and maga1ines: I want to be prepared sn ca~ one of my single fric'nds asks for help in finding a mate. Pe o ple seeki ng a friend/lover/marriage partner th1 ough these ads have 10 read hc:twccn the linc;s. ANN WELLS warm fire tonight , go skiing in Aspen th1, wecktnd and havedinn.er in Paris the next. plc·usc reply with photo." She may be too late, he probably has enough photos by now to paper his skt lodge an Aspen. 1 h~ woman who wrote, .. Widow. 45. seeking romantic. smccre man fo r po'siblt lasting relationship:· should not answer the ad wh1t:h reads. "Cicnerous male, 50..plus. seeking discreet. da)'11me romance with at· iracuve female." What he ha in mind is not a "lasting relationship." Both men and women st~ss they want: A1trac11 .... c (or beautiful), in- telli8enl. scnrn1vc. fun-loving. enthusiastic. financially secure part- ners. Who doesn't? Everyone. according 10 the ads. as attractive. No one 1s honc'lt enoug_h to admit his/her face nnd body would make a beagle look beautiful. A surprising number of men boast about being m1lhona1rcs. One ad reads: "Self-made mult1-m1ll1onairc (alumnus of Yale and Ha rvn rd) ... si ncere, fun and very generous wi1h my love. at1ent1on and wealth. I want to spend the r~s1 of my life creating a loving, monogamous and beautiful mamagc ...• "and he actually gives his name: phone numhcr and address. This. I'm sure. i a cruel trick played on him hy h1r. pals -the ones who work with him 111 the hardware store. Anyonr who i~ sman cnoulh to make millions of dollars on h1'1 own, and be an alumnus of both Yale and The casual OAS attitude toward money surfaced last year when it was revealed that the former secretary· ~eneral. Argentine millionaire Ale- Jandro Orfila . was still drawing his salary from the OAS months after he went to work for a publ ic-relations firm. The official residence was refurbished for his successor. Jose Baena Soares of Brazil·. There is no doubt that 1he mansion. valued at S 1.8 million. required some serious repair work. Floors were rolling. windows and doors had 10 be replaced. plaster was cru mbl10g and a new retaining wall was needed. But some of the other expenditures seem to be for things a diplomat might be expected to provide for himself -Instead of charging to the taxpayers. OAS documents obtained by my associate Donald Goldberg list some of the little luxuries bought for the Baena Soares home: •Two king-size. one queen-size, one full-size and two twin mattress- and-box spri ng sets. at a total co\t of $2.780.49. •A series of mirrored glass doors and wall pieces: Sl.931.95. •A 19-inch color TV: $527.77. •S3. l 00 worth of linens, blankets, towels, napkins. tablecloths. quilts. comfoncrs. placemats and pillows. •Fabric and upholstering expenses ofS9.286. The OAS spokesman sa id the refurbishing project had been pproved before Baena Soares' elec- tion as secretary-general last March. If so. the elegant touching up con- tinued after Baena Soares moved in. One detailed document "for re- fu rbishing at residence of Am- bassador and Mrs. Baena Soares" was dated Oct. 5. 1984. It gives a room-by- room rundown on drapes and up- holstering: • •Po ngee-textured. Ooor-length drapenes in the hallway: $800. •floral-print drapes and matching sofa fabric 10 the li brary: $3,000. •Drapes and fabric in the family room: nearly $3.000. •Master bedroom drapes and up- holstery: $4,000. •Son's bedroom curtains: S 1.300. The touil bill for the drapes and reupholster)-work done in the fall came to more than $24.000. The OAS spokesman said the organization's Permanent Council had approved all lhe costs of re· furbishlna the sccretary-genefal's residence, but my sources arc skep- tical that the council was informed of th e details. They also say that when inqui ries were made by my associate. officials quickly passed word to employees not to talk. HELP ON, THE WA Y?: Better late than never. I auess. Congress finally seems to be \aking an interest in the confusion caused by the Justice Department's breakup of AT&T. If a bill introduced by Sen. Donald RicaJc. D-Mich., is passed. Ma Bell's orphans will get some help from the Federal Trade Commission. ' Example: "A good wife nc\cr OV:&:,E:llilllll!Rlili!!!!!~ ' drawl. JU'it underdcpo111 ' "-\ 8 /1 • 1yndlc"""1 4 For example: The woman who wrote, ·'Adorable, good humored, brown-eyed blonde. i~8. S feet J irt~hc • ~k' fun loving. amuent n)ale ... " hould tay awa> from the man who wrot~lrac11ve male. S feet 11 10chc , fu tng, IOOk1ng (or hone I pcnon to h3rt walks on the ~ach. Iona dnve-t or Just ~ltling a~d talk· tng." One man dcscnbcs himself as being a uccc 'iful doctor, attractt vc, casual. relaxed and very 1n1' . Stay away from th1 character.• l"ve ·met a non1berohcl')' intense men and none. of them \\>CfC Cl' ual and rcloxcd. Or fun lovm "'Harvard. 1 too sm:in to put thi ad m the paper. No. I won't aivc You his name and addrc • he is pro~W bonkers alr(ady from.-.ILD "'cnna li11 phone and cmp1yrna friVT1a11 box. The bill would plug a regulatory loophole by giving the FTC authority to keep tabs on the various Iona· distance services being offered to the publ!c with a maximu~ .of com- petitive hustle and a mmamum of enlia}ltcnment. The bill would do for telephone uscN what tM truth·io· lending laws do for consumer-bor· rowers. the fuel-economy chin do for car buyers and the food·l•behna law do for arocery shoppM(-prov1de 1nform1uon. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. l . lchWaril Ill PuC). ,t ,., Frank Zlnl ~ ~ [d•IO< Tom Telt C·ly fd•IOI Crete IMft parl1 c dil<JI ' r--~~~-" ) It 1s obvious that while he could be fun lovi ng. he I not amuc:nt. lftte 1$. he'~ a ta&htwad he's aficr more lhan walks.. cfrivcs and con versatton he could chttk out the ad that reads, .. Successful, hand~me. cx- ccu 11 vc cek•na fun lovana friend/lover. l(you would like to have 1t quiet dinner and cuddle an from oh I The: lasl ads I rl'lld listed many "profc aonal' " Devcn of them claimed 10 be docto" r he othe~ included rorpora11on pre 1dcn1,, financacn. cnarnecrs. uccc (ul ex· ccuhvc•. No one 1dm1tt d he/ he wa a sale clerk. plumber or haardrc r And they tan be' a\ fun loving a anyonc else. _,._._ --.... --· ·---·----' • Th~ ~t pu7IC 1, why the~ attractive. 1ntclh ent. run-lov1na. scn111t1ve, weahhy men have to advcm~ for a companion. If the description of thcmstlvc arc tr-ue. they should ~ advcn1s1na for 1 bod)'auard with a b1acluh to keep the women away C.l•m•l•I Au Wtll• IJv~1 la l.apuftllprl. Ri(l}c's btll would--reQutre the F'f 10 ·.:promulptc ~lcs to ensur:i ~t 1ntcntatc lon1-d11ttncc compan1~ notify all m 1dent1al consumers tn writina of any chanscs an rates or relattd characs" wi thin 10 days. The aaency would also sec that phone CUSlomcrs arc a1vcn "simple, 1tra1&htforward" rate schedules on request Jed ,...,.... l.1 • 11Nk91d c•,.,,,.,.t I _ ........ , - P APAR~/ ll ............ _..., .... Judy Carpenter •howa wlnnlnt ~uk; Suan and Tim Strader wear thetn. Sound of Mu.sic soiree ' more than f~t for a king By VIDA DEAN 0..,,.....,.. .... Them.inuetwaspopulardurinJ the reign of King Louis XIV, but m Newport Beach the feetare livelier. After seeing TM Jlmmle DeFore dancers ably demonstrate the dance ofbygonedays, "Soiree a Yer- saiUes".guest.s (includini Def ore himself) optedfor swinging to the tunes ors...,, Cole'• Sounds of Music. They were at the Newport Mar- riott (250 strong) in support of the Sound ofMusic chapter's major fund-raiser for the Orange County Performing Arts Center, soaking m the French atmosphere ... via enter-- tainment, menu, decorations and opportunity prizes. Louis' palace couldn't have been more colorful with its soi recs than this affair ... an elC$1:Dtly attired group ... women wtth large masks formed offeathers, fresh flowers. crystals and rhinestones, etc. prom- enaded around the ballroom. "Mine is madeofkclpand sprayed with gold," said Ellie Faber earlierofherpretty pearl-and sea· .shell-<;tecorated mask as we walked from the atrium cocktail hour to dinner. Live red carnations and baby's breath adorned GelT)' Scltroeder'1 mask creation; Martlaa Greea'1 feathered design complemented her black velvet gown, but RJeltard Odle'• decision was that Jady Carpenter'• black and crystal mask took the prize. Others spotted in the promenade led by jesters and mimes were Saau and Tim Strader, Ollie HUI, Llnda Hupea, President Slaaroa Eaayalu, Dorodty Harley, Rena God11WJ, Bob McCaflrey (a white satin m8$k with a nose of an elephant or anteater'!) and Party Chairman Cadterlae nyen (orchid and silver). "This is such a great group," said Th yen, who has been working on the event si nee she completed her Bob McCaffrey duties as chairman of the fall Concours d'Elegance. "They have been so easy to work with," added tf\c obviously pleased chairman holding the bouquet of pink roses presented to her. (Later they were placed in a champagne bucket for safe keeping). "J think Charlie Paap has done a fabulous job with the decorations," Th yen commented as she observed the 12-foot enclosed fountains at each end of the ballroom and the tall arrangements of orchids and can- dJes centering the potpourri-scat- tered tables. Other huge arrangements fronted the fou ntains and flanked the bandstand along with topiary trees. ··1 had a dream about these decor- ations three years ago," said the exuberant Paa]>. "Wait till you see what (do next. h will be even bigger." "He always says that," wife Carolyn joked. (He really seems to. too). The menu was also getting its share of compliments-Fil et de saumon poche: La Salade de 1\nn and Robert McLean with Dorothy Hurley 1pot another lntereedn& mull. teaumes frais; Le Carre de veau; Fruits Fraise Saba yon topped off withOodivachocolatesandcoffee with a choice of orange peel, cinnamon or whipped cream, etc. (An added incent1ve to dance more.) After dinner there was still more incentive to dance or at least jump .forjoy..for underNnten Joal and Jim Baker ... they won the cruise along the French and Italian Riv- ieras aboard "The Sea aoud"' the tall ship oriainally owned by Mar- jorie Meriweather Post. "We bought one ticket(S 100), then decided at the last minute to buy another one. It was the first one that won the trip " Baker said already looking forward to sailing May21. Other luck:jesJt the ball expected to raise $60,000 were Terri New- mu, who owns a new fox jacket donated by M. Ja~ Fan of Fashion Island and Underwriters Tom "I never win a thing" and Mary Wolff, who have a weekend stay for two plus brunch, compliments of the NeWJ)Ort Beach Marriott. Also awarded were gift certificates from Wyndham Leiah Diamonds (Bnee Lambert); San Clemente's Colby Antiques and Glabman Furniture (Committee Member Barban and Jlm Glabmu were there) and a facial and 1passage gift from OubSL Tropezbyl.be attendinJ Au and Rua Paqe. (Entertatner James Roberti donat- ing his time as emcee and sinaer, was callina the shots durina the evenina and Guilds Chairman Carol Wll.ku drew the lucky numbers.) If prizes bad gone to spi ri tcd dancers, Au McLeaa might have been a winner ... or Boward l\Jd- ardsoa or Jolm JobtoD with Marie A.adenoa (those two have been dance partners for 34 years accord- ing to John's wife Mary). Other ~ny-goers were Mame (Pleue eee IODl&&/ AS) ,.,, Orange Coeet DAILY PILOT /Wedf...-, M.a. I, ,._ ANN~M TYU8TlllllM ·1NT111TM••11TM P.l~yers square oil to be letter-perfect· It takes skill to get words in edgewise at Scrabble clubs BJ TOM TITUS .... ..., ........ is-there somethina seriously wrona with someone who lists amona his ultimate aoals in life the playina of the word "quizzical" over two triple- word-scorc squares? Perhaps not, when you figure the point count it would produce -374. And if r,ou happtned to stretch "quixotic 'over to another triple, you could picJc up another 164. If you haven't already &Uessed, the name of the pme is Scrabble, a pastime dieamed up by one Alfred Butts back in the 1930s which is being rediscovered by "word people" (in- cludina your correspondent) every day with incrcasina frequency. Serious Scrabble playen, not con- tent with puttina their friends and family members to shame in the privacy of their living rooms, have orpnized clubs across the nation - four exist along the Oranae Coast - and even have set up national tournaments to determine the best word-weavers in the country. This year's--WiJJ be field July 28-31 in Boston. In preparation for that big event, a preliminary tourney will be staged this weekend in the recreation room oftbe Huntington Landmark residen- tial complex on Atlanta A venue in Huntinaton Beach. Those who win at least two oflhe four 41mes can move on to regional elimmations and, if successful, the Boston finals. What motivates an otherwise nor- mal individual to devote one or two evenings a week to such mental gymnastics as strivina to play an X on a double-word score or a Q on a triplc- letter counter? Most likely a preoc- cupation with words and their diverse usage combined with a thirst for -competition. (ln the caSi,£_ of yours truly, it started · when I noticat an article about the local Scrabble players in this news- paper two years aao. I visited each of the clubs and soon became a reauJar, watching my won-lost record and per- aame average gradually increase from 80-100 and 330 in 1983 to lut years 172-124 and JSS. Currently rm playing at about a 370 clip with 33 wins and J 6 losses in 1985.) Scrabblers, much like devotees of crossword puzzles, have their own lanauage, neatly packa~ed into the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary, the bible of the club competition. Linda ltY&nl Beainners are eneouraaed to memonz.e the list of acceptable two and three-lener words -whieb includes such head scratchers as ar, bo, ka, ut, tav, zax and the ever- popular cwm (defined as a cirque). Yawnina in the path of the novice are words of more popular usqc · which · are verboten in the· Scrabble dictionary -yo, koi and zit amona others. And one thine you'll learn in your tint session is that you can, pluralize ~. but not xu. Once those basia are pan of your new vocabulary, the element of strategy comes into play. You'll learn when to "open" the board and when to play it safe, when to pass a turn and swap letters, and the touahcst de- cision of all -how Iona to 6old onto the Q (if you toss it back too early, chances att you'll catch it apin). If you'd like to join the "word people" and push tiles around a board- for fun and prizes, there are several opportunities to do so. Three of the four local clubs -in Huntiniton Beachk El Toro and Leisure World - are a~liatcd with the national or- ganization while the other -in Newport Beach -is geared more for the recreational player. The tai:aest, and probably the most competitJve Scrabble club along the Orange Coast meets Thursdavs at 6:30 p.m. Oft &be leCODd floor o( tM Home Federal S.viap buildiat at Main Sc.rm ud Yotbown Aveaue io Hu.n . lellch. c.om.ct dub di- recior u:! Aken at 96().2729 for further detaila. For Scrabblen in tbe Soulh County area. the Mi.Dion Vif;o Scrabble Oub convenes each Tueeday eveniQa at 6:30 in the commumty room o( Central Savi.op. on El Toro Roed at Pueo del v aJencia. Jamila Atcba, club director, can answer questiom at 770-04S4 . A few miles from that daab, resi· dents of l..eiJun World ad invited aueau play each Monday at I p.m. in Clubhouse 3, off Marauerite Parkway. The director of th.it raDidlY arowina aroup, Gerry w~ -will provide more information at 837-7223. Be&innina players may prefer tbe more relaxed at.molpbere of the Newport Beach club, wb.icb ptben on the first and third Wednetdays ot each month at 7_p.m. in the Newpon Beach Tennis Oub, 2601 Eaattihdr Drive. This aroup will ractivale next month upon the return o( itl direaor, Louisa Arnold. -Alene 91~ 7321 for . directions. Who knows you may even ,et IO play "quizziC:ai•• over two triple-wont -scores. Rotary observes 'EducatiQn Day' G.T. Smith G . T. "Buck" Smith, president of Chapman College. will be honored during the annual "Education Day" luncheon sponsored Thursday by Newport-Irvine Rotary Oub. The event begins at noon at the Airporter Inn m Irvi ne. Smith wtll discuss the importance of pnvate liberal ans colleges m the nauon's education system. A &raduate of J.he Coll~ of Wooster and Cornell University, he served as a vice president of Cornell be fore being named Chapman's president in 1977. mtth recen tly announced that Chapman 1s two-thirds of the way to 1Ls goal in a S54 mllhon fund dnve thitt began in 1981 and will culminate in 1986. the college's I 25th b1rthdaY. Other Rota~ luncheon guests will include .\. Stank} . Core). super- intendent of the Irvine Unified hool D1s1nc1. and the pnnc1pals of Woodbridge. lrvi.ne and University high schools. Attitude helps to 'be your best' Linda E' an' \3~ s. ·· 11us1 want to be the best 1 can bi: ·· I M.c that statement .... c should all stn' e to tx· IU!ll th.ll I had the plea,ure of rn..-eung Linda at th\.' home of \.tr and \1r<>. Chic k herson .... hen <ihe .... as mamed 10 John Derr~. long before her tremen- dous SUCCt'\S in ••D)naSI\-.. I have 'ct•n her at se,el1£1 Holl)- -wood pan1e' ~·nee then and she 1sst1ll JU'lt the same beau11fu l. poised, 1emhl~ fncndh and prt>J\.'Cting an inner .,..armth One of Linda·, ~'' ~aut\ S('(TCtS '"a pos1t1\e am tudc ony..µre "a) to N' happ~ ·~to thin~ poc;1t1' c .. he also refuses to be,omc trapped 1n the nl·gat1' e. prckmng w loo~ for the good 1n e\ Cf) SllU:lltnn PHAR WAYNE 'l ou alc;o 'hould not dwell on Lhl' ..adm'\'I of thing but look for the good \O \OU can gro" to have a happ}. po<;1ll\t and producu,,e life. \.\I.' all must rtmembcr that 1t 1s ne'er 100 late 10 change the way we feel about hie We are all capable ol 1mpro' ing o~. "dves though 1t take<; worl... T t) to 11tht bad thoughts wit h good though ' If you believe in musie-, clap yoJir hands Earh ofu., "a mi racle. wonderfully and tndl' 1dually created to be the onl) one of 11 ~ind m the universe. I foci that hie is a gift. an exciting and sti mulating ad ' enture. Forg1' e 'ourc;clffor the past so tha t you can IOH" yourself now and tomom.1" Judgi ng yourself too hor.,hh can be cnpphng. It 1s much cu!l1er to lorgl\ e others their trespa,~·' than 10 forgive ourselve . Mickey Mouse 1s doina W-H-A-T'L \ Mouse that doesn't talk or sing. n1ud' less play piano. is teaching music appreciation to 24,000 second graders throughout Orange C(rnnty. A devotee of children. music and \l 1~key Mouse, I wanted to see this IOI tn} !>elf. 0 I. ;Htcnded two "Disneyland \alutC\ the Amencan Band" concerts for more than 1.600 second-graders ... ilft'.,.mblcd in the multi-purpose room oft1e1&-~y School m Huntmaton Beach Buse~ brou&h..LK.CQt')d.,,..dcrs froni ncarbl ~n ~w ·:lioo tb hear FrfdilY s concen too. 1 arrived in the middle of the first lonccn nnd there they were on tai( • ind b1u er than hfc -the fam ous Mickey Mou , with baton 1n hand, .ind the also famous 16-member [)1c;ntyland Band, conducted hy for- mer teacher David R Warble II .... ere rc'plendent 1n red. JOld ll nd white uniform!! with bnght, h1 ny BETTY PoRTER is Disneyland's birthda) gift to sec- ond Jraders ... (The Park 1s celebrating its 30\h. year.) The students applauded with glee. "Do you know this son~?" Warble asked. And as "Hi-Ho. H1-Ho" fro m "Snow White" started. the children responded with a loud "Y-c-s-H'" Then the leader introduced band members, each musical instrument buttons and elaborate la scls. and It unique wund. ·The movie \ar-hkc handsome The 3().minutc prOiJ"lm traced the Warble's 1nformam·e narrative was hastory oi the Amencan ~om rcfrrshinJIY free of condetcCn11on. the J 9th century_!o thc.1>t'csenl. He had tl'l~ rapt. adorina attention oC. ~ ·There wu m~ ft-om the Ga ·~ students .sitt1na on a h1plyl)oliibcd includina ''In the Ood Of' um- gym-hkc floor near the s1aae. menime." "A FC$ti ve Ovcnure" by All of the the \\It'll drt sed. well Alfred Recd, "The Onainal Oix- manncrcd ch1ldrcns' eye ·and u~ ieland One-tep'' and Georat M . turned face\ were on Warble, Mickey Cohan's "You're a Grand Old Fl~f Mouse ond the band. The mood was and .. rm a Ya_nkcc Doodk 0.ndy • one of C\Citemcnt and the scene was "Wh)' don't you $tand up andJ•llJe stra1atu out of the" Mqac KmJdom." just a hard as )OU can," Wat6k '"I ho~ that you're enJoy1ng our IUllCStcd and M1cke MouJC showed concert. · Warble ~1d warml y "This how \ Mickey qiakes up for his lack of "I ~an1 to lOll"lc again ." "31d speech with c~aucrated posture and another. sweeping gestUTCs. For example. a "Ho"' lonunatc the'IC children gloved hand cupped behind n huge arc." \:ltd Janr ( inC'r. prOJC('t cha1r- hlack ear may 1od1cate "Please h!itcn 1pan for the '>pon~nng Orange carefully" or "May I hear some Counl\ Ph1lharm on1c 1ety. "Es· applause. please ·· Th~ children knew JX"C1all) 1nu· the~ 110 performances) the difference and complied accord-are the onl~ outc;1Je-the-Park appcar- 1ngly. an e ctor C'ducattonJI purpose~) the 1111 tandm~ the student\ fol-01.,ne,lanJ Band ha' made 1n 1t!> 't). lowed M1cke> . ., .. lead" 1n .,1ng1n "Ifs 'tar ht'ltnn ·· a "'6JI World." The aud•oat•.,.-.. \n)1lnr l'an p.t\ to to Dt - prtpal"cd: the kne'IR the l\n(''I ne,land hut onh 0 ('11n t ·ounf> -..._ ~ond 1rader\ h.nc Mid.t) Mouw: -n.oo. to the OtUahi.. of lhc au-and 1ht n1'inc\ land 8.lnd t'om1n to dlcn e. the band struck up Joh n f.Mm with n lrtt mu ital educatmn Phillip Sousa' "The Stamand mpe the will neH·r forget," Huberi Clari... Fortvcr" and Mickey sa luted and le ·~ta ~> pnncipal. \:ltd proudly strutted his tuff. marc h1na up and 'cl)onc agrrcd that Mi l..r down and all around tht st The '1ou!le had t. rncd tm informal tttltc; chtl drtn Jumped up and down 11nd of "Mic tru" and "Profcc;'°r of thrv couldn't stop clappm Mu'llC to und c •t'ldc"'" "I lo\.ed ~'°' with ~ht le> ·in fJ t Ml( ~t'\ ~1ou'lt' 1' the nlt)\l ~ousc:· \31d one l11tlc girl. a' 1f c;he tamou\ and the l'x~t rnnduttor in th<' wtrt d lo lea"e .-whole ~orld ·· \.llll \\-arhlc I k n· an· a couple of Linda's outer ht'aul\ 11r,.. • l \crx 1-.t• 10 lighten up the mu. le<i unde1 Hlur \ h1n Open )'Our mouth und '>tt\I.. our \.OUr tongue as far as you l·an. pointing the up upward You 'hould tkl and ~ the mu lcs tn HWr nrd t1ghten1ng up Then each Y>etk. add mort ~pcuttons a 1he mu lcsl('t~trongtr YouWlllqutckl) ~t re ult •It' 1mpona 1mtt our n I.. With th~ 3m(' pec1QJ Catt ')'~:na,1 \'e 10 \OUI' t ~ ~1n on }Our neck '' 'cl"\ dehca1c and wn.ok' a ta 11" a' 1he fact f'llar "•> n~ 1 a IT:'\rd~nt ol "lrYip<>rt fkarh and tht author of .. P1l1r \\-a,nt's F•,or1tc and F1h11lou' R«1~ " "'ddre cor- rr~p;.lncJrn<~ ro hu 11t~nr1on. r/o P~ \ Publl~h1t11 Co. 2()()()...4(). Cor- ona dcl Mar, Y~61j '• ·. Al Ormnge COMI OAJLYIPILOT/Wedneeday, March 6, 1985 Masculinity achieved without team sports DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 dido 't catch theoriJinal let· terabout bow hi&b a .. 1 schoolcoacbesabuse 1111 youna athletes but I lAi , read two rebuttals to IDS your ~ly in the LansanaStatc ••••••••••••• Journal. h br9ught to mind mybrother'scxperience in,iuniorhiJh, 16 years ago.• In our family, kids tend to attain their adult size early. Mybrother"Tom"was io tbee\ghthgradeat the age of 12. He was nearly 6 feet tall and had a mustache. :Naturally the coach wanted him d~sperately. Tom was not one who oould be taken in by maoho malarkey. Besides he had an afternoon paper route and two other jobs because he wanted money to buy a car of his own, which he managed to get at the age of IS. INld" t 1948) WilliMI Powell. Ann Blyth. - -le00- 1 (I) CHARL.O IN CHA& L tt!OHWAY TO HEAVEN U~ "The TUl'ning Point" (1917) Amt BlllCrott, Shittly MICLllne. IELTI ENTERTAIMNT TOHIOHT MOYIE ***"' "Escape From Fort 8'tvo" ( 1953) Wiiiiam Holden, Elelnor P1t· k•. • ~TIONAl GEOORAPt4IC ~THEWOALOOf .MOYIE ·~ "eo.y Blitzkrieg" (1941) Leo ~~by Jorden. ** "CMst.lne" (1983) Keith Gor- don, JoM Stockwell. ®MOYIE * t ~ "Somewtlere In Time" ( 1980) Christopher ReeYe, Jane Seymour. ())MOYIE * ... ''Twlligh1 Zone -Tti. Movie" (1983)~ohn Uthgow, Vlc Morrow. -8:30- 1 Cl) E / R TIC TAC DOUGH tou..EoE BASm8ALL AfTIJAl8 -t:OO-8MOYIE t t "Au1h0f! Au1h0f!" ( 1982) Al Pa- clno, l:lyan Clnnon. 88MOYIE "Hell Town" (Premiere) Robert l .. c~ DISCOVER: THE WOAlD Of SCIENCE e NATIONAL OEOOAAPHIC (I) DIANA AOSS: FOR ONE A1'IJ FOR All (Q)MOVIE • * "Crackel's" ( 1984) Donald Sutherland, Jacl< Warden. Cl)MOVIE * * t 11t "Splash" (198') Tom Hanks, Daryt Han.nail. -•.30- lUXc.MY THIATHS W'ALK· INS * Fint Two Mltitlee "'"'""' * " OlllLV S2.75 U..._ lletM When Tom did not succumb to the ooaoh 's pitch, "you owe it to your school and classmates " the ooach hauled out his bi&§est gun: "lfyoudon't p{ay football rou'rc not a man.' M)' brother laughed and walked away. wonder how man y 12-ycar-olds could have stood up to suoh a challenge to theit masculinity? Today Tom is highly successful in both his business and personal life. He has no football i~~uriesand he did very well without the "character-build1n1" provided by a team sport. Alotofpe~plewon't likethis letter but I hope you do, and that you'll print it. -A PROUD SIS DEAR SIS: I do. Here it ls. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Today I simply must respond to "Everywhere USA" -the woman who works in the nursing home. Like"Everywbere," I have worked in nursing homes •• NIQHT GAU.ERV 1,.:-=.o POOR MAH BOOK N ~cmLllT8 MONEY TALKS MOYIE • *** "Agatha" (1979) Dustin Hoff. men, Venessa AedgrM. ®MOYIE * t \.1 "Supermtn111" (1983)Chrltto- pher Aeew. Rlch11d PfYO'. (l)MOYIE t "Sorl II" (198'} Eddie Oeezen, Lin- da Kerrldge. -10-.30-Cll RAWHIDE e N>EP£HDENT NEWS -10'.36- (Q)MOVIE * "Nana" (1981) Katya Bero«;.& Jean-Pierre Aumont. -11:00- u. (I) 0 alNEWS· llUAN8 AHO AU.EN JEFffASOH8 PEOPLE'S COURT MONTY PYTHON'S Fl YING !~BIU<O ** "Heads Or T alls" ( 1980) Philippe - Noire!, Michel Serrault. --11:30- (1) MAGNUM, P.1. 8 BEST Of CAASOH ODOCOlfl,.E 0 NICNEWs NIOHTUNE 8CTV 1'W1UGHT ZONE VEGA$ AOa<F-ORD FILES LATBIGHT AMERICA 700CLUB MOYIE * "Private Sdlool" (1983) Phoebe Cetes, Betty RuSMlt -11:40-~MOYIE *"' "Angel" (198') Cliff Gorman, Susan Tyrrell. -12:00-1 TWIUGHT ZONE EYE OH HOU YWOOO .MOYIE t t * \.1 "The Rotnlntle Englilhwom-en" (19751 Glende JacklOn, Michlel Celne. i~NIWS ***"A Cry In TM W~" (1974) George Kennedy, JolMI Pet· tet. -12:10- ®MOVE **'A "Untllthfully Yowa" (1984} Dudley Moore, Nat_,. Killkl. -12:15- (Q)MOVIE **** "The Biel y_. Of Out UV." (1948) Fredric Mltdl, Dini Andrtwa. -12:30-" = NIQHTWITH DAVID ~HrratCOCK l:WVECCHIO H \.1 "So This Is Paris" (1955) Gto- rll DeHIWll. Tony Curtis. eMOYE · U 'ii "lneldent On A ~Street" (1972) James Olaon, Wllll1m Shatner. I LCM. AMEAICAH mu UNOEASTAHDIG HUMAN BEHAVIOR. -12:40- 8 (1.)MOYIE **'it "Deliver Us From Evil" ( 1973) Geo<ge Kennedy. J.n-Mlchlll Vin· cent. -1:00-eMOVIE U U "The Red Shoes" (19-48) Moira Shearer, Anton Wllbrook. eMOVE t t "Pete Kelly's Bluee" (1955) Jadt Webb, Jenet Leigh. !~ t * "Solo" ( 1978) Vincent GH, Perry Armstrong. -1:10- (J)MOVIE * t "Now And ForflWlf" (1983) Cheryl Ladd, Robert Coleby. -1:15-~MOYIE H "Now And F«Mf" (1983) STADIUm [;) c1neoome a PLACES'" TME ~'W f"AllTASIA 18) H&AltTIN) 3:20 7 :30 12:40 3:00 5:20 7 :40 Micki I. M1ude(,.Q·13) 10:00. Shown In 1 :00 S :10 I. t :ZO 4·Trac:k M19nttlc: Sound Ill 1111/llt!dt Nw Syf11111 TOMllOYllt) s """ Co·Hit WHkend hn (A) CE'llTAHI f'U•Y (It) Also Showlnt Flrtstarter (Al , 1'HK-SAAPAST c(.Oil (It) Sflo-At U :OO Z:Ol> 4 :00 1:00 ktLLHIQ f"l&LDS (It) 111SS111G HI ACTION • Sllow1 at 1 :45 4 :35 .,... ~ ... :i' (•) P'UI 1 :00 .. 10:00 7 :30 &. 10:10 N nja ll_i.A) WITM:SS(lt) Sllows At: 1:00 ):10 5:20 7:30 .. 1 :45 ~ltLYHtLLS COP (It) SHOWS AT 1 :f5 3:25 5:35 7 :50 .. 10:05 Ei4j(Jp'3i12U3:AV:: ~=•pe!itan ) 1 Ac:adtmY No mlnatlonsl A PA&Ae& TO IMDtA VISION QUOT (It) SHOWS AT (ll'Q) SHOWS AT 7 ·30 &. t ·SO 7;00 &. 10:U ' • no~ Tomorrow through March .23, our semi-annual N-M hosiery sale! Six pairs, NOW 17.50 to 39.00. Regularly 6 pairs, 9.00 to 43.50 Select from 12 different styles. from knee·h1ghs to girdle-top pantyhose. Everything you need 1n an array of nf!N colors tor spnng and everything of the finest N·M quahtyl Hosiery Newport Beach THC 81t&AKI' AST C&.Ull t•) Co•Hlt The Wild Lift (A) YISIOll 4llUtEST (It) "'us Co·Hlt Heaven Help Us (A) --..w1t1C11• .-SSl·MSS . \ N~ Newport Beach open 10 to e. except Thursday and Friday, to 9. Sun~y. 12 k> S. 1'.lephone: 759-1900. for 20 years and spent my own money for combs, brushes, du5ting powder, warm socks. pners. toothbrushes and bedroom slippers for the residents. It breaks my heart to sec the way some folks oe&lect the elderly. It i1n 't because they don't have money. The middle· and lower-income folks pay more attention to their kinfolk than the well-to.- do. DEAR TROY: 111 lleepatlt ud a.ope ta llelpt. ftulr1 for,. .. , letter. • • •• DEAR ANN LANDERS: When people are troubled they tend to write on and on. What was the lonaest letter ~ou have receivcd?-J UST CUR10US IN WACO, TEXAS There is an elderly gentlemen here who is extremely pleasant. His son is a physician on the staff of the home. Time after time we have told the doctorthat his father needs various items. He always replies; "I'll brinl them tomorrow," but he never remembers. Finally we boU&ht the items ourselves. DEAR WACO: I Uvt M Idea. Wtll )'09 MUie for die loacnt let&er everwrtuea? -'°""la& .. ''TM GelMtt 8"' •f World Rec:er41,'' tt wu two-Wrd• of a mile bl ._,..,udwrl .... •144tqmacMaenllalaJue IHI., a y...,womula~,.Eal.IU4, tolterNyhieM,a .. -euu&G...ieUowAirBaH,texa1. . •• • • • • Ann Landers• booklet," Sex and the Teena,er, •• This samedootor walks by bis fa1ber's room six and seven times a day and never stops in to say a few words to lhe old genlleman. Hard to believe. isn•t it? l hope you ~It print more letters about the neglect of the elderly. Someone must wake up the conscience of America. -TROY, OHIO explains every aspect of sexual bth•vior-wbere to draw the line. bow to &1y no, the various methods of contraeeption, thedangersofVD, thesymptomsaod wheretogethe/p. Fora copy, sendS2andalons,self-addressed~stampedenvelope(37~ntspost111e)toAnn Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicaio. U/. 6061 I. Leelle Moore MOORE-FLAMSON L~stre Araen FJamson and Thomas_James Moore were united in marriage on Jan. 19 at the South Coast Community Church in Irvine. Pastor Marty Scales and the Rev. Robert Cornelison officiated. After the ceremony. 1he couple greeted 500 guests at a reception in the Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Meridien in Newport Beach. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Flamson III of Corona del Mar. She is a 1981 Charity League debutante, a gradu· ate of Corona del Mar High School and is a senior at Chapman College. She wore a gown of ivory . silk taffeta with a dropped waist, Eliza- bethan puffed sleeves and .a scooped neck bodice trimmecf with pearls, beaded Alencon lace and handmade silk flowers. The full skirt swept into a cathed~I train that was bordered with lace lQ.d pearls. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Howard Fradkin of Huntington Harbour and Alvin Joseph Moore of La Jolla. He is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and is the owner of the Pacific Sun wear Corp. Bridal attendants were Mrs. Alain Vaillencourt and Sheryl Chamberlin as matron and maid of honor, Mrs. William Bridges, Mrs. Jon McGraw. Donna Miller, Tamara Schaffer and Mary Jo Tyler as bridesmaids and Amy Leigh Yould and Brooke Marie Aamson, nieces of the bride, as flower girls. Attending the bridegroom were William DuPuie, William Bridges, Geoff Bourgeois. Scott Aamson, Jon McGraw, Randy Blumer and Christopher Y ould. The couple are residents of ~ew­ port Beach folio.wing a honeymoon in Tahiti, Australia and Hawaii. t s111Til-a1seoP Balboa Island residents Linda Kaye Bishop and Sterling A. Smith exchang~ wedding vows in the Community Church Congregational in Corona del Mar on Feb. 16. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Bishop of Henry, Ill., and is a graduate of MIO. County Senior High School in Varna. Ill. and Northern Illinois University. She is employed by, AVCO Financial Services Credit Card Inc. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley D. Smith of Sacramento. He is a graduate of C.K. McClatchy School and McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento. He Is with Gering and Associates· law firm. After a wedding trip to northern e atifomia, the ~uplc are now resi- dents of Laguna Hills. SANBORJlf ·FltRREIRA St. Clements by the Sea Episcopal Church in San Clemente was the setting for the Feb. 16 wectding of Pam Ferreira and Bruce Sanborn. A recep1ion followed at the San Clemente home of the bride's parents and was attended by l 00 guests. The bride is the daughter of Fred and Lena Gregori. She wore a custom designed silk dress and was attended by Renee Paul. The bridearoom, of Potter Plaoe. N. H .. is the son of Ken Sanborn and Gay Ellen Rayno. Dan Plasky-was his best man. - The couple are residents of San Clemente after a wedding trip to Julian. She iu-music teacbere1t two Catholic Schools and he is self- employed in the construction busi- ness. The Crunch BUnch. Like the sound of variety? Then our combination Seafood Platter is for you. Or make it a simply delicious dinner of our famous fish , shrimp, scallops. dams, or oysters. 3095 Herbor Blvd., Co.te " ... ()ult IOUth °' .. °""° ,,...,., ' Kl'OU from Pedco) Mr. and Mn. Smith Mr. and Mn. Sanborn SOIREE ••• From AT-- and Robert Gtbsoa, Nora and Cbrley Bester. Barbara and lteat Freud& seated with JoAue and Goe MD and the newlyweds Mary LH(Hopkins)andSeottBoruby, Juet and Doaald Corttla, Marta and Raymoad FrucJ1. Do& and ~CloekatCalMrlaeand · DeLue nyea'1 table with BW•r and Robert Wallertek, Bart and BUMI 'hlvta1 (she was gettinaa lot of attention from her gown created by Prince's designer), Joyce ae .. me,l.My andLeeKan1, Kara and Job Belloll, Canlp and Ma'°1 De Wald, R•tll Dlq(Dr. Dlq was 10 Florida), Sau and Jamet Barlow and the Warrea Coy1. RIAL TO WATO-GUMD TOUT Wllite Only • Colors Av11labte . :· s323 ~ ~1220. . 'f.--.. ... ' [!!'d ,EY r>tst µtnce ton's con- ~,~~ m- in tly ,man f; ous or- 000 ral's >f the · ard wa s ary- Ale- his r he ere obe nd a ures mat for the tined' rg list t for size. ess- st of een elec- arch. con- td in. I re -! Am- t wa s li-by- 1 up- r gth rhing • 00. and fall the ~ncil r rc-eral's ~kep­ of hen la1c ally the Stice •. lfa nald ll's the .. I - I . ) Otanoe Cout DAILY PILOT IW~. Metdt •• 1111 Alt ,/ Newport musical mysteryde11ghts Mary llUf'phf, Jeffrey Holland ln "Somethbtg'a Afoot" at the Newport Theater Arta Center. Musical5 and saurical comedy traditionally are pre-equipped with diverse production values -what succeeds in one fonn may be reachin'g- a bit for the other when the two clements arc combined. When the proverbial .. best of both worlds" is achieved, it's a joy to behold. and one such instance 1s on display at the Newport Theater Arts Center. It's called "Somelhing's Afoot." and it's a glowing example of high comedy combined with ~us1cal proficiency. Director Eileen Fish bach and· mu· sicaldirectorTim Nelson have mined a highly entertaining gem from this sparklin$ send up of Agatha Christie's "Ten little Indians," in which a group of people summoned to a remote island by an unseen host begin dropping dead one after another. In .. Something's Afoot," each murder is . more outrageously con'tri ved than the one before it, heightening the play· goer's attention as his eyes dart about ttie cast in anticipation. The Newport cast performs with polished ensemble excellence -even though several exit the stage per· manently in the first act. The opening number, "A Marvelous Weekend," involves all 10 performers and estab- lishes a high level of energy which is maintained among the survivors throughout the evening. And, while "Something's Afoot" may be an ensemble show, it's neve rtheless a star vehicle for Mary Sullivan Slack. who heads up most of the musical numbers and kicks up her heels delightfully as the Miss Marple- type character who instigates most of the sleuthing. Slack excels both as a singer and a· comedienne, and her energy is boundless. The romantic lead .roles. often lacking in color in musty English thrillers, receive abundant pizzaz from Ma ry Murphy and Jeffrey Holland who hype up their "love at first sight" romance delightfully. Timothy Johnson is properly sinister as the oily young heir to the fortune, while Beth Hansen heats up the stage hilariously as the sexy noblewoman. 'Father'-Barettairi black Bob Cady, Cynthia Kelly and Kent _ Anguiano enjoy .some.fine mQments as the scheming servants. while Bernie Hawn and Jerryd luck provide ample support as the doctor By FRED ROTHENBERG also wrote the script, which means. racy bent also is too prevalent. Not and military man, respectively. .,.,~ • ....., too often, Hardstep trades his collar every cop has to be a bY·thc-book Technically, the Newport show 1s a NEW YORK -This father knows for a cape and becomes Superfather. heavy. marvel of inventiveness. thanks to best. too. Only his technique is a little It's a bit transparent when he-goes Blake reponedl y cast this pilo1 Oliver Brown's paneled setting and different. It includes a wicked left to the hospi tal to cajole the Jewish himself, turning down NBC's sugges-the tighting and sound effects of Rick hook. Sadie Rabinowitz back to life. It's also tions, and the network will have to tie Cutler. The se1 li1erally ''kills off· the You can put a priest's colJar on a bit much when he returns to his his hands if there's a series go·ahead. characters in increasingly outlandish Robert Blake and call him Fa 1her room at the church one night, prays to The names of the characters -One fashion and part o( the fun of Noah "Hardstep" Ri vers, but you God ("Together, we will give 1hem Ball (a pool term). Sister Angel Cakes watching the show is ifrying to gue ss can't take the fighter out of him. heck"), downs 1he rcst0fhis beer and and Stump-arc much more colorful which one is going tog it next-and You'll never have him playjqg strums a lous) song on the suitar. than the actors. by what method. catatonicatly calm figures, such as But th e film does have tts tCI1der The best help comes from Fran The true unsung heroes of ··some- Robert Young's sage papa in the old moments. as Blake has tapped in to Ryan as Mother Ma8$icwho runs the thing's Afoot" are Peter Nickolin. series about a family. "Father Kn ows . the same sincere sappiness that has benevolent St. Dominic's and holds Alan Roberts, Joe D'Angelo and· Bob "Best.~ -----' made MictraetLand<HH "'Hicghwa)'ie' her own against Blake. · Ferera. T-lle} .comprise the show's · So in tonight's NBC movie ··Father Heaven" a semihit this season. "'Mother Maggie, my bananas arc orchestra. which plays unseen of Hell Town," Blake plays a feisty. The sets and nighttime shooting dragging," he-says. backstage without benefit of visual Cliff Dri ve, Newpon Beach. Vf'lth performances on Friday and Satur· day cvminas at 8 p.m. call 631-0lU for ticket information. *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATIES * Lo MIRADA ~ T-11) 12.JO l JO u o 6 30, • 30 10)0 ..._. Ida 0. Slit Dolt --•ACTDlt 111 .... (1) l2CS HS H S H S U S 104S ....... k~tb Ott Stlt ~ llT10S .(I) 1 oo 1 JG. roo a 10 10 so ..,,..,,.. IOd1 0. Slit Doil) ANAHEIM ~ 11141 111 "" -........ f1-1 ti At L-lc * * SUf'Ea SW., MHTS* El/HY W & SUN * • , ...... (K.IJI l'lUS Z#'PO! (JI) . imos (I) l'UIS M fM.COll 6 111-(1) ORANGE ~ ; ; ~ 17UI •1 >ln'lhr-._. s. Ota. .. Gr-,..,. --•ACTilll l' Ma-Cl) Pl.US .... It M -Tilll 11\ (111) l:M IJll/O<Mfo Sill!• AM fwy • S..te Cll. 11t •S~ltSWAPMHlS* EVH Y SAJISON • • f H0•,1 IA~·. JP!VI ,,,,I 11'"""' ,,, 114 634 47~q __ ,_(PC:I Pl.US IMftD' (I) l~Y (N ~Vl(W A C~ 1 Ollflll ltllllfJ ....i• M W..,._tl) • OCUY Sl(J[O I Ol Cot. 1 OQ, lt40 .. ..,. ...... i.a..Olll; -QlllJf (I) , ll JO. l JO. UO ·~. J IO. 10·~ .,._ Tic:Nb OI SW. 0.., Qll.,.., (I) l'\.US aDll .. (I) n1 -llST cua ct> l'LUS M -.Ol.ft ct> laHABRA ~.-f'>~" MISSION !Zl4!1p •tW!O Fwr • Or!p unonhodox clergyman in a barrio give this ~hetto a gritty quality, but "I'm not interes1ed in your coordination. that has been bypassed by di·vine that ambtance is not supponed by bananas." she shoots back. "Something·s A.foot'' remains on SUP£R SWAPMEETSEv«ySAT.&Swidov intervention for years. strong realism in the storyline. Viewers who liked "Baretta•· prob· the boards through M•rch 30 at the rAOM 1 AM Tt 1,.. -r., 1.1 .. -11 .. 111•1m m~ HARBOR Dnv&-ln I S.nt1 Ant Hubor Blvd Nur Mc F 1dd1n I In his one-man crusade aga inst ~B~la~k~e~·:s~a~n~ti~-a~u~t~h~o~r~it~Y~-~a~n~ti~-b~u~r~e~a~u~c~-~a~b~ly~w~i~IJ~be~.~~~:__~~=-~~~~N~e~w~po~n~T~h~e~a~te~r~A~n~s~C~e~n~te~r~.~2~5~0~1.J.~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~ii~~ii~~~~!i!~~~ parish crime and slime. Father Hard-,.. step plays a vigilante, punches out a drug dealer, decks a child molcstor. curses and drinks like a sailor. hangs out in honkylonks and has his juices stirred up by a female dancer . .. Heavenly Father, when I took< the vows. you promised me this fc:ding would go away. WeU, i1 ain.t." he says. But. all the while Father Hardstep is striving to keep the streets safe. he's honestly and passionately caring for his flock -his JllVing grace. STAR MAN 8 30 <PG l 8 30 A Soldier's Story (PG) 6 00 "l'omboy" (R) ti JS JO 10 It also may be the savi~g grac·e of this movie, which is only o K but ~Mllllllllllllllllilllllillml~~ definitely Wis series potential-- because of Blake. The actor-producer has aggressively pushed the sc·ries wi th NBC. and it could work with a stronger supponing cast and 1;nore focused scripts. Blake is one of a kind. His forceful presence commands and dominates every scene. He has a hard ext(·rior and harder core, but the whole package is infused with feeling and vul nerablity. He can credibly play hard knocks because he's been there hi mself. An acknowlcged former drug ad· diet. TV troublemaker and wise guy, Blake comes across as the geo•uine article. When he plays Father Hard· step, an ex·orphan, ex-con. Blake makes you believe street-wise. ac- ti vist clergy like him exist. or sho uld. This sinner is a saint. sort of. Blake. the former star of .. Bar<:tta." THE HEAT IS O~I! 131:\11::1~~( 1-111.1 ..... c; . R -. • A PAAOOJN~lff ~ _ ...... _ .. _._ ....... _ NOWPLAYlNG •llllU l'OUWtAlllUl.UY W/IVI te• ,,_.w.t f"""-'°' IOYl"'ll1tf'I l1't "3Jt ~ .. llt 1500 •MllHW ·-VA~ £4"••rtt1.,,,..,..tA,_ ~ .,,. AS<•" •COITAlllllA ·-¥!t.IO (dWMds ~· ~0!1' /l fwlt<ll-,.,. 91H 141 llM ~ 6110 • COITA •IA • OIWIM /~·r.~t..'"'" "'= •U IOllO f"""°' £' '""' "' ~ •WUr.!.llll ,~ .. -c. ..... W1w •1 eJ5 -= ... -~°' .. '"' IJU l?O WU1'llll 11 lll PX.'C \II n ty l9 °"'"'" •1 :JM:) •"'ltl>E.'ff'1D}VI llJJliPO , / ACAD[MY MFMBFRS '. • •A SPELLllNDER .. : SUPERBLY CRAn'ED. EROTJCAU:t CJIAIQID -AND BUGllLY ENTERTAINING. BAIRJSON FORD'S PEIFOIMUICI IS A UAIVIL." _,...Tftn ... ptopli9 .... ' .. ·. ' TRACK DOLBY STEREO EOOIE MURPHY "tlVllL Y HILLS COfl" (I ) 800. 8 15 10 15 ' TRACK DOLBY STEREO HARRISON FORO "WITNIH" (I ) 7 15, 9 "5 .EXCLUSIVE ENGA.GEMENT "tLOOD SIM"ll" {I ) 7 00, 9•00 edWINI BRISTOL .. 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Cl 9e • " " l' l• ft' = 0 I I l ( • • , • f • ' ( i ( ( AlO Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, Merch 8, 1985 by Tom Batluk DOOllfESBURY BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) 5atll1 IM LATE, QN:t.IHAPA urrt£ 1'fl:UJtJ! 11.fTH S£:all/TY. \ by Garry Trudeau by Jeff MacNally THE FAlllLY CIRCUS ---------by Bil Keane ~ ... NINE ... E~T. .. 17, 4-'/, 1. l ... HUT ~!..UUT ~! ... "Revolving doors work magic. They turn crowds into regular people!" llARllADUKE by Brad-Anderson -· "Why don't you talk to Marmaduke here while I try to balance my budgetr < BLOOM COUNTY GARFIELD r:i l.!I PEANUTS "Are you going down too?'~ DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank ,Ketcham ~ .JL---.:JL-.... j ~ I M Di 4f-7 3-" ;-~ LJ2-&~ J rs ~ ~~ I ' I ~ •1 ~'r lHINK 'rOU ~EW AH( WORDS Ul<l ~T ~' by Berke Breathed by Jim Davis DRABBLE ~'.>!>Ii ~N A~O OON'T R£.iURN Ii\ ----~ PA?!> rr Oowfll ANO OOtol'T ~f\~N rfl FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE l'MGoNG-10 ~'/OJ, EL. ROSE IS ROSE Wf'U, HNI~ ll&JO ~ DOOG .•. BR IDGE by Charles M . Schulz TME'r' ALL SEEM PRETTY WELL·BE~AVED TO ME .. by Kevin Fagan by Lynn Johnston .... m{ee. IHRls ~il'M~ OF. by Pat Brady SCORE YOUR HIGH TRUMPS MOON MULLINS JUDGE PARKER L.Al.JRA, I MISLAID 'fOlJR HOME AOORESS . AND WHAT TIME SHALL- 1 PICK YOU UP ~ PL,AY /T S',AFE, J(/D·· LEMM~ GIVE: YA A F£W PolNTERS oN HoWTo DfFEND r---"7"ftl YER5El.f. I 'LL BE GOING OFF DUTY IN ABOU T 30 M INU TES , CRAIG I CAN YOU PICK ME UP HERE AT THE HOSPITAL ? --~ ' by Ferd & Tom Johnson W'HY? ALL. l GOTTA DO IS Go l"O BS'D ~,ARl..Y-· THEN l C,AN BE,AT MIM up. ~ --. . /. e Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH • ((.17~2 ~Q95 0 Altt43 •v.w WEST EAST +0AI +Ql01t64 ~J'U ~87 O J98 O Q1072 •KJ9' •Q7 SOUTH •9 ~AK 106 0 5 •A 108653 The bidding: S..dl Weet Nwdt 1 • P... I+ by Harold Le Doux 1 • ,... 2 o Eaet p ... PaN P ... , ... OKAY .. ANO I'LL DRIVE 'IOU HO ME SO YOU CAN 6€11 r~ SOMETHING FANC¥• WWM 001~ INTO THE. CIT Y TONIG HT FOR. DINNER. D ANCING AND FUN I ... I ~ p.,. S t;;> '~ , ... , ... Openlnr ltad: Ace. or •. .it> The purpote of a crosaruff ls • u1uall1 t.o allow you to 1ingfe In your low trumpe. But be eutt to count your Lricb btfore you pro- c:"1l alon1 euch a line. North-South bid reuonably weU t.o reach the only cam• LhaL •Lood a chance -four IMana on the Moy· •Ian •-8 Cit. When you are defending a1ain1t two hands that aH clearly distributional, it. ii often a .ound tactic to lead trumps. Here, tboufb, West feared that a trump lead would blow a trick, 10 he attacked with the ace of 1padea. Eut al1nal· ed enthusiasticall1 with the nine, so 0MAl- SHAllFF West continue4.. the eult. won in dummy with the 'kine. · Declarer had four trickl ou\tlde t he trump eult, so he needed only sjx trump trickt t.o make hla l'.mti fie •ucceeded In eoUMUq urn. • with the minimum of rilk. After cashing the aee·kln1 of diamondr. he rulfed a a1amonc1 with h'9 low trump. Neat came the ace of dubt and a club ruff wit.It du••J'• low trump. o~ thoM two nan• •c.ood up. the contract wu Nf• rwprda.11 of th~ dittrjbuUon flt ti.. IOtatlon of the jack o/ \rumpe. \ Ottlanr nan.cl two ,,... in hand and a elub oa LIM boerd with the klnt. q""n and ate of trumpe, in that order. That brought his trick tot.aJ to nine and he still had t.he ten or trumps in hand and the nine In dummy. It didn't even matter which ha i11d had the lead -all deelarer neieded to do was lead a plain suit CHAILES ~.Go1£1 and ruU In on• hand or the other. Eh.her tit• ruff would 1tand up ror tb • fullillint trick or, if a def•ncler overruffed, declarer'• ,.m1inln1 trump would ~ promoted t.o the tenth trick. .. -.. .. ",..~,........ ........ w ....... 1.11.etc......_e.. .... ,. .... ,.. ... ,~ ... - .,, DOU.LES tmr •••.,_ _. &111leee&. Per a ce.i •f.L •I• DOU.LEI •nllle&. .... II• te "'C;;...o, ....... r.o. 1a eu. PtlllilJn. N.J.-. ......... Nialli te N••..., 1rt 11•': • Estanetartps Anafieffil, 8= 1 in soccer semis Anteaters roll, 11-1; JCs tunible UC lr-.iine romped to a non- conference baseball win Tuesday, but Orange Coast and Golden West found the going tough on the road. Herc's what took place: UC lrvfH 11, Cal State Lot Aa1elea 1: The Anteaters, behind the four-hit pitching of Doug Linton and Craig Brink and catcher Steve Morgan's fifth-inning three-run home run. dis- posed of the Golden Eagles in a game at Anteater Stadium. The Anteaters scored five times in the eiahth inning. In community college action: t.t Aqtlet ValleJ t , 0r..,e co .. t S: The Pirattt 11w their record fall 10 3-2 when tk.,. very tittle froin four extra-bate hits, lcavina runners stranded on second and third twice ~nd another on tctond in the final frame at LA Valley. Rob Oibbs doubled and tripled in four •~bits, and Gene Rouminacr. Pete Ellison and Ed Pimentel each doubled wi thin Coast's nine-hit It· tack. Steve.Knits came home on Gibbs' fourth·innina triplea\DtG•f'lmentel , foUowed with a run-ICOrif\l'deabte to tie the-Jame at 2·2, buL. Valley responed with a four-run sixth innina to put the prne away. c.aa.1, •f t1te eu, ... u, O.Wea ""' 7: Tbe Rustlers pve up 19 hits and committed six errors 1n losina for the first tim.c ~s season 1n a pme 1n Valencia. / . Andy Mota had the hot bat for the Rustlel1 whh a pair of home runs and Ken OeMarto hit a to&o homer fo~ Golden Wett in the third tnniftl. - 11111 llllM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1• It's the lastch8.nce for U:Cl . Anteaters, Fullerton open PCAA Tourney tournament. This year I'm very happy," says Mulligan. he notes. ~·1 think Henderson is u bia a threat u The Anteaters' most recent lost to Full-(former Titan IW and Olympian) Leon Wood ByCURT SEEDEN °' .. Dellr "!It ..... The Anteaters finished in sixth place in the PCAA standings this year. The N IT is out of the question and an NCAA benh would require UCI to win the PCAA Tournament. erton, an 84-74 setback on Saturday in Titan was," Mullipft says. • Gym, is still fresh in the Anteaters' minds and Henderson, a former Saddleback Collea,e on tape for pcrusel. stat. is avcrqiOJ 16.S poin&t per pme while You can bet MuUipn and his auistants are Neal averqcs l S.9. spending a lot of time in lheftlm room at UCl. Roten leads UCI with a 21.7 average and. A year ago at this time, when his Anteater$ finished in second place in the PCAA basketball race, Bill Mulligan did not like the idea of the PCAA Tournament. With very little to lose and an awful lot to gain, Mulligan sends his Anteaters up apinst Cal State Fullerton Thursday at 4 o'clock at the Forum in Inglewood in the tournament ''We'll make some adjustments for Full-Murphy is averaJina 16.4 po1nu per pme .. erton but you can't do anything major this Mullipn must also have to contend w1th timeoftheycar," Mulliganadmits. "We really the pouiblc absence of freshman auard don't match up well with them at all. • Rodney Scott who hasn't been in practice this A. second-place finish behind Nevada-Las Vegas figured to propel lhe Anteaters into either the NCAA Tournament or the National Invitation Tournament. opener. . If the Anteaters can defeat the Titans, they would more than likely meet Nevada-Las Vegas Friday at 7. But Mulligan is concentrating all his efforts on the Titans. Loser to Fullerton twice -this season, Mulligan doesn't think odds will enter into Thursday's game. "We have two bia guys (Johnny Rogers and week because be is battling a virus. Tod Murphy) who arc a little biggenhan their If Scott doesn't start. freshman Wayne two big guys, but the rest of their gl.iys arc Engelstad will Ft the call at forward with Troy bigger and they have a longer arm span.•• Carmon moving to the off guard. But it didn't. Mulligan adds. San Jose Stale and Utah State open the TheUCl coach saystheTitans'juniorguard tournament at 2 Thursday followed by UCl-UCI made it to the-teeond round of the tournament before Fresno State ended the Anteaters' season with a 71-.S7 victory. "Last year I wasn't happy that there was a "We beat Long Beach State twice last year and still beat them in the tournament opener," Kevin Henderson and senior forward Tony FuJlerton. Nevada-Las Vegas faces Pacaficat 7 Neal pose the biggest problems for the andfresnoStatetakcson UCSantaBatbaraat Anteaters Thursday. 9. Dellr ... ,....."' Le9 ...,_ Pro &olfer LiN Younc aeta in ·80llle practice •wi.n&• prior to Thuraclay'• openln& round of the Unlden InTltatlon~l. Holder for ch am pionshi p flag is empty; Will young pitchers do job for Mauch? - MESA. Ariz. -Odds and ends from the spring training trek and the odds are it has to end ... •If you took a p<?ll around the Cactus League, eight out of l 0 baseball people would say they fear a strike but you won'tget one out of I 0 to talk about it out loud. •Gene Autry Park is an outstand- ing facility and almost finished ... still empty is the holder for the championship flag. •Manager Gene Mauch says the Angels have a great assortment of -young pitchers and says he will "go with them" ... actually. Mauch doesn't have much ofa choice in the matter. •On the subject of old pitchers. Tommy John continues to work hard but he will have to prove he can pttch better than his 1984 record of7-13 would indicate •Several clubs ha\ e al read) named theiropen1ngday pitchers but none e'lpla1ncd wh) the hurry. arner es ac Putting problems, injury are behind veteran LPGA star By HOW ARD L. BANDY De11J .... C•• 11, I i-. t JoAnne Carner hasexpedenced the good an<f the bad at Mesa Verde Country Club and she's back to test the cou~ this week in the Uniden LPGA Invitational. 'Tm glad to-be back here." Carner said while walking the fairways during a practice round Monday under a bright. sunny sky. "I have some fond memoriesofth1s course. But I'll also never forget the second year I was here: I had taped an interview for TV that was to be used on the weekend. then I missed the cut. l think I four-putted from three feet on No. 9 that day." Carner i~lar:d her back at the duMaurier sic in July last year and played only three more events that produced a pair of second place finishes. She started I 985 by winning the Elizabeth Arden Classic in Florida, giving her 12 co nsecuuve years with at least one victory. She now has 41 . "1 reaJl y had to change ray game af\er l injured my back," she said. "The flow wasn't there and I had to make some swing changes. "My posture was all wrong and I had to strengthen my gnp. I've also spent a great deal of time on my timing. It got to where my lower body was ahead of my upper body which caused me to fire and fall back. "I've been putting terribly. In fact. when I won in Florida. I had 32 putts and that isn't good out here. I JU St out- • Bua TUCIEI SP ORTS CO LUM NI ST •The Milwaukee Brewers have a Japanese pitcher, Yutaka Enatsu. in camp ... he is the fi rst Japanese import since Murakami Masanon had a cup of coffee -or glass of sake -with the Giants in the middle 60's. ally. the irons go a little farther than they did. I very seldom hit the driver hard. We've played so many short courses in recent years, it bas almost been a puttin& contest out there. The courses aren't Qljitc as short this year and I like it th.at way. "What I like about it is that you can I act your swing going, Before you could never keep a full swing going and it would cause you to top the ball. With the metal woods and new golf ball material. everybody bits the ball lonR anymore.•• JoAnne Carner hit everybody else from tee to green. Actually, what I have done is work some of the swing chanacs into my putting. l can't seem to find the type of flaw l have on the putting green." Carner has taken the fast three weeks off and she missed ihe U nl den last year because of a fishin& trip in her home state of Flonda. "The first two weeks I was off before this tournament. the ocean was very choppy and I didn't get to go fishi ng. Then last ·week I had to start practicing again and the ocean was like glass. It really made me vef) mad because l couldn·t go fishing. 'Tm hitting the ball better than I ever have ... Carnercontanued ... Actu- •Reaction to the report out ofVero Beach tha1 Sandy Koufu might come out ofrettrement was that the bar in the press lounge at Dodgertown is being kept open later than usual. •I ft he owners open their books to the players. the players will open thetr books to the owners ... won't they'? •A gu} said Te IT) Forster checked an to the Atlanta Braves camp at 223 pounds ... Hoss hasn·t been that hght since he "'as a baby. •The uniforms of the tounsts who come o ut to watch s~nng tra1n1ng haven ·t changed in _o }ears. . the wearers a recalled ··snow birds.·· • Enatsu. th<' M 1lwaukee pitcher from Japan. SS) s the ~mencan ball Carner still uses the con ventional wooden driver. "I don't particularly like the metal driver," she said. "I like to work my ball with tbe dnver and with the metal h~ it is hard to do." Carner bad further thoughts about the Mesa Verde course. "When the wind comes up in the afternoon. that's wbat really makes it play so well. The fairways arc wide enough but 1fyou act a little careless. you make them ~ lot narrower. "I'm a good bad weather player. As we say in the business, if you have to make your move and gain some ground, we want bactweather. It's bad for lhe pro-am but for us it 1s all ngbt because-we are used to bad wc:atber." Carner is the all-time leading money winner on the LPGA tour and could become its first S2 million -.Afinncr this year. "I don't set a lot of goals for m~sclf but at the start of' thr \ear I was $2 I 0.000 short of the !2 m1lhon mark. I would hke to grt there this year but other than that. I JUSt go out and try to win as man} tournaments as possible." When she v.on this vear she became the oldest pla)er ·,n LPG l\ h1stof) to wan a tour event. pla)'t'tttre "a lmlc crazy" . al least that's" hat his interpreter sa~s he S3\S. ·•The most pleas1ngs1ght 1n all of spnng training 1s ~ngcl coach J1mm1e Reese who 1s back 1n uniform after suffering a heart attack late last season ... Before the sun sets on another season. J1mm1e ""'II be 80 •Rookie pitcher Ki ri.. ~k( a k1ll 1s the son offormer NH land Lo Angeles Sharks pla)er Ted Young McCaskill looks hke he can pitch and he has more hair than the old man but he wi II never be as tough. •Perhaps 1t 1 a trend the Mets signed Dwight Gooden to a contract loaded with incent1,eclauscs and 1t reflects the statement of Angels G M Make Port. whosa\ . ·-rd gladly pa) a m1llton dollar<i for ~(h~ ms -1 JUSt y,,ant the 20 wins .. Sharpnackisassharpashecanget •You could get up an office pool on the first major league manager to sa ). "we will hav<" a representative te.am" ... or has one of them already said 1t'> •Rod Care"' looks young and health} and happ~ and says he fecls lhatwa} Barons pitcher rans 14 straight; Sailors advance- Founi.ain Valley Hi&h's Bob Sharp- nack turned in a virtuoso pitching pcrfortJ\llnCe Tuesday to highlight high school baseball action. Meanwhile, Newport Harbor High's Sailors opened the Newport Harbor Elks bucbeU tourMment with a bana. dropPin1 Santa An• Valley by the football score of 14-3- and Ocean Vie..w. Marina and Mater Dci were victorious, also. Herc's a look at Tuesday's action: and rode the arm of left-hander Jon Dishon in gaanang the win over the Falcons in the Newport Harbor Elks Tournament. Dishon tossed six innings. allowed just two hits and one earned run while walking only one and fannin$ five. Sophomore nght-hander Pat Dicrona finished up for Newport by throwing the seventh inning. The Sailors were led by Todd Lawrence (3 for J), Joey Ja mes (2 for 4), who had two RBI. Chris H1rahara (2 for .S). "'ho scored three runs. and Dean Marttnc:i. (2. for 2l.. who had three RBI. Mike Jarboe had a big blow an the second inning for Newport wi th a two-run single. i • Foutala Valley S, Hutiaatoa <>Ceu Vic• •. Cypress 2: The lleac• l: The Barons' SharpnJck, who Scahawks meet La H~bra next 1n the struck out 14 straiaht batteruf\er the -Loara Toum,amcnt .s consola~1on Oilers' first hitter grounded out, had a bracket. follow1na their third stm1aht perfect game until one out in the sixth S·2 dc:ctsion. mnina and fanned a total of 18. Oc~n View (2· l) JU~pcd tQ a 2-0 The Barons tolled behind the 6-2. lead 1n . the first . 1nn1n• o n John 190-pound.gaht-l'tandcr td dcf'ea\ ttie dan s run-tCOnn& tnptc, follo-ed Oilers at Glover tadaum in Anaheim by a 1nalc. fr~ Phtl Cbta...-- in the quarterfinal round ofthe LoaD Jerry l<1ng rwtr~run ~nplt' .1n the Tournament. bottom !)f the third 1nn1na clinched Trrry Reichert had three of the the verdict. Barons' four hits, includ•l\I an R81 Octan View Coach 8111 0 1bboos double an the sixth a,nd a two-run said he ~ hos>(ful of' pla)'1J\& Lt 1nale an the seventh The only hit Habra ThurMiay bccauJe of a harpnack allowed was a bunt anale doubfcheader with San Clemente in the sixth that also went for an error. scheduled tuntay. sconna Hunt1naton Btach's only run. Mater Del 11, c .. aa M.,. t: Bobby Ne.,port Hat'Mr 14, Suta Au OcJardin hit a thrte-run homer W1th VaU., l: The l0r&comcri&ed 14 hit M out and Ted flOioci• bi111 k>eded double scored two more in the Guedea singled in Vince Torres in the Mo narchs' nine-run second innmg as fifth mntnJ. to snap a 1-1 tie and give Mater Dei won its season opener O\er the host V1k1ngs the \ 1ctor) the Mustangs in the first round of the G uedea. who was p1tch1ng in rehef •Themo t cndunngbascball hangout in all of the ma1ors. minors or spring training cities 1s the Pink. Poodle in Scottsdale ... if you ne«l to find a guy and W!> not at lhe Poodle. check the morgue Newport Harbor Elks tournament. of Dave Emmons. picked up the Junior left-hander Steve Wa tson "1ctor.. struck out nine in four innings and • The· V1kmgs. no" ~-~. scored first picked up the win for Mater De1 an the second innangas teH Blokdyk before g1V1ng way to reliever Mike "alked and Greg KnufT singled him McCarthy, who went three mnings to second. Chns Sublette "'as then ~1t and yielded just two unearned runs. b} a p1U:'h to load the basses. Keith The Monarchs play Newport Harbor Laszlo then mglcd Blokdyk ~ome. Thursday at Te Winkle Parki7 p.m.) • Manna returns to acuon on Wednesda). March 13 -.hea the •Las Vegasoddo;agamst a IQ85 Freeway World Senes show the Angels at 15-1 and the Dodgers at 5-I. ·~·fauch'srukagainstpla en. -.-eanng bcardsonh appl1esLowork- mghours Martaa 2, Mlttl• Viejo 1: Mark (Pleue eee PUP /82) J • Ocean View, Poly tangle tonight LONG BEAC H -Ocean View H1ah's a- hawks take a H-3 l"C('ord and hopes of a C IF S-A basketball tin&ls berth into tonight's semifinals game wtth Lona Beach Poly at the Lona ,Beach Arena at 8·4S .,., I f the n1&htcaP of a doublehcadtr ancludt.s unbeaten Glendale (26-0) and 6-1 L nwood in tt!t 7 o'clock 4!" pmc. Ocean View. (ed b~ 6-6 sophomore Rick} Butler and 6-0 point auard Blaine DcBrouwtr, unset ~IJUC Co-MVPs. ha spht with the Jackrabbit dunna tbt season, bf«zana at the Tournament of O\ampeoa 73-60. then d roppina a la t·m1nutc 71 ~9 decu1on at home. Poly has Vron 11 of u la t 12 pmes and 1 led by 6-S Vincent Camper a,nd 6-6 ndtt Purry. Poly. the Moore ~aauc champion, 1s I~-7 overall. Ocean V1tw Hiah Coach Jim Hams ~ s h1 Seahawks· bta problc-m With Pol}. even 10 the 73-60 victory. has bt'cn the lack of late--pme agattss1'-c· ness. , Ocean View had a 64-44 lcad with thrtt mtnules ~o ao b6orc scnhng for \he 73~60 win. and-the:. . scaNwk wett up b a 2o.6 count befoc'lC\ cnlWll~ -'*' I t1'1tn Jhe ~nd rontc l The Scaha"-'k ha"t' had five player5 in doubtc figures in both pta off games ind the cnu~ stanll\& hneup was selected to the t>a1ly Pilot' all un~t team -DcBrou.,.er and Butler shanna MVP-honors while 6-7 Tony Pan11aa, 6-S Mike Labat and 6-4 Dave tr&l&hl w~rc amona the fi ve first-team sclcct1on . The Wlnncr of ton1&ht' pme quahfie~ for the final turday n1aht at the same ~1te •1nSt Thunda 's Wlnner between Mater Oc1 (27-0) and rra <ll·S). ~~;::::;.;~~;..;:=.~-----=-----.....-1~;;__---'"'"4-..-.---------.......... ~------.--....:.. .......... ,.._.~.~~~----==-~---_;;..,.---------------------------......~----~-----4 ~ Be •urf•, bicycles •nd.rana to Win ........... all for a shirt When Jack Lundquist devetoped a • tems ~ure runnina he knew he 'f'aS .... '° have to make an ldjustmtnt - iMI with 1 blM:Qround whic:b included c,ctiDL surfi"' .na akiina. wbat better way to keep a 40-,_...-old body in aha~than toentera triathlon with just illoee items 1nvol\fe<l? Lundquist surfed foran hour in Huntington Beach, bibd from the Huntinaton Beach pitrto the top of Mt. llady(6S miles). then took two runs down slopes for the ~reward: A T·shin. • Tbe compeli&ion: "Vince finished sccond aboul a Mlf bout behtnd," says Lundquist. "But I don't know hit lut name. .. CUrt Eury was maybe an hour behind me. Fourth Wll Otts, but he quit somewhere before the mountain climb.'' .....- That was the field for Sunday's big event and Lundquist admits it was a rather slim field at that. But k's looking for tou&}ler oompetition next year. "This was brewna the acc." says the Huntington Bach icsident "The Bolsa Chica Bike Shop h~ 36 T- lbins. but the wcatber was so bad on Saturday 1t may uve held down the entrants. "The road was closed to Mt. Baldy and there were can stuck in the snow. But Sunday it turned out to be a nice day and'everything went really weU. Next year we'll cha~ a fee so there may be better control of the entries. 'This year it was a little low-keyed and it became a little too low-keyed." . . Lundquist says he had .no doubts. du~n1_1!1s uphill ~nd the fina l three miles to the ~~air lift ••unbelievable." • His time for the bike ride w~s four hours, 56 minutes. . While the triathlon cenainly must be considered unique in terms of entrants, it was also different i~ format, but as Lundquist says. ·~where else can you ski and surf in the same day?" ltevlJa McBale continued his sen-m satfonal shooting with 27 of bis 42 points in . the first half Tuesday nig!lt, carryinJ the Boston Celtics to a I I 0-102 National . Basketball Association victory over the outmanned New York Knicks. McHale, who set a Celtics record with 56 points against Detroit on Sunday by bitting 22 of 28 shots from the field, was 15-for-2 I against Ne.w York including 9-<>f-lOi n the first half. ... Elsewhere tn the N'BA, forward ltevlJa Grevey scored 14 points in the first half to help stake Milwaukee to a 22-point lead as the B~ks went on to a 102-87 victory over the Seattle Supersonics ... LaSalle 'nlompso11 scored a scason-biJh 26 points and snared 13 rebounds as Kansas City crushed New Jersey 134-113 ... Mic .. el Jordaa scored 37 points as Chicago erased an 18-\)0int deficit on the way to a I 04-99 victory over Washington ... Roludo Blackmu scored seven points in the last minute to push Dallas pastlndiana t08-I02~1UkfVa.Mewepe scored a game-high 28 points and led Portland on a founh-quarter raJfy that gave the Trailblazers a ~00:91 victory over Atlanta! .. Mike Evau scored the winnmg basket on a Jump shot with 44 seconds left i~ the second overtime to give Denver a 133-131 vtctory over Houston. Flyers ruin Bouy's big night Brin Propp scored three goals and set up Dave Po.U.'1 game-winner at 2: 18 of overtime Tuesday night as the Philadel- phia A yers beat the New York Islanders S-4 in a National Hockey League game that featured Mae 8011y'1 record-setting 50th goal. After Bossy's dramatics, which included the tying goal with just 57 seconds remaining in the third period, the Ayers scored on the only shot of overtime. f'elnt..lon, radio TB.IYllM)N No ewnta leheduled. RADIO 5:30 p.m. -NO IOCCU: LA Lazer1 at D11M. KWV&FM ( 108). 7:30p.m. -PllOMIKl'TaAU.: Gotden State • Ulken, KLAC =· 7:30 p.m. -8AIKIT8AU.: Ctevetand at CCISllD1t1D11etn•, KHJ (830). TWOAY'l llADIO 4 p.m. -COLLIM 8AllmTULL: UC Irvine vs. Ctilf 8taW Fullerton, KWVE-FM (108), t<EZY (1190). . PREP BASEBALL. • • From Bl WartiOrs stun Artists in flve "I'm SUR everyone's ao~· to be ukina today, 'Ball, Woodbridae? Who's Woodbl ' ?' "But anyone who played t m last year knew what was ~int this year," sayi t...auna Beach Hiah voUeybaJI coach Ball Ashen. • · Ashen knew what was comin,a and when Woodbrid&c lef\ Lquna Beach Tuesday niaht 1t was with an S-1 S, 8· f3, 15-7. IS-IO. 18-16 Sea View League victory after 31h hours of work. Laauna Beach entered as Orange County's No. J. ranked team, with Woodbrid&e just a notch back, and Ashen credited the Warriors with their stcrlin& play for thd winnina effort. "The turning point might have come in that third match when we messed up with a rotation mistake." said Ashen. "It son of disoriented us." When the pme was on the line in the final set and tied at 14, there were nine straiaht sidcouts before the Artisu first took a IS-14 lead, tben went up, 16-IS, but Coach -Steve Stratos' Warriors held on behind the play of middle hitter Lany Barnett, in addition to the play of Matt Hunkin (17 kills). setter Gres Padgett and Satosbi Noda, a beck row specialist. Ashen said he didn't get a good look at Barnett "because he was moving so fast." Barnett was credited with 21 kills. All-league returner Scott Burch played sparingly for Woodbridge and wasn't really a factor, and Laguna 'Beach was without Mi lee Stafford because of tom ligaments in his foot. "Those guys (Woodbridge) got their rear ends kicked for four year1 and JU St aot tired ofit, I guess." added Ashen. Elsewhere, Newport Harbor's Andy Allison was e m n e w ewar had 11 service aces, but the Sailors weren't able to stem the tide of Corona del Mar in a._ 16-14. 15-7, 15-8 setback. Guy Putnins led CdM at the middle blocker spot and Peter Nourse was steady on the outside.'-Setter Jon Schisler, coming ofTa recent a knee injury, aJso played well forCdM. Estancia pushed University aside Universit)'. with a 15-4. 15-4, I 5-7 conquest, spearheaded with l 0 ICJlls from Adam Lockwood and a strong setting game by Phil Horgan. ln non-league action Marina, on the s1rcnJth of Randy Smith's 8 kills and 29 assists from setter Rob Roscnblatt,bestedl.agunaHills, 15-11 , 15-7, 14-16, 15-7. ' Man Song Hing leads UC Irvine UC Irvine, ~i.n~ the play of Bruce Mar:i So.ni Hing, won .easily over v1s1tmg Rice Tuesday to h1ghhght area tennis action. Elsewhere. Orange Coast and Saddleback posted wins in community college play, and in women's action, OCC outlasted Golden West Herc's a look at how it went UC lrvt.e S, RJce •: Man Song Hing continued to dominate his opponents as the Anteate~ won five of their six singles matches to defeat the Owls in non-<:anfercnce action at Irvine. Man Song Hing. who in the past two weeks has defeated some of the nation's top players, including No. 4 ranked Todd Witsken of USC and No. 23 ranked Danny LeaJ o f Pepperdine. ~in posted an impress!ve,outing by defeating Scott Melville. 6-2, 6-2, the nauon s No. 28 singles player. Also contributing with fine singles performances for UCI ( 12-5) were Brad Ackerman. Keo Derr, Darren Yates and Neil Amor. In community college action: Oruge Coa1t I, Golden West 0: The Pirates stop~d the Rustlers in a South Coast Conference match, behind Scott Lee, Raul Montoya, Vince Lottesier, Ray Hir~o and Mike Whitcher, who all won in straight sets. Coast 1s now 2-1 in South Coast action and 34 overall. John Despot, who also won his singles match for OCC. teammcd with Lee to defeat Eric Crew and Tim Nguyne in doubles. Montoya and Harry Moloshco knocked off GWCs lonel Bogde and Abdul Alaovi twice and Lottesier and Hirko doubled to beat the Rustlers' Sergio Velasquez and John Jenkins in two games. Mauch taking long look at pitching prospects From AP dJ1patcllel Angel Manager Gene Mauch, wbo has been impressed by several veteran pitchers attempting comebacks and youngsters tryinJ to force their way onto the team's roster. 1s about to get his first opportunity to rate the prospects. On Tuesday. Mauch announced a schedule of three squad games, the first of which will be played Thursday. Each scrimmage will last eight innings, with each of the 24 hurlers at ,We Mesa. Ariz. camp pitching two innings apiece. Vikings hosl Warren Simi Valley 9, Edison t: The Chargers committed seven errors in losing 1he1r El Scaundo Tournament qual'\erfinal game on their own field. Camacho's offense 10 get by the Sea Kings in a Newport Harbor Elks Tournament game at Corona del Mar. Dionne sets NHLrecard From AP dJspatclles INGLEWOOD -Marcel Dionne tallied a goal and added two assists while sureassing the 100-point mark for the eighth time -a National Hockey League record -10 lead the Los Angeles Kings to a 6-0 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins Tuesday niaht. Maile Miller had two RBI for Edison while team mate Jeff Kent was . 2 for 2 and scored a pair of runs. :: Edison, 3-2. was scheduled to · return to Loara Tournament play today at 3 against Newport Harbor on the Edison field. Sa44J~k 8, Coroaa del Mar 1: The Roadrunners used Jeff Rowe's four-hit pitching and catcbcr Albert PU Pl AUTO A DUCK llOKllS -9-1-1445 Rowe yielded just two walks and struck out eight in going the distance to help Saddlebaclc win for the first time this season. CdM's Darrell Landers (0-1) suffered the loss. allow- ing five hits and seven runs. only three of which were earned, during his six-inning stint. Cd M's three errors proved costly as Saddlebaclc used it to score four runs in the first three innings. Steve Clark picked up for landers in the seventh forCdM. The Sea Kings play Thursday in the second round of the tournament .against Sea View League foe fatancia. Sa•ta Au t•, E1tucl~ S: Three Eagle pitchcT1 were rou1hcd up for 19 hits as the Saints won b1a over Estancia in a Newpon Harbor Elk' Toumament pme. The Eagles crossed home four times in the fifth innina. hipUJhted by RBI singles by Mike Rossellini and Ken Hamson, with two others com· ina by~an a ro1 11'*9 walk. Bue that was about theextentofEst.ancia't offense. t.ancr Mitt Hatfteld had 1 little control problems for tbe EqJcs, lastinJ tbroual'! just four t.tters, walkint three of them. ' Raul Jara picked up for Hatfield and went 2'b inninas. allowina ix runs (only one .earned), before Rosaellioi •• who aurren<krcd 10 hiu ,lliiiilii_iiil_iiliiiiiiiiiiililiiiimil._...-.. , Md four runs. finished up. .. .. . Dionne's goal, the 620th of his 14- year career. came from fi ve feet out as he jammed 11 past Penguin goalie Robeno Romano. The Kin&$· rookit goaltender. Bob Janecyk, stopped all 21 shots he faced as he recorded his 20th win of the season and second career shutout. The Kinas took control of the game early as Gary Galley soorcd a short- handed aoat at 4:33 of the first period. Bernie Nicholls added his 41 st goal of the year at 14:44, and Dionne scored h1sat t 9: 1 S for a J.-0 lead. Brian MacLellan scored the only second-period goal with a shot from the let\ crea~ off' a pa -Dionne at 7:n . •Jim Fox and Mart Hardy ICOf't4. • the third"period pis for the final 6-0 count. The Kjnp (30-2S-l 1). who arc t.tthna for KCOnd place with the Winnipta Jets and the Catpry flames, remain in fouth ~lace in the Smythe Division. two points behind both teams. With the loss. PittJbw'ah (21·37·S) remains four points out of a playoff 1pot in 'he Patrick Divis.on bchand the New York Ranten. •"' I 1 ~ >· .... WllT8•U• CONt'SalNCI ft9dlc~ WI. M H LA Ullen 0 ll .10S "-1• 2' 33 .4" ~ ,, :J3 .4" S.ltll " u .u. LA~ n 3' .Xl 0.... llett 1• •S .W ~"·DMUlll Deftver •I 2 l · .6'1 Houllon • 36 u .SfO Delea s.i 21 ~ Sefl-'nlonlO 31 31 .500 Ulen 21 » ,4Sf !<ante• Cllv 2 I .cl .344 IAITHM CONllalNCI Allll'lk OM.- x·Botton •·PhlladelPtlle NewJentv W1"'1ntlon New York 4' 13 .7'0 ~ u .7~ 31 >O .SOI 31 31 .500 '° ~ m C..tt~-Mllweu!IM •2 19 M9 0etro11 33 27 .S50 Chkeoo 21 32 .~7 Allenl1 2S l6 .410 Cleveland 7• l1 .)Pl Indiana It •1 .317 •-dlnchecl Pl•voH berll\. T .... '1'1~ 8ot1on 110, ,...._ Vorlt 102 l(enM• Cllv I,., New Jef'MtY 1 ll MllweukM 102, S..llle 17 o ... , IOI, lndlene 102 Chkeoo ICM, W••hlnoton .. Portltnd 100, Allente 91 Denver 133, Houston 131 (2 01) T...._..1Gemet GOIOen Sl•lt el LA Lallen Cltvtlfnd el LA a..-1 Chlca6o 11 8o•lon Seellle el Ntw Jef'MIY Allent1 11 Phlledtll>!\le Porllend el W1Shln9lon l<I~ m't 17 ti 21 -· •l.'I 7 10 Ul.'I ltV. I V. 131.'1 17 If n~ Un1den Inritadonal startlngtlmes THUllSDAY STAA'*O TIMIS f'lrtt T• lMlnillll!el 7:lt-ElelM CroW/, C:erOlt CNrbon• ni.r, "-'9 P.clltO 7'..Jf-ea(Mre Mo•neu, ClndV Hecktv, ,UMM Nteele 7__.Alk• ltltunen. Tll«tw Hftt!Oft, MlcNko Yoltov•me 7:S7-.Jedllt laftsclil. L•urlt etelr, Amv lent •~1thrvn You119, D•lt EllQtllng, Lvnn Connelly l!1$-4<atllv l•ktr, K11tw Hite, M, J. Smith •~.,_Marv S.th llrnrnttmen, Jane LOdl, CllarlOll• Monloomerv 1;3)-1(.ethv Postlewell, Leura Cole, Holll1 Slecv t:42-T1llUkO Olluko, Janet Colin, 8arb 8\IMowlitv l:S l-t. vnn Adami, Ctvl' JohnlOll, Pet 8radlev ,._S..... Quinlan, C•thv Merino, Doi Germain t,Ot-Jucty Clerk. MarllM H ..... Laun. ltlnkef' ""' T .. (A,_,...) ll~•ncv Looe1. Cindy Hiii, PeMY Pull lli,....Roslt Jonti, Lenore Mul'eott•, Anne-Merle Pell ll:st-Lauren Howe, Merl• Fl_.-11- 00111. K1lhy Whitworth 11:07-~ A~ln Dettlll, Bltsv 'King 12':lt-Donna Whllt, S.Chlko Takahashi, Muffin SOencef' ·Dev Un 12~S-Olanne D1lley, Saren L•V1<1vt, Mletto Sut ukl 12:)<1-Su. Fogleman, L•ur• Hurll>ul, lhrl>llr• ~Hsi 12·:.o-t4oreen Friel, Pim Glelzen. Nancv Whfle-Brewtr 12:52-eerber• Btrrow, CollHn Welke!', Dawn Coe T.-T .. (A...,..._I 11:41>-L.aurl Peterson, Avello QQmoto, Amv Aleoll 11:..,....Jull lnklltr, ••Tli SOlomoll, .WllYrl 9rlt1 11:.-s.tlUlllo Masuda. Ala ,,,,._, Lori Gerb«t 11-07-.J•ne llalock, Pal Mevers. Mllll Ode 12:l6-Celhv Morll, Vicki F.,.OOfl, Salldr• P9lmer 12:25-Pla Nlluon, Lise Voune, LYM s1r-v ll~Ofll~ Melsttrlln, S~ Ertl, Jene Crefler 12:0-<lndV Figg. StilhOtnl Suzuki, Pennv H1mmtl 12:S2-Marlne .Naust, I Olll)le I.Auer, C•lhv·Manl ~~!eW<~A,..,11'-'*"·~ ~~~~~ 1:01 sen S.ndtrs, C.thv Revnotd1· Ulen 11 Houston lnell•n• 11 S.n Anlonlo C ..... ICWft SOUTHWIST DeP1ul 65, Pin Amerlcen SS TCMMNAMINTI alelllMC • -,Int .... K1nM1• 7•, Nebl'Hlta ff Olclel'IOINI 116, Oklelloml SI. 91 ECACHettlAllMlkC.lf•-~ 8o•lon U. 6', NleHre 61 C1nl•lu1 90, New Hemoshlra S6 Nor111M1tern 103, Maine l l si-65, Vttmont S6 Mlu-1Y .... ~ ""'"__, Br •Olev U , Crt'9111on S9 lndllna SI 6', llllnol1 St. 61 TulMt 7•. w. Tuai SI. " Wichita SI. "· s. IUinols " ~nton l:l~SlllllekO V•komochl, LtAntl Casseday, Mklol'I Wellaur• l:lt-Lvnn PerkM, Cetollnt Gowen, Jene G.odff ~ f I . . . " c ..... UC !NIM 11, cat Shlte LA 1 (Men·~·> cs Los AllfflH 000 010 ~ I • l UC lrvlne 000 031 7S1-ll 14 0 ~riv'-re, Estrada (6), Herrell (71. ~~=-1.alNr 99, J' txas· A rime ton 70 ---eolltednL(lj AlJCLDoy{e, LYlldl en. UntQn,_ McNMW SI ... N. Texas St. ,. NE Loulslan1 70, Arkenws SI. 67 Hltltl KMd boVS C" SIMl,INALS l ·A Bonit1 67. Nogales '3 Mornlno•l<le ... Demien '3 l·A Crouroed• (S.nla Monica) 75, Monlclelr Prep .. Ch1dwlck 70, Whllllef' Cllflsllan 57 Smlll Sdleltl HesP1rie Chrlsllen 71, Nftdlfl ~ Temote Ctirlsllen U , Wooder111 Chrl•· Hen SI Hl9h lcMd t*tl cu• SEMl,IMALS •·A Compton 60. LvnwOOd .. Muir SI, Gahr SS J·A BrH ·Ollllde 6S, RIVef'llde Polv .. FoothlM ~. Palmdale SO 2-A I.a Qulnt1 SO. CeiOn 33 Sen Lull Obl1l>O •S, Chino '3• l·A Sa" Dimas SO. Sant• CIM• • V1"-Y Cllrlstlln J7, Nordtlofl 37 Smell Sd!Mlt-FNntrldH Sacred HH N ... Trone 17 Bor"on 11, Rio Hondo Preo SO Lft A&amltol TUISDAY'S ltlSULTS USltl ef 67 ·llllM Mll'Mls meetlftt) FIRST RAC•. One mlle PICI. Luc:kv L•vitv (sntf"ren) 6.00 3.00 UO Wind Driven !Ander.on) 3.00 2.60 F1111nvour1Ht'"ll (Miiar) S.20 Time· 7:<M 11 S. ll EXACTA ll·SJ peld '29'0 SECOND RACI. One mile o.c:e. Tenn lt Ru"ntr (Tremblav l Cel Angel (Aut>on) Arm.ditto (0.M>mef') nme 2.01 lt S Sl.00 2•.00 9.00 10 60 S.60 3.60 ll EXACTA ll ·41 Peld IS73 SO. <'THIRD lltACE. One mlle Nee 1Cen1uc1tv Lene (CrC>QNn) 7.60 • '° Affirm1llvelv IACkef'men) 7 JIJ Annlt Rovell (Pel'aolnel Time 7 02 1/S. ll EXACTA (3·2) paid 17S.OO FOUlltTH RACI. One mlle trot 2.AO 3 . .0 2,60 Mlng Oregon (Flscol 600 UO 3.60 Moon Cloud IV•llendlngneml 11 60 uo Jevs Memorlft (Sherren) 1.00 Time 7 03 3/S FIFTH lltACE. One mlle PIO lacocc:e (Maler) 3 60 3.00 2.60 Prime Byrd (DI Franco) 6.00 S.60 Slllewev Artist (TOOd) 11.IO Time· 21>0 •IS ll RXACTA !S·ll i>eld 132.10. SIXTH RACI. Ont mlle pece. Newl (Marchand) •uo 21.60 10.60 MOOdv Blue N (Kuebler) UO •.20 Scotch llrlohl CM•ltr) 6.20 Time: 1:59 '15. ~ ll EXACTA (1·3) H id 1420.90. SEVINTH ltACI. One mlle oeu. Lii A!IMr CTOdd) SOO l .00 2.60 Soec;lel Pete!' IVaMendlnlltleml UO 3.00 F1IM1 Regal (Plano) 3.10 Time: I.SI US. $l IXACTA II) paid '39.00 llGMTH ltACI. One mile PKe. 11111 Erlle (Delomer) 20.60 6.60 560 Emereld OUlinQ (Tondr .. u) UO l.tO AnC!ys WeeMtt (Koenlol s.tO Time-2111 3/ S. $l IXACTA 1 .. 3) Hid 17UO. NfffTH aACI. One mlle OllCI. S.ult (SNrrtnl 7•.20 UO UO Awesome 8rMH (Crogl\en) >.00 2.IO Glen H-ver CAUOlnl 510 Time: I.Sf $l IXACTA 11· 11 Hid 116 .0. 12 P'tCIC MX !2·S-1-l+l l Hid Sl,31100 with 11ven •IMlno llcktll (five llO<Mil 11 Pick Six c~rvovef' POOi: lf,m 17. TINTH ltACI. One mlle lrOI. Ptltv (V1llenctln9fleml .. UO 2.IO NOllle Arnett• (A1*r.oll) • '° >.IO ~ MOote (0.--1 J.20 Time. 2.00 J/S. $l •XACTA 1•·<11 Hid MllO. ILIYINTH ltAG•. One milt Pee. llt"el GHtllt IAuOlnl 6,20 UO ,,10 Ml.lltl larrv CSh«rlnl UO 2.20 Rnl Sunnv (RC>Mfll 2, lO Time, 2:00 315 J UCACTA !Ml Hid •S:UO. Alle!IOlnee U14. •• 8flnk C6> and MorHn, Kllne (6). W-t.lnlon, 3·1. L-Larlvlere. 0-3. 29-Andtrson <UCll 2, Perrv (UCI>. llvrne (UCI), Moo<e !CSLA). 3B-Kllne (UCll. HR-MorQlln (UCI), Buller (CSL.Al Communltv C.-... LA V...., 6, DrMel CMU J LA Vehtv 011 oo.t 1)()()-6 10 1 'Orenoe Co.st 000 200 001-3 9 O · · Ftfnendlz •nd Collrttl; Brennan. Garcl1 (6l 1nd Frven, ElllM>n 161. w-Fernendl1. L-Brtnnen. 2B-Vlll111nor IV>. Roumlnper (01. Glbb1 (0 ), ElllM>n (0), Pln'llH'ltel (0). 3B-Glbbs (0). ~Zl,~West 7 , ...... ~-·> Golden Wnt 00 7 200 00)-7 I 6 C1nvons 30( 121 '°' Olla-n 19 I Martin. Ovef'Hm 13), KUH!rlo. (31. Bucllles (6) and F'lores. TllcMer, Creclon It) •nel Kulcl, Drurv 16). W-Tltcllner, 1-1. L-M.Nln, H . 28-Neu (GWCI 2, Hetcovlch (C) 2, Carlson (Cl. C0091f" (C). HR-Mol• {GWC) 2, DIMaf'co (GWCI. Carlson (Cl. BIUtlm CCI. Kutd !Cl. Nelon· bors IC). HkltlKMGI L.a ....... l..,,,.. 2 !Lw.T-w1*") Los AlamrtCK 000 001 2-3 10 0 lrvlnt 000 101 ~2 7 7 Hacktr, Ftanaoan (6), Ven Rlnkle (7) end WOife; Snoddy, LiPton (61 encl Rat1m1tuffa. W-Van Rlnltlt. L-Upton 2B-Nen (LAI. LIPlon (I) 2. HeberMl\I (I). Oceen V.w S, CVlll'eH l C LMniT~I Cvoress 002 000 o-2 6 2 OcHn View 202 001 x-5 S 1 Lysgerd, Baumoartntr (61 1nd Brandenberger; Taub. SmYIM (7) end Ktno. W-T1ub. L-Lvsoerd. 38-S.vld•,, (OVl, King COV). '"""In V...., J, H_....,. ... di 1 (LMra T__,_..) Founlefn V•Mev 000 001 2-3 • 7 Huntlnglon Buch 000 001 ~1 I I Sh•rPnecil and RelcMrl. Hied!. Cogan (S), Pont (7) incl Tomaslck. W-Stlare>neck, 3-0. L-f>onl. 28-Relc:llert (FVI. Sa~l,C.-41111Mw I (.._...,,Men. E•s T~) SeddltbKk 202 012 ..... 7 s Corona dt4 Mir 000 001 ~I ' l Rowe and C•mecl'IO. Lenders, Clerk 171 end Boat. w-Rowe. L-t.endtrs, 0-l. _....,.. Hel'Mr 14, SMlll AM Vein l !Newll«f HatMr Ells Teur'ftMMMI Sanle AN Vallev 200 001 ~ 3 ' l Newoorl Harbor n2 002 x-1• I~ 3 Gol\ialel, Domlnvuez (2) 1111e1 PMez Ol1llon, Olcrone <71 end Perlli. W-Dlshon, 1-0. L-Gontllft. 28-J•mes (NH). P•rh (NH). JB-+ilrehe,. (NH). S..... AM l4, IUMde S (Newperl Hetller Ells T__,,_) Sanl• Ana -S07 020-1• 19 3 E Slancla 001 040-S 10 S Scnllllno 1nd H. Otlv1re1. Hllfitkl. Jere (I), Rosselllnl (3) Ind Cebellero, P•n•rl1I (Sl. W-5cnllllno. L-H•llield, 0· 1 28-Lulen · (Ei), Vandoren CEI~ Cabellero (E), A. Oliver .. (S.r'I. SOtll (SA). Merllla 2, Mii.-Ylele 1 , ..... .......,., Ml11lon Vltlo 000 010 ~1 S 1 Merine 010 010 x-2 6 O C1mobell, SWHll•nd CS> •nd RoberlM>n, Emmons, Guedea W , SUblellte m end Torres. W-Guedee. L-C•ITIPbell. Mml Vein 9, ld!Mll 2 (11....,._T~I Simi Valley 002 0'3 I 3--9 t 2 Edison 010 000 1-2 7 7 SUlllvan, Sl~s <•> •nel Devis, lhlrd, Demelo 131, Emme CSl end Mlrll" W-Sull!Ven. L-8alrd. 28-fetnt (E), MIM· """ (SV), H•nlt"" (SVI. Hate ($VI -f' ltJltr (S V). .... """' .,.. M9ter Dtl "1 II Ten '1 IOl>-1. Glttlln <ET), l0,7'/ 2 Werner !ETI, 10..Jl; >. Slnclelr !ETI, 10 ... no-1. we.-(MO), 1081 t. Gt llffl <11!..Tl, 2A.S1: l. Slnc:lllr !E"TI, 7U2. .,._l, Feou. IMO) 54.<M. '· Torrer CM~l1 5021 3. Conred (MO), H.06. ..-1. L-1 (MO). 2~.21; 2. Western (ETI, 2;0Ul; i, L.l<MI IMO>, 2;08.77. ~1. l..Oota !MO), •!34.IO, 2. McFeo· den (ET), w.~; ). #/Ive!' (MD) .. U6.02. 2-mJle-I. Serrao (l!T), 1o:n.n . t l\lt ... <MDI, 10'16.1'; ~ Clerence CliTI, 10'.lUS. ..., rtllv-1 Mlllf De4 "-l" Miit rllev-1 Met., Di. :a.as. no HM-I. lllenlfl 1u1. 17.n , t -GulMon ( l!T ), II 7l, 2 Gellven Ill Tl. 110 rime. .... -+-no lt+-1 'Thleroff CET), '3 ,.I, 2. C.U.1.non (IT), "-1'2. J ~ (MDI. U.111. H.1-1 ltOM !MOI ..... 2 Grett (MO), S-2; S. Mk IET)1 ~I. L>-1. Gt... IMO), If·~, t 1'81' CETI, lt-l, J ~ (MOI, 11·<1 TJ-1 ~" <ITI, 4'-4, t GrMt IMO>. •·•· J. ~"" tETI, '1·f PY-1 Wen.w (IT), 11·0; 2 LIMIN (ETI. '"'· > !1111 .... IMO), l«ry !MOI. .... ..-1. Meur'Olll CMOI, tAJ t K-IMOI, JH, J, ......_. (lT), ,,_SY'I erov•ux, roa • 1:10-0.bbll Haff, Michiko Ollllda. Merci 8o11rlll l:1.-l(rl1 Moneoll•n, o.t!IM Streble, MIHll MCG41ofge · C""9 UC 1nW 5, lltlce • Mllllet Min Song Hing <UCll def. Ml4vllle, 6-2. 6·2. AckMrnan (UCO def. Tavtor. 6•0, 6-2; Derr IUCtl def Petty, 6·•. S·7, 6•2; Val .. (UCll def. Sllclunen.A•3, 6·4Amor (UCI) ........ .,~Illa, w..-.'1; Mlllec-Utl dtf. tWMftde1, 7•Sr 6-i. ~ TaYIOr·Mtlvff .. (It) def. Derr·Men Song Hlno. 3·6, 6•3, 6·•; Pettv·Sieckmen !RI def. Amor·Hl,,ktl, 6·0. ,.,, Mllltr·Brellta {R) def. H9f'Mnel4tl·Yelts, 1·6, 6·~ 6·3, Communttv c ..... <>ranee C•tt f, G..._. W..f t SIMle1 LH !OCCI def. Crew, 6·4, 6·3; Monlove <OCCI def. Boodt. 6·3, 6·0; Despot COCCI Ml. Alaovl, 3-6. 6·3, 6·1; Lo11esi.r COCCI Mt. Gln\Duro, 6·1, 6·0; Hlrlto (OCCl def. N11uven. 6·0, 6·3; Wtlltcller IOCCI def. VelHQvtl, 6·0, 6·1 DeutlM1 Montove·Mol0111Co !OCC) def. Boode- Alaovl, 6-1. 6·0; LM·DesPOI (OCC) def. Crew·Nouven, 6·l, 3·6. 6·3; Lollesltf· Hlrkb COCC) def Vel1SQUH ·Jenllln1, 6-0, 6·0. S.d•1Udr I, Centt9I 1 SIMle1 . West (S) def SleofleM, 6·1, l-•; R~ ISi def Knenna. 6-2. 6--0; 8o1emen (S) def. • Leon, 6·2, 6·J, Cilrlnt (5) def. Vu, 6· l, 6-2; Tllomu (SI def Certv, 6-0. 6· 1; Herrlolt (Sl def. Hiide, •·2, 6-1. '*'-' West-Bozeman (Sl def. KneM1·Vu, •·2, 6-2. StePllens·C.rev (Cl def. Cltrlne- T110me1, 6·3, 6·4; SIWlet·Trlmble (51 def. HllOl-Mercado, 6-1, 7·S. Hkltl l<Md ICllMn 23, P'ecMce S Slntles Holmes (E ) def. Huvnh, 6·0; def. O.Vlne, 6·3; def Gevtrll, 6·7; def. Johansson, 6·2; Dve (El won •·2; IOsl 4·6, 6·7; won 6·2; AMIM>n IE> won 6• 1. IOsl 3·6; won 6-3; IO$t 3·6; GOldf•den CE> won 6·2; loll 0-6; won 6·•. 6·3. DeutM1 McCart1n·Moort (E) def. Bredv·T•· Ilda, 6·4, 6·•; def. ICh•na·PH. 6·21 6·•1 Reulkh·Arnoll IEI won 6·2, 7·S; won 6·3, 6-0. Mii• Del 2'Vl, WHtmlM,., 1\l't Slntles Jenkln1 (MO) def. Smllll, 6·2, def. Whitaker, 6·2, def Hem. 6-2. def. Robinson, 6•0; Ml"" (MO) won, 6·4. 6· 1, 6·2. 7·S; Thome (MDI won, 6·l, 6·2, 6·0, 6·•; Rede (MD) won, 6·3, 6·1, 6·1, 6·1. ~ Lech·Llboov IMO) cMf. Bowmen-Smllh, 6· I. 6·6. deS. Wineman· Mullen, 6·2, .. 3; Curren·Pffl IMOI won, 6·0, 6· 1, scillt. 6-1, 2·6 Cemmunitv c ..... w.,,.. Or ..... CNS1 I, G--. Wftf I MlltlM Barmore IOCCI def. Ven Llnoe, .... 6·•; McMllllln IOCCI def. Ruiz. , .... 6-3; Lan- CAlllf COCCI def Claus. 6·3, 7·S; Elllson (OCC) clef Tl1ntre t, 6·3. 6·1; Tllurmond COCCI def Ivey, 6·3. 7·S, BrOOI• COCCI def. SHwo. 6·0. 6·0. Deublel Bermort·McMittan !OCC) def. Ven Llnoe·ltuli. 6· J, 7-S. L1nc111er-ENlson (OCC) def CleuMt·Tl\nerll, 6· I, 7-S; Ille\'· Fltmlng CGWCI def. Ptrrv·Brodi., 6·0, 6·2. ~ . . . " Wemen'~ COMMUNITY COLL.GI "1lf'ce J, 0...... w .. , I P'-rce 020 001 !>-) • 0 Go4detl Wtst 000 100 I>-I <I • DerneM end Nagy, Bredv encl HolMQultl 21!1-8eld1 (Pl HIGH SCHOOL ~It.Or-..• Unl~llY :MO 010 t-10 12 • Orenee 011 410 1-• • s hll, Fret l•I end Llltlefltld, Juenttt (3). Schroder end Mevers. w -F,.I. L-klvOdef' 38-J-•I (U), Flt !0), 2. Meter Del I•, "-2 llrea 100 001 <>-2 J • ~,., De4 oos 110 .-14 11 • Boss, 8•UOll <•> end Poludle; T"""°'1. Sulllvan l•l end ttie._ W-T...,._, L-lou. 2t-Groodttood (MOJ, HR-~ven IMO), OelMy !MOl •• .... __ & CM firm ·nain.ed in $100 million trade secrets suit -. : CLEVELAND(AP)-A·comP.uler helped scatter its trade secrelS acroH company alleaes in a $100 million Europe. l1wsui1 that a former employee The suit was filed this week in U.S. ... Santoni, Nichol get tcu>·posts at Comprehensive Care Corp. IUclaard A. Sutoal has been appointed president and W. Jamtt Nicol has been appointed vice chairman of Com-,rue.alve Care Corp., a Newport Beach-based health care co mpany. The pair will also serve on the board of directors. Both posts were crea1ed as part of an.overall restructuring of the company: Santoni, a psychologist, has been with CompCarc for I 0 years, most recently as executive vice presiden1 of human resources. Nicol has been with the firm since 1972. His most recent post was executive vice presiden1 in charge of the compaoy's behavioral medical care joiot venture with Volantary R0tpltal1 of America. • •• Joaepb Farber has joined Am,frlcu Dlvenlfled's tech division as project manager of solar energy, responsible for the installation and evaluation of solar and alternate energy projects. He has 34 years' experience in solar energy, most recently IS president Of Solar Reaearct. Sy1tems, a research and deveropment firm and manufaaturer of plastic, low-temperature solar collectors. He has also been a consultant in solar enef'JY and aerospace. He serves on the board of dfrectors for Solar Age magazine and the AS/latenaatJoaal Solar Eaergy S.Ctety. He has served as chairman of the Oruge CCH1nty Solar EnerlY Coalitloa is is current president of the Soallilera California Solar Eurgy Seclety. confidential information," Novak said. He said 1he information in- clud.cd cust~~er li!ts.t prod1:1ct infor- mation, pnc1n1 anrormauon and markeung stratqics. Novak said Brandl was dismissed in December as director of Telxon's Eurol)eln marketin& and sales oper. ation. He said Telxon was disutidied with Brandt's job performance, but retained hinr as a consultant until March l· Durina that time, accordin& 10 the suit, Brandt also worked IS a couult· ant for MSJ. Tclxoa, whkb bu beeft ia businell 1ince the late 1960s, produca ponable compu1en daat .. ther. pro. Ceil and siott inlonnauon tlMu is law communicated to a bost com- puter. At Commercial Credit Thcift, Inc., we make it easy to get the money you need. With payments you can afford. No matter what you need the money for. We'll even ta.kc your application over the phone. And, usually, give you an answer in just 24 hours. So call C.Ommercial C redit about a personal loan you can live with. And !\ Harry Morgan get the things you want t<X!ay. Without getting a loan you'll regret tomorrow. ftnoo8I kMuu t0 fil I pcnon's tNdFt- MONTHLY AMOUl'-'T TERM PAYMENT 12,SOO l6 month I 92.23• 13.000 48 mooch ' 90 44• M.000 48 month si20 sa· IS,000 48 month 11son· ()(bcr-..na and W1IU lho ~ Cal.I frw dmih Commercial Credit. We have as many financial solutions as there are financial needs. <S 2> COMM£~1AL CRJDfT FINANCIAL NEl'MlU< Cott.a Mesa: 370 E. 17th St., 645-8700; Huntington Beach: 16075 Golden Wcs1 St.,847-ml; Mission Viejo: 24395 Alicia Parkway, Alicia Town Ptai.a, n0.265 l; °'1111p: 2200 West Orangcwood, 97U880 .@ Open your account today. Call the toll-free Financial Line now: 1-800-423-BANK. IOO ,_.. ol ..-riclt. Great American ~~t.nk.- Wldl II ._~°""II~ AMM1a... a Toro ....... fiDr t v..., .... , I I ltJ1#•8-ll Cqllwlaldl U.-lwll Newpwt ... ~ S.Oe 'I S..1-Ca;lllaw w_..... • ... ~~----~--------~--~ On the· I , • -·--- IEllESDArs Cll•I PllCES c -· WHAi NYSE D1u NE W VOAK (AP) M.r. 6 NYSE L ~A lHHS NEW YORK (APl -The fOllowlng llst shOws tne New York Stock Exctwtnoe stocks and warrant• that ti.v1e gone up lhe most and dOwn 11\e mos baHd on percent of Chani>e regardless of vblume for Wed11esdav. No securities trading below s2 are Incl· ·uded. Net and percentaoe chanoes •rt !the difference between the previous clo• no price and Wednesda'r''• 2 P.m. Price. UP'S Name Last Chg Pct. I M lcklbrv s 6'1e 'h Up ,.i 2 Tesoro Pel 11 ~ ~ UP . 3 Toots ROii ,734 2>M UP . 4 TesoroP pf W• l'h UP .6 S Walnoco OV. ~ UP ~ 6 HerltCom pf 27'71'11 1~ UP . 7 Mohasco 2i~ 1'1> 0uP · 8 ~!~~rc:e I/• Ve P . 9 R.OG;eray UV' .t l ~'fton'Wi. ngy J~ l~ 8: :l omeM g Y~ ~ UP . tloetown 7~ ~ HP . nlc:are 7~ .... uP . lt Un ark Mn 2~ ,,... UP • AmWo_trWk s 23 ~ I',._ UP ···! I Kevstcon 2>.I. 111 UP 4. 19 EAL wlO 2~ YI UP 4. 9 Kerr Glau 1 l'At }2 UP 4.l ~ 8ASIX F"" .,.. Up 1· ~m~~~~11 pf ~\.J 1~ 8: : Varco 'Ill 11'11 UP . Homestake ~ UP . Echllntnc J~ I UP J UU N) Name Last Ch9 I EvanP 2. IOof J3Js -1111 2 AmSLFla 'h -l'h 3 Measw•• 'h -2112 ; ~~lj'Ul.40of 11'18 = 2 ~ 9 H~:l1~ h, = ~ J tfv !.~~. ~m = 1:: II Wurlitzer 3'h -11. AmCentCp 9 -~ I PerrvOrvo 1811) -11/•· 1 Texasw11 2 -'le It trJL, ~r· ar: = ~ y Ff BTx ldl ,,r•e ,ff)~ -2'1• ~ ~T r;~ttt:d s 1!~ = ~ 0 obiils AH 21~ -l'Ai ondero~a 1211• -~ vmrkCP 7'h -~ IMemMo 7" -~ Ptrll11v S•ll -'I• BelhSI 2.50of ~ - 1 WH AT AMEX Orn NEW VORK (AP) Mar. 6 Advanced Tod~n ¥ecHned 34 nchanged ~ otar lfiS\Jes ~ew ti ghs ew rows 6 AM E.X LEADER S Prev. ··~ NEW VORK !AP) -Seles, ~ p,m, price and nit change of the ten l'l'l()SI active merlcan Stock Exchenoe loue•, tradi ng natlona llv el more than 51 BAT In<! Wo_ngLabB TIE Comm Olllard s Amdahl OomePtrl 8eroenBrun ~quareD wt FNpfA ulfcano NASDAQ SUMMAR Y NEW YORK (AP) -Most •CttY• ovtr· ·llJt-counrer 1tocks s149e>lled bv N~SO. Name~ y,, I 81, A 'kf2 Cllo. ~phel'f; 1, , 2 • -3 onvot , 'I• ~ -'I• vfOOd l I 1" 'I• + ~ FdMlc 1 ~ ~ +~ uu'rrn 68Jm.~ 5· 11 6 + 13-16 rwTom 6 7,m . •/4 ll'J -~ ?.=,. . v, ~· -Va Al> eC , 2 l.4. 2 + lh M , ~ -111 Tlorerv , 1 '· '6 11,. GoLo QuorE s That's an apt desert pt ton of both bust ness and bust ness people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of wh~re companies are gotn~ and which people are helping th~ get there, just watch Cre_dlt Line' -every day tn ttie Business sectlo~ of your new · Illy Plllt ~ - PWlJC ""II MUC 11Z!!1iE !WI.IC "P Piii 11!P ~ YC1U --~---T -=..,·=· :--,•1 ::rT.,•.,...... • .... -..... --· •11UL8 OOllTAOT A...._ ...... ,_,...._ Nil--1 l9. -A ~-. ,.-.. --A•Aftr~MI ••• U...._ _..I, ..... t fl ... -Ila ~-t ·;:vm.f':i~-.. "l.-:..=..: ' • .. , ::.~::;= ~:.. :.".:..·c-r .. :.:..:::~·-..::.. =--reno. .., ... ...._ ___ ,,...... COit-YO•ll• JIM ''f.&\ila. lllldC..W.llM .... ••. J.f. -}...... Wl1'a ~ n1MY .... ~=~~ ..................... w .-raft•A-NOTICI 11. MIRHY ........ ...._ .. -"-'-C.. ..... fUlllt .............. e • _. ..... -.;~ -=-= WMdlf °' Toti .... ._,, ..... __.,-..Olll#• 11-. ..._ Oii • ..... 91 --... li;ii;iiiiii~~:''iili W&•YGU-MD---~Oft .c:"'o: --~--!!!!!".~.. ..... ~ end 4*111"1• ........ -. • 11lCIO llOolt ......... ~ .,..., ... "-Jll I , .,,, ~ ~ PLA•ATIH OP TMI nlloMI_. ·---•-. -................. d ... a.111.f/l .... ,lft ol ....... lft ...... fll .. , T1"9~le'*'-1--......~W.. , '9ATUlll OP THI ....... ...::::-.:..~==·:::.---·-fl/I ._ ......... IMIC1•1ll ,._ ... T ............... ~ ,_.., fll _, ~!"INl:1M' .....,;Clllllt• NOCW • AeAHllT ....,.. _... _, '-' · " ,_ In h • lltd/or ..... ot. duOtlnl ' rwlM'• • -.. ~. "°"" l1W&J11 : Alllle L. ,....., • c:==~~ 'YOUIYCIU .... COll-10119110ndollali•1n=·~~~-!'~ LOMn N IYIMTTP.LllT? :!!"'Tlh~~ ~ ••llOlllr ........ TN11111u:c_..,.._., ... cw• . ....,. h4MH • ... TAC'rA~ ..... ol c.M.. ___ .., ..,._ Notloellher91W~INl A......._._~ ... -·A _..,_..,... ea:-t.2,1,Ml40... ----~Cllrll .. Or· ..... CM·-.._. •..• ,,. $ llOW• 90 ....,._..11,rg:::;a .. :-:~ .. ..,._MAITI" MCJ'"QAOl~~H.LUTZIVICl. ....... •1tooNorlll4.Cocee ..... CA --~Oii~ he Let ...... , 1111 MIWY ..... ,_,.... t.A&.I ""' ... .., ..... -· ..... * .. • ..... ~ANY. •c.ltornleOOt• MoWATIM In .......... 100, "'.. '" • ..,.. ...,_ OI 11. 1... ....... ... AM. c.1-1'11111 ,_ .. __ .._ .. _,, M 6 I .... ._ potlillon,MTNltM,oreu. ......... eour. o1 Of• Cllylf .... Me,,CouMyol OllW OOllllftOf\ d 't lll t W ..,.,....,.. .... ~ ......... OPTllUeT rtgfle, IMle end"*'-, c:Md-ll:oee•lle OOIOt TrWllH, Or llte=i• 11-flee Oren9e.8e•OSC .. ll I-lllMM!eboWe. ... ....., Plllllf\M ar.,.. C-TNc ----le ..,._ ... C...-W -....., ",.. ::.·:::... .... .::.:::Of :"::::',.-:="" ....... Trume Ylldlt LA v um I COHTIN!HTAL OIYll..~· .. ..., MIO ... ..,,,.,. Delv,... '*'*" 11, ....... w ..... ...,.. 11.,.. I.OM :UllJlll In lie -lfl\IM8d In '24Sela4.11 of II lie deed of ltUll....,.... ~ lu1cWATlM lie MINT °' CAU'°"NIA, nwOfOOI•--.) 27,...,_t, ,_ w1Hp ,_ HOl!oele~--IN:t _, ~·1 • • by~ A. lelnCI Md,.. 8Pllolftted M pet90MI rep. INC., • ~ oorpot• leld,__. ......... .... W...., AMTA L ~0 Pl 'I t f = 0... MAITI" MOfO'OAOI dWrtlled M ~·Ind ~~~:rw=+~ GClfdecl o.o.mllet 22, 111S, ~ IO ..,..., Mlon, It 6A!/ftJ '"ah• ...._,. __.,,. • ... Tiiie ... .,.ii w ... ~Nit~ .. fl. COMPANY. •C•lfo111:61190'· w.ct 12 IO .... of the ... CO..AllY T........ -~ ~IWI021n ...... ~~ ........ Of .. cMoedent. l"'!!' under~~ =:-::~·,.. P9lJC llmC( ..... ~QM" or-...... ta. -pctllleon • T ..... or ... tl1 ao ... of IM "°""' ,.__ -:..... -------.... _... Tiie petition feQUMt• 0 .... power ... .,.. "D I YI I "' ... Cowtty °" '*'-Y ... ' T ' • _. ----•• tht "8oordet of County of ~ 10 .... .._ lfte MMdln flee~ Deed of .. ~._ "· tt11 cHeot ruetH, or 112.00 ._. of Lot eoz Of C....,.le 1119111 T .... Ote,,,.. Cellfo""•· end ...... Uftdet .,. lndepeno T,.......,...bvTIUOM> :-'...I'..., of IN,.. llCIHIOUI• 11 •• ,_ l1WIJC ... 1111.-T,,.... under NelWpottMeMTrect,•...,. ~He: '11•H1•1141, IPUttUMltolM,..-.otde-..... Adi; ..... ....., of a. A.WALKIRAHOMWM bv c8'd ... ol ..,...ITAW ,,..._, ar._.. Ooelt -----·-----IM deed OS ""8t ....,... '"'Ill ~ 11'1 booll 8, 4111 ltt mL If! Mllllle ,_,.. end -.ct10n 10 ........ Act a. WM...l(p, ..._, Ind w.e. _... "*'-t Mf .... '"-...... ,._..,. Delly Noe ~ 18 ff N:UIC I I If I ! 111 br "°'*'A. 8elna Md re-Pli88 1 of Ml9C1R111D • K ...... "'89"1 If under deed of trwt re-A ....tno Oft IM .,..idOn .... reOOt'ded ~ 11 dwoet....,.M~ dOillO ......__ MM:flt 13 ttll ' • -·Al. • f OOtded December la. 1913, ~. In IN °"'°' of .. Putlllctl8d Or-.. CoeM corded OCtOllet 10, 1M4, .... t.lcf on MARCH 11, t..O. In looec 1,... of ~ In Mid noee. -... end.... HONl-WHT O"OUft. • • ... ""-........... .. ...... No • .,_,O, Of Of. ~ "-iordit Of °'Wl98 Delly Plloc '~ 17, ..,_ No t'-41t1M of 1M6 M t:30 AM In Daot. fld.i "9ootde of c8'd Coun-,._of fie lr'*89 Md of 1..0 o.e.... 8' .. "* ........... ts ftclel Moordt In t'4e Oftloe Of ~. Maret: t , 11, tM6 Md or....e. "9oordt, '_. No, 3 et 1oo CMc ~ ty, et P808 1 .. 2. fWlofdei'c h truee. or.-c1 by ._ 1100, HUncfr9on lwll\, CA "8LJC llJTICl MQIOMAl. 'UMPING, IM flleoOrdetC of County of Mof9 ~ lcno.n W·MO ... Oft Maret: 22 1M8 M Dtt¥e w... Sent. ~ CA lntt"'"*4t No. 11tN, br deed of tNM Ind .,_.., ftt4t 11'01 I ._.... Dr. ...... Ot•noe. ellfornla, encl •:164t,t,3,and'4Cemer . t :18 A,M, et IM'ttont en-n102. • • twonofOt.eah•def9ull lfeny,UftdettMwmtollM ,.... J. ~bloc*. 21 111eonnoue• 11•11 ...,. .... CA....0 CU::.'°:.~::; :;t,Co141-=--~ PmUC llmC( wwe to IM old OJc:noe "YOU Ol.l&CT 10 .. In peymant Of ~m•eoe deedOStrwt. ~· l.agune NIOUll· ..... ITAW ......., a.file ...... • --Of County~. loceled ortnllng of IM~. you of the ~ aecuted Tiie ~ __,. al .. Tl'69 ................. m11 VII Vlflr. C11' 1 •WI under deed of ttUet re-GOftWftOn deilgnatlon ,.. on lente Ane ltlld,, .,.. ltlOUld eltMr lllP9llr 80 tN llleteby, Including tllet uncMt6d b*w.e al .. olll-..lerMe "-""8U. 20S22 4o1n1...,... ...._CK_. COfdld,Ootober 10• ..... ltlft0wi':abo"'9,nowwr.n1y YOU AM ... AULT tween lyoaMOt• ••• I llMt1ng Ind ..... '/OU' Ob-br.eat:Ot .... NoeloaOf 91*1naecutedbyfle .... Renclell,Orc:noe.CAtaeeo xix CHECK. Hiit ...... '· ._ "'· hrtee No. i4"" 1t1M. °' Is .,,.,, • to ltt OOfl"!llll -A-°' TmMT, ·~· ..... Me. Cal-~or flle wrtt'8n ~ wNcll -NiOOfded ~ 8f'Y IO be ... end ,....... Tlm Peul!M. •&entry ... l.Mnber1 •••• B Toro, CA 111 .... Lo .......... Mid °"'* Reioordl, ,.,... nw °' corr9C1Mca.I DAftD OIC.111111 ta. '°"4MI • SM1111o euc:elon, lo !tone w1tt1 tht court btibe bet 21. 1*. • fWlofdar'• 111"9 •tin Ill I CW. -. Lcigune Hll, CA Wlt7'1 tamo e. Cl tu•. CA ..-n ~on M8td: 22• tte& at Sald .... wlll bemeda,bul -. ..... YOU TAKI lie lllglleet bidder fot CMll me 11Mt1ng. Y04M _..,. "'*4MMflt No. .._..1017, 1*\111.-ld ••:oee•... ~ KtWtl. 1t7'1 ~ hnfemln 'I/ti, AINr1, TOM ......... 470t •. t5 4;M. ., IN front -~"' covenent or _,_ ACTICHI TO PllOTICT (Mve6le .. the time of .... enc.~ be In pereon or by WILL HLL AT PU8LIC time Of me.,,.... P'Je'Ntklh :::.. Hunltnocon lw:ll, CA UM 1 Ccw9' ~. CA =!! ....... !MM, CA lr.noe to me old OrMge rmnty, ~ 0t Implied,,.. YOUR PWM If rT llAY In lftM moMV of me united your attorney. AUCTION TO THE HIGHUT of the Notice of 9* II · t2tat N . County Courthouse, IOCeted gerdlng tltte, PolllHlon Of • IOt.D AT A '~ ,.._OS Arnerlce: CMl'tlef'1 IF YOU A..f A CREDITOR BK>Oe .. f<>f' CAIH. l8wM U4U23M . Tiiie bueiMM It con-1lllt ~ It OOft-renll ~. 210 1---------oheck dfewn on • «ate or or a oonc1ngen1 Ql'edl!Ot of monev of the UnlMd et--. o.ted: F*'-Y •. ttl& ducted bV: • oanw• pert~ duded by: en~ ~ ~. CoroM Diii "8.ICfllTICE PmlJCfl)TICE "8.JCfl)llC( MUonelbri,e9'N0tfed.. thedec1•ert yournuettlle oraOMflW'tcNd:Clrwl MAITIR llORTeAGI ~Morton ~W.Mer'I .... CA-~----..._...-_.. ...... __ .,., CNdit Uf'6on 0t • ....._ 0t yout dlMI wtitt h court or on • "* Ot MllONll '**· COllPNfY, ,,..... • ._,_, Tiiie • •t ••• -tied Tiiie Ii. 11 IW • .... NOTICE OF INTENTION TO LEASE ...,.. MW'VI an0 '-' ... PtMtn\ 1t to 1M 1*toM1 • ..... 0t ....,.. ~ ..._. llM.. .._ c.,, ~":. ~~ ot ":: w11t1 IN~ a.ti of Or· dldlll lliW: • ..,_. ..,,. REAL ANO PERIONAL -OPIRTY COdetlon domlclled In IM r..-ntectYe llPPOlnted by unk>n, "" • ...._ « ,..,.. c.....,.,. Mt11, T.... r-..-. Law.--c:noe COuMy on ~ ,_.,. rn SI ... of Cellfomle P8Y9ble IMeouttwlttllntciutmontN MYlnQlalndlOenWll*'IOn pllte1te1 41l•ff1•H41, Mge ......... ,on._._,6, 14 1• NGMN ..... FOR PtlRPOIEI OF CONDUCTING to ......., Mono19e tom-ll'om the esate oe 11rec i.. domlCltled 1n tNt ........ •1Ml1-W. 9r: ......_ 1tts ' w ,._ et11..,. .. .., •ANT CARI CHILD CAM peny" ~able • caesi) IUlflOI or 1en .... prO'll4ded ~ et .,. *"-of ..... "---.. w.." 111 s PubllcNd 0r-"C PllblllNd 0ranoa CoeM wt1t1 .. ~a.ti• Or· a MA/OR p ' 1 .. right, t1t1e Ind "*'-'· In Seo11on 700 of the .. r1ght, tltte Ind im..c Publlthed Orc:noe CoeM -..-D.ity Piiot "*'-Y 20, 27 . .,.._ ~ Ofl '*'*Y ..u.v RE SCHOOL PROGRAMS con~ lo end now held Probet• Code of Clllfomle. held br 11, • T,._, In~ Delly Piiot Febfuary t7, ~Plot f*'*Y 13• 20• M#ch e 1a 1• 14, 1MO NO'TICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN thet on the 2 tet day of Jenuery 1986 the by" under Mid deed Of truet Thi time lot filing Clelmt w111 reel property lllluele In Mid Jo(arc:ti 8, 13, 1MS 27 • arch I , 1~ W-5M . ' W-M4 ' ,._ Boerd of Truat ... of the Oceen View School Dillrlct of the County' of 0r9ng. In tl':I property lltueted In not ••aplr• ptlor to tow ~ end 81.n. delonbed (L W..578 PublltMcl ar.,.. C... Stete of Cellfornle, «Mtermlned th.. the following lend, bulldlnge, end Mid c::''Y f4 8~. end mon111t from the dete of the P'::C:t , 'ftaJc .,TIC( "8JC fl)JIC( ftBJ: mllCl = ~ ~ r7 .. equlpmen1 wlH not be needed fOf echOOI l>UfPoMa. end wtN be let 10 the daectl 11 ollow9. · notlct=-NE the UHtT 1~ A.NO -PCnnoui• H•M ' ' w.a hlghe9t bidder for · , IM ..-ny 1417.50 .... of Ille II~ by IN COUJ1 "-DEFINEO OH THAT CEA-IUNlllOR COURT Ulm ITAl'W PICllllOUe. 111•11 pr program• for ..... P«IOd from September 1, 1985, through Auguei IN noftherly 132 .... oC L04 .,. • pereon im..9t:f:: TAIN CONDOMINIUM PLA.N = J:.':: Tiie lolowlno.,.,......,.. ~.,_., PmJC ..a 31, 1988, 902 of 11':1 ~,....the ... ,, •• ~ may_..,. RfCOADEDJUNE21, 1171 CouwnO.Ol .. W dolno----• -._penoN.,.. ICHOOL/ADOMll Glen View School 8621 Glen Drive Hun11ngton Beach, CA 92647 Lark View School 17200 Plnetiuret Lene Huntington Beech, CA 92647 MMdow View School 5702 Cllrit Drive Hunt1ng1on Beach, CA 92649 Pleuant View School 18662 Landeu ~ ~- ""R'"unt ngfon Beach, CA 92647 5 5 5 5 No.of ..,.,., ... 4500 4500 4500 Ttect. In tl':I Ctty of Cotta uponthe ew:ut«Ot~ INBOOI< 13117.PAGE 178, NO AtUm Af YOUR SERVIC E~~:: ... OYEN llCllllOUIAll•ll ....... "'°"""on. IMP letrator, or upon the ... OfOfflCIALAECOAD80f NOTICtO.MU MAINTENANCE. 5011 6402 Tern Clrda Hum: ..... nm " recorded In book 5, PIO' 1 tomey t0t the necutor 0t ORANOE COUNTY, CALI-°' MAL ....... h ChutcNR, Wetb1lll-.., Cell. '"t 8eectl CA t2Mf TM .....,..,.. ,._. .,. of Mlecelleneout MIPI. In edmlnletntlor, end ,... with FORNIA, fOtnla t2ll3 on . dOlnt .....,_ •: the office ,of 1119 County fW.. tl':I coutt wttll proof of Mf'· PARCEL 2; AT PllVATI MU Greg ory Ch a r 1e1 IG...li.,.Beltlett. ._ A .-W YOU Pt.AIT1C oordetofNld"'""-.. 111Ce ewrttten --etet AN UNDIVIDED 1/10TH In,.. &1ete of LYL! Stelnheue 5081 Churchll Tern Circle, HuntlngtOft au.-01 .. Y MEDICAL ~··•· ' . ....,_. -EST DTO OT 1 GROVE DUNN Silao known • • 1eect1 CA t:zt.4t More commonly known Ing tllat you deM9 epectal INTER INAN L .. LYLE G. 'ouNN. 0.-WHtmlneter, C•lllotnl• Roel CMttM WMt· ~. 14'1 AllOOMO A.,. M : 874 1, 2, 3, Ind 4 C«:ler notice of the ft11ng oC an in-OF TRACT NO, t0371, AS Ollled, t2113 '**• ;r(0 0.S... ..,., .... 101, ....... St, Colee MIN, CA ventOtY end llPPf'eiMrnent of SHOWN OH A MAP RE-Notice 19 hereby.,_, that Thie bullneet 11 con-B Huntington ~ CA llaedl, ~ ... <" • ..,,... eddrw or etllt• ..... Of of lhe petl-CORDED IN BOOK 461. lhlllfldelligned • Elcectttll ducted by M indMdual I~ ...,. P. Ellolt. M.O .. Mc. ottlaf common CflillOnatlon tlone or account. mentioned PAGES 3 TO 4 OF ""8-of IN Ettate ol LYLE Gr . g 0 r y c II. r I•. Thie bUelMM .. con-• Cellfor"'8 oovpof ..... . "thown ~ no warrlnty In S«:tlon 1200 end l200,5 °' CE.LLANEOUS MAPS. RE-S'81Meut . \441 AVOC8do. .... m . II glYetl M lo Ht complet• the California Prot>ete Code, C 0 RD 8 0 F 0 RANG E GROVE DUNN, Silao known 'Thie ltlWIWll _. fled ducted by: 1 gensel Plitt• .... _. C.OC 1:611 nw Of correctnw,) ....., I ....... AttarMr .. COUNTY. CALIFORNIA, ~LE.,..G .... ou:N~ wtttl--tN County Qer1( al Or-": H SW1tett Seid .... wtll be meda. bul Lclw: 117'1 ,...., llM., TOGETHER WITH ALL IM-........ •o 'th. O........t end ,.._ c:noe County on Februlty 8, TNit ..a....n. ... ~ P. Dlotl. M,D .• W1tt10Ut ~ Of ww-..... 111r 0.... ..... CA PAOVMENTS-THERlON, ....,,. ' ._.__ -• 1t86 _. P; t'Nnt renty,txpfWOtimplled,r• -EXCEPTING THEREFROM blddet upon Iha tarme end ,... ~theCouMya.tlofOr· Tiiie llfMl_.:C .. tied gerdlna lltte. pc 1111elotl Of Publtahecf Orange eo.et CONDOMINIUM UNITS 1 c:oncfftlont Mr~ "*"" PubllcNd Orlf"9 CoeM .. County on "*'-Y wlttl tM County aMl ol Or· All proposals mutt be received no letet th•n Tueedey, M1teh 28. 1g15• al encumbrancee, to cMllfy the Dally Pt1o1 Febrvwy 27, 21, THROUGH 10, INCLUSIVE, ="tionendof tu=~ Dally Plot FetlNety 13, 20. 1~• 1M6 ,_ anoa COuMy Oft~"· 2:00 p,m,, •• the Butlnest Office of the OcMn View School Dl•lrlc:t, 18940 B unpeld prlnclC* of IM note Merc:h 9• 1985 LOCATED THEREON, Court on Ot eftet Mardi 18 27· Merctl •• 1M6 Pubilltled Or-Coellf 1• eec:ured by MIO deed Oi WTM20 PARCEL 3: ' ' W-513 -,,.. ...... Street, Huntington Beactl, Callfomle 92647, Bld1 will be opened Mitch 26, 1nll1 wllll In..,... end late AN EXCLUSIVE EASE-1N5, 81 the office Oi PVT· D.ity Plot~ 20. 27, .... a ,_ ..... M- 1G85, •• 2: 15 p,m .• In the Boerd Room •1 18940 B Street, Huntington a.en. c:Nr."9e !hereon .. prOYlded rtBJC ll)TIC[ MENT APPURTENANT TO NAM. STRID ANO BURGE. PlllJC fl)TJCE Match 8. 1S. 1M6 ...... M ..... ...... Callfomla 92647 1 The Boerd\>f lrult ... et\ell conelder the ptopoa.ei. U>..... In Mid note. the tee Ind... EACH UNfT FOR TH! U8E localed at 18114 ~ W·• ..... 0.. ........ ...... property on Aprll 8, 1985. •t 7:30 p.m .. In the Board Room of the Oc:een View pen ... of the truatee end of 1W11 AND OCCUPANCY OF Boul9verd, Sun• 141: Hunt ACTTT10U8 ...... .... ,.. ....... ....... School District, 18940 B Str .. t, Huntington e..cti, CA 92647, tl':I ln11t1 creeted by the YOU AM • DVAUt.T THOSE PORTIONS OF THE lngton Beach, Caltfornle Ulm ITAT'lmlfT "8JC fl)Tll'I' CA-c deed of lrull, end adll8nCM, utm1t A.,._.., 0. TllUST, RESTRICTED COMMON 1t2M7, Ill r1ghl, lltte ln1•eat The f--.. ,,__ .,.. ,,_, Pulllllhed Or.,. C.. opl .. of th• term• end condition• of Ille le•M are ev•ll•ble ....... dlttrlet "•ny, underthe1ermtofthe DATID DICl ... R 11 AREA DESIGNATED INTHE Ind eetat• of Mid LYLE doing~~~-PICTmOUe. ..... o.ly f"llot ~ ao. 2'7, office at the •foremenlloned ltddr ... , Minimum rentel for clutfoomc end deed of'"*· .., ~ .. YOU TAllt DECLARATION OF RE-=~ ~=·=:i ::::·: vr: MARKETING. 1214 MAim ITAW Mlf'df .. 13. 1NI accompenylng equipment and NMce8 ltlall be S(),30 per equere fool, per Tiie tolal emount oe lhe ACTION TO PROTICT STRJCllONS AND SHOWN rlgiht tltte end lntereet th8t Londonderry 81., Coeta The folowlrlg per80l'il we W .. tO month, unpaid balenoc of lhe obi-YOU9t W£h I Y, IT llAY OH THI! CONDOMINIUM Mid. e:quited br MeM. CA t2l2t doing ~ - Written propoul• to ..... seid property mu11 confOfm to the terme end gallon MCUred by the prop-• IOU) AT A "'9LJC Pl.AN FOR EACH UNIT 099'=· ~-or oth.-Victor H. KlnQ. 1284 Lon-AVACa. 5821 RldgaOury conditions. Priority In ecx:.ptence Of propoute to ..... Mid property will be eny to be IOtd end tMeon--MU.• YOU NBD AN 0.-The ttrMt eddfw Of ...._ °"* tNn "' In .o-OOnderry Sc .. Ooeta MeM. Dr,, HuntlnV'on a.en. cA given 10 propoNla Whlctl offer low COS1 f ... to enrolteee end offer quality .,. eetlmlled co.ta. --PLANATION OP THI other commoil ~ dltlon '° 1he1 oC Mid LY&.£ CA 9~ 92647 0 -:·~ N · . progrema. L ...... mey be entered ln1o with mora 1hen one bidder, pencee Ind Cldvencet et the NAT U ft I O' TH I Of the rMf property GROVE DUNN et the time of Lyon Falrt>tot,_, 14421 Thomae Gary ~ The governing 00.rd reeervee therlghl 10 reject eny or all bids end to waive time of Ille lnl1lal publlcatlon "'OCHDINO AGAtMIT •bo.n d••crlb•d 11 hit deeth In end to 11'69,..., Coela Meta Dr., Le Mirada. 12713 Gotthe Pt . Gr9Nda BENllY eny lrr.nt•lerltln, of tl':I Nolice of Sale 11 YOU, YOU 1MOULD COM-purpottedtoti.: 1871Tuteln property ·delc:nb4MS u tOlo-CA 90838 Hille, CA 91344 FLORENCE OUN , , ...,-1241,823,oM, TACT A L.AWYlft. AYenue 8-0, Coale M .... lowl' Thia t>utlneu. It con-Thia bullMM le con-• De1e<1 al Huntington Beach, Cellfornl•. lhll 1•t dey of Mercn. 1985, Detect: Febtuery e. 1986 NOTICa °' Caltfomla, . Loi.One(1)cnd TWo(2lln OUC1ed by·~ ducted by: an lndMcfull CAN HENRY, .,_ct OCIAN v•w ICl400&. DISTRICT .. MAITH MORTQAGI TMl8Tlr8 IALI The underwlgned MreOy 8lodc Nine Hundred One VldOf H, King .>r, ThomM G, F-vuaon away af\er a short w,. IOARO CW TRUITSll COMPANY, T,..._, .. uec.R o.ID dladalmt ell lltt>llity lot MY (I01) oe Huntington 8ee:tl TNt ttawment -tied Thl9 ~ .. flled ne9I. March 4 t• 1tJ .Mnet Qerrldr, ,,....._, ~ 11M.. D.sr CllJ, 0. 1WU8-T lncorrec:tnw In Mid ._. V.ta Del M Tr11C1 Sectton w11t1 the County C1ert1 of Or· wnh the County a.ti ~Or--• • Publllhed Orange Cout Deity Piiot Mereh 8, 13, 20, 1985 W-645 C.itfentl• M111, T.... 11' '"'1 addr-0t other common One (1) • ~ 0,, • Map llt'9" County on "*'-Y .,. Coun1y on F*'*Y She wu born in Rieb-, phue: 411·1t1·H41, LOAM '1-OM6gnatlon. recorded In Book 4 Peo9 3 27, 1915 ~. 1986 mond. Ohioan March I 1--------.,...,~ 9'; KJtellM NotlceltMreby~tbat Se6d. .... 1111111 be ..., .. ~'----u ' n-. ~ ~ 23 18"" •t......A-•-ter rtaJC ll)llC( "*JC ll)TIC[ "8JC fl)TICE ........... "VIM-P,11(ii11t MASTER MORTOAGE wlthoutwwr.,,ty,uprw0t "'"'---"'~ ,.,_ PubWled Or CoeM Pub411Md Orange eo.t ' '"'· .. ,..,.._.... -----------• Publlehed 0r-. Coat COMPANY, a Calfomla cor-Implied. regarding 11111, pot-g:~~ Orc:noe ty, Deity Ptlo1 Mar:T. 13, 20, Deity Pllol FeC>f"ull'y 27, of a United Prftby- NOTICE OF PREP .. R .. TION Deity Pilot Februwy 21. poratlon.u Trl4C•. «Sue-....ion. "' encutnbrencet. The lbOw propertlae .,.. 21, 1985 Merch 8. 13, 20, 1995 tenan Mmater. She "' "' Merch -'· 13, 1985 c 11 •or Tr u • t • •, or 10 Ntltfy the prlndpel bllf-more commonly known .. W-&:se W-633 had lwed in Pomona, Negative Declar1tlon 15-3 W-578 Sube111uled Trutt• under ctnee of lhe Note or 0''* 901 Alet>ema AY!lnUI Hunl-Ca.lJf from 1926 to lhl deed of trull executed obligation _,,ed by Mid lngton Beech Cellf0t"'9 end PtllJC ll)TIC[ flll8JC NOTICE 1970 · h ahe and . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Olrec1ore of the Meaa ConlOlldated Weter Dletrlcl wfll, et It• ~lar Meellng to be held on Marcil 14. 19&5. consider the adOpllon of Negatlw Dedaratlon 85--3, currently under preperetlon, fOI' the followlng: "'°"CT: Hamilton Street W1tet Main RepllOelMl'lt CIP 8512, Fite No . MC 740. LOCATION: H1mllton Street belWeen Plecer:Ua and Pomona Avenues, PftOPO•NT: Mesa Consolldated Weter District 1965 Plac.ntla Avenue Coate M .... CA 92627 Tefephone:(714)831-1291 Coples of the lnltlel study are on file and evallable for Inspection at the office of the proponent .- The Maret: 14, 1985. Regular M .. tlng of the Board of Dlrec1ors wlll begin at 7;00 p.m , In the meeting room of the Mela ConlOlldeted Water Dla1rlct office located at 1965 Placentia Avenue, Coate M .. a. Callfornl•. Questions and/or CO{nmen1a should be dlrec1ed to 1he proponent on or before March 14, 1985. DATED: February 8, 1985 KM1K~ Qenefal ~a leer •IA CONIOUDATl!D m .. DtlTRtCT Published Orange Coast Dally Piiot Febtuary 27, Maretl 6, 1985 · -----1 I W-616 Ml.IC M>TICE PmUC ll>TICE Ml.IC ll)TIC( NOTICE OF PREPARATION Neg1tlv• Oect•r•tlon 15-2 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Olrec1ore of the M ... Con90tldated Weter Olatrlct wlll, et lta Regular Meeting 10 be held on Merch 14, 1985, conaider the adoption or Negative OeclaraUon 85--2, currently und., prep1ratlon, for the follOWlng: PttO•CT: 2111 Street Water Main ReplecetMnt CIP 8513, Ai. No, MC 739. . LOCATION: 211t StrMt betWMn Sente Ane and lrvl~ Avenue., Pfte>POMIENT: M ... Coneolldated Weter District 1 t"5 Ptacenei. Avenue Coata M .... CA 92827 TtlephOM: (71'4) 831·1291 Coplee of the lnt11el 11udy er• on ftle end evallebi. for lnapeotlon at the office of the propoMnt. The M1toh 14', 1985, Reguler ~Ing of the Board of Dlrecton wtll begin et 7:00 p,m, In the mMtlng room of the Meea Conaotldat9d W8'« Olltrk:t ottb located at 1995 Pteoentl• A~. Coat• Mee&, Calttornta. Ountton• and/or comment• et:ould b9 directed to the proponent on or before Mtn:tl 14, 1985. DATED: February 8, 1085 K.tK~ OIMtal • •tA CON A~ DtlTRtCT rtaJC M>T1C£ by ~~~19an01 .. ~~ ::'ot~z:!;. W:pr': 101 tndlenaoolla, Hunt-h ':,~. d Dr i---------cor,_, ...,.._..,..,_ · ....... lngton Beech CallfomlL ACTTnOUI ~U ftcnnOUa .-.u er .L.....-n • · -·~c--.. Serlel No, 83-618314. of Of-''**'· plus eovencee. If 8ldl "' .. .,.. ltwtted NAm ITATWmNT NAm ITATDmlff Frederidt H Henry ----• flclal Recorde In the Offloe of wry, undet the*"" tllereoC . . • •ti w. OoMii ......_ the Recof-det of County of Ind lntereet on llldl 8d-lot Mid property Ind mwt The lollowlng l*'tOtll.,. The folloWlf)CI P«aon8.,.. moved to C.oeta Me. ~....., Orenge, Calllornla, end venc .. , end plua Ifft, ~ W:,~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ;: P 0 R T ~~~TEAING She was a member at c•· .... -pureuanl 10 the notlol of de-c:hergee end ftpel'IMI of,.... STR D D 8 AGE. Or 1 St. Andrews ~-Plalnllft: ROBERT LEE feull and tlec11on to Mii Trumt .. end of the ltuell NAM, I AN U ARCHITECTURAL MIU-9112 Anntlt , Hunting.on SAYANICH under deed of trull r• mlated by Mid o..ct of attorney IOf Mid edmlnle--WORK (2) NEWPORT BMch, CA 92Me tenan Church, N -0.fendenl: PETER BUSS corded Oc:lob« 10, t9f.4. Truat, The tolel ernount of lnttOf. Of mey be flied wnn ARCHITECTURAL. 885 K•lhleen M King. 9112 port Beach. belor\ginc JONES DONALD a ..,_.__ No ·~ ~1..,.,,.1 of ,,,,. _ .. l""•llon Incl•......,. t"9 Clerk of Mid Supertor W•t 18th St, Coe1a Meta, Anniil Dr . Huntington to -·eral art>1.•na A • · ...,_ , -nv , -"""V"" • -""' Court et any time •ft• flrtt CA 92127 Beech CA 92tMe '"""• r --.-· JONES, and DOES 1 through Mid Ofllclel Recorcte, w111 reaeonably ... lmllled '-· pubilC.tlon of thlt notice Neel p 2905 Broed This butlneu 11 con-graduate of Mon- x. =:C, soc 7U,29 ~5~~~ ~·fr!:5 ~ ==-:;::,=:•: lndbef0fem8'1ing111<h ... , St~~9c:h .. CA92M3 dueled by an lndMduel mouth College, l.n tuila:a!*I t anoe. to lhe old Or-ttlel pubtacatlon of thte Ho-Tenn• of .... : CMh In a... Clay Smith 330I Clay St,, Kethlean M. King Monmouth. ID. w -r -..... "" money of tl':I Unl1ed ~ Betl,, CA 92M3 nu 14atement -ftled , NOT1Cl1 Y• ....,,. ..._ County Courtl'louM. localed lice. It • 112• 115 .a, St•t• on confirmation oe Thi .. ,,.,~ 1 . with the Coun"' Ctent oe Or-was abo a suety year --. TIMoowtMerdedda on Santi An• ~. ~ O.ted· February 22 1915 • ..,.,.,,,_, • con •1 E. ..--J" ...,._ ,_, twffn Sycamore St & Cofill,Hfilal D•t•l•P· .... on tl':I pr~ 80 IOld. ducted by ~ennera c:noe County on Fet>Nery mem~r of P, 0 ,, • MMt .._,.. ...... rou ,... &oldWey. San1• An•. Cell-MMI ef c.....,., IM., • [:' i:=ted ::::::.. bid ':: ::t'!n.nt wu llled 28· 1985 ,_,. member of D.A,R • llMlftd ...,.. • .,._ RMd toml• '' publlcl auction. to CeMomla Clfpofllbtfel;, • D•led: Fet>rvery 19, 1985 th the County Clerk of Or· Publlehed Orange Cooet and Past Worthy tfte W...~ ..-... the hlghelt bidder for oath T......,91:..'::_'•....... l"9 ...,,. w ...... h-County on Feoruwy Dally Pilot Februery 27, Malr<>n Chapter 110 If you with 10 ...a the Id-(P•Y•ble at the time of .... _... • C.-. eoutrlll ., IM 1.-.. of M en 8 13 20 1915 0 d • f E ' 111ce of 1111 ett«ney 1n thll 1n lawful money oflhe Unl1ed feffil• oerpefatleft, 111 0.-7, 1985 81 , , , r er o a stern malt•. you ltlOuld do eo Stet• of Amer1c:a; Cllhilf'1 ,.._., 9': D. '-...,._, * ~OROVI DUMt. W-e31 Star, Pomona, She promplly to thlt yout writ-check drewn on • et•t• or ,, .. .,.,.,. 11M ller114 Publilhed Orenge Coat was a.bo acnve in ~:,'~If any,~ be :!:=,~:,8!•.:,~ :' .. ':."'~ ~:" ~ Delly Pllol Mardi 5. 8. 12, MUC NOTlCE Seruor Chu.en Oam. AV110t UottMI ha...._• federal NVlngl end loen ... .,,.'° 1985 TW~711 W-e37 ACTTTIOUI .,_.. She is survived by ....,..lldo,ll.,._..1*9de aoc:1a11on domlclled 1n lhe Publl9hed Orange Cooe1 P\11.IC NOTIC( NAm STATlmNT her lovmg daughter, deotcar CMIMN Ud. • ...-Ste .. of Calll«nl• peyeble Dally PllOt February 27, rtalC NOTICE d_,The~~ ~· .,. Mary Helen Crumb c11eMta a --q119 Ud. to Mui• Mortgege Com-Mereh 8, 13. 1185 '1CTITIOUS .,._.. "' .,.,.,._ -S T d. , ........ dectCfo ...... peny .. eccepl•ble .. cuhl w-e 18 FtcTTTIOUI .,..... ..... IT A Tl..wT EL GANT -BEL TS ANO 0 n -I n -1 a w e LAe le W.mHllfi ...... ell rlglll, 11119 and lnl.,..f, MAM1 ITAT'lmNT The following penone ere FASHION BEL TS, 3855 8dow1ch: four grand- 81 Ulled deMe ~ter el conYeyed to and 'nOW held rta.JC M>TICE The 1o11ow1ng pereone ere ng bullNel u 81rC11 St. Newpor1 8Mctl. c h 1 l d r e n , J u d Ith :'.':n':.~~ ~~:c';~~u:~~ ,... ~Dey~"~$~:~ ~~~ l~~~~lTl~:.NT~ c~~G L•lher Inc;,. Beasley, Carol SI.OM. lnmedlllemenle. de .... Mid County end State. and YOU AM • DVAUL.T Rome Ave.. Anehelm. c:. AY8 , Coet• MeM. Merylend cori>Orlllion M ike B&lowich. Kann menere. cu rHpuHI• deecrlbed u lollowl: ~A==-~· fornil 92804 A 92621 Thie t>uelne•• I• con-B&loWlCh, and ~ ete:rtte. ti hey alQune. puede The ... 19'1y 52,50 feel Oi ~I ~al YOU TMI Coo.id R. Harderl. 2555 Gregoty Cherlel GIN... dve1ed by • ~tlon great grandctuldren. 89;.~·~~~F~~NT: A = ~ ~~r~~~ ACTION TO P.-OTICT ~ ... ,=:-Aw,, AnM!elm, .~~Ave., Coete ~,!~1 : flled dear friend, Evelyn cMI compltlnl ha bMt't flted the City of Coetl MeM. u YOUlt "'°""TY, IT MAY Elaine R. Herder\. 2555 w. Thia bualn... 11 con-with ihe Coutlty C•11 Of Or-Busby and many lov- bythe plelnlltt lglln•I ~," per mep rlCOl'ded In Book 5, ~~'Uo '::'~ Rome Ave,, AnaNtm, Cell· ed by an lndlvlcMll ange Counry on February :ng fnends. VisiUUon you Wiii\ io CfelW1d thle law-P11g41 1 of Mltceltoneouc PlANATION O' THi fOmla Gregoty C GlllM 25. 1185 12 Noon to 8PM' tuh, you muet. within • Mapa, In 1he office of the .. ., TUR I O, TH I Thll butlneu It con, Thia atetement wu flled Pu...._._. Or-~ Th _ _._y ,.. __ ,_ -7 deyt •~• tllll tumtl'IOfll It County Retordet of MIO ",. ducted by hult>end wife the County Qer1I of Or-.,.__, -,,.. .....,_, Un!Ua i..--u-a • Mrwd on you, ......... tNs County PflOCllDMQ AOAINIT Doneld A Herden County on Febr'*Y 7, Dally Pilot Feoruory 27, 1985 and furieral .... eoun • wrlnan retPOOM to Mor• commonly known ;~T ~~=:t'° COM-Tiiie et•..,._,t w 19 5 Mardi I. 13, 20 1985 Vl<."E'S will ~ held Fn- lhe comp1e1n1, um.. you oo .. , 848 1, 2. 3, Ind 4 Center wllll IM County C.k · ,.._ W-&30 d M h 8 1 c:wu. IO. yout deftult wtft be 81, Coal• Mela. CA NOTIC9 °' ange Coun1Y on FeONwy 5, PuDlllhod Orange Coeet a~ a.re . ._.. anleted on epplleetlon of the (II a atreet llddr-Of ":::':.:-' 1985 ,_1..,. Delly Piiot Febnlaly 13. 20, "8.IC NOTICE IOAM. both at Pieftle pllllntlft, Ind Ihle court mey otllet oommon doltgnetlOn Publiehed Orange Cout 27. Merch 8, 1985 Bro8. Bell Broadway ant• .• ~ agalne1 It lhOWn above, no werranty ~ ':T Delly PllOt Febfuety 13, 20, W-585 '1CTITIOUI .,..... Chapel. c.o.ta M-., you kit the,..., demanded 11 gt.,.., u to Ila complet• LOAM •?4M7M 27, M•cn I , 1985 •-ic W\nrc Ulm ITAT'lmMT followed by entc:mb-ln IM compllfflt. wtllch MU"' correc1neu.) QIWltl h W·573 ,._ ""'"''" The ............... per'900I .,. could'-""'~· Sa1<1 .... w1111>emocte but Notlcel•'*eOvi'To/" ;;;;;:;;,; ITI('nt at Pomona Val· Of-eea.telllngof;nonayor wtthoUt oownenl or Rr· MA STER MOR GAO! PmlJC fl)TIC( '1CTTTIOUI .,.._.. ~F'IC WO~S 2'18 lev Mausol~u m ~or odl8f,...,,... r.,,ty,expr .. orlme*ed.r• OOMPAHY.•Cellfoml•oor-NAm ITAT'lmWT MecAt1hut lh'd . . c.a . ~lnlN~rt. ~tltte. pc1111slon or por9tlon.•Trull .. ,«&uc> l'ICTITIOUe.,..U Thefolo-'nQpenona-~ CAl2tl0. ~ Pomona, , ~ o.tect· OCT 27 1ta t aet....., thl c • 1 t or Tr u It••. or *-eTA~ dOif'9 bUllr'8lll • • Bros. Bell Broedway JOiW: J, Corcofen, a.ti, unpeld prlnclptl ~,,;'riot. 841b111Med T"*99 under Thi fo1tow1ng pef'90l'IS -SHAM .. OCI( TRAFFIC 2,,'~;I•= UA "-~ Mortuary, OiredOrL 1y ~ H1n1q Deputy MCUred t>y tlld deed OS IM deed of tl'Ult Peouted 001nQ buc"'91 .. e; ASSOCt'ATES. t~2 Sur1-CA V'O ' 8 6.42 91 ~ ....,_ f', ...... ......., truet, with lnleteet end ltle by :,~,. an;t.a SIJMMER FLOWfRS OF ~~.· "rJ':fon Beoch ~9.,.!~,1 2735 -.. u..,. .. ,....... A .. CflargeelhereonuprOYlded oor • . CALIFO .. NtA, 13SO s £. ,,_,"",.... ClbOlaA\4 Coet -CA ~------~ ••••• Wlltlttler, CA In Nici noa., the feel end.,.. Seflel No N -MMM. Of Of. 1r11t0f, .... S.Ote Ane, Merlene Wllllmerll Eat-. t2t2e " 8 • KAMCMl LA .... 11111 -penlel of the tt\111• end of flclal AloofOl In..,. Offlcla Of Cellfotnle. t2707 19432 SurtOM Ln . Hunt· Thi buel I co . ~ OrltlOI eo.t the trues,i' created by IM IN Aeconter Of~ Oi KeW\ ltedley weever, lnQton INch. C.Hf«nla, • n..a • n llT. OUW Delly f"llot ...,_ •• 13. 20, deectoftMl.endlMIVtinOle. Oreng•. Cellfornl•.Ofs;: 1aao s IL ltlttot '"· t84t ~:.;~~..... MortUlll'y . c.me .. , ..... blltned °' ....... Cout Dlllr ""°' c-...--.a1. M•dl e. 1885 27, ltl& lf""f.undatlMltrm•oflM purauenttothanottoe 8ent•Me.~.t2707 fhllt bullneta •• COt\• Thie ;:...,I -Meo Gt91'Mtory r-v -... -• ._.._, w '"1.. w...a deectOitruet teul'I Ind~ to ... Thie bWIMU " con-duel9dby WI~ Wltl\1Nr-_,c..o00t-1625 0 .... Aw t I -v " The total cmoul\1 ot IM undit deed Of lrull ,... duc'9d W an lndMdual ~ W flt• r-="1 Co.le W,.. !------------------I~ bel8l'ICI oe ihl ot>ll-oorded Octc>bef 10, 11M. KeWI ,...,,., Tiiie llateiMnl -flied =-"1 Oft Jf/l"/UfJl'J 30! ~S55-t rmuc fllllC( w ll>TU "8.JC ll011Cl oa•1en ~by tt1e pr., S«i. No ,t'-41ta00. ot T'l"6I 1111WMllt ... flild """.lM eouniv a.t o1 Or· 1 l'al1W ~~=~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~-=~~~~~==-~~--1~~-~end~Uld~~--~-~ty~of~lf"9~ty onJ~1~ ~~~ • et>ft eetlmeled coece. H -Mii on Mltdl 22. tM& et .,. ~°"~a. 1M6 ,.... "-M.t Piiot ~ 27 end ~ at tM t : 15 A.M. II the li'ont en-tt16 ,_.. Publlllled Otc:noe Coeet -1 llY • WfSTMAak SAVINGS IANk STATEMlNT Of CONDfTION 11 of 0~< Pmher Jl, 1984 t.l~h,And Inv<> Jmenu, S 8,U5t,.JS4 'M0ttg.\M" l o,m, , io . .lql, 110 0 1 h''' l\!1~ •t ~ 21), t;f) \ l Sttv1~ M.u)UV•s___.. 0th r l 111 1l:t1f•., • Capl1<1I toe k dnd Ot~ N~l Worth loWI l1•b1htM.'.\ S1~.702.9ti4" 1,'i98,788 ·i.1n :us ......... .ind Nl'l Worth ....... S19,'4740l7 • On • CorporJtc Meua. Newport ffcach T ~phun (714) 720-1082 C:.": "'9 Initial pubkllttOn tr•noe to IM old 0r...-Putllllfled Orenoe eo.t Olllly ~ Fet>ruery 13, 20. Marctl 8, 13, 20, 1915 W-12' Oi 1M Noctoe of Sllle II County Couf1tl0uee, ~ Delly ftleot '*"*'Y 1,, 20, 17."~ I. IMI U4t.•1•.1•. Oft""'-Ana IMI,, b9-11.Metctie,1tts W·*--------- Dllted, f:*'*Y 8 1M5 ,__.. aycamor. II I ff.!ff •-II' 1111\nrt •AITIR •Ottf OAH lroectwey, Santa AM. Cal-•-II'_.._ PWlJC ll1f1C( __ ...._;.....;.;;..;;..;--..~..._1_-. __ C09All'I ,,_.,., -tornll et P'JCISIC ~. l!O ~ ~c-. ..CTITIOUI .,_ .. .......... -C"' IM ....... ._ fot ~ PICTmout. I ... ..,... ITATW C.....,_.e Mltl ,...,: C~• ._""'-of... W• .._ ITAF rT TM~~.,.. .,, n1-1ue. ~.::'os~~ n.~=~ ;&:::~ ... .._.,..,_ ... 8rr' K,.._ cN011 clr1IWft Ofl e ..... Of ~----• I YANT lLlCTAONIC . AGOftTION COUSWHO, K....... •lttn= NtlONll..,. ...... or... CALl,oMA WIHOOWt SAL! CO NOt La Or.-4023 9ltCfl SI • Hewpor1 ~ ~-27 ••cnc1t"'*-'or•-or lttw!CE.21 .. 1.--.9-nt , lfouritMI v.-.y, eel--~·~~ Cal- -F _., -' • .....,.. ....,.. Md '-' .. , • 116, Hllrt,:ron leedl. tom1a. t270I • • Mwdtt. 13, 1... w-an :=:' J:::::,:.:: C.::."t.: °'*"°· 2,.., ~~~.,,.~ =· ·~·~ -flt ~ to .....,. fttai1J t CJim. .,_.,....., '111, HYfil• CelfotTlle tl?OI CA t2MO _ ..... ..---............... -....... -...... __ ,1*1¥11 • VJ.i•-~1 ...... leedl. ~ ~ .... cOn-Thie ~ ..... COft- \IOU ._ • .. AULT .. f11M. .. Mf .,_.., .... .. duCted "r en lndh1dlllel duc'9d Irr • ~ Ul99 ·-°' ~ ~ • -"°" ... ,. ~ la oern-ffMn ~ 1ry.,.., ,ref\ lotd. ....... 0.11 DATW ,_._.. I. -. by""''°" lllld .... of"'* illwCtoll "Y 111 lndMIMI T'lwlt ..-ment ,... tleS .:-~ 0: oe "::. ...-YC1U TMI ~ In "'9 ~ ........ lf4 0.. OUtlefld Wftfl IN~ C... of Or· "" ty = ro1 :-Orrncii:a:O:: r",~= •:--and ... ~~a:'°'~. = Ooun'Y on"*'*"' e. : OOt.lnty on"*'-"'"' ... 'f,a..,..uu. w.a.. .--. .. .,..°"""Yon'*'*Yt; w ,,, .......... 0r-": • YOU -• ....._ tOI 00 .... of IN nor9I ,... ,_ ~ Or-. C0Mt .,,_...., -~ _ MftOll °' l'9 MW 1Ja00 lelt _. lM IOI OS ~Or.,.._ Coa.t Delv PWo4 F*'*Y t3. ta.~ "!lot ,.__, 21, °' ·fW ........ ~ .... Tred. Ill 118 Delv "°' ~ ti, 10, 17, Mllftll\ t , 1tll ~I. 1) 20. ,... w.cM ·--·•lllJ••111111ililililll••ll!l!lll!l!llllJl!l!ll••••••••L---....J!A!•~A!!IW!!l~T~Y~O!,!•!:·....!"!O~U~c.y!:!!~°'~O..~c~r~••~a.~•~21, iiAerdi t , 1tl6 w 1 W411 - t' -.. • .. l I - ~ POii •• .,, fllCTmOUe ..... "°""°"' .. 111111 NQ110MU 11011C8 C1P um ITAW MAim ftAW "" City of ,~ V• A'"°' TN fOllowln8 ,.,..,,. .,. The ~ ,.,..,,. .,. hU ...... ~ '° M&P doifla ~ .. , Oo4nQ ....... 000 o1 ~ Md NihiON "OHIU & TAYLO" GOOOIOUNOl,908Mth ,~ ...... t11 ' lty 0.YelOPfMftl TO ...... .,. HAlflOlllHHfll, fH& 8V., ~ leadl. QA --. ... 701, ~ W. -l.oot», IMN. C.. eio. Gtant fUndl tor llnd HTAll NO. A-UNM !MM A¥1., C.a Meea, CA t2913 .....,. ...,.,c1•1 "'8NMO tor"'8Wltl lnOfdltto...-To .. hln. .., .. ai.n., tM21 ~ J Goodl. ..... _., aoct. M.D,, lftc. Jofwl L. ~. N40 lfle conttructlon of iow-eredllort Md oonllnt•nt "°"" "· 8uwdfL t 3o'ttl ltr•. ~ letd't, a Oelllomla OCWW*allOft, ec.nn ~ onv. ...... encl mocl«llt•lncOIM '*-" oredHort, Ind l*90nl --Swtft Court. Newpoft IMOll, CA nte3 1•41 Avocado Avenue, 11t,TulM.~1·U41 ~ TlllaoonedMela maybeolM.-ln-....cl CAnta • Tiiie ~ la oon-8-101. ~ 9Md\. J I ~ ~1 .. t f« Pr(lp0t8!e" In tM wll lftd/0t ...... of: Qary Teytot ltteft. a4516 ~an~ celfOnila a Cell•omlUOt'P(lfadofi, 11~ tr oftt epOtllOft Of OAIY BAILEY COD09t Clltf, Lake '°'911, J. GOOCk Tilll ~ la con-~ Ylle ~. lt'lllne. Cell-°"' non-:' wno alt!* own A petltiOn hM Mell 1M OA t2t30 Ttllt tteterntnl w11 flled ..._. i,y: a oorpon1Uon totnla 12711 ~= an option 10 by llllNHT J SCHAO, Jfl. T~ butlneu It con· whh the County Ci.rtl of Or· ~~~~ ~~~~~~~~the~tha~~eourtof~~w·~·~~~~~------~~---------~-------~~=~~~~---,, .. 1•1n1 ducted ti'(: a I"*• P*'t· of fl'ountaln V"-f All anoeCOunty~that Mf'lhiP 27, IMS , ........ kJe l1lm .......,t WM Ned net9'liP prQPOMlt mutt be evt>-EFIMEST J. OCHAO, JA. be Gary Taytor ,Streff, Robet1 ~ ~ ..... ...._ ._._ .... ':' -.i: 1 ..... ltf Wt """' .. COUnty Olertl of Or-J.,.,.. 8. ~. ~ mltted to IN Cltv OI F~ ~ .. perlONI ,.. "· Saevedra Publlahed .,.ange ---!!!!. !!!! -!!!. !!!! -____ , 1• ... ec..ttey on JanUary 24, dent a In V t II 8 p I an • ttaanl~ to a611•llNI' Iha Ttlla ~t wee !Mad Dally Piiot Mttctl I. t3. 20, ...... lllJ IMKll lift ..... 1111 ~- 1tll Tllla atawnent .. ftllad nlnQ/luMdlng ~IMl'll ...... Of the~' the COuMy C'8rtl Of Or-a7. 1115 • ------- -......... -... ,.,... wlttl the C<Mltv Ciani of Or· t0200 81at91 Awnut, ,oun.: The petition requa•,e = County on f*'*Y •• • . W.a& l&JPlllT -llllTlf ~-~ ..... Large f.,nlly tm, ~. S ..:-.: = ::....: ~.isounty on ~ ~~~llley20 ·,~ ·~~ ::::~ 81::'"~ , ~ Orange'= Ml.IC NOTICE • .,.,.. ~ .. -"-" .t.~!' SIA Hm/Duptex Tllf.9182 cats 70ll'OOO· ,,..owwpot1o 1~0 ..._, a.. ......,. ...., W _...,, • · -oent Admlnlatratlon ot bo DtlllY PlloC '*'*Y 13, 20. Magrilflcent Ytew9 fl'Om Nit· ........,_ on --.,.,......... 2 0,0 • 1 let TD • ... ,.. ............. Publlthad OrMgt cdMt ~~~~ t•t•Act. 27,Mercnt, IM& rtetmOUalUllNIU lnQ room end m .. ,.,. Sac.Beywlndo.wopenup CONDO: 38r, 2~~'= CA-Delly Piiot F*'-Y 20, t 7, ~t goei. A heel'lna on t11a petition W-684 um ITAftMINT aulte. 2 tpaeloua ldrma thla werm IMno toorn gar. NMr Hoeo • ~ Orange CoMt M•dl •• 13, 1916 obteathlea. For ed· will be held' on MAACH 27. ___ .,.-TIC( The tolloWlng pertona .,. plua .dtn. Flrtpteoe. 3 wl\t\ mountain atone... .., ............ . ~ Not febNlty 20, 27. W-eot lonll lnfonMtlon oontec1 1"5 al 9:30 A.M. In Dept. .._ "" dolnQ tM*neae •: 9 atN community boet piece. FantMtlc oountry 141-llH ...... 11.1116 Patrtol•Ftw'nn. HCOCoordl· No. 3 •• 700 CMc Centar NOTIC8TO MCT ASSOCIATES. 1701 lllpa. 'ctoee to Udo VII· icltchan, dealgner W..eot nltOf ... (114)9834321, EX· Orlll• W•t. Sent• Ana. CA .CMOITOM °' Wtr,.,.,, c.sa. Huntington lege.-'485,000. AM< for w1lloovarlng1 and EASTBLUFF 38' 28e, air, ----------anal0n235 92702. _,.t1_a_• ee.ctl.CA 92847 Sa.... BARBARA J AM!S ot 1,menlt laa '1lora. -----.._ w/trplc. LJl(e '*'· •-.,. lllllftYV"r .... ~ Or ,.~1 IF YOU OBJECT to tlla - , _ _. ChatlM Rot>ef1 ,..,,,., 1 170 000 7• 1 " "1 ..,..., f I d ~ ..,,"4 ,. _ _, ~ ..,.... t"antlng ot the petition. you ( ..... , .... ,., Jr .. 1701 wer~. C-31, • " ~ " ...... n View. ba1utl u yar • '°""'~ VALUY ~~ _ Dt111Y Piiot ~ch 6• ~~ ~hould either llPPM' at the u.c.c.) Hunllngton BHch. CA sp SElECT 1111...,. patio. Very prvt 1285,000 ~ .. "":"--hearing and tt•t• ~ ot>-Notice It~ given to 92647 PROPERTIES ~ By ()wner. Land lnct. ICMOOl•TNCT ~~;9ER Al· .,._.,.-TIC( jactlonsodllewrttttnobl«> credilort or tll• wtthl" OenntaAllanCorrado,830 Imagine youraalf In r:1n1nclng negotiable. )!O!Q ~ SOCl'"TES LTD 1072 8 E ,.-..-, "" tlont wl1h the court belor• named trMtfarOt(t) lhll • c• Plum•. San ctement•. • .... -SnorteUtt1 with • good 642-0350 or 780-9398 ADOPnOM _.. " • . · · the nearing. Your eppeer-butll trtNfer It about to be CA 92872 . ••• ocean view rrom ilvlng -----~=-==-- "'9QLUTION M =~Sultr_ 91:7~7 891119 k·WM •nee may be 1n per90n or by made on peraonal proparty Thi• txiatnau Is con· From kite'*'. deek & end dining rma plu• 3 BA Flll&lllll MINT TO LaAU · orn LIM .... Ne. your attorney. hatalnaftar deecrlbed. ducted by: a general pan· f"'.! bb Ellis Bdrm, lwga Matt + guest and 3 BA. Call IOf IP-MUST SELLI Thla bMUtl-...a.ue o.TNCT ir:.a ~=· NO~ LlaN IF YOU ARE A CR!OITOR The NmM end ~ nar'8hlp uru G • 9drmt. 2 Bathl, dbl gar, polntment today lul 3 bdrm + den hOme In • ~':°""'" 1072 s. E. Bn.tol, Sult• 102: IALI ON or a conllnqent cradltOf of ~~~ ot ~ ~~~ C.R. Sttufftr. D.A. Cor· .... ,.,,. .. _ ....... , , ... • • community poo11 •Pl & 9"-MIO Newport He!Qllta. Frendl llOTICR II ttl"llY Santa.Ana California 92707 HOmOWNIRI the deceased. you ,_,, fl.la tr .. -ori are. redo tennlt court•. /4 tuper doors. akyllghtt, re· CllV9I TMAT THE llouet-Doatl entarpr1Ma. Inc • A~JJaN your claim with the court or Del.EONE and PATRICIA Thlt ttatement WM mad 110111 l&f ...... condo It 1151000 Ot try modeled thr~hOUt. Mo-;,:. DEF T p<IMl'll 11 10 the peraona1 DaLEONE. 23881 Via Fabrf. with Iha County Clerk of Or· 1 leaaa ""tlon ' Juat TA91 VAUIY ICHOOL elltomla OOfPO'tlllon • ...,1 YOU ARE IN AUL , "9f'llallve appointed by cante -1522, Mltelon Viejo, ange County on February Watet1ront homt on undy ...,.. · sume 1192, 11t. IMITMCT hM .....,eel . Hhchc:ock, Sult• 110. UNDER A HOMEOWNERS t:'cour1 within lour monttl• CA 12e11. 27, 1985 -l>Ueh. 3 Bd, 4 Yt Betnt, JIGOIS TllnEllOI listed. 1233,000 R•• .................. , ••• Santa Berber•. Calltornl• ASSOCIATION LIEN DATED from the d•t• Of nm ... The location In California F-dining rm. wet bar, lge Fantaatlc pool, ..... and Ro<SgttWS31·12M ........................ 93106 MAY 10, 1914. UNLESS ftettan• ovldad of the chief executive ottlce Publlthed Orange Cout gourmet kitchen plut It· REALTY INC ...,.... .. ir'11e ..... ,..,. •• I Thlt ~Ull""' I• con· YOU TAKI! ACTION TO fn~~lon 700 ~. th• Of l)(lnclpal bYtlMN ottlce Dally Piiot Match e. 13, 20, tractive 2 8d .Pt. Could 811-8810 patio th•ll •II cuatom ....... .,,.. .......... dueled by: a llmltad part,.,.,. PROTECT YOUR PROP· p b t Code of Cellfornla of the Intended trantlaror It: 27 1985 be •II Ont houM Private end beautlfufly done. af • olnt 001M Md a thlp ERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT ro a 8 · 1eeo El Carril RMI s tte ' W 835 · Immaculate 4 Bdrm home _..,..... of tfte......,. •· Greg E. Park•, P~t A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU The llme for filing clalmt Wiii no ioo8 . •community, tennle-allp If It's~ ......... _IS Which thows Ilka• model. -==~-----• ...., ..._.. .....-.. Tiiie statement wa Ned NEED AN EXPLANATION not nplra prior to tour *· Cat'labad, CA 9 · avallablt. 1850,000 Mary ,v• ,,,.,,..... Convenient location on ... ........, °""' ..... ti the County Clartl of Or· OF THE NATURE OF THE month• from the dat• of the All other bull~ flam: "8.IC NOTICE Lou Merion. 844-8200 iou'll move it quiet CUl·d•aac. Priced LIM llU "'C ...... C......_ ........ County on FabNety PROCEEDING AGAINST nearing notice aboYI. and tddr .... e u_, by ~. .,_........,..., -...... •St ... lft a _....:.......... _...,... S OULD CON YOU MAY EXA,MINE the ln&andad lrantfarOf wltrMn ,...,.,.,....,. wv to~ al :M5,000 ... ~ ....... T-.. 15, 1916 YOU. YOU H • nte k t by the court "you three year• .... yeart .... MAim ITATllmNT .. -·-1ua LIT Ille,......... v..., ICIMol ,_ TACT A LAWYEFI. 11P • 1 k t ,...... .....-r-•-Dally Piiot (714) 673 4400 o ot 1"'-~ on D11er1e1 ...-,.. .. ..... PublleMd Or~ Cout NOTICE IS HEREBY art a per90fl imara.tad In pMt '° ar a nown o ,,. Tiie folloWlng peraont are Quiet family ar .. ; older ne '"' .,_, ...._ ....... eo llllllo .. ad Dally Pilot Fet>ruant 20 27 Gii/EN that on Wednetday Ille ettate, you may ..,... Intended tranaferM are: doing bYtlnesa u : well mlfntllned home· Classified Lido. Immaculate 2 ttory -~ .,..;-' ' ' 27 .. d f M ch 1915' upon the exeout« Of adm~· MM.· COUNTRY ELEGANCE, bl 1_,.,: d ,. .... 11 home t..turlng 4BA 3be, ... ...., IN ..... -arctl 9• 13• 1...., the 1" ay o ar ' ' I t tlOf or upon the at· The NllM(I) eocl bUllnMt 411 3111 Street Newport copper plum ng, .,,,.,, ii • "'9 family rm, dining rm, ...... ===· .-M In IN W-903 at 10:00 A.M. 11 the north 1'o:ney 'tOf the exeeutor Of eddrMI of Ille Intended 8etch Calttomla • 92993 room and 3 bedrOOfM. 642•5671 and breakfUI area, wet bll' • lllllMl..._llall.:. ~ 9-nl. c: :c' :~~ W:,?c~': admlnlttrator, and Ille with trMtferM(t) are: Kenneth R. Patricia Lenorn' L.awrenoe, Priced falrly It $295,000. a f rlendly quality throughout, See & n. •*"'-" ~ loca:'.c, .~oo Clvlo Cent., the court with proof of Ml'· Bauer and Carol L. Bauer. 406 Jumlne AY9., Corona -comparatnlloutttandlng ,.,_... .......... Nil.IC .NOTICE Drtw Weat In lhe City 01 vice, a written reque9t atat· 24141 Stem. EJ TOfo, CA del Mar, California, 82925 WATI HI H()Nl ad·YiSGr Wiii value at $379,000. A1k Ille ..... -.. Mt ..,. Sen•• Ana. County of Or· Ing that you deelre aptClal 92930. Thi• butln••• I• con· ttoMI ~ '-· help you turn lor Gib Walker a ... h1t.. per -~.TITICl~IMl .. 'IE ange Stale or C•llfOfnla notice or the flllng of an In-Tll•t Ille property pertl· ducted by: an Individual REAL ESTATE LIDO REAL TY 973*7300 -..~-..an ....;..... Ind • ".. .... MONTICELLO COMMUNI: ventory encl appralaement ot Mnl hereto 1' detcrtbad in PatrlCll• L. u.renc. 131·1d r.our wheels R9fd 842 1872 r •• -"!!_ --_ Loen No. TY ASSOCIATION by l1s At· ettate uaetl or of the pell· general .. : FtxtyrM. Equip-Thll ttatement WU Iliad ·--------ntO Ca h. Of : • -'9' -· ,_., ..-CM11'7.....0/l.EE tlontOf eQCOl.lntlmentlOnad ment, Inventory, and with Iha County CWll Of Or· • et1tl9. T"• •lt1IMllM T.I. No. C.-n IOfM)'I. Flore & Nordberg. A tn Section 1200 end 1.200.5-of Francnl'8 end la loceted at ange County on January 21. e -r-,:-tt..!! UNrT COOi c P:1~"'~ .~~;:., ~~~ theCallfOfniaProbataCode. 376 Broadway. Laguna 1985 '*,,!~,,",' c..~~ "''' _ f) c h e.• w•H -. IA ·-, SEASIDE FINANCIAL a • Sufi f A'fWJ Crary _,,.,,Betch. CA 92661. F2ll71I •• p~ l'"l,J ~~ (b {;.;(I' v HMI ~........., ...... CORPORATION .. duly ap-It '831 Teller Avenue. • ~ ........... At· The BullMM neme Ulad Publlthed Orange Coast f4lto4"' C\AY. POUNI Okenat'a llu ......._ A .._ ·polntad Tnnteo under the l20, NewpOrt Beach. Cell-t tot ..........,, 11• by Uld tran1taror1 at Mid Dally PllOt February 13, 20, MfltJ/Clffftlftt dapealt tolfowlng dellerlbad deed of fornla 92680· and WtlOM C~ Ortwe, Newport location 11: MAIL BOXES. 27. Marcll 6, 1915 0·1~,''0ic~ .. bJ,:d•'~~-~ ...., ~ .......... ,,.., .. trutt WILLSELL ATPU8LICte6ephone number ls <714) IMCta.CA-ETc..JJIA* w .. 597 b.;f()tW\~.°"'M,,;e;~d: l.J<'Lir".a. IUl!flFICJ. AUCTION TO THE HIGH!:ST •5~0564. wlU, pursuant 10 Pvblllhad Orange Coast Thal Mid bulk tramlar Is ......, lllllTI 3229 BROAD.ST. 2 UNITS. Each unit O"lef 1700 1/1 w/prtv•I• back y8Fd1. Built In 1'171 • $22.800 yrty Income. 3 Bdrm, 21h ba. 2 trplct .. unit Vaulted celllnga, 4 ~ ancl. g.araga + xtr• parking. New carpttt, ceramle Ula kitchen & beth•. Hard to belt a1 $310,000. Act fut. Both have gd axlttlng fin.enc· Ing. Owner may aultt. llD 00Rtn1l11l1n-.. Ilia BIDDER FOR C ASH Article B. Sectlotl 1 01 Ille Delly PllOI March 8 7 13 Intended to be contum· I T T I F R H ,.W lo .wJ loeMed ,... AND/OR -l'Hfi CASHIERS Declaratlon of RCovenl •1nll. l985 · ' · mated tt the office ol: PllllC fl>TICE 1-.... 1.,., -.-1-.1,,...2.-.-l --.l-t ...... !wot• In tNa ,._ OR CERTIFIED CHECKS <?.ondltlona ·~.d estr ct one WTn..&40 Laguna Hiiis Eacrow orp. ..... Ind tMf'8 IMl M "° SPECIFIED IN CIVIL Coe>£ ( Declaration ), recorded In 24141 Allele Pkwy. St. F, IUMlllONe OM .._...__.___._..._.....__, ieduotl•" ftOM HJ SECTION 29241'1 (payable at Book No.9890. Pege536. u PlBJC fl)TICE La9un•. Hiiia, Calllornl• llNT AmNDG> I C A R .-G I .,....... In detef"*""t the Um• of Nta In lawful lnatrument No. l601I. Of· 92653 on or after April 1, CltOU-COWU#fl ___ _...,..."'_.--4 ... ......... '"'""'.... money of the United Stat•) flcltl Record• of Orange NOTICI TO 1915. CAii # .., ,. • I I I r I ~. tll rlgllt. 11119 and tnt.,•t County, Ca llfornla, and CONTMCTOAI Thia bulk trwi., la aib-CrTACtON AICMCI~ , t ... i.ct ,,., .. alt le to and now held purauant 1° CalltOfnla CMI CAUJNO 1109' llDI tact to California Uniform NOTICI TO OllllN· I ~,,....., ........ by 11 under Mid o,ad or Code' I Cslsll 1C3!!._ andss 2~all2~· Sotiool Ol1tr1ct: lrvlne um-Comrne<cl•I Code Section DANT:.= a AouaadO) I A l u R R I My 1un1 II a compulsory C•ed•I _,,_ -, IM ......_.. Trutt In the property her .. n. orn 1 v """" • ... fled e 106. lllEC I MAL TY a card user When my uncle asked ......, ....... , ........ v• •fl., deecrlbed: 2924b, 292~ NII •1 publlo Bid DeedMna: 10:00 o'clodt The neme and llddr ... ol DEVll.o..-wl' CO., 9A9t-I 1$ r I ! "'' why she -ep1 ctlarglng 6tr ICIMol Dletrlot ,...,.. TRUSTOR: MARTIN L. auction to the h~t bidder em of the l•tn d'f Of March the peraon with whom MTT "'°""'T•I, INC.. , tn~ sne reptieo Well my .._ c.Mer, 11111 Oatl LEE for cuh. In lawful money ot Place of Bid Recefpt: Dlatrlc1 clalma may be lllad It et al., D1e1......._ .---------, pl'lik>le>pny ''·ti tne moe 1'1'· - llfWt, ''"'"talft V•..,, BENEFICIARY : FI RST Ille United Slatet. •II P•Y· Admlnlllratlon Center. S060 Laguna Hiiia Eacrow COfp, ltlX HOOGll M.ALTY a I S l 0 T H E I Ca .. mM. ll1GI. ne ...., FEDERAL SAVINGS AND able 11 the time 01 Ule. ell Berranea Ptrlcway, lrvlne. 24741 Allele Pkwy, St. F, OIVILO,.HMT COM· I I I' I' I 0 .-o,.•• ,... ,~.,,u. Q"°'ed "'-2:GO P·"'" llrkt•J, LOAN ASSOCIATION OF that certain real PlOC*fY CA 92714 Laguna Hiiie. Ca 92853; 'ANY, "0 NA L D D. . . . . . b, ,,, •g ·" '"• M•-• -•h *'°" 11, 1... SANTA MONICA. lllutled In Ille City or Cotti Project ldenttflcatlon Memo: Cleor1 Price , Eecrow McMAHON AltCHlnCTI & 10" d•••iot> loom "•P No 3 *"'- .::,:::'.":. ::Z 19:X:.~.~~~~71~ ~.:· ~?°~':11,~~n~•T.: =~11~~·~~.r~anroom ~~ 1~~:': ~ ~8;'c~:,:: ~~~.I~ I .:C...S::J. 8 ~:~':tre~·~ie~o .. m ....... eMol6' eMll eel'°' Book 13746 pege 1341 ot scribed .. follows. Place Plan• are on Ille. DI .. tl'lall be March 29, 1915, ltONAL.D O. McMAHON.. M ~::::::::=;::::;::=;;;:;::::;:~~=~:;:~;;;:=~~ onl ........_ Alff penon Otflcitl Recorda In ttle office Lot 27 and • 11334th un-trk:t Admlnlttratlon CenllN', which 11 the bullnan day lndlvldualL COMfl'O"T i) ~~E~>t\81f '0 '1 I I I I I • I I _... '* ... ...-.. _,. or tlle A.corder of Orange divided lntar"t In common 5050 B•rr•nca Perkway, before th• cootummatlon CONDITIONING COM· · · · · · · -· , ""'*'•-"'*'bid may Coun1y:;r-· lnandtoLot lofTrectSl&O, trvlne CA 92714 datespecllledabov• PANY, "fLCON CON· ---UTI Alltwen It ............. 1111 ......... orelbtdexceed-Mid .deed of trust • lntheCltyofCotta M .... u N0°TICE IS HEREBY D=~et>rvary25, 1915 CltlTI, ITllNI" '•---------l---------11'1"' ....... the penieftt ICflbet ,,.,. followlng: shoWn on • map thereof r• GIVEN that the •bov•· K ll. --· CaroC ITIJNllt CO..Alf't, °"" ----1c NOTICE .._..._... wrtnlftt.ld. TM PARCEL i: COfded In book 181• 1>11991 named Scnool filttrlct for L. .._, Intended ,,.,... Ml MDIU CONT9'ACT· Pl8.IC NOTICE r~ ......... r11pa"•'"' bidder An undivided 111 llh •O. 41 and 42• Ml•· Orange County, Callfornta. ..,... ING, 909 LlllMCK a flCTI'houe IU8MM '1CTTT10U9 9UllNIU eMll Ilia ,......, lo ••· lntar"t In-and 10 Lot 1 of oetlaneoua Maps. r41C01dl or acting by eoc1 ttlfougll Ila Publlthed Orange Coast COWANY, INC .. Al'flUIO NAMI ITATWMINT NAm ITATflllRNT :::;: .::.. ':: .! ~ Tract No 10610 In tlle Clry MITd~.;.Te~ou~:.fH non· Governing Board. herein· Dally PllOt March 6, 1985 01t000FtMG.,poratllNCon· .. •,C1aMamla11.TY The foltowlng partona ere 'rn. tollowlng ~·are been • 0 • of Cotta M•a. County of after referred lo •• "DIS-W-844 • ., " ~ bYalMN u · doing bu91MN ae: YIWlllUlll tn COM, near bMch and eoutn of highway. 2 Bdrm nome, frplc. bricked patio, dellghtful yard, great co nd ition . $329,500 lJ,_.l()lJI:: ti()Mf:i Relltora, 675--8000 C..11.... 1124 *1&11 llPll •• *U,llUTllll* Sharp 2 bd condo. Sec1--------- gate nr SC Plaza pool epa llUI YIEW 1111111 +carport Sao. at 189,900 Spec11 o ulu OCEAN. 3 bd only $79,999 uam BAY,+ CITY LIGHTS 10·~·;. lln. Try $7000 min View. Entartalnert 4 bdr down. Won't lutl Wood&-home w/pvt 191, yard + Ide VIiiage 2511 W. bonua rec rm. Prlciad to Sunflower Patrick NII el only $35-4,900 Tenofe, ~t 131·12645 w /ta rmt. A nu ma $250,000 + owner wtll carry. Won't IUtl Cell Patrick Tenor• 131-12M epptOYecl bJ th• Orange, Stale ot CallfOfnla. excluatve euementa and TRICT". wlll receive up to, Dll-IC MnTarc ~~I~. ·~c~ N VOTECHNICS COM· ORIGINALS BY MIA. 117 loetd of TrueteM. .. par map recorded In non .. xelullve right 01 Wff>/ but not tatar thin the at>ov.. .-~ nu ~ f:RA.. .._.,_ ........ TM loetd of T,...._ Book 455 Pagoe 5 and & 01 over, under and upon Loi I atated time MalOd bldt for ---------TftACTOltl INC a Cal-PANY, 2722 Windover Or .. Rlvertlde Ave., Newport!-'=======;;;;..;. -.. INlll• h ...._.... Mlacellaneout Maps. In the for ~ry or dealrabte the awerd Ot a contract for 11414 fofnla ...,.;..etton" NIAQftA Corona del Mar. Calllornta 8Mctl. CA 928413. *l'W hi •• 1M egt RVM~ .._. • to _,....,., to...._ office of tlle County R• lngtMI and egr.... , .... tNt tbove project. NOTICB M E.ICTIIC C~TION. 92~25 JulluO Maro Muahk~. 102 3BR 2ba, DI R + Guea1 Mid ._...... wtwn ten corder 01 uld County. vl•lon cables, poles, wlrea Bids thall be received In ntUITlrl IALE c• Ila ~ No'lbtedlnlca Inc .. • Call· Schotz Ptau. #247, New-nae/Pool 15-4~7009 Agt .,. eftar ,_..,. of Mde. EXCEPT therefrom Unit• 1 and conduit• for etectrlclty, the place Identified abOve. Tl No • .-n :cno:r-~INMQ. e fornla corporaUon, 2722 port ee.ctl. CA 92993 "'*-'Ion _ _,.."' lhrougn 11 lnclutlv• H telephones and other and shall be opened and YOU ARE IN DEFAULT CalfomlaOOf lllton,lftd Windover Or., Corona del Andr .. Alyaraz.21114Vla IYIWWI llU/IPTlll lllt ,,.,_.. lfMMlld be ad-shown on the Condom4nlum purposes and accoutre-1>11blloly reed aloud at tlle UNDEFI A DEED OF TRUST OOll J ;;r::..IO. in. Mar. Cellfornla 92625 Ette, Yorba Llnda,CA9298e 5BR2b1,lergel'9C.rooml Duplex 1320 w. Balboe, 1 tlr"Nd to: llOUNTAIN Plan recorded In Book menta thereto, Hwer1. above-sta ted time and DATED 6/23/83. UNLESS duel¥e Crw O•*Mlllita. This bu11n ... It con· SM• Muankln, 102 SchOtz loe llvlng rm, 2100 aq ft. S275 000. 15-40-1295 VALLIY ICHOOL 011· 13830 Page 1043 Offlelal dralna,wat«.guandttMm plaoe YOU TAKE ACTION TO you'AM 1a91Q IUIO ductad tl'(:a corporatlon Plue. 1247, Newport 151 OLYMPIC AVE.i----·------ TNCT, 11210 ()Mt ltreet, Records . plpn, and accouUtmenll Tnere win be a $20 00 de-PROTECT YOUR PROP· 9Y PUINT!ff• Thi• t tatemanl ~ .. Iliad Beach, CA 92N3 1 136.000, ph 499-3861 YllW ,_...,. V...,, Caltomla, PARCEL 2: 1nere10. and for such roof posit required lonechaet ol ERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT (Aud. laeota ......... ) with the County CWrk of Or· Malle Alvarez. 211"4 Via •· .. -~--v---.. -_3_bd_"_m_,_1_3_1~ ,.-. •••• pN1. (714) 142 .... 1, At· Unit 2 u thown on the overh1ng1 and other en-bid documents to guarantM A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU ILA Tl" 1'"'"'9Ulll ~ County on Fat>ruary Ette. Yorba Unda, Nowport ,.._ ,.. ...., , , ~ --f-!~ CaroC .-... Condominium Plan abOve cro.c:llments of a Ilk• Of di.+ their return In good con· NEED AN EXPLANATION ate., Ind TONI IM'YWAM 13. 1985 ,_,.1 ~· c:i,:~= It con-bl, Just painted, tent lln,111 FOUNTAIN VALLIY retarredto slmllarkind.and~tl dltlon within 35 days tftar OF THE NATURE OF THE C~ATION............ lermlted&newroof.8x12 HurrylAndYQUWlllowna4 tcttOOL DtlTIICT 90AM> YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T on tdJacent Iota of Mid trtct the bid opening d••• PROCEEDINGS AGAINST IAlt .. ITT '"0"'"'''· Ctlerteo '· ~" ductecj by: • general part· Comp. 1utom1tlc green-Bdrm. 3 ba w/famlly rm, °' TltUITIH. Ann Galaa, UNDER A DEED OF TRUST lorrool ovarhangund other E.ach bid most cOntorm YOU. YOU SHOULD GON· INC • c ...... ...,., .•. .l.D .. CflA, II.A I -netthlp houM. 24x24 covered lrg 80 x 150' lot. Thft It Ctaftl °" .... 9-d DATED 9/ t 1/80. UNLESS encro.c:nmen•a. ol • Ilk• or tf\d be reeponstw lo Iha TACT A LAWYER. -croe. c............ ,.._,..C•=~ Aft.. ~lut:.:. WM fifed plant .,... I 139,500. fee, not leua land, with. Data: 2-21-85 YOU TAKE ACTION TO dtulmlltr kind contract document• On 3/29/65 •I 11:00 A.M. You ..... JO CALaNDAlt ...... C• Coun Clef , Or 2957 Jacllrandl bOt view Publlthed Orange Coast PROTECT YOUR PROP· EXCEPTING AND RE-Each bidder atiall.aubmlt ST ATE WI OE FORE. DAYI eftar tfila MMMaM Publllhad Orange C0Mt with Iha ty k O • beautiful hit . Dtl[i Piiot February 27, ERTY IT M•Y BE SOLD AT SERVING lrom H id un· on lhe form lumllhed with CLOSURE SERVICES .. tlle la ..,.... "" ,_ to ... a Daily Piiot Fet>Nary 20, 27, ange County on February ••TL mmfl I Merch 6. 13. 1985 A PUBLIC ~ALE IF YOU dlvtded 113341h lnter"t In the contract document•. • duly appointed TruatM '1Pe•'"ten tllPIMe et March 8. 13, 1915 14, 1985 ,_ lniat 1044 •11·1111 W-624 NEED AN EXPLANATION common In and 10 LOI 1, 1111 of the propoled aubcon· under and pursuant to Dead d;le oourt. W-901 Or Coat ---------OF THE NATURE OF THE non .. xclu11ve easements tractors on Ihle protect .. of Truat. Recorded on A..._ ot "*"eel.. D:~b~~~.b~~ 20. 27~ llOIEl9LI PllllC P«>TICE PROCEEDING AGAINST and non-excluilve~htt 01 required by the Sublottlng 8/24/83 u Document no. not~ reui rew .,,._ PlB.JC NOTICE 3 915 $2400 dow n, aalla r YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· way over, under upon and Subcontracting Fair 13·270422 of Otflclal A. wfttteft r11p1nae flMIM M Maren 8' 1 ' 1 w-e11 provtdet FHA nnanclng, NOTICE M TACT A LAWYER. tald LOI 1 for neoeeeary or Precllcet AC1 Govt. Code cords In the offloe of the A.-'" proper ..... '°"" If ,... flCTTTIOUI ....... low fl)(ad lnte,...t rata .• __ ......,,__ ___ .......,~ DIATH M 543 w Wiiton A-2 Cotta dealreble lngreu and Sec: 4100 et MQ COfder ot Orange County, WMt the_. to...., row NAiii ITATl•NT "8.IC NOTICE 2BR townhouM With gar ---•• Aaa 1• DOM L. LUTZ Mesa CA 92627 · egr011, televtalon cables, Each bidder ,.,;uSI tubmll Cattfornra, executed by: ..... Tna lollowlng peraone .,. i----------183 500 eaii ... A.ND M NTITIOtt "(If. a atrMt addrOll or pole•. wlrM and condulll for with etcll bid certified Of HUTCH HUTCHINSON " 0...-de ......... doing butlnMe u; ACTmOUI ...... ~·~~on 559.9400 BY m : Super 3 bdrm 2 TO ~Tiit common detlgnatlon ot electr\cfty. teteptionea and catlller's check peyable to BERNARDINE A. NEIL WILL b'ellUOfl Mta ottactofl tu-A·CASTLE LIMOUSINE NAm ITAftMINT ba upgraded, many xtrat IEITATI ~· A1210ll property Is shown above. no other 1>11rpo-and ac· the DISTRICT or a bid bond SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION dlclel 1'ated tlaM llft pluo SERVICE, 1t 11 Baytlde The tolfowlng partonl are lncldg ape. Nr Park & So. To ell heirs. benellctartea, warranty Is given H 10 111 coutrement1 tnere10. and In the l0<m Mt forth In the TO TH E HIGHEST BIDDER de. DtAI CALINDANOI Drlv9, Suite 2008, Corona doing bu91neaa u: Cat Plaza Appt, No egtt credllora and contingent complelaneu Of correct· for IUcll rool oV9rtla~ •nd contr1ct documenlt In an FOR CASH. (payable at time para praaafttar ufta del Mar, Calltomla 92825 OLD COUNTRY INN, $157,500. 567-3344 etadll0<1. and pareone wt1o ne11)" The beneficiary other encroachments 01 • amount not ieu tllan 10-1.of oholelnlawM money Of Iha ~ -tee • .,... Marvin M Richardt, 1970 27001 La Pu Road, #100, may be oltlerWIM lnteretled under Mid Dead ot Tru11 by Ilk•°' dlUlmllar lllnd. 1°' the the maximum emount ol bid United Stat•) ti SOUTH .,.,.. ., eata OOf'te. 16th St, BldGJ', Apt 305. Minion VlaJo. CalllOfnl• Lilta Aaa Ith 1111 ltl tlle wtll and/or Mtate ot reuon or a breech or detiutl benefit of the remaining Iott 81 •guarani• that the bid· FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE UN ~ o una ._... Newport Beach. Calff«nla 92891 ; FRESH PA11Pf "8M 21); OORA L LUTZ In the obllgttlons aocured In Mid Treci and the remain-der wlll enter Into th• ORANGE COUNTY OLD .....,.. ne la ofNoaf9 92N3 Paul A. Voravatplbul, A petition hN beerl flied thereby, heretofore u -Ing lnltretll In said Lot I; proposed contract It the COURTHOUSE, 211 WMI prot1ul1~ au rnp ...e.a Thlt butlne11 It con· 2233 Rutger• Drive, #C, PIUt G11ett HOUM. F/P, ~CHARLES McWATERS In ecuted end dellvared to tlle and excepting and reaervtng nme Is •-rded lo tueh &enlt Ana Boulevard, Santi eeottta a~ tlaM.,. ducttd by: an lndlvldual Cott• Meta. Callfornla hardwood. 845-7009 Agt. Iha Superior Court of Or· underalgned a wrl1ten Dec-lrom said Loi 27 eatement• bidder. In the event of failure Ana, CA •Ii right, Utlle and oumpllr con IH far: ~RVIN M. RICHAROS 92828 • ..... II ange County requeatlng lhat laratlon ot Default and 0.. for roof overhang• and other to enter Into Mid contract. lnter"t conveyed to and mellded4t• l•t•l•t •P· Thia atatemont WU flled Thia butln"' It con-IT'S .... Ml CHARLES McWATERS be mand '°' Sate, and wrl11an encroacnmentl. 01 •Ilk• or tuCh MCUrlty w111 be forfeit. now held by It un<W Mid proptedaa al uo'9d ....,.. with the County Clartl ot Or· ducted ti'(: an lndMclual 121.ooo-lg 18d 5Yf Oki Yd eppolnted u oaraontl rep-notice ot breacn and of elec· dissimilar lllnd, lor Ille beo-DISTRICT r..arvee thJ Daad ofTrull In the p<oparty qua la OotW MC1IGM au ange County °" February PAUL VORAVATPIBUL 2 Bdrm, 2Ba. + den. San patio 122~ mo nr Bay St reaentallve to admlnlater the t!On to cauao the under· etll or adJacent IOI• of Uld right 10 reject any or all blct. situated In Hid County, Call· ceao. 18. 1985 Thie atetement wae tllad Joaqutn model In Rancho CM 8484483/e.4&-145e •••••of tlle decedent. atgned to Mii aatd property tract °'to w91\18 any lrregularltteo lornla, doecrlblng the land " ,... de flOt ... rew ,.... With the County Otork of Or-San Joe9uln. Dacof•l«1--------- Th• petition requHt• to u llaty Mid obllga11on1. The 11'"1 •ddrees or tn any bide or In the bidding. therein: LOT 108, IN TRACT r11p 1 Mt Oft lltM,,... MaJ Publlahad Orange Cout anoo County on February perftct. Quiet lnelde golf LAllU ~ •uthOflty to admlnl•t• the e.nd thereafter thlt ~d.,· othaf common designation Purtuantto the provltlon• 3529. BOOK 125 ON PAGES loeo tfte ceet, Ind ,.. Dally Piiot Fat>Nary 20, 27, 13, 1985 courM IOGellon. Lower Beautlful Golden waat "tate under the lndepen· algned ceuaed said notloe of or 111• Mid real property !•: ol S.Ctlon 1773 ol the Labor 34 TO ~2. OF ORANGE ...... moner Ind ,,.. Mercn 8. 13, 11115 . P1lllola unit with loll of privacy. 24x80 w/lge tam rm dent Admlnletrallon o1 Ea· rHCll and ot election 10 be 2348 Minuteman Way, Code of tlle Stet• of Call-COUNTY. 8'ly Mer be e.ll8".,........ W-907 Publlthad Orange Coaat S197,000. ,.,,...,. kltehen 28A/2 ... a' tales AC1 recorded November 111 Cotta M .... Ca. 92926 Md, tornla the DISTRICT lies Ob-The ttreot eddr... and ..,,..., • .,...... "9M IN Dall PllOt Febnlary 20 27 -"""'·· ' ..,.. A hear1ng on lhe petition ttM u ln1tr. No 64-469&60 u of the date ot Ihle Notloe. talnad from the DlrectOf ot other common dealgnatlon, oowt Doi-.,. NOTICE Y 3 1985 . • lntlt .... ltlltJ m•tr bdrm vary apeclout. w1n be held on MARCH 27. of Ottlclat Record• In the of· Vffllng to Mid real property the Department ot lnduttrlal If any, ot the reel propety II i.ted ne praeonla .., .-_,,,, Marct'I 9, I • W~ 18124 Cutver Or, Irv. PVeryorch•tl.rto,Jllve? "/91odun~ 1965 at 9·30 AM In Dept. lice of the Recorder of Or-11 In: JANE I. LARSON R•l•tlont t h• gene ra l ducrlbed a b ova It "'"_...•........_,.ado lllCT1TtoUt MllMll 111-1.. • Ya "' No 3 at 100 Clvtc Center ange County; CARGILL, •widow prav .. lng rate of per diem purported to be: 21tt Baker ...,-el...., 1 ta,_... NAm ITAT'lmNT P\8JC NOTIC( 1dult1 welcom•. Aol. C>rlve W•t. Santa Ana, CA Said ea1e wilt be made, bv1 Tile Mle wlll be made wag.. and the general Str .. t, Cotti M.... CA ....., • ......, • dlMro The loltowlng partont are ~40.5937 t2702. wlthOUt ooventfll or war· wlthOut covenant or war-prevailing rate lor holiday 92628. r •tr•• c .. aa de tu doing buelneu u; PICT1TIOU8 .,..... La~ lltul IHI ,....Lr--:Spac..---:-1oua--=o,.,.bl.,..,.,.lll(--- t IF YOU OBJECT 10 Iha ranty, oxpr ... or lmplled. r• ranty regarding tlti., ~-W1d overtime WO(!( In the lo-The undara~nad Trutt• ,..apltdld tM _... ... DtMO CYCLING, 21~ 21th MAm ITA~ 2 i&m 2 b: e;;; co:;; 2t; 2bl fern rm w!t r::· oranttng of the petition, yt:>\I gardlng lltle PQIMSllon °' aestl~on o:_eneu~::" ~ caltty In wnlctt INI work It to d1 tactalmi any 1 •1blll!!_f~= ...., ,., ,.,.. • 11 ...._ Streat #8, Newport Baedl. The fOllowlng panone we Twnhm wit< to bctt encl 5* Park Ownf 531415' ttiould olther appeer at the encumbranooe. to ~Y the Mt 1 t... 0~-v-be perfotmad tor aacl'I <:f'•ft ncorrectneaa o .... ... T1'afe .. ...., ...., ,.. Calltoml• 82913 dolno bualneet •: 1 •70 000 """· •15 .... 8 · ri-rtno and 1tate your ob-remetnlng p<tnctpal aum of cur by and purtUenl 10 lhe or type of WOf11• naadad to addr.aa and other common ...,......,, .. You .., ..... Randall Deen Da Marco, NE'W VIOOA MUSIC, 2040 unit. 1 • · .. .,... "" 1"C."" ...... ..., .... _ __,, ........ ,-... --~l~lf~I jectlon• or Ille written oblte-the note(•) NCured by aald power 01 ••le confetr~n execute the contract. Ti-dealonatlon. If any, 9hOWn lo ... .-, ...._, ...... 212 21th Streat 1 8, ,..... Monrovia Av. .. Cott• Meaa. ~!!!==~==-..!.!!! tiona with Ille court before dMd of Trull. with lnl.,Mt tlle ttJove..ref•enoed ..,_... rat• •• on nte at the DIS· heraln. ...,. It,.. de Mt....,• port hectl. CellfOmla 92te3 CA 92827 V...._ 1Br ~. Iha llMrtng. Your ac>~· .. In Mid note prcMded. ad· l«tllon by Artlcle B. a.atlon TRICT ofTlca located at SOSO Seid .... wHI bt made. but ......,..,, ,.. ..., ... • Thia butlneta It con· 1<9Vln ChetlM Thomen, ll!JI!! ... ~ lMI Ocean View $ 13&,000. erlCe mey be In peraon or by vanooe. If any. und« the 8, and 1>11'-uent to Article B. Barranca Parkway, lrvtne. wllhout oonvenant Of WW· attofMJ ,.._,.. ..,.... ar ducted by: an lndlVlduel 2040 Monrovia Ave .. Cotti -837 ·9872 or 13t-22t0 your attorney t«ma of Mid Deed of 1ru11. Section e of Mid Daciar· CA 92114 Coplea may be ranty. expr ... or Implied, r• a letal ....... (...._.. Jft AANDALL D. DE MAACO Meta, CA 12827 :.-----:::~--........ ._.,. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR teea, cnargee. and expen ... atlon, eocl Cal. Clv. Cod• SS obtained on requoet A copy gardlng title. po11•1lon, or IM,.._...,..,. Thia ttottment na ftlad This bu1ln ... 1 la con-... H 1111111.1 ...... !!!p UH or a contingent creditor of f tna TN91M end ot the 13~. and Cel J~ c:' :! of thaM rat• tholl be poet· encumbtanc.e. to pay the ,...._ ..,... ,..,,,,... with tna County Clartc of Or· dueled ~ an lndlvldual lllAlfmt-l• Rm_.. the deOMMd. you must Illa truata creotad by aold Oeed 2924· 2924b. • 1 1 d ad at the JOb lite. remalnlnp principal tum °' ........ ,_. ... __, ange County on Fet>tuary KaoYln ·Thoman Qra11 oc .. n view of ~LY 1 11.000 C.:-._..•• V04lf claim with the court or of Trull lie• ot A...aem•n an 11 thall be mandatory upon Ille nota(I) MWred by Mid .,._ • ...._a llft ....... 13, 1985 Tllll 14 .. emant WM llled vn ..,,., ,,....,, It to tlle pertonal Said ute wttl be held on· Claim of uen waa recorded the COHTAACTOR to wN>nl Daad of T'ruet. with lntaroet """• •1t11M..ea. II•..... ,_.. wlttl the County Clartl of Or-Catalina I al and pllu• AIYwllda Co lyerl ,._.,,tattve appointed by Thuradey. Marcitl 21. 11115. agalnll Ille •~bed the cont.rllC11e -arded, end Iner.on, M provtcled In aold ... a• 1• 111 d1 • •.. Publlohad Orange COMI M9' County on F.cin.t.-y tunaett. Sec~'/':'.'k· 1to;hti tM court wl1hln lour month• at 1:30 p.m. In 1119 lobby 10 rMI PfoPert'f tor nonpay-upon any tubcontreotor notll(•I. edWnOet. " any, ....._. tla.,........., {,,.. Dally PllOt F""'9ry to, t7, 11. 1M& Ing, Wlilt( to ,... Bkr/Oo-op/ .... mahd 1rom the data ot nret I• tna txilldlng l~ted at 801 m • n ' o 1 du u • n d under aucn CONXAACTOR, under tlle 1arm• ot the Dead a1• 1 11t1a 1111bliltJ). Marllh e 13, tM5 ,_ taurlnt.I nr ,uanoe bf letllN'I a prOVfdad th Lewie StfMt. Ortnge, Mlotlmenti on Mal 15• to P'f not 1e1a tllen the aid Of Trutt. teae. ctlargaa and TM ....... ...i aMW ef ~ W.eM Pub!Wled 0ranea Coeet 1247,500 J•.,. In lectton 700 01 th• ornfa t2eee • 1914. " TMtr\lmen No. apeciflad ratMto an worllart expenoea of the Tf'Utt• and IM....,.• cm .......... J Deity Piiot Febnlat'y 27, t,m U.n Completely remodefecl. Probet• Code of Calfornle. At the time ol Ille lnlllel "4·2021 l9, In the ()ttlc:4al employed by ,.....,., In Iha •K· ot the '"'"' Cl"1ad by Mid ............... _, rtB.IC NOTIC( Marett 8, 13. 20. 1916 111· 1• Greet rental .,_ Onfy 1 The time tor llllng d •lma wltl bllcatlon of this notlee, ~rd• of z~nge ~I)'. toUllon Of ttlf QOntract DHd of Truat, to-.wlt: . C... ........ JllL-• W-429 mlle trom Loma Linda not 9llplre prlord to 1tour the lotal amount of the un-1.!~ 0°r1n~!.tt ~ .,:!_.ion°" No bidder may wl1hdraw 129T!}~_, un.._ & ...... tlae C...) 11 M ., ,,..._ flCTITIOUe 91J 11•aa T1C[ Madleal Center. l..Ow dft. from Iha at• 0 the bolanOI Of the Ol>lf. -............. --~· .,.., bid tar . panod Of thirty ............. _, ,_ -..... c:... -NAm ITA~ ..alt"° c noUcl abOve Ion oacutad by Iha •boVo to Seit wae recorded~ 1130) dayl aft# tN dat• • Deod ot Truet het .. of«e •· ........ c.-, af ~ Tl'la lollowlng .-.one are ---•Ill Mh flow. W. trllda fOt 0 MAY EXAMINE the bed deed of tnnt and Ille above daactl ,... Of 1119 oe>enlno of bid•. acutecj end daltverecl to the 111 CMo c..... dotno bullrleM -PtCTmOUe ........ .. uu"... :r~:O,~p= Illa kept "V tM ciourt. If you lmtted cotte, txpenaea, P;,~~11 °~ Au9ut: ~I, A payment bond and •. under91C1nad,..!~~ ..... ,.0. ._ -I) ORAHOI COUNTY Ulm 8TA1'Rmff Prtme, welled Nx110 IOt: 1200,000 =11" ....... .,. a ptf90f1 lntara.ted In n d a dv 1 n c • • 11 1•-· u . atrumen o parformanaa bond wll ,J}/I Nlratlon Of .,..._, ...., .,.. AM. CA aaa -l utlNE.88 LINI! 2l THI r.-fol60wlftt por90M.,. 500 ft lo -..---• -. 7..,.7 , •2,. :::::."', IN •eta. JOU may~ 100,188 51 84-3SOal&. In Iha Offldal required prlOf to .. ecu. mandfOf8ele,end aWl1ttetl ni. ..-_ .._ aMI SANTA ANA VOICI S) MIQbua!MMM: --· ,,_, .. ,_ • ...,. ,.,,. • .llPOft the•. ecu1« Of adf'nltl. f~ tot•l lndobtadneN Record• Of Orange ~tY. of Iha contract Ind ahlll bt Notice Of Default and £Jee.. ....... ,,.. ...., .. ......... TAAVILHOIT OF..oAANOI . NAl~ CWll, 2540 Of9el U1ra pttcng. Privet• kr Co-Op 'eet·• l'Mllled ...,,, or ~ the at· no an attlmtte on wtlloh Celtt«nla. In the form aac. fOtth In the tlontohlt. Tha~'19..0 _.. ~· • pllltMf COUNTY, 12IOO Gerden Vlate Beyt, Newpor1 lteactl. tt,,..U w/'*""' pool. ··-~ ror tN .aout« or tie opar11no bid 11 computed The 101.i amount of the contract doc>U!Mnt•· called Mid Notloa of o.. ...... • • • a. 11\'d-&M.tt-.a. ~ .,._ .. _ .aul 111 .. Lm ... •• Qdeaf ... ~~.,... r"" eie OC*(. "d by~ ~ ~ ~ ~ .;,-..,~ ~ ' ~~~ .. "':~ ~ ~--~rium. ~-~~ '25'0 ~· o;oa.,..141-0111 Bftr PlofMJIOtlllr "'tnarl_legld_ I ,.. '°"" • ptOO( otlef• 14) 38Ht37 °" (21ai li'11&-~ "'Ntiirtd "Dy 'llli of'tna oa-nment Code of reootW'"ln1'ie ~al-..• ........ t1ae 1 Tna' Jim o.i 0r...-. eey.. Noewpof'l IWll. a. 8d un1t1 located In Sen \Ilea, a Wf'ltten '""*' atat· 27·4485 Ille dty «*Ofl IN above-d0terlbed property Iha Sttte of Cellfemia, Iha wllara the ,_. property It ... , ............ uon, lnC., I ~ cor· fomla t2MO 8emerdlno. Le. IM'I l tnfttlltto"_,,.~ i. :,:..:c'C:::.,r-:;on•~contr1ct wlll oon111n~2JUJll .,,, • 11 ...... • 1 @0'atl0n. 12100 Garden ~JodYOwene:.5: ... 111•1 rr1 old . Auu1u ~ of IN ~ Of an In· Dated Ftbruary 20, ttH P'cMllOnt p«mmlnQ tht ......... .., OfOve .,.,., ... H Gal'dan VIM• leye, Hawpott • --... R15 00() In ~ wantoryandoppuiJoamontof TAC 1'12 encl ecjvtnett at Iha tJma Of IUOCUIM bld d•r t o ........ ,., ...... ,. UllNMe, ......... c ... GrOYe CMltoma t2t4i Callfomla t2teO ...... Aalllno pnoa .,.. 000 . ...... _... (}!( of Iha pMf.. , IUllDI '1. NANCI Al Iha lnlttal publteatton of t"'-autMMltute MQUf"'8a .'°' flfi'/ lan1i u , •MM.._. ..... a ......, A•• .,., I TNt ~ la oon· Thia bvelneM 11 con-a.. '-· city llgtlt9 & ' "°"8 of' eooounta l'Nfttloned OM"Ot'ATIOw; M eatd Notice of Sela la 12.SH 21. ~ WlthMlcl i,y the Dt&o H••Ul•llH, Ylrtl•la ......... ,_. ~ e.y: a 00t1*MIOI• M*S W, llUIOand Md.... ,llllNon lalandl ~ 1n~1100anc112ouoor ,....., Ir T.D. ""*' °"*' FetinMy 22• 1• T"ICT 10 afttur• per· Ar•:•llHHtlH ~,.. ,......,.......,c.-.11moaan,Cll*mlln C""10WIN ''*'""""'°"""*""' Traditional the C8lltOrM PtoMte Code. :O.,AN'. .."''· •r. 9!" ...... 0 ... ~ tormance IMdar fl'la oon. "'I •• I. • --·ti (JM) Thia 11.....,. ... flfad Tiiie ttat~ ... tllld 'f9mlV ""-YOM own .... Ref.-., MlerMr M ._......_, Aaallo IJAalltli1toti tract ·~--,......... lwtmt'-CountyQ!nOf()r. WIWl\MCountyOWtlofOr• IMdtTOUCMtwdlyC.. ft.ealty , ...... :,.,.,. _. ........,, '91 ..... ..=.:~=.::: .... , .... .._Ir f.. t::La-:..~: Dlllet"9iM) .. ~ .. County Oft F*"8tY .. County Oft FtJbn*Y 119ve~-=lJ°"'Y 8SJ.'7S'70 .~ 11,, C_.. t I t., Or-.., CA -.,. ~ , ...... -... .., Ce.!!l• • .,.... --~ ....._, ....,....", 14, 1N6 11, 1tl5 ~ c.l Ml 711f l ~CM-1(714)-..cNt ~·-'ls11M•ntMd11UOO'*'t .. \ . ,_1 ,_. ~ Or.nee COM ,ublllfled OrMgt OoM1 ... A......, =r' Publllfted Or .. Coeat Pu °'::T. Coaot ~ Orente COMC I Pu..., Onlnga Coeat .......... Ormnta 0.. I HOUiii rn. 19)oo. THE REAL F';l /\TM.RS ~ \ Qljly,..,. '*'*" 21. 21, 1y P11o1 Ftt>tuerr 21. =Pu~1ot M c.11 1io;' °"" "'°' ,.,,.,, 21. DalY1 "°'Merell • 1i. 20. ""°' '*'*" 11. Oallv P'llCIC F*'*Y 20, 11. ~ ,_ 11*'-Y 20. n. "'°C:°"· o.. Mlrd\ .. INS .-cfl t. t3. 1115 It Ill' • • Mardi •• IMS 1td w .,... a, 11. 20. ,.. Mltdl .. 13, ,. ...... .. 1S. ,... ~ 411.-.T \ ~, w.et1 t w-121 .._& w .. "1= __ w-toe • w.- , -• I i ' FOlN>ADS ARE FREE Cal: IPPNTmn knock• often whef1 you uM reaiutt-gettlng Dally Pilot Claaaltled Ada to reecn the Orange Coat mart! .. Phone M2-5e78 r HoR OSCOPE Income Tax 1--, Preparation AGES 11-14 EARN ~ TO $75.00 PER WEEK Wt now h1tt 15 09tftl111$ 101 ,ounc u1~ buwers to seturt readefs for The Orance Cout Dally Piiot Our crews sllrt at 3 30 p m and WOik until 8 30 p 111 wedct.ys On Slturday. we wor\ a few rnoie hours You wlA earn many t11ps and praes, alo111 with earn1na rour own mo11ey theft 1s no dehe11nc 01 collechon involved If you art interested, Please caK Mt h rt (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC ROH 1 Rote 5 Lassoed 10 UnO.reoolced 14 "I cennot tell 15 Re1+n 16 .. EHeys Of -• 17 Calm 20 Allan lete 21 Gaunt 22 Atlltctlons · 23 Fungus 24 Brings up the rear 25 Saltlike 28 lollher 32 ·· hearts that belt -- 33 Hoeroed 34 Wing 35 Benet! toot 38 Chest n0tses 37 FIOll 38 P1nda11c work 39 Free-tor-an 40 Fencing move 4 1 Reprieves 43 Dyed 44 Partk:le 45 Shor1age 441 Hard worker 49 Locus 50 l11ti.1:lev1I S3 Consider ii notion 56 Sugar apples 57 Sea btrd 58 Torto1sehke 59 Ma1011ty 60 Raiment 61 Axed DOWN I NATO for one 2 lily 3 Hubbub 4 01st11nt pref 5 Revendi11on 6 Swedish 11lend 7 Orymusure 8 OstrtCh s ktn 9 Commends 10 De<eltCI 11 Spanish duke 12 Caned1an rebel leader 13 Com units 18 UoelOOfted 19 Coaxed 23 Melli source 24 Embankment 25 Rellsh 26 Stage speech 27 Comes second 28 Vales 29 Needle 30 Fune1al talk Jt Shed hght 33 Witch cny 36 Snapped 1>ac11 37 Baseb11ll hit 39 Make a beveled JOlnt 40 Flaa cloth 42 Whitest ,.3 Mongolians ,.5 Grape drinks 46 Five or nine 47 Aware or 48 Residents sull "9 Kind 0111ne 50 Fuhle 5 t Cat call 52 Chess piece 54 Arte 55 Sort ol sulf 10 11 12 1J 16 , .. , ... Ill Test shooting. Lenny'• Salon & Photography Studio, 67S-0823 STAIT .. I . TllllFU PIT APPT. SETTllS SOIUI Plll1'US DIMES --A·-- Set appointments on positions open for exp. "'"'o-..~·'' phones In Santa An• ol· printers. Salwy baed on flee. No exper. nee. Com-experience pany trains. Salary. no w.11 selling. SS-7. plhr. eves. positions open for tr•lneee Ideal for Hlg'1 School Stu· to become thick lllm d e n t s · R e b e c c • • screen printers, st1.rtlng 662·58A4 w•g• $4.50 p/hr. 979-8373 P/TlllmWHI tmmed. openings In S1nt1 TEACHER ANO Ana oHlce fOf phone PRE-SCHOOL AIDES wrvey. No ex.per nee, EJtpe<. a.12. 2:30-6pn1, pvt comp•ny trl•M., 5·9 JC'IOO'. H.B. 536-1441 Mon-Fri, 9· 1 Sat Salary, --------- no Hlllng. KathlHn, TIAml 862-sa.41 Ar• you aomebody •••• man SID""' , pect at. creet1v •. -1 , enttwllutlc7 P,...achoot, Muat be NoenMd end ag. South Cou1 Pl~ .,.., grMelve to handle list· Compe11tlve Nlery. Com- ings, eec:rOM, + errand• P•nv benefits. &4()..4150 6 d~• a weet<. Salary. 1-------- C•ll Patrick Tenore -------• 831-12641 TILllllllTm The 0..M99 COMt Deity Piiot ta loc*lng for • fuM time teeem.rketlng per. aon.· Candtd•t• mutt 1UL man uus po.-• ~ " lie. R. E. Agenta. '50,obo. hetd wotttlng •ttltude, plu• p/yr. No tr1vel. ·~ helpful. Celt I en ~_c>ro.~l.!•.,,.d .... ~8:4:....2~~'· 27Q or • Co• OeMy ~ 111 .. 1 .. /TRllt Box 1580, Cott• MeM, For orowtno AMI •ht•tt C• 12828 At1n: u .. ~t Co. Tr• Smfth Ing tolnc!Uc»...ietant to i-------• otc me~. Seletyl 1000 1-------- LINE WANT A.OS IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIEI Sell your item• for $50 or ,.., In our l•mous DIMES-A-LIN~S pub· ll•h«J each Sarurday In ,,. 0.lly Piiot. . • DIMES-A-LINE ad• mutt be pr•pald '° m•ll or bring tn.m Into tn. Dally Piiot off~. e. tur• to lncluO. your phon. numb# or ad- dr.,. In your Ml. h•~ a prlOe on Heh Item & no abbrevt.tlOM S<xry, no eommerclel -11, get• ,.,_I Pf"'1u<»1 plantt or enlmaJ• -~-::'~~, ........ __ DEADLINE: 3 p.m. n.un 11.,. to 11200 + compeny ben-N..o • painter? Need a --+-+--+-~ eflt9. Xlnl potentitl for hOUMkMJ*? ~ • ~1. Send r• b•bytltter? NHd • eume to· Bo• 11 1, Clo btNk? Ftu tl\Ott need• 08lly Plklt PO ao. 1MO, through clHalllld. c .... ....-.Oflloe Coet• MeM CA 12121 2·5e11 -.... .., ...... C....ll11a.Ca.- .. 141-4112 i I • • • .. 714 -833-1300 4dr. 1151.N /mo- S&Sl.42 dwn-Tetrf'M/ ... Coftvn'I Clld End l• AU.-llftll LUii 860f22M3N 714/432-1511 '85 ACCOAD 4 Dr, 5 Spd, A/C, FM/C-. low ml. I 10,000 Iv ""II 71&-8443 llFPI .._.new I UMd Hon. dH. No down re• qulred.845-5287 B•y Street~. • PORSCHE AUDI • CHEVROLET HiehfttQuall111 S.lft6 S.rvk• I .. iiliA .. --...... 1111110••• .. MUM llw. MIW, W Wf ... Jih f'Wl'I. l ey ltr .. t 1Mlt0f1f, ................. ftllO. ....., OIO. 1IO-fo. .............................................................. _______ ...... __ .:.. ......... --............. ...-.-. ................................ .-.. ........... ..-.--------------.-..~~~~~---~_..:..._-=..:-~-~--~--~~·~ j Bill YATES . VW-PORSCHE 8 37 · 48 0 0 4 9 J · 4 ~ I I NABERS CADILLAC LARGEST SELECTION ol l•t• model, 'tow m14-Qe -Cedlllec8 In Orenge • Gouftty1 s.. U9 todeyl ••0-1110 2900 Herbor ~. COSTA MESA 1 ( l .. ·'Simplifying me~l preparation Correct appliance, cooking bags save ttqie in the kitchen In the kitchen of the '80s, you're as apno find a man or teen-ager doing the cooking as a woman. With more women working outside the home, more meal preparation is. being done by other family members. · · So, it's gOod to. know that meals ca'n bC made quicker and easier than ever. The recipes on this page illustrate two work-simplification strategies for the contemporary kitchen. The first is selecting the appliance that will produce the best results with optimum cooking efficiency for a panicular dish. Here, the microwave oven is the best choice, however, conventional directions are included for those who do not own the appliance. . . The. other time-savi~g strategy is using heat- res1stant nylon oven cooking bags that work well in microwave as well as conventional ovens. Cooking bags simplify preparation and foods cook faster in them becuase moist heat is trapped inside. This method also tenderizes the meat and blends flavors deliciously. · To complete the meal, add a salad or vegetables and rolls to one of the entrees and top it off with the Maple Baked Apples for dessert. BARBECUE ROAST BEEF l tablespoon noar l lar1e tile (U x %0-lacll) oven cooklD1 bag 1 c•pcatsap "'et1p water 14 cep packed brown sa1ar 4 teas DI Worcesttnklre saace 1 tea1pooa paprib ~wder "' t.ea1poo111arUc ult "' tea1poo11 oaiH ta.It 14 teaspooa tiot pepper uace S to 3"' poad1 beef &op or bottom rood roast 8 to 11 ICaiser or b,. rolls. Shake flour in oven cookinJ bag; place bag in 12 x 8 x 2-inch microwave-safe baking dash. Combine catsup, water, sugar, Worcestershire sauce, and seaso~ings an bag; squeeze baggently to blend. Trim roast and place in ba&; close with nylon tie. Tum meat in bag to coat with sauce. Marinate in refrigerator 3 to 4hoursorovemight, turning meat once. · When ready to cook, make6 half-inch slits in top of baJ. Micro-cook on high power S minutes; rotate dish. Micro-cook to medium (SO percent) power 35 to40 minutesl rotating dish 2 to 3 times. LCt stand S minutes. Slice ano serve on hllr<frolls with sauce spooned over-top. To ptcpare ahead, micro-cook roast, cool, slice and refrigerate in sauce. To reheat. place in oven cook.ing bag and micro-cook on high power S minutes or until heated throu&h. Makes 6 to 8 servings. CoaveatlouJ Metltod: Shake flour in oven cooking bag; place bag in 13 x 9 x 2-inch baking pan. Follow (Pleue eee SDIPLIJl'Y /C4) ,_ A bed of lont I~ rice complementa .almon In tlala tuty Kedleree. Ofegon chef's Kedgeree: Delicate salmon at its best Knead a change of pace? Start rolling in dough with tasty homemade bread You've had sesame on buns, poppy seeds on rolls and caraway seeds on rye bread, why not have them all in one delicious loaf? The bread pictured here is a fine tasting sour rye. How sour it is depends on how long you let the yeast-flour mixture sit, from one to three days. Caraway seeds are baked in the bread as well as on top along with the poppy and sesame. For authentic flavor, beer is the liquid used. There's also a recipe for Three Seed Whole Wheat Bread. In this the sesame, poppy and carraway are all mixed right into the dou&h for a seasoning trio plus onion. fn both recipes we've suggested using an electric mixer to make it easie r, but the breads can also be mixed by hand. Sesame has become more and more popular in this country - you've always seen the seeds on hambu'Jer rolls.. now they're used in coattngs for chicken or fish . sprinkled over oriental dishes, and in candies. Poppy seeds are used in bread. cakes and cookies. Caraway. in cheese spreads. sauerkraut. and with noodles and pork dishes. Sesame and poppy seeds should be kept in the rcfngerator. caraway maybe stored at room temperature. THREE SEED SOUR R)'E BREAD t pacb1es active '411ry yeast, 4111viftd Thia dellclou llCMJr rye breacUa conred wltb poppy. ••·•e l ~ et1ps warm water (105-115 and caraway .eed.a for utra lntere9t and cnancb.· · Ocean views, ~oodcd scttina and fabulous food ... Salishan Lodgt at Oleneden Beach is a microcosm of Oregon at its ~t. dqreet) • stand for I to 3 day (the longer the lightly. Let nse in a warm place t Ctlpt me411J•m or •t•e fr"M mixture stands the more sour it will until double an bulk, about 1 hour. prajuces some of the bctt lamb, "We ctioose the California-rye flo•r ... __ be). Punch down dough. Tum out onto veal and poultry in the country," grown Iona arain rice because it's 1 C1lp • .._ IJ'ln:r UU·ll5 On the day of baking add a lightl)' floured board; cut into 6 The cedar-sided lodaes blend unobtrusively into the wooded hillside. Pinc, hemlock, huckleber- ry and kinnik.innick, a local shrub. -111..,....,.· ..,.n11tic yet eleaant leftd- 9Capina. i\nd 1n ·the kitchens ex· ecutive chef WiUiam Juna prepares aourmet meals for his auests. "We specialize in creatina re· sjonal cuisine," says Juna. "We stan .-.th the best local products and prepare them simply and honestly." Jun1 has plenty of products from which to choo "Thi area says Jung. "Our local rabbit is whiter and nuffier than other long ffl"ffl) remaining }ca t and the beer: mi' equal parts. Roll each piece into an wonderful, too, tasty, tender and grains. which creates a brunch dish AbMt I' C1l,e an.,.rpose floer well. tar in 3 cups of the all-8-inch rope. versatile as veal. And don't forget that's satisfying but not too h~vy." (aslhe411), 411ivtde411 • purpose flour. ugar, 2 table peon Cover and \ct rise until dou&h has about Oregon apples and pears." says Jung. "Our guest really eajoy 1~ Ctl' ••1•r of the caraway seed. salt and one of rela ed and risen h.ittly. about 10 With the ocean at bis doorstep, it." 4 &&Mesf••• c:raway sm, the eggs. hghtl} beaten. Beat at minute hapc into six 16-inch fresh seafood is always on Jung's Try Juna1 Kedgeree and other dlv14e411 moderate speed unul smooth R ruch rnl'V'c with · · fMftV: Qi•••ll ~1.'Mtl •ts"'~ .~ ... ~~:..!a.~;~ .... --i..•1a,n• ult -~--mout l rnm~ r-_:.... ........... -« ..... ...:.•e=:-=: t: · ~ ~-=-· ----~ rqularly, as arc Dunacness crab with these recipes below. lea•. uptly beatn, 4lllvkted dd honening; beat at high ~prinklc 2 ropes on all sides w1th from Newport -the Dungencss S ·•••tesp•oH ve1eta•te speed for 2 minute . With a remaining 2 table poons ca.rawa)' capital of the world -red snapper, 9'EOOEREE ;~:•• He4ll wooden spoon 't1r tn eno ugh flour seed. baby shrimp and tiny scallops. S Ctlpt c9"e4 C.Uforala ._11'11•• tesame to makeuoft dou&h (about )cup ). pnnklc another l ropes on all Kcd&crcc, made with fresh arm rift ('"'9rff •ttMftlc t a.We.,u• ,..,, tee4 Turn dough out onto a Oourtd ides 'Wlth se me seed and remain· Ch1nook salmon, as one of 'the .. ~ 41ttect1Mt) In the larac bowl of an elcctnc board. Knead 1n rcmamm flour 1ng 2 rope with poppy seed. popular seafood entrcs. Juf\I aar· t ..... ., .... veptaWe .at mixer dissolve 1 packqt of the until mooth dough 1 formed. 8ra1d l r pc (~h contaJn•nt a 'ni hes it with hard~kcd qa and • n,.,.... ~n. aHcff yea tan warm wat~r. dd l')'t Oour: about 5 mmut different sccd)-10Scther for c.ch serves it over a bed of Cahfomia • "f_ Hlery. ftMIJ ~1411 tir until well milled. Cover bowl PlaC(' in a area~ bowl, tu mint loaf. Place each loaf on a arcascd ~I Grain nee. • (Pl•ue ... 9ALllCM/CS) tightl Wlth clear pla tic wrap. Ltt douth to grca complctcl} Cover (Pleue ... mAD/C7) I • · ... ' . .- t a .... Skating champ Cu.ts fiiJe figur:e in. -~ltche~, to.o Parmttu clleete Like so many women today. Pcaay Flemina chooses to manaac the household and maintain her career simultaneously. Her ~r- Every March the public gets its ta t of-informalioJLa~~ lion and healthful food selection. It is National Nutrition Month. spon- sored by ttie American Dietetic A~iation. In 1984, however, ' Americans were reminded all year- long with newsbreaking findings, about the links between diet and , disease. sonal ingredient for success, she say5, arc a special blend of quality f•mily time. professional dedi- cation and the $tmple things in life. heart disease. The panel asserted that elmtcd..bloocl chokstemlis.-.a direct cause of bean disease. and changes in fat intake should be the first step in bringi ng these levels down. Other diet news concerned the 60 million Americans wi th high blood pressure. After analyzing a national survey for relationships between eating habits and incidence of high blood pressure, scientists at the Oregon Health Sciences Uni versity concluded that one key dietary cause of elevated blood pressure is an inadequate intake of calcium and potassium, and not an ex- cessive sodium intake. "My first priority is family ,'' says Pegay. "So I'm always looking for ways to makt cooking and other bouschold tasks simple, especially since I travel one week out of four professionally." he recently traveled to Los Angeles for the taping of the television special, "The Magic of Da vid Copperfield Vll," in which she guest stars. The show airs at 8 p.m. Friday on Channel 2. Fleming's career has remained active ever since she won the Olympic Gold Medal in 1968 compulsory figure and free skating. Today she i1 one of the most respected and well-recognized sports representatives in the world. In addition to starring in a number of her own television specials. including one ("Peggy Fleming at Sun Valley") that won two Emmy Awards, she has served as a principal commentator for the most prestigious television skat ing events and competitions in recent years. During the 1984 Winter Olym- pics in Sarajevo. she shared com- mentating duties with spons an- nouncer Dick Button. Fleming also supports and helps raise funds for national health organizations such lls the Kidney Foundation, the March of Dimes. the Diabetes Association and the American Cancer Society. by much of the medical profession, mainlydlecausc..th~)l-8"~ short-term diet histories. Many investigations have shown that a significant decrease of salt in the diet lowers high blood pressure in some people. ihereforc. 1he medi- cal and science communities advise that those people who are currently shaking the salt habit, stick to it. According to a rcc~nt Finnish study, blood pressure can af so be lowered by decreasing the con- sumption of saturated and fl)o no- unsaturated fats, whil e increasing the intake of polyu nsa turated fats. Fleming admit that handling all of these activitie requires a certain amount of dedi- cation. "But I love my career," she says. "and hkc most athlete , I was fortunate to learn about pro-Flemlog fessional dedication at a very early age." he was onl y in her early teens when her skating coaches re- cognized her natural ability on ice. At that time, she began training five to six hours a day, six days a week. eleven months a year. to reach the gold. Her schedule now seems equall y demanding. but to help manage all of this activity, Fleming says she looks to the homefront for relaxa- tion. She~ives in the San Francisco area with her husband, Dr. Greg Jenkins. a dermatologist. and their 8-year-old son. Andrew. "We enjoy our privacy, w in- stead of hiring outside help, I take care of all the household responsibilities myself.'' explains Fleming. When it come 10 cooking. Flem- ing finds sharing recipes with friendsand family a real time-sa ver. "Like most worki ng mothers. I don't have hours to spend in the kitchen. Exchanging recipes keeps my menus va ried with new dishes that arc tried and true.'' She shares hd favorite ··easy to prepare ret a little out of the ordinary' dishc here, tested by the Krafi Kitchen . . Her Mushroom Appetizers. a cream cheese. garlic and egg yolk spread topped with mushr~m slices can be easily prepared JUSt before the gue ts drri vc and quickly broiled on toa tcd bread squares to serve as a warm snack. Her recipe for Sherried Parmesan Chicken has a sauce of sour cream. Parmesan cheese and mushroom soup poured over chicken br~asts on rice. It is excellent for either casual dinner parties or a special meal with the family. "Whether it's whipping up a terrifie meal for fam ily and fri ends. traveling out-of-town or being at home for your childcen," s~ys Fleming, "the demands a working mother faces take a lot of energy. organization and determination. "But when everything balances out j ust right," she claims. "there's no doubt about it, it's worth every ounce of effort." SH E RRIED PARMESAN CHICKEN 3 chicken breasts, split, boned, skloned 1 lO o/.t-ounce can golden mush· room soup I 4-ounce can mushrooms, drained 1,':J • cup (l 14l ounces) grated I tablespooa 1llerry Paprika Hot cooked rice v. cup sour cream Placo chicken in 12 x 8-inch baking dish. Top with combined soup. mushrooms, chc~ and sher- ry. Sprinkle with paprika .. Bake at 350 degrees; 1 hour or until tender. Remove chicken to rice-covered serving plat.ter1 keep wa rm. Stir so ur crea01 into sauce; serve over chicken and rice. 4 to 6 servings. MUSHROOM APPETIZERS U white bread 11lcea, cra1t1 trimmed 1 S-ounce package cream cheese, softened % egg yolks - t garlic cloves, minced Yt teaspoon 1alt 3 cups mushroom slices 2 tablespoon• margarine Cut bread slices into triangles; place on cookie sheet. Broil on one side until lightly browned; turn. Spread with combined cream cheese. yolks. garlic and salt; con- tinue broiling until edges are lightly browned. Top with mushrooms sauteed in margarine. Serve warm. Makes 4 dozen. Variations: Substitute 48 pa rt y rye bread slices for white bread. Decrease garlic to one clove. Staning the year. the Lipid Re- search Clinic Coronary Primary Preventi on Trial announced results of a I (}.year stud y involving 3,806 men with high blood cholesterol levels. The study was the first to show conclusively that loweri ng blood cholesterol can decrease the risk of bean disease. The in- vestigators reommended that diet be u1Cd Lo reduce elevated levels. The researchers therefore SU$· iested that people increase their mtake of calcium and potassium primarily by eating-more dairy products. This would, however, potentially in crease their sodium In thei r homes. the participants substituted skim milk for whole milk,vegetable oil and margarine for butter and other cooking fats of · t:..-.. _ animal origin; and ate less fatty forms of meat, fish and poultry. This. study w~ c<;>nsistent w_ith previous mvest1gauons repon1ng similar blood pressure lowering. In December a panel of public health and medical experts brought together by th e National Institutes of Health confirmed this link between blood cholesterol and mtake. . These findings were questioned At a news conference in the 0-;;;;;;;;;~~iiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit::::;;:;:==::;==:;;;:::;;;;:::;;:fl spring of I 984. the Am erican Heart Association declared its preference of diet ove r drugs to control high blood cholesterol. In order to help decrease the risk of heart disease in th is country, the hean association called for a shift in the American diet, from the typical high-protein. high-fa t diet to one with more complex carbohydrates and less total fat. especially saturated fat. Making news in the area of medical. techn ology was the con- tinued use of angiography as a research tool fo r measuring the ~ijii~~ii;iiii~~~~~;;:;$ii~~~~~~~~~~~~ effecti veness of lowenn~ blood chlolesterol. Coronary ang1o~raphy 2 SS Buy 11 Get 1 at 1/2 Price 1 ANYTHI NG IN THE STO RE : Fl ora ls • Foliage • Tr ees •Ceramics • . . a 2 2 involves th e special X-raying of blood vessels in order to measure ~ 2 the ex tent o~ anery narrowing. Newly reponed studies in 1984 show that lowering cholesterol with diet and drugs can delay or slow down the disease process. In line wi th the recommen- dations of the various ncws- breaking events of 1984. and in support of Nauonal Nutrition Month. "WC offer 'the following recipes. They arc moderate in cholesterol and total fat; and satu rated fat has been reduced by the use of polyun saturated fat. The recipes were developed by the Mazola Nutrition/Health Infor- mati on Service, which provides helpful information about the links between diet and heart disease. WHOLE WHEAT BISCUITS 'h cup skim milk lf.l cup corn oil l cup unsifted flour 1 cup whole wheat flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 'I• teaspoon salt Jn small bowl. sti r together milk and co rn oil. In medium bowl. stir together flours. baking powder and salt. Stirring constantl y with fork. add corn oil mi xture until well blended. With hands. fo rm dough IO tO ball. On light I) floured surface. gently knead 10 to 15 limes. Roll out or pat dough to 1h-an ch thickness. Cut with floured 2-inch cutt~r. Place on ungrcased rnokie sheet. Bake in 425 degrccovcn 12to 14minutesor until lightl} browned . Makes 12 biscuits. Each biscuit provides: 130 caloncs. 3 grams protein. 16 grams carbohydrate. 4 grams poly- unsaturated fat. I gram saturated fat . less than I mi ll igram cholesterol. 150 mill igrams so- d ium. ASPARAGUS AND TUNA SALAD '13 cup corn oil 2 tablespoons white wine vinegar . l tablespoon Dijon-style mus· ta rd 1/• teaspoon dried tarragon leaves 1fa pound asparagus or green beans, trimmed, cooked tender· crisp l can ( 7 ounces) tuna, packed in water, drained l tomato, cut in eight wedges o/:J cup sliced mushrooms Lettuce leaves Into small jar with tight fitting hd, measure corn oil. vi negar. mustard and tarragon. Cover: shake -well. Refrigerate to blend fl avors. Arrange asparagus, tuna, tomato wedge s and mushroom slices on lettuce-lined serving plat· ter. Serve with 2 tablespoons dress- :----------------. ing per serving. Makes 2 servings. .. I ...... .. • a ao-om,ee Each serving with asparagus provides: 300 calories, 31 grams protein, 9 g~ams carbohydrate, 9 grams polyunsaturated fat, 2 grams saturated fat,_ 30 milligrams cholesterol, 480 milligrams so- dium. To reduce 1odlam, replace tua with '1'i pound bonele11 1kinle11 chicken bre11t1, cooked, cat In strips (1 cup). When atparap1 b out of se11on, use fresh green beans. EGG WHITE POPOVERS % egg wbltea % cup 1tlm milk 1 tablespoon plus l teaspoon con oil ~ cap sifted floar Con oil coollblg 1pray In small bowl with fork, lightly beat egg whites. Stir in skim milk and corn oil. Place flour in small mixer bowl. With mixer at low speed. gradually beat in ca white mixture until well blended and smooth. Beat at high speed I to 2 minutes, Spray 4 (6-ounce) custard cups evenly with cooking spray. Fill each prepart:d custard cup. 1h full (about 'I> cup) with batter. Place in cold oven. Turn oven on to 375 degrees. Bake 30 minutes. Quickly cut slit in top of each popover to let steam escal>C. Bake 10 minutes longer or until golden brown. l mmed1atcl~ remove from custard c~Qs. Make ~·· _,. • Each popOver provides: I 40 calorics. S &rams protein. 17.,.ams carbohydrate, 3 aram' PolY· unsaturated fat, I aram saturated fat, less than I mitliaram chole tcrol, 4S milli.,.ams IOdium. By 11la1 utm •Uk. eon .. , aM Ollly eg Wfattff, tlMH ,.,..en an •lrtMllJ free er e'-lnterol. Te parutae 1Mt ,.,...,.. art ... , to remon frem C9ttaN npt, lt'1 aHadal •.,...,Utt n,. wtdl ... •tick ~ ... .,,., . SALMON ••• From Cl ! tablespoons carry powder 1 poand salmon, cook .. , drained, ud flaked or 1 cu (llit1'~es) ulmoa, dralaed ud flaked 3 ea1, urd cooked, 1Ucecl "' teaspoon paprika Parsley, lf desired Saute onions, celery and green peppers in oil 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in curry powder. Add vegetables to rice and blend thd..roughly. Spoon rice onto platter~ keep warm. Arrange salmon and egg over ri ce. Garnish with paprika and parsley sprigs. Serve with Mustard- Mayonnaise dressing, if desired. Makes 4 servings. RICE WITH RAISINS .AND PINE NUTS "' c11p olllon, fllael y cllopped % table1poon1 batter or margar- llae ! caps CaUf ornla long 1rain rice 4 caps water or clllcken stock ! table1poon1 lemon jalce l teaspoon ult If# lellllOOll uffro __ .,, cap rabbi• 'h cap pllae nuts Saute onion in butter or margar- ine until translucent. Add rice. Stir to coat with butter. Add chicken broth or water and bring to boil. Stir remaining ingredients; cover; reduce heat and simmer 45 to 50 minutes or until cooked. Makes 6 to 8 servings. CHILLED SEAFOOD PILAF % table1poon1 butter or margar- llae l onion, tbllaly 1Ucecl 1 1arllc clove, cn111ed ! caps water '19 cap wblte win~ 11/• caps CaWontla long grain rice l teaspoon ult •/, teaspoon pepper % cups mussels, cooked, qaar- te recl• Dre11llag YI cup vegetable oil •;, cup white wine vinegar •;, cup green onion1, 1llcecl 2 tablespooaa Dljon-1tyle mus· ta rd 1 teatpoon salt 'h teaspoon pepper 1 teaspoon reel pepper sauce 3 table1poon1 f reab dill, minced or 1 tablespoon dried dill weed Melt butter in oven:i)roof skillet; OfMge COUt DAILY PILOT IW~. Matdt,. ,.. If you're lookina for a simple to An incrediblydeliciouscauerole, make,aood tastina.economicaland it's alsO easy on the btMlieL nutritious main dish, then try thiJ hearty, savory pasta casserole. For a marvelous meat stretcheT, this inexpensive, healthful dish combines the gourmet goodness of beef. sliced zucchini. green peppers, onions. celery, tomatoes and macaroni. For a delightful variation, use fl1:vorf ul Norwegian thick flatbread layered with the vegetables and then topped with nutty tasting Jarlsberg cheese, one of Norway's finest cheeses. 40-0Z ~ ................. ,. .... Jn lkillet, brOtm ~ 1llilll spoo. lO btak imo bitl. . Add zucq.ini, pa pepper, am.. celery •• prtic and cllili powder. Cook W>til v~ ~ tender; stir occasionally. Add tomaao sauc:e. - Into l 'h quan buttemi ca..aole la~r half Norwegian thick 8aa.. bread, macaroni and sauce; rq1eaL Top with remai.Jlina ftatbrad and tomato slices. Bake at 3SO ~ for ·20 minutn. Top with c.bccte. Bake I 0 minutes toneer or until hot and bubbly. Makes 6 to 8 servinp. 25-LB saute onion and garlic 2 to 3 minutes or until translucent. Add water, wi ne, rice. salt and pepper. Cover. bring liquid to boi l. Re-1 move from heat; place covered I skilJet in preheated 350 degree 1'---------------------' oven, 15 to 20 minutes. Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce Remove from oven. stir in I mussels, cool. Refrigerate 3 to 4 ' hours or up to 8 hours. Combine Chuck Roast eEEF dressing ingredients thoroughl y. . av.o£.cur Pour over chilled mussel pilaf, toss Round Bone Roast BEEF gently. Stir in fresh dill, if desired. CHuc11 Makes 4 servings. Fam·11y Steak ~~ •2 cups crabmeat or shrimp may eot1uru be substituted or added. RumR Roast =CUl Pastry filled with goodness Pork Steak ~.CUl Lunch Meats M~~EO Pepperoni iM'r Wranglers ~rL Gfte p•zza TOTINO$ LB ~~ I ~ATION LB 51 .2.7 Egg Roi ls ~~N LB 51.99 Weaver Chicken ~~~~. UI 51.99 Pie Shel Is :Yi:ITHS LB s1.49 Bagels ~~,~EAS EA 45c Pancake Batter :Jife~~~A EA s1.19 French Toast Al)NT JEMIMA EA S2.29 Rich's Coffee Rich 1.J~Z 52.99 &-OZ s1.09 •2-0Z S2.49 2111 •N I• OZ 95c •201 nc •e-01 sgc 90Zgac ·~z @ Grapes mcrre~'"'( l8sgc Carrots t~~~y ,E .. OE" cB "'IGEA 25c Pota oes ~~.r1° .. ~SE n~ •S.SCA'l'fl"'l ..w--~ •f"' · ~ "' "E""1"176. !_roPi;;)'Mf~ OOAA FANCY NORTl-iWEST Recl~c:lous FoUaae Apples •I.I9 ... "" 7f#C BEEF PIE t tablespoons butter I medium (4 ounces) onion, fi nely cllopped (YI cap) Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials Low Liquor Prices l pound .around beef cllack I! ounces ·m11llroom1, coanely grattd in a food proce11or l te11poon la1tant beef-flavor boaUlon 1ranale1 1 tablespoon all-parpoae floar blended wltll ! tablespooas cold water 11-oace pacu 1e pte cntt mix 1 ea yolk blended wltll l y, tea1pooo•1 mUll In a 1 ().inch skillet in the hot butter gently cook onion until golden. Add beef; cook. crumbling with a fork until it is pink. Stir in mushrooms. bouillon granules and flour mixture. Cook over moderate heat. stirrina constantly. until thickened. Cool. .. ..c~:----~~iae1 liH M l• tom of an 8-inch pie plate with half of it: roll out remainina half to cover pie. Fill pie shell w1th beef mixture: cover with top pastry. Flute edaes and cut 6 one-inch slits on top tQ. vent. Brush with cg yolk miX"ture. Bake in a preheated 42'~ oven until brown -40 to 4' minutes. Cool on wire rack for 10 min~tes before ~rvlna. Makes 6 servinp. PETER PAN CRE>MY OR CRUNCHY Peanut Grape Jam jlt~KERS Fruit Qxktail ~"' Libb~ Corn ~~~t~ Nutri-Grain nr' Tortilla Strips ~ Syrup & Marmalade =:RS Melitta Coffee ~ Coffee Bi«b'trw· • , •• ,,.oi 4SC llOZ 11.44 Purex ~Hl T•1de ~~:lf/NT·llEGULAA OIHINSC!NTlO Ivory Bar Soap Bath Tissue ~~~~Oii Towels ~'°" SandwicbBags =R Zee Napkins SPICt fONf L-uvs-E>1a~rs art .. ()ft Orange Juice KMJOS(N Dish Liquid ,Al~IW • ... 1• -~ ,.,.. ' .. ill!- II u u .,... , Gallo Wine .VAR~l6 Windsor Whiskey r •Norl•AN Amaretto ~Jgll4() · Dewars Scotch ~~,~ Valido Cafito l lrff P sa.99 I 7HtTEP sg.99 I ~LIT(~ sg_gg 1~'4t 59.59 Ba~ •••• 611~-0Z N • ... • ADVERTISED ITEM GUARANTEE W£ MSf.M't ™E AIOHT TO l..IMIT OA AEFUSE SALES TO OOMMEACIAL DEALERS OA WHOUSALEAS. :SIMPLIFY ..• Pree Cl di~ions above except pre-heat oven lO 325 degrees. Bake I 'h ho'irs or until tender. ... MAR INATED SP AN I S H I CIDCKEN l &ablespooos flour 1 large size (14 x ZO-inch) oven eeotl.Dg bag 1 cu (8 ounces) tomato saQce "' cap rote wine 'I• cap vegetable oil ~ cap finely chopped onion ~ cap finely chopped green pepper 1 teaspoon instant chicken bo.Jllon 1ranale1 "' teaspoon thyme leaves 14 tea1poon garlic powder '4 teaspoon cayeaoe pepper '4 teaspoon black pepper a clllcken tbJgbs Salt, pepper, paprika Shake flour in oven cooking bag; place bag in 12 x 8 x 2-inch microwave-safe baking dish. Roll down top of bag. A4d tomato sauce. wine. oil. onion. green pepper, bouillon, thyme, ga rlic: cayenne and black pepper: squeeze bag gentl y to blend. Rinse and pat chicken dry: season to taste with salt, pepper and paprika. Place in bag; close with nylon tie. Tum chicken in bag to coat with tomato mixture. Marinate in refrigerator 3 to 4 hours or overn ight. turning several times. When ready to cook. place chicken in the bag in 1l single layer with meatiest parts towards edge. Make 6 half-inch slits in top of bag. Micro-cook on high power 24 to 27 minutes until chicken tests done. rotating dis h twice. Makes 4 ser- vings.- Conventional Method: Shake flour in oven cooking bag; place bag in 12 x 9 x 2-inch baking pan. Follow directions above except preheat oven to 350 degrees. Bake I hour or until tender. SAVORY RICE l tablespoon flour l large size (1 4 x 20-inch) oven cooking bag 1 can (1 6 ounces) whole tomatoes l can (103• ounces) chicken broth 1 cup uncooked rice ~ cup finely chopped onion l medium green pepper, coarse· I ly chopped "' teaspoon oregano leaves a;, leaspoon garlic powder Yt teaspoon pepper 1 package (10 ounces) frozen green peas Shake flour in oven cooking bag: place bag in 2112-quart m1 crowave- safe bowl. Roll down top of bag. Add remaining ingredients except peas; squeeze bag gently to blend and break up tomatoes. Close bag with nylon tie; make 6 half-inch slits in neck ofbagbelow tie. Micro- cook on high power 24 to 27 minutes or until almost done. Carefully open bag; sttr in peas and close bag. Micro-cook on high I power an additional S minutes. Let stand 10 minutes. Makes 4 ser- vi np . Conventional Method: Omit flo ur and oven cooking bag. Place tomatoes and chi cken broth 1n 3- quart saucepan. stirring to break up to matoes. Bring to a boil over high heat. Stir in remaining ingredients. except peas; cover tightl y and simmer 20 minutes. Stir in peas: cover and simmer an add1t1onal 5 minute s. Tum off burner and let stand. covered. 5 minutes. CLASSI C SAUSAGE AN D SAUERKRAUT l tableapooa Oour 1 lar1e size (1 4 x 20-lncb) oven cooking bag "' cup water I teaspoon Instant chicken boellloa graaales l caa (17 ounces) sauerkraut· 1 c•P 1llredded cabbage 1 cap 1llred4led ~atn>J ... "' eep cllopped 011lon 1 bay leaf • f pepper~rn• ' "' poaad smoked u uHge, cut In !-lacll ln1t1t1 ' smoked pork cbopt cut Va ·lncb lllJct or 1 poaod fully cooked um, cal In ~-lac~ chunks bake flour in oven cooking bag; place bq in t2 x 8 x 2-inch MJcrowve·safe baldoa dish. Roll (P1 ....... 8DIPLIFT /C8) SOU $4 0 ' 0 I· . . SIDE DISH'S SENSATIONAL Planning a special dinner menu? White selecting the entree is one of your first concerns. remember to give equal consideration to the oflen-overlooked side dish. The ide dish should comple- ment and enhance the main en tree. providing contrasting yet com- patible taste. text ure and color combinat ion . The potato -America's favori te vegetable -makes a deliciously versalile side dish. At its simplest -baked whole and topped with butter or sour cream -it's a favorite with the all-American en- tree. gnlled steak. A hamburger wi thout fries or fried chicken without mashed potatoes. j ust wouldn't be com· plete. The potato al o enhances a variety of specialties when com- bi ned with 1 other vegetables in deliciousand nutritious side dishes. Potatoes Rio Grande. a sen- sational new south-of-the-border side 'dish. combines stewed tomatoes, green chilies, bell pepper. potatoes and Cheddar cheese in a zesty and colorful casserole. It's a perfect accompaniment to grilled fla nk steak or meat loaf. Potatoes Rio Grande arc prepared in less than 20 minutes, a boon for today's busy homemaker. And, the calorie-<:onscious will appreciate that each heany .ser"'ng contain a mere 222 calones. POTATOES RIO GRANDE l 'h pound• ( • medium) potatoe1, cut Joto ~-lacb cubes t te11pooa1 ve1etable oil l medJum 1reen or red bell pepper, 1eeded aad cut Into strips 1 can ( 4 ounces) diced green cblllea 1 large clove garlic, pressed l caa (H ounces) stewed · tomatoes •;, teaspoon pepper Salt, to taste "' cap tbredded Clleddar cheese \ • 6-0UNCE i tablH pOODI chopped pa.rsk )' Cook ix>tatoc • co' er~. in ~ lll ' inches bo1lin~ \Valer in 3-quJrt saucepan until not qulll." lt'Olkr about 12 minute\. Mc O\\htle. h1:. t oil in large "-illc1. Add srl't's pepper: toss ov~r high heat • minutes. Add chilies and garlt<: cook and stir 2 minutes. Stir in tomatoes and pepper. Cook to reduce liquid by half. Drain potatoes and add to sli:.1llet. Gently cook a"'1 stir to heat through. tir in sa.ll. Spnn"-le cheese over potato mixture: co,tr to ;nclt cheese. J?rtnkle "ith parsley. Makes ~ servings ' VIVA • l·ROU. •DECORATED • 66-COUNT. SMALL •...COUNT, MEDIUM • 32-COUNT. LARGE 99 • llEGlJlNt AHO CUSTARD • ALL Vi\RlttlES PAPER TOWELS 12-PACK 12·0Z. CANS 7-UP • •1 C.\!lMI o•our LUVS DIAPERS 750-ML. 90l'Tl£ • SM/£ 1.00 • UMn 3 E.&J BRANDY .... EA. YO PLAIT YOGURT 22-0Z. BOTilE SUN LIGHT--__, LIQUID DETERGENT C LASSIC LITE DINNERS · • INCWOQ H COfT lA8fL 6.35 OZ. TO 8 0 1 RICE- A-RONI '\AVINGS RELATE TO PREVIOUS W(EK'~ ~l-PHA BETA PRICE OR LAST DATE IOR TO INI tlAL PRJCf. Rf OUC tlON EXCLUSIVE Of AOV£.RTIS£0 OR PftOMOtlONAl ITEMS Vour Cho•c• of 4 Patterns THIS WEEK'S FEA Tl.IRE ITEM ... CAKE PLAft a!1'!! With E8Ch S3 00 PurehaM DOUBLE SAVlllGS-,COUP-ONS -------Clilir-----, -------cllliir--1 "'OfCllAklONl•A1 ' C~•'lt.oocllll•H \ ,~ MO<~lONl'Hf ' ' (QI. ---, Al.MMfA • ~~.~~~:.::~ Al~tm ~~-,. • J \ I . 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FOLGERS COFFEE ii COUNT HEFTY TRASH BAGS 59~ ALL GREEN GARDEN FRESH ASPARAGUS Cuisine qf Spani sh seacoa reflectedin saucy fish dish Herc's a handsome way to serve fi sh that's sample enough fQr ram1ly dinners yet sJ>'(:ial enough for guests. Inspired by the crcatjve cooks of the Spanish seacoast, this recipe features a chunky textured tomato sauce studded with Cali- fornia ripe olive wedges and flavored · with Mediterranean seasonings. comes out tender and moist in 20 poshin1liqUid int01hc~1'11 minutes. needs about five mtz 1 I • While the fish bakes. make the dational cookina to simmer..,.. .sauce by combining bread crumbl, into a rich. saucy c:oeai11e9CJ. Te npc olive wedgei. parsley, chopped ·serve, pour ti.e aauce over dae ... tomatoes (either fresh or canned) and pmilh witb penley ...... and lemon juice with sautced prlic ~and ex tra ripe oliwe. and onion. One-fourth cup of It s no surpriee ao fiAd Califafail ground a lmo nds may be ripe olives in disbes ol Mediler- substituted for half the bread-ranean oripn. Olivet uvc beea crumbs if a richer flavor 1s cultivated for over S.000 yean iD preferred. Greece, Spain and other countrid As glamorous as the dish looks and tastes, it can be made with ingredients from the freezer and pantry. White fish filets. either fresh or frozen, arc cook.ed by a no-mess. no-fai) method. Poached in the oven in a covered casserole. the fish Cook the sauce ingrcidcnts on the Meditcrra.DeaD sea. together over medium heat until most of the liquid evaporates. Then, when the fish comes out of the oven, stir haJf a cup of the KRAFT AMERICAN SINGLES CHEESE FO'OD GO fOU9 Al PttA MlA COU KTO. C.U D AND A (;AM( TIClll1 100.A ~ -:-.,.. .• ::;· ... .,;·,;.x: -:-: ---·· .,_,., ::... • -;~ .,. ~-.-;-.::..::-:::-% ... 5:::.;-:-~,"i ~ .:· .. ~·-=~-"":::.-.......... ._ - ~ -· ~ .... 1:"tet':r' ~~ I •• -• •• --••-•• -"\,... -·. ..... .. .. -.. --.... -·· '""• I _-.:::· : ~·= • ::: ::: ... _ -.......... " ..... .. ... .. .. --·-· . . . . . . . ........ .. ... fW ' ·.:~: .. .:::: : ::: : :: -· ... ,... •, :• .:-T ,,... •• - t.. •• -· •• -~"' ..... ooo•o-.•• ._......,. • ··~ • ...,,. c-:;, SINGLES PRIZES AVAIL.ABLE: • 1-11.-.•tu•NIZI IWIH11TAlH ~~ :-::-· ·- • 10 · •a• CASM PW.Zll • 1' · 19 NM MUSTHI LI ClnlWTllUS •SO · -ftAI FIB ~I •50·MU•-=-•tcMH llU..-S • 50 . .lfC .... ,Ull ~ A• fCI IYSTOa CA•M • 50 • 1 llUK U WH AI •CAi.a""? .-2!511. 't.m CAM PW.Zll • P\UI neousa•• • UICHT CHTIACATH A• CAIN Pltlnl! \.. ............................. ._, .... , ..... , #9!1. • .. _,..~ .... ,. • ~~ • ..... • ........ ..,. .... _._" ..... ~ ............................... "°'"' • CATALONIAN PR PILETS 1 •mall ........ ,.d ("' ewf) ! ........ ~ ....... m.cff •.1.e., ....... .... ~ c., cn9tJ Ftelldt lweM cntJDh• ~ C1lf pictM CaJifenala ripe olives, c.t 18 we41et 3 tabtes,.... ~ ••• d ..... ~ 3 &o 4 me4Jam ._.&eel, peele4 wl cMppe4 (I ftltl) er J e.,t draille4 cauM diced ..... ._. chppe4 % tablelpeoal le•• Jaice l cea1,...aa.1t l cwp water • 1 ~ poud co4, ...... ck, pen.ct or otlter wltlte ,. .. ftleU Sautc onion am\prtic in oil until onions arc tender. Stir in bread crumbs, olives. parsley. tomatoes, I tablespoon lemon juice and 'h teaspoon salt. Simmer, stirring often over medium heat about 10 to 15 minutes or until most of liquid has evaporated and sauce is thi ck. Combine re maining I table- spoon lemon juice and V1 teaspoon salt with 1 cup water and pour over fi sh in 2-quart shallow baking dish. Cover and balre in 400-dqrtt oven 20 minutes or until fish is tender and flakes when tested with a for( Transfer fis h to serving planer: kcepwann. Stir in about 'h cup broth from fish pan to tomato mb,ture. Bring to a boil and simmer for 5 minutes until it is a good saucy consistency. Pour sauce over fish. Garnjsh with parsley. lemon wedges and ad- ditional riP' olives. as you like. Makes 4 servings. •For a ri cher sauce. substitute 'I• ground almonds for half the bread crumbs. Duxelles mix has many uses If \Ou are a mushroom buff. the next ·time )OU bu)' a batch, get an e"<lra box and make a duxelles mot . This is a tast)' fi lling that has man) uses in cooki ng. Mushrooms have been a popular food for hundreds of \Cars. The" range from the button· t) pc eaten '1 nuall} C\Clusl\ cl~ in .\.merica 10 dozens of oth~r varieties served m other coun1nes. Remember. 11 1s dangerous to wander 1hrough the woods picking wild fu ng1. Some". hke a member of the .\manna fam1 I~. are deadl)' poiso n. Other mu hrooms. espec1all) among those gro" mg in Me\lco. cause hallucmat1ons. Mushroom duxdles is the crea- 11on of a 17th -centul) French chef. La Varcnnc. and 11 was named for his patron. the Marquis d'L''<elles. It wa a grea t suc~ss and most chefs have u ed the tlaYoTful mnture since then I Ou\elles 1s made from stems and broken hits of muc-.hrooms. and you can also use the caps if you wish. The pieces hould be minced to the size of di") ph t peal>. · Du"<ellcs ha' man' uses. You can fill an omelette. -;tuft a fish or meat roa t. or top 1omatoes. It 1s also good as a -;tutling for baked potatocs. or c-.autl'Cd \\1th zucchini. Here 1 hO\\ duw lks 1s made. 1 pound fresh mullroom bits t tablespoon b•tter or ma rgar- ine · ~ cup fl nel) cllopped onions or shallots '" teaspoon sa lt '~ teaspoon gro.ad black pepper 1 / 1 s teaspoon groud avtmea Rinse. pat dn and finel} chop the mushrooms. which will make abom 51 ! cups P!att in a dean cloth one quarter cup at a tune and t" ist tight I~ 10 extract as much l11.-1u1d as pos!.1blc. In a large skillet, melt butter .\dd onions. salt. black pepper and nu tmeg. Sautc until onions are trans- parent. .\dd the chopped. dntd mu hroom ule o'er high heat, umng constant!~. until all re- maining moisture from the mush-••ili.., ~~.Ibil ill take about 5 to 8 minute Cool l 1 •• CAUwt•91£11 ROllRTI TOIRlS noao CASM Wllllll IARIAU STEM M thorou&hl>. CO\.cr and refrigerate until read} to use Thi mixture wi ll keep. chilled. for "eral weeks. In 1t final form the duxellcs 1n thl\ re 1pc C'o mc to about p., cups. •' __ ...,.,.........,...__..,. ___ _ I --j J . --· "' C8 OrMQe CoMt OAK.V PILOTIW.m.ctey, Merch 6. 1915 J Check out advantages of induction .co()king ··· cooklna. was introduced in the cause bums or add heat to your hot from lhe heat or the pan. bttwecntbecooktop·s~urfaccanda temperature. If the unit aets hotter ..._,, , mid-1970$, but was too expensive k_itchen. The utensils and food in spatters don't bum on. pan ofboilina water without burn· t3hu~on m6a~?ca~f'y~1p!~ei~t ·~~t~1~! ucc 9 • • ........,_ to mike its way into many home them become hot, of course, and However. the aJass may become an.a the paper · Wh · I Oas and electric rooktops have kitchens. add heat and steam to your kitchen scratched from ovencalous clean· The 1nduc.tion cookin.g uni.t i top from cracking. en It coo s lo not chaftll!d much over the years. Now, however, this new tech· durina cooking. ing with abrasave cJeanett and made of copper wire twasted anto 460 dea.rcc~ F. it s~itc~cs on again. The only chanan have been the nology is available at more reason· The1nduction coil responds im-stained 6rdiscolored ifnot properly thick strands. In the center of the From this description. you can addJtion of temperature-sensinA able costs, and if yo u are in the mediately to control changes so cared for. coil is a combination sensor that see that one disadvantqe of induc- bumcn or units, "solid state'lf market for a new cook top. you thcrt is minimal he.at-up or cool· Magnetism is thecruciaJ factor in docs three things: . tion cooking ma y be t~.t you musl (electronic) controls and automatic might wantto investigate the induc-down time. When the pan is the operation of induction cookinf. -It senses the magneuc ma-have cookware contammg ferrous ianition o( p.s pilot lights. tion cooking units. . removed, the cookinJ unit auto-A high freq uency induction circuit terials and s~gnals the coil to sta!' metal, such as cast iron or steel that Both ps and electric burners Using magnetic force, the units matkally stops heatmg and the just below the cooktpp surface current if there is a magncuc attract a magnet, on the bottom. cook by. the conduction method. cook by creating heat in the control panel flashes to remjnd the creates a current in any pan with a attraction. Aluminum, glass or pyrooeramic That is, the burning gas or the cookware itself, and offer some cook to tunithe unit off. magnetic bottom. _ ft senses the position of the utensils won't get hot because the)' eltctriC' unit heat the pan that in benefits and features not available Also. cleaning is easier than with As that current meets resistance pan. If the pan is more than 50 are non-magnetic -they will not tum conducts heat to the food on standard electric or gas conventi onal cooktops because the in the pan. it immediately creates percent off center (or less than ~ attract a magnet. And smaU pans, inside of il cooktops. smooth glass over the induction heat. The pan itself gets hot. not the me hes across the bottom). the unit less than 4 inches across the A totally new method for top-of. For example, there is no flam e or coils has no cracks or crevices to cooktop. As evidence of this, it's will not operate. bottom, won't work ct~ther. range cooking, called induction hot· metal element to retain heat. trap spills. And because it only gets possible to place a paper towel -The sensor also reacts to HeavyweiJht stainless steel ~~..;;~~==;;:=:~=:;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;:.:..:::...:..:..:::=::....:.:.::.:..:=.::.:......:.:......::.=::::..:..~:..::.__:..:..:.:..:....:.::..:..:..:..:.::..:...::.:..:..:.....:...:...:=::..::.:...::.:...:.~...!!:..=..--!::::.::.:.:.::::......:.~~=-..:.....?::!~~:.;:.::.:._~==-_.:..::;.:......::::;:.:.::::;.:-~:........:~:__--, cookware ~ves the mo~ even SAFEWAY Isl WINNE . OF' s1 . o' 0 . ~~~~~"s'a;ds~~kin:c~~:i~~nri~~ . l-L weight stainless steel pans can ~ ,... M a ,_ M ~ r ' Mr. J. PalFKA ~:~r~~~ ~~'s!nf~rc~~~~~i~~~ rC\ A MONTH FOR LIFE1 Llteky simmeringorwhenspeedas1mport-~-1 . • of Te•e'cula :~b~~;h.~~~~;~ho~fd::r;.;~~ Notice ......... The second drawing for a grand prize of •1000 a month for life will take place next week. If you have spelled out l:.-l·F·E in our bingo game, be sure to submit not later than 6:00 p.m. Saturday, March 9, 1985 at your Safeway Store.- All submissions will also qualify for the Hawaiian vacations and future drawings of '1000 a- month for life. Safeway ~ i '"i• Boneless Beef Roast ~a::i~6u~~ai\~ Beef Culle .Steak Lean & Tender mm>Star•klst Tuna ;:~ua~~rl!0q:, MlllblelS Corn Green Giant 2 1201 99c Cans rttff {}lor.\· ~S.._I Cookw.e One ( 1 l 12 Pack Of 12·oz Cans Mandarin Lime/Lemon Lime ........ ............... Buy One · Get One FREE _J/'""'·..,.. .................... .... )_. ~· ; -..... . / ••.. ~~ ,, -.... 'v'*'' • -=. ,; Deodorant, 11/t·oz Size Look For Specially Marked Display Safeway Low Price 'I" Less Mall·ln Rebate •' I ff Your Coat FRIE Wit Rebatt . ... ~·aonel••• . · I FrjerBreasb Fresh Grade A ·~·$j2• ...... fryers lb. 6Sc .up, Like Cola Diet 7·Up 'i ck, 12-0L Cans P!c~ 3 4 D Mrs Wnght's OnUtS Baker'• Oo1tn 13-Ct 11 H Pkg 'y I • y . Auorted &-oz Sn. . Op alt OQUrt Flavora Carton ~· ..... a .... the bottom -not warped -for Odds Cha11 Efl No WBOJ even cooking. Pans with rims or 8Cll\fe 219185 bee ""'" "vti!'H ~ '°" ridges are OK.t however, a use V~lllf .... If, 1lG•w ~"t..'"H ""' the magnetic force still heats the ic.,, • ., .. ;-• · ~:"' pan bottoms evenly. ' .. 1,, .• ·• I "IQ9 ' ' '•fl\\ J, I t , ' \ J I H -... _, See Store For Oefals Caitomia Grown Perfect For Strawberry Shortcake Zutanos $Basket Pkg. •-$1 3Per2 49 Fresh Mushroow11s saig~ro~lth lb. t 1 •• .lpe Ayoc.clcii Great Guacamole 6 $I 00 Calllornia Fuerte For Seedless Grapes r~g~~st::i·e~rg: lb • 1 3• Green 0..IOllS or Red Radishes 4 Bunc .. es t I 00 Pinto BeallS M:x~~':;tJ:~~es 3 1bs. *I~ . . Yellow Onlons 0iceJ'a%~P•cy 3 ~~0 79c •lpe Tomatoes sa1ad size lb. 69c Golde~~J!~!~ington State, Extra Fancy Fresh and Crisp, Steam And Top With Cheese Sauce ·~: 39c ... 69c (l-) DOUBLE . ~J 1 COUPON {, DOUBLE • COUPON Thus. if you buy an induction cookJop. you may have to discard your old cookware and buy pans made of cast iron or steel. • • • QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED Q. I'm ln U1e market for a aew oven and woald Ute to b•y a self· cleaning model. My .b11ba.Dd ob· jects, bowever. He aay1 tffy wUJ cost more to na becHae of the electricity needed to prodace tbe bigb beat for cleallillg. How mach difference it tllere la operatl111 costs betweea tile 1elf-cleula1 aad non-1elf-clea11i11g ovea1? A. While it's true that self· cleaning ovens use more electricily when in the cleaning mode. you sa ve electricity during ru>nnal opcr· at ion because these ovens are better msu ated than standard ovens. he ex tra efficiency of the average self· cleaning oven as enough to offset the cost of six self-deaning cycles. • • • Q. Wby are contlaaoas-cleanlal oveH so mucll less expensive tllu tbe regular self-cleanlag ovea1? A. The .. regular" self-cleanina ovens are pyrolytic. That is, they remove the soil by causing the food soils to decompose at very hi_1.h temperatures (885·900 degrees F) . An additional heating com~nent must be used to provide thas high temperature. Also. these ovens must have a thennal sensing switch and an interlock system to prevent ac- cidental opening of the door while the temperature is high. more insulation. shields to protect the oyen door window against excess heat. and a special vent -exhaust system to remove the heat and fumes. · Continuous-cleani ng ovens have a special porous coating on the oven walls that partially absorbs and disperses the soil. This process takes place at normal bakina temi>c:ratures and keeps the oven t-presentably" clea n. Racks. door parts. the inner glass of the oven window,..and the glass cover for the light bulb must be cleaned by hand. This dark, rough surface will not have the same clean, smooth look of a pyrolytical~ ly cleaned oven, but may be quite acceptable to you. lncidentally, this porous surface must not be cleaned with soap, detergent, commercial oven cleaners, coarse steel pads or brushes. These products will spot1 clog and mar \he porous surface ana cause permanent damage. • • • Q. Wily is It tllat tile freezer of my fro1t-free refrigerator 1omettmn develop• a strong odor (for eu•· pie of olllons) wllen I don't Mve anytlllag in tbe freezer glvla1 off sucb a smell? . A. The source of the strong odor 1s probably a food stored in \he fresh food compartment of your refriger- ator. In a no-frost refrigerator the evaporator-the coil of tubing th al co ntains refrigerant and removes heat from the food -is usually located behind the rear wall of the freezer compartment. (In non-sctr- defrosting refrigerators, the evaporator is inside the refrigerator and gets covered with frost during operation.) Because of the remote location of the evaporator on no-frost rcfriaer- ators. a fan is needed tocirculate the air from lhe fresh food and freeier com pan men ts . Thus, air circulated by this fan picks up odors in the fresh food cornpartmcnt and carries them tC> the freezer section. Well-wrapoed frozen foods ar~ unlikely to give off odors. · SHRIMP 6 RICE. 1 poHd me•l•m sblmJ (cooked, 11telled ••d devel•ed) 3 tabletpoo.1 batter I ~,.,._, .. my I 14-0t --·-----·-· ,_ ... Al po Dog.food Auort•d Can ~;a.=:=::=-r_a.-..= I ......,. At lc1cwsv I ........... ....... !'!! ~ ... ~ ...... ~·.,. ;:;r:..:tr..:r::~--~~"';.= I ! tabletpoo111 aJl-pvpose flotr 1 c., milk •4 -..... eek~ -----~;: -.. ·--~~:" ... -, .. __ I r..:;:s:.~.:-...--...~J.=r.\":;r-t=, I I _ .. ___ .._-.. ~-.. I I I ---, =~~~J::rn ";;r.:t:::; I I ry LI id Dlal\ Soap 32 01 '2" I --:..T..:C:-.t ... ..:;.;::;-. I vo qu •1•011 s ite I I Spic & $'pan s~:rc, 2t.:: '1" a:~r-- ----T!.X-----.. 1 AMT TAX ~I .. ---------~---.. Prices Effective March 7·13, 1985 at Safeway 1nd Sarew1y FOOd Bam Stores In Southern C111fornla (EICcept: Catalina). ~ SAFEWAY ~ tea1,._ c.rry ,.wder Yi te..,... ,.pr1u ¥. .... ,.. WereestenMrl UllCe tta~1~m..-. Sau ud TabeNe ...... ta1ee Ret c..lle4 Alce • 7600 Ed~ Ave Huntington a..e11 • ?975 Harbof Blvd CO\llt f.4eM Sales In Retail Quantltlta.. ,, • tOOO 0.Y"'de Ck Nft~t Beach • 388 1 So Bi IOI Sent• AN • 838 N Coest Hwy . LllQUl'a Bff<:h • l • MOMfch Bay Plaza, LltQUN Niguel Cut each shrimp 10 hair lengthwise. Make a whi~ sauce of the butter. flour, milk and teaSOft· ings. Add shrimp 1nd ~heat. Serve over rice . .Makes 4 small tef\'inas. .....:a---~~~~--~~~--:~.-------~~~---~----~~-------------=:---=-::t:':-::-'--=::---:~~---...--------~-=;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~ .. t i 2 2 ts n ?PE ?''7222 sass ''s 7 a - Quici. dish a show stopper Excitina kitchen creations need 3 BE not rcqufre a areat investment in CIT~~~· marinatina. Xteld: 4 to 6 servinp. time. Stir·fryinaand marinatina arc t poud cooked scallops GllAPEFRUn VINAJORB'ITE two techniques the sman chef can t cup cooked •r caued areea DRESSING use to produce quick yet dram11ic . beaat ¥. eep srapetrmt J•lee meals. l cup cooked or caned yellow .,., c.p •~la. wlM vblepr In slir·fry cookery, the secret 10 bcaa1 .,., c•p veptable oU success is havina a diversitr of l caa (8 ounces) red kldaey 1 clove prUc, mt.eed ingredients. Almost •ny tasty com-beaas % tablespeoa• capen bination of foods can become a i grapefr•lt, sectioned l tabletpoa prepared Fre-cai splendid dish using this cooking % cup thinly sliced red ollioa style •••tar4 method. Grapefruit VlnalJrette Dre1t-11 /• teatp00a1 dried leaf tar-ing raaoa, cnmbled Some foods should be precooked Ya tea1pooa ult or parboiled before frying, but most . Combine all ingredients; toss 14 teaapooa pepper will only need to be cut and added hght.ly. Letstand 3 to 4 hours before Combine all ingredients; mix to help make a satisfying meal. serving. Toss several times while well. Yield: About,l V4 cups. The proper technique calls for i------------------_::___.:_ __ _.:!z=~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~ sauteing ingredients in very hot oil in a wok. The wok. the mamstay of Chinese cooking. is designed to heat quickly and evenly over the entire surface while the food is stirred constantly. Stir-frying is a healthful way to prepare food since very little oil 1s used and the-food retains its crisp texture and nutritional values. Oriental Citrus Fry, a savory selection suitable for company, lends the piquant navor of gra pefruit juice to a shrimp and vegetable medley that's cooked until just tender-crisp. Succulent grapefruit sections are added at the last minute for a contrast in taste and texture that delights the palate. Another quick and easy dinner is Three-Bean-Scallop Citrus Salad - a one dish meal that offers a mosaic of tastes. col.ors and textures. ORIENT AL CITRUS FRY % table1pooa1 vegetable oil I large clove garlic, minced • 1 ~ te11pooa1 cbopped fresh ginger root 1 poud sbrlmp, peeled and develned hedpepper,catla1tripa (I cup) •;, '"'poaad now peu - 2 caps coanely c•t bok choy If• poaad maaairooms, sliced ¥• cap grapef ralt juice •;, cap soy 1aace 2 teaspoons cornstarcb '>ii teaspoon bot pepper sauce 2 medium grapefruit sectioned ln wok or large skillet heat oil over high heat; add garlic and ginger: cook until golden. about 30· seconds. Add shrimp: stir-fry until shrimp tum pink, 2 to 3 m inutes. Remove and keep warm. Add red pepper and snow peas to wok: sti r-fry until crisp te nder. Add bok choy and mushrooms: stir-fl) I mi nute longer. ombine grapefruit JUICC. SO}' sauce. cornstarch and hot pepper sa uce: add to vegetables. Cook. stirring constantly. until mixture boils and th ickens. Return shrimp to wok. add grapefruit sections: stir just to heat. Serve on rice or Orie ntal noodles. Yield: 4 servings. BREAD ••. From Cl cookie sheet. Cover lightl). Let me in a warm place until double in bulk. about 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Bake until golden and bread sounds hollow whe n tapped with knuckles. about 40 minutes. Cool on wire racks. Yield: 2 loaves. THREE SEED WHOLE WHEAT BREAD Z cups warm water 3 tablt1poon1 lnstant minced onion 3 cups all-purpose flour Z packages active dry yeast 2 tea1poon1 salt l teaapooD caraway seed l teaspoon poppy seed 3 teaspoon• 1e1ame seed, divided 11• cap ve1etable oil 1/• cup aioaey 3 c ups wbole wlleat flour (stone groaad preferably Miik Mix warm water and minced on ion; let stand for 10 minutes to soften; set aside. Meanwhile. in the large bowl of an electric mixer combine all-purpose flour. yeast. salt, caraway. poppy and I tea- spoon of sesame seeds. Add oil, honey and reserved softened onion. Beat at high speed for 3 minutes. With a wooden spoon, stir in enough whole wheat Oour to make a stirf dough (about 2112 cups). Tum out onto a lightly floured board. · l(nead in remaining 1h cup who~e wheat flour until a smooth dough is .formed. Place in a greased bowl turning dough to grease com"letc· ly. Cover lipuly. Let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, about I hour. Punch down dough. Cut 1n halt --Shape caehpjece into an 8 x 4- inch loaf. Place each loaf in a .,eased 9 x S x J-inch loaf pan. Brush tops with milk. Sprinkle with remainina 2 teaspoons sesame seed. Cover liahtly. Let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk. about 4S minutes. Preheat oven to J7S dcarccs. Bake until breads sound hollow when tapped with knuckJe , about 40 minuta. Cool on wire rack Yield: 2 lo,vc . . ., VONS .. SOPER SAVINGS Pws·c=• ~~J:ic~ULIFLDWER IA .59 FRESH CUCUMBERS 6 ~100 Salad f....,._ It ~E ,!~ME APPLf.5 . IA .39 FRESH CARROl'S 2 IA 35 II IA ~ c.w--19) al\G • ~k~~W TANGERINES ta .39 ~~E'TTE 10MA10~ .49 ~~~oo.2NIONS LA .15 EA .99 LIQUOR ~~~pFF VODKA 899 ~~~~B~CA BEER 199 ~.~22N'S GIN 999 ~M~11o.~RICE® VODKA 659 ~p~!Wo.,~~RAU BEER 299 ~~1~~~8ol~HISKEY 969 ~~~2~'!'°w~} c£?0LER 279 ~2~~BY SCOTCH 999 CARlD ROSSI CHABLIS 299 Rt.N .,, Burgundy J uw. lloult Double Coupons wrtS CHEDMR CHEESE 199 ~ ""Id. l'....ily hdl 1"'-Slet lA 2041 IA PHILLY CREAM CHEf.5E 159 Ki.h, Soll ~ 12-0unot C..- ~~ ~D HAM 199 PILLSBURY HOT lDAF 89 P\plfl Hal.~°'..,_, I~~ e HEBREW NAT'L FRANKS 199 0<~12.0......,...... GALL.G> ITALIAN SALAME 219 °' ~ Chubl. ~ ~ ~~~ TORTILLAS .5_9 KR1\fT SINQLf.5 SLICES 219 w._.i 0-f;)od. 16-0untt Peii:~ VONS BEEF 801.00NA 109 °' ~ Sllcod. 12-0unot ~ FROZEN FOOD TREE 'TOP' FROIT 'N APPLE 89 Or 8etl')l CIWI. Gnipe. U-Ounot C.. • JERSEYMAID ICE CREAM 179 ~c-.n,7~~-1' 2~£~~aE_E~6~~~ 165 ~J98 I I-Ounce Bo.. 4 SelKted Verle1 ia HOf POCKETS BBQ BEEF 219 Ham & 0-. ~ ot S....00 Pin-. 10.0. &c. WEIGHT WATCHERS ~~ 209 Sole llolUm. s...c... 9~ Fll ol F1.n Au o ... 9~0t WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE 79 120..-c.n • YAN DE KAJllP'S 389 FISH FILLETS 240.-. Bao BAKERY 25J~~~.99 ~~l~~ROLLS 199 ~S CRESCENT DONUTS 105 ~S SANDWICH ROL~. 7 5 , ... -=--.. STEWED 10MA10ES 59 ~IUO...-C.. • ~~~RY PRESERVES• 98 FOLOERS COFFEE 19 ~ ... MIUl,_.,~L----------- ITAUAN DRESSING ~ 16-0unao Bottle PEAR HALVf.5 Del ""°"'"" 16-0unco Qin COf'FEE CREAMER llof>t. 16-0unco ,,., COCKTAIL PEANUTS "'"'*'· 12-0unor c.. -129 .73 109 159 ·:~s ~1~0 o..-.i.~~ >Outa ..... HOT COCOA MIX c--Jon. 12 °"""" P-.g. SPAQHETil & IUR MWS a.&~ 0... I~ C.. UPTON TEA BAGS a... -s..-24-Gounl a.. 137 .73 129 ~APERe65 119c.o....t lloll ~~2' LIQUID BLEACH.71 SUNLIGHT LIQUID 189 ~Ing Oft_... l2<Nnae Bottk! SUM PRJC~ TRASH BAGSJ12 20Counl ~ ~:m:59 &g 1'ITll COCD'Ofll SCOITISSUE 4-ROll MCK 199 IOOOSl>Mt1 ~ llDll .68 COAST BAR SOAP l'O< llet/\.~S.. ~!~R ~E~FTENER 159 DAIRY .49 PARKAY 59 ~-- You don't pay more. You ju$t get more. - ... BLADECOT77 CHOCK ROASl'S T~ K1..g 6ttl L8 (C-~ Cut LB 1191 . BEEF RIB ROASTS lAllGf v.> 198 1-~ ~Rll>El"<>t .... ,t.8 IJ91 L8 :4'.~c~CZ.U~W~ I9~KE~~ .79 f32N..}~ fi~!!~.~AST L8 189 ~!:f~l;1?~t,CLOD RO~ 189 ~~.~~~~p~~,~SflC~e .89 CORNED BEEF J19 BRISKETS " ~,~c..i P.-..c..il" l'WI I ~!'!~~t!,N HAM L8 109 ~~~ED BEEF ROON~ 229 ~~~~USAGE lA 198 ~£~e"'~~.s_ort.'~· ~ E• 179 BONEl.f'.58 J69 Romm STEAK ~ Klfl9 &Hf FuH C\IC Lil 1~ rip Steeb LB 1 •1 SEA FOOD FREsH SQOID .......... ll\ .98 TRUE COO FILLETS-26~ I~'-< LB SEA BASS FlLLETS · 349 P 1k ~ .. °"'_,.,. Ul ~~ ~~~ SHRIM~ 898 • I • I e Wfla&a LJU(._..., ***** ____ __...7-=--Bone Chuck Roast 119 a LS !'?~~!~ .. '!'!mp Roast ... 1.87 ~~'!!'!!/~.~~·~ .. l8 1.9, Boneless Round Steakl• 1.91 pie* Pepsi, Diet A Pepsi, · PEPSIFREE DIET PEPSI FREE ~~~~Jj' PEPSI LIGHT, MOUNTAIN DEW SllCE OR DIET SLICE 6 PACK. 12 OZ CANS 159 P"*Huhfs ~-A Tomato Sauce r*Kraft Mayon11a:,lse 320Z JAR 159 r *Grap#Jfrult Juice OCEAN SPRAY REGULAR OR PINI< 48 OZ BTL 149 S• ....... n mor• during our Netlonel Brend• ENnll T•k• adv1t1llQI' Ol f'•"" KC'y fi·•v "'• n I our 1>1g Na1101111 Br11n1• Evrl'll ~1 t • •r ,, your l11vor111'! a1 your nr•g"~ " 1 • l •, I • for lhr 1tflt11 \ .w1lh IN• •1 '' ' ***** Frying Chicken ***** Top Sirloin ,.-=257-Steak BONELESS BEEF LOIN Beef Back Ribs ... 69 rA(Jlf_N ()(H<()'llfO Ground Beef Patties 3~~G 3.99 LAC.V l Ef fH(J,l(N DOES NOT O CU O.,_. fAl Lar~e.En~.~~b R~~·~-ll 1.97 -:;...> -- f"*Folgers A Coffee pie * T ortllla A Chips UIUAA SCUDOER S REGULAR NACHO OR NACHO HALF SALT i:? OZ. SAG 129 _ pit Harvest A Day Bread EXPANDED WHI re OR WHEAT Ill OZ LOAF .39 r La Torti/la Corn Torti/las ... I r Yoplalt ~J.6Dol: Breakfast • '"U'"·; • Yogurt ~~~I.~ JVARIETIES 60l CUP ,;~~.65 • \ PICK PUFF POCKETS Norwea1an Puff Pockets are a quick and easy supper idea for Lent. Frozen p'1fT pastry dou&h and sardine from Norway arc the secret to this recipe's easr preparation. Simply thaw and rol out the pastry lquares. then layer with sardines and other kitchen staples incl udina piccalilli, onions, grated cheese. pepper sauce and mustard.seeds. Seal with the remaining pastry and sprinkle with more mustard seeds for added eye appeal. Cool each toasty-brown .. pocket" slight- ly before serving to enhance its robust flavor. Pair Norwegian Puff pockets with a tosacd arcen salad fo?-• quick _ .,, c1p 1Uced 1ree• 01loe1 and easy Lenten supper. The savory 1 &ea1pooa m11&ard 1eed1 pastry pockets arc a aood bet, too, L&q.W ~ot ,.,,er eataee (or heany af\er-school appetites or Beatem eg, for 11a1e for television snacks. Thaw puJ,T pastry according to packaae directions. Preheat oycn to NORWEGIAN PUFF POCKETS 425 degrees. Cut each sheet into 4 1 ,.eka1e (11'4 oueea) frozen squares. on li&htly floured surface peff pa1try roll out squares to about 1h inch i tableapooa1 DIJ••·•lyle mH· longer and wicter, . &ard Spread four.of the squares with 1 cap allredded Jarl1berg cllee1e mustard to wi thin 1h inch <?f ed'e~. 1 Jar (I oaacea) red pepper Layer with cheese, p1ccahllt , piccallltl• (spicy sliced pep-sardines, onions, mustard seeds pen) and a few drops of pepper sau~e. ! cut (3'4 OHcet eacll) Nor· distributing equally. Cover with way 1ard1Det la oU, dralHd remaining P.stry squares; press ;;:;~iiiniiii=Piiii;;;r:;;iWiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil edges with tines of fork to seal. Brush tops with egg; sprinkle with additional mustard_ seeds. Transfer lo baking sheets with wide spatula. Bake about .15 minutes, until golden. Cool slightly. Serve warm or at room temperature. Makes 4 servi ngs. •souled sliced pimientos or roasted red pe·ppers may be substituted for piccalilli. *F::.;,* 97 Ground Beet ANY SIZE PACKAGE. LB • SIMPLIFY ... FromC4 down top of bag. Add water and bouillon; squeeze bag gentl y to blend. Drain and rinse sauer'kraut; DOES NOT EXCEED 30'llt FAT **'*** Whole Beef 1~" Brisket 1 TO 9 LB AVERAGE LS BONELESS. TEXAS STYLE Pork Loin Roast 1.47 "'Al.OIN CU' J l8 A'iGEl\ltGf L.11 Shank Half Ham 1.09 llONE·W F~L' COO<tEO ... LB .. e~!!!R'•~~~~~!J~!l!}P~~ ... la .99 r*Frlskles Cat Food 6 VARIETIES. 8 OZ CAN ~-31 r*Tlde Laundry Detergent SCENTED~ UNSCENTED. 42 OZ. BOX 199 pit Scott cL Tissue BATHROOM WHITE OR ASSORTED 4 PACK S50 SF PKG ~---- f95 pit Oreo A Sandwich Cookies NABISCO. REGULAR OR DOU8LESTUfF,200Z PKG 199,. pit Lady Lee 6Meat Bologna 8 OZ PKG .99 ----,,.---~........_..__..~---- Treats from the Seven Seas ***** Pacific 249 f!E'!!!IL~~ppe~e drain again, . Combine sauerkraut. cabbage and carrot in bag. Add remai ning ingredients; close bag with nylon tie. Turn bag gently to coat meats with sauerkraut mixture. Make 6 half-inch slits in top of bag. Micro-cook on high power 18 to 20 minutes. r-0tati ng di sh 1h turn after half the cooking time. Pork chops are done when meat pulls ----.-if-away when cutting_ along bone. Discard bay leaf before serving. Makes 4 servings. Benton Scrod Cod LI 3.39 f"l"S>i f lU.(l • • . • • • . . • • • • F~~~~ ~~~~~~ .~~!~~ 2.39 ~!.·~~~~. ~~!. -~~~~'!.~ ... 3.59 ~~·!!1/~)l!~"b~~.st~~.l. 3.19 -auallty Produce Solld 19 Cucumbers LAROE SIZE EA • f1'!'~~ .. §.f1nach 8lH .29 .. b.23 Nave/ Oranges MEOIU"' SIZE • , • , • • . r *Cranberry Drinks OCEAN SPRAY CAANAASPSERRY, CAANAPPlE OR CRANQRAPf:, 18 OZ BT\. 179 pie Kamchatka 1 Vodka 80 PROOF. I 7H TR BTL 749 -P' Ball Park &Franks MEAT OR BEEF. 1eoz PKG f 69- Our Five Star symbol on meat. poultry, and se1fo0d means we're proud of th• quahty and valut wt offer Five Star Meats are Bonded .. our guarantee of quahty If not completely .. 111f1ed, return tht proof of purchaM for a lull refun<J ~· .• ..,," ... ,..._ ................ _ ~-....--... c-._ Conventional Metbod: Shake flour in oven cooking bag: place bag in 13 x 9 2-inch baking pan. Follow -Oirections above except preheat oven to 350 degrees. Bake 40 to 4-5 minutes or until heated through. MAPLE BAKED APPLES I tablespoon flour '.4 teaspoon ground cinnamon I rerular siie ( 10 x 16-incb) oven cooldng bag 'h cup orange juice ~ cup maple-blended sy rup 4 medium baking apples · 1.4 cup chopped nuts •;, cup butter or marga rine, divided V anllla lee cream Shake flour and cin namon in oven cooking bag; place bag in 12 x 8 x 2-inch mi crowa ve-safe baking dish. Roll down top of bag. Add orange juice; squeeze bag gentl y to blend. A4d maple-blended syrup; continue to squeeze bag gen tly until well blended. Core apples. leaving a small plug in blosso m end. Peel upper half of apples. Fill each apple with I tablespoon chopped nuts. Place I tablespoon butter on center of each apple. Place apples in bag. Spoon sauce from bag over apples. Close bag with nylon tie; make 6 half.inch slits in top. Micro-cook on high power 7 to 9 minutes or until apples are almost tender, rotating dish after half the cooking time. Let stand 10 minutes. Top with scoops p f va n- illa ice cream before serving. Makes 4 servi ngs. Conventional Method: Shake fluurand cinnamonln oven cook- ing bag; place bag in 13 x 9 x 2-inch baking pan. Follow directions above exce pt preheat oven to 350 degrees. Bake 30 to 40 minutes or until tender. (For 325 degree-oven, increase baki ng time to 35 to 40 minutes.) HOT SPICED WINE % caps water 1 cup packed brown sugar I wbole cloves 3 wbole aU1pice Peel from 1 or111e Peel from 1 lemon 1 cap or111e J1tce .,, c1p lemoa J1ice :.. 1 bottle (750 ml.) Barpady wlH ~ombine water, sugar, cloves, all spice, orange and lemon peels in 2- quan oven alass pitcher or batter bowl. Cover with plastic wrap, tuming back one e gc to vent. Mi cro.cook on high P<>wer 7 minutes. Let stand at least I hour. Strain to remove fruit peels and spice. Add fruitjuicesand wine. stir to ~lend. c;over with plastic wrap until scrv1n1 time. Pour wine mixtu~ into microwave-safe cups . d m1cr0<00k individually on ht&h power for I to I 1h minutes each. Makn 7 cups. Coavnllou.I Me&ltod: Follow directions above except combine water, supr, spice and fruit peel• in a 2-quan .. UCCP1n. Heat to boilina o~er mediun). heat: simmer 10 minutes. Remove from heat· let ~~nd I hollr. Strain. Add fruit Juice and wine. Heat over medium heat JU 1 to boilina. • . -i • I ' n ere's a new line of irresistible resh baked goods in town _ named Entenmann's. Baked goods with that old fash- ioned goodness, made Crumb Coffee Cake With turn of the century goodness and an abundance of crunchy streusel crumbs. Apple Beehive Pie Packed with luscious apple slices under a lattice of flaky pastry. ... , With all the finest ingredients and a lot of extra care. And each so delicious, you'll want to try them all. Raspbenv Danish Twist Lavished wifu pure raspbeny jam and topped with delicious. icing. Fudge Iced Devil's Food Cake Made with a cake so rich and moist and icing so scrumptious you won't be able to resist. Sour Cream Ch·ip & Nut Loaf Blueberry Cheese Danish Like you've never had before with fresh cheese and delectable blueberries. ~---· Walnut Danish Ring Covered with lots of crunchy Diamond-Sunsweet ·walnuts. Please redeem by March 17, 1985 02551 ~------------------. .. .. Full of chopped nuts and chocolate bits and blena ed with real sour cream. All-Butter Pound Cake So buttery-moist. it's perfect plain and even more special with fruit or ice crea~. -Chocolate Chip Cocikies . ... -- • ·~-------~~----------._.. ......... ______________ ,... ______ ...,.. ______ ..,...._. _____ ~~-~ ' ~--··--·-' Ormnge Cout DAILY PILOTIWedneeday. Merch e, 1985 -- Chateau Bouchaine initial wines iJD.pressive • There are a handful of "star Freemark Abbey.a. e pecially for of the winery propeny, who the 1075 Buchl i Station Road. Napa, Blanc without arassinessl and then quality'' ..,.winemakers that have somcspeciacular\..htrdonnay and other partners are and where the Ca 94558 (707) 252-9065. finishes with a pleasant, not .ov~r· equal ~nown with the industry and Cabernets, and then repeated his grape come from. but sfoce it's Boucllalne 1983 Sauvlpoe Bfuc done touch of vanilla from aama '° coasumers. TheK folks have repu· J succe s when he followed Mike what's in the bottle that really ($8.50): Amazing! ThtS i not the one ye\r old French oa)c latiom at least as great as the EftY Graich as winemaker at Chateau counts, I'll dispense with all chat variety for which Luper is known. puncheons. The oak statement ts wineries for which they work their Montelena. this time. and is only che second vi ntage of the kind you would expect fr~m ~. and should they ever mo~e IUI Luper is now the partner and I will tell you that production and auviJnon Blanc he has ever made, aging in s~a!lcr ~rrels. Oon•t miss &lolls to areener pastures their winemaster at a Napa Vallc_y wine· availability is somewhat limited, yet it as my favori te ohn altogether this one, at 1s quite spectacular. I reputalioM tend to create immedi· ry that debuted lat rear, C~tcau but the wines arc available at outstanding collection. found it on the wine hst at famous ate attention for the new endeavor. Bouchaine. Based on initial releases selected merchants and restaurants It is reall y unique, and quite chef Jeremiah Tower's equally For example, should Dack Ar-"stars," but names like Mike and indications of what is to come. in 40 states, so }'OU can find them if unlike any Sauvignon Blanc made famous and very "in" San Fran· rowood ever leave Chateau St. Jean Grgicti, Ric Forman, Zelma Long it Jooks like Luper's image and you make an effort. in California or anywhere else that I cisco Restaurant, .. Star's.'' to set up his own winery or simply and, while he only c.onsults these reputation arc secure for the fore-I will also tell yo u that the know of. The bou~ucc says Boucuble ltH ''Aleuader Val· make wine for someone else. you days. Andre TchelistchefT. are solid seeable future. I say that, because Cameros-Napa region winery wel· "Graves," that austere. flint y. grav-ley" C'Urdo ... y ($12.SO): The can bet bis first releases would be examples. ..star" winemakers are only as good comes visitors, though by appoint-elly. quality unique to those special largest production a~d t~e.rcfore snapped up by both the trade and Another of these "star quality" as their la1est vintage. The public ment only. To visil the wiQery or white wines of Bordeaux. mostavailable Bouchaane wme, but consumen who are devoted fans. winemakers is a fellow named Jerry can be very fickle. inquire about local availabilit~ of It has the muscular structure of a a very good '?ne. ~good choice ~or There aren't too many of these Lui)er who gained his initial fame at I could tell you about the history the wines; Chateau Bouchame, Qtardonnay flavors of Sauvignon restaurant wrne lasts because of its ___ ....;._..;,.;..;....:....:.~...:.:.:.:;:.;.:,:::__;;_:_;,;,,:..:..:.;:__..;::.;::!:,:_:__.:.:..:._~_;_~----------_..:.------_..:.-----_.;:;.------__;,,-,;;,::._;;_;;_.;;.._...;...L..:...' ,;_:;,.....;....~...-;.---. -style. Chardonnay~ fall int~ ~veral categories, and t~as one 1s m the citrus style, but ncher than most. This combination of richness of body combined with enough crisp- ness to handle most foods is its · major charm. Boicllalne UU "Napa " C'Urdonaay ($14.50): An even more substanti ve wine, and the style most folks expect when they pay this kind of price for .Chardon· nay. It is vi scous and fat, but still has citrus notes in the finish and enough acid to maintain. LARGE ARI ICHOKES ._r- Boaclaalne lHZ ''Lot Caraerot" Plnot Nolr ($12.50): Scheduled to debut about the time you read th~. the wine is bound to receive a lot of attention. It is one of the bener Pi nots of the vi ntage. As you ng as it is, the aroma is still straight- forward fruit with berry notes. ....... All. ntli 1$ ~ OtANCI 10 OWN lHI .,.,_ llT. INCLUDING IUOANT MATCNINO U•V- ..0 ,_., SIAllf 'l'OU9 ClOU«"naN WOOM'I THIS WllK'S flATUltl CUP 59! SIRLOIN TIP ROAST BEEF ROUND 2 19 ITIA• ... && 2.29 L& • Fos'9f" Forms FRESH CALIFORNIA ROASTERS Fillet of LB • 98 FRESH DOVER SOLE .. ........ LB. 2 ••• e IA. It is a lighter (but not light) style with amazingly rich cherry flavors for its delicate structure. Pi not Noir needs time in the bottle, and this one shows great potencial for de- velopment. · AUSSIE WITH A CHANCE - Australia is among the world's best wine producers. but the wines have never sold very well in America . ... inch Por Panly, it may be because Amer\.. SPIDER PLANT ............................. EA. ... canSJUSt don't think of Australia in 12·0unce Cons, 12-Pock, RAtgulor ~ .. 298 ................ terms of wine production. but mostly it's because the Aussies usually send their cheapest wines in an cfTon to be price competitive. 9().Proof 750·ml. Sour Mo.sh ··················•·•• A new brand just becoming available is .. Chloe.'' and it really has a chance to be discovered by Americans for several reasons. JACK DANIELS BOURBON ....... .. Chloe lt83 "Banter Valley" Chardouay ($9): One sip and I declared this is the best Australian white wine I've ever tasted, -though admittedly I haven't had all that many. It is a lush, buttery, rich Chardonnay of tremendous fruit, but is complex and not overly oak ed. 4·llter In A Box ALMADEN MOUNTAIN CHABLIS ................ 4.ff c L .. LIMIT 2 ROASTS .................. •ow L0111 a1011s STUFFED WITH 99 PEPPERIDGE FARM I DRESSING L& • Pacific Fillet FRESH RED SNAPPER ................ LB. 2.28 fARM18MHlll SLICm mACOll I-LB. IA9 PKC IA. . There is oak, but it is not a major, and certainly not an overwhelmmg. statement. ft is more California in style than French, and you may have a lot of fun placing it in blind tasti ngs alongside California Chardonnays. Cllloe 1983 SemUlon Dore ($8): Proof that California winemakers should not give up on this variety that is mostJy used to blend with Sauvignon Blanc. If you like Sauvignon Blanc, Fume Blanc, or White Bordeaux, this wine is in the same general style. but has its own · unique fla vors which are difficult to describe. I can tell you It has very pleasant flavors that grow and expand in the mouth throughout the taste cx- Sliced. Skinned & Dwelnod periencc, and that it finishes very FRESH BEEF LIVER 89 nicely. The Chardonnay is a knock-.................. · LB. • out , but I drank much more of this wine with my lunch, which is the ultimate test of a wine. HUGHES GALLON MILK Chloe 1980 Sll lraz Marco Polo ($9): Shiraz is the grape we call Syrah in this country, and Chloe has tacked on the Marco Polo name because he was supposed to have transported the first Shiraz vines from Asia to Europe. ~ ....... .. IMIUM•IAD '\\ II// A9 ~ 1%-La. ~ .::: LOAF -'-~~~-..,.....-;:-~/\~,~-~---~ ~ Jock, Extra light, 2·Lb. Pkg PANCAKE MIX ... ,................ .. .... 95 Assorted Flavors RICE -A-RONI LAVER VARIETIES .................................. LA.I( ......... IUDIUllGIIMA• f i ~~ l9 ~~J· IA9 12 9z. AtQ.. ~wuru °' =~-FRANKS .... ::-.... j . .._- HUGHES SHARP CHEDDAR .. Lll 2.ff Louis Rich. 12-0z F'ttg TURKEY VARIETY PACK .... EA I.ff Hughes 16-0z. 8lEU CHEESE DRESSINGS ... EA. 1.29 89 <\ff' ............. ~ •UNNY ~ ... 9.99 Pepsi light, P.psl Fr-or 2·LITER PEPSI OR SLICE ....................... ff OCMll SNAY JUICIS ..a.oz. I 59 ASSORTED • The name may be "hokey," but the wine certainly is not. Chloe has manaJed to give us a wine that combines the spicy qualities of an authentic Rhone (where this grape is most famous)-with the ripeness and varietal intensity one would expect from a California wine. This is a ve~omplex, mature wine that will ndle bold foods. and for some rea n I kept dream- ing of it in com ny of duck. Chloe lHI Caberaet SHvlpon ($8): From a drought year and a resulting very small crop, the over· riJ?Cness and harsh tannins you might expect arc not there. It 1s a f ulf-bodied Cabernet, but the tan- 12-0z. Assorted nins arc round, the flavors earthy OORITOS CORN CHIPS .................... 1.79 and complex and it is overall quite ~~~~~!![!iiii[!jiiii) drinkable. ~ The wines are just released and more information is available from: Chloe Wines, 2001 Pierce St. #4 San Francisco 94115 (415) 929-8045. National distribution is intended. -12-0Z. CAN 8·0L Aasoa.d ---- BRIDGFORD DINNER ROLLS "l' ......... M 16-oz. Corton ,RICH'S COFFEE RICH ...................... a9 ~ ....... . aPIDA .. •O• ~.99 BROCCOLI SOUP !•1u pooa1 h•tter "'-· c•p cMpped celery wltll leaves '4 CIP cllopped ealoa l b ••c ll (a b oat 1 ~ poud1)broee.J1, c.t lato 1mall pteee1 PRICES EFFECTIVE 8 AM. TH~. MAit 7 THRU wtDENSOAV, ~. 13, 1915. NO CASE OfSCOUNTS ON .ADVHTISEO SPECIALS Z c.ps clear fat-free beef brodl ~ ie •• ,... ... , t.S.OZ TRIAL SIZE Springfield. 1(. o, • RUlllNG ALCOHOL • ••. .... . 2 FOR I w 30 a ~ vw..qh• oJ.rt RAYlUBE MOTOP Oil . 2 fOllt fl 10-Count ............ llAZGn S.C=T 2 '9CGS • 1 CON TAC CAPSUlES .......... ' '2 ~Ion Flew. 15-01., Ind 30C Off SHAMPOO OR CONOtTIONER 2 FOR •a d ,. # 0 • tea.,... pep,er l c.p mllk In a medium saucepan sently cook celery and onion In the butter until wilted. Add broccoli, broth, salt and pepper. Brina to a boil· cover and boil aenUy until br~I: i tender -about 20 minutes· puree. Stir in mi lie and heat. Mak~ about I quan. If soup is thicker than you Ulcc, add broth or milk and correct scasonina. . j .... - TOllOMOW: ~ --· ~ FORECAITI ON A2 Wt [JNf ',[lfl t MfllH H t, 1·1ii·, Butke School ·closure confirme·d . Parents call Huntington Beach trustee reversal of earlier ecision a ' lasco' But after about 30 speakers trooped to the podi'um, trustees went alona with Superintendent Larry Kempcr's recommendation, agre~ina the closure of Burke poses the least Burke Parent Teacher Oraaniza- tion President Ed Zschoche cnaraed the vote-was "vacillat1n1 and ca pricious" and that trustcn were not well enou&h informed to close a school this year. In February. Board President Brian Garland and trustees Pat Cohen and Karen -o· Bric vo\t<I lO close Perry- school over the pro~t• of colleaaues Gary Nelson and Sherry Barlow. By ROBERT BARKER °' ... ..,........ . Ro~rt H. Burke Elementary School in Huntinaton Beach will close at· the end of the school year, officials decided Tuesday night. The decision t>y ci ty . .school district Coast A county woman's final alimony payment was bigger than she ex- pected./ A3 HB students told If they break the rules on drugs, be prepared to suffer the consequences./ A3 Callfomia LA councilman Art Snyder and former wife both lose. Daughter will go to foster home.I AS . Nation- Senate budget commlt- t~ !n blparttsa11 voting, recommends fr~e In President Rttagan's de- fense budget/ A5 A former choirboy goes to the electric chair In Florida./ A4 World Vice President George Bush tours Sudan famine areas, vows U.S. help./ A4 Nicaraguan rebels deny charges they are killing Innocents./ M People Local Scrabble players will try to be letter-perfect this weekend as they match wits in the first round ofa national tou'r- nament./ A7 Food · Correct appliances help simplify work in the kltchen./C1 Skating champion Peggy Flemlng sh~res her per- sonal Ingredients for suc- cess./C2 Sports JoAnne Carner returns to the LPGA tour after a three-week layoff at this wsek'slJnJden lnvlta- tlonal In Costa Mesa./81 This season, UC Irvine basketball coach Biii Mulligan likes the Idea of a PCAA Tournament./81 Entertainment The musical comedy and the murder mystery are skillfully combined In "Somethlng~s Afoot" at the Newport Theater Arts Center .I Al Bualneu MSI Data Corp. In Costa Mesa, is named In S 100 mllllon trade secrets law- ault./83 INDEX Bridge -'" A10 - Bulletin ~ard A3 Bualneaa 83-4 Claulfled 86-8 Com tea A10 Croeaword 88 Death Notices 85 Food C1 -10 Horote0pe 87 Ann Landers A8 Optnk>n ~ A8 Paparazzi A7 Peopte A7-8 Play Revtew A9 Potlce Log A3 Pubtlc Notlcee 85-6 Sports 81-2 Televf_,on A7 Theatera A8-9 w .. ther A2 trustees came after many in the disruption. audience, which numbered about In tak.ing the action that reportedly SOO, argued in vain to keep the school will save about $200,000 annually, in the eastern.part of the d1strict open. ·trustees reversed their earlier dt- Others araued apinst closinJ any cision to .close Perry School, one of of the district's 10 schools, claiming only two elementary schools in the that there are ether ways to cut losses. • western half of the district. Dark times. . . fOrHB library Transformer hit by lightning; readers issue flashlights By ROBERT BARKER Of ... JWIJ,... .... Patrons at Huntin_Jton Beach Cen- tral-l.ibrary are having trouble find- ing enlightenment. .. That's because a lightning bolt in Saturday's freak storm knocked out a transformer that provides power to the bustling library near the comer of Talbert Avenue and Golden West St reel. The library. which has about 298,000 books and sees 2,200 visitors a day. is one of busiest in Orange County. It's continuing to operate without lights but it has not been easy. Library Director Walter Johnson's staff requisitioned 20 flashlights from the fire department so library users could navigate around the book stacks. "The restrooms," he said Tuesday, ··are really black holes." C>c,mbina their action in fint targctina Perry School and then reversina ·that vote as "a fiasco," Zschoche said there were "numer- ous" alternatives that haven't been fully examioed. A f\er protests. Garland asked to reconsider the Perry vote and also proposed not closina any school at all this year in the district that's been dippanJ into it1 reserves to the tune of abo4t SS00,000 a year. Garland joined Nelson. Bartow ........ ,....._ ....... But other than closing early at (Pleue ... LIBRARY I A2) Wluton Lee of Bandqton lleacb w ftubll.,.. ta .-rcb llbra~ -U.Cb. t OC backs Reagatn on revenue cuts By JEFF ADLER OfhDl!llr ......... Orange County parted with coun- ties around the nation Tuesday when the Board Qf Supervisors voted to support the elimination of federal revenue shari ng proposed in Presi- dent Reagan's 1985-86 federal budget. Supervisors voted to break with other counties as well as the National Association of Counties, which has called for a continuation of revenue sharing. In urging the county back the president's call.for an end to revenue sharing, Supervisor Bruce Nestande said local governments must do their share to reduce the federal deficit. which hovers nea r the $222 billion mark and is projected to go as high as $235 billion by 1988. Supervisor Harriett Wieder. who backed Nestande's motion. pointed out that the inten;st alone on the deficit approaches ~ 150 bill ion per year. The board's action camt' as Acting County Adm1nistrat1ve Officer Larry Holms advised supervisors that Re· agan's proposed $54 billion budget· reduction package would mean a "substanttal reduction in revenue" to the county. The largest loss of revenue would be the S 14 million the Supervisors back private airplilne / iloise ordinance Howeve~ one aircraft association says law cries out for littgatton By JEFF ADLER Of ... .., ........ The Orange County Board of Supervisors pve its tentative ap- proval Tuesday to a noise ordinance that for the first time would regulate private ai~craf\ operating out of John Wayne Airport. Supervisors approved the first reading of the proposed ordinance that would establish noise constraints for private aircraft nyina out of John Wayne Airport. · The ordinance, which i! 'o ~ scheduled for adoption Tuesday. would affect about 12 of the 1,000 pri vate or general aviation planes based at the aarpon. according to airport officials. Although no private aircraf\ oper- ators attended the meeting to op~ adoption of the ordinance. super- visors did receive a telegram from the president of the National Business Aircraft Association that threatened legal action of the measure is ap- proved. "The discnminatory treatment of non-commercial operators who are now bein' prohibited from operation at your airport on the basis of rules which are more strinJent than those applied 'o noisier air carrier oper- ations cries out for litigation." as- (Pl--eee.11018.&/ A2) Goats breathing easy as Navy Q~s trap bid ,,.. .............. . The~ .......... . ...... to ............... M .......... of Mn a... 111Mc9 goeli ....... ol.., .. Newr .... """'9r)'oflcllll ..... P'GPoll4 for ......... "'°"to.,. end NmCM ........ from ... NtwY- OW1'9d Mlirid • ......... o1~---· . TM nprtewe u::,.r-1d Tu•diy, two -9 before I prof111t111-· ...... br .. Nllwr w ....... II to beglrt IMoClr'l llMM 40010M1 ... eulded _... duttnl:• "'°'"'*"• ,.... ..... .., .... .,.. .. Allirt1ll ....... to ... Cole. lft ··~-.. ....,...,........,. l#ldlr ......................... ....,, '41h "'"" .. bell1•1dtoNeurnto•......,1RJU1rto111un...,r11111•...._ Colllild, • I ....... , .. ,_Wft/Ml l • county annually receives in revenue sharing. The program. st.an ed in 1972, was slated to provide about S4.6 billion in assistance to about 40,000 local jurisdictions around the country this year. Revenue sharing funds can be spent v1nuall} without restriction. Holms told the board that because the county "prudently decided to use this money for non-recurrent expen- ditures" in the past. no county operations are threatened w11h elimination 1f the program is cut. For several years. the board. an contrast to other counties, has budgeted revenue sharing money for capital .. bnck-and-monar" proje-cts. such as the proposed construction of a new county Jail. If the program and the board's funding priorities were to continue about two-thirds of the S 14 million. about S9.3 m1ll1on. would be used for capital prOJects while the S4 million balance would be allocated to road improvements and transportation projects. Holms said Holms. acknowledging the Na- tional .\ssoc1at1on of Counties "substantial" cfTon s to save revenue shanng. recommended the board authori1c Its capital lobbyist to work in favor of the program's r~tentton. In .................. .-~MUl~------ lom• 2,000 applloaDta fonned ~ llne tbat 8t:retlC~ed 11.alfway aroma.d ADaMtBI Stadl ... heeday for a cb.uee at 25 to 40 job opeaa.p u a ftref\Oter wt~ tbe Qraace Coa.Dty Fin Deputmat. 8ome ln tie crowd camped oat at tile 8tadlam oft!' tlM 9-kend. Pfo Jobe were actully lla.Dded 09t h•daJ -appHcanta were almplJ tllere to ftll oat a form to take a written teat for Job openlna• ner tbe nut two yean. Bat e•eryoae who wu ln llne 4hf recel•e an appUcatloD. ' and O'Brjc on Tundar 0 iabt in Choo.in& instead &o clote Bw'U. Cohen at first refuted to IO aJonc. "It wun'l a hasty deciiioa to do. Perry," the said Tuetday ... I really believed Pmy should share the. ucri(ICCS and burdcDs previously shared by othen {in previous district closures.) "I'm ~·but I don•t tbinlc Perry is immune. But deClari.,,:~;• for ( ...... _ /A2) Strong lead in Laura- search ·c an-shaven' man may have been tied to desert abduction By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .., ....... _A man S«n. a1 the .sa...DK desert camPIJ'Ound where 3-year-old Laura Ann Bradbury vanished almost five months ago is beina sought today in the northern California city of Santa Rosa. investigators stated today. The man. thought to be in his early 60s, is not considered a suspect in the apparent kidnapping but is wanted for questioning. Santa Rosa police reported. Investigators said the man is travel.- in& in a van similar 10 o ne u.se4 by the suspected kidnapper and was sttn at the Joshua Tree National Monument campground several days before Laura vanished. ··tt's not a break:through but it's onc of the strongest leads we've had yet, .. said Eileen Winters, the missangg1rt's aunt. San Bernardino County Shenfrs deputies, who have coordinated the ·search for the Hunungton Beach &irl since her disappearance Oct. I 8, 1984. have been combing Santa Roea and other cttJes north of San Fran- cisco sin~ Feb. 25. - A news conferen~ was scheduled this afternoon an Sant.a Rosa to offic1all)' ask for the pubhc·s help 1n locating the man. Jim Bryant, a sheriffs spokesman, said the latest lead in the extensive search for thc girl came from two men who also were camping at Joshua ' Trec near the time of the apparent abducuon. "These gu}'S had apparently been out of the area for a whale and hadn't heard about the kidnapping. .. said Bl")ant. "The) came back into town recent I). read an anicle and re- mem ~red sceang this guy:· The man being sought as thought to ~ named John and ~as a pct dog named Sam. Santa Rosa police said. He 1s descnbed as being neat, clcan- (Pleue eee LAURA/ A2) Kids ask for park at Arch Beach Mission ViejoCo. site still has to be acce pted by oc Elevrn-)enr·old Maggie Redfern docsn't kno"' much about politics. And thc pnnc1ples of land-use plan- ning arc ~)'ond the sixth-grader's gra p. Focus o~ THE N E~s Hut the little blond gu1 don know Me th1n1 -she and her fnends v.ant 1 par\ 1n rch Beach Heights. Perched on a hilltop oo Lquna Beach' southern border, rch Beach He11ht 1 1 community 9f 11ah'I p.1clted home with httle or no lawn A~e ~1ble only b tv.o tcce> lnd w1nd1na roads, the nc"hborhood i enurcl m1dcnt1al There " no ~hool, rnmmunit~ tnicr or ~ti) parl -or tor that matttt, any pubh propcn) whcrt children ma> play. But 1l doc n't ha'"c to bt' that way. R1&ht ano'is from Mqgae· Balboa \ \Cnuc home " 1 I c"° bunk of (Pleue.ee PAAK/A2) • Api:il Fool's Day will bring 1 airport parking fees hike I 1, JD? ADLER '°' .. ..., ........ I Jt will cost mort to park yo ur car at John Wayne Airport btainnina April • l. The 6ranae County Soard of Supervisors aareed Tuesday to a rate hike ajmcd at increasing airport revenues by an additional S l.3 million annually. Supervisors unanimously ap· proved the across.-thc-board in- creases that will sec parking fees go up • anywhere from 2S cents per hour at perk.ina meters to SI per month for employees who buy monthly parking l)ISIH. In the ajf"P.<?rt's short-term parkina ltit, rates w1U increase from SO cents ~hour to SI a hour, while the daily ' rate will jump from $6 to SI 0. • Jn Iona-term parking, the rates will incrcuc from SOs cent per hour to $I an hour with the daily rate increasing from $4toS10 a day. The new 1,800-space Nonh Clear Zone parking lot, across the San Oiqo Freeway from the airport, will ch•'IC airpon petron.s SI hourly and $3 per day. All metered spaces will double in price.jumpina from 25 to SO cents per half.hour. For employccs, the monthly park· ina pass will increase in price from S 1 S to S20 a month. Airpon Manager Murry Cable said the parking rates averaae out to 13 percent less than the averaae realized on a pcMpace basis by other com- parable airports. John Wayne Airport earns $776 per year for each of its 4,471 spaces compared to an industry average of$89 I per space. Los Angeles International Airport earns $791 per year for each or its 26 SOO spaces while San Diego's Li~dbergh Field leads California airports with earnings of$ J .261 per space annually. With the rate increase, John Wayne Airport will realize $1.078 per space, the second-highest return in 1hc slate. Cable advised the board 1hat the rate increase is "intended to maxi- mize revenue while rcmainmg within industry standards and encOUfa&IO& effective fac1ht)'. utiliution by providrna rate differentials between parkina lots at JWA." All revenues derived from airport patkina.aoes into the county's Airport Enteronsc Fund. Senate backs ban on business loans WASH I NG TON (AP) -The Sen- ate Budget Committee. looking for domestic spending cuts to reduce federal deficits, today embraced President Reagan's proposal to abolish a loan program that subsidizes American firms doing business overseas. But the panel also recommended establishing a new, $1 billion war- chest -not an the president's budeet -to protect domestic companies from "predatory" overseas competi- tion. . BURKE SCHOOL_. •• The GOP-controlled panel be$Aln i1 s exhaustive, time-consuming search for domestic spending cuts one day af\er votanit to reduc.c the admin- istration's miltt.ary build-up by $79 billion over the next three years, a step that Assistant Senate MajQrity Leader Alan Simpson, R-Wyo .. pre- dicted would be ratified. : FromAl I \ : ll\e sake of unanimity, Cohen : changed her vote to go along with the · Burke closure. : Trustee Nelson said Burke's • closure' would mean no additional busing and that the disruplion would •.t.e minor compared to other options. The bulk of Burke's children will be transferred to nearby Hawcs'School, the site of the district's special education programs. Under the plan, the severelf handicapped children at Hawes w1I not be displaced by the Burke tnOux. The defense spending plan adopted by the committee would chop an estimated,...l21. I billion off a 1986 fiscal ye~ ~rojected at $230 billion if there are no changes. LAURA BRADBURY BREAKTHROUGH ••• From Al shaven. about 5-foot-8 and we1gtnng 165 POunds. "The part about being neat and --clean-shaven flys in the face our dcscnption of the kidnapP?r but th~ height and weighl is ngh1." said ,Bryant. • The missing brown-eyed, blond girl .. was last seen when she wandered off to an outhouse a short distance from .. where her family was camped. sighung of the girl. the suspected Bryant said in vestigators believe kidnapper or the van since Laura's the little girl was grabbed by an disappearance. Deputies nave ques- overwcight, bearded, middlc-aJe tioncd more than 500 people and tnan.. who .may have. pushed the gid_ followed up more-than 1,000 leads into his metallic blue van. since the apparent abduction. The van was seen later the same day traveling on a backroad to Big Bear. Brvant said . The girl's parents, Mike and Patty Bradbu ry. said they believe their daughter is still alive and have never given up hope that they will . be There· has been no confirmed reunited someday. :LIBRARY DARKENED IN HUNTINGTON ••• .From Al .. : about sundown, the library has made ._few concessions to the power failure. People arc still checking out books j -albeit manually-and can read by 'good old-fashioned daylight that filters through the large picture glass windows overlooking Central Park. Bui clients can't use microfilm or #computer catalogs systems or other .. electronic trappin1t5. It's also tough getting a snappy response to a telephone call. It seems that all the phones ring but none lights up and harried employees are having a difficult time selecting the right instrument. City officials are attempting to buy a new $30,000 transformer this week m Los Angeles. Johnson said a nearby ltghtnang strike at about noon Saturday caused a po~~r surge that destroyed the transformer. "The library was full at the time and there were no problems. I did get a little apprehensive. however, when people used cigarette lighters to $Cl around. But the staff acted with equan1mtty and rolled with the prob- lem." .NOISE ORDINANCE GETS NOD ••• •.From Al sociation prcstdcnt John Winant !wrote the board. Winant added that the association believes noise reduction can be -"achieved without "arbitration, dis- crimination and overprotective regu- latjon." He urged the ordinance be amended to make the new noise rules fai r and equitablF for all operators. both commercial and non-com· 'merc1al alike. However, Supervisor Bruce Nestande faulted Winant and his supponcrs for mounting such a "blistering" at1ack on the ordinance. but failing to show up at the meeting. Board Chairman Thomas Riley pointed out that any pnvate aircraft operators who oppose 1he ordinance or want to suggest · amcndmenls should attend next week's scheduled public heanng on the matter. In establishing noise standards, the proposed ordinance also would ban further use ofihe Westw1nd 1123. Jel Commander. BAC-111 , Jct Star I, Sabre Liner (with the exception of model 65 ). Gulf Stream II and Lear Jet models 23. 24 and 25 at the airport. The planes all were deemed 10 be too nots} to meet 1hc new gu1dehnes. In endorsing the ordinance. Nestandc said he cannot understand why private planes carrying two to four passengers ~tmes ma1es more noise than commercial jetliners that carry far more passengers. Deputy County Counsel Dan Didier told supervisors most noise violations by private aircraft often are the result "of inadvertance or poor pilot technJ.gue." ' But Didier noted thal when private aircraft exceed 1he 98.5 decibel a1r- pon noise lim11 at Monitoring Station I, the dev1auon lends to be far greater than dev1at1ons regisiered by the commercial airlines. GOATS WIN ANOTHER REPRIEVE ••. From Al ~----~= More rain on Coast's tioriion A WMk *'8ttw 1ye&em moved ttvOUOh Southern canrornla ~ today tcett.,tng a r.w leotated ahowwt owr the Loa ~ Buln and moun1,in ., .... 9nd more rain wu expected throuoh Thurtde)', roracaaters Mk!. ,,__ Natlonaf WMthar Service Mkl anottw tytlem that WU tytng to the ~• ..,.1y today wu a)(pected to bflng ahOWat'• to rnoet or Southern Callrornla tonight, with tnOW In the mountain• above 5,000 r.et. OYerntght rainfall amount• Wiii ranga from a querter·lndl In the coaatlll arMI to• half-Inch In the mountain•. Alono the Orange Cou1, "'°"'' .,.. tlk91y tonight. Pwuy ctoudy Thureday. Cooler with hight 52 to 60. Lowa mottly In the 409. Tempe M1911, iow 1or 24 "-• endlnO a1 6 em • 3t 27 eo 44 eo :M .. 2t 66 SS 78 73 22 20 21 07 .. &.o 40 16 81 44 IM 36 30 21 61 37 .. 31 63 54 •1 31 81 ,. 54 21 ______________________ ~ ... Ill 21 09 40 20 ... , 27 40 12 37 21 '° 62 54 28 76 40 41 " 2t .. 44 26 33 22 48 24 42 19 81 ., 38 22 51 28 34 21 36 17 27 06 10 23 23 " 22 11 "' 38 2t 12 34 12 ., 20 38 13 79 89 17 64 34 24 83 4 1 17 52 30 16 ... 24 : ~ Calif. Temps H 90 .. 27 Hlgh,lowf0f2U•OU•Hndtnget5a m 74 61 ....... .,.., St 43 ;: ~ Eut91la 48 3t 51 ,. =.., : ;: 59 27 lot .t."QMe 58 47 1$ 37 ()alllen(i 41 42 27 14 Pato AOOlel 54 37 ~ 27 Aed llufl 46 36 72 33 ~ CHy 50 42 u ~! sec;1-10 50 40 12 "" Sallnet 63 42 46 2t San Ol9Qo 8 1 6 I ;: :: San Frlll!Cleco 61 42 San1a 8wlMlra 61 31 ff ..02 Sloc:ll Ion 62 !18 ;~ ~= MIQf'l, IOw lor 24 llO\ifl end11>9 al 6 pm O l7 BattlOW 61 3 I 43 2t Big 8N< 47 13 n 61 IMtnoc> 62 13 Blylf'le 72 40 53 32 CateHn• Mi 43 11 32 long 8Mof'I 58 40 49 32 MonrOYla 82 31 49 11 Monta<ey 65 ~ 1 -----------Mt W"-1 41 ·~1 Extended Con11ctera1>t1 clouolnaH wllf'I en..-OI .i-1 Friday and Satur- cley PW11y CIOudy Sunday Conllnoact coot HIQl'll st lo M Lowt1 In upper 309 Ind 40tl Newpo<t hedl llO 42 Ontatto 58 34 Palm SPftno• IMI 40 Puadena 58 44 A"'at110e S 7 3 7 San 8atria•dlno 59 36 Sen Gebtlaf 82 31 SanJoM 51 39 Santi Ana 60 40 PARK DELAY UPSETS KIDS ••• From Al Surf repor;t 63 43 32 27 43 2t LOCA'OON MD IHAN HIHlflll010tl 8-fl 1•2 pocw Alwr Jtolty, Nawpor1 1·f 000< 40lh 81•-. NawPOt1 1·2 poOf 22nd su-. Nawpor1 1·2 -Balboa Wadge I PoOt uouna BNcf'I 1-2 pocw San C'-'-t• 1·2 poot Watlf tamp 57 Swell dktcllon. eoul-t Tides Sacood tow Second llfOll TOOAY 3Gepm .9~20 p.m ·THUfllOAY 300 e m 11,0Sam 3·37 pm 11:52 pm Flttt tow F1n1 f'llOll Second tow Second "l9" t 1 4.11 01 9 I o.e 5.2 Sun Mii today If 5 53 p m , rt- Tnu1tday 11 e 1' a m. an0 Ml• 19aln at 6 S• pm Moon rl-today If 5 44 p m • Mia Tho.lrtdey at 8 19 • m and •t-again at 8 seam 1he Aliso Greenbelt promised 10 the jusl want H> be cenain they have Herman cr1ttC1ttd-the second vcr- city by the coun1y of Orange. 1he properly planned for the regional s1on approved by the Harbors. proposed Moulton Meadows Park park before they stan ".dcahng out Beaches and Parks Committee in site. any land." Herman said. January 1984 as including some The promise was tendered back in Riley echoed those sentiments in a unlikely enterprises such as a winery. 1980 when Maggie was 6 and her letter to young Maggie. She and 28 That plan was to go before county sister Carrie just 3. City planners other Arch Beach Heights children supervisors in February but was gleefully plotted and planned the sent the supervisor a petition about delayed because the National Fitness future park. There'd be two tennis the smaller park site. In it Maggie Foundation was considering one of courts. a tot lot. picnic areas. a jogging wrote. "I think ii is aboul time 1hat the sites for the nation's firs\ athletic trail. And. through a state park bond, the proposed park be built 1n Arch training academ y. Herman said. there's money to pay for it. 'd 1 · But the land. it seems, isn't the Beach Heights. Kt s have 10 Pay in The academy doesn't exactly fit the county's 10 give. Not yet anyway. the street, which is very dangerous. I in1en1of1heplan. Unlikcagolfcoursc Maybe not for at least a year. hope that the park (will) be built or equcs1rian ccnler. it won't be a The I 0-acre park site is included in before 1 am much older and go off to moneymaker for the county; but the 3.400 acres of Aliso and Wood college... having an academy to groom young canyons. part of a land dedication In his letter. Riley 101d· Maggie that athletes is expected to bring the area a offered by 1he Mission Viejo Co. in he is "sincerely ... interested in boost 1n pres11ge. 1979 in exchange for the right to build providing parks for the people of tht!I Laguna Beach Mayor Dan Kenney the 20.000-homc planned comm uni-counly" and had, in fact , helP.Cd the sa) s he's frustrated by the continual t) of Aliso VteJO 10 11s no11theas1. But city obtain a grant 10 build the delays over Moulton Meadows Park. the co'unty has nevrr accepted the promised park. But little Moulton He belie ves count y officials could land dedication. Meadows Park is JU St a sh ver of what help 1f the) wanted to instead of The acreage that Enc Jessen. the will be a larger regional park in the holding 1he mailer up "in some county's chief of planmng for the greenbelt and the county can't give bureaucra11c whatever." Harbors, Beaches and Parks District the city its share until ··com-Kenney said he's started to wonder calls "the heart of the Aliso Green· prehcns1ve planning" of Ahso-~ood whether t~&unt-y-is~t -tryiflg-to belt" 1s part of a proposed larger. Canyon Regional Park is completed. punish the ci ty for standing in the way regional park that has been in the Riley said. of projects which county officials works since the land was first offered "You can JUSt 1magt0e what people favor. "In general. you finall y have to by the Mission Viejo Co. would say 1f we started developing start weighing these things," Kenney Although county supervisors have small parcels of our park without said. accepted some smaller parcels that havi ng some overall idea of the uses Herman sayi. 41UCIT talk of retri- w11l become part of the roughly 5,000· we propose throughout the facility," but ion really burns up his boss. acre park. its core is still formally in Riley wrote. "h's ridiculous to consider him private hands. But the county has a darne<J good running this office by witholding park And after five years. some people idea what 1he regi onal park will look land," he said. o are beginning to wonder why. like. Supervisors accepted a concep-In the end. when Magg1e and the Those who may be in lhe know get tual plan of the _park back in 1979 and. c11y of Laguna Beach get their Jumpy when asked the reason for the according to Grace Scckcta, proJeCl prom1c;ed park will probably be delay. manager. the basics haven't changed decided on the basis of pnont1cs, "I can't answer that for you." that much over the years. suggested a count y observer who Jessen said. Try Peter Herman. he The proposed park sttll encom-preferred 10 remain nameless. suggested. passes S.000 acres and the 1n1ent ts The county will have 10 accept the Ci1y Manager Ken Frank also said still to maintain the propcny largely M1ss1on Viejo Co. dedication if lhe Herman was the man with lhe m its natural state. she said. Horse-S50 m1lhon national fitness academy answers. back ndmg. hiking and bicycle 1ra1ls is to be constructed in the greenbelt. Herman 1s one of Fifth D1stnct are still in the plan, as are some And it's unllkel) 1hat the supervisors 5uperv1sor Thomas F. Riley's top campgrounds. Secketa said. will dally when 1t comes 10 facilitating aides. He's Riley's spcctahst in south Such minimal development would a project Supervisor Bruce Nestandc Orange County land-use matters. cost about $710.000. she said. likens to "bringing motherhood and A Navy spokewoman in San Diego confirmed the latest reprieve. But. as with previous rcscut' attempts, public information officer Ruth Lawrence said the situation will be re viewed agaii\ if the Fund fails to remove all the animals. restnctcd area. Top brass agreed 10 allow trappers in after tbe Fund said 11 would take out a SI O million in- surance policy to proiect the Navy against damages and to release the Navy from all hab1hty should a catastrphc occur. "Wha1's the holdup?" Herman Periodic changes to the park plan apple pie to Orange County." bloodlust or lhey're nuts." responded. "There is no holdup," he have centered on what uses arc Prelimina ry sketches of the 175- Colc said Tuesda)' that the Navy said. The M1ss1on Viejo Co.'s dedi-acceptable as "revenue generatton acre academy arc to be unveiled for JUSt couldn't ignore the success ofthc cation offer. stands for IS years. opportunities." Secketa said. In the first lady Nancy Reagan April 15. fund resuce. "The success of the Herman .said. There's oo hurry. first plan, uses designated were "100 Maybe oy lhc time the academy is rescue impressed the Navy. We did 1t The county 1sn '1 dragging its feet on specific" and in so·me cases too urban, ready for its groundbreakmg, Laguna 1n a h1ghfy professional and compe-accepting the land. he said. Officials she said. Beach 'trill get its piece of the pie. tent manner," Cole said. "The Navy l~ri=~~~====:~:~:~~~=:~~~:~~~~~==~~:~~=====::i could not ignore the impressive For the first time since th e Navy and fund members first began butting heads over the goats in 1979, rescuers will be alfowed into a rcstric1ed area where the remaining beam have ned. During the just-completed rescue effon that ended Monday, 870 of an estimated I .250 goats were captured by a net gunner and jumper who loaded the animals anto a helicopter. The rescued goats were shipped to the mainl"nd. where they arc being put up for adoption. results." UTIERS cu Fund offi cials also said the or· ganization will pay for a larger ponion of the rescue effort. Until now, the fund has paid about 60 percent of the cost of the rescue and the Na vy has paid 40 percent. . Nav)' officals in the past have ndamantly refused to allow anyone 1n10 a shore bombardmcnl area because 111s littered with unexploded shells lef\ over from warship target practice . .-·• Tuesday the Navy acknowledged that rescuers had caught all the goats they could w11hout going into the Just Call 642-6086 Qelty Piiot Oeff"'J 11 ou.,enteed ... ~; '·~ ~ , .. ,.. ""' ...... ,,,., ~ ii-, ,.lOo..,1• ~~'c"' .-Id ,-:v c.«t• 0. .,.,.,,.., Fund President Cleveland Amory said Monday that Navy offi cials would be heartle'>'i 1f 1hey shot what remained of the herd af\er such a successful rescue. "If they shoot them now." he said. "Either they've got The $Oats are believed 10 have been on the island for more than I 00 years after beang left there as a food source for merchant marines. The goats are considered a threat to rare species of plants. birds and a lizard that ltvc on the island. What do you like about the Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you like? Call lbe· numbu at left and yoar menage will be recorded, tranac-rl bed and dellverc4 to Ute appropriate editor. Th same U -boar answering service may be ••H to record letters to (tie tdltoT on any topic. Contributors to oar Leners column mast Include t111elr name and tetepttone nmbtr fo-r vtr1flcalloe. No clrc•latron calla, pleHe. Tell us wbat'a on your mind. • ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H.L Schwartz Ut Publisher Clfculatlon 714/M2-4m CleNffted edftrttelng 114/'42·1111 AH othef ~ment1 M2-4aZ1 MAINOf',ICI 3'l0 .,,,. .. , '41f It co.ta M.a CA • Mef aoor-So• lsecl C:O.ta I.MM CA O:HI~ "'"°' •-.e! • ~ ""' .-; ..,,. .. _ ,...,., U»t t'•"' ·~ •O •"'..,.""" ~ Fr•nk Zlnl Managing Editor Karen Wittmer Advertising Director (''1fJY"fllt ltf\1 Ora"Qf C-~ Compel'y NO ...... .,.,,,.. -ratldt'll ~IQr ... ,.,..11 .. OI ~- 1\ ..... ., ,.,.., De fteltOOUC..O ... "'°"" ~ '* ..... J (A»'(ftO'll - oe -~ -- c~ T1l1,....,... Aonm•ry Churchman Controller "'°"' 0r..,..c-•• At- ' ~· Ae>Hrt L. C8"trefl Production Manager Donatd L. WllNam1 Clrculatlon ManagM _. • VOL. n ,NO.• I Designed, Finished Installed 31 Years Exper~rtce Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TOaAY:~-:-a-r:FACTORY DIRBCT PRICUI Call (714) 548-8841 or 548-1717 HBI..,.. MAIUf ICTlllY 1977 Placentia Avenue • Cos~a Mesa, CA '1JJ!fEl • • - • t .J TOMORROW: \ FIRST EDITION WI lJNI 'dll\ ~ M l\ Ht H '· 1·111. < > f I /\ N ( , I < < > I J N 1 ·y :. ~ • f. · ' ro. Coast A county woman's final alimony payment was bigger than she ex- pected./ A3 H B students told If they break the rules on"tfrugs, be prepared to suffer the consequences./ A3 California LA councilman Art Snyder and former wife both lose. Daughter will go to foster home.I A5 Nation Senate budget commit- tee, In bipartisan voting, recommends freeze in Reagan's defense budget /A5 A former choirboy goes to the electric chair in Florida./ A4 World Vice·Presldent George Bush tours Sudan famine areas, vows U.S. help./A4 Nicaraguan rebels deny charges-they are killing Innocents./ A4 People Local Scrabble players will try to be letter-perfect this weekend as they match wits In the first round of a national tour- namenf./ A7 Food Correct appliances help simplify work In the kitchen./C1 Skating champion Peggy Fleming shares her per- sonal ingredients for suc- cess./C2 Sports JoAnne Carner returns to the LPGA tour after a three-week layoff at this week's Uniden Invita- tional In Costa Mesa./81 This season, UC Irvine basketball coach Bill Mulligan likes the Idea of a PCAA Tourn~ment./81 Entertainment The musical comedy and the murder mystery are skillfully com blned In "Somethlng's Afoot" at the Newport Theater Arts Center./ Al Buaineu MSI Data Corp. In Costa Mesa, is named In $100 million trade secrets law- sult./83 INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Business Ctualfled Comic• Cro11word Death Notices Food Horo1eope Ann Landera Opinion Paparazzi People Play Review PoUc• Log PubllO Notlcea Sport a T•vlalon ThMter1 Weether A10 A3 83~ 88-8 A10 88 85 C1 -10 . 87 A8 A8 ' • A]_ . ~ Af."r. A9 A3 85-8 e1 .. 2 A7 A8·9 A2 e I ID a . I state· on. .otte.r Dark times forHB library Transformerfiltby lightning; readers rssued flas_!1lights ByROBEi\TBAilKER ~- 0ttt1eo..,,....._. Patrons at Huntiniton Beach Cen- tral Library are havmg trouble find- ing enlightenment. That's because a lightning bolt in Saturday's freak storm knocked out a transformer that provides power to the buvstl ing library near the comer of Talben Avenue and Golden West Street. The library. which has about 298,000 books and secs 2,200 visitors a day, is one of busiest in Orange County. It's continuing to operate but it has not easy. QC assemblyman backs little.people in bid for f ranchtse SACRAM ENTO (AP)-Dwarfs arc the lates1 arouP to Join the scramble for a piece of the comios lottery bonanza in California. Assemblyman Nolan Frizzelle. - Fountain Valley, told the Assembly Governmental Organization Com- mittee Tuesday that dwarfs in his Southern Cahfomia dis.trict arc among the groups wantins to sell lottery tickets . .. They have a perticular handicap in the job market. Many ofthe~are oo welfare. They're a cost to the state. (Pleue Me DW AJU'8/ A2) St[ogg lead'·in Laura search 'Clean-shaven' man may have been tied _ to desert abduction Library Director Walter Johnson's staff requisitioned 20 flashlight s from the fire department and are making them available to library users so they can navigate around the book stacks. "The restrooms." he said Tuesday. (Pleue eee LIBllAJlY/A2) ....,,... ...... ~ ....... ~ Wlnaton Lee of Banttncton Beach uee flulil1Cht to MUcb ~bra.~ !ltacka. By STEVE MARBLE Of .. ..,,... .... A man scm at the same desert campground whcrt 3-ycar-old Laura Ann Bradbury vani shed almost five months ago 1s being sought today in the northern California city of Santa Rosa. 1nvesugators stated today. · OC backs Reagan on revenue cuts The man. thought to be in his early 60s. 1s not considered a suspect in the apparent kidnapping but 1s wanted for qucsuoning. Santa Rosa police reponed. By JEFF ADLER OflMO.., ......... Orange County paned w11h coun- ties around the nation Tuesday when the Board of Supervisors voted to support the clim1nauon of federal revenue sharing proposed in Presi- dent Reagan's 1985-86 federal bu dget. Supervisors voted to break with other counties as well as the National Association of Counties. which has called for a continuation of revenue sharing. In urgmg the county back the president's call for an end to revenue sharing. Supervisor Bruce Nestande said local governments must do their share to reduce th e federal deficit, which hovers near the $222 billion mark and 1s projected to go as high as $235 billion by 1988. Supervi~r Harnett Wieder. who backed Ncstandc's moti on. pointed out that the interest alone on the def!flt approaches S 150 billion per yea r. The board's action came as Acting County Administrative Officer Larry Holms ad' 1scd supervisors that Re- agan's proposed $54 b11l1on budget- reduction package would mean a "substantial reduction ~ve nue .. to the cou nty. The lartest loss of revenue would be the S 14 million the "Supervisors back private airplane noise ordinance However, one aircraft association says law cries_o~t for lttigatton- By JEFF ADLER Of ... Dellr Nltt .... The Orange County Board of Supervisors gave its tentative ap- proval Tuesday to a noise ordinance that for the fi rst time would regulate private aircran operating out of John Wayne Airport. Supervisors approved the first reading of the proposed ordinance that would establish noise consli'lttnts for private aircran nying out of John Wayne Airport. The ordinance. which is to be scheduled for adoption Tuesday. would affect about 12 of the 1.000 private or general avia11on planes based at the a1rpon. according to airport offi cials. Although no private a1rcran oper· ators a11cnded the meeung 10 oppose adoption of the ordinance. super- visors did receive a telegram from the pre 1dcnt of the National Business Aircran Association that th reatened legal action of the measure is ap- proved. "The discriminatory treatment of non-commercial operators who are now bein$ prohibited from operation at your airport on the basis of rules which arc more stringent than those applied to no1s1er air cam er oper- ations cries out for ht1gation.'' as- (Plea.e 11ee N018E/ A2) Goats breathing easy· as Navy OKs trap bid county annually re<'ewes 1n revenue sharing. The program. started in 1972. was slated to provide about $4.6 bill ion 1n assistance to about 40.000 local jurisdictions around the country this year Re ve nue sharing funds can be spent v1nuall> without restnct1on. Holms told the board that because the county "prudentl> decided to use this money for non-recurrent expen- ditures.. in the pasL no county operations are threatened w11h elimination 1fthe program 1s cul. For several vears. the board. 1n contrast to other counties. ha budgeted revenue sharing money for ID the line of fire ca pital .. bnck-and·monar .. pro1cc1s. such as the proposed construction ofa new county 1ail. If the program and the board's funding pnonue-. were 10 continue about two-thirds of the SI~ mil hon·. about $9.3 m1lhon. "-Ould be used for ca p11al pro1ec1s while the $4 million balance wouJd be allocated to road 1mpro,ements and transportation projects. Holms said. Holms. ackno'l!. ledging the Pl.Ja- uonal o\i.soc1a11on ot ( ount1cs "substantial" dfoni. to "ll\C rc\enuc shanng. rec-omm('ndt'd the board authonzc 11s capital lobb.,.1s110 'II.Ork in fa\or of the program's rl·1cnt1on. lnves11g.ator<> said the man 1s travel- ing in a van s1m1lar to one used by the suspected lodnapper and was seen at the Joshua Tree Nauonal Monument campground several days· before Laura vanished. "It's not a breakthrough but it's one of the ~trongest leads we've had yet," said Eileen Winters. the m1ss1 nggirl's aunt San Bernardino County henffs depu11es. who have coordinated the ~rch for the Hunungtoo Beach girl (Plea8e Me LAUllA/ A2) Kids ask for park at Arch Beach Mission Viejo Co. site stt 11 h as to be accepted by OC Ele,cn-H•ar-old Maggie Redfern doesn't kno'I!. much about poht1c~ And the pnnnples of land-usc plan- ning arc hc}ond the sixth-grader's grasp LISA MAHONEY Foru s ON !Ht Nlv.s IM th~JJ.Ule blond 11rl docs know one thing -he and her fnends want J park tn rch Beach Het&hts . Perched on a hilltop on Laguna ._,,.......,..~...._. • ......, Bea h'' ~uttlem border. Arth Beach Hr1gtm " a community uf llghtl~ pac~cd home wl\h hulc or no lalll'n . A cc stblc ~n!ttby t't\lo steep and -wmdm.J"1'0Sd 1re(tl1bott1ood , cnt1~ly ~1dcnt11I There 1s no school. commun1t ctnt r or cit)' park -or, for that matter. an pubh tbe ....... ..,... tlae ........ No Jobi were ~taallJ property wh(1"t" ctuldrtn m•> pla} laanded oat Ta.CS., -appllcaata were almplJ there to ftll But 11 d~n·t ha-.c to bl' that v.'1y 09t a form to take a wrtttea teet for Jo.b open.lnt• o•e.r the R1&ht :tcro.-.-. from M 1c·, Balboa nattwo,_,.. Batenryonewlaowutn Unecllc{recelffan 1 "'rnuc hnmc 1\ a 10.. n: chunk of appHcatlon~ '.J (Pleueeee P°';ll/A.2 ) l J I - April Fool's Day will b ning air.port parking fees hike . IJ JBPP' ADLl!R .............. It will co t more to park your car at John Wayne Airp0rt belinnina April 1. ~ Oranac County ·Board of Supervisors aarted Tuesday to 1 raLC bih aimed at iocreasina 1irp0rt revenues by ao additional S 1.3 million annually. Supervisors unanimously ap- proved the acro~the·board in- creases that will see parking fees go up anywhere from 25 cents per hour at parkina meters to SI per month for employees who buy monthly parking passes. In the ai~rt's shon -term parkina lots, rates will increase from 50 cents per ho ur to $1 a hour, while the daily rate wiUjump from $6 to SI O. -.J ln lont·term parkina. the rates wtll incruse from SOs ~nt per hour to S l an hour with the daily ratt' increasing from $4 10S10 a day. The new 1,800.space Nonh Clear Zone parkina lot, across the San Dieao Freewiy from the airport. will charge airpon patrons $J hourly and $3 per day. All metered spaces will double in price.jumping from 25 to 50 cents per half-hour. For employees. tbe monthly park· ang pass will increase in price from S 15 to $20 a month. Airport Manager Murry Cable" said the parki ng rates average out to 13 percent less than the average realized on a per-space basis by other com- parable airports. John Wayne Airport cams $776 per year for each of Hs 4,471 spaccscomi:)ared to an industry averaJe ofS891 ~r pace. Los Anarlcs lntemati.o.nal Airpon cams $791 per year for each of its 26.SOO space while an Diego's Lindbergh Field leads CaJifom1a airpons with earnings of $1 .261 per space annually. W11h the rate increase, John Wayne Airport will rcalizc $1 .078 per space. the second-highest return in the state. C'able adv1srd the board that the rate increase is "intended to max1- m1Le revenue while remaining within industry standard!> and encouraging effective factht)'. utilization by providing rate differentials betwe~Jl parking lots at JWA." .. All revenues derived from aarpon parking goes into the county's Airpon Enterprise Fund. which is used to fund airpon operations. LIBRARY DARKENED IN HUNTINGTON ... Prom Al ''are really black holes." But other than closing early at about sundown. the library has made few concessions to the power failure. People are still checking out books -albeit manuaJly-and can read by l &ood old-fashioned daylight that filters through the larg"C picture glass windows overlooking Central Park. But clients can't use microfilm or computer catalogs systems or other electronic trappings. It's also tough acuing a snapp) response to a tefepho ne call. It seem ~ that all the phones ring but none light~ up and harried employees are having a difficult time selecting the right instrument. City officials are attempting to purchase a new $30,000 transformer this week in Los Angeles. Johnson said a nearby lightning smke at aboul noon Saturday caused a power surge that destFoyed the transformer. "The library was full at the time and there were no problems. I did get a liitle apprehensive, however. when people used cigarette lighters to gel around. But the staff acted with equanimity and rolled with the prob- lem." .. LAURA BRADBURY BREAKTHROUGH ••. From Al SI.nee her disappearance Oct. 18, 1984, have been combing Santa Rosa and other cities north of San Fran- . cisco since Feb. 25. A news conference wu sch'ed lfled this a fternoon in Santa Rosa to , officially ask for the public's help in u locating the man. :. Jim Bryant, a shenffs spokesman, ~said the latest lead in the C)(tensive search for the girl came from two men .or who also were camping at Joshua '( Tree near the time of the apparent abduction. .. These gu ys had apparently been out of the area for a wh1lr and hadn't heard about the kidnapping." said 8Q'~ril. .:.:.Ih_~ came back into town recently, 1 read an article and re- membered seei ng th is gu y." The man being sought 1s thought to be named John and has a pet dog named Sam. Santa Rosa pohce said. He 1s described as being neat. clean- shaven, about 5-foot-8 and weighing 165 oou11ds. ,~ ......................................................... .. ~·nwARFSAPPEAL .•. z-FromAl '" :t'I They are people who could do this l1 kind of a job very efTcctJ vely as an ft.organization .... And yet there are no specific segments of the law set aside n for them to be allowed. as a grou p, to "~ participate." he said'. . Fnzzelle said a II under cons1der- at1on by the com ttee would favor awarding some loft business to !>.small and minority corpo ·es at the expense ot other spec1al-1nteres1 groups such as the handicapped. Assemblyman Richard Alatorre. ()..Los Angeles. th e author of the bill. AB2, said he would talk with the dwarfs. but did not ofTcr to amend the measure. The bill's provisions favor- ing minont) bu'iinesscs as sulx:on- tractors 1n major suppl) contracts arc 1n keeptng with state and federal law~. he added "The part about being neat and clean-sha ven Oys 1n the face our de~ript1on of the k1dnap~r but the height and weight 1s ngh~." said BryanL The missing brown-eyed. blond girl was last seen when she wandered ofT to an outhouse a shon distance from where her fam1I} was camped. Bryant said in vestigators believe the little girl was grabbed by an overweight, bearded. mtddle-a~e man who may have pushed Lhe girl into his metallic blue van. Thc . .van was seen later the same day traVel i!lg o n a backroad to Big Bear. Bryant said. There has been no confirmed sighting of the girl, the suspected kidnapper or the van since Laura's di sappearance. Deputies ha ve ques- tioned more than 500 people and followed up more than 1.000 leads since the apparent abduction. The g1d's parent'>. Mike and Pally 'Bradbury. said the) believe their daur)ner ts still alt'c and ha ve nner gi ven up hope that they will be reunited sorl'leday. u .................... ~~~------------------... --------... --...... ... t,NOISE ORDINANCE GETS NOD ..• b..J!'romAl ' .:. soc1at1on president John W1na nt a;; wrote the board. Winant added that the association believes noise reduction can be •achieved wi thout "arbitration. d1s- criminat1on and overprotective regu- lation." He urged the ordinance be amended to make the new noise rul es fair and equitable for all operators. ,., both commercial and non-com- mercial al ike. ·r· However, Supervisor Bruce ,. Nestaode faulted W1nant and his (supporters for mounting such a •· "blistering" atLack on the ordinance. c but fa11tng to show up at the meeting. ,, Board Chairman Thomas Rile) po in It'd out 1ha1 any pm ate aircraft operators who oppose the ordinan<.:c or wan1 to suggest amendment<; should attend next week\ sthcdult:d public hearing on the matter. In estabhshtng noise standards, the proposed ordinance also v.ould ban funher use of the Wcstv.ind 1123. Jct Commander. BA( -1 11 . Jct Star I. Sabre Liner (l.'.ith the exception of model 65). Gulf Stream II and Lear Jet model'i 23. 24 and 25 at the a1rpon The planes all v.cre deemed to be too noisy to meet the nc"' guidelines In cndur'\1ng the ordinance. 1'1cstandc ~1d he cannot understand why private plane\ carr)'ing two to lour passenger<, so metime!> makes more noise than commercial Jetliners that carry far more passengers Dcput) Count'.r Counsel Dan D1d1er tol d 'iuper' •~ors most noise violations b) pn' ate aircraft of\en arc the re•wlt "of 1nadvcnancc or poor pilot technique." But Didier noted that when private aircraft exceed the 98 5 decibel •air- port noise hm1t at Morutoring Station I. the dev1a11on tend\ to be far greater than dev1at1on\ reg1'itered by the lOmmerc1al atrhncs :L GOATS WIN ANOTHER REPRIEVE ... ~ .. FromAl j --... __ _ More rain on Coast's horizon A wMk WMlhet •Yttem mo\19d thfOOQh SoYthern Cllllornla Nt'ly today ecatteflng a few laotated llhowef• Ovef the l.ot ~Satin and mountain ereu. and more rain w .. expected through Thurlday, tor.caatera Mid. Tn. National w .. ttw s.rvtce u ld enottw ••em that wu tying to the w .. t eerty today wa• expected to t>rlng Showett to moet of Southern Callfomla tonight, with 1now In the mountain• above S.000 1 .. 1. OvemlQht ralnl•ll amQUnte Wiii renge from • querier-Inch In the co11tal er.., to a half-Inch In the mounteln•. Along the Orange Co.st, thoweft art llkety tonight. Partly cloody Thurtday. Cooler wit.I' high• 52 to eo. Lowa moatly In the <40a. t( ...... Ctty 31 '7 " Tempe IMV-OU '° 44 ·-~~ ,..,..,.: LJllle Roc:lo '° 34 HIQll low 111< 14 -.,, .. IO"'O Al 6 LouiaVllle 41 29 •--cold-Memc>N• 55 35 •m ~· ... FUrlff $ftOW 0ce•.oeo...._s~a.,. HI Lo MUHn!Boacll 71 73 Alt>Mly 40 16 MHwMoe 2a ao Nlleafllf...,.. ~M US 09c>4 of ~c.. Al~VO<Qut f l "4 Mplt-81 Poul H 07 Amer Mo 64 35 NU/lllllle 64 27 Anctw>fego JO f l New O.!Qrla 64 51 At~t• f7 37 NOor VO(\ 64 ,. M 43 AttlllltlC Ct1Y 16 31 Olll~Ctty 55 ~: Calif. Temp• s .. ia c.111 32 21 A-..tln 13 54 Omen• 3'I TW-Vf//Wr 43 21 a.llimOf• 87 31 Otlendo 15 '° y_....,.l/ty Bor"*'O"Om e t 31 PNIAOolollla .. ll High. low tot 24 11<>urnnc11no a1 6 • m 8*narCk 21 09 P'-11• 14 lak.w.lleld 51 43 Surf report 8olM 40 20 P111a:::r.: 48 ~ Eurelta 48 31 eo.1on 41 27 Portt Me 211 FtetnO $8 42 a..naio 40 t2 Porllond,Ot 51 ~; L-eter 53 38 LOCAT!Ott tlD '""" c~ 37 28 Provtd9'1C• 59 Loe AflOOM 68 47 Hunllnglon 9eodl 1.2 poor Cllari.ton,S C 90 $2 =~Hy 75 3 7 Oa-lellcl 49 42 lllWI' hny, Newpof1 1·2 poor Chttleaton,W V 5A ie 27 ;; PHo Aol)tot M 37 .c>lll 81~. Newpof1 1·2 poor Cllartotl•,H c 75 40 Reno 0 Reel 111\itt 48 311 22ncl StrMI, Newpof1 1·2 poor c~ " 18 A>ehmond 72 ~: l'lectwoocl City 50 42 BelbcMI Wedge I poor ChleagO 29 It St tou11 31 118 .__to 50 40 Lagune 8Mct1 1·2 poor Clndnntll « 7$ 81 Pel• l Oln!MI 82 Sallnu ~ 42 SanC'--'lt 1-2 poot Cl9Ytleno 33 22 SallLakeC.ty .. H 5.,, 01eoO 81 51 Weter lame> 57 Columbu&.Oll ., 24 SanAnlOft'O 15 55 a.,,,~ SI 42 Swett Cllree110n -·-· Conco<d,N H 42 ,, San Juon PR 74 .. • ... t. 8etber• St 39 O.-FlW°'1h ., 42 SI Ste Maue ~ -: 81odc1on • 52 34 Oey1on 38 22 S..Ule 31 19 High, IOw lot 24 llOut• enotnv •I 5 p m Tl dee Der!-5t 26 Spoil-44 l7 8afltOW 56 3 I Ool M-34 21 s~-84g Boat 47 13 Oolr011 36 17 Topellt 43 29 Blfhol> 52 13 TOO.AV ()ululh 27 05 T11eaon ~ ~~ Blyttle 72 40 S.Condtow 3·08p.m ' 1 !I Pno 70 23 Tulea 71 32 ~... 58 43 Seoond ':"Oh 920pm 4.1 Ftltbonha 23 18 wa1111no1on Long 8Mcl'I &a 40 FttQO 22 11 Wtet111a 49 32 Mont<Wlt 82 37 THUfllOAY F"141gttelf .. 36 w111c-e .... 49 18 Monler9Y 55 41 Ftrel IOw 300e m 0 1 Otend R8'MO• 29 12 Ml WllMxl 4 1 31 ~IOw 90Sem 11 G<MtFlllls 34 12 Newpof1 llNcll eo 42 337pm 0 8 HWltord 4 ' 20 Extended Oftlwio N 34 Sec.ot>d hlgfl 11 52 p"' 52 H ...... 38 t3 PWn8prlnQe .. 40 HO<>Olutu 79 &II Paaedone 68 « Sun '°'' today •• s 53 pm • , .... Houlton 87 S4 Conald.,•b•• eloudtneo wllll Rl¥O<lt<H 57 37 Tnur.Oty et 8 14 a m end IOI• ~okl et lndlanapoltf 34 24 enance ol a/lower• Friday and S•IU<· Sen knttd"'O !19 31 5.$4 pm Jtc;l{ton,Mt 63 41 day P•ttly e10udleSund1y ConllnUOd San O•l>flol 82 38 Moon rl-today ti 5,44 pm, Ml• JICll1«1v1lla 87 52 COOi HIQha 511 10 , LOWI In uppot 301 SW> Joee 51 39 TrMld•y et e 111 am end rt-99okl •• Jun06U 30 15 and 40. Senti Ana 90 40 e·&e•m PARK DELAY UPSETS KIDS .•• From Al the Aliso Greenbelt promised to the 1ust want to be certain they have Herman cnt1c1zed the second ver- c1ty by the county of Orange. the properly planned for the regional saon approved by the Harbors, proposed Moulton Meadows Park park before they stan ''dealing out Beaches and Parks Committee in s11e. an> land." Herman said. January 1984 as including some The promise was tendered back 1n Riley echoed those sentiments in a unlikely enterprises such as a winery. 1980 whe n Maggie was 6 and her I t>c to V10 ng Matf·c ~he and 28 That pl""n was to go befiore county sister Came JUSt 3. City planner!. c .er ' u · l · -> .. other Arch Beach eights children supervisors in February but was . gleefully plotted. a.nd planned. th~ <,ent the supervisor a petition about delayed because the National Fitness future park. There ~ be two. tennt~ the <>ma lier park stte. In it Maggie Foundation was considering one of couns. a tot lot. picnic areas. a ~ogging wrote "£ think it 1s about lime that the sites for the nation's first athlctit trail. ~od. through»>. state par bond .... the p~oposed park be butlJ in Arch training academy, Herman said. ihere s mone) to pa) forn. . Beach Heights. Kids have to play in But .the land n \tern<,. 1~n t the the '>treet. which is very dangerous. 1 The academy doesn't exactly fi t the county s to give. Not yet anyway hone that the park (will) be built 1ntentofthe plan. Unhkeagolfcourse Maybe not for at least a Yt:ar. . befo-re 1 am much older and go ofT to or equestnan center. it won't be a The 10-acrc park site 1s included 1n c lleg ·.. moneymaker for the county ; but th e 3,400 acres of Aliso and Wood 0 c. , having an academy to groom young canyons. part of a land dedica1ion In hie; letter, Riley told Maggi e that athletes is ex pected to bring the area a offered by the M1ss1on Viejo Co. 1n he 1., "sincerely . . interested 1n boost in prestige. 1979 10 exchange for the right to build providing park for the people of this Laguna Beach Mayor Dan Kenney tbe 20.000-home planned commun1-county" and had. in fact, helped the says h~'s frustrated by the continual t) of .\li'io V1CJO to 1t" n0nheas1. Ru t <.:It)' obtain a grant to build the delays over Moulton Meadows Park. the count) ha\ never accepted the promised park. But little Moulton He believes county officials could la nd dedication. · Meadows Park 1~ just a sliver of wllat help 1f they wanted to instead of The acreage that Eric Jessen. the will be a larger regional park in the holding the matter up "in some county's chief of plan ning for the greenbelt and the county can't gi ve bureaucratic whatever.' Harbors. Beaches and Parks District the city its share until "com-Ke nn~ said he's started to wo nder calls "the hean of the Ahso Green-prehenslVe planning" of Miso-Wood whether the county isn't trying to belt" 1s pan of a proposed larger, Canyon Regional Park is completed, punishthec1ty forstandinginthcway regJOna l park that has been 1n the Riley said. of projects which county officials works since the land was first offered "You can JUSt 1mag1ne what people favor. ''In general, yo u finally ha ve to by the Mm1on Viejo Co. would say if we started developing start weighing these things," Kenney Although county supervisors have small parcels of our park without said. accepted some smaller parcels that having some overall idea of the uses Herman says such talk of retri- w1ll become part of the ro ughly 5.000-we propose throughout the faci lity," t>Ution really burns up his boss. acre park. itc; core 1<> still formally 1n Riley wrote. "It's ndicul ous to consider him private hand'>. But the county has a damed good r\Jnning this office by witholding park And after five )ears. some people idea what the regional park will look land," he said. arc beginning to wonder wh). hke. Supervisors accepted a concep-In the end. when Maggie and the ThoSe who ma y be in the know ge t tual plan of the park. back in 1979 and. city of Laguna Beach get their Ju mpy when ask<:d the reason for the according to Grace Secketa. project promised park will probably be dcla). manager, the basics haven't changed decided on the basis of priorities. "I can't answer that for you," that much over the years. suggested a county observer who Jc!>sen said 1 1) Peter Herman. he The proposed park still encom-preferred to remain nameless. rnggcsted. passes 5.000 acres and the intent ts The county will have to accept the C11y Ma nager Ken Frank also said still to maintain the property largely Mission Viejo Co. dedication if the Herman was the man v.1th the 1n its natural state, she said. Horse-$50 million national fitness academy an~"'ers back riding, h1k1ng and bicycle trails 1s to be constructed in the greenbelt. Herman 1s one of Fifth District arc still in the plan, as are some And it 's unlikely that the supervisors Supenisor lhoma'i F. Riley's top campgrounds, Seckcta said. will dally when 1t comcs to facilitating :11de\. He's Riley\ specialist in south Such minimal development would a project Supervisor Bruce Nestande Orange County land-use matters. cost about $71 0,000, she said. likens to "bringing motherhood and °" A Navy spokewoman 1n San Diego J confirmed the latest reprieve. Rut, as restricted area Top brass agreed to allov. trappers in after the Fund said 11 would take out a $1 0 million in- surance policy to protect the" "la' y against damages and to release th l' Navy from all hab1hty '>hould a ca tastrphe occur. "What's the holdup?•· Herman Periodic change~ to the park plan apple 1,>ie to Orange County." hloodlu~t or the> 're nut'!" . re<>ponded. "There "'no holdup," he ha ve centered on what uses are Preli minary sketches of the 175- Cole \3td rue'>Cla) that the Navy said. The M1ss1on VicJO Co's ded1-acceptable as .. revenue generation acre academy arc to be unveiled for JU'lt couldn't ignore the '>uccess of th e cation ofTer stand'i for 15 years. opponunit1es," Sccketa said. In the first lady Nancy Reaa.an April J 5. with previous rescue attempts. public 1nformat1on offi cer Ruth Lawrence said the s1tuat1on will be re viewed again if the Fund fails to remove all fund resurc "The c;uccess of the Herman said There'r, no hurry. firc;t plan. uses designated were "too Maybe by the time the academy is re'iCuc 1mprec,\cd the Nary. We did it The county 1'\n't dragging its feet on specific" and 1n some cases too urban, ready for its groundbreaking. Laguna the animals 1n a highly profe~'>1onal and compe-accepting the land. he said. Officials she said. Beach will get its piece of the pie. 1tnt mannc~··c ~1c~a1d. ''The Navy l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I could not ignore the impressive For 1he first time since the Navy -; and fund members first began bulling heads over the goats in 1979. rescuers will Ix: allowed into a restncted area where the rema1n1ng beasts have Oed. Dunn& the Ju<)t-complcted re~uc effort that ended Monda). 810 of an estimated 1.250 goats were captured by a net gunner and Jumper who loaded the animals into a helicopter The re~ued goats were \hipped to the mainland. where the) are being put up for adoption. ref~~~· offi cial<, al\O said t~e or-UTIERS CUST gan11at1on "''" pay for a larger pon1on of the re\cue efTon. ntil now. the fund ha" paid about 60 percent of th e cost of the ~ue and the Navy has paid 40 pc~nl. ' Na"}' offical'i 1n the past have I. adamantly refused to allow anyone into a shore bombardment area bel':tU\C H 1s l11tercd with unexploded -. shell\ left over from warship target ,~ r..· J 'J " f'.. practice. fueo;da ) the Na'y acknowledged that rest uers had taught all the goat'i they could without going into the Just Call 642-6086 . Fund President ( levcland Amory 'ia1d Monday that Navy officials wou ld he heartle'>\ 1f they shot what remained of the herd after \UCh a successful restue "If they shoot them now." he ~aid "Either they've got The ~oats arc believed to have been on the island for more than I 00 years after being left there as a food source for merchant marines The goats arc considered a threat to rare species of plants. birds and a l1tard that li.ve on the island. What do you like about the Dally Pllol'' What don't yo u lll't? Call U1e numtter at left ~nd your menace will be recorded, trtDl<'rlbed and delivered to lbt approprla1e editor. Tbe same U -hour answerlns service may be used to record letters to t111e editor on any topic. Contributors to oar IA tters column mu ll Include tllelr name and telephone number for ve rlflcallon. No elrcalatlon call1, ple11e. Tell H what's on your mind. ORANGf COAST Ctrcu6etlon 714JM2..u33 ti Deity Plfot . Daily Pilat Cl1Hlfled ed•ertfelnt 714/IO-M7t AH other depeftmentt 142-4321 •d 0.llYety I' • ( la Querente.d M""'.Mlf I '"""' II t'"' .,., ""' ..... ~..,.,, l"'l)Cll Iii' ~ KIP •"<"'""'""• Ir." ...., rOU< <1Nt ., M delo..,.., lut.Y1 ..,.., S....otor I (W (II')"'°'_.. ... ('~ Coot Dy 1 • tn CM 0-1?• 10 • "' -,,,,.,, (Gfll' Ile ..... .., Ctrcul1tton Telephonee ..... ·~'""""' ..... ' •' H.L. Schwertz llt Pub II sher Fr•nk Zlnl Managing Editor Keren Wittmer Advertising Director RoHmery Churchmen Controller Robert L. C•ntrelt Production Manager Oonatd L. 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