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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-04-13 - Orange Coast PilotBusy week for fe male Huntington office r UY ROBE RT BARKER of"tMDallr"91 ..... Curle Drayer ha1 been one buay police officer during the laat couple of night ahlfta In HunUnaton Beach. First, ahe and patrolman Bob Clemmons, chased down and caught a burglary suspect on root. They were responding to a silent alarm and ft>und two suspects on the roof of the My Place r estaurant a t 5 4 ~2 Commercial Drive. T he sec o nd s u s pec t was arrested later. Early this morning, Drayer and officer Chris Filiclcchia arrested three suspects afte r (Stt BUSY, Page A%) THI DRANGI COAST Bryce Van Horn with offer he could ref use. H e's only 5, but M esa kid I offer e d 'loan ~ \ Bryce Van Hom haa accomplished a lot in hil short Ufetime. He can ride a two-whooler, he goes to pre.chool and he just turned 5. Young Bryce has also accumulated a great credit record. Never even bounced a check. At least not according to Union Home Loans, the company that sent him a letter last week offering him a $5,000 loan. Bryce's father, Michael Van Horn of Costa Mesa, called up the loan agency and told them Bryce was only 5. "The woman who answered was hysterical," Van Horn said. Evidently a computer screwup had resulted in Bryce's being placed on their mailing list. Meanwhile, Bryce has kept the mock check the loan company sent him. He wants to save it for when he learns to read. A r eal tre asure chess Talk about your o ne-of-a-kin d chess set. T his one features solid gold chessmen . T he asking r,rice? See Page BI . COUNTY IDITION Death cancels scuba classes BY PHIL SNEIDERMAN or ... °""' .... ....,. Orange Coast College has canceled five scuba diving classes l.n rnid-aemester, in part because a mi~ed ecuba student died during a claaa trip to Catalina Island l.n January. A $5 million wrongful death claim haa been filed against the Coast Community College District, which includes Orange Coast College, by the student's widow. A separate $1 million claim has been filed by his children. The claim will be considered tonight by the district's board of trustees. District adminiatrators have r ecomm e nded that responsibility in the matter be denied and that the claim be rejected. A claim is often the first step l.n preparing a lawsuit. The scuba student, Frank Walter Scroggs Jr., ~7. of Cost.a Mesa, died -during a class trip Jan. 13. District officials and the (See SCUBA, Page .U) Field raids criticized By GLENN SCOTI' or ... °""' ,... ...,, Attorney General William French Smith soon will get a letter from Irvine City HaJl urJZing him to suspend Border P at rol raids for illegal farm workers. It wlll be signed by Irvine M ayor Larry Agran, w.bo s u cceeded last night in convincing other City Council memben to send an official city m1J11!18Ce to Smith in Washington, D.C. (lee RAl.DI, P .. e A%) WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1983 Drug clinic closure sought in doctor probe A judge was expec ted to resume a hearing t oday on whether to shut down the drug detox ifi c ati o n c l1n1 c o f Huntington Beach physician Mark Hopp while Hopp is being Investigated. o.-,,...,,....., ~ o,,__ Dr. Ton y P roto pa ppas a ppears a t Ha r bor Municipal Court for arraignment; The hearing was requested by the state Attorney General's Office, which claimed that Hopp's negllgence in prescribing drugs to drug addicts contnbuted to the deaths of at least 10 of hu patients over the past three years, according lo Deputy District Attorney Chris KraUk. Kralick denied a report that his office would charge Hopp with involuntary man.slaughter in connection with the deaths at this time Dentist pleads, jailed By KAREN KLEIN Of"lhe Delly ,... ..... Costa Mesa dentist Tony Protopappas was expected to post bail today and be released from Orange County Jail, where he was held l ast night afte r s urrendering himself to authorities. Protopappas, charged with <tnurder in the deaths of three patients. was ar raigne d yest e rday before H arbor Municipal Court Judge Selim S . Franklin. The dentist pleaded not guilty to the charges and was taken into custod y in h e u of $500,000 bail. Tho ugh Orange Count y Deputy District Attorney James Cloninger requested that bait remain at $500,000, Franklin said he would reduce bail, probably to $250,000, as soon as Protopappas could have his property put up as surety. Stanford Shaw. Protopappas' attorney, said he expected to offer the dentist's Laguna Beach IStt DENTIST, Pa«e A%) "I haven't talked to anyone a bout that (new charges)," Kralick said, adding that no new charges would be filed before May 5. when Hopp is scheduled to appear in court o n the misdemeanor counts. Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Knox agreed to resume yesterday's hearing today after Hopp's attorney asked for Early Wendy wins Pilot Oscar picks By P HIL SNEIDERMAN Of" IN 0.-, ,_ _.,. You're never too young to catch a.car Feve r. Just ask Wendy Holliday of Fountain Valley, who is the grand prize winner ln the annual Oscar Fever contest sponsored by the Daily Pilo. t and the Harlequin Dinner Playhouae In Santa Ana. Wendy 16 a junior at Fountain Valley High School. and her cinematic ~ ball were sharp enough to predict all eeven top winnen In Monday night'• 55th Academy Awards pre9ent.ation. Wendy wasn't the only Daily Pilot reader with a sharp eye for movies either. More than 500 entries were received and 21 of them accurately prec:Ucted the eeven top awards. But Wendy Holllday's correct entry arrived with the earliest postmark. and thus she will receive the grand priz.e -tickets for two to enjoy dinner and the Harlequin production of "I Do, I Do ... ~,... ..._...., ca.y ~ Wendy Holliday (le ft), Michele Robert8. We ndy who serves on the Student Senate and on the yearbook ataff at Fo~t.ain Valley High. said the priz.e will be ah.a.red with her friend Michele Roberts, 17, a senior at the same IChool. The friends (See OSCAR, Pase Al) The Fountain Valley High bateball team maintained a 1rip on lin t place in the Sun.et League with a 6--2 wletory o~er Ecliton yetterday. P .. e El. , Cash In on news Got an Idea for a good newa or feature story? Call us at (71 4) 642-4321 , Ext. 226, d ays, or at (714) 642-5686 evenings and you could win one of three weekly cash awards. Top prize Is $15. I ' Holocaust r emembered J~wlila tanivon Of the Holoeauet are h0eon1 Ceatllet who ... P.ed tlMm ,. ·-·· ., n. IMat .. , &heir auaalaer ia "pllifully 1mall." Pate F2. Fresh artichoke• and canoed lalmon team in the kitchen for light, 1prift1 d i1he1. Food Sfftion. P .. e Cl. more time to exarrune a 44-page petition filed by the Attorney General's Office. Kral ick said the a ttorney general's petiuon reiterates much of what investigators have been claiming since Hopp's case began -that Hopp·s negligence in prescrib1ng drugs resulted in the addicts being maintained in their habits instead of detoxified. Hopp'• daughter. 24-year-old Renee Young. also is charged with eight misdemeanor counts of refilling prescriptions without authorization. And .the loser • JS. • • A Newport Beach man who lost control of his car and plowed 1.nto a tree outside of Palm Springs reportedly waa watcblng-tbe Academy Awards on a portable TV while driving, authorities re~k Brigham, 23, WH arrested on suspicion of felony drunk driving Monday by California Highway Patrol officera, who re~ the TV wu atil1 operatlnl when they showed up at the .cene of the 9:30 p.m. acddent. A paaaenger. Theodore Kotecki, 22, of Laguna Niguel, WU thrown from the car and suffered h ead injuries, of&en aid. Kmecki remained hospitalized in Rancho Mtraae today. Patrol off icere said Brtabam'• car drifted off the 8de of Dlte Palm Avenue, bit , a tree and l"Olled several thne9 before cominl to • "°P· They said BriCMan WM 'fOt_~, • • ' An!hropologist big man on. campus DhH•ovc r •r of "Lu ·y' f o ii offering n ew link in e volutionary theory DENTIST JAILED. • • home, Bia Bear cabin, Coeta Meea office buUdJna and aJrplilnl' aa collaienl. He estimated Protopappaa' pereonal worth at $3~.ooo. The !'7·year-old dentlat, lookiq compoeed and wearing blue Jeana and a 1weater, Ht silently at the defendant's table d urln1 the proceedings. He answered "yes" when the judge leial • r{g'hta and WU Willing tol waJ"'hia rl&ht to a prellmlnary hearing within 10 days. The hearing was set for JWle 13. Protopappas' attorneys said he BlffiY ... stopping their car. Police said three s us pects accoated a man and a woman as they left the Huntington Tavern in downtown Huntington Beach. Looking for money. one of the suspects allegedly struck one of the bar patrons in the face with a . 25 cahber handgun. The man and woman broke away from their attackers and hid in nearby bushes until the s u spects departed. Their whereabouts w ere detected by the police helicopter and radioed to Drayer and Flllcicchia who made the arrest. The three suspect.a, according to police, we.re Glen Thomas, 25, of Huntington Beach ; Terry Fuller, 22, a transient from Texas and David Dressman, 35, of Huntington Beach. They were jailed on charges of. robbery WH "1t1aytna wllh friend• In Oran11e County" over thl' Wl.>ekend and trylna to arrana for bull. Co.it.a Meta polkl' h1ave bc't'n aearchina for him since Ult' murdt>r char"t>• luued lut Friday Cloninge r said h~ feared Protopappaa would flee the area 1f he was released, but Franklin disagreed, <.·ltlng the fact th•l Protopappas had turned hlrn1Clf ln a nd hired two lawyera to represent him Protopappu surrendered his passport during the hearing. C lo ninger to ld the judge Protopappas did not Inte nd to kill t h e three patients. but h is "wanton disregard for life" an treatment jusufled the second- degree murde r charges f iled against the dentLSt. R o bert Tulle r , o n e o f Protopappas' attorneys. said the . dentist had performed the same procedures thousands of tames without incident. Protopappas ha s b ee n prohibited by COU(t order since late February Crom practicing dentistry pendlng the outcome of an investigation by the state Board of Dental Examiners. The dentist has been under investigation b y Costa Mesa police since the F'eb. 8 death of Patricia Craven after she was treated in Protopappas' office. Two other patients, Minna Kim Andreasse n , 23, o f Huntington Beach. and Cathryn D. J ones. 31, of Costa Mesa, died earlier after being anesthetized by Protopappas. BY OLENN SCOTT C)('tf!e Oe.ltr Hot ll•ft Ont1 l'llrcful tillniPIC ot Donuld Johan1tm waa enough to explatn why he wwa being led around UC: lrvfntt yoet.erday by • UTWIJ but cxcil#'d IJn>up uf pt'()plf' Pinned on the lapel of his Navy blu" blawr waa.. u miniature golden rcpll<:u of ttw bone& of a hand, a desJgn that hWi bC'com both n profl•u1n nul and comrnercwl •ymbol for him. It lan't jUAt any hand, though Johan so n la o n e of anthropology's rising stars, a sclentiClc adve nturer whost> du;roveries of f06Stlized 1keletona in Ethiopia have led to major revisions in theories on how humans evolved Crom apes. h 's one thing to sift the urad p lains of Eastern Africa for f1llillll.I 1md lfUllc anoth~r I.<.> turn thl' flndlnl(11 lnto popular 1tufl. JohMnaon hu muturt..od both Th(> lapt•I pin II un l.magl' o( bon~ dilc.'<1vt•rc'<l during a 1117~ t·>tpt'dltlon In the Afar V1tll1•y The 11kelt>tal h•nd 111 th.. 11ame rompotiltt• Ct•oturt:d on the rover of the provocative book ht• ro- authored. "Luer Tht· &-glnnltlga of Humunklr1d. • J o hun11o n Clew from h111 headquarters an Berkeley to UC lrvlne yesterday to spdk to an overflow crowd of morf than 400 people In the Fine Arts Village Theater on the meaning of his dlSOOveries and the work o( his <.'OIJeagues. His belwf. Humans evolved from apes more recently than scientists traditionally beliew.>d. It may have c.x"Currt.'<l JUSt more Cable TV Chief Robe rl La Toure lle, 42, has been name d the new executive vice president and gene ral manager of Dickinson Pacific Cablesystems whic h serves Huntington Beach , Fountain Valley, Westmin te r and Stanton. than 4 m llllon yean •ao rather than 18 to 20, he IAld. And he 11uig ut1 Homo aapione (u humana ar«! c&lled) lin't the lat8t •tae• In • direct hierarchy from "pee, but It the end result of an ulfahoot, m evolutionary turn apurrcd by the IUCCffl of tool Uk and brain ex~lon. "We are the side branch,' het aald. "We ar sort o f th e evolutionar y experiment that never wo uld have been predicted by o ur ancestors." Hla theory draw• on what scienllata learned in 1974 when J o han1on and a colle ague s tumbled upon the bone• of ·Lucy. a femal e h o minid estimated to be 3 million yean old. She walked on two Ceet, not (our as apes. but her skull waa more ape·Ukc than human. Roads study rapped By J EFF ADLER Of the DllllJ Piiot ti.ff T he item on the Boar d of Supervisors' agenda yesterday appeared innocent enough. JohaNon theoriuw that LucY• people, he named their typt Au.lraloplthfocua 1fa1'111 ("Afar 1pe·man"). preceded the evolutJonary tum that aeparated the human atratn from • more primitive, plant--eatfna apedea of hominid.I that eventU.Uy failed to od1pt and dJed out, She wu, tn effect, the mother of both aroupe, he aJd. Wh n the flrst •pee stood on two feet remain• a myatery. though. Johan1on aald he'• confident the answer Uea in the EHt African 1011. lt't Ju1t a matter of returning to find more tomi.ia. Meanwhile, he 1ugge1ted humana are on the brink of a new and equally significant evolutionary ch ange, thl1 one ca.used by cultural pressures to ada pt t o the powe r • or technology. "My big fear ts 1f we don't ma k e th e right c areer choice ... somebody is golng to push the wrong button and there won't be any descendants to ask where they came from." RAIDS . • • From Page A1 The raids wiU be criUcized for t wo reasons: City 0Hic1als contend Borde r Patrol agent s act unconstitutionally when they sweep into fields without search warrants to arrest workers who . are in the United States illegally. I rvi n e resi dents are e ndange red because workers often flee agents by speeding off dangerously in cars or on foot through local yards. OSCAR WINNER. SCUBA DEATH. • • It authorized Board Chairman Roger Stanton to circulate for publtc comment a much-heralded inquiry into how the county might go about financ ing transportation improvements during the next I 5 years. The report, prepared by a cons\1Jtmg firm under contract to the county, recommends a mix of tolls, taxes, fees and fares be used to pay for $13.7 billion in raiJ, bus and highway improvements planners envision in the county by 1992. The co un c il agreed u nan imously to send their objections to Smith, who is ctuef policymaker for the lmmigration and Naturalization Service, of which the Border Patrol is a branch. • • frequei:'tlY ,ee movies together and collaborated on the Oscar Fever predictions. "It was kind of fun because I'd never entered a contest before," Wendy said. "But we were so caught up in the Oscar excitement. I was just reading the paper one day and saw the contest and decided to enter." The. other Daily Pilot readen who accurately forecast the top seven wmners were: From Costa Mesa -Elizabeth Mmeo, Dana Lee McFadden. Chip W igely. Philip Harper and Murray G. Black From Newport Beach -Ernestine V. Towne, Kathv Harrison, Mildren Hamilton, Thomas Cassutt. Lrnda Gregory and Shirlee Roberts. ' From Laguna Beach -Francine K~ler. Eileen Barnette C Ga.rfink..le and Jerry Halbert. ' J:trom Huntington .Beach -Ed Schmerler , Mark R. Barre, Carol Kanode and Nancy Vogelgesang. From Irvine -Jerry Rice. Hunting ton Beach ,..... -looking tor _ .. l*IPte ""'° took •1.100 ~of "*c:Nncllee ~-oey "-IN A8 Fumlture -., 1.._, 1 8-:tl Bl¥d A....,, ""' e WOINn ~ -ept a .... .,,,.n buay wt11i. ecc:omplle9a IOOll artlc*ie trom -·-o1 me tc«• A ,,...,. tu-WU .,, ... .., yMletO•• •• Ille Ta1ge1 1to1e. 988~ Adama Ave lot afle9edly al>Opl11t1ng a CIC>Clt I lie CIOCk. ...-a• se. -,_.., A r-t on IM t 7900 block of \Ian au.en Str-teponed that tOOla v-•t 11'\0fe ltlan 12,000 -a alolefl IYom a loc-eo , ... tl«age lhecl Irvine A bo• of :>6 vldeO 1rain1nv ,_ wonh 1720 •• ,~.., alOlen yealerd•y lfom 1n. Cenlury 2, CO•POt•I• ortle• at 1187' MecArtl'tu< Blvd From Page A1 man's family have declined to discuas the circumstances of his death. The $5 million claim was filed by his widow, Maurine Margaret Scroggs. A district report on the matter st.ates that "the claimant alleges that the district breached a duty to provide the decedent with equipment ln a condition capable of sustaining Life and that this breach caused Mr. S croggs' death The claimant also alleges that the district failed to have on hand proper s upe r visor y personnel in the event of aerious injury and that this failure also caused Mr Scroggs' death." Bill Gold, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Corone r's oHice, said Scroggs' Jan. 17 death certificate lists the cause as an accidental drowninf(. N0<lllw00d Communlly P.,k wpenn00<s lold pohce yelle•d•y • plaqua •On lor t tcholeclutal eace llen c:a ol Iha naw ctub'IOuae wat atolen lat• ....,end The l)laQue valued •I '30 wH ha~ on • wall 1n 111e c"'- f:'o untain Valley A 11·\'Nf·okl deelllul• Qtrl who ,,.., JUll errt,,.C lrom P1111eo.ip1>1a wH laken lnlo ptolecl•v• cutlOdy yellerday Sha •at tur<!ecl over to • youth _,., 1n Gwcl4n O to•• Olloctell !hare u 10 tney woulo arr~ 1tenl()Ol'teoon b.ek 10 ,_ ,,_ 8utglaro took property and GUh wortr. more 111an MOO rrom the Flral C11r1111an Church 11110 Magnoll• St Tha lou onc:luOed S7S 1n COlf\t ftom 1n. Ua/I boa Fair weather Coastal '*· C•Hl•I low 58, Inland 48 0oMt.i l'l6gh 86. in..nd 70. Walw ... SfMll er.ti ~ tn enecn "°"' Polnl Coneeptfon to th• Melllcen bof daf. Nont\w..C wlnde 20 10 30 knot• ov.r outer ••••re wltl\ 8 to 1CMooC-~_,-· "9fl~able 1on';r:n1 to:;;,,,'7""~ Md w.i to IOUt"we•I 10 lo 18 1111011 tomorrow .n.rnoori. Wind ~ 3to4 ..... Wea1~ ...... 4tol ..... then a loot of anew yeetwday Mor• -and wind• uo 10 40 mpti -• forecast todey T emp eratures NATION HI Lo s: 31 57 28 10 35 3.4 19 72 39 76 51 65 42 82 87 59 34 3e 21 80 SS 3e 21 53 211 58 45 68 73 49 30 46 H 2t 20 83 54 82 42 87 45 29 18 H 47 63 63 49 43 73 47 57 ... 15 11 55 45 37 22 &a 43 M 41 33 31 87 40 2& 14 45 2t 35 H u 11 55 .. ~ Ttlul'sday, ~I 14 '••' .,.~ h ..... ,.. ... y.,< .. -.OU U ~ ~I .,I C.,._,e<ct Fronts Cold .,. Warm ..., 44 28 Pnllade4pl\19 8e 68 PhoenlK 71 ea Pltllb\KQll 81 llO Ponlend, U. 91 84 Ponllln<I. Ore 73 49 PrO\lldence 4 1 .. 1 RaMlgtl 71 39 A.,id City &3 39 R«lo 7 1 8 1 RIQhrnond 82 49 St 1..oul1 et 57 St. Pet .. Tamp• 73 43 Sah Lake 711 84 8*" Antonio n 12 San Diego 411 4 I San '"anol9CO « le 81 81• Me<le 79 83 S.llle 78 82 81\f~ 5e .. Stoll• ,.11111 59 40 SPoll-39 t7 SYf*OU*e 17 ... '°""' 51 34 T~ II N fulM WMNtl01on WICM• 67 35 ee 47 52 38 61 <I() '7 38 59 <141 84 39 36 23 41 u 85 40 83 56 79 80 .. , 31 12 87 83 52 5a 43 112 32 11'4 31 11 ea 43 a.. 52 21 41 21 71 42 47 "° 11 47 11 41 71 :It llRF RIPOii Tides TODAY ltoOllCI IOW 2 M PJt't 0.1 ltoOllCI Nott 1.11 p.m I 4 TOllllOMOW """ -i 41 •lfl· .0.1 ""' IW\ ..... "' .. i 9-fd' • U7 Dll'I 10 '-"'~ Utp"' It tun H • t ·tl p m , rllH ..,.,...,_ • 41.11\ Moon .. ,, 1:11 p ..... rlMI tomorrOW r.u e.m ' ... Orange Coas t Col l ege spokesman Jim Carnett said college adminjstrators decided last Friday to cancel the five scuba c lasses n o w being ~ondu c ted . Mo re than 100 stude nts were enrolled m the <.:lasses this semester. Carnett said several factors contnbuted to the decision to halt thl• classes: -The legal claims associated with the scuba student's death T~ sta te's reluctance to c:ontmue funding scuba classes. Although these classes were on a state "hit hst" last year. Orange Coast was able to continuing offering them because they are required for students seeking a vocational certificate m marine technology. -The marine technology program is being d1scontmued after this semester as part o f various program cuts approved by district trustees. College off1c1a)$ said scuba students enrolled this spring will receive I ,.., credits because they C'Ompleted half of a three-credit course. S tudents who need a half-semester course to maintain a full schedule will receive help finding one. college officials srud. Also. the $30 (ee that would have been used to pay for thlS term's Catalina tnp will be refunded Stall. one person associated with an OCC scuba class. who asked to remain unnamed. voiced concern that the students may be left dangerously "half-educated" regardang scuba diving. Students this term have practiced only in calm pool condit ions. but the source said aome may feel they have enough skill to 8CUba dive m the ocean, although the etas.es had not reached that type of training. But the plan and its premises drew early fire from an agtt.at.ed Supervisor Bruce Nestande, who questiuned the way the study was prepared and the conclusions 1t had drawn. For o peners. Nestande said some of the prerruses from which wide-ranging conclusions were drawn "defied logic" He also said he disagreed wnh t.he mix of transportation proJeClS that were used as a basis for the study's dollar projections. The study allocated 50 percent of all transportation funds to mass transit projects, Nestande said. "I don't believe in that distribution," the supervisor . who hu been cr itical of mass transit projects at the expense o( highway projects. conunented. Nestande a lso questioned the logic of considering capping operations a t J o hn Wayne Airport (lo be considered by the board today) at some level while proposing to build a tram or rad line into the airport. "It would be hard to keep a cap on in the future if we have a tram or rail system feeding m ," he said. H e added 1t might be "irresponsible" of the board to procee d with propos e d transportation improvements when so many other capital projects. such as the Santa Ana Flood Control Pro)eCt. remain in question . Despite his reservations. however. N estande joined the board in unanimously directing the report be made available to community organiiatlons and interes ted individuals for comment. Howeve r, one r esident objected during the meeting. Robert Dosie r said the city shouldn't get involved in federal matters. where it has no real power. Agran. who said recently }'le is a ngered every time he is renunded of the raids. answered that the city is responsible for the welfare or its residents, including fann workers. This 1s harvest season for strawberries, the crop planted throughout the flat fields in southern and eastern lrvme. No major Border Patrol sweeps have b een reported th i s season a lthough Agran said many small-scale arrests have taken place. 3 in custody for vandalism T hree young boys spent Last night in Orange County Juvenile Hall after throwing Molotov cocktail-like devices into a window al Nieblas School in Fountain Valley. Police said three wine bottles were filled with gasoline, set on fire, and hurled into the building sometime yesterday. The fire in the b o ttles a pparently went out before it could set the sch ool at 9300 Garderua Ave. ablaz.e. But a window and some screens were broken and damage was reported to the exte.·ior paint job. . Police said parents of the boys -aged 11, 13 and 14 -will be liable for the $100 m estimated damages. " WATCH FOR Crown Hardware's FAMOUS ANNUAL PARKING LOT SALE Coming Saturday, April 23* At Our Corona del Mar Store 8:30 5:00 P .. M. E. Coast Hwy. •Note, thla aale ta Saturday after next. Aprll 23, not this Saturday. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT IWedMIOa~. Aprtl 13. 1'83 NATION \'V'ashington urges • unity Budget unit rej cl federal sp nding cut CJ1icago 's fir t black n111 yor 1no.-e to cool racial ten ion By Tbe A11oc lated Preu WASJilNGTON Tht· Hl·publll'an lt·d St-n•lt> Budil'l CommHtt't' toduy rejl'Ct<'d l'r~dent RHtc11n'ic p1 ope.all; for dt'l'I' cuts in federal spcndlnH for edunAtlmi and Job n·trulnlng programs. lnst«.>ad, th.-l'Omm1tt1..>e vott'<i 12-8 to tlll'l'l'llil(' muney Cor u brood range of educnt1on programs by uboul 2 pc.'l"l'<'nl Those progrnms lncludl· lmrn!i Cor t•o llegl' studcnlll, v~ational education, Lmprovf'd tt'llchmg or mathemollcs and 111cience and asstst.ance to h1gh S('hoo~ and l'Oll~ges I Shultz ask s Arabs to withdraw PLO WASHINGTON Arab countrtl'l> "madt· a m1l>t.ake" an naming the Palesune Liberation Organ12allon a~ the sol<.• legmmate represent.alive of the Palestinwn people and should now consider withdrawing that m;:mdall'. Seaelflry or Stall· George Shulu says At a nt.>ws conference yesterday, Shultz blamed the PLO almost t•xdu.,1wly for the latt.-'St St'tbac:ks to President Reagan's Caltt:nng Maddie East pea('(' phm But ht• imphcatly criticized Arab l"Oun tn('i. fur acct'ptan~ what ht• regards as PLO exl-eSSt'S Missing boniber sought in d esert LAS VEGAS -Air Fort'e planC'S ix'lo(an seart'htng ridgcs and canyons loday for a 8-52 bomber carrying seven people which disappeared whale makmg a mock bombing run Fog. snow, low clouds and r:im had hampt•red the SC•lr<.'h for the plane, but Capt. Jerry Garlington o f the Air F'or<.'l' r('SCU<.• headquarters at Scott Air Force &St'. lll • said the Wl'ather improved slightly today. Yesterday's search was rcstnl'ted to low-lying areas. Garlington said the 20 search plan<.-s today would focus on three high ridges along th<.' route of flight the missing bomber should have taken The B-52 disappeared Monday during a low-level mock bombing run. STATE Inves tors probe d in De Lorean case DETROIT -An Internal Revenue Serv1Cl' probe may haunt some prominent and w<.'allhy Americans, including entertamers Sammy Davts Jr and Roy Clark, who invested more than $17 m11hon into rl'SE.'arch of the De Lorean sports car. court records show. The IRS wall not say why ll as mt<'rested in court records of the auto empire of John Z De Lorc..in. but an agency spokesman admits it does not allow tax dcdul·t1ons for product research 1! the money never went for that purpose. The money was collected in 1978 by a New York invcstml·nt banker for the gull-winged sports car's development wh<.'n De Lorean. former General Motors Corp. exa·uuve, was trying to start ha.s auto empire De Lorean was arrested in Los Angel~ last fall on drug trafficking charges and 1s free on bail (Thl· Wt•st Coast distributorship for the exotic sports l"ar was in Irvinl'. Calif.) Students protest f ee hike proposal By MIKE ROBINSON AHMl1ttod ,,.., Wttt., C HI C ACO Har old W01hlngton, narrowly oloctcd tht' tlrat black mayor of tht> nation's 1<•<.'cmd-laraHt city aft.er a divu1lv~ c:•mpalen charaed with racial tension, offered hi• hi;nd today "In f rlendahlp and foUowihlp to every llvina 110ul in thla city.' The two-term congretsman. who d efe1i1ted Republican liernard Epton In ye1terday'1 cloct1on, wilJ become mayor on a date to be set by the City Council today . He promised a "new Democratic coolit.lon" In his four years In offic.'e "We must work as one people for our common good and our common goals," W~shington said after defl•1.111ng Epton in an l'lec.'.llon marred by angry mob SCl'nes, wat..rmelon lapt·I buttons ond "'Volt• R1~hl, Vol<' White" T 1hlri.. Wa1hin1it{m, who loet u 1 U77 bid Cur City Hall, 11&ld hi• th It step would bt' to met't with Epton at &1 prayer break!Nt WI VISIONS REALIZED <See related 1tory, Pase F Z) both candldateli had promhsed, win or lose. The ict-toaether latcr was poa.tpo ned until afu:rnoon. and Wm1hmgton aald the meeting would Include his opponents In the primary. Washington oven·ame a 1972 misdemeanor tax convict1on. suspension of hlB law lice~ and an array of unpaid b1Us to dash Epton's hope of becoming Ch1tago's first GOP mayor In 52 ycurs. He won on a record l 3 malhon turnout with a powt>dul outpouring of black voles, strong support among H1span1cs and Some of Cahfornaa·s college and umvers11y :.tudents are mounting a statewide protest against plans to ra1Sl' thNr fees About J.600 of them chanted. stomped, clapped. and carried placards on various campuses yesterday In Sacraml•nto, about 1.200 Northern California students. including c1v1I rights groups, marched through Capitol Park and gathered on the W1..>st S~ps. shouting. "No Way, We Won't Pay," and ·'Nuke the Duke" Delly Piiot Photo bJ L .. P1yne Palm tree fans am Osadc he, left, Rhonda Bramlett, Richard Freel and Nick Miraglia check out one of trees the city wa nts l o uproot. Burton mourne d in San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO Wnh flags at half-staff. the body of Congressman Phillip Burton was to he m st.a te in th«' rotunda of City Hall today with an honor guard reflecung his strong interest m conservation Hundreds of constituents and fnends were expected to fiJe past the closed <."OHm as Nallonal Park rangers, police, firefighters and deputy sheriffs kept a v1g1l m his memory. The 56-year-old liberal Democrat, who S('f"Ved an Congress since 1964, d1ed Sunday. Balboans fighting mad over palm tree threat WORLD Walesa r eleased after questioning GDANSK. Poland - Police seized Solidanty leader Lech Walesa at his Gdansk apartment loday. questioned him for more than five hours. then released him. Walesa declined to d1~ the incident with reporters. saying he was "too tired" and would make a statement "after Sunday." State television saJd Walesa was questioned about a weekend meeting he said he held with underground Solidanty leadeQ>. But the broadcast said Walesa "did not confirm" to police that he held the session Lech Walesa Tahiti hard hit b y typhoon PAPEETE, Tahil1 -The wo'lt typhoon to tut this tropical island in modem times lefl Tahiti loday with at least one l>«'.':l°n dead, 26 injured and as many as 15,000 homeless, relief officials said. All of Tahiti was hit for 12 hours yesterday by winds of 95 mph to 110 mph, the Weather Bureau said. A 28-year-old By STEVE MARBLE Of UM O•lly Piiot 8 1Attl Sugges ting it's almost ant1- Cahforn1a to chop down palm trees. a group of Newport Beach neighbors are trying to ax a t1ty plan to uproot a row of palms on busy Balboa Boulevard. "No way are we going to part with our palm trees They're beautiful," says Winifred Foss, who has laved on the Newport avenue for 22 years. The palms, planted in a center d1v1der, are marked to <.'ome down and be relocated at a park in West Newport. The city says the frond-topped trees are too valuable to toss away The palm trees -36 m all -are planted on the boulevard between 33rd and 44th streets. Lloyd Dalton. the beach city's design engmeer, says the trees are causing problems with motorists who complain they have troule seeing oncoming traffic because of the palms. He says the palms also have plunged the city into legal hot water because several dnvers who've been an auto accidents have sued the city over the spindly tn.>es Sam Osadche, another boulevard resident, suggests the city give the palm trees the same rights offered all accused ofrenders . . woman was electrocutt.>d by a power line brought down by a falling tree w hen the storm hit and 26 others were harmed by falling objects, emergency service o fficials reported. "The city's jumping too fast.· The trees should be innocent unlll proven guilty," he says, We're Listening ••• 642·6086 .. 5 . ., ..,..,..,'*' " '°" 00 ~~·: J,.M,.::;'p~. ·~· 1-COll'f Wiii II• ......... .. Nt..., _, ........,. " ...... ,..._,_ °""' .,., 1 • "' cal -IO •"' "" """ oap, .. .......... ctr•••·· TlflJhR• ... ~c-,..._.. ......... ~--­•••1•aw .. -......,.._,. ..... • What do you lake about the Daily Pilot" What don't you like" Call the number at left and your message wlU be recorded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24 hour answering 1ervlte may be used t<' record let· ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include thetr name and telephone number for venftcalion No clrculalion calls, please Tell us what·ii on your mind ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ThomH P. Ha'9y Pvblltll« •nd Cll,.1 E~ecuti.... OOIC»I C .... "*9 -'"" ..... 1141..,....,. A" otMf ..,_.,,,..,._ ......_, MAIM OP1'1CI 3JO W..t 9ey SI eo.ta ..._. CA • MOI --lklti IMO Co91t .,._, CA m,. COP"f''IJ"' 11113 Ortl\Clt eo-t ~ ~ No ntwt ttO•IO , 111u11,.1101" tdltorl11 """'' 01 ·-·-ia ........ ....., 119 ~ _,..,.... Del-(11~- ' cla1rnmg 1t':. not the palms but parked cars along the center d1v1der that cause problems for mo tons ts. "If the palms go -it's Ha1bor Boulevard here we come." Osadche adds. "I'm for leavmg the trees unul we come up with a tx>tter plan " The city's plan 1s to w1dt'n Balboa and to relam:lscape at that time The center median, where motorists now can park, might bl' eliminated in a widening prOJC<'l. Dalton says the uprooting JOb has been put out to bid The Caty Council. though. has the nght to mx the palm clearmg. "l JUSt can't understand 1t." says Foss. "'Those palms are a part of Balboa Boulevard They're about all we have " Gem Talk ByJC HUMPHRIES Crrt1f1rd Gt,,.olo(Jittt, J\GS TEN TIPS tor diamond buyers Her'!' ore len 11ps 10 help you choo\O diamonds wisely I Choose o 1ewolPr of good repu1011on 2 Remember the r our C s Coro1 w<>1gn1 color clonrv ond cur 3 Coro1 is o unit of we1gh1 Ttiere ore I 00 points 1n o c.orot Bec.ouse larger stones ore rare. rhey ore worth more per coral. 4· Most diamonds ore white. Others warmly reflect subtle colors. Colorless diamonds ore very rare, ond very voluable 5-Clorily decreases w11h the degree of 1mpedec.11oni. Inclusions. formed when rhe d1omond cr'f1lal1z&d centuries ago, delracr from clorlly 6· Cui determines how a diamond relrocis lrghr. and how 11 'twinkles" w11ll brtlhonce Marquise. peor-shoJ)9d and ovol cuts ore generally more voluoble 11\on rovnd or omerold-cua 1tooes. 7 Grodot1ons w ithin the Four C 't determine tho wide range of dlomond values 8· A toltloire. 01 tingle uone ring, 11 your be11 value, rather thon one wtlh several smaller tton•s 9 . 01omondl make ony jewelry piece more voluoble, bu• workmanship coun11 fOf mote In such plecos os eorrlngt, pins and br«elett 10-Buy a dloinond thol will 111eon 1he '1\0st to you ond to your loved Qn4' A d1omond It fote11et. Its purd1oae de1tr11el CCl(efvl thought • Unl'Xpt•rt«dly 1tr onai b114:klnti from rcform-mindud "h~kefront llbl!rat." al od1.h1 with Chy tt•U for yt•ar11 M le h lt'I L..a velle. chulrm&n ol t.ht' Board of Ele<.'llon Commluloncra, u1d 82 pc·r~·t•nt uf those reg11lered to vote c·1111t ballol.3. With 2,11115 ot 2.914 preclnci. rt"purtlng early loday, Washington had 6~ff. 7'J.7 votes, or 51 4 rx·rwnt, to Epton'1 617,159, or 48 3 percent Soclal18l Ed Warren got 3, 725 vot.es. Ninety-seven per<.-ent of blackti cast their ballots for Washington, compared to 18 perc·cmt of whit.es, ac<.:ording to an exit poll That was an improvement over the Democ ratic primary. when Wash1n~ton got JUSt 6 percent of the white vote in a three-way l'lll'<' "History was made tonight, oh yeah," thl' beaming v1clor said ru. an esllmatro 15,000 cheered. lla ro ld Washington 4'0 vors vi<'lory : Judge delays . •, action : • • • on air noise suits An Orange County Superior Court Judge has postponed hearings on 137 small claims lawsuits filed by Newport Beach. Costa Mesa and lrvine residents llred of the noise generated by nearby John Wayne Airport. The cast·s. scheduled to be considered by Harbor MurucipaJ Court beginning today, were postponed when Judge Robert Knox decided many of the major issues contested in the suits are covered by a Superior Court lawsuit filed last December Some 60 of the cases were schc'<iuled for the hearing. while anothl'r 77 were set for trial during tht• week or April 18. Knox ruled the cases cannot be tried until the jur isdictional 1; dispute is settled. He ordered the < parues to argue their case before .. Superior Court Judge Phillip / Petty May 24. J Deputy County Counsel Dan ' Didier argued the Superior Court ' should have JUnsdiction over the issue because the swt filed last December was lodged before the ~· small claims actions. · Some 223 residents of the : three cities are seeking up to $1,-· 500 each in damages from the county, claiming noise and pollution from the airport hu l ~maged their right to enjoy / their properties and caused them mentaJ suffering. Hearing on ex-judge's appeal bid scheduled FormC'r Judge Joanne Harrold's cnmanal case wound ats way through five courtrooms yesterday tx>fore coming to rest with -Judge Bruce Sumner m OranR<' County Superior Court. . Sumner set a June 20 hearing date on Harrold's motion to set aside <.·harges she falsified her declaration of candidacy for the June. 1982. election and coerced a notary publJc into backdating a deed that would prove her local residency Sumner may not handle Vasquez new arts panelist Leah Vasquez.. an artist and former pubhc1st for the Laguna Beach Museum of Art. has been named t o tbe nine-me mber Laguna Beach Arts Cornnus&on He r work has appeared ln a variety of Southern California museums and is ri?presented In galleries m Los Angeles. London and Laguna Beach The arts comm1ss1on works in an advisory capacity to the Laguna Beach City Council in matters regarding culture and art Do youlrnow a CARAT proceedings beyond that heanng, however Presiding Judge Richard Beacom said he expects an appeal of Sumner's ruling on the mouon no matter who loees,. and that such an appeal will likely further delay the case. U the motion ta denied. Harrold aull will have to face the criminal charges also. Bt'acom said another judge may handle those matters so that they won't clog Sumner's JUdioa.l calendar -.. ' Harrold's case came to Sumner : after Judge William SheCfeld, to ! whom it had been assigned, 1 disqualified himself from the"" case because of personal tfes to• Harrold. The case then went to one court where criminal calendars are set, another court where it did not belong, and finally Beacom's court before being as&gned to Sumner. Harrold won the June, 1982, primary election for a West Orange County Municipal Court seat, but had the victory stnppea from her by a judge who ruled she was actually a resident of Riverside County and thus not eligible. She and her husband, 'I John Saporito, w e re the n indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury. 4 from a CARROT? We do because we've studied gemology. the science of gemstones and precious metals Our knowledge. combined with our ethteal and proless1onal bustness practices. have earned us membership 1n the Amencan Gem Society. a select group of 1ewelers in the Untied States and Canada We hOpe we can put our knowledge lo .....ork for yoi.. A.it Or•noe Oout DAILY PILOT/Wedn•aa•y, Aprll 13, 1083 Primer for prosperity Noted economi t h ead1; con ventio n in Anahe im thi w.-.~k By LARRY D. SPEARS or ... w,,... '""' How~. Ruff 11 coruldered th<> fo remost guN of Arne '• aold bup, and tht• rt<put.Mtlon la well ct.. . HJ.a booka.. "How to Protper Ourlf\8 the CommM Bad Yeara" and "Sur vive and Win In the Inflationary Etahtiee,'' have been read by millions Hla newalett.er, wt th more than 160,000 subllcrlbers, l1 one of the moat widely followed financial advlaory tervicft In the world. H~ has his own ie•vWoo ahow, and hla radJo program ill <"arned on more than 200 1tationa. All p romotin g the 1lorlea of gold as an investment medium, riJrht? Well, not exaclly T rue , w hen 6,000 people pour Into lhe Anaheim Convention Center tomorrow for the start of Ruff's aixth annual national convention, mo1t w ill be there to hear his latest projecUons about gold . But Ruff's personal and advisory philosophy is not chained to gold. ll Is, instead, a phil060phy of financi.al survival and Investment s u ccess, a d justed constantly in the face of changing political and economic conditions. In other words, 1f Ruff felt pork bellies were the bes t investment under certain conditions, then Howard J . Ruff he'd tout pork bellies - and have no qualms about 1t. ''Gold Is not always practical except as a basic part of a lofl8-tenn portfolio, a store of wealth," Ruff explained. "When gold has gone up beyond reason, when everyone is raving about it , when gold is on the cover of Time magazine, I'll sell. because gold will no lofl8er be the best investment." Why, then, is Ruff so closely associated with gold? One of the biggest reasons is tmung Ruff came to prominence in the mld-'70s, just at the start of the most inflationary period in history. And, according to Ruff, "inflation is the single most Important factor in the price of gold." He called the onslaught of double-d1g1t inflation, and with il, gold's meteonc <'limb from $200 t.o more than $800 an ounce in less than five years. And then he called the other side -the run back down. But not all the response to Ruff has been golden. He has been criticized as a doomsayer. thriving on bad news and playing on ~he fears of people living lo the shadow of economic upheaval, global conflict and a possible nuclear holocaust. "That's plain bull, that doomsday view of me." Ruff said. "It was plain bull then (when he first started making predictions for hard times) and it's plain bull now. "I'm just a businessman trying to make an honest buck helping other people make an honest buck. There's nothing doomsday about that," he continued, warming t.o what is obviously a sore subject. "Any insurance salesman selling life insurance could be called a doomsaver because he c:ould ~ for«utlna a rrt•mutuni death "Tht-function o 11 prupht>t uf doom 11 to J.m.!vent doom," Ruff said. "That's wh111t I'm doln1 wht•n 1 m1&k~ pN'dlctJona of Inflation; hopln1 It will prumpt P,Ollcy <"hanace that will prevent that lntlotlon ' And does Rutt see more inflation ahead'! ''There'• no queatlon we're 1n for more Inflation. The situation now la 1lmilar to 1976, only worse," he said. ''Then the government had a "O billion deficit and wu balling out Lockheed, the Penn Central and New York City. Now thl' deficit Is $200 billion and we're btuUng out the ban!<., Socml Security, Mexico and Brazil. "The government has to have more money t.o deal with these problemil, and the only way they can get it Is to print it!" That's the biggest reason Ruff 18 going into the Annheim convention with SU<'h a bullish stance - not JUSt o n gold, but on o ther hard-asset investme nts as well. "Right n ow w e're seeing a vcrr rare opportunity for investors," Ruff said. "We ve just had a wondl'rful. classic correcuon (the 20 per'C'ent drop in prices in late February and early March), w'-•'ve had a good consolldat1on phase and we should be seeing the cyclical turn within weeks, if wt• haven't already. "But right now, there's more money to be made short term in mveslment.s other than gold. We got a buy signal on gold mining •Nu:es last w~k (RufC is a strong advocate of techmcal analysis, .r l..ane Kirkla nd s pea ks in eounty charting trends, price movements a_nd sales Lane K irkland, AFL-C IO volume). Silver looks better than gold right now; Top labor official ~ets county talk platinum is better." president, will speak tonight at a What about the long term? Is gold the answer building trades rally to be held al for the Eighues? the Anaheim Convention Center. "I think so," Ruff said. "Our charts say $3,000 Kirkland also will make an ounce gold and $100 an ounce silver over the appearances tomorrow and long term... Friday at the Los Angeles Hyatt How long a term? "I'd say a viable timetable Re gency Hotel where he •~ \.vould see those prices by 1985 or 1986," Ruff said. attending the AFL-CIO regional conference. The Ruff convention gets under way at 9 am. The union leader's Anaheim ' Breast disease topic of seminar A iK.•mlnar on ttw physic-al and psychological cffo<:IM of breillll dt~ast· will be.• <:onductC'd Saturday, lit Golden Wt.-t1t Coll,•g<• in Huntington Beach ThC' program, l'nlltled "Currl'nt Perspectives in Brl•ast Dl&•ut!t!: A NC'w Look at an Old Lump," will bl> held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Forum I. Registration fet-11 $18. Physicians, n urses and counse lors will discuss breast exammat1on, diagnosis and treatment More information may be.· obt.u1ned by calling the <:'Ollege, 892-7711. ext 454 or 459 • Michael Ogden, a former physical education tt!&C'hN at Nc>w1>0rt Harbor High &:hool, 1s tht:' newest 1><:rgc.-ant in the lrvm<' Pohc."tc" Department. Ogden. 33, hwi been an off1('(•r in Lrvme fur fi ve y('ars He was promoted this month to th<· m•w post lo fill J vacancy ldt open s1nc.·c last Ot·tobl'r Ogden will rl-'mam in the dcp..irtment's planninl{, rc.'S(.'arch and training d1v1s1on Ht' also has workt..-d m traffic· and patrol d1v1s1ons. He graduatC'd from Newport Harbor m 1967 ;snd later worked at the high school as c.·r~ country and track l'Oat·h bt'fore going into law enforremC'nt •"Weight Till Now," a one-day work shop on C'ontrollmg your weight. will be presented by. Coastline College on S aturday, at the Peterson Leaming Center. 20661 Farnsworth Lane, Huntington Beach. The program will last from 8 30 a.m t.o 3 30 p.m. Health and fitness lecturer Terry R. Monroe, director of LifeLong Corp in Irvine, w ill conduct the program. Ht•g1stratlon fee 1s $25. For information, call the Community ServK'etl office at Coastline Collegt". 963-0811, ext. 25fi tomorrow and runs through Saturday, wtth appearance will begin a t 7 30 ,.-r-eg_~-tr~a_u_o_n_s_ti_11_o_pe~n~p-r1,o_r_t~o t_h_e_f_irs~t -sess~-io_n~~~~P~·-m~~~~~~~~~~ ~___J~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CORRECTION In the Seara April 13 adver tlalng ••ctlon, the r e I• an advertlaement on th• back pag• for "FamllJ Winner 11 Athletic Shoe•." Th• prlcea are correct; however, th• colo r lllCiatratlon 11 Incorrect. Th• correct color of th•M •hoe• 11 dark blue, llght blue •nd white trim. We alncerelJ regret anJ lnconveni.nce thl• maJ hav. cau1ed. I Sears I ORANGE COUNTY MASTER C HC)RALE 111 it s 27th Co ncl'rt ~L·a~on SPR\NG Uuo SUMME~ 11 wet~ our Sp<~ oWJr c le cuClJlC.e .~1 ~ Df\Y.S Ot\JLY,.JAftl,\L,\4,15•Kof l)r. M ~1urice Allard, Mu ~ic l)irl'cto1 invite~ you to the l~Oth Yl'ar BIRTH L)AY C ELEBRATIC)N of #"'3'!> '10~ 50% ... 751., ~ ~£., ~ Ok-select.e<f-?Fuir44 a.Ali 1:J:'I. nul.!£ - f~_, ~ '5~ dJl.CL 1cf1 ~IN'S! ~ EAav! ALL 9U£.S ftN~ THI HAM SO GOOD WI BUILT A STOii AROUND IT. •&<*eel or.cl smoked up to 30 ho\xa • SglrOI alceel or~ fM bone • Cov4"eel with our aecret glot• • ... f ot room t~otur• ao no heotlng nec:euorv •Juet col. Ofder ond ~k ltup ...;:;__ ___________ _ WE DO CATERING • GIFT CERTIFICATES JOHANNES BRAHMS as \\'C pc rfo r111 his 111011u111e n ta I • ~ .......... equ1em \\It h 11.ltltlll.iiJ\ l'l'llll\\lll'll "'n l111-.t"' l)1.:Ju11.1 \t L'\L'll"P ll \1 1p t.ll)Cl .111d I ):I\ 1d hlld. H.1r1t111h: \\ It Ii t lh.' M.1 .... t 1..·1 \\mphrnn On:hr ..... t1 ,1 l'hilq' WL" ..... lln , Mu ..... 1c 11ll'L'Clrn ' Saturday, April 16, 1983 8:00 p .rn . Dona ld R . Was h M e n1ori al Auditoriu1n G a rden G rove , C alifor ni a Ticket Order ""'"' ,, •II '""I''" 1~ ''"' 1111.J, I N.1111, I 11\ l'h1111, I l,11 A1l11h '' '""' "' '111111\-111 [ '• "'"' I Ill I II '" .11hl "'\I ... dM I L•l'------ 1 \' '" ~· ""'' ~! ~ ~· g -----'--:-1,-•• -p I I II\ ''"'II tt " . ·' I It, 1 I. p.11 .tJ.I\· It• ( 11 111~1 l ••11111 \\I h I \ h 11 iJ, l h.11 ~·· \ ''·' Cl \\.1-1111 11.J I 'I' I l .1h l\11t h11t 1 I .I \1~11.llllll 1•1, .••• 111.111 ti• 0 1.l ll):\ l 1111111\ M l•h I l h 111 "' r·n ""' \1 •• • l\11.1h1, 111 t .1111 "'''" l'f,,1,, \llllto.l ,1 •l,lllll'\.f ,,Jt .hldt t"\\J \111\IPl11 lt•I f\111111 111 ttdo.1 '' I h,·l\k 111111 1111 ,11111111' •,tk• 111 1111\\'111111 11111,11111111 ,ill 1h1 I h111,1h ll11•ttl\" l }I It~ l'ol t • t I ; \ ~ 11 h \ '111 l{\'l11m J, • ,,, Woinen's poverty growing rapidly WASHINGTON (AP) Poverty ln fomalo·head~d hOUMholda la growlng rapidly as d 1 vorce, ae para t lon, and adolNCent pregnancies lncrea11e and blu in education and employment linger, the U.S. 1 Commlaslon on Civil Rlghta aaya. In "A Growln'R Criala: Disadvantaged Women and their Children," the commlaaion aa.ld it was "alarmed about the increasing Income dlaparltJes for women, particularly minority women, headins houaeholda." "For many black, white and Hispanic women, poverty meana inadequate and infrequent use of medical services, reduced employment opportunities and increased househ old responsibilities," the report said. "Children, when their mothers live in poverty, run an increased risk of birth defect• 1tnd mulnutrlUon and 1ubll1t In an environment that could Interfere with education und futurt· employabJlJty." The commlaalon found that the problem• are greMtcr for nonwhite women who are h~uds of households than for whit<.', female head.a of famJlies. "The underlying impll<'allon of .this trend is that, all other things ~lng equal, black and Hispanic female-headed households will dominate the poverty population by the year 2000," the report said Reviewing data gathert.-d primarily by the U.S. Census Bureau, the comm1ss1on found that between 1960 and 1981, thl:' number of persons 1 n po1Jr famllies headed by women rOSC' 54 percent. 'Bag lady' wealthy; $250,000 at death SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) -A woman who lived in a tin shack and rummaged for food in trash cans had more than $250,000 in savings when she died last month at the age of 92, authonties said. The body of Margaret Siders, found in her modest dwelling on March 31, was being kept at the Caddo Parish morgue because no one has agreed to pay for her bur ial, said parish coroner Dr Robert Braswell. Authorities said she died sometime in late March. For 20 years, Siders was a familiar figure in downtown Shrevepor t, pulling a wagon through the city and sifting through trash ror edibles. She had lived alone in the small. tin house since her husband Herbert died about six years ago Authorities discovered Siders' fortune after police Detective Bettye Brookings obtained permission to enter the home to seal'C'h for the records of savings aCt"Ounts she said she knew were there. Brookings. who as a meter maid in the early 1960s befriended Siders, said the bank books she found showed about $250.000 in savings at four local banks. and she belaeved Siders had more money in another account. The house apparently was broken into before the detective arrived, authorities said, possibly by fortune hunters. Siders had been rumored to be rich since the early 1970s. when poHce found $98,000 in a mattress after a fire at the Siders' former home. Dt'un Rual ••r p layb u l O(:C Celebritie , locals vie o n occ C OUl"l A Hollywood celebrity basketball team will square oCf against a squad uf Orange Coast College faculty and students tonight at the ace gym. The l'clt•brity C'Ontest, designed to raise funds for student scholarships, wllJ begin at 7:30. Ti(.:kets, prited at $3. will be available at the door, on the Costa Mesa cam pus. 2 70 l Fairview Road. The Hollywood outfit wiU be led by s uc h stars as Michael Damian (The Young and the Restless), Km Shriner (General H os pital). Jack Coleman (Dynasty). and Dean Butler (Little House : A New &·ginning) The ace squad. coached by OCC basketball coach Tandy G1ll 1s, wsll inc l ude : Jim Jorgensen (crew coach), Mike Mayne (baseball coach}, Ken Oruz (psyc·hology professor), Ron Rooker (acC baseball player and former all-league high school basketball star), and Reid Hadley (OCC oarsman and former high school basketball player). .-------- Boheinian Club faces bias appeal SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The st.ate won't drop efforts to force the secreuve Bohemian Club, a retreat of presidents and corporate potentates, to hire women, an attorney for the Fair Employment and Housing ~ion says. The commission ruled in 1981 that the all-male club's hiring policies unfairly dLSCnmmated against women and it ordered the club to start hmng women at its Sonoma County encampment and at its San Franci.sco headquarters. Commission stalf attorney Jim Miller said the agency decided to appeal the ruling of Sonoma County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Eymann. who said last month that the club can restrict employment -overruling the commission. Club officials have argued that the presence of w omen would interfere with the uninhibited hijinb at the club's annual forest retreat, which is regularly attended by leaders in politics, industry, th e milita r y and culture. Presidents Hoover, E isenhower, Nixon, Ford and Reagan have attended. Miller said he couldn't name the date when the commission would file its appeal. probably in San Francisco. Club attorney William Edlund declined to comment on the planned appeal, saying a statement would be "premature." State may delay sale of mansion SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senate's leader says he is trying to work out a compromise that would delay the sale of the new governor's mansion until Gov. George Deukmejian leaves office. Senate l'rt!Sident Pro Tem David Roberti, D- Los Angeles, said in an interview the proposal under discussion would allow Deukmejian and his family to live in the 12,000-aquare-root structure. and then require lta aale. The proceeds would be used to build another governor's residence closer to the Capitol, Roberti aa.ld. The sprawling, Spanish-style structure located In suburban Carmichael, 14 miles east of the Capitol, was proposed by former Gov. Ronald Reagan. Former Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .. a bachelor, refuaed to live in it, calling It an unneeded "TaJ Mahal" He uaed an apartment across the street from the Capitol. A law enacted l.ut yev requires the state to Rll the f1l&ll.Si<m, but state officials say bids have been too 1ow Orengo Co11t OAILY PILOT /Wedf\e1d1y, April 13, 1083 • By Tbe A11oclated Preaa PARIS -f>rloce11 Caroline does lndct'<i "o uut with Robertlno Ro11elllnJ, 34, *>n ot the late actreu Jn1rld B era man, b\•t newapaper rcporta thMt th1 ·y plan to wed "are not true ," the 11pokeawoman for Monaco's royal family a.aid yesterday. "II ever ahe decides to marry, the announcement will come from th(' palare," Nad ia Lacoate said 1n a telephone conversation from the Monaco Embassy In Paris The New York Dally News and the New York Post reported the wedding 11> planned for September and said tht-date will be announ ced by Caroline'& father, Prince Rainier or Monac-o. Caroli n e, 26, as thl' daughter of Prlnceu Grace, formerly actress Gra~ Kelly. who was killed in an auto accident last fall. Caroline was divorced from her first husband, Phillippe Juoot, in October 1980. She is seeking an annulment, which would allow h er to marry again in the church. SOUTH BEND, Ind - Despite one newspaper's objections, former President R ic h a rd Nixon's address on foreign policy at a $50-per - son Repub- lican fund- raiser will be "off the record '' and closed Nixon to the press. "It's a fonnat that's worked well lately," said Nicholas Ruwe, Nixon's cloief of st.arr. ''Par&lcularly , thr eontrlbutors aerm tn opprechU.t• It." Ht> &1.1ld In u telephone tntervicw Monday from New York thot all but one of Ntxon'11 n>ci:nt fund raltllng appearsru.-ett on polky "have been off the ra'Ord." Nixon is liChf'duled to ap· pear April 20 at a gathering for the LaPorte County Republican Party at tht.! LaPorte Holiday lnn. Tht> 400 tickets have been sold out for more than a week. GRAND FORKS, N D Phys1c·1st Edward Teller c;.iyi; he ob.iecta to bemg called "the father o f the hydrogen bomb." "The H-bomb has n ever sent me a Father's Day c·ard." he sr.11d Monday before a lecture at the University of North Dakota The hydrogen l>omb "the work of many the 75-· year -o ld scientist said. add- 1 n g that he ind others in- volved in the earHer atomic bomb de- velopment Tetl9f near Los Alamos, N M . should have talked more about th e broader 1mphcauons of the sc:1ent1fit' breakthrough '"fhece was surpris ingly little talk about that," he said "That was a sad omission. We were extremely busy" Teller sa id a f e llow scienust. working on another phase or the project at a d1Cferent location, sent him a petition to sign and circulate at Le:• Al.11.11'W4. Thts petJ Uon expreueod the acl~ntlat'a n"11C·rv11tiorw '-Vn<.'t!rnJng how tht-hornl> might be used MANILA, l'hlllpplnea - l''lrst lady Imelda Mar co• 11uld Tueeduy that the blrth of h('r grandaon helped her uc..'Cept her eldest daughter'• mnrr1age to a divorced sportsman. a union she once vehl•mently opposed. Mrs Marcos called her daughter's lift.> a "triumph of thl' i.pmt " A presldt•ntsal palace announc<.•ment quoted Mrs. MarcOb ~ saying that after months of i.oul-searchmg, she n .. ·<.iched a turning point after her daughter Jmee, 27, gave birth to d 6-pound 8-ounce boy 1n a Honolulu hospital Fernando Martin is President Ferdinand E. Marcoa' first grandchild. Tht.-pr esi dent acknowk'<.iged his daughter's 17-month-old marriage to Filipino amateur golfer and professional basketball coach Tomas Maootoc for the first time last month but said Mrs. Marcos was still in a frenzy over 1t WASHINGTON -The s ultan o r oil -rich Oman is giving $300,000 to the National Symphony Ort·hes tra to c·ndow a chair in narrative music an honor of first lady Nancy Reagan. The girt. described as the firs t thl• orchestra has received d1rcc tly from a head of state. l'Omcaded with a White Houst> mc·ctmg today between President Reagan and tht' orchestra's Persian Gulf benefactor, Sultan Qaboos Bin Said, who is v1s1 ttng the United States for thl:' first tame since 1975. Saks Fifth Avenue /s Store-Wide Clearance with Savings of 30% to 50% off Original Prices! Now is the time to come to Saks Fift.h Avenue and save on a vast assortment of clothes and gifts; on merchandise from almost every department in the store! Find terrific values on: • Designer Dresses, Evening Wear • Better Dresses • 'SFAbulous and 'SFAntastic Sportswear, Dresses • Sportswear: Designer and Better, Separates, Casual and Active • Right On! for Juniors-Sportswear and Dresses • Robes, Sleepwear, Daywear and Foundations • 14K Cold Jewelry, • Women 's Shoes • Blouse Boutique • Blouses •Maternity ... and find a truly sensational collection of gifts and things for the home-fine linens, tab le accessories, items for the kitchen, 'SFA vorites, our exclusive collection of gourmet delicac ies. Great va lues, all, to be found in: Crys tal Ca llery • Gift Callery • Stationery Ca llery 1'11Nlrw'<l~llf' 1>rn 1• '"''"' 11011> m,11 /).hi'~ 1-lk•n oo ''>me' •l1•1m fl'IOI to thl\ t'\l'nt Nc)l •'~N~lh'"t: 111 t»t•fy \l~/1' ult' Jnrl ro/1>• JI•·~-..,~ \o1h f olrh /\~f'fltll' '''"" ln•ex•~n•elve* .,,. South Co.:ut Pl.tit JJJJ Brls1ol Stfft"t.. Costa M~~ Monday throullh rtidly from 10 am to 9 J() pm; SJtyrday ttl 6 pm. Sunday rl l'IOOl'I to 5 pm • • f. -· ' .. •, ... .. • ' .. • t .. 1 a • ' ... ' , • ' • ' ' • • • • ' ' t ~ t • .. I' 4 8 Orange CoHt OAll..V PILOTIWtdn••O•v. April 13, 1983 ' Costa Mesa seeks to lure tourists Costa Mesa may not have the visual appeal of some of the county's coastal communities, but it has grown into an important city with plentiful accommodations, lots of restaurants and theaters and one of the first and finest shopping malls In the country. Accessible by three freeways and on the doorstep of John Wayne Airport, it's easy to get to and within reasonable distan<.-e of such popular inland tourist attractions as Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm, as well as beaches up and down the coast. For these l'easons. the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commeret> has decided it is time to promote the city as a tourist destination and a convention center. Last week, after two years of study. the Chamber convinced the City Council that establishment of an independent Visitors and Travel Bureau could benefit the entire community and net the city up to $4 million in additional tax revenue at the end of five years. After hearing support from representatives of citizens' groups a nd business people, the council voted to contribute $60,000 a year for the next three years to help put Costa Mesa on the t2:>urist m ap. T he balance of the $270,000 investment it will take to get the nonprofit Visitors Bureau rolling will be contributed by the Chamber. which will provide office space, secretarial help and public liaison. This is a timely and worthwhile project for the city, which already has on the drawing board plan s for continued development of hotels, shopping and cultural facilities. And the promoters should not forget that Costa Mesa's early motto as "The City of Air-conditioned Sunshine" as still very apt. Op1n,01h • Jlt,,,,,. , •I '""" ,Udtt· dbOY,. dre t tlO\t.t 01 1ne-::ld••y P1101 OtrH, .,.,.,.._, • • Ut ~"t't-d on tn1.., iJ••(j• tt• thu'4 ut "''-"u du\r1ur" .... "a d'l• .. h· ~l·dO•, on1m• nt •\ 1n41f ed Add"'" Iii' :><111, l'tlOl p 0 604 l)b<) CO,ld ,.,..,.,,. I A l/blb. Phom / IJ b•J •371 MAllBDX Telecourses no answer To the l!:d1tor: Over the past few months your newspaper has often stressed that Sacramento is financially pinching the Coast Commuruty College District. True enough But the important issue. an issue the Coast board of trusU!eS have heard raised but refuse to debate, is whether taxpayers and students benefit more from putting our dwindling millions into telecourses or public television programs (by leasing or selling thlS part of KOCE the district might a ctually make millions) or live courses. Norm Watson. chanceUor of the dastnct, has led the board of trustees down a primrose path where TV and telecourses have top pnority and the board has found at impossible lo reverse and save face. Taxpayers mu.st beware that Watson sees ~ as a futurist and the faculty s slow-poke traditionalists.;rh !act is just the• opposite. Ml>st telecourses epitomiz.e traditional educ.auon. at its worst: they monumentahze the monotony of a traditional lecturer talking at a captive audience. Such taped lecturers have other disadvantages over live ones: TV "lecture not.es" are expensive to update; technocrats compromise course content to conform with production handbook standards, language as reduced to a blandness, fulfilling public expectation that college puts people to sleep; ~Id-time, simplistic multiple-choice tests are used to evaluate students. Live. "tradition.al" courses, on the other hand. explore all vital modes of educating. including c hallenging essay exams, 1mprovisat1on based on 1mmed1ate student feedback , innovative discussion for~ts, lively debate, and. lo and behold. films and videotapes: v1deotapes carefully selected by (acuity. not ones handed down lo students because of business arrangements made between various district admmistrations. Great telecourse teachers lake K~nneth Clarke, Carl Sagan. and Jacob Bronowski are rare because they present such intellectual complication and depth that they in turn require sup plemental livf<' seminars for follow-up explanation. That necessity is the mark of a great lecturer. These seminars are required in the LACC telecourse system but not used in the Coast system. Telecourses are not part of a new frontier, they are part of the 1950's naive love affair with television as an end in itself. GARY HOFFMAN Professor of English & Instructor in Art 'Affordable' housing To the Editor: In my opinion, your edatonal of April 6 shows a total lack of understanding of the so-called ·'affordable housing" problem. The high oost of housing is not caUlled by developers or by the lack of buildable 1.ilnd. It's caused by government Government contr ols the permit process. government controls land use and government imposes rules (th e Coastal Commission. e tc.) t hat cause land values to accelerate at alarming rates. In 1978 county government saw the problem. but its solution was to force builders to build so- called low-cost or "affordable" housing. Again government's answer la to increase regulation rather than reduce it. Tom RUey has received most of the credit (rightfully IO) for the present program. Few people r e a lize R iley's greatest supponen are not the public but colledivilt grou ps that wish to make ua all equal through the force of government. 1l'h ese include the ACLU, Fair Housing Council. Gray Panthers, Laguna Beech Houllna Committee, Legal Aid Society, League of Women Voter• and the most fam ous group 'of all. Tom Hayd e n'• Cal'l\pal1n f o r Eco n omic J)emoa IJC"/. By 1981 the Orange County Kou1ln1. Authority had a *20 m l lll~ budget a n d lh• &nvlronmental Mana&• men t Aaenc1 WU wauln& lht do1. OAANOI COA8T Daily Pilat · County housing bonds proV1ded tax-free income to a few and the new low<OSt loans to a special group have removed more than $100 million from the private sector, increasing reaJ interest rates to the rest of us. The free market will take care of t he need only when the government protects private property rights by removing burdensome regulations. Any compromise with the CED or the Housing Coalition results in the loss of private property rights. Government i.8 the c.ause not the cure. DAVID R. HlRSCHLER Street lights To the Editor: How about some street light.a in the residential areas of old Corona del Mar, City CQuncU? Beauty ls an luue, but how would you feel about beauty after your daughter, wife or child became a victim of a violent crime or your vehicle or home waa burglari&ed? Then yot• couldn't care leu about beauty because all of thoee thlnga are ugly. Don't say It'll neve r happen to me. It d.oee happen bocaUM It'• IO CM)' wh n It'• ao dark out there. Th p0Uce department can't do It all. KAY BOYD ,...__ ........ , - ------- Soviets politicize psychiatry WASHINGTON -The Soviet Union announced a few weeks ago that it was withdrawing from the World Psychiatric Association. To most Americans, this wasn't exactly earth-shaking news. But 1t sent a chil1 of fear into the heart of Svetlana Evdok.imova, a New York Caty high school teacher. It could mean she will never see her brother again Here's why. Soviet affairs experts see the withdrawal as an ominous sign that Soviet boss Yuri Andropov plans to continue, or even intensify, the KGB's cynical campaign to label dissid~nta ti mentally ill. And Evdokirqova's 32-year-old brother, Rostialav, is one of the victims. , I EVE N BEFORE Andropov took over In the Kremlin, the World Psychiatric Association had condemned the K.BG's ~use of ~ychia1ry to lock u~liucal diaslaents in mental hos . In fact, the association h veral resolutions pending to expel or suspend the Soviets when ll met in Vienna this July. Rather than nsk the indigruty, the Russians picked up their marbles and went home Neither Evdok1mova nor the Sovtet affairs experts need to be reminded that 1t was Andropov. as head of the KGB , who pioneered the loath.some practtce of 1mprison1ng tro ublesome opponents in mental wards. Amnesty International has (:). -JA-CK-A-ND-IR-SD-N -~ 1dentif1ed 305 chssidents confined in mental hospitals that are nothing more than KGB torture chambers. Now Andropov wW be frtt to continue the repression without the minor embarrassment of baving to defend it before the international professional group. Rostialav Evdokimov's "crime" consisted of publishing several articles critical of the Soviet a.overnment an d possessing prohib ited books. He was arrested in Leningt'Dd Last July. ~dokimova fears the worst for h er brother. Becau se of his connection with the "Moscow w orki ng group for the investig ation of the use of psychiatry for political ends," he bAd beet> threatened, even before h1' arrest. with umfinement in an insane asylum. Evdolwnova's fears are based on bitter experience. She told my reporter Don Corrigan ahe la the granddaughter. daughter and now sister o{ Soviet pol1t1cal prisoners Her father. Sons. was arrested in 1971 and packed off to a psychiatric prison after a three-day court proceeding at which he was not allowed to be present EVDOKIMOVA'S father was released after e~ht years, dying of cancer. Her brother's arrest last July stemmed m part from his publication of an open letter "to all honest people on earth" the day his father died In the letter, Evdokimov called his father's death "a murder" Last fall, dissident sources learned that Rostislav was undergoing psych1atr1 c examinations designed to show that he suffers from "hereditary sch1wphrenia." Wher\--the Voice of American broadcast the news of his internment on January 22, along with a statement from his sister. the Soviets abruptly announced that Rostislav would be brought to trial. Evdok.imova believes the only chance her brother has -a slim one -is to be allowed to join her in the United States under a p r ovision of the Helsinki agreement permitting the reul)ificataon of famrnes. She has ap~led to Secretary of State George Shultz and to Congress for help EXECU1 IVE ME MO: Officials at the Housing and Urban Development Department pressed a new computer in lo service before 1t was ready, with results that one regional official descnbed as "horrendous." The computer sent out mortgage payment notices to some 29,000 people who h o ld HUD-ad- ministered loans. But instead of asking for the usual monthly payment, most bills demanded payment in full for the mortgage balance. A HUD loan specialist looked on the bright side. "This will bring a lot of realization to these people of just what is owed," he said. -The Environmental Protection Agency. whose benefit to the general public has ~n seriously questioned lately, JUst issued a ruling that ~he nation's largest conser'<atlon group doesn't benefit the general public. In order to keep the 4.2 million -member National Wild!Jfe Federation from getting documents at no C06t under the Freedom of Information Act, EPA bureaucrats ruled that the federation doesn't quallfy for a fee waiver for acting in the public interest. The ftt the EPA watchdogs 1ns1stro the federation ante up was $24.50. Congressional critics want to know why the Labor Department doesn't have a nauonwide directory of jobs available to the unemployed. Department officials claim they do have one. An employer can report a .)Ob operung to a state unemployment office U it's not filled within 30 days. the listing is sent to Albany, NY .. put on m1crof11m and distnbuted to state unemployment offices across the country The 30-day wail can be waJved 1f the employer requests. But critics say this system is 1neff1c1ent and time-consuming. so few employers use 1t. Experts say a good nationwide computerized jobs directory would cost onJy $6 milllon. Welfare fraud program works By THOMAS D. E LIAS O n ly two other Califor nia counties 90 far have imitated a unique program th.at has saved Orange County $17 million in fraudulent welfare payments over ita first two years. But the plan could soon be saving upwkrds of $100 million a year statewide. Since Orange County services about 5 percen\ of California's welfare recipient.I. wise use of the plan cou)p aave financially strapped sun~ and county governments even more than that. The money ls saved when dislrlct attorney's investigators stationed al welfare offices cheek q u estionable claims made by welfare applicants. Of 250 claims checked each month by the 16 Investigators in the pilot program, about 125 usually prove fraudulent. But uae of law en forcement officers to check statements from poor people has d rawn some ClllfDRllll flCUS criticism, mostly from civil liberties groups. "HAVING POLICE in a social service office IS having a chilling effect," said Marilyn K. Kau, a lawyer for the Western Center on Law and Poverty "We have reports of dozer» and doleD$ of people who are eligible for aid but have not applied ~auae they have been tntimidac.ed fJoon'I making an application." But county offid.ala say they'tt not denying funds to anyone entitled to them. "Thia la not a harassmef't program," aald Loren DuChf'IOe, chief of the district attorney's office of investl.gation. "It doesn't scare anyone ofl. "We're involved only 1n determining whether willful fraud Is being attempted A child either exists or doesn't exist. A husband either exists or not." The Orange County program differs from other anti-welfare fraud schemes onJy in its liming. Other programs probe some suspect claims, but only after they've been in the system awhile In Orange County. any applicant whose caseworker suspects fraud can have his claim investigated before checks start to llow. DuChesne claims the investigation doesn't delay ellg ibility of legitimate applicants, but does prevent issuing of checks to persons who don't qualify. •'Thia attacks the problem at the front end," DuChesne says. "We nip it in the bud, before any dollars go ouL And I'd like to see the dozens of people we've scared away. In two years, we've onJy had two cases challenged and we've been upheld in both." The cost-to-benefit ratio of the Orange County plan is one of lt.9 Search for 'unde~s~anding' ThOt"lfhta •t I.Arp: -~ -The two rarest types In the -MOit people who insist that "'~J· world are the liberal wh o knows they are look.Ing "for someone ':';,'~ what should not be chan&ed, and w ho understand.a me" are really Olllf Ill• ~ th e conservat ive w ho know• lookJng for som eone who will .2!1"' what i.I not worth comervt.na. a~pt them withou t requiring maanlffed version of one man _ If t h e brai n 11 like a that they stra.lahten up and fly poundina hit chest and braalna computer, auo many thougbtlell rta)\t. to the w o r 1 d a b o u t -n l i observers auggeat , then wbo, -Tho onl y time we arc demonttrable 1uper1ortty over pray ta doina th e procrenunintt acUvoly wlJllng to defend other men? -'A more .ccurate tranalaUon "fttedorn of speech" I.I when our -T h e moraltier w h o 11 of the Gotpel ~:''Bo ye own 1ell-interest I.I threatened -tcandal1ricd by the i:nvaJence of ~fore perfed. .. '{!"!'! FaUwr and there II no 1pedal merit in "obaeenJty" ahould ponder Ute ln heaven la perfect, • la ,.Be ye proiectlna that rtaht. r e mark by a true motallat, therefore complote," for while no -EducaUon doe. not make UI Thoreau, who ..set. "You cannot human belna c.n perfect blrrmll, emarur, lt m erely propel• ua receive a lbock uni-you ba~ each of ut l\u the caped\y to further and hate r In the an e1eatdc att1nlty far &hat which complete hl.mMlt. c:l1rtctios1 ol our nauve abut ties: llhocb Y"OU " . . ..&. and ll one'• abW\y la to make a -The ~odd of inW1\at>Or9 -No Cbl ahould ~ atta'tdoo h If .... ..a u ~ ... _, ..... f•·11 t1oo to• man delivert.na • a.ct.un or• loo! ol I.... , -uca DD ... oollrla __, • a ud ~ hla "p~r.: help him do a macnlfkie'nt Job ol bth1nd the world of ph)'lllca; tbt termOUl ,, ntllon L-~ • that. dec:Wve •.inc." ot our time II not • un we....,.,... -Much of what puees for the amw·rta betwwn pow.., he trata h1I wit.. till •ln,adonal -=urhy" M8ml to be but tbt '1houiht-r.aa" btntfe1n hS. n•llhbon, hll frlenda, bll poUtbl tnwwity our obMlec••t world polldm and eubanll:Da• -and bW lnlm&eil: -u a man nd.ft.cs to hlmleU our new potenual for mutual, -l'or every one alrpl= t.n tbt ..,_ eon. that tie ret.. ind ~ tcMl. innlhllatkln. cnlh &hat Iii due to l'DldtY to hi• country, M would be -Tb• only •problem wlth i.Bure In tbt tit, I Im oanvm.:.I c:on•ldered an ln1uUerable 1~tlliMd.U-lnlel'llt" ll\hat that thrff oth•n1an du• • .!! bcwll& Md """"::f 'C'i )let 11 wben lh• Ma\ cvmee up, \M • c:iommun!Cadon fil UN • - not a coun lr! ~·ly the lflht IE*. olL ( ~· strongest appeals: It has cost onJy about $1 million to save $17 mil hon And San Diego and San Bernardino counties, which set up similar programs during the last four months, report similar results THAT STRONG performance prompted Gov. Deukmejian to make the Orange County program part of his welfare reform plan. Deukmejian plans to extend it to 38 counties that account for 95 percent of California's 2.2 million welfare recipients. But even though the biggest share of the savings -50 percent -goes to the federa l government, it isn't yet ready to adopt the plan nationally. "The federal bureaucracy is just too bi~, .. said DuCh esne. "Tht•y won t do anything like this until it· su«:eeds in at least on e sta te. I think they'r e watching California." "We are,'' says Robert Carleson, special assistant to President Re,.gan and a fonnel' California wellare d.lrector. ''The systems are so different from state to state that this would not. be easy to lmplement. And we would have to write ln som e ttrong civil liberties pro~ON." But ln C.Ufomia. the 1yswm 11 baatcally the tame from county to county. And civil llbertiH protectionl liW'91~ rOuat be Mldcd before OtuluntjLan can hope to wtn le8UJadve approval. But \hat should be far bun • fat.al problem for a pncram that. wotkl u well N th.fl one. 7bom., EV• & • lreel.Mxw oolumnl6t l».ed Jn &nra Nanka. ,., . .,........ Samantha Smith, I 0, had le tter to Andropov printed in P ravda. Dear Yuri. • • Girl, I 0 ., writes Andropov MANCHESTER, Maine (AP) -A hhh- grader whose letter to Yuri Andropov was quoted in the Communist Party newspaper Pravda hopes that means she will get a reply from the Soviet leader'himself. "I just wanted to know what Andropov was like," Samantha Smith. 10, said. "If you get a letter back from someone, you get to know what he's like." Pravda recently published excerpts of several letters it said were writte n by American citizens. Samantha's letter asked, "Why do you want to conquer the whole world, or at least our country?" Pravda said. "We think we can pardon Samantha her misleadings, because the girl is only 10 years old." Samantha's letter offered congratulations to Andropov "on your new job" and asked him if "you're going to vote to have a war or not?" In a telephone interview Monday, Samantha said she didn't remember when she wrote the letter, but recalled that she got the Idea from a class assignment that her Cather, Arthur Smith. had given to his Engli.sh class at the University of Maine in Augusta. "He had his class write a letter to a famous person, so I thought I might do one too," said Samantha, a student at Manchester Elementary School. ThJs wasn't the first time that Samantha has written to somebody famous. Several years ago, sh e sent a letter to Queen Elizabeth, and got a response from one of her ladies-in- waiting. If Samantha decides to write to any other famous people, it would be either Princess Diana or Prince Charles, she S&Jd. "She has always been a good writ.er," said her father. "This is just proof that letter writing works and people do pay attention." Vitamin A perils cited in overuse WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Administration is being asked to require labels on vitamin A supplements to warn consumers that large doses can be toxic. The Center for Science in the Public Interest. which submitted the petition Monday. wants a warning that says taking more than 25,000 international units of vitamin A a day for several weeks or more can harm adults or teen-agers and that more than 10.000 international units can be harmful to children and infants. The proposed warning also would advise pregnant women to consult a physician before taking more than 10,000 international units of vitamin A daily. Packages of vitamin supplements in pill form containing 25,000 international units would carry the warnings. Most vitamin combination preparations contain either 5,000 international units or 10,000 international unlt.s. Poaible side effect.a from large doses include headaches, nausea, double vision, loss of appetite, dry skin, irritability, joint pain and increased fluid premure inside the skull. The group said that too -much vitamin A during pregnancy may cause birth defects. FOA spokesman James Greene said he had not aeen the petition, but he added that the agency has already lasued advice about the intake of vitamins. "In general, we've said the overwhelming majority of people c.an get the proper amount of vitamins by eating a wide variety of foods. Mega-doees aren't really necessary for l1l08t people," he said. The U.S. Recommended Daily Allowance for vitamin A is 5,000 International units for adulta and older children, 2,500 international units for children aged 1 to 4 and 1,500 units for infants. ANNIVERSARY SALE BALDWIN PIANOS & ORGANS CNtM,....121 Yeanl P~•Qwity•VM APRIL IS GRAND PIANO MONTH ~In Is c:eld>fatlng lb 12 ,., annlver-y -Come In t. SA V£. <:Mh ditcounll on or ... n1 6 pllftO• Aprt II Grand ""1o Month-Cash • CIOUIU PlUS *11.9 .o/o s·e· Moo.IC· 171 S6 99500 t«>WON.Y I BaJdMn. ......... \Tc:'* ...... <*AMI. ptA-.ot MUA1 nnstOCATIONOMr ORGAN I PIANO CENTER .._ WllL. ~ IM:Jt. 1'lii.; n.n., M. ........... la.t 270 I. 17111 •t., Coe .. .._ Ml-J•11 ti-",__ M II t 11119 4/•111 lllllJ '. Or1ng1 Coaat DAIL V PILOT /Wldneaday, April 13, 1983 AT SuperpoWe . · f ' , .. 'l'<i'ft_.. ... :t~nding with arms '·~,,,~ . ' By BARRY SCHWEID .. ~ •' 'l"hu Sovie ta hope that U they etake out po11tllon1 that appear reuonable and put the Rcagirn admlnlatraUon on the defel\IJvo, they can weaken the already 1haky CQmmltment amons rnany Wett Europeans to the 1979 NATOdectalon to deploy new U.S medJum-range rru.ne. be&fnn.lnl In December. .... ...._ ,,_ • ...., ( I -J WASHINOTON Two nt:W U.S. propoMlll to ~l , ructuce the pileup of nuclear weapon1 aro the laiW.~ ..... '!II. .... , • 1tept tn a deadly "Rite ot Sprlna" with the Soviet ·:. tw-e to keep the 1allery In Union, played before an oudlence that fHra!lf ~·-,wfU, f •ctoP El.u'~pe there la deep 1uperpowera flop the re.ult could be ann.lhJlat.to~ · th-.t w l t-arv a~rnent halting the When th~ curtain rl8e9 again on arms cqn&:ni1: • led 'd4'altit of now U.S. mlullea In talk.I In Geneva, Switzerland, on May 17, It wUl-;'bi> ... ~~i.mbor 'ailcl 1i1apt1lnJt th~ dfadly Soviet tho U .S . turn to lead. The chief Amttlca~1~2ba'ttte rlJk · W~al'e wW be high. negotiator, Paul Nltze, will Inform tt)e $ovj C ' , ~~ver ieci S'-"se, and the Soviet defeaallon that P~dent Reagan la prepared ·10-,; 'Er,nSpn )K~l.tWCJI ·,1lde!a.~apon1-Umltatlon modify hla demand for an agreement ban~i',. ~ix(All, t'Mn '<AnW t<>J~ the propaganda lntennedlate-range mi.uUet. · 4 nteal ~ play~. oflr I Geneva. In public The Soviet reeponse -Foreign Mlnlai.er ,_ •t.atementa iheif )4:eden and in the media. Andrei Gromyko'• rejection at a Moecow newJ •. Thi• he pe Viakt thl1 1prlng'1 arms control conference April 2 la not considered final -will be • ,,5e1otlatlon& a ca.r~lly deadly game. National carefully measured by the Kremlin's militar y · ainl.Nr'P.Cl'i~:ar\' baaed not only on security judgment and by the Impact It will have on the deratl.oQi, btlj an how they will play In Peoria, talks. " ptriak'and • .-pedal.lr1 Jn Western Europe. U.S. missile pl§D. ·'s1;jl~ter' ... .. s • Soviet arms specialist cites incl'ea~ing dansers . ' . MOSCOW (AP) -The new U.S. proP<>6al for ,., . The fyjX, Wlnch could be deployed in the an MX missile system is a "rather sinister" step roid·J980s. \a a hi,hly a~urate and powerful new forward In an increasingly dangerous arms ra~. a ,weaporr that whJ t>Srr)' Up to 10 ")Uclear warheads. leading Soviet arms control specialist claims. .' • The comm~n also called for development of But the specialist, Oleg Bykov, acknowledged ' 'a imaJJer, single:.warhead missile !or deployment m at the same ~e that the Soviets are readying their · ~ 1990s. · own new mlSSlle. . The MX report, which Reagan is expected to "Of course, 1t takes two to make an arms race. '•lerlcjorae next ..-ee)c, comes at a time when And the Soviet leadership has put it in so many . U.S.-Soviet negatiaticrus on limiting or reducing words: We will respond," said Bykov, actjng' :·1~1'\&-· arid ~ecl)uin-range missiles appear director of the Institute on the World Economy and . '4'e.adl~keif.~ ~ · International Relations. ' • ' : Bykov said thf8 "system" -the MX paired By kov was interviewed yesterday In his 'With ~eveloprm;nt.of still another missile -"is m 17th-floor offices at the institute's headquarters in ~excess of what has been the framework of strategic southern Moscow. He stressed he was not speaking ~ty attained qn both sides." in any official capacity. But his views have J "'llhe military-political co1:rnotation of this generally reflected thoee of the Kremlin lelldership, ·Jl)'Sten:da rather.sii\illter because it is stepping up an 0 n Monday , a spec I a 1 com mission · ';-alreal:iy destabili.zh)g arms race," he said. r('(."()mmer;ided to President Reagan. that the Uni~ . •· the Soviet .~cademic !laid the "urge nt States bwld and deploy 100 MX missiles ln existing.... .... ~l!celsity" ndw is that the United States and Soviet Minuteman rnis&le silos in the American Mldw~ 'Union "devise ways;of s 0 topping the anns race." • ., ~ . ~ ~· ·~ ::'It>· , ' .. y . , . " Reagan, by the aa~ token, muat tact.or lnto U.S . propoaala the mood of conclllatlon In the NATO countriea. He 11 giving ground on "zero-optlon" not only because a deadlock In Geneva wu in proapecl, but because hll best friend.a amona the alJled leaden counseled hlm to aeek an Interim deal · • lt'1 a safe bet that Yuri V. Andropov wu &190 trying to look good ln Europe when he launched hia career as Leonld I. Bret.hnev'1 auocemor wt year with a catchy offer to cut down to the 164 mlMilea • the British and French have targeted.on Soviet territory if NATO would shelve the planned U.S . missile deployment. On closer inspection. the offer wu judged una<.'<-"ept.able. since it would still leave the Sovleta with 164 tnple--warhead SS-20s, while all ~72 ot the American Pershing 2 and ground-baaed crube missiles would be kept at home. _Hospital seeking special blood A call for a special kind of blood donor has bee n Issued by Children& Hospital of Orange County. Blood donations are needed Crom individuals who have had chicken pox or shingles ~thin the last three weeks. and are between the ages of 17 and 65. Prospective d onors who have had either chicken pox or shingles recently may call Childrens Hospital Volunteer Qtfice, 997-3000, extension 277, between 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m . Monday through Friday. Those 17 years old need parental consent to donate. ...... , .. , .... ~Cl ... ,: it this freshl ,_ I' i .. •· ~ .. New Brtght has given smoken a. ' Your ~·~ 100~ are smasn1ng1 F1n;,11y a fresh new taste experience that -· uury re~~' 1n a IOIN iar c19c31ene1 1 outshlnesment.hof.Although~ ~ lhf*d io'l'\ave found Bajht My search is weren't asked to wrfte us, ihej ~:; c~ tt)efe rNlly !} great cas1e 1n keep sending raves llke. tt,ese: ... ·~ · ... t .~. As I fl! my first Bnght my tirsr commenr w~ .. "Ooooh 11~ 1eml'lcf' t1 ~es so clean. ' L.,a,,te Clrfwflo Stony Creek. CT Bnght is a ranr.asucafly refresh- ing taste! I hcNe been a Belalf smoker for O'tler 15 ye~ Bnghc has rhe cleanest. coolest ta$1e I hcNe ever expenencedf Robin 'tbrtl Miehgan You ve got c:1 111oir nt"f on your t~rxls Bognt 1~ _. nevv and t'l(C 111ng cli:k1111()(l 10 lhe c1gcire11e f..irn11y Mervin Sltwrman CIE'\ieklnd OH I've only ~rnoke<J Benson & Hedges MeochOI since lht'y've been our 1 11 never go back Bt1gh1s .!Ire 'IO light and rasry I love these c1ga1ent's1 Barbara Norwood Bryan TX rm really not one fOf uying new ogarenes 001 I bought a paclc ro uy Believe mt' Bngh1 IS a cool and ftgh{ tasting ogarene I 1cxa11y enJoyed 1hem. I hcNe smolced Benson and Hedges MenthOI for ye~ Bue I am surely going to switch 10 Bnght 100~ n<:NiJ Sharon A.~ Wheeling. WV Bnght haS a cnlf). c~an all around good taste Bngh{ was a bOghl Ideal Thanks for making sudl an excel~t cigarenel R.F. Welp fast Dubuque. IL Pu<chased iwo packs or your neo.N Bn9ht 100~­ and round lhe taste del19htful-Sll'l00fh and. ltke ~ scr,c ~sh and clean HafJ.Georgl Btdlbwn. NJ I am ~ry ~astd 10 rell you 8'1ghCS are as ad\lertlsed' Vf!'Y cOOl tasty and rettf'Sh1ng I really "'*1ftd them. EYetyn c. loott\ Cleaiwa~ FL Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined· That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Health . • Or•nge Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednald•y. Aprll 13, 1983 o ... r Plktt Photo br o.,, Ambt- S p ec i a J delivery? Gene Sneed ch ecks out the 18-foot airmail box of his neighbor Gene Urschel in Costa Mesa. Carrier pigeons might land th ere but mail carriers only service the regulation box below. Ray faces TV lie detector NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Attorney F Lee Bailey has administered a lie detector tesl behind prison walls to James Earl Ray, who is serving a $9-year sentence for k.illing Dr. Manin Luther King Jr., a prison official said. Balley said the test was videotaped for presentation on his syndicated television show, "Lie Detector," which pits celebrities and unknowns against a polygraph machine for a $25,000 prize. The attorney declined to s pecify what questions were asked of Ray Monday. "We administered a polygraph test for the he detector show, which ... is shown on about 87 ataUons around the country. m connection with certain matters that James has been protesting," ~ysald. Last month, Ray renewed his bad for a new trial by claimJng in a petition Cited with the U.S . I)istrict Court al Memphis that a former prosecutor ~ithheld evidence during his 1974 appeal. Ray asked the court to reconsider his earlier request for a• new trial, which was denied. Ray pleaded guilty in 1969 to being the sniper '¥ho killed King as he stood on a motel balcony near downtown Memphis on April 4, 1968. But Ray, who ls serving his sentence at the Tennessee State Prtaon in Nashville, has argued since then that he is Innocent. Us• th• Daily P1loc "Faat Rnult" urv1c• directory Your lft'vlce is our 1peclalty Call &4.2·5f'll Ul 322 RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTHY, INC. ·-·• ...... -4 .... 1922 HAUOI IM.VD. COSTA MISA -141-llM COLDEN STATE UN IVERSITY SAN MARCOS. CALIFORNIA ......... ll&ltl ... ~ ............ C.. 11r LI ... ,..._, AcllllM l.-e, Ut r11t1111 ....,,,. ... ,....,,..~,__ ...... ~1 1111.-4-.a 1111::$1000 ....... IMta MW IMt tllt MW Jf/tll i.OCAr/ON: .,.,,. • .,m II/Of..,._~ Nlf." CONrAOT; ..... c.. (114) WllOI ,,.,.,,,,.,,, """"" Weather hits Big Sur -in the pocketbook BIG SUR (AP) -Th~ eow1tllne la u plcture-~tcard beautiful aa ever, but nature 1 riche. e1n't pay the bllla, and Bla Sur la In the mJdat ot lta worst dlauter In more than 40 yeaf'I. A 60-mlle 1tretch of California l, the acenlc coaatal hlahway that funnel• touri1t1 Into the area, haa been cloeed for more than a month by some 30 mudslides. Engineers say aix Stiff er penalties for bad checks? SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assembly Judiciary Committee has sent to the floor a bill to increase the cavil Liability tor writing bad checks. Assemblyman Richard Katz's AB1226, which would aUow punitive damages m small claims courts of up to three times the amount of a bad check, was approved Monday on a 9-0 vote after the committee placed a $500 ceiling on th~ amount of the punitive damages. Kau. D-Sepulveda. introduced the measure on behalf of the National Federation of Independent Businesses. He said the bill, patterned after laws in Oregon and Idaho, would give small businesses a tool m small claims court to prosecute writers of bad checks. Katz said most district attorneys, with heavy backlogs of felony and violent crime cases, are reluctant to prosecute bad check cases, and that without the provision for punitive damages it is impractical for merchants t o pursue the cases themselves in small claims court. MIC-21 2 2" 3 '/2 HP Recoil· Start Mower o( tht-111idt.'11 u.ru 1WrluU1, lndudlnj On{• that killed a <.'Onttructlon worker. A. a reeult, dozena of bualneuee - from Eaalen lnalltute to the Ventana reeort -have been 1huttered. Unemployment amon& the community'• 500 permanent retldenta 11 at 95 percent. To &et food and 1uppllea requires up to 300 mUet o f travel through back road1 lo detUnatlona that were once within an hour's drive. "Psychologically. It'• Juat been awful," said Holly Fasaett, whose tamtly has owned the famed Nepenthe l"estaurant for 30 years. Perched on a coast.al cliff, Nepenthe hus been closed since March l, when a mudslide blocked the access road from California l. Since then the restaurant has become a sort of commune, with the ownecs provid1Ag rood itnd shelter for its 30 workers But, Fassett said, "We can 't go on like this for much longer. It's been nearly a month and a half. We've been eaung what we had an the freezer." Other resort businesses are also taking care of their workers. At Ventana, where 95 employees are bein.B fed, manager Bob Bussinger says cash losses are mounting at the rate of $4.000 a day. Esalen general manager Brian Lyke said the institute's reserves are being drained at the rate of $50,000 a week. The spiritual and physical therapy center normally has 80 paying guests during the spring season; when the first slides hit, 44 guests had to be airlifted out from a nearby U.S . Forest Service helicopter pad. Quality constr:.Jcted mower with 14-ga steel deck. sld~ discharge B&S® A-cycle engine · 27.77 Taste of togetherness Cindi Zellers and her d a ughter Christina, 5, find the conditions are perfect for lunch outdoors at Lake Park in Hunting ton Beach when there's sunshine and a slight breeze. Such a re the simple satisfactions of childhood. 174.88 Rear lag Lawn Mower Rear bag. wheel height ad· justment. B&S® recoil-start engine. throttle control. 6.66 Patio Chair Open Daly 9-9; Sun. 10-7 .. 13" Hedge Trimmer 13" cut electric trimmer. Double In· sulated. Outstanding quollty. Strong. sturdy tubular frame Folds for easy storage. Handy Garden Tools Choice of cultivator. transplanter and trowel. Wheel Barrow Sturdy metal tray with strong braces. Ideal for gardening. Your Choice Garden TOOis Chofce of ruaaed lhov•I. level head rake, garae-n ho•. Leaf Rake Mod91-19-192 ....... ._ MWt .. Pa11 Through PNner A basic pruner. Helps make gar· denlng easier. ,..."" . ... ..., Stablllzer a. Condltlonef 3 112 lb. 9'19. H~Shears Teflon-$ non-stt~k finish. Essentlal tor small hedges: llllJNlt WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1983 ENGAGEMENTS COMICS HOME/GARDEN hess set. • • Designer hits ne\N t}eights in lavishness By STEVE MITCHELL OftMU..,Net8tllft ~ Jim Grahl has added new meaning to the word extravagance. The Newport Beach jewelry designer has created a ch~ set tbat hu been apprai.led at $580,000. Okay. So that sounda a litUe steep for a chess set. But consider the features: _,. The 32 chess pieces are made of gold. Solid gold. Eleven and • half pounds of aolid gold. ~ And the st.ones. Did I mention the stones? Rubies and sapphires. Hall-carat 110litaire diarnonda mounted on the acepters of the opposing kings. t. Each chess piece is mounted on it.s own wood base. Not fir or o6k or pinewood, mind you. Rare woods. The yellow gold chessmen are mounted at.op bases made of a dark African hardwood. Their 16 white gold opponent.a are mounted on lighter wood hues, carved from a block of bird's-eye maple that Grahl says took him three years to find. The chess boa.rd itaelf sita atop a portable table. and is made of acid-etched glass, illuminated from underneath by fluorescent Ughting. The board's siding la made from the same two woods uaed u bases for the chess pieces. But perhaps more impressive than all the glitter ~d shine, IB the attention to detail that Grahl put into each chess piece. Right down to the riveta in the knights' armor. Grahl says the gold chess pieces are designed around 14th and 15th Century European costuming. '"lbe kings are Nordic, the queens are Spanish and the pawns rbe Welsh foot aold.iers," he-said, adding the croesbows upon .nhich the toldiers lean "are a bit of artistic liceme." 1.... And the two gold k.nighta are composites of seven !lets o{ wrnor worn by ~ Henry vm. • t• " Seems the king had to have new hardware made every couple oj years as his stomach expanded. 1 "The 1'aat suit of armor he wore looks like a pot-bellied atpve." the European history buff laughed. • Grahl aya his latest chess aet is the 11th in a sen es, and while there are similarities between sets, all are different. 1 This la the first set he's offered for public sale. It's also, by w. the mc»l expensive .. "'l The previous .eta were pre-eom.rniaeioned and remain mostly in homes in Southern California. Costly homes, one would guess. He laid five jewelers spent more than three months finishing a.Qd pollahtng the most recent edition. And, he said, he molded the chem pieces in a manner· that niakea them "operl to modlficaUon.'' In other words. If a buyer with more flamboyant tastes than the designer wiilhe9 to add a few more atones to the cheessmen, there's no problem. Oh, there'd be a little adjuatment to the price, of course. But that's to be expected. Speaking of price, Grahl and his partner, Manon Halfacre, say they've received a few ofr.n for the set, most recently during 8J1 exhibition tour ln Houston. , ..__ .. And the golden game baa sparked interest locally, too. It's on :ewbit at Traditional Jewelers, Halfactt's shop on San Miguel •Road in Newport. U you're interested in putting in a bid for the set, drop by f dd take a look. Serious bidden rolght even be able to handle the GDOOth, intricate chta piecell. Go ahead. Pick up the rook. • Heavy, ian't it? i Bring the checkbook? .. lt'a your move. ' . • • Two telel'iBion titans, Johnny Carson and Fred Silverman, will compete for the same late-night audience this September. Pa e BS. ' D D ~ Designer Jim Grahl and jewelry shop owner Marion Half acre will sell you this solid gold chess set that features hand-polished pawns (left) and jewel-studded knight (below). Make an offer -over 1580,000, that is. A h~m•ri tragedy • • • . All 'street people' need help By BRlJCE ,l>ALIAS .......... ,,_ "'*' PHD...ADELPlilA -Bill FJtenhuth ~ed aoftly to the pile of dirty rags lying on the steam grate in the middle of the sidewalk. The rags stirred and sat up. . Street people, vent men, bag ladies, urban hoboes, Skid Row bums to most. But to Eiaenhuth, they are patients. Eiaenhuth drives from the suburban suiclde center he directs to viait nightly with thoee who wander Philadelphia's deterted atreetl after midnight. He gives them ooffee, a buck for break.last -and concern. ~ Once, many lived in ~back wards of mental hoepitals. "It's not a Pennsylvania problem; it's • naUOnal problem. Hol'dea ancf hordea of them have been releued into communities that were never prepared." aaya Dr. WUllarn Dubtn, director of paychlatr1c emeraency 1ervicea at Th<mU JeUenon Hoepit.al. , In winter, the atreet people auffer malnutriUon and CXJ>09Ure, and th.e moAat a1r of the ateam venta that provides wannth al80 keepa cuts and ulcen from heallna. aometima r.ulttna in aancrene. In aumrner, aurvtval it not u critical, but many at.reel peop~ au.ffer dehydration becawie of the layers of aolleCI clothea they wear year-round. ''They lived in boerd1na home. and left. becau.. they didn't pt eJonc, whaiever," •YI PoUoe lnapec!t« John DeBenedetto. ''They were never reported mAlllnc· Some ~ ao blld. they didn't knoW where they lived. Tbat'a how ltreet people ,., started," •.YI DtBeneclet1o. a member of • ma,yor'• tMk force orpnJaed 1Mt winter. Fo~ the ... fore»'• recornmendaUoni. the dty Ml liteWllhed a "drop-ln" C191\W Md plam. ~tric ~home. r.tema ... ,wry Wtdelj. fl'OID 000 = tn Phli.delphs. to llWl'al ~ • on who la MMd. '-rhili .,.. lotll ol thlm, y ••" aya allJ a..hh Can H rm Dr.~ Shapiro. "l loat my mlnc:l.". •YI nonnat Of her • ~ outllde Philadelphia St.ate JbPlw. , • the inltituUon Ci commonly known. hall 1 paden~ down from neerly,T,000.Jult 20 • ... . .. years ago. ao·iorence was among the approximately 6,000 patients di8cbarged • Less than a month after her release four yeara ago. ahe was found standing in the middle of a suburban expressway. trying to wave down trucks. Filthy and covered with maggots and lice, ahe was aeeing things and hearing voices. State police took be to the county line where Ei.senhuth waited. He _fOl F1orence committed, and she eveotuauy WU channeled back to Dyberry. Jeaae Struthers wasn't as fortunate. Strut.hen climbed out of the 1ewer where he bad lived dwin8 the sub-zero temperatures a yeat ago. Found crawling down 13th Street. Struthen wu one of more than 800 street people that dt¥ workers p6cked up during the winter freeze and took to Guiffre Medical Center. He died there. Of 192 ltreet people kept at Guiffre durinc an eight-week~· all but 26 were clualfied aa having mental problems. acoordina to Shapiro. Slxty-eeven were achbophrenic, the mo1t common ~ of aeriom mental lllne., chancterUed by • ...-Madon from reellty and Iona-term deterlonUon. "I did not awt out to do thla nlaht after ru,ht.'1 uya Ea.enhuth. who haa aoucht out detrwtltutlonaUmd chronic~ for more \Mn a~ in New York and Pblladelphla. "But they're mentally W, all destitute, all rnilUndentood and they all need help. and won't alk for It." m.nhuth aays. . App:ox.Unately 400,000 people have been dl9charf8d from atate~tU ~t the country llr¥le t.dera1 Uon e1tabllabed communlty·men"1 heal t'enten ln 1983. Many of thme ~ dwina the 19609 went to poup ot nwtlnl home9. Unaer the 1963 law, the oormnunlty mntm9 wen to continue their V..tment. Thoae ln the beck wardl NIMliied Wldl 1972. That y.ar, Social Seeurt~ ~dam .... -~ to lnalude ....... t.llJ -...... ly dtlablld. With ~tal a..ity ........ ·DioVklbw, ' = .. SE'° lift 0u .... u..~ ............ emi>Ued and unNjWat*i ~ fllled. .. ~ . HI Orang• Coaat DAILY PILOT /Wednttd1y, Aprll 13, 1883 Her le.tter filled with love DEAR ANN LANOKRS A whll back I found my11df noddln.c In U6'«'t'tm'nl when l reocl the.io lint-. In your l'Cllumr1 "The: prtncis-1 rouon lll'(.'Ofld rrw rlaiC!ll fall la be<.·uult" o ( trouble over children Crom • f1rat marrlugt• hia or hctr'8." May I aay a word, please, to l'hlldrt"n whOIMl partnta hav" 11pllt tind who find thenUl('lves with a 11tepparent they 1-esent a lltll~ -or a lot? .O~~ CHILDREN: Slnct your clad and l marrttd;t have worked right. Ilona with hlm eo he could kffp up the chtld-1upport paym nta. The fll1ht1 you make to vlalt u1 for hollday1 and summer vao.ttJON aro half pald for by me. I 1hare in the bllla for your medical and dent.al care. I buy tnOlt of lhe clothes you wear. I do all ttul willingly becau.te I love your father ond recoplze that he ha.a an obllaat.lon to you, which I am happy to aha.re. When 1 say "No" '° you lt ls becaWle I want you to tum out to be u pe~n of good character who will be able '° handle whatever life eends your way. It would be a Jot easier to say "Yes." No hassle, no arguments. ju.at cloong my eyes and ears and letting you do u you pleue But 1 refuse to do lhat. C hild ren of divorce have a few added problems, 6ut then so do people who marry a divorced person with kids. Please try lo understand where I am coming from. lt's hard for me. lOO. But I am willing to mecJ you more than halfway. If you come 30 percent down the road, I'U travel the other 70. I am -YOU!t STEPMCYrHER DEAR STEPMOTHER: I llave never printed a letter like youra before. My beartleU thanks for wrltlDI It. Mllllons of stepparents and cllildren are sure to see tbemaelves In Ann Landers' column today. EIMA IOMIECI AT WIT'S END Did you ever stop and think how much the maintenance cost 1s on our quality of hfe? I'm talking about the expense of keeping appliances running, wheels on the car movmg and repairs on life's !Jttle necessaues. Early in life, you learn aboul pnonties. There are some things you have to !ix. There's no choice. If you don't you can't get to work or the meal goes bad. There are other thmgs you will never fix but will live with. • I know in my heart when lhe frame on my glasses break, I will spend the rest of my life seeing a paper clip in my peripheral vision. If a light burns out on the sewing machine, I will either burn a candle or curse the darkness. It never occurs lo me to replace the bulb. A car door on the passenger side is never a priority. J ust as long as there is one that works, who needs it? There isn't a chance of it being repaired until you are ready to sell the car. ln all lhe years we have been marned, we have never replaced a garden hose. One more leak th.ts summer and the entire hose wUI be one continuous MARRIAGE COUNSEL By OR. E. C. Q. INGE NOT JUST A STAY-AT-HOME 0 : Why doee a peraon Who uMd to like going to panles, restaurant•. ahow1, movie.. 9lc • undergo a change to the point where he °' lhe hat• going out of the hOUM7 A: Some atay-et-homea have reuena: They don't ISO well with other people, don't want to lruat the kid• to a sitter, don't know which fork to UM In a restaurant. But many people who "prefer" ltay1ng at home are really ell but Incapable of going out. A;oraphobla Is aometlmea ref«red to a1 "houaewtfe's phOt>la," but "*' can get It, too. Thia la the tear of leavlng ~ and tear of having a panic attack While away from h<>Me. Some agoraphobes can't leave the houee at Ill: ottier. can go only a btocl( °' a mlle away. A counHlor may be able to determine whether the lndlvtdual hu valld reason• to at~ home -°' If he °' she has a genuine fear. The counaelor wlll want to eKplore the background of the aubfect. to dlacover why the change from an 1ndMdual who enfoyed social activities to ooe who pref94'S not lo todaltze. However. II the P9fl00 It llCCuall)i AFRAID to leave the house. the matter Is not Operl to loolc. The first step Is to understand that thl1 Isn't jult a matter of lazlneu °' unwllllngne11 to change. The peraon wlll require psychotherapy and needs to be guld9d to a countelor. Brought to you as a publlc service by The Cope Center, 2710 Herbor, Suite 201, Coete M••• 545-T732.. . ~-ANll-IM_Dl_IS_ DEAR ANN LANDERS: tt taket a lot of nerve to diaagree wllh • penon who hu aa many oxporw In her corner H you, but l believe you w ere mlat.aken In a recent column when you ~ld a woman, "Wt both know that people don't 1nore when they ar awak«:." J offer my husband as Exhibit A. Often when wo are waichlna TV totether or are aeated ln a movie theater 1 can hear h im breathtns heavier t~ nonnal. Aft.er a few mlnul.el he begins to 11\0l'e, I have looked' at hll'\ aever,P limes to make .. ure he haan't fallen uleep. Sure enou1h. I see hla eyea are wide open. ( tell him about It when It happena in public becawe It annoys people around hlm. He quiet.a down a bit temporarily, then he'a back, full steam. So, dear Ann, please be aware that some people do snore when they are awake. -AN AUTHORITY IN CENTRALIA. ILL. DEAR AUTHORITY: Just when I think I've beard everything I get a Jetter like yours. Thanks for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS. W ilh so many child ren turning out lo be disappointments, do you have any words of wisdom that mighl help? -L.P . IN AUGUSTA, MAlNE DEAR L.P.: Train a child ln the way that be should go and walk tbere younelf once ln a wblle. roll of bedsheets! People are really tight with a buck when it comes to shoestrings. To me, they measure the life of a shoe. When there is a knot between each eyelet and the I -inch string at the lop breaks, it is time lD replace the shoes. Bul never buy shoestrings. Another phenomenon that people seem to marry for life 1s their luggage. Ever stand and watch a carousel of luggage al the airport? Men standing around m Gucci loafers and solid gold chains around thell' necks will claim suitcases with a woman's cinch bell around them. And how many women do you know who would throw away a compact just because it had a broken mirror in it that made your face look like a crossword puule? No one I know. ~ Whenever anything breaks down, you have to ask yourself some basic questiona. IC I throw it away, will there be a white mark on the wall? If l fix it, is there a possibility it will break down again? If 1 have a great personality, will anyone notice it's broken? With our teleVlSlon, it's a series of compromises. When the picture kept spinning around, we hit the tuner with the bottom of our shoe and it stopped. When the faces on the picture turned green, someone would volunteer to stand at the sel and hold the aerial between his forefingers. Last night, Tom Selleck's mouth was on one side of the screen and his mustache on the other. We have lo el the set fixed. "Thoroughly original. Magical!' -VEW YCRK TIMES LocALHERO ~ ·---::.:...:-:-~o ~ ·---·---EXCLUSIVE OB1'NGE COUNTY ENG1'GEMENT aoN-THUR8. 1 t:15 edwords MESA CINEMA ::~ .:.;.~." 646-502 5 #1 Table tor Five **.f'M. ... -(N) IAT/IUM. 1:», ... ._ THE VERDICT =:.-:.~ #2 "LISll' rr• "> .......... nt. ... . lltlfllUM. '*' ... .. "GA TEI OF HELL" .... ?! .. .. ~,,..., .. .. tAT/tUM. ... 7:11.11111t e dword'> WE STBROOK CINEMA ::.: .. :·~ . .'" . .. . .. 530-440 ' &~~{; SO FASHION ISLAND · NEV.rom BEACH · (714) 644-7030 I • . . ... WeJJing~ & ~ngagements I t . .. ' ... . ____ l_n_g~g.emenf4 Paty-1"urta Tho Dally Pilot wants your wooding thwai{, announce tht tn1•1•ment of th• Mr1 and Mn. WIUlam P•ty Jr. Of~ W and engagement news. dau11hter, Susan Kapwi Paty, '° Cart.er To h olp you aubmit the required Wurta Jr .. 10n of Mr. and Mns Carter Wurta I , , b·' Da Corona deJ M&r. ' n,ormation, ,017111 are •w•lla "" •t the Jly Paty attended Me.a Coll~e and Cal Staw San',., Pilot office, 330 W. &y St., ~UI Mesa . Diego, where her fl~ wlll araduat.e In May. • •"* For weddJnp, only a hlack and white They are planning a Junu 18 wedding In:; photo of tho bride t. aceptabJe. Snafl,'hot.11, Haleiwa, Oahu. ~ C Polaroid MK/ color phoio. can't be used. , : ~ Th~ photo mu.st be aubmJUed no later Herbert-Dunzer • • than three wee k• after the wedding, • otherwise Jt wUJ not be publJBhed. Gavin and Dorralne Herbert of Laguna Beac:P,. announ<;,~ the engageme nt of their daughte~ ... Engagement Information is to ~ Pamela Lynn Herbert, to David Scott Dwuer, aon,.,. submitted at lease seven weeks before the of J ohn and Elaine Dunzer of Newpon Beach. : wedding. The betrothed couple are USC gradual.el. They Form11 and photos can be dropped off ;t are planning a Sel!. 17 wedlng In St. George'' · the o ffice or m a/Jed to the Editorial Episcopal Church. gu.,. Hilla. •• Department, Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Ccsta Mesa, Calif. 92626 POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT GET OUT OF MY WAY! l'M IN A MU9'"V TO GO MOMll ANO "EL.A)(. TOM SELLECK BESS Al<MSTKONC HIGH RoAD 'lb CHINA • SO COAST PLAZA • TOMI COOD u1.,_ ,,_ 7Sl-41M fOMi COOO --ur.,-""11'" CPC) " - lllct Ololl -111 Olll.ur CfC) .... n. 'IH~lOot -..n. llH~ 7Sl-411A .;,;lt>Mf;;.;,,,;,p;COOb.;,,..,,.,....--( ___ '-__ ~ .:.:-"1flUfl{• 111 7Sl-4llA -Ii IO°'OCI TOMI CVfTU ur.,.-,,_ 1Sl-41M Norris-Fine Mr a nd Mrs Thomas P Norris of Newport- Beac h announced the engagem e nt of the~ daughter, Anne Mane, to En.sign Gregory Fine ok .. Pottstown, Pa. :.:, They are planning a February wedding an ~ Lady Queen or the Angels Church, Ne wport Beach.-' The future bride will graduate in May from"~ the University or Notre Dame. Her flance gradua~-! with distinction from the Naval Academy i~ Annapolis, was commissioned in May 1981 and is'!" serving aboard the USS Pintado. Elexon-Neff ' Mr. and Mrs. Dan Elexon or Huntington Beacti · announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathyf: Ann Elexon, to Paul Allen Neff of Newport Beach . .:': They are planning a Sept. 24 wedding in t~ .. Baysh ore Community Congregational Church,; Belmont Shores. :::. Neff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Neff of.1: Arcadia, is a USC graduate. • * BARGAIN MATINEES* Monday thrv Saturday All Perf0tmMK•• befOfe 5:00 PM IE._ s..-. h11 .. •11t1 Miii Wifsl BJtdtl• lo M99~.j4()0''"'} "llAIDllM OP 'Tltl LoeT AM"---"MAN, WOllllAN "THE aUCK 8T ALLION ' AHO CHLO" ::J RITURNI" -._ --, ... "L081N' IT" 111 .. ........ -. .. ··~ ...... TO CHINA" l'l•l "<lAMDHt" "• "HtGH ROAD I -- -•a -- -.. OOl.aY 8TIJllO ---•Wllfl• ·021i,u1.ffi000 J "HIGHROAD ·----~~= 'i<>.21-8'!.":= LAKEWOOD CENTER SO UTH ..... ,,. ... AD BOYi""' ----·-· BIG• BIG• DRIVE-IN BARGAIN $2 EVERY WEDNESDAY A THURSDAY Ctlldrtn Under 12 AIWa'p flH "'""°" - ,. .... ANAHEIM 0 11 1\lf IN ._ .... _. ~ .. . ... BUENA PARI' : • o1 ., 111-4010 ... LINCOLN rit'1\ t ...... fOU NTAIN VALLEY O~IVI IN ..... 00.0-1..., •• -(lo.) "ZOJ ---·~ -"- ffl·IAll Cllll "- "THI OUTJ!M"8'" -"\.~ 11"""' "OVll' ntl ..,... .. "ZAl'NDf""' _,._ C..ltlOllllS .. lA fUBl<A • ,, ., "\.oetl' fT" ... -"IAPtltlDI" .. ... ,,... -~! •• .. ,.. ' .. • ~ • • • , . . I~~ YOU AMID'°" l'T •~Ilg IMt" ( IHal Wllllm "¥Olde. GOii Clrlnt CC)MOYll * * 'W It A Oengerout Afl, ~ ~ 1NI) Oudily MOott, lklly -e.-oo-1 L~~IOH • • • ''The Outalder" ( 1~71 Otrren McOtvtn, 8Mll Garnton IL'"' ,AU 04/t '.M.MMWINE 1Ml8IEICIM ... ~ATM MlllHOUll l! :::or .. M PAAI< • • • "~ For One ' (1982) Saul Aublnell. Marcil Strllll!lln Cl)MOYIE • * "The Sword And The SOfctter' ~~ HOl'llly. KathlMll Beller. * * "Mountain F emlly Roblnlon" 111111. Robert login. Sunn OimMlt Sllaw -8:30- • Cl) SOUAAE PEGS CI> atAAUFS AHGEL8 m UE OETECTOA -HO- • Cl) KRAFT 8AlUTE.8 nE 25TH AJHY£RSAlft OF TH£ COUNTRY MUSIC A8SOCIA T10N 0 Cit M FACTI OF Lift G 111 AYAH'S FOUR I Wl.D, WllD WOT M'A'S'H e THE OIULH CONCERTS '9 OETO: THE HISTOfVC GHETTO OFVEHICE 6D TBN8 (C)MOYE •••• ''The 0-~ter" 11978) RObe11 DI Niro. Meryl Streep -•.30- 0 CllTAXJ (!) ntE ABIEl..8 m M'A'S'H (a>MOYE •*'A "Last Of The Blue Dlvlls (1979)~tary (%)MOVIE • * • "Allbl llte" (19351 Joe E Brown. OIMade~. -10:00- 0 Cl!OUINCY UDm•NEWS G O DYNASTY 8l) FROM DUST~ ASHES lti> AUSTlf CITY LIMITS 6D 'OE YIAGINIAN CS)MOYIE * "The Burning" ( 1981) Juoo Alex· ender, Brien Mattr-a. O MOVIE • • "Saturday The 14th" t 198 ll Rlch11d Benjlmln, P8Ull Pltntlu -10:15-CJ:D WIU.IE NELSON & FAMll. Y -10-.30- • Cl) JOttHHY GARAGE • IND(llSC)fJff NETWORK .T. IT'S TIME TO FEEL GOOD AGAIN. MAX DUGAN RETURNS * ( FOR f\Kll EXC:ITErnEOTI VisrtOur ••• ARC ADE of GA MES • ..... • : .': )~ 1 Aeademy A werd H.IOH Ro.\D lb CHINA ~ ~mm SOPHIE'S 1flWf..,.. CHOICE • Mt •11 7111 1011111.s. l•Hr. U :•I 1 111 l 10I 7111 t :U Wm l tlO ltH 1 100 7111 t ill 111411100 11117141 10111 ~$tallioft 1 10111 1~1~•1•• NIWI ..... UM.Ol'AMJ> .-nNOHI ln'llWt. MAln' e Aa. GAMNNO 0# ilOU>CAUIT IUfMYON 1i=TINIOHT * * "Sta WOfld ' ( 1971) l .... ~.1..~Y Pllfket (J)MUVll • • "PllltMrt" (18121 Ay1111 O'Nul Jotlll Hur1 -11·•- I i~~T~CAASo.. ~IC HeW9 NIOHTUNf H * "CUIM Keep" (t9e9) Burt l~Fllll 1~~~80H * *\Ii 'Smoley And The Bandit ' ( 19171 &111 Rtynoldt, Salty Field -11:46- <HJMOVIE •• "I'm Oenc1o0 A• Fut A• I Can" ( 19121 JHI Clayburgh. NICOi Wlllilm· ton . -12:00- • ENTERT AIHMENT TONIGHT I ({O) THE WT WOAO 1H SEARCH OF ... IHDE.PEHOENT NETWORK NEWS II) LOVE, AME.RICAH STYLE I S) SEVENTH AHNlJAl 8AH FRAHCl8CO BIG l.AFF-OfF -r12.D5-(¢)MOVIE • "Tarzan. The Ape Man" (1931) Rtcllard Hams, Bo Dlrelt -12"JO-D Q! lA TE NIOKT WITH DA VIO' LETTlAMAN D COUPLES G YOO ASKEO FOR IT (!) TOl4 COTTlE: UP CLOSE at LOVE. AMEAICAH 8TYl.E (O)MOYE * * "J.0 And Tiit Sall Flat Kid" ( 1978) 611m PldUW -12:40- 1) Cll MOYIE * t t Curse 01 The Black WldtYM" ,. ~OMlll l\'ktr" ( tM3) I.• Mll'Wl. lttcltOtd OiAman r.~~:.'!,,y (11141 ,,..,.. 'Of· r•IJG;. Dtiy P. • "The MIQlllllOtnl M1tldot" ( 18551 Anlhony <NWI. MUNI\ O'H111 MCMI •' "Thul\det ROid · PIM) "°°9r1 M1ICl\uln, Oflll 8atry ' ll)MOVll U "BIOOd Mlllll" p t10) Ptt11 ~ar~lONIOHT t * "I'm ()en(Jng Al Fut Al I Ctn" ( 1812) JIM Cltybufgll. Nicol Wllllam- IOll (l)MCMI * * * .. ~ .. ft981J Nigel T•· ry, Nleol WilUll'lleOll -1:15- 9MOVIE •• • • "Tiit Stunt Man" (1980) Pt11t O'T oolt. StM RAllabecll -1:30- U IB N8C HEWS OV£fMlHT m TOM com.E: UP Ct.06E -1:40- CH I NOT NECE88AAll. Y THE NEWS -2:00- 11 Cl) C88 NEWS NIOHTWATCH mNEWS ICJMOVIE • • "Cattle Annie And little Brllehes" 11981) a~rt Lancuter, John Savege <OJ MOVIE • * *'<\ "The FOUt Seasons (1981) Alen Alda Carol Butnett -2:10- ('RJ BlOHDlf -2:30-D Q!NEWS mM<>Vlf • * • "Behold A Pale Hone" ( 1964) Gregory Peck. Anthony Quinn -2:50- U MOVIE •'h "RlngSlde 11949) Don Bltry. Shllla Ryan <SlMOVIE • * "The Sw0td And The Sorce<1t' ( 1982) let HOfsley. Kelhleen Beller -3:00- (f) ZANE GREY THEA TIIE ( 1977) Tony Franctos.t. Donna M!ltt (tt) MOVIE -12:'5-* • "Corbon Copy" I 19311 Geor91 -3:10-'- IZ. CINEMASCORE Segal. Susan S11n1 James SH complete llatlnga In TV Log CHANNEL LISTINGS 0 KN• I fC 11\1 1!'>61 K()()(. lh!O I 0 KNfi( IN lt( 0 Ou IV 0 K1'LA flrl(J I l I IV 8 1tAIH 11\llt 1 .. HU() 0 1'.f MU tC ll'>l c C(1nJn11u 1 O "HJ rv 11n<.1 , • !WOHi NV NV 10 ~ l '>I l'llH I II IW lll'>I l])ttrTv '"'' ( It ')PN 1 Cl) l>.f OP IV llrld 1 s IShowl1m1·1 ID ltU r I f'li'>I " Stlothqlll II1J i>.O< f tPf1'>1 8 ((.tbh· N<·w~ Nel wor I< I "MAGNETIC CLASSIC!' -L.A. Titus Outilters ~ f UNIO• SQUIRi ~ t INflfMIS llilllJlflllAl AT t0AH0 12•l!tttOIU Or•no• Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, Aprll 13, 1883 Ill Ju mi Gertz (left ) and Claudette Wells star in tonight's episode of HSquare Pegs," at 8:30 on KNXT (2) . Two TV titans By FRED ROTHENBERG Aff T ... vt.lon Writ. . ~ NEW YORK -Two television titans, no ledger in the prime time of their careers, will compete for the same late-night audience this September. Johnny Carson , whose "Tonight" s how is leading but slipping. will be up againat a program developed by Fred Silverman, the former Wunderkind of network programming at CBS and ABC before he fell on his {ace as president of NBC. Silverman will not be telling ;okes against Carson's monologue. but Alan Thicke, a Canadian talk-show host, will. His syndicated "Thicke of the Night" is being developed by Silverman's InterMedia Entertainment production company. "When I was at NBC. I knew we couldn't come up with anything better than Canon," Silverman says an this week's TV ~Cable Week magazine. "Now that I'm ~he other side of the fence, I'm all too aware of e vulnerability in that time period." Once t oroughly dominant at the witching hour, the 57-year-old Canon has lost a chunk of his late-night audience to ABC's "NlghUine," CBS' rerun movies, and programming from independent stations antl cable. In addition, NBC's resurgence in prime time m the big cities with young, upscale vie wers is not totally compatible with Carson's strong support an Middle America. Thicke, 35, who says his mixed bag of comedy 1s "Monty Python meets Art Linkletter's House Party," will appeal to th( younger audierlces who t~nd to prowl late-rught television. Ail producer of in•ex•pen•slve* ·(in ik spen' siv) not high in price; reasonable; classified advertising Daily Pilat Classified Advertising 642-5678 • ID • • co Ill pet1 t1on "Femwood 2-Nlte," he wrote Martin Mull'1 famo1:a line that "leasure suits cause cancer in rata." According to a spokesman for Silverman, "Thicke of the Night," a 90-minute, five-nigh ta-a· week show, has r eceived programming commitments in 80 markets, and it will go head- to-head against ''Tonight" In much of the country. In the lineup are 15 ABC stations, including Boston . Pittsburgh and Kansas City, four CBS affiliates and seven NBC stations, including Baltimore, New Orleans and San Antonio. So far. none of the NBC stations has canceled "Tonight," leaving both programs on the schedule. The Casper, Wyo .. affiliate asked If it could delay "Tonight" by 30 minutes. but NBC said no. NBC'a Baltimore station, citing Carson's slipping appeal, scud it might drop "Tonight," but no decision would be made until after the May ratings are interpreted. Among NBC's 200-plus affiliates, loeing one station -or even a few -isn 't a tidal wave of defection. But the network would have to fear a bandwagon effect, particularly if "Thicke of the Night" as successful Probably the most bizarre development is that two independent stations owned by Carson - KNAT in Albuquerque and KUVU in Las Vegas - will carry "Thicke of the Night" against "Tonight." It's strictly a business decision since "Thicke'' doesn't cost the stauons anything. Under the barter system, the producers and stations each take half the commercial time. Nevertheless, it's an awkward situation. SAVE MONEY ON YOUR INSURANCE -ll. AOINT • CO-ANY MOHMY PAY•INl lf,-.. 1.i. SENIORS! • RABBIH INSlMAJllC£ 441 Old Newperi 81Yd • ... _,_.. leodl, Go. 631-77.0 .. 13, 19&J.Aprl 19, 1913 ~ hlllri: 3.~ I am better known as "Green Swordt11I." A beautiful creen body, embellished with a red zc·uc st11p llonc my Qtn hne. My sword IS yellow, elft1nUy edced 1n black. I am on sale 11 Aquatte Tropttlls w1t11 my mate -I.he two of us. tor only $3.39. 1510 W. Ba••C.11 Mesi 549-13'1-c.m....,. & ... ., . . OUT! Tonight 7:30 PM KOOB, Ollannel SO An Joa nw 18, • Gift f• ....., wbo lat Join oo- i.tl AD oa.,. ... Jo om. fw a look d UM -DI ... .._o1a1a1raana. Darlni the pro&nJD, Can in your quenlona ('114) 898-8080 ,.._._. '1 SOGl/IO, UM 0ru&t Olu'1 ...._ ClhiMu Ant., 0...0 1M UM Ana .,_., • .,_, nil .................. .,"" Oltlr ~Ate,.... ..u.n..., Ult Onqe OlutJ...,. " .............. ...,.... latenaUwl o.,.au.. ...... lnlM...., . Chicken Planks~ Dinner 82.79 It's the best pert of the belt pert of the chicken! Four tendet strtps of whltemeet chicken arved from the breast, better·dlpped end fried to • crunchy, golden brown. JOH HerlNw 81¥•. In Col .. MtMI Just SOUtl'I °'Sao ~ 'wt Acrou from 'tdcO I I Mi Orange Co111 DAil V PILOT /Wldn11d1y, April 19, 1N3 fiCHUJO c; \R•·1•:1.1t THE f'A~IL \' CIRCl'S "Go real slow, Mrs. Crisp. I haven't finished my homework." '9.\R11.\Dl. KE by Brad Anderson ''Remember, Marmaduke ... tell him when I say no. I mean no!" llOO' ll l Ii Iii ~S LEFT ... Rl~HT ... WRoNG ... ~==I PEA~l.TS ~ooNio l-...:::11iHE PARTY WITHoUT ME1 M.AMl~·-MY FEET ARE' l(ILL.IN' Mri ~ I WANT TO TELL EVERYONE ~ow I 6AVE UP MV BlANKET Tl' M 8LEtt EEDH -n4A1' MNPrf CAl\M' ~ ~R AHE:A~ PE:PU1V. by Gut Arriola by Jim Davis BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ~~~ 'f·•l ilf "Where do you want these co1t h1ng1rs?" ·~r ~.DAO ... LET ME AN'MoM ~OLE THIS. ITS 0.: ~R 152 ~ " by Charles M Schulz 0 I'll Believe it When I See it·· by Tom K. Ryan I '!:at. I ••• _A Aolh vulnerabl•. l-louth dealt NOl1'U • 975% ~AQ8 OAU •SU WEST t:A8T • 10f4 •AU ~ JIOU \'?IU O IOS 0 50 •Kn& •cuoo SOUTH •IQJ \'? K 7Z 0 lQJ111 •At Th\! bidding: 8Hlli Wfft N ... Eut I 0 PUI I• PU1 3 . , .... 0 , ... 4NT Pue 5 ~ P ... S 0 Pua P ... p.,. Opt'nlnl( lead: Jack of ~. snot: DR \BBt•: ~OU fAINf f.0, 61(, 8ROfHf.R ! E.vf.R'i'flo(IN& I!> OK~'{. OAO J~'f AAD A Ll1'1'l..E. Acc1oe......i1 Al 11.b~~ GOllN ON lllOGI BY CHAALES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Ir you are lookl111 (or a no mk ruaranlet, brld1• 1t not your same. Switch to tlddl1 wink•. but take urf' that you don't nip a di1k Into your eye. Mouth had a dtlritult rel»d. H• dtrldrd that. bf'uullf of h11 "ood •pad• fit, hi• hand WU too atrOnf for tWO no trump, '° he elected l4 jump •h1ft in club1. When No.rth took a jump prelerence in diamonds, South launched in tn Hlackwood and ltllled in a amall alam when he learned an a<'t wu m1111ng. West selected the 11fe lf'..ad of the jack of heart.. The declarer soon ahowed that it wu ufe and sorry! He won the lung or htarta. drew trumpe and then forced out the ace of spadu. East 'IO'J l<NOl&l 1'14~1 MELKMllAl A~M 'flU.'1' 60E~ VI' ~NO OOWN , ~\.\.OWtt-l(, CAA!> 'fo Elllf£~ 'f\.(E. Ul1~Mf.Ni VILL~C,£ 1 1.ir\e4 &o a dub, but ll wu too 1a1.e. w~. 1pedt• 1plll eveo.11. dedarer aoNtd lo a bl1ll lie•" 111d alunect h11 IOi! Ing tlub on th" thirteenth •Pllde to mb bil 1lam. Obviou1l7, a dub lead would la.ave defeated tbe con trad. No matttr how dttlarer maneu vtted. ht could not have .voided loting a Lrk.k ill each black 1ult. But how wu Wnt to kaow'l Man1 time world ch1m plOO Benito Garouo'• 1dv1rt in bu Doh Uridre Tip aomt yean ago pointed the way. lie eaplained that. wbeo com peltnt oppooenu bid • small alam apinst you, you doo't have much ttme to develop tracks you are go1og Lo gain ' lht lead oott more, al Ix-st. Tbtre'9N. Jtu ....W aab 111 att.acilqletd.,aleli& &~ 1t.rn In 11 9flort .. llliW • quitk trick. owio...11 l)t 01111 1uit ll&al olfm t nal rhance or that lot Wea II a tlub u .... ,. .......... .... ..-.a..nc...... c ................ , •• ..,, .......... 0,..... L .. ~.... Hd ... II ,. '"'G ............. art ...... ... ...,_,P.O. In m , Nww--'. N.J. t7MS. M.b ~,.,..._a. N.,,• ......... b 1.>EA.L, 11 All1DE.tolf~l.l.'{ KONKE.0 OAO ON 1'"E ~E.AO~ 1'HE.~ "fOOK. \.{It.'\ 1'o 1'1.(E \.\O~Pl'fM. t"OR by Kevin Fa an l.£.'f'~ c,o! MOM Wit.I.. oe~e.R.JA'f10N W\f.E.1 \)~ 'fl(f.R,f ~ ~ ~-s "e.R.·~A~ 'f'fifK .. C:.Ot..i\/EN1'10N \X'f~ our! t 'OR BETTER OR •'OR MORSE t 'l .,K \' M l'KERHE.·\' -FAMOUS C<ld.POSERS - Chapter Ten-Claude Barlow During his formative years,Claude Barlow's parents pushed him constantJy ! IT SAYS HERE THE PRICE OF 60LD IS GOING I'D BETTER HURRY UP by Tom Bat1uk A shove down the gr&Id staircase at the La Scala opera house appears to h8l1e done the most damage! by George Lemont T PITTS, M .0 L06E. LOWER LIPANO CHIN SPECIALIST By Mark Lasky Orange CoHt OAIL Y PILOT /Wedneld1y, Aprll 13, 1883 8 1 . ome&·Gafde -Delly ..... at.ff l'>hoto t-~~----;....:.;,--:r----_.-....:;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i::;;:::::::;::::::;:::;..-.;:.1 Unfinished furniture a t Costa Mesa store. It's less expensive and often lasts longer . Raw furniture practical too When it comes to new furniture, many homeowners are opting to finish Jt them.selves. Buying furniture in an unfinished form can save a consumer 30 to 50 percent compared to a similar finished piece, according to George Heed. who owns the furniture in the Bare stores an Costa Mesa and Wesurunster. But Heed contends that many of his customers are n ot simply bargain hunters. While some finished furniture is made of particle board or has only a wood veneer, unfinished furniture is usually 1 80lid wood and thus lasts longer. The store owner claimed this combination of quality and affordable price has paid off "The furniture business as a whole is depressed," Heed said . "But the unfinished furniture business is a growth Industry." Most unfinished furniture stores offer written directions, classes and other types of instruct.ion to help first-timers firush their own furniture. The steps mclude sanding. w1pin1J off the sand dust, applying a coat of finish. wiping 1t dry. sanding again and applying a second roat of finish. According to Heed, finishing a dinmg room set with a table and four chairs requ1res only six hours over two days. He said the most popular woods m unfinished furniture are oak, alder and pane For customers who do not wish to do the finishing work themselves. most unfinished furniture stores ofCer a customized finishing service. Many people take extra pride and use more care In finishing a piece themselves, and thus end up with furniture that may even be superior to a store-bought firushed piece. "There's a big difference," Heed said , "between finishing a piece for your own home and flnishing a piece for $4 an hour ma factory." Bedding plants color[ ul, easy When you talk bedding plants, you're talking l.nstanl garden. Colorful bedding plants that can be removed individually from their containers and set out on display much earlier than if you had sown the seeds yourself. The special magic of bedding plants 1s the instan t garden tbey make possible, plus the advantage of using plant material selected and grown under commercial, controlled greenhouse conditions. The mo8t popular bedding plant varieties are petunias, begonias, impatiens, geraniums, salvia, marigolds and dianthus. Now, those are the pretty ones. If you'd like a more practical bedding plant, chOO&e from among the many vegetables offered in containers. Such as pony-packs of tomatoes, peppers, broccoli. cabbage and eggplant. Some lips in buying bedding plants: -Make sure the seedlin~ are the last item you pick up at your nursery. Treat your new annuals like a carton of ice cream. Baking In the trunk of a car is no better for plants than for frozen desserts. -Prepare your flower beds, hanging baskets and other containers before you purchase your bedding plants. -Once home, protect the seedlings until you're ready 10 plant. Place them in a shady spot and water well. -Once the plants are in your garden, shade them with cardboard, a board elevated on bricks - anything -for the first few days. ILL IUIDS IT TIP DISCIUIT PRICES ~a•pet 1a·Pket 848-4424 Every day classified presents an interesting variety of merc handise at great prices. And it only take a few minutes to scan the classified co lumns for whatever you want. Best of all you can sho~ classified anytime, anywhere, thanks to the convenience and availability of newspapers. be savvy -shop classified regularly. Shop classified fi rst. ~ Of>!H: 7 DAYS A WOK E\/£HIN08 Tll l,,M. Dailylilll 642-4321 ·oN GALLON CANS OF MOOROLO LATHHOUIE & TNMPAtNT Fade realltant eo1«1, aoap and wet• clMn up. MOOAGAAD LATEX HOUIE PAINT App081 Miity, fut drying Fe.de r8111tant color. SINCE 197S ............. (J~ ........ L.....J University Park 18102 Culver Dr. 552-8000 Heritage Plaza 14230 Culver Dr. 552-1110 . . . ·With contemporary dining tables, chairs and buffets in Teak, Walnut, Oak and Glass. Chrome or Brass. All Priced For A Quick Inventory Reduction ALLIED LIGHTING Highlight Your Hom~ with Outdoor Lighting Fixtures from ALLIED LIGHTING (Bring In this ad and receive our Speclal 21st Anniversary Discount!) Offer good tlll 4/30/83 .. Orange Oout DAILY "L.OT/WedMldey, Aprll 13, 1813 USING REVOLUTIONARY NEW ?EC:HNOtOGY ••• 1 r How many people you know (In- I i eluding yourself) actually enjoy r hard physical exercise -jogging, push-ups, etc. In fact, there's a lot of people who can't exercise, even if they wanted to. Arthritis, broken bones, or other dlsabllltles · prevent many individuals from the ~ type of movement necessary to -exercise muscle tissue. Now there's the Bio-tone Effortless Exercisor. A revolutionary new way to exercise and tone muscles ~ electronically. So you can firm, tone and shape-up, · ' effectively, and without effort. .. t HOW IT WORKS • ~ Bio-tone Effortless Exerciser "' Developed 16 years ago and used in Europe by many ·~ professional and world class athletes, Bio-tone is a _. passive exerciser affecting male and female alike. Bio-tone electronically exercises muscles in a natural way, duplicating the tiny impulses sent by the brain during vigoruos exercise. The pleasant sensa- tion of rhythmic, effortless exercise total relaxation "" creates a soothing, calming feeling as it goes to work ., firming and toning your waist. hips, thighs and stomach -any area you wish. It Realty Worbl , Each 35 minute treatment at Newport Bio-Fitness has the equivalent effect of 1500 situps. And, be- cause Bio-tone stimulates the circulation, muscles • are rid of waste products and toxins which cause the familiar soreness following vigorous exercise. Bio- tone is perfect for persons seeking an alternative to the monotony and regimen of traditional exercise. • .. THE RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES "My son Dann y Pruitt was severly injured 2 years ago. As a result he is paralyzed from the chest down. Danny started E.M.S. (Electronic Muscle Stimulation) recently and has already shown signs of improvement. We are excited, it looks like we have some hope in the right direction." "I have found the treatments invigorating as well as relaxing and the inches are coming off." KATHY PRUITT ANITA BLANCHARD "After suffering with lower back pain for the past two years, to the point of being bed ridden for weeks at a time and forced early disability retirement, I started treatments at NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS in January, 1983. The results have been simply great. I have never been so mobile or free from pain in years. It feels great! Your staff is to be commended." ~'-'--?" "After losing 110 pounds I realized a serious need to begin an exercise program ~hat would tighten and tone my muscles.' When I discovered NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS it was a dream come true! After only 12 visits I lost 21 inches. The individualized treatments are great and the staff are truly caring people". 111 recommend NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS to all my friends." SAM AMBURGEY ALLISON GAPPA-FORD "Due to my hectic schedule I don't get enough time to properly exercise. I find . NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS relaxing and get immediate results. I lost8 inches in only f~our treatments with no dieting. Fantastic!" .__ ~ °Following arthioscopic surgery to my left knoe in June of this year, I was unable to run or bend without severe pain. I tried three types of physical ttaerapy with little success and literally couldn't play tennis without hobbling around." "After only six sessions with John Benson at NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS, I can not only bend my left knee and run without pain, I am on the court and playing ~ MICHaEDAWN tennis again. I can't believe it, but I am a believer now." ORANGE COUNTY18 ll08T •XCLU81VE • COll,,,_.TE PA881VE IVCERCIU c•NTSR ~~- HUGH STEWART INTRODUCTORY Ol'l'•R 1o:FF DlllJ Piiat WEDNESOAY, APRIL 13, 1983 SUPERMARKET SHOPPER SLIM GOURMET MEAD ON WINE C3 C6 D5 You can eat cheesecake and diet, too. Page C4. Artichq~es, salmon winning combi9ation With the majority ot couples Combine stately artichokes with . working outside the home, the convenient canned salmon and you preparation of the evening meal Is often have a winning combination for entrees a shared responsibility. Today's that are fun as well as easy to prepare generation Is Interested In foods with a together. degree of sophistication that are also For a delicious entree for two, nutritionally sound. At the same time, whole cooked artichokes with their they generally don't want to spend long petals decoratively trimmed are filled hours on food preparation. with a savory mixture of canned salmon, sauteed mushrooms, onion and green .. How to cook, eat 'chokes TO PREPARE Pull off lower, outer petals of artichoke; snip off tips of remaining petals. Cut off top third of artichoke. Cut stem to one inch or less. TO COOK Boll -Stand prepared artichoke in pot wtth 3 quarts boiling, salted water. Cover and boil gently about 30 minutes or until petal near center pulls out easily. Drain. Steam -Place prepared artichoke on rack above boiling water. Cover and steam about 30 minutes or until petal near center pulls out easily. Microwave -Invert 1 large (about 12 ounces) prepared artichoke in deep quart-sii.e microwave-proof bowl. Add It\ cup water. Microwave at HIGH about 7 minutes or according to time recommended by microwave manufacturer; give dish a half-turn halfway through cooking time. Let stand 5 minutes. When done, petal near center will pull out easily. TO EAT: Artichokes may be served hot or cold. To eat, pull off outer petals one at a time. Dip base of petal into sauce or melted butter; pull through teeth to remove soft. pulpy portion of petal. Discard remaining pe tal. Continue until all petals have been removed. pepper . Another winning combination is a make-ahead main dish salad that's light, but satisfying. Artichoke petals form a base for a flavorful curried rice mixture. Before serving, the salads are topped with colorful chunks of canned salmon and a sprinklinQ of green onion. ,, Salm on Stuffed Artichokes 1 cup allced muahrooma 1/• cup uch chopped onion and green pepper 2 tableapoona butter or margarine 1 can (7¥• ounce•) aalmon, drained and chunked 1 tHapoon llm• or lemon Juice 2 hot medlum-alzed cooked artichoke•, centera and choke• removed Saute mushrooms, onio n and green pepper In butter until crisp-tender. Add salmon and lime juic e: toss. Heat m ixture thoroughly. Fill centers of cooked artichokes with filling. Makes 2 servings. Curried Rice Salad 1 teaapoon curry powder 1 teaapoona butter or margarine 'II cup water 'h cup rice 1 tablffpoon each chopped onion and celery 1 teaapoon lemon Juice v.. teaapoon chicken boulllon granule• 1 cooked art~c ok• 1/• cup mayon alM Salt and pep r 1 can (7'1• o cea) Nimon, Spoon out fuzzy ch o ke at base; di.sca.rd. The heart, or bottom. of the artichoke iB entirely edible. Cut into small pieces and dip into sauce. drained and chunked 2 tHapoona chopped grMn onion Saute curry In butter. Add water, rice. onion, celery, lemon juice and chicken bouillon granules. BrinQ to boil; sim m er. covered. 20 m inutes or until rice is tender. Cool. mayonnaise. Salt and pep per to taste. Arrange artichoke petals on 2 individual p lates; spoon half o f rice mixture on each, top with salmon and sprinkle w ith green onion. Makes 2 servings. ., Remove petals and choke fro m artichoke. Discard center petals and choke. Dice artichoke bottom: stir into rice with ----Cook-of-the-Week--- Jrvirii te' s lifelong fascination: Cooking By BEA ANDERSON O(' tM 0.-, Ptlot ..... Evelyn Gray began learN.ng cooking techniques wheD she was a tot. "I learned by watching," she said, recalling th.at at the age of 4 she was an audience of one in her ta' kitchen. She said she would stand by the h our in - fascination while observing the family cooks in action. It wasn't long before she wu putting her fucination into practice. Rer family and the cooks were sick with the au at the same time, ao it was up to her If you want to share your recipes with Dally Piiot readers In the cook-of-the-week series. send us several of your favorites. Mal l them to the Food Editor. clo the Dally Pilot, P .O . Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626 and Include your name, address and phone number. Favorite foods given Oriental · twist and the maids to handle kitchen duties, she said . In a few years she was baking sweet rolls and cookies, taking turns with her brothers who Shared her interest. o.IJNlt ...... Evelyn Gray at her hobby Naturally, home economics was a favorite subject in junior high IChool and her major at :East Texas State Colle,e and the Uniwnity of Arkanlas. Sometimes all It takes to turn an ordinary meal Into an extraordinary dining experience Is to present favorite famlly foods In new and Intriguing ways. With a llttte kitchen creativity, beef round steak, vegetables and lettuce can become an exotic Orlental Beet Stir-Fry, and to tastefully carry out the theme for desSert, try Cheery Cherry Cupa. Oriental Beef Stir-Fry 1V. pounda beef.tOP round 11M1l, cut 1to1'4 tnchee .... 1 ..... loeberg lettuoe 1 t•lllllD Oft oometarch 1 tHIPIDft Mll8f Ye oupeofNUOe 1 a.llilllpHR...,, ,.~ .. 1-.. ................ a.._....,. . .....,,.. 1 .... • onron; IMoed I ...... (eltoul I oupe) emelf m•.roome 1 .... ........, out Into 11 ....... Partldy trwu at•k to fltm and Ila diagonally IOfOll the grain Into V«Y thft\ atrlpe. Cote, r"1M and thoroughly dt1ln lettuce. To lhred. ha!W heed ltngthwlle, place out·aldet down , end llot croelWill wtth ,,..,,.... ltttl knife. Rtfr1gerate lhredded lettuce In plMtJo bllQ to crllp. .. . . Combine cornstarch, sugar, soy sauce and sherry; pour over steak strlpsi stirring to coat. Heat 2 tablespoons oll In large frying-pan or WOt< untll hot. Add garllc and ginger root and cook 5 seconds, stirring constantly; discard. Cook onion 3 mlnut8'. stirring frequently. Add mushrooms and cook 2 minutes. Remove and keep warm. Drain marinade from steak strips: reserve. Oulckly brown steak strips In remaining oil. stirring constantly. Add marinade and heat through. Stir In onion, mushrooms and tomatoes and heat through. Arrange lettuce on large platter. Serve beef stir-fry over lettuce. 6 to 6 servings. Cheery Cherry Cups 1 Caft (21 OUncM) tart oMrrJ pie fnl Y.~wenllta butter and nut ftewor OH for "9 . .,...,.,. 2 fteked oooonut COmbine ry J* fill and vanllla bu1ter and nut flavor In saucepan and cook llowtv 6 mlnut ... Coot Heat oil In deep fat fryer to 365 degrees F. (Pan lhould not be more than half tuN.) To prepare cupe, fry an eggroll wrapper 20 seconds. Place bowl of eoup ladte In center of wrapper to form cup and cook In hot fat approximately •5 aecondl. Drain on 1b8orbent peJ*. AePMt with remaining wrappert. Place 1ppto~lmately ~ cup lherry pie flll In each cup. Sprinkle eaoh With an equal amount of coconut Yield: 8 cherry cupe . And while she baa never been employed in the field, she haa worked many volunieer boun for charity, edltini cookbooks and =":"' and preputng church receptl~ while living in Lone The seven· year Irvine resident saya 1he has always cooked• a hobby and ov~r the years haa accumulated a divene collection of redpa Her 1pedalty1 ahe aaya. ii deller1a. wtuch ahe lOWll rnaldJui but hM to De careful not to aerve them too often. ,._, my hUlbana won't pt fat." · She lhares two cWllert redpee that she aya never tail QUICK AND l!!ASY CllOOOLATE MOUSSE 2 cupa (~) eernilweet chocolate chipe 1 ~ ieupoona vanilla Pinch of l&lt l ~ c:upa whlpplna cre.m, heeted to bollina point a ea yo1ka 2egwh1c.. WhlPped cream. optlonal Combine chocolal*, vanllla and aalt Jn blender or food plOClllDC' fJUed with '*1 lcnlft. Mix 80 llC.IOIMll. Add heatild crwn and t'!Ofttlnue mbc:lna JO MUidl more, or until ~-II completely melted. Add JOlkl Mel mbi about 6 leCClladl. ~ to bowl and allow '° cool. -~ (let J'J\EEU, rap Ct) .... -.. -.. .. .. ' ---- C:I Orange Ooa1t DAILY PILOT /Wednnday1 Aprll 1S, 1tl3 Homemakers losing war against sugar Homcmak •rt w ho but w t•t1 n A v ol d I n1& advice, uyt Lau.~ wio b.-.d-cereal. avoid buyl n& ~llJ\Jy. 11ofl be twH n meal anacka tho reaulttna 1trqn1•r Lau'• r«"commenda d ri nk • and putrlo• that have added •uaar 11 tffth...., bettec pre,.red tlon• H em eapeclally becauae of their hlah u Important u bruahlna t o w Ith 1 tan d a c Id lpproprlate conaldorln1 sugar content may bu 11nd floalna." ... uha," uya L.au. the dram.tic rite In wlnnlna the bal\le, but E.AUna a balanced diet The tour food '1roupe C.'ONumptlon of •uaar tn unwittingly lo1lng the made up of the four food are m 11 k , meat. UU. country durlna the yean aao, the averaye AmClrlcan coruumcd 0 poundt of autiar per year. That ttsure hH now r!Jlen to an ettlmat.ed 130 p o und• per year , accordtna to the CDA J ournal. 1 war aa al n a t t h e i r roup1 a l1o"l1 1ound ve etable-frult and pa1t 1hc decades. Sixty tamlllea' ronaumption of r::11~_,_,..,_.._._._r-..rt111.-.... -... ..,_...., ___ ._~..-r..ll"lllim---------1 that sweet 1ubetance and ~ l 'p o t e nt i al d e ntal I -- problema. .--~~--r-"'!'"'l~~..-..-..-..... ~~- The reaaon lies ln the I ~ many proce11ed or I ~ . pacbged foods that line grocery 1tore 1helvea. · I · <>PIH 7 ( "Sugar, In lt1 many I OAva • fom\S, la one of the more , ~~'° "'· ____ ..,. _____ ,, common addltlvea In I H.,. "Where c anne d and bou1ed I "'° y..,. 1801 New rt Blvd· oua111y •• fooda," U)'I Calvin Lau, of Proclu<» leWDQF • the Order of 0 .0 .S ., cha1nnan of the I Know How" (NM.r Hoeg H<>191tal) Ml-0032 (Corner of 18tll St.) the HouN" California Denta l al•l'INGDE'T ~-~ OWTHPT Association'• Council on I · · ~ntal Health. "So~e I r---l11llJ)1J:i---i ,---dj!l--1 i---l~1llu1I:I---, pro ducu w e d o n t I _.ACMTON I I ntlY'MNOT I I OUR'AMOU• I ordinarily think of as 11 OHR CAU DOH I I •DOZ. MOW I I ,:RUIT I sweet -~anut butter, I I rT AU. I ~ 8TIM salad dreaing and meat-I I I ROSES I II BASKETS I coating mixes -actually I GIFT PACKS I I •2500 I rontalnaugar." I I I I 1111 11 I Lau's contention is • 1 "'OM 815 I : AND "'H o:::av I I AND ...... DIUVIRY I boF m e dout by dthe0federal II L---------j 1 _T!!!_O~O_H!8!'!._~j L_'!~~ca_~~-AL_J oo an rug I Administration that has 8AVI SUO traced the use ot sugar I r--«i•lili•1;1. ___ 1---ld•ll@J:•------ta.1114.1:1---11 for more than ~o years. I 1 L.AROHT GROWN I NO. 1 IDAHO ,' ,' ,..., GltOWN , 1 A c c o r d I n g t o I t s I I INCOWAAA&E I I RUHIT CELLO ~~~~~~ ~r~~~:J f~ I' STRAWBERRIES 11 POTATOES 11 CARROTS 1 I ~=n~":t~ect~ie:n'::, 1~~~ 1 I 49t .ox l I 5 1 ~'tAo 49~ 11 2 •=• 39t 11 ~:~~w~y:~1L---~~---~t--~!~~--JL---~"!.'~---J I to the consumer. I I "People don't have as I r--1iM1@1:1 --..., 1---11•lll41J;J---1 r----li111J;l1I:l---.1 much control today over I I I I I I the amount of sugar they I 1 "-11' 8IZI! I ,... CfOP Doua&.I HRA.DeRt I consume, and that can 11 JUMBO I of the ,.., I I •D HUCIOU8 I Starting a New Bu8'neaa Ac~cordl"I to Colll9f"• ........... ... ~ ........ c:.-(loc. HtoO to 11110) oil ,., .. ,. ................ ...... . .-..,. -....... fflo ...... _,., wttll '"° ~ Clorti .... howe It,.. ......... ............ '" . ........... _...,. "'° oroo lft which tho ~elllOM lo louted. Th• ......... ,., •• ••1111trod it, low alld •• ,..cooutylft~ ,.... .. ... 1..... .. .... ~. Moot llonllo roqulro ,.... 9' """ .. ...... COlll_rclol _. Th• DAILY ~ILOT ,. ............... ... pullllk ............. We ' "°" ..... __, ........................ ~ 5il f llU HUT IC( ClllAM SANTA ANA '""""''~""'" 71t• 1'1 lfl'\.IOI t•I .,..,,,... 751-4778 LAGUNA HILLS lc-.•""1•' 0 7 D JTAtnON .,.. s.o.. ....... c..-11-• pen ays ••oet ""'" , ... , ~....... 1ta1 Ai< .. ,.,, • ., 'V {'a,.utJ, ~c.e. C'/teilmt s~l1'0f 8"94-'4789 ·~I ,,,:;088 CARVEL~ AMERICA'S FRESHEST ICE CREAM A PROVEN SUCCESS SINCE l 934 Retail I Wholesale I Expansion unit opportunities Select your excluS1ve CARVEL area in the etty of your choice at prime locations throughout cause tooth decay if the 1 ' AVOCADOES 1' I CANT ALOUPEs 11 NAVEALPOPLAEASNGES 1111 right precautions aren't I taken," he saya. I 1 1 3FOfl 1 1 11 3 '°" 11 l I 7 1100 II FOflnlorl'l\at-c.i Lau explains that as I Laa FINANCING AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT 714/545-8111 sugar breaks down in the I L UMIT 12 I 1 LMT I I I L.MT 1 'cw UCH 11 M·F e oo em • s oo pm llollJ ionic• to tllo o ...... c ...... , c...-.Olflof--11, •11 • ol 011• ,c•11••11I-olflcoo o• 'hOftO tllo LIQAL Ol'AllTWJfT MMm, lat. ))2 lor •••• ........................ Orange, Riverside, San Diego, & San '8ernard1no counties. =~~=11 ----~U~~~~A~~~----~11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tooth enamel. The acid .:,/!.:,. ~~~~~~~~~I THE RlllS HIVE STOPPED! ,l · I eating swee t foods . I PRODUC S ·1 Continued acid attacks I E I EICELLEIT I ~~wbo~;ie;;a th~ot~ I ••• ESPECIALLY HERE I :~~~ it can cause • • • lld THE PRICE IS RlllTI I is ~:e ~~f~~a~ ·~~ • • • Ind YOU IET IEWNRT OPEN DAIL v ·riL e 11 if it i s co n s u med PRODUCE QUAlln Ci' ~ I throughout the day -in ,~ ,..,_. snacks, for example," , ~ ~ I saya Lau. "It's better to 'T THESE SIEDIAL IRIDES/ =w~::.. I have sugary foods with -~ meals ra t her th a n in .I ------·----''•---------------------- Save25eon New Fleischmann'LlightM 25% less salt 25%1essfat 25% less calories ............ , .. ,. ..... . u:.;;:,ms89.~ Freeh Spinach "Our ~199t 8peclalty" 9' lb. Freeh Zucchini Squash Stuffed Cornlah Game Hens W/Applee,Celery,Onlona a S..eoned BrMd Dreulng Rog.12Atlb. *1~~ FrHh Al••Mn King Salmon Flrat Catch of th9 Year •1n, .. k. *8!~ .•.. Fresh! Strawberry Pies Made FrHh Delly Asparagus Aprll la The Month For Thia Vegetable Large Size All Gr"n Stelka Fllet Mignon• EHtern Com Fed Chofce Aged To Perfection Reg. Sl.99 lb. $599 lb. Freeh Hawellan Yellow Fin Tuna . .:~::I *1099 Reg. S12.19 lb. lb. Large "H•••'' ~1$1 Avocados WI' Marah Ruby 'S/$1 Grapefruit Freeh Foster Ferm• BonelH9 Chicken Breast Reg. $3.U lb. $~9 ,-;b. COUPON Good Thru 4/1t Extra Large Eggs Elenl'• P·remlum Spaghetti Sauce (wlth0!~~ only) 69.+ Doz • 17'h .~229 29 .~289 Alta-Dena Yogurt Sale "Alfi:lavora" e oz. "J. 1 12 Pint B9'-L• Yogurt Y NaJa Low Pat Y ..... 11'•· ea. Reg.U-M. ea. PAllKIN8 AVM&.AaLK ATKA• OPITOltS Pacific Ranch Market 3347 E Coa H·iwy. Corona del Mar 673·3110 Prtcee l!n.otM Trwu 4/19/83 Maye Yogurt <I ~ I Reproduction of refund forms cause confusion By MARTIN SLOANE Dear Martin. I have n o t iced that a aupermarket in my area BUPEillRIET IHIPPiR hu started to reproduce auume that refund refund form1 ln form1 printed In their newapap er supermar k et ad - adverthementa and vertlsementa ere un- clrculan. I have alwaya authorized. Moat of uaumed that thla was them are printed with d o n e w l t h t h e the permlulon of the manufactu.ren' approval manufacturera, and often and \hat the fonna were t h 1 s l a p a r t o f a "leaal" to uae. But now .----- I'm beginning to wonder. Recently, this s tore printed a refund form that must have come rlghJ off the aide or 8 cereal package, because the only requirement for obtaining a free box of cereal waa to send in the form. If the form Isn't authorize d . can the manufacturer reject It? If IO, how can consumers tell which ones are good and which ones aren't? -Ron G., Garland, Texas. D ear R on : Th e situation you describe could become a r e al problem for b o th consum ers and manufacturers. If I we re a manufacturer and found that one of my forms had been reproduce d without permlasion, I would strongly consider rejecti~g these refund requests. After all, the companies print up a limi ted number of refund fonna to keep a Ud on their promotional budgets. Il supermarkets w e re all owed to reproduce refund fonns, the cos t s t o th e companies might be atronomical. But readers shouldn't -- t.'OOperatlve adverll1ln1 arranaement where the manufactur~r pay1 part O( \he COi\ of the advertiaement. What should you do tf you run into a aituaUon where you use a refund Co rm Co und In a 1upermarktH ad - verll1emt'nt 1md your re fu nd rc-c,j1Jt-11 l 11 rejected ~aua.e It WOI not 1ent In wtlh an authorized refund form? If you purchased the product u a result of the advertisement, then I bellt've that th e supermarket 1hould be responsible for giving you the refund Orang• COHI DAIL. Y Pll.OT /Wedne1d1y, Aprll 13, 1083 Cl Heating process dangerous O nt• of tht' favorttt' rodpt.•• ualnK awc..oetened c:ondt'nt t'd milk lit for c1tramel pudding. An old, 1llll-popuhu ml'lhod of muking l'aramel pudding n tlh f or h u nting an unopened 14·ounc ... c:an of sweetened rondenaod milk m the oven 1>r In u kl'llle ot bollina WMter Bol'CJe n, Inc· , leading ma nu fol·t u re r o r the product. r ('ports tha t thl11 nt t>l hod o f carame l 1zallon 11> a di.ngl'roua prnctke BtH.'11u1e heat cuu1e11 r•xpnnal on , IC an y unopcm.-d cun of food (nu mo lt e r wh a t lhl' l'on ttml11) 11 hw.1t('d In bolling water, in an oven, In an electrk cooker or ove r D rtame, th(' can may explo<fo. Thl1 could cause• 111crious Injury to thf' kttchl'n or to anyone In the area To prepare lhl• well - known c:aramt.'I pudding easily a nd sa f e l y . c:on1umer1 can follow theee •lmple inltn.K.'t!orw: Prehe at th• oven lo 4i~ dear~ F, OPf!n one 14 ·o un c e c an of 1weetened conden•ed milk and pour oontenta int.o a pie plnte. Cover tht.' pie plale with aluminum foll, pl.ace in a shallow pan of hot water and bake for 1 hour. or until thick and •llihtly caramel ~'Olored. Remove the foll, cool, then chill before 1erving. produce calltorn1a's finest coachella grapefruit 1st of the season local grown squash I~ .• 59 deli morrel smoked & polish sausage I~. 1.99 charlle'a pride roast heef I~. 4.49 ch1rlle's pride extra lean' comed beef I~. 4.49 corned beef sandwiches ... testy • no dealer sales cola slaw made fresh dally I~. • llmit rights reserved meat seafood deli MA941CO Brandi Swing lnlo 8t)r1ng 8aW!ge. AeolMt I 32-Pll(le "Swing Into Spring 81vlng1" bool!llt with t111 In coupon•. rwfund• and .,... oftlr9. Sen<! 1111 required refund form 1nd 2&-clnt• ~/handling, plul two dlff«enl l/nlwreat Product Codi eymboil lrOl'll the ~ or labile CU1 from 1111 followloCI brenda:,,, Baby Ruth Nugg1t1. Butterflf\g1r Chlp1, Care Free Gum, Dromedary C1k1 Ml1111. Flel11ehm111n M1rg1rln1, Junior Minta. Llf• Severa Roll Candy, Royal o...rta, Sugar Fr• 8'Mlh lavere, Bubble Yum, Riil Cracklra, Trl1cull Waler• end Mlll-8onl P9' Snadl, any N~ 8'and c.nal, Plantlf'I '"-I or "'°'°°'" Oii, Pt.nten Dry Roeetld Hirt• M Can1111r 8nKkl Or •• Nnd-prtnt.cl UnlWrMI Product Coda ~ numo.r fl'Ol'll any Jet of OnlrneclerY Ptmlentoa. any cen of ~tenter Hull or any can of IMdt M ... ~ Spf-Mda. This '°"" mutomatleally 1t1ten you tn • twMP•t•k••· Expire• June 30. 1Ma. TOMT ... t1 A4'fund. Send IN,...._,~ lonn and ltw• urwerM Ptoduc1 Codi eymboll ll"olft ..,_ TOMC 'Em oed!aoaa MAWAllMI wtfF: .. Chlp Oflw, .... Ule ~ prtce ~ tor pcMto, oom or tor11111 Of1fP1 -up to t uo. Send th• r=:: r efund form and th• Produot Codi eymbola troM IN followlna tfW9e prOduc:U: two l ·lltef t>ottr.t of H1wa111n l'\IMll, 'rult Pvnotl, loft Or1nk, p1V1 Ott• b .. of your tavorlt• lw9ftd potlllo. corn or tort .. cHpe, Mr ... MIO, lrldude ltlt ,..iat• ,.,. with Ille pwrolllM price• ............... I0.1N3. 5 , ... Tll• Hol 'N "'ch . ~ • ooupon tor ,._ 'H Natl « IN purGtlMe . "* """"°· lltld .,.. l'«IU'1r9d r1f11nd f0"" end 011 proof of ~ .... ~Hot 'N llidl, 1 penel ''" any Of tlwl ~ilno brand• Cl•IH Miii, NHllt, ~ Of Hlr...;'1 hot ooooe lllllO. .... """' Ola ,......, ...,. .. , .. "":J>!lcle clfoted ..,..... ,.... Of Nlfl#ld on .. "'91'1-Lele* flllt f'9 toml Of'I IM ............. Dlo.11.11A .· ~-lot1lld ~ Julol ~ <Mir ............ 79-0lnt ..... -lflY ......... .,,.. ..... In.'°""' ..... ,..,.,. ,..... .............. ~ .., .... or_,.. ol ..... APfllt .............. , ..... ( tus t1n-costa mesa/newport beach boneleaa stuffed chicken breast • meaty stuffed ,... •· 2.69 I~. 1.98 pork chops r.,',. • ...... ~---"'"-=--'-· _2.6_9_1~_. 1_. 9_8_ '" S: lean ground beef tustin -coata mesa/newpor1 beach mahi mahi rtt· •· 2. 98 I~ . 1.89 halibut steaks 3.98 iriep·i juice \ u oz bottle "5: 1. 7S 1.29 r.w. knudaen hewa llan 11 t t hi salted or l po I 0 C pl no sail • oz. bag Mi 1.49 .89 4 llavors r · hbq chickens full cooked I•. wee ti and • SWISS hOll1nd Import t111 calamari lf'eaU 2• count box "I· 1.S7 not to exceed 30% fat content 1.49 1 ---~"l·...;.:.;•·_.:...;6.:...:....:98_.;.:I~~· 4_.......;...&..9~8f , b;;;edt our own tasty , large rtt· •· 1.79 I~. I k, meet ~If=::, .. 1.911•. 1.S~ i' ~~~~ ..... 1.191•. 6.98 i\ ~ t:" natural roods , ' 1 \ ' vitamins \ Irvine ranch farmer• market raw shelled almonds 18 oz. pkg. ... 2.79 2.29 lrvtn• ranch farmers mmet new gen1retlon trlll mix 18 oz. pkg. lrvln• ranch farmera market mtdJool f Mt•• 18 01. pkg ..... 1.29 2.59 "!" amerlcan health wheat pep.ya •llZY"'• -yogurt covered rtillM carob ,... ... 49 ... 39 -l ,... " J.29 •· 2.S9 homemade l~lne ranch ma~•t 100% natural 7 9raln &rea4 2•oz.1.29 homemade Irvine ranch market IP•nt• ceke 7" 1.59 '4 Orange Ooalt DAILY PILOT/Wed\\qday, April 13, 1983 Dessert low • in calories Thia la the Umo to aet cracker crumble In chunlul "cont11lnt-r of t'l ectrlc into 1hape for 1ummer 1A cu p Ii n t' I y ~. cup ull purp11111l' h I .,. n d " r o r t o o d and the prcx•aa atarll chop~ pt'Ca.1\1 flour procuuor, t·omhlnt• w It h 111 mm In i yet ~ t e a 1 p o o n 2 kiwifruit.II, pt<uk>d rkottu cht>..-11e, yuuurt, savory food. cinnamon and 111<."l'd usg•. lemon julcl' und A colorful layer ed 3 table11poon11 butt.er ·~ p Int tr t' fl h vunlUo. Cowr. 8hind or salad, complemented by or margarine, melted 11lruwbf>rrlea proc.,u until 11mouth a low-calorie cheeaec-ake 4 lllblespooru1 honey, Butter a 9 -lnch pll' Add bananas, flour and deuer t, provides an divided plow In a mtldlum l>owl rcmuJnlng 2 t.t1bl011pnol'\.ll excellent way to begin a ~ cup part-skim l.'Ombine graham crackelr honey. Bltmd or pro<.'<~ atet without aacrtfklng mJJk ricotta cheese crumbs, pecans und until smooth necessary nutrients. ~ t'Up plaJn yogurt dnnamon. Mix In !)utter Pour Into prepared Salinas Valley Salad 2 eggs and 2 tablecpoona honey; c rust. Buke in a 350 uses freah, natural 2 tablespoons presslntopieplate.Bake degree F. oven 30 to 35 ingredien ts, and Fresh freshly squeezed lemon In u 350 degree F. oven minutes or until set Fruit Cheesecake la juice 1 O m In u t es : cool ChHI. Gamlsh with kiwis unique for two reasons. 1 teaspoon vanjlla completely. and strawberm::;. Maket1: At fewer than 250 2 ripe bananas, cut Meanwhile in 6 _to 8 servings. calories a serving, It ls .---------------------- ideal f or w eig ht watchers and, unlike most "em pty calorie" desserts, is good for you. SALINAS VALLEY SALAD 3 cups tom iceberg lettuce I cup cherry tomatoes, cut in half l medium red onion, thinly sliced 2 cups tom spinach leaves 3 hard-cooked eggs, peeled and sliced l can (6 to 7 ounces) tl1na, drained or 11"' cups cooked, diced chicken or turkey ·~ cup coarsely broken walnuts ·~ cup plain yogurt !h cup mayonnaise \4 c up c hopped fresh parsley 2 tablespoons chopped fresh dill 2 teaspoons Dijon- style mustard In a large, clear bowl arrange le ttuce; line sides of bowl with a layer of tomato halves. Top with onion slices and spinach leaves. Place egg slices around side of bowl. Top with tuna and walnuts. I n a sma ll b owl combine yogu r t, mayonnaise, parsley, dill and mustard: blend weU. Spoon over salad. Makes: 4 to 6 servings. FRESH FRUIT CHEESECAKE • Fresh Fruit Cheesecake tastes ric h but is low in calories. ' l IA cups graham Shells used as dishes You've heard it a lot in the past week. You'll hear it a lot more in weeks to come. Vons is going to save you. With a program of savings unlike any other supermarket today. Use citrus shells as I "dishes" for tartar sauce, sherbet or fresh fruit cups to make a unique presentation. TQ prevent the citrus from tipping. cut a thin slice from the bottom of the shell. Eggplant slices make a won-derful and nutritious substitute for noodles in lasagna. I Mash fresh sweet potatoes and bananas together for a fluffy and vita min -packed vegetable side dish. To make carrot curls for a beautiful and edible garnish. shave thin, wide strips with vegetable peeler. Roll up, secure accordion style with toothpicks, then crisp in ice water. Wrapping thinly sliced strips of ham around apple cubes will make easily prepared additions to your party platter. Everyone loves chocolate and fresh fruit. So combine them both - just dip grape clusters, o r a nge sectionv or banana slices in melted ch ocolate. Let dry, then serve. When selecting kiwi, look for those that are plurnp and free from blemishes. They're ripe and ready to eat when they yield slightly to pressure. Squeezed lemon /'uJce mixe d w l th m e ted butter la a favored sauce for artichokes. Add fresh 1 trawb etrles to champaane for a touch of elegance. Remember to Include watercre11 with your other areena when aervina your favorite aalad; Cllll42 .. ff71. Put a few word• to work for ou. (\ SA VE YOU WITH GREAT WEEKLY SPECIALS It's one of the most important features of our new "Save You " program. More money-saving weekly specials than ever be- fore. Just turn the page, and you'll see what we mean. Re- duced prices every week on hundreds of items throughout the store. SA VE YOU WITH SLIM PRICE® PRODUCTS Vons own brands always save you money. Vons generic Slim Price products save you even more. With more than 225 Slim Price products to choose from, you can save as much as thirty percent on your weekly to- tal by shopping at Vons! SA VE YOU WITH DOUBLE COUPONS It takes just a few minutes each week to clip Vons double coupons. But It makes a sur- prising difference yi your total grocery bill. That>S' the kind of savings we're passing along to you. ..n=r~ •. "'==~ ~~ *l•tM'=:'&...Aw. _,.=..~"-- SA VE YOU WITH QUALITY THAT'S GUARANTEED Guaranteed quality. Vons gives you that, too. Because if you're not · satisfied with your purchase of Vons fresh pro- duce or Table King Premium Quality meat, Vons will gladly double your money back. Other markets are saying it. Vons is doing it. Today more than ever, Vons is going to save you . With savings this great on so many quality foods, shouldn't you be shopping with a low- price leader llke Vons? .t 1 - Nutrition pac}ced in lunch When teens head ou l the door in the morning, most parents worry if they are eating correctly al noon. Or, for that matter, if they are eating at a ll. T een-age girls, es- pecially, ten d to skip meals, because they are extremely con scious about their ,.weight. However, most active teen -age w omen do need on t he average of 2100 calories per day. Whether your teen -ager is brown bagging it or eating lunch al home, here are a few suggestions to make this meal occasion a nutritious one Remember that lunch should include several servings from each of the four food groups listed below: • Milk o r o ther dair y product -3 servings. A serving is 1 cup o( milk, yogurt or cottage cheese, a 1-inch cube of hard cheese, or 2 small scoops of ice cream or ice milk. • Meal or meat alternatives -2 servings. A serving is 2 to 3 ounces of cooked meat, fish or poultry, 2 eggs, 1 cup cooked dried peas, beans or lentils, 4 tablespoons of peanut butter or cheese 1f it has not been used as a milk alternate. • Vegetables and fruits -4 or more servings. This would include a citrus fruit or juice every day and a deep-green or deep- yellow fruit or vegetable ever y other day. A serving is a norma 1 por tion of fruit -an orange, an apple, half a grapefruit -and lh cup cooked or raw vegetables. • Breads, cereals and grain products -4 or more servings. A serving is a slice of bread, 1 ounce of ready- t o-ea t cereal, ~ cu p cooked cereal, rice or pasta. On warm days a crisp salad fills the bill. Pack it in a chilled plastic container, and be sure to send the dressing in a 1eparate container, to be added just before eating. CRUNCHY CHICKEN SALAD 1 can (5 ounces) chunk chicken 111 cup c h opped apple 2 tabl es poons chopped celery 1 teaspoon finely chopped oruon 2 t ables poons mayonnaise or salad dressing !4 teaspoon poultry seasoning ln bowl, combine all ingredients• chill. Serve on salad greens. Makes about 1 cup, 2 1ervings. Dressing tangy C o n coct a ta n gy dremng for avocad09 on the hall-4ahell. CREOLE AVOCADOS ~ cup olive oil W cup tomato paste W c u p red wine ~ ieupoona suaar 4 r l p e med ium avOClldoe (Halved, .eeded but not pleled) In an electric blender I whirl eopther olive oil, tom•to ,p91te, v= and atpr until b . S po o n •b o u t 2 tablimpoonl o1 the •uce lntO the C.vtty of each avocado hall. Mak" 8 ...-vtnea . ....... ,.... ..... . • ..,. Ill .... ...,, .... .. In price: reeH1te1tfit: = ....... ,. l Orange CoHt DAil. V PILOT /Wedneeday, April 13, 1883 l:I !Pocket bread breaks routine Br •k the undwlch ruutJno wtth a creaUv11 tmd nutrlt1ou1 altern1illv~. 1uch 11 Pork Pu~kt-t Sandwlc.:hCltl. Pocket bread round1 or pita bread 11 a dellshtful chanae from 1llced Hndwlch bread. Cooked pork rout and ham are combined with alfalfa 1prout.t, chopped t.omatoet, leaf lettuce, and cheddar chee11e for the dellclou1 and nutrlllou1 filling. The sandwiches are then drlnJed with an oUve oU and vtne~ar drealllJ(. PORK POCKET SANDWICHES ~ pound oooked pork, cut Into 1tripe (about 2 cupe) ~ pound cooked ham, cut Into stripe (about 2 cups) 3 to 4 cups tightly packed torn leaf lettuce 2 lh cups alfalfa sprout.t 2 medium tomatoe8, chopped 2 cupe (8 OWlCOI) cheddar cheeee cubn ~ (8-lnch) pocket bread roundl ~ cup cooki"I oil 2 t.ablettpoona olive oil 2 t.ablapoont red wine vinegar 2 teupoon1 dried 11&1.ad herbe 1h wupoon dry mu.tard l clove aarllc, mJnced lh teupoon ult Y. l.eaJpoon pepper Combine rout, ham, lettuce, alfalfa eprouta, t.omat.oee and cheeee In a larse bowl; W. eently. Cut pocket bread round.I In half, 1poon mixture Into pocket bread. Combine remaining ingredlenta in a jar with a light fitting lid. Shake well. Pour dreeaing over mJxture ln pocket bread. Makes 10 undwlches. ~~~hhh~hkh~hhk k h~~~~hhk k hh~~ JUST LOOK HOW VONS .IS GOING TO $AVE YOU THIS WEEK .. r -----------------t' I I ii I I' I ... \' I I' 1 I ' I 4 I ,, ~ 1 ~ l>OI Bl I ~I ·~ (<>I I'()"\.... ?' . ' . r ~ .7', 9:-~ ~ ~ 7 '71 ~ ,-97 -,7. - -~ 1~ ~ 1.: l>Ol Bl I :; 1:; ( OI l 'O'.._, .; -'' DEL MONTE TOMATO CATSUP »-OUl'ICI IOTTlf ---VO"IS IS GOl'G TO SA H ~ Ol--- ·. ,• .. l .. .. .. ~ ' I • .I fif "' Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Wedn••d•y. Aptll 13 o es y oui: f amily fit America 's food profile? y .. ARBAR.A OIBBONS What'• your t•mlly'1 food profile? Areordln& a 1tudy ln Community l(utrttJonltt, 9~ percent Of American howieholds ttt lnt.o one of thete nve ~acteriJUc patterns: l . MOSTLY M EAT EATERS : They ar e k'eluctant t o try new tboda, tend t.o skJp meals and spend less on tbod. They al80 Uke to wa~h medical ahows on TV and read 'w ome n 's magazines. 2 . O N -THE -GO ROUSEHOLDS: They 8J>end the most on food of any group, love to eat out. like to cook and try new r ecipes, are n ot nutrition-conscious but Oislike junk food. They list.en to the radio a lot, especially news broadcasts and r oc k IJlUSic. 3. CONSCIENTIOUS EATERS are the best educated and wealthiest group. They like to cook and try n ew recipes; they're confident about their nutrit ion knowledge, concerned about sugar and pr-0t.ein tntake and are ready to change diet to safeguard well being. Despite th eir affluence, they spend less on food becauae they eet more meals at home. They prefer news and docume ntaries to other TV shows; they read business and professional journals and magazines like Time. 4 . H E AL THY UTERS spend the mo8t time on food preparation; rarely skip meals, like to cook and entertain, are con cer n ed about c hol este r ol , sa lt , preservatives and overprocessing. This is the oldest group; they fike to w atch health programs on TV. 5 . "IN A DITHER" households skip meals, eat out more than any other group and are more likely to own a microwave oven (which th ey us e t o h eat convenience foods). Their eating habits are FREEZE ... From Page C1 Beat egg w h.i tes until stiff peaks fonn. Gently Jold into c h ocolate Q:l..ixture. Place in serving ,lowl or wine glasses. ..COVer with plastic wrap jfn_d chill. Serve with p ed c r eam i f . Serves 6 to 8. ARCTIC FREEZE 3-ounce pack.ages chee.e, aoftened 2 tabl es poon s io,ayoruW.e 2 tablespoons sugar 1 can ( 1 pound) hole cranberry sauce 1 9 -o un ce c an crush ed pineapple o r tidbits, drained ~ c up c hopped walnuts ~ pint whipping aeam. whipped Soft.en c:hee9e, blend ln mayonnabe and augar. Add fruits and nuts. Fold in w hipping cream. Pour into 9x~x3-inch loaf pan. Freeze until firm , six h ours o r overnight. Let stand at room temperature about 15 minutes before eerving. Serves 10 to 12. Cooking with class A lerle. of cla8lles will be ~ th.is month at Coat llardwan, 240 B roadway , Laguna Belich. For re11ervationa, Phclne 497-4403. Carol Wllllama wlll teach a New Amertcan Cuisine c1aa at 7 p.m . tomorrow ; Patty Gilfillan will introduce ~t techniques for male lnltJatea to the kitchen at 7 p.m. April 20· and Vicki Tarango Will ~t • veptarlan meal at UUO a.m. April 216. ~·· ~ costs tl2; the others ant tl&. *** A ~ worklhop on t h ree dlff.ren t puta nuchln•• w ill be conducted at 8:30 p.m. TuHday ·~ l'HHro'• lntemaUonal Cookware, 1919 & C.Glll& Hiahway, e««w del Mar. 'Colt II su. ror , ... rvatlon1, C9D m-ius. ' rHlatant to chana~. Tht'y Cllnkul Nuti tt1011 nutl'li tend to t't!ad TV Gulde.> t hat 1 I pt• 1 l' l' n t o t SUM liDURMIT M u r c• t Id h It• of volunuwr1 l l'•ll'd W('rt• Information from tht' lncorrl'c:t 111 uuc•ulrll( natl o n ' s m rd 1 t.' a I , thulr bod~ from<> 11lw profeulouol ltnd food YOU'NI-: Nl';VKH TOO tt-eh11 kul llfo11pun ts 11 ~ trade publlcollona. OLD! A report on uli(lng yeam. ARE Y 0 U LARGE ablitractcd In the J ournal A cl' o rd l n ti to t h l' FRAMED? Whatever of tht• American Dleletlc 1:trtklt•, 1111ly th<*' older your guess, the re's a Assoclotlon clu1m11 wti th an 8d are "agt•d '' good c hanct.' you'r.e neecl nl'W t~rmlnology Per11ons 77 through 80 wrong. An artkle In the for the ages beyond 60, are "elderly." Those ti9 Ame r I can J o_u_r_n_a_l _o_f_c_o_n_s_I d_c_r_l_n,...,g_t_h_u_t_t h_c_ through 76 un· "nj(lnsc," w hllc· 1wr110nt tiO lQ tlH arc "mature odulta." IS IT FAT, OR IS IT M USCt..Jt? It depend• on your 11ex, itt.'COrdlng l.t> u recent 1tudy abstracted in the J ournal of the American Die tetic AMcx:lallon Wh lll' Iorgo-frame nu·n geM•rally wolgh prnpc11 tlmwll y more thun arnull und medium frame mon, th<> ln creue 11 usually dut• tO lean body weight, not more lot. Large frame women, on the other hand, have proportionally more fat than amall und medium frame females. , EATINO lN PARADISE: Throufh- out the South Paci le, crackera, white bread and rlco have replaced taro , ya m• and breadfruit, slates the Food and Nutrition Bulle Un. Apples and canned fruit have replaced mango, pawpaw and guava. lrut.ead of fresh fish, t he natlvH now prefer canned fl1h and canned conwd boef; they al10 like 1weet1, beer, 1uaar, aoft drlnk11 and tafty 1nack lood1. The 1w !\ch I rom breaat feodlna became 1uch a health problem In New Guinea that the 1overnment banned baby bottles, making them a pre9CrlptJon item. ··-... ••,·.:~ No Girnm1cks ... No Games... EvcHyone Wins With Stater Bros. LOW PRICES' .• .. •.; •• ., ., No Gimmicks. •• 4' No Games! y Wins with the PRICE LEADER .... , SWEET JUICY RUSYS •. Grapefruit '"' ~ . -•iA, ~ ·~ .f .. ~ --.-'/tr' ' .. '-.. •." . . .. Chi llrumsticks 64-0Z CARTON Artichokes VJGl ,_.. GAUi< ~str Pears •NC swm c.-E.AH 8APIU'Tl lJI Str Grapes ~ ~ r.QCR; Ulstr Asparagus T(Ml(Rf~~r,<UN -~•.29 ZackyFarms FRESH CALIFORNIA GROWN FARMLAN05U Canned FAMILY -PACK . LB EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON RED DEUCIOUS APPLES FRESH CRISP JUICY -OREA T. FOR SNACKS OR WNCHBOXES! Pepd.COla . Diet Pepd, Pepd U&ht, Pepd Free, Diet Pepd Free, Mountain Dew 7.acky Farms Chicken Sale! F;ying Chicken l l 6 e Wings LB . Thighs LB s • • BreastsRllSATl~~ED LB ••.s Drumettes LB s • .6 ZACKY FAAMS 16-0Z CHICKEN $ • 0 JIMMY DEAN FRESH Bologna.. . EA ..& • Smoked Saarsp n.-.-saaA lled r~•-at-.f(llllAIQll. tl.Ql"fAf(Jllll '1 09 ..... - s ltlfli.s u • .,. •. 09 SZ.na09pper SMC:Jh*.i u 11.59 Ham Roan Brbket ..~.Uc .. u 12.29 •U'1 .89 .... 11.99 ~u.O•~ 13 39 u u Sal.i a. u • lllUOY , • ...,. U..Ql 12 09 ..... u ••09 u •-S9 u CllANOIW'I Oii CIWIUf'LI Ocean Spray JI ice ITAlllllll tflWAT'lM>ll Chunk Light Tina Smaat hltJIS IA • ··rr_~ ~ ·~· lllOlll.All Oii CHIW MJB Premium Caffee IWAMJC* Sallsllry Steak hint u.oi IWAHIOtt '"" I CHIN 011 Dlcal Eh "'°' 1111An QUAllTClll Pltay Margarine HAM NHN Knudsen Sour Crm VAN 0t: UMl"I 'llO«" Fish Fiiiets • Sole quick to fix Euy to prepare, delectable 80le requitts very little oookh\i time, needlna only a few minutes to broU or 18Ute, a few minutes longer, i1 the fillet la fro&en . Remember, there'• no need to thaw fro&en fillets befOl'e cooking. 01\ANGE GLAZED SOLE 2 pounda 10le fillets 2 tablespoons butter, melted 2 tablespoons orange juice 2 tablespoons cornstarch 1 cup orange juJce 1A cup butter Vs c up sliced almonds 'A cup dry white wlne 'h teaspoon salt dash o1 pepper 'A cup apple jelly 1.t. cup lemon juice 'A teaspoon liquid hot pepper sauce ~ teaspoon salt 1 tespoon grated orange rind ~ c up canned drained mandarin orange BP.Ctions Rinse fillets with cold water and pat dry with paper t owe l s . If necessary, cut large fillet into serving -s i ze portions. Spray broiler pan with non-stick vegetable spray, then place fllleta In a single layer on pan. Combine butter and 2 tablespoons orange juice, then bruah over fillets. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Broil about four inches from heat source for six minutes. Baste with Orange Glaze (see recipe below). Continue cooking for two to four minutes or until fish flJke11 eaaily when tested with a fork. Transfer to warm serving platter. Serve with remaining heated Orange Glaze. M akes four to atx ~rvings_. ORANGE GLAZE Combine cornstarch with 1A cup orange juice, th en set add e . In medium saucepan over medium heat, m elt butter. Add almonds and saute until slightly browned. Add remaining orange juice, wine, jelly and lemon juice. Heat to just boiling . S t i r in cornstarch and continue cooking , stir ring constantly until mixture thickens. Add liquid hot pepper •sauce, ult and pepper, orange rind and orange section s . Mix well . Reduce heat to low and keep wann until aerving time. Makes two cups of glaze. NCYI'E: Tangerine may be substituted for the orange juice, rind and sections. Crepes made for freezing The following basic crepe recipe makes 16 to 18 crepes -prepared all at one time. They are then frozen and can be used. u many as desired, when ~ed. B.uic-CREPES 1 c up all-purpose flour l ~ cups milk ~ Sespoon butter, melted w teaspoon ult Butter Co mbin e all ingredient• ln amall rnlxina bowl; beat with rotary beater en wire whlak until blended. Heat ll~Hly buttered 6-tnch let or crepe pan. Remove from heat; spoon in about 2 t.ableepoona batter. Wt end tilt aldllet to apread batter evenly. Return to heat; brown on one lkle, then lift with fl.naen. ~ crepe over and brown on other aide. Remo"• from pan. Repeat. buuednl akWet if'* ry. To lrelle, staclc crepea ln lay.n between lheeta of wand paper. Wrap with alumfnym foll; freeie. Cr•pea can be kep& frosen 2 to 4 l'DOlld& To detro1t, remove only aumber needed. Keep ltH~ eovered wilb WaDd P9~i le\ thaw lboUl l hour. Shoulder·Bone In PORK BUTT STEAK Cenltr Cut. Fre•h RIB PORK CHOPS l8 1.69 l8 2.49 ------· Orange Coul DAILY PILOT/WednMda)', Aprll 13, 1883 DI Cheese good nutrient _source Cht.'OIU It a oonoonu-at«l aourco of many of tho nutrients fwnd In mJlk. In f.ct, lt takt'a about 10 pounda, or five quart.a, of milk ·to produce one pound of chffte, accordlna to the Uni~ Dairy lndu.au-y AaaoclaUon (U D J A ). Cheeat1 11 actually many d lfloreAt producta, dependlni on how It ii made llnd the k1ndl or combinations of milk UMd. For example, ootta&e cheeee curda are made from aklm milk, cheddar cheese from whole milk, cream cheeae from milk plu.a cream and Monterey J ack from either whole, lowfat or akJm milk. The flavor and texture of chNM are duo primarily to lt• mUkfat, which allo cont.alna the fat·tolubJe vltamlna A and D. found ln many dairy prodLM.11.1. An excellent eoun:e of protein and ca l ei um, cheeae a 110 con\rlbut.et •llJlJticant amounta of ph011phoru.a and riboflavin to the diet. It alao provides 1uch nutrient• aa Vitamin Bl2 and magnesium. Cheeae furnlahe1 about 6 .2 percent of the protein we eat, 1~.7 percent of the calcium and 4.2 percent of the riboflavin. UDIA report.a the amounts of thetie nu\rlenta remain relatively constant, althouah thoee figures tend to vary with the variety of chMle, type of milk, ~ mothoda, Muon and even the loc.llty of production. In rnanufacturtna cheeee, tho curda are separated from the whey, with nutrients divided between theoe two componenta. In the cue of akim·rntlk cbeeee. for example, about one-th!J'd of the nonfat eollda found tn the rnJlk remain in the cheeee, the remainder ln the whey. Moat of the water-aolu b le vitamins In milk atay Jn the whey, maklng It an l..ncreulngly Important by-product of cheelle manufacturing. FRESH LOIN OR RIB END AVG. WEIGHT Certtf,.nh under 300 colorie•. 9 or HALIBUT IN WHITE SAUCE lleol McCoy. 1 lb BEEF SAUSAGE ROLL EA 2.59 EA 1.59 c LB. UMIT l •OASTS Farrn•r John. RttQulor or Beef SMOKED SAUSAGE l8 1.89 Certified. I ·lb. Pkg WILSON SLICED BACON EA 1.59 USDA (hot<• lleef. Bone 1n CENTER CUT CHUCK STEAK LB 1.49 USDA Chooce S..f BONELESS CHUCK ROAST . LB 1.98 ITUFFID PORK LOIN CHOPS BEEF CHUCK 7 -BONI ROAST BONELESS FAMILY STEAK CINTIR CUT PORK LOIN ROAIT FRESH 2 19 L9. • L •• 1.29 USDA BEEF I 98 CHOICE CHUCK L•. • IACH 10-01 G.nerol M1ll1 3 Pock Auorled Flovot\ 8 <1.5 01 FRESH I 99 PORK La. • HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE ~ C>l Pf(, 'JR l\i(J ',Ill 1 SF!I 16 0 1 . RtU. Wheot Thin.. 13·01. Tro\(uot\ 96-ot DOWNY FABRIC SOFTENER 2.79 1.69 CHEERIOS CEREAL 1.09 .79 Hl·C DRINKS .79 .52 NABISCO CRAQ<ERS 1.49 .5-or Sou COAST BAR SOAP 64-or Re9ulor Of Noturol MOTT'S APPLE JUICE l6·or Wide or fl•·~ Wide CREAMETTE NOODLES 2· b Con INSTANT HERSHEY COCOA .. 2.89 KRAFT ITALIAN DRllllNG 24-01. ROMAN MEAL -._~RIAD PARKAY MARGARINE ! HUNT'S TOMATO PASn .~~ 79 Oil FR~E IA •• -·~~;;:a lA.1.19 LIMIT 2 oJi~~~RS 49 IA .• !~Gs~~ 35 60Z (AN IA .• LARGE ARTICHOKES FIRM COMPACT LB. j ~ Inch Vlto"'i11 R1eh HAAS AVOCADOS fA .29 8-01 Pllg. Mori••' A1tor1•d Flo¥Ort. : 2·01 COLESLAW OR SALAD EA .39 SALAD DRESSING EA 1.39 ASS.T'D . PLANTS .2.99 HIALTH 6 aUUTY AIDI ----FOODI OF THI O•INT----uouo• INCIAL TRIPLE PROTECTION F .. TUNI r'» CAL ROSE BLACK VELVET PlAIN LABEL NOODUI 80TAN •tel YAJCISOM 49 25·ll. 50• AQUAFRllH CANADIAN CHAMPAGNI WHllKY 750 Ml. 1.89 ~z~ e IAO 8.~·oa. ltl. Milder 6-o . Con 7»Ml. I TOOTHPASTE I 44 8 2·0Z TU8f e Stoli<hnOo 7»rnl .. IC).,.fOOf KIKKOllAN 111 WIL-ltAC I'' IOY IAUCI......... C•Aa MIA T .... 4.99 Vaseline I0.01. AJst'd. lllTINllVI CARI LOTION .. I .53 IM• •TD 9•• VODKA ...... . n=:====••OID FOOD UICIALI===~ fllHl•MAN'I aAY r=====DIUCATUllN Tltl~Tl====::i Ml•RMA• ORAllGI IUICI 12-ea. llO. OI MOJI PUlP AUNT,IMIMA WAnLll 69 10..()VNCf PO(lflc Plll•h FnlH 269 OCIAN•laCH ........ L1. 1-POUND •ALL •ARK F•ANKI All Vdl!TIH ... ,............. • H.ot & !ot Mont..-.y 01 f101•ntin9 12.1b. loe 39 STUFFED SOLE . . . .. . .... ll •.tt u-011"'. ,.,.. .. ,_, ORE·IDA TATER TOTS ....... I. 10.01.Jod,.th HUGHES AMERICAN SINGLES 1.69 l-'·01.IMfSondwlch$t9ol11 99 PACIFIC OYSTERS ..... .. .... ll I.ti ' 119 3,-0tlllU "kklet Whol90r MIAT OI ._ STEAK·UMM .................... 2. l ·lb, loj,,011 ""'r . VLASIC oelf DILLS ................. 1. It 7'.S..a chkk..,,1Mf 0,ch.ft. J EASTtRN LAKE SMELTS ....... La. l.•t 12-ow~ VAN OE t<AMP ENCHILADAS . • I kotcl\ '"''°"" WILSON VARIETY PACK ....... I.It ~~~~~!!!':~~~~~~~~~:::::~561M~O~K~E~D!"~N~N~A~N~H~AD~D~le~.!·l~~a~.~·~·~================================~ ~ l'OUINIX SAUi ~ ..... WAR•"tt" Le .. Y-TetAL .... 9&LI m wan• .. ,,.. ....:.&=:-.:..-:.::....... •• WILCOMI fl~ 4 499 c=:e::.'T'.::;:sc::: fOOD llAM• AA ,._~~~~--...-. IHOltHlll ::. ....... ' ....,...--:.---:-: ...... ~::::: c~-C.......,t'Et; .,_ .. _ 1191•-"-r:il ........ .,.c--...-.. ---... -· --.. --_,_. ,_ ···-·• ... •1o1e• C'_ .. ___ , ... _____ ..,.. '*""'""'.... .. ..... ...,c--.11- • ..:.,-:,:..-r._;o_:::... .. 'r.::.-, •--:: u "" nut.AIM '"""" -.. - -19 ...... _. , • .._ ltH WIO A1111 )0. 19N HPlACIMfNT Pll THI ___________ .. .._.. , DI Oranoe Coat DAILY PILOT/Wldneeday, AprH 13, 1883 STOA£ COUPON SAVE 25C ON ANY ORE-IDA "SWEET 'N JUICY" CORN ON THE COB o. .... ,... ............ °"' ... ·~ W'l ~ c ........ u ~ .. t•C..., HCl,....,""" .. '*""'"'......._~_.,._. .. J\11_..,.tt ...,...,,.. lift~ .. .,.....,..~ ........ ....__~ .... •O.-• .c.. .. -' .. c.~ .......... ~,.,.,. ........................ ,........,,. ~ ~ w~ ........ "*' • .,.~ .. v_. • ....,...,.. .... ~.._. •-" _,.IN c;--' -l>Clltl ... •lkt 00.U ()'< Ol't 10o COAN OH fMt COii ,.,..., ...... ., .. l ....... " .......... °'1'Jy OM ..... ~ ... .... -.. --------------- Save40( when you buy brim® OECAff[INATED COFFEE MAIU\C TUll(R~ COUPON COUf'C>ff W'tM5 SEPTElle8E.ll lO 1913 leOT GOOO Olll 2·0Z. Oii Tltw. SUE IJl'll-OM COl#'Ql~llA~ GCNCAAl rooos(~TION • .,.,......._, 1.A'l'W'Mf~\~P ••II lnft'IDtitlfW'fWIJlll'l!if ... f~ullllt.\'IACIU' """JC kli ~ 1r,wh:u·1w ·•Vftf""i ~·' .. ""'., ... ..,~ ... ~'""°"''Y'IN~··~ ~ .. (lf~\"'-'~fOf wlnl-.'ijt'lut .. 'ftlrf.rllo..Ji. .... , \~N)l'll.ADl ~ ".,,,... ... ,~ •• 'l'Pf'*"'«il ~~~P.·~~··· """~ ... ~.'::'u)'C:~:::.~~~'""?/~\A ............. lwJllOfftl; •n-""''-d .. ,"""'.....,,... ~~"*"'(JI ~WllW-~flolf1f"""4 ...... •I''"' ......... ~ ... """"*Ultt ...,.,_"..,.,. _ ._,,,.~ ~=::.;=~~~~';f."..l~.-p "' ... IOI ._.... l Wl'l01 ·~,...,. .... ....,°" ... ~ '·· -·~ .......... A.a·~ .. .., NC02082400 --------------- ---------------I I I I I I ---------------1 Save75¢ when you buy 2 peire of lffl SllEER ENERGY. PAHTYHOS( in a bv minutes in your dryer. Now fur pennies your clothes can -~ \L look like a million bucks. ~~,,A T ....... Mr rs ..... ,,,_.. New Sweater Frnh removes surface din, wrinkla and odon from wools, couons, blmds. le even frHhens) our pillow•, drapnand blankets. Spray Sweater Fresh on 1he pr· ment and tumble in 1 wann dryer. In mlnutet, your clo1hes ano cleaner, tofter, frah-tmelling. Try Sweater Fresh now and save. ltl.500 ~J,003" .. I I I I I I WEIGHT WATCHERS INTRODUCES CHEESECAKE ON A DIET and fi ve other luscious desserts like Carrot Cake , Black C herry C heesecake, Apple Raisin Spice Cake and Apple and C herry O.)bblers The next time you want to make a tasteful statement. try serving Mauna Loa' Maca· damia Nuts instead of ordinary nuts. Their sophisticated gounnet navor sets Mauna Loa apart from ho-hum snacks. Light. crunchy, and always in good taste. Your guests will definitely notice. And that's why Mauna Loa Macadamia Nuts say good things about you. • • I -' HofrlY ,,.redeem these~ ,. coupons &NUT CORN FLAKES'" : .. -~~ cereal. ~· at any store~ r selling these ' products Special offer on two or the best! New. improved Hunt's Tomato Paste- the winner in tllste tests. and today's Hunt's Tomato Sauce-thicker. richer, better tasting than ever. Stock up on both and get Free cans from Hunt's~ See coupons below for details. I r- Golden corn with a touch of honey an Iota of real, chunky nuts. It's different and dellcloua. The , only nutty cornflake anyone makes! I I I I I I Orange COHl DAIL y PILOT /W9dnMday, Aprtt 13, 1983 •• --------------- 20bE't'l 0009£ ~~gQ~ ~ ICIUOOG S HONEY & NUT CORN ,LAJCES'· cereel. 20¢ .... ...._.. ......... ...... ~...._......, , ______________ _ I I I I I I 12C ON1 CAN 120 51000 21.lf 71.fS OH1 CAN -----------SAVE20¢ ..J) ..J) ~ 0 0 .... on ttw purehaae of• c-n.. ___ ...,_, ...... ..._.,....,.._GC ...... 4..-,_•.,..»• GEMlSER 4-BULB PACK OR 3-WAYBULB ,.,,. ... ,.,., ___ ........ °"""" """ ,_ .. ,_,..MrilCM Ii ,.._. WI -G(-Ollt<-llUI• --.....,.. .. f .. OIO L.-. Olw ~ ... ....... .................... .._.. ......... ~-..... -*"° .... .......,..,. • ..... ,,_.,._Ill ... __ ,.._ ..... ~ ..... Clllft ..... K1Wll ..... ,. -)IOGf -00.. •O '°''°" --~7)4 ............. __ ..," ~ ..J) .... ,,, :r Now J'O(I CM get rM llflltt '°" ne«I and .... MetV>'· •1'1 --~---::--o::-..=:::.:·..=::,,. ___ .. ----... -...---.. .._._ l .... c......, -........ ..,,..,. ... , . .,,.,........,.,.... ..... _ .. _, To ftwt ,_ ..... ., Tn1s tOUPOn may t>e '•O•...,,.d lcw tact••"'" ptut 11 fof l'lencti.ng '' ·1 ••• rec.e-"tld hom • c u•t0""9' on • °"''"'• .. of tn.e ~·l•d 0'00"""'1 fOf t.O•MPf'Of' ,.,,., 10 ,...u., Bo• 3007 £11n c.1, frlfC 77898 On r.qu~tl yoo mutl turnlll'I .n.,o~•• Of otrwr proe>' ~ ot i>u,cn••• •~owing t ufl1c1en1 11ocei. dunno O no,,nat r-.ctemptioo eye.tie to tower tOllPQn• wt> ]) m11teO tor rt10e1Ttpt1on Coupon tnl)' ,,ot Oe m ::;::: -:~·.:::~-: . .;'::~--= :c:,:v 0 ••M '""""'"' l>t low C••n Volue 1120< Oooo g Ql"lly 1n V S A P\lltrtO Ate0 and US G0v•'1'met°tt "'C> tn11•llo1'°" ll"'lf O .. E COuPON PEA Oz PVACH4$[ ANV USE NOT CO .. SISfEN'I' WITH fHESE TEAMS CO..STITVTCS fRAVO ANO"'"• vO•O •u COVPO..$ SV8MlnfO JOR AEO[MPTl(lt< ---------------SAVE 10c ~ 0 NEW Vllllll SlllA .. FROM "' ~ Hidden Yalley Ranch· Salad ()essrrJ M11 ;;; T1•ntt.(1t 'Uk ''"'.,.,..,,.~., •• , • .,.......,...,,..,..... .. ot...,.cU111PA-"•..W~ ~ tv• """""''''~• •M..-,._ 1t bhMllM .... "9'1~1idWwtMl:'f'N.,,UWc..........tr.""''............... ~ lhi ·~·"' ... '',,..,, l1'r11~....-,.,.., ....... n..,,\...,._ ...... ..,..,.,N'f""r' ....... .,_ l' ~~·-·"'"'--"'"' ft. ....... l'N .... M>~~ .............. uf ...... "'*"'*--°'"'" ... ........... ' .. ...., '"' ·~1•''°"" ~,......... n. cow f-11111 •• ,,....... •. .,_,.. ....... ! •• ~~-_... • ........ ........ ,. .• ,...f'W' ,_. ... "'""~ .. "' '·•'-•··~·~ttw,.w ...... ,,*'Ml'toc.... r--:::;: ~,:~.~:l:=~=..;~~=:;',.~~·;~~':-~ .. ,-:;;_: 4~b00 lO~OlD t... t.• 1.1~ '•"·•I ,'11.J H Tu.......,.~ 'U'P-"" 1lMd 1t •11 TtttCU)AOX \..'fJ,..l"AHY 1·tt ttl t\ Hilt 1,1 "tu' h'\\.\!U'7\4 CO,'PQ-.t:)PUt.IS ........... ---------------Save s5~~n the Hi-Pro Glow of Good Health Here's how to save BIG on Iii-Pre $300 OFF BAGS Look for speciallt marked "$300 Off' 50 lb BagS at part1c1pating stores 75¢COUPON r------------------MAIL4N CERT1F1CAT£ Use the coupon now on a 501b. Bag $l25 COUPON REFUND We'll send you a $1211 coupon when you buy a specially marked $3<lO Off" 50 lb. bag S l 25 COUPON REFUND when yoo buy a speaal1y marked "$300 OFF" 50 LB. BAG of DrJN·:_ BUY: e..~-$300()11 ~ .. OOVol ....... • ... $3000lf 1111Q.._ ............ _..._, -~ --~oeo....,. ___ _ ..,. ....... ~ RECEIVE: ~.:="',_..,,.,..,,,..,,n ooe o1 _.,. aoo HI-Pro "PncaOff'' Refw>d ~:: PO Bo• 143'2 ..,_., Belleville IL &22'4 Send my s I 2S Hl•Pro Coupon to ;- ~~~----,...._~~ .... ~.-..=-~~~~ • 1 .. I .. .. •• Or•noe Oout DAILV PILOTIWedne•d•v. Aprll 13, 1813 Duckling: A wol-k of art Sprtna 11 for er atlvlty, 10 try your hand at lkebana, the ancient Japan ... art of flower·arranatna. Invite a amall aroup of art I 1 tlcal l y-1nc11 ned friend• over tor the aflernoon. After you have completed your flower arrangements, use them to decorate the dinner &able. Then relax with a frozen Kyoto Crush. For the entree, Rum Glued Orlen tal Duck l Ing , 1urrounded by rum- eoaked fruit, la a work of art ln I taell. KYOTO CRUSH 2 cups cubed cantaloupe ~ cup ( ~ can 6 ounces) frozen limeade concentrate 1 cup Hght rum Y. c up orange- flavored liqueur 3 cups crushed ice Mint leaves ln blender container. Asparagus salad memorable By TOM BOGE U WIM Md 'ood Wrtliw April in America marks the peak season for asparagua, the tender stalk that people in this country eat to the tune of 77 million pounds a year. This succulent vegetable dates back many centuries. The ancient Greeks picked it wild in the fields. but for some reason never bothered to cultivate the vegetable. The Romans, however, had detailed rules for developing the shoots and ate them boiled, or dried the stalks for off. season oonsumption. The early American settlers br o ught asparagus to the New World, and pioneers took aackloads with them to cultivate as they traveled westward. One of my most pleasant memories is having asparagus with a Chinese family. They 1erved it as a aalad to complement a platter of cold cuts. Here is the recipe. ASP ARAGUS SALAD 2 pounds fresh asparagus, with stalk no more than inch in diameter 4 teaspoons soy 1181.lCe 1 teaspoon sugar 2 telispoons sesame- .eed oil Oi9card tough end of stalk and slice remainder into 1-inch lengths. Thia should make about 3 cupe of asparagua pieces. Waah asparagus under cold, running water, lhen parboil by dropping pieces in rapidly boiling water for l minute. Drain at once and run cold water over aaparagua b ill to stop them cooking any more, and to set their color. Spread pieces on paper towel and pat until completely dry. In a glass bowl , combine aoy sauce, sugar and ~leed oil, and mi x till augar is completely dissolved. With Iarae spoon, tom to aoet each upuqua piece thoroughly with d.relmlnl· Chill up to two houn b efore servtna. A• a ~'-tal8d tb1t .ervea 4. J.. wt of oold O)eat r~te " • enouah fot e lo c om b I n o f I r • t 4 2 tableepoon. butter lnaredlon\a Blond unUl ur maraarlne . 1mooth. Add let. Turn "' cup red curnmt blender o n and oft jolly quickly Mwral Umee to ~ cup Uaht rwn b l e n d . P o u r I n t o \4 cup oranae juloo s t e m m e d i l a s s e s . 1-4 tt!Mpoon around OamJah each with mint. glng"r Makes 8 aervlnp. ~ cup halvC!d ereen RUM OLAZED erapea ORIENT AL DUCKLING 'A c u p l o a s t e d 1 d u c k I I n g , 1llvered almonds q u a rte red ( a b o u t 5 Slivered orange peel pounda) Trim excess fat from 1 teupoon aalt duckling. Seaeon with IA teaspoon pepper aalt and pepper. Roast at 3 large cooking 350 degrees F ., 1kln side apples, cut Into _w_ed.....;g;;;;...ea _ __....d .... ow..-n~ack In shallow Basic Malue! BONDED MEATS FRY INC CHICKEN Wl'IOle IOOy SOutrw<n (IUA ~.49 FRESH 129 ?~~DBEEF lb ~ NOt O Cl«I JO'I Fat BLADE CUT 109 ~~~ROAST lb RIB EYE STEAK routlna pan, l ~ h uurt or until duckllna teat• done. Tum once durlna rouUna. Abo ut l~ minutes bctlo~ duckling 11 done, oook apples In butwr In larae aklllct until Ju•l wnd~r. Tum once u.Jna 1p11tula to tum carefully. Add jell)'. rum.Juice and atnaer. tleat. A d grapee and almonds. Arrange duckling on serving platter. Spoon aauce over. Garnish with orange peel. Makes 4 servings. FARMER JOHN 109 SAU SA CE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ON C ANNED & PACKAGED Hat or ~ , lb lloll LADY LEE 149 !~c.2!! llb ~g DAIRY & FROZEN orTN<t PORK LOIN ROAST t-TOMATO 19 t-LADYLEE 39 t-NUCOA 65 A ~UCE 101 on • A ~tnwt 11 oz un• A ~ARCA~,~~ctn • PORK LOIN SPARERIBS c.ountrv Stvlt lllt>Eno ~159 J.2!'.~~~TEAK "2.69 r £;:!:e~, ,.,. 79 r ~R~,~~= 79 ~~~c~TION HAM .. 1 .29 _WNt_•_or_Whf_,_t _____ _ ~~SllCEOBAC~''""' 1 .79 r~~IANOUVEOl~oun 1.33 !~~TEW UOICM 1.47 IJOICNI 1 .35 ~o~~!!!~. .. 2.19 r ~·PEPPER SAUCE IClll\ .49 l ~-M~~ ~~~E~OJ ,~NKS .. 2.79 !~N~SAUSACE •ou .... 49 !REESE'S PIECES ''°''"' 1.99 QUARTER PORK LOIN 69 ,iW. !~~~IX C~RE~~01 -.1 .49 =-~~--.. 1• e --· _ r~~~AL s~EE~ENE!" '°' 3 _59 !!,U~!S FARM SAUS~2f=O(kj 1. 79 r ~ CRAIN RICE , .. -1. 99 ~:~~B " 1. 99 r LAO~ LEE RAISINS ''°' eo.1.19 ~tM~~~DER ROAST •• 1.59 r~e.~~~y JU~!~'" 1.67 :!,~,~.RJ! CHOPS .. 2. 79 !~!TER CRACKERS "°' '"'"69 ~~~.L~LAMBCHOPS .. 2.99 !LADYLEELASACNA ••oreo•.75 ~.~!;!~!CHOPS 179 !~RESSOTOMATO,.E;CNl .85 tQJlll).,.. l.Me OO'l ll t ... ... • FRESH FISH ITE M S !HUNT'S PORK & BEA~.~ CNl.69 !~~~·~ .. ~~~.~ ...... , .87 ~I~~~~~~ .•• 1.29 I~!~~~~.c~o~ ~~2.69 DELI DELIGHTS r MONTEREY JACK139 CHEESE ua to lat t 01 Pllg I TURKEY FRANKS \Ml'\H-"°' ... 89 SWISS CHEESE ..3 .29 l ~te.2~T~. CHE~SE '"°' .1.19 IMIOl.9_ttT_ !!..~-.'!:~~ •IOI~ 1.99 I~~~~Y BISCUITS uOt CM•45 I~Rl!!READ,,or '"' 1.99 ----~lftNl'll ...... ... IMLlll_C_ peORANCE 99 A~~ 12oz0n• r zsn Concentr'te llf9Ulll' or With Pull) !!'!10CENIZEO Ml.LK (,Al I I\ 1. 95 LOW FAT MILK CA< t i\ 1.91 SOFT MARGARINE .. OI C"' .59 r ORE·IOA DINNER FR!_E~'"' 1 .19 r ~~r DISH PIE SHEU~°' ..i; • 9 3 BEVERAGE ITf MS .. QUALITY PRODUCE COLDEN lD.29 BANANAS Ripe lltac:IV 10 Uf BLACK lD.79 CRAPES ~~IOUS (Xh.19 BEAN 10 •29 SPROUTS Ffftll Dellcllfful Ut11>9 GENERIC ITEMS CLING PEACHES 1Ul (AAe65 GENERIC APPlE BUTT,.E! ># 1.14 GENERIC FlOUR ,., __ 79 GENERIC PAPER TOWE~; ..... 57 PEANUT BUTTER U...CC9't..,...OI~ GENERIC PEAS GENERIC CA TSUP c w -2 .79 .• °' .... 35 1~01 •".79 LIQUOR. BEER & WINE -A•--t!JIO'f\ ....... _°""" r ;;'~ rnw '"779 r~~2?1ES ,,,.,.,,, 10.99 !~£1..~N MIS~"'""' 10.99 !~DON'S GIN '""••n 10.49 !~~~LIQUEUR "°"''"8.99 r ~~.~~ WEINHAR~·.~ •ns 2 _39 r~~SSK:S~:2.59 !TAYLOR WINES 5 2 9 ~ClU-llO\I -Ot~ • t \fl l fl • HOUSEHOLD & PET r FRESH START 519 DETERGENT launclrV 10 01 •tt "°' , .... 57 r~~J·~~~T TISS~11 .. ,_89 r ~S?.!_T111~!_~R TOWEL.,5" I0.1•69 r LADY LEE TRASH BAGS 9~ __ , IOCAl.LOOI "" HI-· ~ I BLU BOY~~~ CLEA~~ el\. 79 r llOUIO Pl.UMR Uetr!\ 1.34 !~E!.1!~.~~.I!-1.15 l!;l~~t~~~ ~ ,,.11.2.39 flunk l wegn'" Hammond ENC OPEDIAS .. . .. .. • t ' Orange Collt DAILY PILOT/WednHdly, Aprll 13, 1983 DI ~ An American· beer meets German standards BJ JERRY D. MEAD Produclna • arut beer la not all that dllllmilar from producina a areat wine, and tne man behind one of the few American beera that ml&ht be called "great" la very cloeely tied to the wine lnduttry. Frlta Mayt•B la the fellow'• name (and yes, he'a related to the founden of lhe appliance company), and a more dedlcated brewmaster would be difficult to find anywhere ln the world. Maytag's connection to wine ls lhe fact that he is also owner of "York Creek Vlnerards." that famous co lection of vinea ttiat has yielded great wines under labels belonging to Ridge . Praaer, Freemark Abbey ana other famous producers. leavln& an lnttu:t UHi fluffy ou~r hu.ak. Tht cruahed mah 11 then "maahe<J" (w(trm water la ~dd~d) The temperatu~ I& l"•dually lncreaaed to er~ l~ eruymea that convert the grain '• ator c h to ferment.able sugar. Next , th e wort (unfermented beer ) Is drained (allowed to trickle) through mall husks and 1s fed by gravity into the brew kettle 1'he wort l• them bolled for about an hour and • half, and It la durln& thl1 llm that a bl11nd or 1pt.•cl1dly Hh1c:ted, aatw .. y1 fresh hopa, are added The heat extr1cu their plea1aantly bitter chora~er that l1 10 lmpor t to tht.• llniahed brew. All of thett' pocesses t.ake place in handmade equipment Imported from Gennany Some minor , but MIADDN WINI lmponainl, ate p1 now uko place, 1uC'h 1u atralnlng out the hups and the llt'ttllna-out of • white protein materhll that has formed ln the wort. Tht! wort la al10 cool~ to proper brewing temperature. Then co mes fermentation. Yeast Is added and ferment.aUon takes place ol about 72 ' comes tho "krtul('lnlna" (carbona lion proce11) About 16-20 peront newly fcrmcmtlnti bt:er d cir t.• l4 1 • w I t h the ln which thC! y~ut la 1t1ll l •mperature most often actlv~ la added to th'· controlled by circulation flnhhed beer In the of tht-normally cool Sun aa In & tank . 0 v er a Franchk.'O air. Moytag I& period of IMlYeral week.I 11 u c h a 1 tic k l f' r lo r In a cloeed ayatem tank, · ' n ai t u r u I , ' ' t h a t the aaases released by refrigeration for cooling the 1UU fermenting new the air is used only on beer are ab11orbed Into that rare, warm San the liquid In the form of Franclaco day. carbonation. The flnl1hcd beer 1s An c hor Steam's stored to age Th~n carbonation ia the quality ----- you'U mott llk~ly . notkc lmmttdlately \Jnllke moat Amtlrlcan commercial beers that are aaattled and huve bubbles th e alze of baakttballa, Anchor Steam'• bubblell are pinpoi nt In alze and 1maller than what la UllUally found ln the finetit Champagne. Asi de fro m a few fan111h1ng tou c hes to assure all active yeast.a are removed, the beer ls either bottled or kegged and 1hlppod by · refrlaeratlon to your , ravorl1" outlf't. Even Friti Maytaa ' admlta that the 1peda] n VOl'I of Anchor Steam are not for everyone, but If you prefer the full- f la v ore d taste of European brew• to the often watery and neutral taat.e oC moet American beers, I think you're going to like one of San Francisco's proudest aC'hlevementa. Anchor Steam Beer Ralphs Low Prices• Double Coupons! Maytag ow n s no winery, but in the very near future you will be able to buy wines under the York Creek label, produced exclusively from Maytag's vineyards by the Belvedere \Yine Co. that produces wines under several other famous vineyard brands. including Robert Young, \Yin ery Lake, and Bacigalupi. Save with Ralphs 11Super Sale" Spectacular Color Maller. That's right... this week save with great specials in Ralphs color mailer. It's a Super Sale. (11 you don't have a mailer pick one up at your nearest Ralphs.) The beer that Maytag produces is Anchor Steam Beer, made in San Francisco by a process like no other in the world. Of all the people ln the world, none take beer more seriously than the Germans, and i t 's interestJng to note that most American brews can't legally be called "beer" in Q,ermany because of American short-cu ts and leaser ingredients. Anchor Steam, o n the other hand, qualifies as beer by German standards because it ls a pure and natural product made only fropt malted barley, yeast, water and hops. An c h o r Steam contains no pre - servatives, no rice or co rn (cheaper and neutral tasting grains often substituted for barley), and no artificial carbonation. That last is especially Impor tant because Anchor Steam is one of the few American beers to be naturally carbonated by a process called "krausening," which is similar to the natural carbonation process used to make fine champagne. Anchor Steam is a full -bodied, amber- colored b r ew, with noticeable taste of hops (pleasant bitterness) and an overall "European" tas t e . The beer is available bolh in bottles, and, at better taverns, on tap. Once brewed. Anchor Steam is always kept cold, during shipping, at the wholesaler and at retail outlets. Unlike wine, beer la extremely perishable. Not in the eenae that it is going to spoil and do you harm, but in the sense that freshness is the key to flavor. This is one of the primary reasons that imported beers rarely taste as we remember them from experienctt in their homeland . Constant cold temperatures help maintain freshness. If you're wondering about the ''Steam " portion of the name, I'm sorry to say that there is no pat answer as to the name'• origin. Th•{ Anchor Steam Brewery la more \hall 60 yean old, and the real reuon for the name is lost ln antiquit?:-Here 1 how Anchor Steam la brewed: Barley steeped In water and allowed to sprout la gently dried by warm air in a kiln. Thia oroce11 11 called 1•rnaJtina" the barley. The malted barley la then cn.llhed in a mill in such a way M to finely c:ruab the Uwlct.. while A PlcUUque luelneH ................ ". fll•d wltfl tM Couftty Ctafk II MtHI fet he 1ffl9 eftet wftlcfl ...... 0011ttlnulnt ....... e .... mue4 , ...... p.,~ .. ~ .... , If lflero ere cflen,.a. C.. tM L."8f o.,.,,"'."' •• '"• DAILY PILOT for l •f•tMatlon and ,_...~-...... 142-4321 ht.an ........ tl~rw..,,, ........ Double Coupon ...... (!~------­Double Coupon .. ..... '1~ftt'& ........ Double Coupon '1• .. nl 11\u coupon alono wtth any on. Manwa<:1uzen cenu 011 coupon a.no o•t dou.bl• th• taV'\.nQ"I when ,ou pwd\OM th• Item Nol to U\clucle 1•10&1•• hH ff:ocery purcho.M coupon1 'ouporu QTeo'l•J than on• :=-3~~ ••c.ed • value Of U\e \tern C.clYd.•t hquo1 tobacco ond dauy Llmit One Item Per Manulactwors· Coupon and Llmit 3 Newspaper Double Coupons Per CWtomer Coupon EU.ctt.e Aprtl 14 thru April 20.1963 Mea1 Values Dairy/Deli USDA ltup·Golden Plemlum·lfffChudt 1 49 7-Bone Roast ': • ~·I-USDA lnlp-Gold.n Plem1wn· ... l1 99 chuck Roast .. ": . 9311, rat rr-aon.1-Wilson Hams 05DA bup-GokHn Plem1um Beef Stew Meat ': 2.39 ': 2.19 Fisherman's Cove rro .. n,O.bOlled Halibut Steaks R8d'°Sn 12~CON Budweiser Beer ...: 2.28 budM 9l'J Mb Cream Cheese Welc:h~Ch.Uled Grape Drink turkey Franks Plaln Wrap Chunk~ ~loqna 01 Cotto Salcmu lob• Tartar Sauce Meat Wieners =ch'e~se ·-79 pq • "\': 2.59 = .98 ~ 1.59 ... 85 ,.. . ~ 1.39 ~3.39 Bakery Values r.r'same Buns ~ .59 Prom l'oftugal Lancer's Rose ~= 2.88 ~0sW1riS ~ .99 ·switch Ir savf§ more *' ~ lll1ftlt MIU 12MIWl.M"' .... t 6-aa. l7Ml 1711IT .. 1W111 '1eMnt Uua coupon alOng wun any on• Mon\&loC'fweu cenu oU coupon and o.i OOUbl• 11\e 10"'11Qt whH> you puzchcne lh• at•m NOi 10 11\Clll<U r~er llH grocery pwchOM couPQn• ccupona gr.a'!•• than one doUOJ or esc:Hd th• value 01 lh• item tJrclud•• Uq\>Or tobacco OM dau y p1odue11 Llmit Ono Item Per Manwactweis· Coupon and Llmit 3 Newspaper Double Coupons Per CWtomer Coupon Ettectt .. April 14 thru April 20, 1963 ~ W"lllf Specials cannot be pwcha:Md in advance of romotlonal w"k rice Grocery Values Produce/Floral PoP\AIOI G.r1n4I Folger's Coffee ~ 2.29 RedRaspbenv IO• 99 "" . ~ toy.ar-d-MCU.l 189 cheese Pizza Mix ·~ • Cbef loyG-dM Pizza Crust M1x UURr•lcmc2111d\,.. Manwicn Sauce llW\r! Ketchup ~-i°'~u.m. (:IQlOrade .• 33 -. lt'I• 97 -.· .... 125 ... . . ·::L09 Appe tite Shoppe· · · sWtSSCheese ...r::2.25 WU.On'IOwn 2 Honey Cured Ham ...r:: • Ready Pac: OflentCI SIU:Mii .59 ChopSuey IJ• ... Swffl J\ll;\-4Q c:eUo bag Nave ranges --· .59 llowl 0 Hut l"lesh Roaited Of Salted .59 Peanuts ... ... Clip Top .17 Canots .... lit ~ad Chef AMl>l1ed Variety .59 routons ... .... 4•11.H .99 Potho Plants -Auol1ed 4" Ille With Saucert Hanging Plants -L99 Frozen Food , .... ... .79 .69 . . J ,. '• r ... .. • • 08 Orange CoHt DAIL. Y PILOT /Wttdntlday, Aprll 13, 1893 Blue cheese is Charley Pride's favorite salad dressing. He takes pride in eating habits Country singer Charley Pride knows it's as important to care for his health as it is to keep his rich baritone voice in shape. An ex-baseball player in the Negro American League. Pride tries to keep dose to his 190-pound playing weight by eating sensibly and running wind sprints in his back yard. "When I'm on the road doing a concert tour. it's difficult to find tame to eat. let alone choose the right kinds of foods:· says Pride. "I usually only eat one meal a day which always includes a green salad." Blue cheese dressing. Pride's favorite for topping greens, also adds flavor on an open face ham or roast beef sandwich With slight alteration. the recipe serves as a dip or on a platter of cold vegetables. The popular country si nger, who has recorded more than 36 albums. will make a guest appearance on the CBS- T V Special, "Kraft Salutes the 25th Anniversary of the Cou ntr y Mu sic Association" torught at 9 on Channel 2 . The musical tribute originates from Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. and wall reunite Pride with more than 50 of his fellow country music artists. GOURMET BLUE CHEESE DRESSING l 4-ounce package blue cheese. crumbled v. cup mayonnaise 1 1 cup buttermilk Dash of o ni o n powder Dash of garlic powder Combine ingredients, m1x1ng unlll well blended. Chill Makes 1112 cups. Variation: To make a blue cheese dip. decrease buttenrulk to Y\ cup. Spring produce • crops erratic Unpredictable weather has caused gaps in plantings and harvesting of fresh fruits and vegetables . Therefore. production of spring crops have been unusually erratic. Nonetheless. many of the heartier varieiies of fresh p~uoe are faring well and still provide reasonable nutrition. California's recent rain storms have had little adverse effect on the carrot crop. Quality coming to market this week is outstanding and supplies are abundant, which is keeping prices low. San Diego County has started production of cucumbers and coupled with 1 upplies from Mexico consumers should start seeing lower prices and better quality from the heavier volume in the next week. The market appears to have taken a turn for artichoke1. Abundant suppllea, especially on the mecUum aiz.ea. have lowered pri ce s . Artichokes should remain at a value for at least another 10 days until the eeuon comes to a cloee. Squash la a areat value. Local zucchini, yellow and aummer tqUUhes are in are•ter volume now and will u good . Prices are coming down. Sweet corn from Florida is available. Prices are high and quality is fair to good. The Coachella Valley corn will start in a month. The leafy vegetables i ncluding spinach, romaine. green leaf lettuce and cabbage are holding high prices because of short supplies. On the other hand. iceberg lettuce stlll remains a good bargain. Avocados are an excellent value thl1 week. New crop Hass are now exclusively available in the 1tore1 and at exceptionally low prleet1, eapedally for the smaller siz.es. Ci trua remains an excellent buy acnia the board. Grapefruit from California and Florida la abundant and quality ii outstanding. Navel oranges are plentiful and prices reuonable. Both Minneolu and Kinnow tangerine. are winding down in production 10 prices may atart Kotna up ln the next few week.. Chilean grapes are 1till available. Prices on Thompson aeedleu are goln1 up aa auppllea dwindle next week. Other varletlet should remain reuonable. HAMBURGERS NEVER , .. ta•ted .o ood With each pound of ham- burger. mix In 2 to 4 tbsp Oock·ln' S..C. and 1 beaten egg Make into thin patties and press together around a fllltng of chopped onions. Barb9cue or FRttf::~~.~ Writ• to: Woody'• • P.O. lo• 17M 1.ona.=::o"· c~ eoeo1 !\......... . ·11 ....... lnilM Asparagus, salmon teamed· in salad The' Scamdlnavlana haw u 1ly 1en1eo of humor •• wf'll H an apprccl&&tlon Cor fine food, typified by thla auytna: "'l'ht' Norwcatan1 eat to live. the Swede• eat to drink; but the Danea live to eat1" Perhaps tha\'1 why Danish recipes for hon d'oeuvre&, lilil.ads, entrea and desserts have become so popular in the UnJted States The Danes have a way of balancing their flavors an interesting combinations. The recipe here calls for slk'1.-d smoked salmon and asparagus, two highly compatible foods, and the best of each ls brought but by a lemon juice-dairy sour cream- mayonn.aise dreasing. The Danes are inclined to use a thick t.ernier while asparagus. but any good fresh, frozen or canned green asparagus may be substituted by those who prefer it. SALMON ASPARAGUS SALAD I twud of lroburg lt•tlU('t' I 3-ouncc.i pock&gf• sliced 1mokt•d twhnon I I -pound can white uwporagus (or cooked truh uporagus) 11> cup mayonnu.ise I tablespoon frozen cht1pped ch aves Dash of lemon JUl<.-e Separate lettuce into leaves and line serving dish, allowing leaves to furnish a scalloped border. Cut salmon in uniform straps about the length of the asparagus. Place in alternate rows with asparagu11 an an attractive pattern on the serving dish, leaving spa<.-e for small bowl of dressing. Combine mayonnaise with chives, dairy sour cream and lemon juke In small bowl. and place on serving dish. Chill and serve Serves 4 to 6 LOW PRICES I QUALITY FRESHNESS & SELECTION Fr~!!: .. !r!!'sts fryint 990 Chl<hn With llllot I'-II l\rtoch.d ,. Oelocole Flowo• Servo With Otown 1 .. 11 •• D•ve• folleh 5~·1. Round Steak lonolou, Safowoy . o .. ollty ···' S 219 Cube Steak CN~;:;~ •. llo Bornu Satt°"iy S 19 Stew Meat <>·•"'' llH' •l '2" mai>Swanson ~~~~ t~ 09· dntmmmm ... ••~ ~llEllllJlla ~ '2ue DltRaspbemes &t«A• 1:..~' 11" T S• I • lonolou, Sofowoy op If Gin o .. ollty ... , l•in Steak froth, a-09 .. lar Ground Beef J.llo ""•· or lore•• 0-1 Not bcMd 30'11.fat llo 1 Beef Ffltters 1 "''1 f.. ';:, '"" $279 Ground Turkey oi::,.., llo lOuol ~CJI Drumsticks f••1111 1"''" $1 29 Cir W•og> s. .... ~ 11o Sausage -'409 o 'P' Dl)1ce Cream~ 2r..~300 b 89' IZDt Pancake Mix~) 3't..~ 11u o 69' ID!>Tomatoes 5:;" 2~ 5gc Dl>Margar1ne ~'" ~111 69' 4'¥!*111 lo11le1 6 2t!*1 Sliced Beef Liver 0., .... ,..1 Sliced Bacon sm•k·A·ll•mo Fried Chicken Ty-:;,:::;·" lavel Oranges s ..... M'l4 JVtCf Yellow Onions = 21oa 491 Ruby Grapefruit 1b 69c •-•11.s1s• ...... 4 For 1100 Crisp CarrotSJcr Stuc.k• 2 l!v49' Fresh Pinto Beans 5 "'' 1100 Red Apples Dflc:=,r.i•• 3:0 98' Fresh Shallots FF:!,' Pt>Q 891 Fresh Rhubarb ~~!, tb 79' Daisy Fresh "=~ 1M<1 99' Bean Spr~ts kt s.iaos •o 39' Croton Nonna ~ 4 ~ •ttt Russet Potatoes,.,.,,,.""' 3 itit •1• Nephltles ",.::;" 4 t;: •1u '"'"' O.,...tl Franks 511.t": ::;-n :..~ '1"' Dlteread ,.,, .. ~~ ::f1 99' Imported Ham ~.;t ~: 11'' DltRolls = :\ 99' 8raunschwe1ger C 10 79' DQKmgs ~ ~·~1 1~0:~ 11>t Rainbow Trout ~= •t 11• Dlteottage Cheese ....,, 89' Perch Fillets='='' ·o '1" DltSour Cfeaml 89' •Star-Kist Solod Whole Alb<><o•o T ""o 7·01 s13• Con mat Tomatoes c.s~:~~0 •Vienna Sausa 2 14 ..., ••• s100 Co"' e 5-oa 59c l•loloy"• Can .. *199 Dm>llorthern llapklns .r\•;o s 1 • • ll>Popov ~o:i ~Br d Clor•S1•..., ...... 69c = ... ~an Y L:: DO Hi C Drinks """ o.1n~• con .-rohlua $3 "'°" II> Tiny Shrimp ~'::~~ ·~ .... 99c Dtoid crow ,.,e:,, C.n ll>Scotch ~* -....crackers .... , ......... 79c _.,Heineken ........ ~ '•'""'" ... 1c.1..,., ~ ..., - .. u; •s" u;•12" ~ '8" u; '9" ~.{; '9" l'acl 6~~'3" Great leer Buy! Schlitz Beer light or ltegular 12·•·!.1 1 12-oi. Cans • DOLibby's 1:= ·~ 79' IZIOSoap o!:,'!,., 3 4"'90: '100 lltchlps e.:a-~-:" ;'"Y6 '1" lltVOUUrt LUC-sc!.~·200 llltBeans ..!"~ 21~ 1100 ll>Trail Bars......,,.., 2':': '300 e C»et 7·Up • Sv1or ,,.. Uke *149 Pod1 12.... • Con• .. .. I. .. I ,, ... Orange Coaet DAil. Y PILOT /WednMday, Aptll 13, 1883 07 Factory-made food pFo.llu~ts not real thing 8 J D 0 R 0 THY A. beU•r ri.vor and ll more ano\hor can dllcover J)l'non under wawr ln a callper. ln a•n rtl, when and you 1hould try to wie p.rt.hablo fooda 1uch u iho peachee be ufe to WENCK 1t•b1 e th• n poly -th• 1 • Important ape c I a I tank l 1 a a 1-klnfold mea1ur .. It wlihln a week aftur cottaau cheetie. Talw care eut? :.~~~=:.t=.AHMf un1aturated olll nutrl\lonal dltference1 relatively eccuratt above an tnch In roub\.lylt.WhonbuylnB of the cottaae cheeH .A 11 the Jan are such u ""Y or oom, It 11 between formulat.ed and m thod for determlnlna Jhtckoeu. thf' penon ii t, c h• ck the d • t e when you uae It -don't 1Ull uahtlr ... led wlth Many of lhe fooQ.I we ofwn added u the fat In rut foodl. the a.mount of fat he or . con1ldtred to have too at.amped on the packaae. let It at.and out at room n.o aigna o le...._, and eat today are factory-a w Ide v • r It t y o t QUESTIONS WE ARE 1h• h11 tn rela\lon to much tat in proportion to Thia la the "pull date" t.em~rature any lonaer If there'• no •iln at mold made. That ii, lhey are lmJtaUon milk producta. ASltED: l e a n b o d y m a 1 1 . l • a n , o r t o b e after which the cottase than n~ or other 1rowth In the fabricated from food Thu1, the penon who ... Q. A friend ju1t However, thf1 11 not a overw"liht.· chee1e 1hoi..i1d no t be jar, the peachet will 1UJJ ln1redienta, often In a ~ lhe11e to try to avoid atarted s<>lna to a fltn81 very wnvenJent wey t.o ' -eold. The lat.er UU. date, • • • be aate to eat. However, form \hat lmltatea the aaturated butterfat, 11 cent.er and tne tint th.Ina meuure body fat. A .,., • • • the longer you can Q. I recently found they probably won't "real lhin8·" actuallysetllnga tatthat they did waa 1ubmerge limpler moro frequently.'•.• ... Q . l've beeo ex poet to keep the ac>me home canned taate aa aood now, aa Some examplee of ia even ie. dealrable. him ln a tank of water u1ed method, thou1h )l•vlng trouble keeping cotta1• cheeee. Also be peachea In my pantry they would have if these formulated food• A consumer who takee auppoaedly to meaaure aomewhat lett accu.rate la coua1• cheeae freah. 1ure your refrigerator that have been there they'd been eaten when are Infant formulas, the time to read labels hla fat content. 11 thl1 called thoakinfold tel\. It. How Jona LI It 1uppoled temperature la cold four or five yeara. They freahly canned. The imltation and "nondairy" a n d com pa re t he method on the up and involves meuurtna the to keep? enouah -lt 1hould be I o o k 1 o m e w h a t discoloration la j\.ltt one producta iuch u milk, ice nutrition at.atements of up? lhlckne91 of a pinch o( •. .A. Cottage cheese no higher than 3~-40 dlacoJored but the J&r• sign that lhe quality h.u cream, cheeae, sour one produ c t with ... A. Weigh In~ a akin with a 1 ecfal 11 ave riahable food de reea F for storing are still sealed. Would deteriorated. cream, coffee creamer; ....:--=-~----=-~~_:_~~_:._:_.:..:.:..:.......;~~:.::.:..:.:.:::..-=--=..:.::.:..:..:_:..:...:...:...:..:...-=....:::..L~..:.=..=--=-:~:::...c.....c.::.;:.=:::.;::.::..:.;:....:..;;.;~_;_;.x....;.....;__~~~...;__-!.::.........::..:...::._;;_;;;;.;.;...-=.;;.;;..=~..;....;;....::..:..::....-=~==-===-~~~~ margarine and imitation margarine ; egg substitutes; Imitation meat, chicken, aausage, bacon strips and bacon bits : and instant brealdast drlnk.s. When the real foods are available, why choose the formulated product instead? Reasons include lower cost , greater conve nience, allergies to natural food ingredients not found in lhe formulated product, and desire to avoid certain food substances -for example, choleeterol in eggs that is not found in the substitute. Sometimes the consumer chooses the formulated product without realizing that it is not lhe same as a real food or because of promotion efforts have led the consumer to believe that the formulated product Is lower in calories or in some way better than lhe food it replaces. Instant breakfast drinks that consist primarily of sugar, flavorings, color, and a few added vitamins such as C and A, have been cleverly promoted as having "aa much vitamin C as orange juice" if not more. Yet their overall nutritional value is no match f o r the multinutrients found in real orange ju.ice, which contains significant amounts of pot.asaium. folacin, thiamin, and vitamin A plus other nutrients. In instant drinks. 100 percent of the calories oome from added sugar, compared to zero percent of the calories from added sugar in frozen reconstituted orange ju.ice. When manufac\,.urers try to duplicat• the flavor, texture and other senaory characteristics of the conventional food, the nutritional com p oai ti on of the formulated products is often a secondary consideration. Imitation milk is an example. To avoid problema wilh flavor and physical stability, only low levels of sodium caseinate (a form of milk protein) or soybean isolate (protein from aoybeana that replaces milk protein) may be uaed. As a reault the Imitation milk product may provide only ~ to ~ as mu$h protein as real milk. Vitamin and mineral levela also may be interior to those of real milk. Becauae coconut oil, which is more saturated than butterfat. has a Ginger adds zest True ginger flavor comes through GINGER SHRIMP 1 pound ahrimp (about 17), peeled 1 ~ tablespoons very finely chopped freah ginger 2 acalHona, finely chopped Vi tMlpoc>n aalt ~ teaspoon ·~ar 2 ~ tableapoooa vegetable oil 3 tablespoona lhetTy In a wee bowl, mix toaether 1hrlmp, 1 tablelpoon of the ~r. 8Calliona, .St and aupr, let stand for 30 minuta. In • wok or a lar1e ak.tJ.Mt. aver modetately hJch beat. beat oll; Mid 1hrimp and marinade with the remalnlnt ~ and IW'·fry about 2 rrilnutea. Stir In the aherry; COYW ~ '1Ver low be9t., cook ju.It unUl 1brlmp an eOobd throuch - about 2 more mlnut.. S.V. at once. Mai. 2 ....,,.,... FRESH DOL MUSHROOMS I-OZ. PKO. ~ SOFT SENSE HAND LOTION INCl.t. II' Of'~, 11-0I.. STL. SCHLITZ BEER ... U~lt Otl l.leMT 11.ot. CAN, u.w • _.. II~. IPIC I IPM •· CUM .... CWID AU.,.._ ..... FRESH PORK ROAST 'AllMlll JOHN ~CHIC IHOUlDlll .. 7t.. ~,2.~~'1_'!.~TT PORK RO~~]__ .. 141 PORK LOIN ROASTS 121 ·-·----·-.. -. .. ~~.2f ~~~.~ SAU~A~E . ···-•• 99c TURKEY DRUMSTICKS 49c .... ". P\A--·--· .. .. -... .. ITALIAN SQUASH DTMPANCY ZUCCHINI ROAITED PEANUTI · , .:. .. 98• ..... ..... _...TD. ........ - LAROE ARTICHOKES ·--· ----" 1r -A--ACt ___ ............. SNAIL Pl.LLETS OR MEAL -cm.,......o•---·---·-ASST. SANSEIVERIA PLANTS ..... 11'\.Afl.-8 ... ITOl-.-CttelftNt •. • RED DELICIOU OXYDOL 01.n11011n. M·OZ. IO• INCLI. 71' 0,, 1" 311 QUARTERED PORK LOI . FAllMlll JOHN IUCID SIRLOIN CUT PORK CHOPS •AMUlllJO• .., • PORK SPARERIBS IA-..IOMlll.COVtl~ l f'YU.l.CH• WHOLE FAYER LEGS CMtei'IN PORK LOIN CHOPS lwtlfT AND JUfCY TROPIC AL MANGOS 'Vl.4., ........ 09 -ONlONS OR RADISHES MllM OtMOwa, .. D •ACM-..0 ...C ... I SP,IOER PLANTS, POTHOS Olt ~ OUl_I, .. MWCM Mtl "'Of POTHOS ON A POLE PLANT 6-~aatNt,WMtUa-19tlU~ . eATM~OOM,Al~D . COt.Ofll, &.llOlL PACI( POTATO CHIPI LAl.o¥M:O--AU'f.-..c---RCl RC 100, DIET RITE cou. ......_-...-.-c .. MOTHER'S COOKlll 1~ .. 141 .. 12• •• 69C .. 1" 4:$1 .. 79c 4i'1 311 311 c;Ri'roTDiN'Nl;;Riia ......... .. -Ult .. •e. o01'&YOH ..... euL -· RED SALAD TOMATOES RIPE, FULL OF FLAVOR PREMIUM RUSSETS Hll.MIUM QllAC>fl> l'OTATOU ORAN&E JUICE TMHWllT 1.01.. CAN, PllOZIN 11!. • 1" ,-----------------~ I -..,,,,.. CIOW'M Ill t t Hl·DRI TOWELS 1 I I • ":I::.t:'~' z9c : I ........ llOLI. I I """'" SHL:::i::i:.-e.l~ I ~------.-,;;;-o;.;M-----~ I ~ MIRACLE WHIP : I . ·"~=D 91c I I -.oa. IAlll I I I I +jhiii8 SIL~~ I L-----------------~ 111 ) . .. , . . Da Ori • OOHt DAIL. y PILOT /WednHdty. April 13. 1883 YOU_,.. tN Dl'AU&.l UNOIR A MIO°' TINeT DATIO MY .. 1'11. UM.Ill YOU TAKI ACT!Otl TO f'aOTIOT YOUll PttOflbn, IT MAY M 10!.0 AT A "*-te aALI. IP YOU NllD AN 8l"-ANATIC>tt OP T .. NAT\HW °' T .. NOCllDtNO AOAIMIT YOU, 'YOU llHOULO CONTACT A LAW'nfl NOTICI OP TitU9Tll'I IA.LI T.I • ...__ NOTICE 18 Hf"'HY QIVEN, 11\At qn WednMC11y, AorH 20, tH3, II 10 00 o'ctock 1 m of Mid d1y, In 11141 room "' ukl4I IOf COflducllno l111t1 .. ·1 SIMI, wtthlll tlll olltoM ol llEAl ESTATE 81CU"'ITIES F.fWICE, IOC119CI 11 2020 North H<ttw1y, 8uo1 204!, In tlll City ot 111t1 An1, County of 011ng1, 8111• qt C1lltornl1, REAL ESTATE 9ECURITIES SERVICE, • Callloml• oorporallon, 11 duly 1ppoln11d Tru1t11 und« end purw1n1 10 1111 pow1< ot 1111 conferred In lh•I Olt1aln o..d of Trutl 1xecu11<1 by ~I JVNQ LIM end KEUN SOOK LIM, hulbend Ind wtl• u jOlnl t1111n11, ,_did A~ugull 17, 1M1, In 8ooll 14193 ot Officlal Record• ot Seid County, 11 p1g1 731, R1cordtr'1 lnetrument No 19781, by rHaon of • breech ot dlfaufl In p1ymen1 or q1rtorm1nc1 of lhl obllg11fon1 ucur1d lh1r1by. Including lhll brNlt or d1t1ull. NOllCI of ""hleh wu recorded December 22 198t •• R1cord1r'1 lnt1rum1n1 No 12-449495, Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST 8100ER FOR CASH, law1ul money Cl 1111 United Slit ... or I CNhllf'I ClheClt dr1wn on • 11111 or national b1n1t, 1 11111 or l1d1r1I credit urilon. or • st111 or tl<llf•I Mvlng• Ind IOln Uaocialloo domlellld ln 11111 11111, au p1yat11e 11 1111 lime ol •II. Ill right, 11119 end lntlrlll 11411<1 ~Y II, 11 Truat11. In lh•I real properly llluele In Mid County •n<I 81111. ci.ecrlbld H fOMowt LOI 7 ot Tr1c1 No 72t3, .. recotdld on a m1p In Book 289, P1g11 46 . 47 and 48 01 Ml11Ce11aneoua M1pe, In th• ottlcl ot lhe County recorder ot nld County Thi S1re11 1ddr1u or other common dealgnellon ot th• reel P'Ol>lr1Y herl4nlbOVI dllCrlbed It purported to be : 14571 Countrywood Lene. lrvlne. Calltorn11. The und1ralgn1d hereby dlaclllmt 111 llablllly tor 1ny lncorrecinen In uld 1treet 1ddrea1 or other common oe.lgn1tloo Sii~ Hie wltl ~ mid• wlthoul w1rr1llty, expreu or lmpfled, regarding ttt11. po11111lon. or 1ncumbr1nc1a. to 11t11ly the prlnclp•I bat1nce ot the NOii or 011111 Obllg1t1on 11cured by H id Oee<I of Trutl, wllh 1nter111 end other 1um1 11 provided therein, pJul 1dvances. It 1ny, under the terms ,,,.,IOI and 1n1er .. 1 on IJUCh 9(fv-es, Ind plut f-. Charg11 Wld expen-ot 1111 Trustee and 01 Chi trusts crMtlCI by MIO OMd OI nutt. T111 10111 1mount ol Hid obllg•llon, Including r111on1bly eatlmeted le11. ch1rg11 1nd upen.-of 11\1Truttee,111111 llml Ol lnltlal publlcatlon Of thlt NOllee, IS $211,581 08 Dated. Merell 25, 1983 208. REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE, 1 Cllltornl1 corpor1t1on, u Trustee. By: ate D J. Morger, Ila Prllldent (SEAL) 2020 N. Broadw1y, Ste Santi Ana. CA 112708 . T1lepl\One (7141953-6810 Publlahtd Or1ng1 Co111 Delly Pilol MW 30, Apr. &, 13. 1983 1528-83 Plate NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF ADRIEN L. NOEL AND OF PETITION TO ADMIN- S TE R ESTATE NO . All7748. To all heirs. beneflcianes. creditors and contingent creditors of Adnen L. Noel and persons who may be otherwise interested In the will and/or estate A petition has been flied by Arthur A. Noel in the Superior Court of Orange County reque1ting that Arthur A. Noel be appointed as per10nal repraentalive to ,administer the estate of Adrien L. Noel (under the independent Adminiltrallon 'of F.states Act). The petition la set for hearing In Dept No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, West, in the City of Santa Ana, California on May 4, 1983 at 9:30 a.m. IF YOU OB.JF.CT to the granting of the petition. you ahould either appear at the bearing and state your objections or file written .objections with the court before the hearing. Your ~purance may be in pel"llOO ~ by your attorney IF YOU ARE A C!REDITOR or a contingent <ftditor of the deceued. you 'must file your claim with the court or present It to the p ersonal representative appointed by the court Within four months from the date of first 111uance of Jenen as provided in .ection "700 of the California Probate <;ode. The time for filing daims wW not expire prior th four monthl Crom the date odf. the hearing noticed above. "T YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If 'iou are a penon lnteretited Eell1ate, you may eerve the execut o r or latrator, or upon the y for the executor or ·*1miniltrator, and me wllh the court with proof of .ervlce, a written request •tatlna that you desire special notJce of the filing of •an Inventory and ~t of estate u.e\.I or of the petitions or accoun ts mentioned In ~of 1200 and 1200.~ Q.f the California Probate Code. Pullll.tied Or~ C-t Dall1 J1Uo1. Mr1I u. ta. 11. aea am.a MUC ll>TICf: \ • IHIMPOO • COllDITIOllEI • CIEME lllllE c IEG. 1.49 IS-OZ lfG. OI l ·IOOT fOIMt.ilAS fOI NOIMAl 01 Of\ T MAii ~&­ ~CK REG. 12.99 llOllZEMA SKiii CREAM 2~7~YAlUl 14-0Z I ONUS Sill ~ • SHULT ON OLD SPICE DEODORAllT 1~~2 .S9 )• .. oz tfCUUt Ot MUSI MAlll· CUTEll THlnS nAIL EllAMR 3~(~.99 99~f9 IOI 01 30 PAOS GILLETTE 'DAISY' SHAVERS CtlMl 01 llO\T Amo SMADO COLGATE lllSTAllT SH AUE 39 crw1N age H:::: ~~:s ll·OZ. IONDlD DACION8 IOI SLEEPllll BAI MATCHING FOLDING PATIO CHAIR 9~~12.99 'If t01y outdoer IM!tf. CAMEO IAGGED .. ClllDIES llG. 4.99 1:9~A U llG.19c """'fOWU. .. • .... Cl0111 , • ••. ··" ... 6-.... ,,., . . . 1°01. TO ' 1 ·0Z. SAGS. YOUI <•• 43-QUAIT ICE CHEST 2411 43-quort copodty wrt+I enameled 1te1I upper a~n and rusa.proof 01herllte bo .. DELUXE WHIED CHlllE LOUllBE 1Z!! ... 0111l1ty luWer <1Mlr11<hlfl. ............. ..... ~ ...... ,,• •tMt .__ .. ...,,, s' e ........... ' ........ MU'I . .... , ........... ....., . .. ,... ............. ~ ......... MTA_. •IU I.""' •Ce* .............. ., .. ...., .. ....._ •11tlt .................... .... ...... c..tw , Prk11 Gee4 Wt4fita4-r. ''"' I Jth thr11 f11"4e11 APfll I tth. S.me lttmt At ••t11llf Pr1<t1. • SOFT•llE LIBHTBIUI 88 HG. 2 .99 BETTY CROCKER SUNSHINE SUPER MOIST HI-HO CAKE Miii CRACKERS 89 !H 99~PH PllCE PllCE u·~.oz. ASSOIUD flAYOU WlffU STOCIS IAST LIMIT ~ MARINERS COVE CLAM CHOWDER 89 !(1 PllCE 1 S·OZ. W*U STOCIS lASI UMIH ~ OCEAll SPRAY JUICE DRlllKS 1'·01 WMIU STOCIS IAST llMll J FIRESIDE 2-LB. BAB FIG BARS 1 ~,~ PllCI WMIU nous LAST. DElllllSOll'S CHILI ~o:" c::s aaa~EI aa~n PACI PllCE Pll(( l'lt·OZ. AUll. flAYOIS. WMU nous un. l•T 1. ts.oz. Wiii.i STO<ll WT. UMIT 4. 4!D DISPOSAllE DIAPERS 19 llG. 6.49 l .. • • • ,• p . ~ • 'I • tounta in a lley High's Dave Leon ard . ~ 20) slides under to steal second base as Ed ison shortstop Todd Mabe takes a high throw in ¥esterday's Sunset League con test. • ... •I I ., DlllyPllDI WIONL!SOAY. APRIL 13, 1'18:J BUSINESS STOCKS E5 E6 UC Irvine vaults into first place in SCBA race. E2. Baseball card tells Stoddard the way to • Will By JOHN SEV ANO Of tM .,.., ......... A plain old bubble gum card played an Instrumental role in beating the Angela laat night. Hard to believe? Well, Seattle pitcher Bob Stoddard was skeptical, too, until he tamed the Angels o n five hits in the Mariners' 8-1 victory before 22,- 912 at Anaheim Stadium. · The way Stoddard tells the story, Gaylord Perry approached the youngster shortly after he was bombed by the New York Yankees (five runs on seven hits in 3 ~ innings) in hi.s first start this .season. Perry, it seems, had detected a flaw in Stoddard's delivery and was trying to explain to t h e 27-year-old just what he was doing w rong. "You're too tight. You're not throwing freely," advised Perry. "Your elbows are in here," lae added, keeping his close to hlB body, "rather than out here," as Perry pushed them away . Stoddard d idn't understand. So Perry went back to his locker, pulled out last year'a bubble gum card of himself. and showed Stoddard exactly what he meant. The picture showed Perry's arms extended away from his body. Stoddard fin a lly got the message. "I have this habit of tucking my hands in against my body," the right-hander explained. "It's a problem I've had off and on ever since college. When I get my hands free, and out in front of me, I pit.ch better. "Perry noticed what I was doing wrong, and tonight I really felt good out there. I was keeping the ball down, and I had a good attitude." It w as one of those nights where the entire Seattle ball club could do no wrong. The Mariners collected 14 hits, (See BASEBALL, Page E%) Barons get it done early; pad lead ,. By)\OGER CARLSON °'.._.,..,,......,, t'ountain Valley Ksgh's Barons have been making a living off others in the la~ going -but they turned it around ~rday. scoring four times in the third inning on the way to a 6-2 Sunset Le9gue bueball decision at Edbon High. Because of it, and an earlier victory ov.;r Ediaon, the Barons find themselves tw9 games up on the Chargens and a game ahead of Huntington Beach in the race for the title. · It wasn't an overwhelming type of victory -all but one of their six Pena finds 'easy mark in Astros I . J..OS ANGELES (AP) -Even ~ they're the only team in th• major leagues without a ~ this aeuon, the Houston A8froS aeem to be doing almost ~right -except win. t ~y dro~ their eighth in a ro,, last t to open the new se•son, a -1 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers. markers were a direct result of Edison errors -but Barons Coach Tom DeKra11 isn•t worned whether his team's scoring is "earned" or "unearned." "There's a halo above us right now," said DeKraii, the Barons' first-year coach. "I'm young and we're young, but we·re growing. Sometimes we've got five juniors in the starting lineup and I think Bob Sharpnack 1s the best sophomore pitcher in Orange County." Sharpnack struck out seven and walked none in going the distance. s p11c1 ng out six hits in upping his personal record to 3-2. · The victory gives Fountain Valley a 6-2 league record and it's 12-3-1 overall for the No 9-raled Barons m CIF 4-A circles Edison, meanwhile, saw its No. 8 status in the 4-A damaged , and the Chargers' lack of defense was a major reason "We should have won that game." said a dasappomt.ed Ron LaRuHa. "Every run (except one) they scored was unearned (thanks to six Edison miscues)." Shaun Takkmen went the distance for Edison, but was the hard-luck loser And lf Joe Niekro falla tonight in the final game of the aeries, the '83 Ast.roe will match the modem National Leque reconi q lorlMs at the start of a seaaon oQntne, a dubioul honor shared ~the 1918 Brooklyn Dodgen, 1R9 Boaton Braves and 1962 New York Meta. Winning effort Jamie Jamison of Newport Beach finished first in the K class m last weekend's powerboat race at Irvine Lake. w hen Fountain Valley exploded for four runs an the third inning with three singles and three errors all that was required. ' Steve Pratt got aboard because of an Edison error. Dave Leonard walked and another error loaded the bases. Kevin Empung singled to center to score one run and another came across when the ball was misplayed in the outfield. Jay Russell, the Barons' designated hitter who had doubled earlier, singled in Lopez, then Pete Piampiano squeezed in F.mpting. lAst night the problem was Atejauidro Pena, the Dodgers' 2a.year-old right-bander who Wf• making hi• first major lfHue start. You can bet on Rozelle's action •A OMt1me reliever ;who took µ_p starting over the wir. ter in his native Dom1nican Republic, Pena acattered a half-dozen ainglea Oftr 6~ innings before Steve Howe picked up to preeerve the wln with his fint 1&ve of the .....,._ Pena beat the A1troa in relief on opening ct.y at.>. Pedro Guerrero. St.eVe Yeager and Greg Brock cracked solo homen -aa many home runs aa tHe f..atroa have managed aU 1eaton -to account for Loi ~es· aCoring. ' H e'll aet another atart, believe me," aaid Dodger Mena1er Tom Laaorda , who 1111 ci.d Pena from a number of ~aie. M hia No.~ start.er. The story ls aging but worth the timely telling one more time. The investor calls his bookmaker and 1s informed the day's activity involves 12 National Football League games and he bets them all. He also loses them all .. The next day, he rushes a call through to the bookJe who advaes his client he has six National Baaketball Association games. The guy bets them all and loeee them all. The next day, he calla again and with llOme desperation in his voice, he asks what ia gotnc on and the bookJe sa.ya he regrets to inform him that all he has are four National Hockey LHaue games. "Hockey?" the client gupe. "What the hell do I know about hockey?" It ii a sad at~te of aflaira that Art Schlichter doa not know a crat deal about SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER basketball, race horses or, presumably. Cootball . The report out of New York said that Schlichter. rookie quarterback for the Baltimore Colts b a d expe rie n ced a somewhat lengthy run of ll1 fortune and had bk>wn In the neighborhood of $350,000 wagering with a firm of bookmaken. The story goes that the booklm began putting preaure on Schlichter for monies due, whereupon Art blew the whistle and the FBI raided the joint. Outatanding, besides the money, Is a comment Crom Pete Rozelle on the matter. At least, the comm.laioner of the NFL has said nothing for the enlightenment of the general public. In private, Pete said, "gen. I don't need ttus nght now.'' The NFL office said It was conducting an investigation but no probe aeema necessary. Schlichter came forward and admitted his habit and what it bu cost him ao there ii very little left for NFL sleuths to uncover It would appear the Youn& quarterback is compulaive. Reporters checkinJ him out found that he bu been a regular around race track1 in Ohio since he waa a (See YOU CAN, Paae El) . Ecasy victories lor OCC, •' Golden West, Gauchos Jeff Gardner wu 3-for-6 with two doublets; Tlnqco f1niahed the day with a 4-for-6 performance, including lour RBI and a double to fO w1th hil h~r; Joe Kwolek wu 4·fOt·5 with two doublee; and KomelJl WU 3-for-5. Mike Caro111 protec tec& hll conlerence-leadlnf blttina anrap with a 1-for-2 performance, which dropped hia averaae two notdMle to .523. fullerton'a Amin David had two homera and two doublH ln five ~ant9 at the plate, knockl.nc in ah< n11111, but the lO·run ic:. drope Full•rcon to 9-8 ln confer.nc.w. Colclea • ett 6, Compton 0 J'~ J:ric Mehlachau and Lanny • OeRoee combined on the pf tchtna pm, wtth only a fourth·lnnll\ll alnile 1polllna a no-hit bid. Bob Grandatalf got the R\.11\len off and runnll\g with a two-run llnale ln the fifth, and Soott F'Olter went l·lor-3 and drove ln a palr of runa. Orandataff'• hit e)(tended hll hltUn, 1\reak to etaht pmet. Oolden Wett ,.malned in • Ue for aecond ~· In \he conference with Oranae t at 10-3. f Mthltchau wmt the first flw ln:nlnlt. .irtktn, ou\ five and walkln, ..wn. Dt&ee pkked up the MW by hurlinl the final f04.&r 11.'0ntltll framM. SaddlebMk 9, D M~ 3 The Oauchoe picked up their fourth atrai9ht victory In the Pacific CO.at Conference ana retained • 3 ~·sarne lldvantap in the Northem Olvtaton. _ Sophomore left-hander Geor1• Bonilla iatt.ertd 10 hill In earnln, hil lt>cth victory of the yev aplnat just one to.. Saddl back raced to a M IMd ln the fint thNe tnntno behind Jeff Hoim.., who had two cfou~. Mark Henkel, who wtmt 2·for·4. and Stiwe Morpn'1 double to knack ln • f!llr ol Nnl tn ttw ..cond 'Mini· TM Ga~hoe a>edMie.,. nMftded n;.d trip U>t'nOITOW, vtlltlni 01Wiatl. 1-. Oilers, Mar_ina triu1nph Huntington Beach High'• Oilers jumped on Ocean View pitching for five runs in the second inning and pitcher Gary Buc k e ts made it stand up yesterday for a 5-2 decision over the visiting Seahawka in Sunaet League baseball action. The victory keepa the Oilen one game o ff the pace of Fountain Valley, while Ocean View's dem ise keeps the Seahawks in the league cellar. Huntington Beach pounded out 10 hits, including a triple by Dean Tomasick and a double by Jim Kennedy. The big five-run inning wu ignited by Scott Green's single. Bobby Rehling kept lt going wtth a two-out sing.le, then T~ doubled to left to score two teammates. Billy Thompeon got aboard on an Ocean View error, Lou Harrtaan followed with an RBI- single, Charley Hartwell lin&led, then Kennedy unloaded with a two-run double. Harri1an finished the day 3-for-4. Buckels .ecattered four l1f\llea and struck out five. H is bid for a ahutout waa spoiled in the (lfth Inning when Phil Hillman 1troked a two-run single. • £"1aewhere in the Sunset League yesterday: Marina\ 4-2 The Vlkinp malntalned their -Quest for a berth ln the CD' 4-A playoffl wlth a victory at Weatmtnater, keepll\I Marina Within two pmell of aeOond place HuntinltOn Beach. Martna tallied thrft runa ln the top of the fourth lnn1na to break a acorele11 deadlock withoUt the help of a ~ bit. Shane nor-led ~f wtth a walk. Pete Wheeler reach" on an error and Todd Conw-.y wu walked to tW \hi a.-. A wUd pitch forwd home cint run and two fielder'• Chol.:. anaw.d 'women to came billM. 1n tM tilth. ..... ~ 'h• flrl& Vlklftl bet, ....... ._ ... ..._ Adlln KMll hid a ...,_.M a1n11e tor thi •1 .._rJllllll ... hJt . . ., .. • . ~· Orano•Co••IOAILVPILOTIW•dnudey,Ap~,~11~13~·=1~9~13~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Nugg l ' chunctt! darnag d Fast-starting Lougani considers himself an underdog From AP dh1patches lNOl ANAPOLIS World a <.'humpwn Greg Lougunh; from UC 11 vuw <.'Vns1den. hlmlk•IC an underdog tn this wt•ek's U S indoor diving <:hamp1onsh1ps du1.• lO rrt't·nt appendix surgery The <.-ompet1t1on at thl' Indiana University Namtorium bt•gulS today and ends Sunday with the men's and women's platfonn Canals "I had the sur~l·ry ubout six or eight weeks ago." said Lougnni:. yt.>!>terday after a workout. "l was back diving about two weeks lau•r, but I was hm1tf'd in what I could dv 1 <.'Ouldn't do any of my optionals I e<1uldn't do any tow<.'r d1v1r1g and l t·ouldn't go into a workout full-COr<'l' .. Last y<.•ar's :I -meter and platform world t.·hampion. who won both cvt>ntS wht.•n the 1982 National Sports Festival was hl'ld here. has won thl· last n1nl' nattonal I -m e ter d1v1ng championships ht.> has ent<.•red "I'm nut 1n as good a shape as I really should be," said the 23-year-old "I t•an't expect too much You can't expect mirc.cles overnight. I've been training fairly hurd, but my training did get interrupted by my surgery. In a sense. I can say that I'm the underdog." A shoulder injury kept Lougan1s from competing an last year's indoor c hampionship meet. Ron Merriott, a former NCAA champion at Michigan, won last year's indoor national <.'Ompet1tion at I and 3 meters and will be back seeking to repeat. . Wendy Wyland. a teammate of Lougarus on Ron O'Brien's Mission Viejo Nadadores. 1s the favorite an women's platform divinR Quote of the day Bob Uecker, baseball broadcaster. on his lack of awards as a maJOr league catcher: "But they had a Bob Uecker Dav Off for me once in Philly " Kings spark Team Canada STOCKHOLM. Sweden -Dave ~ Taylor of the Los Angeles Kings of ' the National Hockey League scored twice within 1:47 late in the game last night to give Team Canada a 6-4 victory over Sweden in their hnal exhibition before the World Hockey Championships. Taylor and Kings' linemates Marcel Dionne and Charlie Simmer were the only NHL players on Canada's team. Meinhardt, Webb earn All-CIF Oriole blow lead, rally _ Rtclr Demp1t)'11 tle-br•aklna&. la two-run doubltt ln \he aevcnth tnntna lifted Baltimore \0 1& 10·8 victory to 1poil C hlo.co'• homo opener. The Whik• Sox had overcome an early ecvtin·run d(lficlt rn take an 8· 7 adv1int1.1aic: before the Orioles came lxick with three ln t.hc iieventh . . In other American Le•iUC baseball action, Frank White'• tle-brcakln" •Ingle triggered a four-run eighth lnntns that11ft.ecf Kanau City to a 5. I vktory ov"'r Bolton , . Dave Hostetler drove in both Texu run.I with a home run and bases-loaded walk and pitcher Rick Honeycutt scattered seven hlll to 1park the &ngers to their sixth victory in seven games, 2-1 over Cleveland . Paul Molitor'• third hit of the day, a double to right, drove ln Jim Gantner with the winning run as Milwaukee rosed Toronto, 6-5 Tom Brookena collectf'd two singles, a doubll' and a homer. and he and Glenn Wilson drove Ill three runs apiece to seark Detroit to a 13-2 romp of the New York Yankees, spoiling Billy Marlln'1 home debut In hill third term as Yankee manager . . Blll Almon lined a two-out single in the bottom of the l4th lruung to score Bob Kearney and give Oakland a 4-3 victory over Minnesota. Cubs finally get first win Keith Moreland cfacked a three· la run homer in the first inning and Steve Trout scattered nine hits over 8 11.i innings for his first National League victory as the Chicago Cubs gamed their tirst wm of the season by beating the Expos, 5-0, in Montreal's home opener yesterday . . Elsewhere in the NL, Larry Milbourne'• bases- Loaded le off reliever Nell Allen with two outs In the bottom of the 10th lnnlng aave Philadelphia a 4.3 victory over the New York Mets . . . ,Rookie right-hander Rick Bebenna allowed two hits 1n five mrungs and singled twice in his maJOr-league debut as Atlanta trimmed Cincinnati. 4-1 . Keltb Hernandu bowled ·over catcher Tony Pena with the winning run of the 10th inning. then St. Louis put down a bases-loaded. no-out Pittsburgh threat in the bottom of the innmg to hand the Pirates their first loss of the season, 4-3 . . Chill Davis homered twke and right-hander Fred Breining continued his mastery over San Diego, pacing San Francisco to a 6-5 victory. Breining, 2-0, is now 5-0 lifetime against the Padres. Steve Garvey, playing his first game at home since being acquired by San Diego as a free agent, accounted for the Padres' hrst run with a homer. Two Sunset League women basketball st.a.rs -Ed1S0n High's Gretchen Memhardt and Ocean View's Tamt Webb -have been chosen on the All-ClF 4-A thlrd team by the First lnterstate Bank ~thletic Foundation's selection l:)(>ard. BASEBALL CARD . • • Meinhardt led Edison t.o the Sunset championship and to the second round of the CIF playoHs. The 6-0 junior averaged 16 7 points a game. AJl~Clf 4-A Fl,.1 T .. m Player. 9ct1001 HI-CL ""!Jo S Aroenean1. AH• Loma 6-1 St 27 11 M RasptMwry. MornlnQSkle S-10 Jr 21 1 S Busard. LB Poty 5-10 St 15 1 Ann Menlte. Buena 5-9 $1 9 0 Holly Ford. Santa Batb•r• 6-0 Jr 20 1 Lynn She<ow Mo<nlngstOe 5· 10 Sr 26 1 A. Ct\tlSt!an Lynwood 6-1 Sr t9 3 M Stewna. Watlake 5·7 So ICI 2 L .. Btodt. Buen• 5·7 Jr II 2 P9'M Getty Royal 5·9 St ICI II Stecy Smith, M~ TNm S-7 Jr Ill 0 A Wltuama. Jordan 5-11 Sr 14 0 ,,_ Delucia. Sant• B••b 5.9 Jr 14 3 Tllh Wllllama. LB Poty 6-0 Sr II 1 M Stllerni. W .. li.ka 6-0 Sf 17 3 c Thomas. Aolllng Hiii• 8.-5 Jr 27 6 C.,ol er.ndt. Cerritos &-1 Sr 22 0 Talllo NII/II. No Torrance 5.7 Jr 14 5 o Saundera. lnolewood 5-11 Sr 13 O Shannon ISoyd, Uptand 5-41 Jr 16 5 St9CY Hunl. '"" Poty f>.7 So 14 4 ThlrdT- Mary Reilley. Buena 5· 11 Sr tO 1 Pauline Jordan. Mulr &-1 Fr 7 0 Jiii Walll, LAlll-ood 5-11 Jr 22 0 Shatt Nattal. Cu~er City 9·0 So 18 0 Otetctleft Meinhardt, Ren-M .If. 1t.7 J~t.f Slmcllt. RoYel 5·10 Jr. 13 5 Cllt" Connolly. So Torranoe &-2 Sr 20 0 T-1 W.etb, 0oeen View t-10 er. 20.1 '-C19"CMll. Sant• ..,bar• 6-0 Sr 10 0 Kai8nl Savoy. ComPlon 5-5 Sr 18 0 Kim Neal. S..,ta MOOICll 5-11 Sr 12 0 eo.p111yer1 ot 11141 yMr Holly l'Ot"d (Sant• Batbafa) llnd LYN' Sllatow (Mornlnglli<lel From Page E1 eight for extra bases. Steve Henderson had two doubles and a triple. Dave Henderson (no relation) had a home run and a single. So did Ken Phelps. Mike Witt (0-2), who started for the Angels, lasted until midway through the sixth inning when the Mariners sent 10 hatters t.o the plate. Seeond baseman Julio Cruz started the inning with a bunt single, and by the time he batted again the Mariners had scored stX runs to break open a l · l deadlock. The Angels, meanwhile. were stifled on Hve hits (three of them doubles). The only run they could muster came in the Cint when Daryl Sconiers walked and came home on a double by Brian Downin~. "ln Palm Springs (the Angels' spring training complex). I saw the same guys and the sar:ne lineup,"pid Stoddard who. with the win. evened his record at 1-1 and lowered his ERA from 12.27 to 4.26. "I like to see a team a second time around because now I know what they can hlt. I'm the kind of a guy who really likes to arout a team. I take a lot of notes and l YOU CAN BET ON ROZELLE. watch, and l really thought I had a pretty good idea of l:}ow to pitch to these guys. "With guys like (Bob) Grich, (Bob) Boone and (Tim) Fob, you have to run the ball ln on them. With a guy like (Doug) DeCinces, you have to keep the ball away because he covers so much of the plate "Downing and (Fred) Lynn are the toughest for me because they do a lot of adjusting. All l know 1s I wanted to finish this game because the Angels are such a great team." And, who would have ever thought that Perry. who isn't even scheduled t.o pitch in this thret>-game series which concludes tonight, would turn out to be a thorn in the Angels' side nonetheless. Said the cagey veteran on helping the youngsters; "I jWit think it's part of my job. And I told him (Stoddard) it's hia job too to watch his teammates. "l watch every pitcher. I watch our pitchers and I watch the opposing pitchers." And .o, just for kicks, what did Perry find wrong with Witt's performance? "It just wasn't his night," he answered with a smile. • • So. Rozelle hu a problem. Darrell Grlffllb -.v 30 pulnlAI m lll\d f\lc:l&ey Oretn ud 28 polnta, 12 lllld•ta 1md c-ljht t•al1 lu•I nJ1i1ht 111 Uwh ht•at Denvu 12~ l HI In thc- Nutlonal Bukt•tma AN.cid1mc11\ Tht> I.ma hurt the Nua1111.•t11' plu utf chun(U, 01 Oonvt;r trail.I i<Jal'Wl1 City by um> "umt-for thl" flnul Wwtem Conft•tt-nc1.• playoff lwrth Kun1a1 City notch<.>d 11 112· l 02 vktory In Chlcaio WI Mlke Woodaon tK"'rc.'1.1 a iiami'·hl6'h 34 point., lndudln11 four cluu·h tNtt! throw1 In tht• flnul mlnuw . Kevin McHale, 1tort1nar In pll.1 ct• ut Injured torwaard Larry Bird, pumped In 20 polnta and pullt'd down 14 rebound• 01 Oollton held off a tourth-quarwr rally to ~ut N~·w Jen&ey, g9.93 . . Dominique . Wllldna 11cored 26 polnt11, Including two that put Atlunt.n l'htiud fol' iood law In thr fourth quortc-r, 1,111 thf' Hawk.a held otf Phllt1df'lphlu, 102-97 . . . Maurice Lucu !iCOred elght polnta ln the final 11x mlnutetl aa PhOl'nix came from l:xlhlnJ w wp Golden State, 115 108 . . Seattle guard Gui Wllllam• srored 10 pointa in the fourth quart.er as the SuperSol'li<.'11 rallied to defoat Portland, 106· lOl Baseball today J 9~3 The Braves having left Boston played tht-1r hrst game rcprt>senttng Milwaukee and defeated the Reds, 2·0 at Cincinnati behind Max Surkont's pitching 1954 Hank Aaron played the first of his ret'Ord 3,298 ma.)Or league games m left fit-Id for Milwaukee and went hatless m five plat.t: appearancs as the Braves lost 9-8 to the Cin<.'innal1 Reds. 1972 -The first players strike In baseball h1st.ory ended. Tabb in fair condition World record-setting distance II runner Mary Decker Tabb was listed in fair condition yesterday following injuries she suffered in a traffic accident Monday in Eugene. "She's _just uncomfortable and has some minor compbcations," said n hospital spokesman .. " Amber Furst a sports car driver from the Paof1c Northwest, h~ become the second woman driver to enter the May 29 lndianapohs 500 auto race . . . Chicago Cubs pitcher Dickie Noles was sued yesterday for $500,000 by a Cincinnati pobce officer who Noles allegedly assaulted last Saturday night South Carolina State basketball coat·h J ohnny Jones has been fired Former p1tchN Carl Morton, the 1970 National League rooloe of the year, collapsed after jogging yesterday and died of a heart attack Morton, who was 39, compiled an 87-92 record in eight maJor-league seasons with Montreal and Atlanta. Television., radio TV: Basketball Lakcrs at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m., Channc•I 9. Tennis -Coverage of the Pacific Southwt>:>t Tournament. 9 pm .. Chann<'l 56 (taped earlic·r today) RADIO: Baseball -St.•attlc at Angels, 7:25 pm .. KMPC (710). Houston at Dodgers. 7:35 p.m .. KABC (790). .. 12 Anteaters rout . C I 49ers, 11-4 Tht• UC Irvine• ba*"bull IA!am haa stamped lt.1elf u ,. contender m the· Southern California Baaeball ' Aaaodation following ye11tercJay'• 11·4 romp over viaiUng Lon" Beach St.ate. · The win was UCl'11 IK.'V<'nth victory m nlnf' ' • outings thl• aeason 1n SCBA play and put the Anteater-. l.n flnt plal't! Ad:am Ging enJOyt.-d a productive afternoon, c.'OUe<.·tlng 10 tot.al baK"ll with a p61r of homen and~ double. ·• Thl' Anteaters c·hU!lt'd 49(•r :u:e T11n Tahu, whcr • ent~red tht.> t'Ont.etlt with a 5-1 mark Taht1 failed to' retire a butter and UCI lt.'<i 6-0 before Long Beach ' State wa.s quickly t9n't:'d to go to na bullpen. · • ln the first. an error. walk and hit loaded th ~. Steve Haworth brought in one run with a · . single, Mike Rupp followed with a two-run doubl~•w· and Ging then blast<.'<! a three-run homer over the" scoreboard in right c.-enter for a 6-0 advantage. · · The AnteatNs waited JUSt one inning to continue the onslaught In the third, catcher Mike .. Rupp reached on an error and was brought in by Ging's double. Dan Trinidad singled in Ging anq Darren Kelchner brought m the final run with a base hit. UCI gave wanning pitcher Carl Ruther a 10-0 cushion in the fifth thanks tu a wild pit.ch, but Long Beach ret.abated with four runs an the sixth on a single and three doubles. Ging then hit his se<:ond homer of the· afternoon. a solo shot in thf' bottom of the sixth, to complete the scoring. . Gary Miller and Gary Brahs hurled the ftnal two innings to preserve Ruther's second victor);" over of the season against one loss The road gets tougher for the Anteaters beginning this weekend when they meet highly· regarded Pepperdme at UCl The two ~e~ms · meet in a double-header on the Waves held Saturday. Father-son duel at Indianapolis? .. . . -. .. . . LNDlANAPOLIS <AP) -For the first ume t~ history. a father and son <.'Ould be racing against each other when the lndy 500 race begins on May 29. Both AJ Unser Jr . who only was seven years old when his father won the race for the first time back in 1970, and his dad are pleased with th~ possibility. ' "Little Al didn't have to be a race driver," said , AJ Sr., who will be driving for the highly successful Roger Penske racing team this year as he seeks to join A.J Foyt as a four-lim<' wiJUler here. CdM • eases to victo ry UC/ back on track after second win in row The Corona del Mar High tennis learn used a pair of tiebreaker victories in the early· going as a spark to a !iUrpnsmgly easy 2 4 \I: • 3 '-"' v 1 ct or y over Laguna Beach yesterday. CdM ace Brien Sullivan did not lose a !let ln the mat.ch The No. 6-ranked high 9Chool player in Southern California has indicated he will sign with Brisham Young University today. Laguna Beach got off to a fast start as Wade Berry defeated Scott Brownsburger in an t-arly singles matchup, but Perry suffered a pulled stomach muscle and was forced to default his final match Corona del Mar 1s now 10·0 overall. In other hagh school matches. Newport Harbor stopped El Toro. 21-7, and in the Sunset League. Fountain Valley got past Edison, 15 111-12 111 In . .college action. UC Irvine continued to rebound from 1t.s rugged week with a 7 -2 triumph over San Diego State. On the community college level. the Orani;(e Coast r.1en and TENNIS women each blanked Coldt•n West, 9-0 Newport Harbor's doubles team posted a sweep against El Toro to close out its triumph Rick Conkey and Mike Hayes. along with Charlie Baxter a.nd Scott Read , w e r e never threatened. losing a total of four games overall. The Tars are 9-2 overall and 6-2 in Sea View League play. There's a three-way tie for the Sunset League lead among Huntington Beach. Edison and Fountain Valley afl!?r the Barons notched a narrow win over the Chargers No. 1 smgJes player Scott Lee swept to give the Barons four pomts. as did the doubles team of Stan Wendzel and J .L Maga. who have lost just one set m league play thLs season. UC Irvine. which endured a schedule (eatunng some or the top college outfits in the nation. lS back on course at 26-5 following the Anteaters' easy win over San Diego State. • Will Mayer breezes to LOS ANGELES (AP) -In another second-round Second-seeded Gent.• Mayer match, fourth-seeded Brian downed college star Richard Gottfried breeud to a 6·1, 6-3 Gallien 6-3, 6-3 last night in a victory over Matt Doyle. !lecond-round match of the Play was h eld up twice Pacific Southwest Tennis because of raln a t t.he Loa tournament. An~les Tenn.la Club yesterday. The tournament's top seed, Sixth-seeded Mel Purcell abo Jimmy Connors. wu to play his took a two-set triumph In the first match of the event today, second round, downing Todd facing qualifier Erle Fromm. Wltaken 6·2, 6-4. No. 8 Sandy May~r controlled the mau:h Mayer advanced with • hard- The Anteaters, who have played six matches in 12 days. won their second straight match. Enc Quade, who played with a sore elbow, was the only singles player to suffer a setback. falling in the third-set tiebreaker. The Orange Coast men's squad had little tromble disposing of Golden West as the dbubles team of Jeff Barnard and Todd Braun remained unbeaten at 13-0 this St'a.son. ln the women's confrontation. the Sues swept as Tracy ltibant won in strlllght sets in singles and then tt>amed with R~mal Ellison to do the same in doubles. Merry Bantz defea~ her foe in straight sets from the No 3 lot LEASE A 1983 COUGAR FOR s19925 P ER MONTH* From Page E1 quarterback at Ohio Stale A apokeeman at o t.raek near Columbo.I u.ld thl.s of Schllchtcr, "He would bet slx or aeven hundred on a horse that had vtrtua11y no chance of wlnnma. He was a gambler but not a tldlled pmbler.'' No kfdd.lna, that Paul Hornung of the Green Bay Packers~ Alex Karas of the Detroil ·I10N were 1et down f o r a t u I 1 y e'a t' b y c h e commlaaioner of the NFL. The charge and oonvk:tion ln·..rolved gambling even thouah the amounts w~~ am.all and neither player hod wasered on the ou\L'Ome of any pine embracing ht. own team. Art Schlichter may have more than one problem. lie will ~rtainly havo to take tlepa to rid him1elf of hl1 compultlon to woger on anything that moves and lf ht hu blown tha\ much on polnl apreadl. he la quite likely behind on hit car payments. moet of lhe way u Gallien, a fought !5-7. 7--6, 6-2 victory over .Pep~rdlne senior who was on John Ftugerald of Australi.. the NCAA champion doubles In an upset, Tim WUkl1on team. broke 11ervlce to it.art the knocked off 1eventh-seeded second set only to have hla Mark Edmond9on of AUIU'alla, aervicci broken ln the next aame 6·4, 1-6, 6-3 and tee ~er pull away to the The lourna~ent conclude• vic~t.:.....~~~~~~~~-::::S:un~da::.·;.,._~~~~~~~_. Leasing Isn't right tor everyone, but may be the answer to your new car needs. Leese a brand new 1983 Mercury Cougar tor $199.25 per month on a closed end lease, with no down payment and 36 month frM maintenance. & warranty. Com• In and hetp ue find th• right leaae plan for you. Rozelle, of roune, will have to dlaclpUne Schlicht r . More prec:Uely, Mi wW havt,to kick the kid out of footbaU for at teat a year. Garnblina and It• obvious undellrw.ble Maodatl~ .,. t.he cS.rW ol any pro<-lonal •J)Ol"L A p.idme oan C1'89W an tmap of atupldlt)' and n.alvet.e In any dlNC11da but thu OM UM once Uie .....,.._ .,._ thet. the IND• la not on the 1.v.l, the pmt. ""'· It w• 20 ,_,.. aAO thla monlh ' ... Still, an example had to be made and one of the atcnttlcant thlnga •bout tt\e case• of Hornun1 al'd Karra1 ·w&1 that both pl~ und«ntood. Tho altuatton la even more delicate todaj. Roulle haa the concern of the nar<.'Otk problem wherein there I• the fear of addlcta lhavtnil. ~ti In OC'der &o raltl funicW for ttM 1Uppor1 of ha bl Then too, lnlormln, on certain types can be haurdoua to one's health. One can find his aport c h ansed from football to awlmmtng .. .ln Cheopeake Bay, c:eweartns a cement overco.l. 'l'he BalUmore Culta have a problem. They will have &o do eomethll'\I abou\ a quarterbeck lX'CIUIO ~ ao.lJ.e la aot:ni W iake one of \he1ri away for •t lrift ON ..-on. You ~ t.t on Ii. MM H•f'lter llwi., Ceit • ...._ ...... • Pitchers in control in Sunset It wu a day of thutouta ln th Sw.t Le.aue women'• .90ttball race yHterday aa Fountain Valley, Ocean Vlew and Marinll all blanked th•lr foee. The molt 1urprt1ing outcome wu at ltdiaon where Charger p(tchina ace Julie Carpenter loet her tint 1ame after l~ victories Outduelln& Carpenter wu aenior rlaht·hander '?'racy Vaniman who waa ln control throughout, striking out four and not walking a batt.er. Vaniman is 5-0 overall and 2-0 In league, while the Baro ns moved to 2-1 in league. &iison dropped to 1-2. Kelly Winn drove in the Barons' first run with a single and a bases-loaded hit by Therese Puchalski delivered Fountain Valley's other run. In other Sunset action, Jadue Oakley tossed a two-hit shutout a1 Ocean View poated a 3 -0 triumph over Huntington Beach and Marina pushed over a run an the bottom of the seventh to trim Westminster, 1-0. Oakley did not strike out a battu, but also allowed JUSt one walk and harmless singles in the fourth and seventh innings. Kelly Bode drove in one run and the other two Seahawk tallJes came home on a passed baU and an error. Marina broke up a pitching duel with i\s seventh-inning run u Tracy Ferguson doubled to left.-center to score Kris Kegy, whio had led off the inning with a single. Julie Lanen struck out nine and walked four for the Yikes: I Jerry f.>imm Pimm takes UCSB pos t SANTA BARBARA (AP) Jerry Pimm, who ll"d Utah into • the NCAA tournament in five of his nine seasons as head basketball coat·h . resignt>d yesterday to become coach at UC Santa Barbara. Pimm's assistant, Lynn Archibald, was 1mme diat<.>ly named Utah's new coach. "This 1s the toughest dec1s1on I've ever made," Plmm said. "We have so many great friends here. but this is a great opportunity professionally and a great opportunity for me and my wife to start a new life." Pimm. 44. has been at Utah since 1961 as an assist.ant or head coach He compiled a 173-86 overall record and has 68 -4:l Western Athletic Conference record was tops among acti ve league coaches. Utah was Hl-14 in 1982-83 OCC, Rustlers • • v1ctor1ous Orange Coe1t DAii. Y Pll.OT /W9dnnday, April 13, 1883 El Si~· Meters delayed b:y . ~igh winds By ALMON LOCKABEY wuvu failed to tee the other ln 18-20 knot wlndl. "Rutt prud•ntly nll•d the DeltJ 'lie' ... , ..... ,..., which wua hidden In &nothtir Oenciral chulrman Biil Crlapln rM.-ct In the lnterett of Nf•ty " Tht< I ~-boat Six Met.er World rough truu.ih. Mid the r~ wu atarted at noon aaJd Crlapln. ' Cup flt'tlt wu lltNally blown out Olamaat d by th• wind and In about 18 knoll of wind which Several aktppera aald tMy of thl• watt•r ye•tt!rday wh n huavy Hat waa Oltana, the the yacht• handl~d with no were bailing and purnplnc waw h18h wind:. and •teep RU fo!U'<i Brltiah ontry own.cl by Baton de problem• over th• flr1t three while belna towed back to port. abendonment of the third tact' of Kothichlld tand •kippered by Jep. Six Met.en do not have auxJllat)' tho world champlonahtp aorlea Lawrie Smith of the Royal Y.cht A. the boaui hardened up for englnc11 and are towed to and off the Sant.a Ana River Jetty. Squadron the ~nd beat to weather the from the race c:oune. Ru11 Har4t, race committee Oayl• po1t of Balboa Yacht wind lncreued to over 30 knoll Crl1pln aald both dhma1ted chalrrnun for the hoet Newport Club, 1klpper of P eraplcacloua, within 10 minutes, kJcklna up boat1 would be back on th• Harbor Yacht Club, called the aald his boat and aeveral othen aeaa that hid boeu In one trouah c o u r • e to d a Y. weather race on the 11et.'Ond weather leg were pumping wat{lr out of the from another ln the next trouah. permitting, a.a both have •pare w hen the we 11 t e r I Y w I n d bilnee eoon after the race •tarted Crispin aald maa1.1. whistled up over 30 knoll, " · generating 1hort 8-10 foot seas lhot t:onlributl"d to one coLU1lon and two disinasllngs. One dismastlng was caused in a t-olhs1on between Hank Thayer's St. Francis V from Ne wport Harbor Yacht Club and Irene, skippered by Phil Durr of Switzerland. Irene was dlsmasted and had a ripped sail and St. Francis lost a bow spreader and had damage to t ht• bow Observers sn1d the t'ollullon was u port and sta rboard s1tuullon in which ont• boat eomang out of the trough of a Newport Christian enjoys 25-1 rout The Newport Christian High baseball team erupted for 25 runs yesterday, 14 in the fourth inning, to romp to an easy 25-l Academy League victory over host St. Michael's High. · In the 14-run frame, Newport Christian pounded out 11 hits, aU singles, and took a 21 -0 advantage. Wall Honeycutt drove an hve runs with a double and triple and Steve Dean had th.ree R'BI with two singles and a double Martin keys CdM triumph The conditions weren't the greatest, but the Sea View League held three makeup track and field meets yesterday with Corona del Mar and Estancia breezing to victories and Irvine l"dging Costa Mesa. Lance Martin was a catalyst tn the Sea Kings' surprisingly easy showdown victory with previously unbeaten Saddleback, 90-46. Martin defeated Saddleback's Ted Baker, who previously had recorded the best llmes in the ll'ague, m both the sprints. Marlln raced to vict.ory an the 100-yard dash in 10.1, narrowly beating Baker who wa.s clocked in the same time, then posted a 22.8 ln the 220, while Baker had a 23.2. Martin also anchored the victorious 440 relay team which won in a 44.9, a stroog showing t'Ornudering the high winds. Dave Anderson was another double-winner for CdM, taking the 880 (2:08.2) and the two mile (9 58). Vince McGuinnea doubled in the 440 (51.9) and triple JUmp (43-0) and David Lawson heaved the shot put 52-8 to easily win that event. The Sea Kings are 6-0. while Saddleback dropped to 5-1 m dual meets. r.:t.sewhere m the Sea View League, Estancia outscored University, 92-39, and Irvine nudged Costa Mesa, 69-66. For the Eagles, senior Mike Hammond has proven a pleasant surprise in his first year on the Wed. Thru Sat. April 13· 16, 1983 TRACK varsity. Yesterday, Hammond won . three events, 1he 100, 220 and 440 to spark F.st.ancta Other top performers for the winners included Dave Welt.el ( 19-~ in the high jump) and Steve Mikulich, who was first In the low hurdles nd runner-up In the high jump and triple jump. A turning point in lrvane's narrow wm was 1-2 finish in the 220 as Junior Ken Simm& and senior Rubiano Heinz turned the trick for the Vaqueros. Robbie Fontanilla turned in a per.onal best of '15.4 in winning the high hurdles and sophomore Jeff Bielman doubled in the high jump and long jump as did Eric Satenno in the mile and two mile. In women's action, Irvine beat Costa Mesa, 69-48, and University was a 72-4~ victor over Estancia. Jocelyn Lee won her specialty, the 110 hurdles, in 15.l to defeat her nearest foe by nearly two seconds. Sara Morton doubled in the 100 and 330 hurdles and Elaina Oden captured the weight events for lrvine. University's sweep in the mile and two mile keyl"d the Trojans' vi.ct.ory Area community college women's aoftball teams enjoyed a sweep yesterday as Orange Coast, Golden West and Saddleback recorded vidories. The Pirates shaded Fullerton, 1-0; Golden West rallied to beat Mt. San Antonio, 5-2; and Saddleback outlasted Riverside, 6-5, in lO'innings. Golden West received a pair of h1~ apiece from Donna Mc:Elrea and Cheryl Mastt:rs and pushed OV{'r a pair of runs an the fifth and sixth inrungs t.o notch its win over Mt. SAC Open Dolty+9; Sun. 10-7 MIC·2t c:::::ll __ .... The Saving Place• Jody Fletcher packed up the victory to Improve her personal mark to 3-2 Oranae Coast won its third South Coast Conference contest of the aeaaon as right-hander Angie Antrobus scattered five hits and MCX>nd baseman Debbie Nelson drove ln the game's lone run in the top of the fifth .. Saddleback's Dino Rubalcaba had a double and triple and came home w1tl) the winrung run in the bottom of the 10th m the GaU<.·hos' non-conference triumph. Saddfeback t railed 5-0 entering the bottom of the sixth but scored three in the sixth and two in the seventh to notch the wan. • • ' .. See And Compare ••• Hundreds of 19831/2 and -1984 autoD1obllese More than 25 l"\~o~ ne1111. 1nodels youniay never have seen before! 1150 Series Gravity Gui Grovtty Gukler UnttOnly 1ff.97 Grovlty tnventon lor GravitY Guiding Syste1n: r l Nt Gt.....iy ~ Sy1lem ' IS .,, ,,,..,..,,. dynemoc P'OQ<"" lor long ierm ph~ be"91~ The ..,,,.,1y ot tllWC••H po6l<ble "'''" ... 0.alllly GuOno Syalem. tQulC)i'llelll ,,.... 11 '"' ,,_, elie<:ttve moe1 -gizino ,,,,,... progrem .,,....,.. The peleni.d oroouc1 line perm.ti o.compr-••trCIMI not IV• ... on -1\11>91 OI ll)PllrllUll 1150 Serles Gravity Quider Tl'le 1tre1m1tnec1portaole11~ SertH lull bOdy W9f0tlt trecl\or't de'tlee IHturH mane t>lec:lt. 11ee1 lram-o•k' •"° a w11'1al>le '1aavy-duty nyton ro1at1no bed. Advll• ol ~ny eYery l'lelgnt and watgl'lt can perl«m a ••11-*'mlnllle~ PfOQl'llm ol 6-com- 'p/e111va eHrcl1e1 lnctudlnq oaclllatlon, tnver1ecl elt•\IPa. aqua11, lumbar etrelcnee, 1rcn.1 and welgnlllltlng. lnvetalon 8ooll"'" enkle hO!Oera reQulred !or uM Onivlty Guiding Inversion Boote• ankle hotct9ra lnver1lon HerolH 11 Polllblt wlll'I lnveralon 8oot1"" ankle holdera oonatrVC1ted' of n~rene ru~,.,lne<I ""' wlll'I aturdy low PfOfMe Gia._, to ... Uft Meuflty during decle>nJl>'•Nlve e1erclM. Malle black lln*", Ont elae flll all, 0e¥tloc>ed bf Ot Aot>trt M. Menln, .. D lhey come wllll lnlltUCllon boot!, "'"'''Y M\d • copy of "Tl'le Ora¥11y Guiding 8y11ern" boot! by Ot "°"'1 M. ~. M 0 Or1vlty Guiding lnveralon ,.,,. ~loped by Or. Aobtft M Merlln. M 0 for UM wlUI Qf~ly QU6dln0 lnWJttlOft &oo111• •nk .. ~. One lncfl d~ Chrome.plated l'llOft dtnttty ''"' tw le 1n1lalltc1 Hally In -"Y etal\dard telnfOfCtcl doCMWey ''°"' 30 '° M lftol"9 w'4le Drape MCl.ittly lnlo petented ~ecktte ~ di~ lor l40Mf, '""Y ...._ ~ .. ,. '°' l~ed t•..Cl9t. sa'e Pnce 199.97 Sale Pnc• 89.97 Save an additional 9.97 on Gravity Guider Unit and Inversion Boots if purchased In combination. AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL Kmart . ' ' ·~·· Orange Coaat OAIL.V PILOT/WednHdlV, Aprll 13, 1893 Banner ·night for Edison volleyball . PREP "It'• ttn• tk'11t wc-'vt• pluyt•d In twu to thrt>t' Wt<t.•ka," Mtld M1&rlnu Cooch Tim Hrld " blcx•kln11 o f p,.", R4>e ra addl"d In the Se• Kins•' vktory. Edlaon lll.ih 111 volley ba ll pro" rum, d o r m •nt tor tt've ral r ampalana, •taait.'r'\oQ Founi..ln Vulley la.al nlaih\ In S unset l.eaaui: action. bt'Stlnai lht' Barona tor th e flrat tlml" In Edlson'1 hlatory The l~-3. 9-1~. l ~-7. 16-M vlcwry at Founi..jn Vltlley catapult. Uw Ch11rgcni Into a th: w ith Fountain Valle-y, two games be hind unbeat<'n leadt•r L11 Quint.a. lc'd tho ~ult, Mlona with 1t>mc ai..ndout phi1y from Kem Boual a nd O.vc Fr ic.•llt• Erlt' Danlloft aparkled In dt'ft•at for Founi&ln V11lley, but ll w1t1 Edl1on'• nliJhl -for tht' flnit lime In • vollt•yl>ull mat~·h with tht' Barona Ml·un1t•r'• pu111lnj kt•yl·d Murll1d'11 fourth vklory In IKlVc:n ll•Miju•• de..'t.'hilons Lu Quinto'• l"xpt>rh.•11ct' prov<.•d tvo touih for Oe~Mn Vll'W lo h6111dll· ... twin 11•ttl..'r 1 S cott Hull u11d Ku1111 Ml·Kt'n!lc po vc'(I ttw wuy tor tht• Azlt'<'ti' aieventh 1trul~ht Jeagul' wJn "Touah dttfenae Dnd c.'01Ul11.t•11t pauJn@ un<l 11Crv1na wu ju..t to() much for ua, 1a1d lrvlnt• Cou.ch Mark McKcmilc. L1111J{ul•·l<'11de r Eltanclu, mu~tnwhllc. brc:.-eU'd to a 16-3, 15-2 victory" over El Toro with tht· Eltgles aubltJtutlna frt>t•ly Brian Faust. She rman Dickmcan and Vinet' &Iv tti f(Ol thelr chA6nc.'N oft the bt•nch a nd made good wie of It "Edi1un 's d e f e nse j us t want ed eve rything," said Founi..in Vullt•y Coach Doug Harbotlle "They played hungry and the ir tfo tensl' t.ook t'Ontrol of tht• mau.•h." John Sln~ler, Edison 's middle blocker. Elst."wh«>rc• In tho Sun!let Lcagut• il waa Ma rlnll •to pping llunt ln.cton B~ach. 15-I 0, 15-3, 17-1 ~ with Jl'rry Meunier pulling lht• trigger, w hlh· Lu Quinta b ret'zed aga inst Oc:t•u n Vll'W, 15-3. 15-9, 15-8. Mike• Man1t•r'1 1tronl( blcwkl11g 11..'d C.:or onu dcl Mur to 11 l ~-ti, 14 16, 15 8. 15-11 vk\Ory over Irvin<' m &•u Vww League play. giving the· Sen K mt(s u 7 :l leu~u~ re<.'Ord Som<' c•o n1l11tt'11t blU(·klng und h1ltinf.{ from S tt•ve Mcu tin and ltw uddltwnnl N1•w po1 t Har bor 1\l>ppt-d MulL•r Dt•1, 1 ~-10, 15·9, l~-K with Andy Alluwn. Andy Crnne and S<?an 8heward paving ttw way In the Sou t h Coast League, S an Clenw nte, Lagurui Bench and Mission V1!!p won ~ I I • • MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINOS Am.rte.ft LA11gu. ft8T DMaiotl f eaaa Kenau Clly Oelllancl MtM S..111• "41nneeo•• ChtcaQO w l l'ct. oa 6 I 8S7 • 2 1187 • 3 671 • 4 soo 4 4 soo 3 4 429 I'> 2 2'• 2-. 3 2 4 333 J·~ Ba111m0t• CleWlend Oel~oll Mfr"'8Uk .. T0ton10 N-Vorl< Bolton uaT DIVIS!<* 3 2 600 3 3 500 3 3 500 3 3 500 2 3 400 2 4 333 2 s 2116 v ..... .,.., .• aco. .. S..11 .. IS, Angele I Mllw111k .. 6. T0tonlo 5 Oetroll 13, ,.... Y0111 2 T-2.~I Mtlmole 10, Chlcego II KM\ ... Clry 5, 8oeton I Oeki.nd 4. ~· 3 (I 4 ""''"911) Todey'•a..-. .. .. '\ t I'\ 2 s..n .. (M Moor• 0-0) II Anple (Z•M 0.1), n T-{Mougll 0-0) •I~ !Batk., 1-0) Mll•1u i.1e (Cald•ell 0-11 •I Toronto (Clancy{)..()) MlnnH ol• (Wllll1m1 I 0) •I O•kl•nd (Undenoood (). 11 O.Cron (Ujdt.K 0.1) 11 .._ VOt' (J ~ ()..()). n Boar on (Bro•n 0-0) e l K •n••• C•ry (SpllHOtfl 0-0), n NllUonal Leegu. WEIT DIVlllON Allant• C1~rnna11 Dode«9 ' 1; m·~ s 2 714 l San F ranc:•oco Sen 0teoo Houa1on 2 4 333 l't 2 S 2MI 4 0 8 000 9•, l!AIT DIVlStON Ptl .. l>\l<Qll 1.Aontr..i 5 ' 833 4 2 667 2 1 667 3 3 500 2 2 500 ' I • 7 2 1 II 1'3 4'~ SI l"'4 PNl~e New YO<~ ChlCago V•lerdef'•llcot9'I 0od9er'9 3, HOUMon l SI loub 4 Pttllburgl'I 3 110 inn>ngs) Phi~ 4 HM Yon 3 110 fnntnOtl Chk:A90 S. "4onlrMI 0 Atlen1a 4, Onc>MAll 1 Sen F1....a.co II, Sen Diego S T..._,.eO- Houaron (J Nlel<ro 0-11 ••·Oodt•n (Hooton 0. 1 ). n S I louta (An<1u111 1-0) •I PlllaburQh (Tunnell 0-0) Clnctnn•ll (Betenyl I· II •I Allan!A (Cemp 1-01 New '1'011< IS"'•n 1-0) •• P11lladelphl• (Ru111-. 0-0), n Sen Fr•nCl.c:o {Hemm•kll 0 01 at San Oteoo (Snow O-O> n AMEJUCAN LEAGUE ....,.,_.. •. Ant• t ll!AT'lU CAUfOflNIA SHncltan n MOMA If <:asilllO 3b C-.'1 Phelot dll Putnem lb OHndrln d TCNZ .. 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"-d•ne 3 ......... 0.-(1:311 11.m.1 UC .,_ at Pepow<llN c.i Sl•l• F.-ion .. l~OI· U OI San Diego 91 LonQ 8Mch S111e Cal S rere lo• Ano••H •• UC Senra B8tt1era Commuftlty ~ ar.,.. C..t .. ,...,_ 10 Fullerlon 120 101 122-10 12 2 01ange Coe.s1 057 042 11x-20 21 e n-.. Ch•-(2). Pierce {31. Gr_,. (8) llnCI LOM< Oflerade, H ... (7) c..cton tOl -Kornelll w -o.terode (2·3~ l -T'Nwl 10 II 29-A.....,e tF). lOMf l'l. Oe..td 11') 2. Sltf199<lt\ (F). Oeroner (0) 2. ll-10> 2, Ttnoeo (0), O'AIMeMcl<O 101 HR-0.llld {F'I 2. Tlnooo (0), ReWrl« tOl. Komeij4 (0) ~• ... 1.c.....-0 Gol<Mn w... 000 031 101-11 1 I Come>ton 000 000 000-0 1 3 M4nt-. OeRoM tll) encl Hamaon, """ and Hema W Meh!ICl\eu L-Hutt • 1# .. -..... DMt)e ..... ll s~ 122 007 002-1 9 o Sen Diego M .. 001 000 200-3 10 4 80flilla end Morg,en, Gerclner, f'reylty (7~ Slrllt>Qe (8), BellUM (8) •ncl SoutllWOt11l W 8onllle tll-1\ L-Gerdner 2B-Ktopp tSDI ~ CS> 2 Ehmann (9) MofOM (SI 38-0eArroelit (S ~ lovth Cont Conterenc:e w L oa SM•• "n• '' 4 Golden w... 10 s Or11r>ge Cooitl 10 6 Fullerlon I 5 1~ Cerrllo1 II 8 2'" Ml a... Anlonto 7 1 3.,. CYPf-2 13 ll C-.p1on I 13 II'' ........ ...,. .• le_ Otanoe Cou1 20..,!'~on 10 GOiden wnr 11. """""'°" u Cerrf10t 1&. Ml 8ttn Anlonlo 4 San••AM> c~ 1 T__.e O-.. F ullerlon •I GOIOetl WMI OrMQe COM4 •I S11111• Ana CYO' ... 81 CerrllOI Comolon •I Ml Sen Anlonto l ·~ . ' 10 1 Hu11114\tlon .. ec:ll t, OcN n View 2 1-1""""11'°" 8NCll 050 ooo o ~ 10 o OceMI "'-000 020 0 2 4 I 8uckt111 ano r om .. >ek Oouly 81QQ1111 121 enll H01•1n Jones (3) w -814':k•lo l Oot•IY 1B K•nneoy iHB>. Tomallt.• iHB) Marin• 4, WMlmt1111er 2 M111na 008 310 0 • ' I WNlm1n11er 000 I 10 Q 1 1 J A191acll encl Fiore• Hanton. e.u 1•1 <Ind l 009 W Rl<tlacll l HMIM>n He•porl Cllflell•n H , II. MIChH l'o I N• .. e>o<I Chr11t1an 2SO ( 14) 13 es 17 ' St MtellMI 1 000 0 10 I l ~ C1M•1 Stuall (4) ""° H<>oey<:ull Ou"'" 141 0 Donnell. M 1.Aarun1 15) and Kobac1 W Cilley l O'Donnell, 2B OevlOIOn !NCI 2 0.on (NC), Honeycun INC) 3B H<m•ycun INCi Loe Alamltoe YllTlll.DAY'8 ll.l!llJLTI (421'4 of ~I,__ ...... 11 ... 1 'llll T llACI . One ml .. peu H1ppoeampua C tparket) 4 00 2 80 2 20 Fox Hound (Kuebler) 7 00 3 80 HelCY<>n H.,o (V•llet\dlngheml 3 00 Alto r•c•O Ancly a Brenna Sheller Pa1n1., Oet1no Joe. Iron Ovlo.e T,,. Punk Mt EOO rime 2 03 JtS a EXACTA 13-7) paid UT 80 H COND AACE. One mtle trot M• .ioe B 1c11n1 1 40 s 20 3 80 I op C•I (Sll1.,1111 8 40 .S 80 Att Pockel (Andetsonl 8 20 Also •IGe<I Oleo I Ovit.• flkt• Co11tn1 Snoopy Rodney Smile Shanna t Ster Supet MooM Time 2 04 llS TH"'D llACE. One mile pace Jury s1 .. 1B .. 11erveon1 3 80 Joo 2 60 Roch N ~ tGrllQO<Y) I 20 5 40 Aunt Salty B tTOCJdt 7 40 AlaO r•C•d Lady Slaal•. Skipper'• ln•Ml9', Timber Creek. Prec1ou1 CholGe. MecK-""'1y'1 Garnel! Ttme ~ C4 215 12 l!lCACTA (!>-4) P•l<I S42 20 fOOllTH llACE. O"" m11<1 lrOI Noble Tr••-(At•rmn1 J 00 3 00 Noble iw .. 1s1-man ~ 00 Cl-lul MC>Me IC>e6om<l<1 2 40 3 40 3 40 Also r•c•o Monlete y Judo• Coun11. Noon S ia• D•y•n s Cup Time 1 SO US Berrien '1nH llACL One mile pll(• S1o1<n (Fleco> 8 llO 4 00 2 80 Sttck Sw11t tSP•1991l l 80 1 40 TaMlen Wind 1Cr09ll•n1 3 00 Also r1ceu Power l tfle1 l wO Oc•ana LOP Yeet B Andy l Hut•Qlll Cl'>ul>te 0 Dancer nme 703 12 EXACTA IS·lf P•tcl i J4 &0 tUITH llACf One mtl• pac• RenM s Chane. 181rgnt 8 40 ) 40 2 20 VtCIO< Cn.,lft 1Crognen1 2 80 2 10 C•IQ"'Y ll(ueble<I :1 20 AltO raced Ketty V•••. No1lh Wettetn l.OUlle< 1 1m•04t "-"'lint ' Honour McOv.en. O~tnn Time 202 12 flCAClA IS 3) 1:11"<1 S21 20 IEVEN'TH RACf One mtle pee. S11u111 IS""'•enl a 60 6 llO Sen•• 1 Tw111•le tKazma1411I 10 80 I Am n fliymenl • 00 6 eo 8 •O Atto r•c•d Rul Lumb., rawha1 Ch••• Sneer.. P•c• Hod91" Heno- Fell Along Tom• Pride Tlme 2 00 4/S 12 EIACTA 12~) pe1<1 S74 60 12 ~IC Ill (4-S 7 ~~ 2) p.a Sl ,208 40 #llh 14 "4nnlng tdela IM• ho<Mt) '2 P1Ck SI• conaotetlon p eld S29 ISO wllh I Sil "'"'"'"II llClo••• 111 .. l'IO<MI) l2 Ptcr.. SI• terateh conlOleuon petd S32 20 wtth 4S """"'Oii 11ett.i1 t•our "°'-· -acratcn> EIO+n'H llACE. One mite !>*» RIClll>\l<n tl OCJCll S 80 3 80 2 40 Mir-De"" !Plano) 5 80 2 80 L~er l.a tlacll.,, 2 eo AIM> •IGe<I Ouol• HIM ~nl Maple Game lime I Sii 3/S a EIACTA (8-2) paid SJ.Seo NINTH 11.ACL One mle pee. TrlGll• Cl>erger (Gf9')') 4 40 3 40 2 80 Fie~ 1 Fr11nk 19elllergeon) 4 00 3 00 DIM<1 Son (Orundy) 4 80 AISO r9Ced ""'1y't lion M•felllC Aur• Beeut-.ia Belll llll)VIM\. H .. billy H .. ven Mr N "4 Time 700 2/5 11l!UCTA 1 t-2) P•ld S22 00 TIJofTH llACI. One mile pece Ouren. llongo) 2 80 2 20 2 40 f0<.-Wtlh loYe (Grundy) e 40 3 40 Oot w ... to..om.<) 3 20 Alto rec.cl l\alla Rhylhm, HO-Cly SGool fl T0<enlo Oertno Brien. Anc1v·1 Pepper lumber CNrmer Time 200311 IZ ElACTA (3-1) ,,_, 113 •O Allenclenoe 3.890 Hfaf\ eohoof rracti C<lrOM Ml lilet .. lad •1 h ell • I()() -I Merlin (CdM) 10 1 2 BAii., lSt 10 1 3 McAtt .. te< tS~ 10 3 220-1 Merlin (CdM). 22 8, 2 Beker ($1 23 2, 3 Mc<Jt11tl (Cd"4), 23 4 u o-1 McGutnnen (CclM). S 1 II. 2 $11....,men (CdM), S. 2 3 1.AcGr•lh (Cell.A) S4S H0-1 Anderaon tCclM). 2 01 2, 2 Hot>bl !CdM) 2 ot 3. 3 Yette ICdM), 2 01 4 Mlll-1 Wood tCclM), 4 ~3. 2. Hobb• ICdMI. 4 44 3 Y•n• (CdM), 4 45 2·mlfe -1 Ande raon (CdMI. e U . 2 HolleNI (CdMI. 10 10, 3 Oftll te4M) 10-30 120HH-1 Stmmona (8). 15 I, 2 C9Q'! 18), 18 2, 3 Solomon (S). 18 2 330LH-1 f'M • (CdM), 39 t , 2 81mmont (S). 40 0. 3 ~ 18), 41 t 440 r••r -1 Corone 6el Mer 44 I M .. retey-I Coron. cMI Mw, n I HJ-I ror11 (CdM). 0-10, 2 8oelW (<.;<IM). ~f; J ~"fir (CCIMI. n m LJ -1 MoAlllllter (81. n -10: 2 ,,_ (81. 11~ 3 Y-(CdM). IM T J-I McQulllllt lt (CclM), 41-0, 2 Tor.tm., (8). 0..f. 3 9-llerg (CdM), 42 8 llV-1 H•ll•lll (81, t :t·O; :t SoMugg (CdM). tz..t; ~ 8). 11 ... 111-1 "-(C4Ml. .,_,, 2 OWlrdeu 111. 43>0~ :I T~ (CdM). 4t· 10i. Ot -1 C.tM,,_I 18). I.._., 2 ~ (CCIM), 143•7W. 3 0uatdeu 18l IJ?·I • .._ .... Ulllttfw9ltr • 100-• H~ en 106', 2 w~ (U).IOU ~ ~· IU0-1 H (I). I U , t Wa~ (U), U 8, 3 . Hoc19t (Ill. t• 1 440-I Hwnmoncl (I~ St 0; 2 Kruev- IU~ 16 0, > Hoctee (I). tr O. N0-1 ~ (I}, 2 ,, •. 1 ltt\lll09f (V). t .lall,I ~IU}. IHS '411e -1. l nutl• (UI ••••• O; I ~Dlt jUJ. 4 N.O: 3 '*"•(I), 6:01.0 l •mll•-•••'• 111. 1t10• t: a Or~Oll' (U), 11 .. fl S ~· (U), I I ... I IOHH-t .._ (l). ,. I; t Mlllwldl (!). , .... ~ .... ,...,, ,_,. .. ,.~-·HJ'1t-.fll, ...... ; .. ~ .. ,._, ~··· ... ,...,_, ...... , ... HJ I Welte! tC). 6 10 2 t.l•Mn ([) ~ 10 1 "4ou1 .. 111r> ~ 8 lJ I Jan IUI 20 I ' w .. 1rt1 tr> 111·5 l l.A1~ul1Ch tEI 19 I T J I Jen (U) 4J II , 2 M1r..u1tch IC) 40·2 3 Wt ll .. (El, 40 :1 Pl/ I B••uck (C) 10 0 ' l.Aouleert tE>. 10-0 j ... bet .... n Mftl••tt IEI ... a 1 ... r.n .. ltJI V 6 SP I 11191[1 •1 l I WHl <Et 39 T) O..a•nn1l1 Ila. ur I Le. (ll 96 9 We•I (El 93 8. ' M :.11111h tEI 11:1 ti lr•I"• H Coale M .. a M 100 I Nguy1<1 !Cl.Al 10 4 1 Beck., 111 10 4 J RuruM () (II l(I 4 no I !11nt1t1t Ill 71 II 7 Rub1e11u 111 IJ 0 t n11,.1~• !C.MJ ~J I H U ' "luvy•n I( M1 ,2 4 1 O.C~ut 111 -.1. } oo third 8b0 I S•mmt Ill 2 04 8 J l.AC8H~ 1CM1 l 09 9 J CutDy IC.I.Al l 10 0 M11.. I S•termo 111 4 :'><I II 2 C.olllv llMI ~01 I J Kullttk tll 501 7 2 m1111 t S•IPtmo (I) 10 38 7 2 Wnt1~ 111 10 46 I J HODtan !Cl.Al 10 ~ 7 110t!H I Fon1an1fla Ill I~ 4 2 But fl) •b o 3 Scnumoer 1CM1 17 4 J30LH I Schurna~•• !Cl.A) 42 7 2 llen•ble (CMI 42 & 1 lUCIMO ti) 43 s 440 •"4•y I •••• ,,. 46 l Mlle retey 1 Co11e I.A••• 3 34 4 HJ t B .. lman 111 11·0 ' 8ow>es ICM! 5-8 3 l/entbll (CMI. 5·8 LJ I Btelm•n (t), 21·1'" 1 Bowtea ICMt 2 I 0 3 Gtan1 ICM) 20 I'> TJ I Merldevllle (II 43 6'. 2 Granr \l;M) 311 4 ) Hegey tC.MI 33 5 Pv I Hold! (I) 10 6 2 llnderton 1CM1 10 o 3 Sparu 1CMI. 9 6 SP I Matson tCMI 4 7 7' • 2 W*'""' 11:1.AI 4~.9 ' 3 Hoverson ICMI 0 0 01 l l.Aalaon IC"4t 142 6' • 2 W11tr.., 1<:1.A1 134 4 3 Sta1•y fl) 127 6 HIGH t CHOOl WOMEN lr'llne It, CHta MeH 41 100 ' I.AO< Ion (I) 'I 8 1 Mert<NMI,,., t11 1:1 t l Suare> 1CMI 11 5 210 l l "" Ill 28 3 2 McF ell<!f"k Ill 71 7 l >!alley 1CM1 28 6 440 I CMpel 111 l 04 7 J Fora iCMI I 06 ) J PtetGti 11) 1 08 8 880 l c.nas.,, 1Cl.At 2 25 7 2 en_. 111. • 3 I 0 1 L1.tm (II 1 48 0 Mtle I Cha un CC MI 5 JI S 2 Nal>IOl\mUlk (1), 5 5 I 0 3 WflQhl tll 6 03 0 2-mtte I MO<HS (CM) l2 24 5 2 Wroghl fl) 12 Sii 4 3 K•1y ICM). 13 32 330lH I MO<lon 11) 49 4 2 P8CH<tQ<I 1CMI Sl t J Bentley Ill I 03 0 I IOLH I LM Ill 15 I 2 P-IOtl ICMI 16 g J G<!O<Q& (CM) 17 2 440 relay 1 Irvine. 53 5 2 Cotta Mot SS 2 Mite r•l•y 1 lr<win• • 1 !> 0 '2 Coat a Mne 4 21 0 HJ t Gare•• tC.Mt 5 O l Od&n Ill • 10 J C11a .. n 1c;M1 4 e lJ 1 Garcta tC MI IS 0 2 George tCMt 14 8 l O<Jen (I) 13 I I OT l O<lenot 117 11 " M~"-1D->1CM1 ~1 n J G·• 111 8• T SP I Oden 111 34 I'-2 Sudbe<.• ICM! 11 l • J Mel<1bbflft (CM1 28 l I Ut\f•erelly n . E1tancle U '°"' I Wf'll• tEI 12 4 2 l•"QIO<O IUI •~ t J MuNel IUI 11 T uo I L81t9IO<d IUI ?9 7 2 Motta• llJ) 30 0 J Well• IE I. J() 0 440 1 Oante11 !Cl I 08 5 7 M>ller IU) I ~ • J W•non tEI , 09 7 aeo t McLeugNoro IUI 2 35 ' 2 Salone IU) 23S• 3 Se•91191E1 2 366 M1~ t Armentrov' 1u1 a,• t Solrne !U) 5 •1 3 Nom11U1 5 4 1 2 -mile l Atmen1r,,.,11u1 lJ 4 1' 2 Sottt\fl (U) 13 4 I 3 Norn• tUI t3 ,, 110LH 1 Tn m i;.ton tUt l7 2 2 Lezor ... 1E1 11 r i S••<~•eno 1E1 1& 3 330LH I l.Aollet IU) SI 4 2 TllomPIOtl tU), ~ 0 3 K&Qanoll IUI S• 0 56 4;o r••Y 1 E1tanc•• 55 e 2 Un>ver11ty M•t• re••1 t Et1enc1a • l? • 1 UNvet,.ly • 38 6 n:.~Nd' l UOt•• \[I 4 8 ~ Stoll tUI ~ LJ ' lr•Omoa CE• 14-3 2 M•IHbu•• (U) 13· 7 3 Scot! tUI t3-7 SP-1 Pa119 1U). 30·S 2 Omgocn 1£1 30-J 3 Mocaby IU) 1 T 0 0 I -I OtnQrlCll 1(1 95· 1 2 MOCODy (UI I 1 6 3 Mutplly IUt 79 7 ~ ' I • • WOftMn'e eo~ COtllMUMTY COi.LiO. 0r..,.. c-1 1, f uller10ft o 0 ••"119 Cout 000 O 10 o 1 5 o r1111er1on 000 000 O O 5 3 Antrooua •net 8r1c~ner Wta• and Ol11nQet Golden w .. 1 S. Mt .... A11I-J Golden West 100 022 o 5 7 1 Mt 5.., An1ont0 020 000 O -2 5 3 Fl<rleN< l(yler 1Sl encl McElt•• ClaYllOOI ena I.Ao"" w Fletcher l Cl•yooo1 28 -Mttle<t IGI a.ddletiacti t , II,_... CC I Rl•efl•de 010 040 ooo o-s 8 1 SMl<lllbedl 000 003 200 1 -11 I I • Reclltord, Aull ,,, 8lld ... .,,.._ 8el1ou1 end Bubour W 8ebou1 l -Ruiz 78 -Rublllca•• (SI 38-Aubalca•• ~ .Mer11MZ '~) Hlah ec:hool Oc...,, View f. ...... 1r,.1on hectl 0 Ocean v-001 200 0 -3 7 2 Hunllt>Qlon 9Ncll 000 000 0 -0 2 1 OeMlll!y end ScrUQ9•. Zecc• •"" Reno 2B -BCM!a (0V) ,_, .... v-,. 2. '-"-0 rounr .. n v,.11ey 000 100 1 2 7 o Edi'°" 000 000 0 0 7 I Vtnlmen and P.,.;ll•lo1t1 C•11)enle< and TrubM•tt 78 F0tll ...,,... I, w .. rmlrlet .. 0 w .. 1m.n11er ooo ooo o o 2 1 M•lne 000 000 t I 2 0 M1111n a ncl O Connor l •rs~n anti ~e<gutt0t1 2B-Ferou~ IMl Pec:lflc louthwHt tourn11rnen1 (el~A ....... ) •-lld "°""' •. "II ... C•tlflW l.Aaver IU S) II.. A1c111111l Oall1•u •IJ.., I 6·3 6-3 Elt1M Golllrtea IU 6 I u•• M•ll 0o, •• tU s ' 6 ' II 'l l,AAI Pu•c•~ lU s I a•• 1 wo w1t•k.,... 1 u s 1 a 1 6·• Sanar MYy•r IU S I oel John rt11oa<t1ld (A .. llt•ll•I •, I t 6 6·2 Ttni w111u1011 IU S) ael l.A•rk (Ofllt>,.dlOll lllu11taHaJ 9.4 I 6 6·3 Men'• tournement {et Hlllon Heed telelwl, a.c > Fi'91 llound tfnttll• 81111n Teaclle• (US) Oaf Sii•• 0.111un IU SI 6 4 8 2 1 6 Grand Prix tournement (et Ala-f!n·~o•-•· '•enc•) "'•I llouncl llnv ... C.•11•• l.Aoretlon (France> clel Tllterty lut .. ne (Francat 8-4 6-2. V1c1or Pecci 1P•r1u•y) 0111 CllUlo Moll• 'BuuHI 3-6 6 3 -a Ate1endro Ga,,zabll IArgenllna) oet C11ro11ophe ROQ•r-Va ueltn tFrenee) II 1 6-3 6-7. Pele< Eller IWHI Oe<meny) 11el IN•lly MHur 1Aua1ralla). II-1 7-5. Ch•ll lffwll (New Zoland) Oel Oemtr Kerellc rWe\t Germeny) 8 t 113 B11nard Frill 1F1 .. nc11 Oel Certoa Krrmayr t8reztl) 11-0 6 • Hentt Leconte I~••~) clel llbOI P1 ...... 1Cre<.nos10•••••1 6-2 8-4 Women'• tourn•ment (al Af'lllll• lalend, ,,._, hcond Ila.ind •Intl ... E•<>nne Gool&QonQ (Au1ll•fta) oet Pt1tt1 VMquer tU S) J 11 6-4 11·3 C11r~rtQ Ba1se11 1Ca11aoa1 oet V1rg1n1a Ru11c1 (Roman••> 11·3 1 6 8e111na Bul'ge 1W•ll Oerma,,yl del t e•1t• Alle n IU S ) II l 6-I H•n• M•ndllt.O\oil CCi ecno110,,;•ktaJ def l<llht Hr•tv•lh IU S I 6 4 6·4 College UC .,.,,_ 7, Sen D'-90 Ill J llngle• !>r ydet IUCIJ clel Coolin. 7·S 6-4 Man ,.,,. "'"ii IUCll (lei famH 6-4 6-2 Jones tSD1 oel Ouacr. 6 2 3·6 7 e Anllton (lJCtl del Ja<;num. 6·0 6·4 Nelson IUCt) Oel Gell II 3 6-1 Aamot 1uc11 <I•' Weflt<IQlon 6 2 11-3 ~ Sny~r-Nellon tUCI) Oel Jon•• E•me1. fl 3 8 l Anlllon Htf\kef IUCll del COl!1n., Gell 7.5 II 4 Welkng1on JOCllum (SOI clet AmO<· TllOlp II 4 3 6 6-I Community colt.a. Or•nQe Coeet I, Golde<> irHt 0 ttne1e• Parker 101 001 Rtcnesaon I 6. 6-1. 6 1, 8rav" tOl del Mc:Cat1lly 6 I 8-4 B••n.,o tOt del >i uynn 7 2 7 6 Myers (0 ) dot Wemb<'fly 11 4 6-I 1.Aa11 .. tO> Ciel K@lletler 6 • b· J Nt>l50" 101 del Herac:ht>e<ger II 3 60 Oouble• b'ilu"·Ba,,.ard (01 d•f R1cne•10n· MtC611hy 4 6 6· 2 6·4 PWk9' -Maltel tO) df'I I(~"""' Huynll 6·3 6-N .. M)(l-8<tQ(jl I 0 I !lei Wern Dir ly · H8' ICl\batget 6-0 6-0 High echool Cerone de! -24'111 , u.-a.-J\lt ...... p.,,, tlB) Olll Br-ger 6-3, roet lo Propp l ·ll foal to l.AcOuMn, 3-11 loel by deleult to Sulhv•" Sci>lf'll (LB) 1011 11-7 4-fi won 11-I to.1 ~. 81\Jmflelcl (LB> foal 0 6 0 6 1-6 0·11 Haworth llB) loel 2-6 I 6 6-7 0-11 DcMl-lMOl\-KOIMNl• I lB l IOel lo W-·EWIOQ, 6 -7 5-7 1pllt ""''" Henmen-Ho.tellet 4-11 8-4 °'°'"*"" WelleQI! (l81 loll O·ll I fl, 1·6 2-11 ,""'!' ..... v-,. 15t,1,, E.._ U 'llt ••ne'" l ee (fVI clel Ball 11-4, Oal WNlc:tler, 11-2 def l.Aoio.hCO 7 ) def Hen. 7-5. Bodlenel< lf'VI won 11-0 IO~I I ·6. 4 .fl won 7-5 CllC>I• ff'Vt -on ll·4 lolll 2~ 1·11 1-11. Ouren (FV .. o., by default 00.1 2_. 2 II 7 6 ~ we nc1 re 1 -1.A 10 • {F V ) oer 0 Connell-Wibe rg 6·3 8-4. def Ol•on Wlvleher, IJ..3 8-1 ....._.NQ\lyen (FV) IOl1 I ... 2 ... """ 11 1 11-7 ....,,,...,. .._... 21, Ii Toro 1 ....... S_..,_, (NH) IOtll lo Mullen. 2·11. del 0."11 1-2 lotl lo Phern, 2~. def Wellen 8-0 Abel fNH) won, ... , 11-1, loll 3-11. won 8-1 Sl0tm tNH) IOll HI. won 6-<I, io.t 4-4. "'°" 6-0. Ryen (NH) IOl1 ~. won 8-1. loel 3 II, won .1-2. Ooollblee Conlley-M Heye INH) def Mat1!•f·l •. t-1 ... 1;• Tran-M~ .. 1.6-0,AMd- Buler (Hti) won e-1 8-0, won M , 8-0 Humtne•on IMdl 21, e>c.. View a Oenz IHBI clll ~2 o.t I( 8-0 0.1 ,...,,... e 4 def Ponger ~..,. tH8) won 8 t &-0. 1011 3-t won 11 4 S..Qivt>cl 1H8) won 11·2, II I, IOll 2 ... "'°"· 7-~ fowler IHBt won 6-0, 11·2. IOSI, 1-8, won. 7-6 0......... Oodo1-Car1oll (HB) CS.I RUey-eon-eo 6 2 11-I def S~ton·Scl>elntitum 11-2 6-0, Oabtlel·DemcSm"' IHB) won, 8-4, 8-0 6·0 II.() ........ 09' 11", lM Alfttaoe 7 CommunltJ coUecM women 0r.,,..e....a.~w .. 10 ........ Rtbanl tOCC> del Henlle (1..4, e-a flflton tOCCI clef Btowne 6-I 6-3 e.nu (OCC> det r...-er 11-4 11-J c-... 10CCl det 11 .... Dltr 3-8 8·0 8 2. Miiiet tOCCl Clef Humphrey 11-0. 11· I Gaylln (OCC) clef NOV)'et'I. 8-0 11-0 ~ A-b#lt-Dlton (OOCI def -e-Br-. 1 Cl 6-0 Geyt_M_ (OCCI def T-11- Humpllrey, II S 8-2. 8enrz C•••-rOCC> !l~I Kueble<-NQu'ten. II 1 8 O Magic Johmw n Lak er s scranJble for e w 1n HOUSTON (AP) -Earv in "Magic" J o hnso n hit t hree baskets in the final two minutes and rect forward Kurt Rambia fc-r tht• game-wmnmg layup to give the Los Ange les L a k ers a 114-113 Victory over Houston ln National Basketball Association play last night T he Lakers, 57-21, trailed the Rockets, wh o own the NBA'a worst record at 14-65, nearly the entire game and we re be hind 104-90 with seven minutes left. But J ohnson , who led a ll sc.:orcrs with 31 points, scored five m a s tring of eight straight Laker JX>ints that cul the margin to six JX>lnll. with 5.07 to play. Houst0n's Calvin Murphy and Joe Bryant kept Los Angeles at bay, scoring all but two of the Rockets' 20 fourth-quarter pomts. Bryant's free-throw with 2:02 left gave Houston a 11 1-106 lead J ohnson then scored on three straight lay ups to p ut the Lakers in front. 112-111. with 36 seconds lefl. Allen Leavell hit a 22-foot shot to give the Rockets the lead with 15 seconds le ft. Johnson was swanned by Houston defenders m the front court, but hit Rambis with a pass with six seconds left to st't up the game-wuming shot. M ichael Coop er added 18 JX>mts for .the Lakers. 16 in the set'ond half Bryant scored 22 JX>ints to lead Houston. Murphy and Wa ll y Walker added 18 pomts apiece T he Lakers were recovering from the lass of forward Jame11 Worthy, who bro ke his leg in Sunday's 101-95 loss to P hoenix. Worthy's e ope ration successful INGLEWOOD (AP) -James Worthy. the roolde forward of the Los A n geles L a k era, underwent successful surgery to have p in s Inserted in h is fractured left leg. doctors said. The operation was performed by Dr. Ste phe n Lom bardo a l Centinela Medical Center . Allending physician• uid there were no complications and the o peration re vealed th at Worth y suffe red no damage other than what was originally diagnosed. Full recovery la expected. Worthy suffered the fracture when he landed on his left foot a fter leaping for a rebound-dunk a ttemp t in a gam e a gains t Phoenix at t h e Foru m last Sunday night. To take Worthy's place on the roster, the Lakers sJgned Bllly Ray Bates to a 10-day contract. H~ has had three years in the National Basketball Asloclation. Bates, a 6-4 g uard from Kentucky S tate Unlw rsity, hail been out of basketball since Oec. l when he waa releued by the Washington Bullett . He had sta r ted t hree g ame s f or Was hington and averaged 7.9 points for the 15 games in which he played. • Mt.IC Nemec ifCiTICI Of TllWTll'I HU ,~ ... -. On M•y 4 !IU 11 10 00 • m tn111tOn/Atrlllf01n l•PttU ltOtOw COl'IPl t\)' 101rn1rly, I0\111\ttn ClllM l tcrow Comp.tnr .. Tl\lti.., 0t 9~.or ftu"M or luOttllllteCI '""'" Cll tnet ~lain 0..0 of Trv.t •111e4jled Oy LYNN( K OIN81 U"0, en unm••tl•O wor11n, •no rec0¥<14Hl M1rc;11 H • lH, u lnttrumenl no 361ot, In 00011 13900. pegt 10 1 Olftc11I ".COtdt of Ortnge County, CtMlornlt , tnO pur•utnl to 111a1 otr111n Notice 01 O•l•ull ano fJeeoon 10 ... ''*""'no-1ec0tdea Oo'°4Mt 8. '"' .. 1ne1r-• no U~62S06, 01 Otllelll ~0roe ol u ld Co u nty, wlll 11nde1 e nd j)U<IUtllll IO tlld 0..0 01 Tru•I Mii •• p11bllo auction f0r 01111, 11w1u1 Money of Ill• United St•tH 01 Am11lc1, 11 1111 Noni\ 11on1 Wiit-to the County ~ou ... 100 Civic> Cef!MW Oflw w .. 1. Senti Ane, Caltl0tnla, alt the tlOflt, tlllt lftd kit-I OOl\Yt~ 10 Ind no... lltld 0y II undtt Mid Dltd OI Trull In t111 proptfly tll11111d In Hid County 111\d St110 dt tall>ld u . All THAT CERTAIN LANO SITUAT ED IN THE STA TE OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY Of ORANGE, CITY OF COSTA MESA. DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS Petcel 1· LOI 65 01 TtlCl No H66 H tllOwn on • mep IOCO•ded In boot. 418, pagH 47 10 50 1nc1ualve ol Ml.c.llan«>Ua Mapt, •n lrnt ottloe ol Ill• Counly Rocordtt or 1e1c1 Coun1y Patoel 2 An 011emonl ror •no•esa •or•as end en1oymen1 over the common eroaa ol H•cl Traci No 9818, H H I lorlh In Article II, Section 1 01 th• Oeclatallon or Covtn1nta. Concllllons end RHtrletlons recorded Februory 7 1978 In boo-12556, P•Q• 1S 19 OtllQel Rtc;onje ol aald Coonry The attt•I l dclreaa or other common des1gna11on or ~••d ptopetty 1111 1n1 Olive, Cot11 M .... California 92626 Ntme end add•••• ol the beneficiary et wllote requeSI the Hit I• t>e•no conducted c111eorp lndua1r1 11 Creclll Inc , c/o S111ar1on/Ame rlc1n Exp1oas Mo1toage Co1por1t1on, 1201 E H IQtilend Avenut, S1111 Bernat dlno ~orn11 92404 Olrtetlona lo the above Pfopeny m1y be ob11lnec1 by requesting llmt In wrlllftG lrom the ~llellry wilhln 10 d1y1 ltom tlle llrat pue>rlcallon of lhia notice Said .... will be m•d• without covenant of w1rr11111y expresa or lmpli.d. u 10 utlt, l)OIHSalOn or encumbrancea 10 aallal)' Ille unpaid b•l•nce due on Ille note MCurtd by 11Jd Deed of Trust to wit: $55,472. 52, plua the followlno e111maltd colla, oxpeneet and tdvanc;es at Ille tlmt of the lnltlat publleetlOn of rr.11 Notic. 01 Sale Eellmattd trullae IMS In 1110 amount ol S 1.~6 20 ptus lnte<est at 18 5% per annum on the unpaid prlnc1p11 balance from 5-1-82 to 1111 p1u1 a ny advt nce• tho beneflclery may be euthorlz•d or obllgattd to P•Y plua 1111y ecx:rueo Ille c111rges. YOO AM IN l>E'AUL T UNOER A OHO cw n.un DA TED MARCH 20, 1110, UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO .... OTECT YOUR "'ONRTY, IT MAY N SOUi AT A l'Ue&.JC aML II' YOO NEEO AN llC .. LANATION 0, THE NATURE Of THE PftOCEEDINO AOAIN91' YOO, YOO aHOULO CONT ACT A l.AWYffl. DATED March 29. 19llO SM1non/Am8f1C8n Exptess Escrow Company IOtl'Tlefty Southern Clllta EIOrOW Col!'lpany, U lfUllH Mitzie A Brown, AMlstant VICI Pte11denl 1201 E Highland Ave San 8et"8fcllno CA 112404 111•1886-7951 Ot 886-7811 Ext 3761377 Publlalled Orange Cour Dally Pilot. Apr 13, 20. 2'T, t983 1731-83 PUBllC NOTICE IN THIE SUP£RIOR COURT, ITAH Of' CAUl'ORNtA CoutfTY Of' ORANGE In lhl Meller ol 1111 Ad0c>tlon Ptmlon ol LONG VAN TRUONG Adopting Parent NO.AD1eS39 P£TTTION '°" ADOPTION (11.,..,aftl) Petlhoner, LONG VAN TRUONG allegeS t. Tiie name by whlCh Ille minor' who .. Ille SUbjecl Of 11111 petition w11 ro011te1e0 11 blnh 11 scon HUY-KHOA BUI 2 Thi et>ove-nemeo minor ctlllO NOTICll Of' T1'UIT1r8 , ........ ,.,.. UH O~%':,~I TO Your Prol1ss1on1/ Flonst ?O I!> Am.l Hill Aver1uo A 100 Cosio Mosa 641 ·0810 VOO AN IN Ol,AULf UNDIA A DHD Of' "'UIY OATIO ..._ n , tttt UNLdt YOU TAKI ACTION ro P•OTICf YOU"· -=========--==:;===========:i "'°"RTV, IT MAY II '°"OAT A t- "U9UO Ul.I. IP YOU NHO AN 1----------- lll .. LANATION 0, THI ""'""' "*.IC NOrtCt OP nil .. ROCllDl .. 0 AOAMl' N~ICE OF 0"" •T11 or YOU, YOU tHOULO CON1'ACT A VI ""'" uwv1•. E D W A R 0 P E T E R P~~1~~~ •R ~ll~~~'v 1oy0:~8'i NICURTZ ~'"zA EONWDAR02 CORPOflATION • C1lllOfnl1 P. NICKEoT A , 1.01por111on u duly eppolnted PETITION TO ADMIN· TrullH under a nd p11r tuan1 to STER EST AT£ N 0 . Deed 01 r11.111. ·-deo Ac>tH 23, Al 17733. IH 1, u Intl No an 10, 01 Otl\Glll T II ... I ..._, t ... I R1<1ord1 In the ol1ic<I Of tne Ccunty o • nf' "'· ...,ne i...ar o.. "8oof«*• or O••nQ• County, Slit• cr1.1dltor1 ~nd cunt ln1ent o1 c 1111orn11. ••eeutld by PAT'fllCIA crf'ditora of Edward PMcr VAN RIPER Nlckttrtz and Pf'rrlOn• whu Will SEll AT PUBLIC AUCTION mav be> OthC'rwf.le ln~rftl\ed TO HIGHEST BrOot!R FOR CASH ~ (peyab1e •I 11mt 01 .... In llwtut In thf' w ill •nd/or ee\ti. money of tne un11te1 SlltM) 11 tlle A ~tl tlun hu buen fllt.'<l nortll ltont en1rat1et to the County by Marian L Nickcirla In the Cou1thou ... 100 CMo Cent., Olive Su""rlur Court ot Oranac Wo t. San!• Ana, C1lllornl1. •II .-~ ''Ohl. 11111 and1n1., .. 1 ronv.y.o 10 County rcq u ettlni M1&rlan and now htlcl 0y 11 unellf Hid 0..0 L N ickeru bt! appolnted u or Trust In '"' p10l)8'1J.:ue11d In personal r<-prest>ntaUve to 1110 f,:;;t~1~1:~·of T:!':"N8:. administer the e1tate of 9611 11 per map 11..a 1n boOlc )48, Edward P eter N ll-ke r tz p1gH 38 10 311 of M1acen1naou• (under the Inde p e nde nt Mapa or uld county. deec••btd In Administration of Esta tes p11rCll• u follow• Acl) The ~t11111 h1 set for PARCEL 1 Unll No 28 u 111own ancs hearing rn pt No 3 at 700 .i.iict1bed tn 1rie Con<1oll'l•n1um Plan Civil' Ct'nter Drwe, W est, rn rtK.Otdtd 1n OOOk llJT4 page 1522 the C ity of Santa Ana, 01 011"111 Roc:Ofcla California on May 4 1983 at An undtvlclld 11741111n1erest •• ' • 1anan1 In common 1n th• ftt 9:30 8 m 1n1111111 1n and 10 1ne common a1H IF YOU O BJECT to th~ or 101 1 or traot No 11611 •• aucn granting of the petition, you llfm Ill dellned In ttie ar11Cle entltled should either appear at the o.11n1110n1" ot 111e O.Ctetatlon or d Covenanu Condlltons end h earln8 an Sllllt' your Res1r1e11ons recorclecl tn book objectrons or f ile written 113117 page 725 or 0111c11I obJeCtions with the court Record• encl any 1menomen11 before the h earing Your PARCEL 3 , be I . Non-exclull•e easemant• lor appearan<.-e may n person ullhllet. access. 1norea1, egr111, or b y your atU>mey. onc1oachme111, cl••lnaoe. eupport I F Y 0 U A R E A anel tor other purpoHt 111 H C REDITOR or a conlll\gent dal1ned In 11>e etllcl• ol 1~• credJU>r of the de<:eaaed you O.C1tra11on enlllhMI E-t• . • Excepuno 111e1ar1om an oil. Oil must file your claim with the r101111 minarela, l!'llnet1I rlgllt•. court or present It to the na1ur11 gas r1ohr1, and 01ner personal representative hydtoca11>ona by whllsoover nll!'ll aphflnted by the cou rt llnown. tl'lllt may be wHllln or under 1111 parcel 01 land h11rein1bov1 Wit n four months from the ducrtbecl. 1oge1h11 w1111 lhe date of first 111uance of perpe1ua1 r1ghl 01 clrllllftG. mlnlftG, letters as provided ln wction orplor1ng and operating thlra10<, 700 f th C41llfonua Probate and s1or1ng 1n and removing lh• O e , ""'' rrom said iano or 1ny other Code. The time for filing land 1nc1ud1ng 1111 rlghl to claims w1U not expll'e prior wllle>•lock or e111ec11onally drMI ones t.o four months from the date mine lrom lands other tllan tlloto of the heanng noticed above. hetlllnsbOve described oil or ou wans tunnels ane1 1na111 Into. YOU MAY EXAMINE thtough o• across the aub-1-ot the fill' kept by the court U tho rand here1nabov1 d1ac1lbed, you are a person interested encl 10 bOHom 11uC11 whipatocl<ICI or rn the estate you may serve clirecllonaNy 0111100 wtllt, tunnels ' and sllalla undlf and t>enNth or upon the executo r or beyond the ox1erior 11m111 thereof, administrator, or upon the Incl 10 rodrill, 1e11.1nne1. equip . atU>mey for the executor or l!'lt1n1otn repalt cl••P•n e nd administrator and file wi th oper11t any such wolla or mines, ' f wllhOUI howevl' the rtont to dnll, the court wl_th proof o mine store explore end 01>1<•11 service. a written request 111rauoh 1ne turfaca or 11>1 upper stat i ng that you desi re 500 !eel ol 1111 subtur1-or tlle special notice or the filing of 11nc1 11are1nabov1 detc•lbod. •• · v e n l 0 r y a n d r-ved 1n 1ne deed 11om 111e 1 .... 1,,. a n 1 n Company, a Wt•I l/lrginll appraisement of estate assets Corpora11on. recoidecl January 18. or oC the p etitio n s o r 11178 In boo!( 118Z2 PIOI 897 of accounts m entioned i n OlllC•ll Records f 200 __ .., 1200 "-Tn1 11rott acscsren and 011111 secuona o 1 .,... -~ common aes.gnatlO<I. 11 any. or 1111 of the California Probate •a•I property datcrtbed Ibo•• II Code putporrecl 10 bt No II So11n1. Jamts L . Rubtl. Jr., ltvtne Cahl0tn11 112715 Atlorney al Law 343! Via The unclart1onecl Trustee • aiaclalms any 111blllty for any Oporto, Newport Beacb, CA 1nc::or1ectnflt9 ol 1111 111181 address 9 ! t t 3 : 6 7 3 • 4 I 7 ! . and othef' common dellOnetion. 11 PubltJhed Orange Coast any ll'lown ,,.,..,. Datly Pilot, Apnl 12. 13. 19, Sa1cl ule wlll ba maele bul 1983 wltllout covenent or warranty 11!30 113 ••Press or 1rnpll8d t~Cltng 11118 pouasston or encumbre nces, PUBllC NOTICE K-ol114 NOTICE ~ SAL.a OF MAL "'°"""" AT ""VATI IAL.E A·1091a PUN.IC NOTIC£ YOO AM• IHl,AULT ~A DtlD or TRUH DATWO Al'tll!.. M. t•. u...ga YOO TAU AOTtCM' TO "°Tl T 'f~ "°"""· IT MAV II tot.D AT A PUklC IALl_1 " YOU NllD AN IXltlAllATIOW CW TMI NAT\MC 0, TH9 "'OCtlOtNO AOAINaT YOU, YOO ... OUU> COMTACT A t.AWYllt HOTICI O' -n.UtTlll't tALI T.t ..... 40li1 NOTICl IS HEREBY OIVl!.N, 11111 on W10n1td1y Mty •. 1913, 11 10 00 o'clocll • m or Mid d•y. In Ille room Ml 1110. '°' conouc:t"1Q Tru1tM't Salta, w11111n 1111 oltlc4ll ot REAL ESTATE 8£CURIT 1£8 S!Rl/ICE. IOClttd •• 2020 Norlll ltroed'#ey, 8\Mtl 206. In Ille City Of Sant• An1, County of Oren~. 81111 OI C1lllornl1, REA L EllTATE SECURITIES SEAVICI<. 1 Celll0<nlt co10011t1Dn. u duly 1ppo1n1eo TtlltlM unotw end putlUIN 10 lhe power Of Hie conferred In 11111 ,..,,•In 0..0 ol Trual e•tc:llltd by PETER M TSAI Ind KIM K TSAI, hutbe n d end wi re. a ATA TU RSUCU e nd VICTORIA F TURSUCU. nu1b1"d and wife & HOW SIENO HUA end AMORNRAT CHUA, 11\nbend 1ncl wlla, rtCOfo.d July 7 19110. In Book t38S7 or Ottlelll Rteordl of Nici Counly, al P•O• 11119. Reco•Cl•r'• 1n11rumen1 No 81190, by reeson 01 • breecn or dol1u11 In p1yment or jMlrlormance or 1no oblloa11on1 MCureO tl\ll'aby. 1nclud1no 111111 b•HCh or c11r1ull Notice ol wlllch wee tecordtd Janu.,y 3. 19113. u Aecoraer'• ln•trumtnt No 83-000711 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER FOR CASH, l•wtul money ol th• United Stalet, or 1 c••hler'• check draw" on • alll• °' n111on11 banle, 1 11a10 or rte1eral er.Oii union, or 1 11011 or ltd .. 11 llVlftG• and loln U.ocilllon domlCllld In thle Ill.II. Ill p1y11>111t the lime of aalt, Ill r!Qhl. 11t1e and ln1 .... , lleld by II, .. Trullae. In lhal ••II prooerty 11tu1te In 1110 Counly and Stell, dHCllbed 11 fOllOW. Lota 6 & 1 Of Trec;t No 442, u per map recorded In &ooll 16. Page 43 or Mtacetlan101a Map•. In 1111 ottic. ol 1111 county •ec0tder or llld county Tiie •lrtel 1dcl1e11 or olher common de•lon•llon ol Ille rail P'Ol>"ly her11nabov1 clNCtlbed 11 pu1portecl 10 be 171 encl 175 Rochultr Streat, Coate Meu. C•lllornla. Tiie undersig ned h ••oby d1act11ms 111 lla blllly lor eny lnc0trec:lness In Miid al•MI lddreu °' other common C1MtOn1t1011 Said Hie wlll be m•d• wtlhoul warre nry, oxpron or Implied, regerdlno 1111•. poueulon, or encumb11nct11, to-aellefy tllt prlno1p11 b1l1nc1 ol 1111 Note or 011\11 Obflglllon H cur•d by H id 0..0 ol Trull. will\ lnta1et1 and othlf aum• ea provided lh11eln, plua 10>.o1nc ... ti any, under 1111 1 .. me llllf'tOf and intlfllll on aucn ••hanc.s. end plu• '"'· charges end eapenaes of the Trull" an of 1111 trusts created by uld Deed Of Trull Th• 10111 tmounl OI H id obllg111on, tnctuc11n9 r111on1bly aar1m11ec1 1011 clletg•• 1nd HPll\M8 ot the Trustee, II the ume or 1n11111 publteellOll ol tllla Nottee. 11 Stile 087 62 Oeted Ap<tl 13. 1983 REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SERI/ICE. a Celilornla eorporallon. u Tr1111 .. 8y (SEALI D J MOfQlt. 111 Prllldtnt 2020 N. Btoedwey Sulle 208 Santa Ant. CA 92708 Tel 17141953-6810 Publ••l'l•cl Orange Cou1 Dally Pilot. Apt 13, 20 27 11183 1134-63 onc1uc11ng toes. clla1ge1 and exp11n11s ol Ille Trus1" end ot tl>e truall created by H id Deeel or Trust ropey lht remlln'"ll pr1nctpa1 tums 81 Iha note(•I Ma#ld by 111<1 0..0 ol Truar to wit $84 000 00 wUh interesl lh«IOfl lrom .Juty I, 1912 II 19 25% per 1nn11 m •• PfOVlded ,,, sal<I note(•) Plu• CO•I• ano any edvanca. of SI .277 llO wttll 1nrertsr t" tM ~ C.-t qt the atate of~... K-oM1t The t>anehclary under said Dee<l or TruSI he1etofore o•ecultel and cltllvered to tht undorelgnecl a. wr111en Otclet111on or oereutt end Ottnand for Stla tnd • •rllten NOl•ct ol Oeltull ano Eltellon to Seti The underllgned c.uMO seld Not!CI of 0tlaul1 and Election to Stll 10 be recorded In the county ""*• lhe 1111 property I• IOCaled 08141 Merell 30. 1963 .... c-ty of 0r-. '1CTTTIOU• aUSINI•• In the M111er or lhl Ettel• ol NAME STATEMENT LOIS VIRGINIA 8EECHTE\., Tiie fOllOWtftG peraona •r• doing OteMMd bull""' •• NOl!Of> le hereby 9lv111 tllel Iha BAST IAN PART NERSHIP. ~will Nit at Private..... 4002-IA C.lle Sonora Leoun• HUit to 11>1 "hlglle•t end bt•I blelcler, CA 112653 1u1>ject to conllrm111on of H id Henrietta 8 Be!Owln 4002-20 Superior Coult. on 0t all• 1111 26111 Calle Sonort. L1g11n1 Hiiie, CA clay of ~. 1983 11 the ofllol of C 1126S3 A HIO~. Box 328. Belbol 1111111<1, l/lrglnll M Pilling, •002· 1A Cellfornl1 11 2162 . Ttltpllone Calle Sonore, L1gun1 Hiiia. CA 1173-71170, County of Orenoe. St••• 112853 w11 bom In VVC11y or Oranoe. Corp County or Orone•. Cahlornl• on Stptemt>et 22 10711 P1c1llc Reconveyance ol Clllfomll. 111 tlll right. title eno M11guer1te E 8ullntr, 4022-A 1n11rHt ol u ld d-.Md et 1111 Calle Sonora. Laguna Hlll1, CA u Hid trUSIM time of 0..111 and 8" ll>t riOflt. Utle ,92653 2700 N Mein Street, llld Int-I tllel tl>e tel•t• ol Mid Sylv11 W Bullna r 1723 12tll Floor. d•c••••d hll I CQUl••<I by Terrepjn Wey.~ S.ICh CA 3 Petltk>NI< 11 en aclul1 person and detlret 10 edopt 11110 ctllld Petitioner 11 Ille Husbenel ot DUNG THI BUI. the molhe< of ulcl child. wno relaln5 lier right ol custody 01 tlle clltld Patllloner and nlel ~ 1111d said m1nor C1111d rftiCM 1n the Counly ol Otano• Staie Of c 1111orn1a. •.The moth« of tM cllllcl. DUNG THI BUI. Wll mAlllad 10 1111 petitioner 011 Aprll 27, 198 I at Senti An•. C1Hfornl11, and It prepared 10 c:onMnt 10 the clllld'1 adoption 0y Ille petitioner rellln"1Q •II ol her r'911t• to cua100y end conlrol S Tiie fatllar ol the chtl<I 11 ..nknown. Unde< the PfO\'llOOlll ol See11on 224, o1 the Ov11 Code hit conttn1 alone " required lor Ille adoption sinc e there 11 no pretUrned lather IS cltllfl!'llned by Stctlon 700• (•I ol Ille Clvll Code 8 The dllld la 8 l>'OC>lt IUbject f()f 14Qpllon, lhe jMlllllOntr I llome It Willt>tt tor the ctlliCI end hi ts Ible to IUPPOf'I end Cl•• IOI the ctllld l>'OP«IY Tiit 1n111111 of Ille Chtld wtH bl piornoted by 11111 adoption TM pe1Htoner egr-to ., .. , the cllllcl In 111 reepecta •• • hl1 own lawfUI ctllld WHERl!FORE petitioner prey1 11\81 !ht Coon eo,.,. rn. adoption of lhl c.lllld by Petlllontt. dtclet1ng 11111 1h• pttntontr end th• cllltd tllenee!Oflll enall a11at1ln toward eacll other 1111 11011 relallop 01 parent end child, and llave Ill the 11011tt enel ~ tublect to all Ille Clutltl ol th•t rtllllon, end that lhl cnlld tllell be known H SCOTT HUY•KHOA TRUONO Oetld· ~ 5. IN 1 Long v.,, Truono Petit toner .... a... .. VM DAO a UNTNI" ttlt .... '"" ....... 222 ._.Me,CAlll'Pot ,_. (714) .. ,...., .........., ............. Publl•tltd Orang• Co111 Dell)' PllOt, M81dl 30 ~Piii •• t3, 20, !lt3 153443 S • c • 9270 oi-11ton ot llw 0t olhanri• other 92860 anta "na, " 1 tf\1111 O< In addition lo 11111 or Slid PllUll C SGollillt Abbott 111•1 SSS-1965 OeceeMO, •• Ille ltt'nt of dMlll, Ill 500 Sle<rl Helghl• =~.:io~:om. and to 111 lhe CM11in lmp<ollld ,..., .......,l>Uf'f Perk. CA 91370 Publ1ahecl Orengo CoHI Dally propertr. allua1td In Ill• O••ne• Ro01r1 C Soovltlt p A 3 20 2!? 111n County of 1"8 State ol Celifomla, 5028 E Townl«MS AYI •IOI Pl 1 · · ...., par11culerly dl9crlbl<I u lotlow1 FrMOO, CA a3727 ----------1-732--33-1 to-wrt Tiff bu-IS oondUCltd lty a PUBllC NOTICE Lot 19 Of Hect 7043. •• per general P•nntnllle> -------------1 mep t«ordtcl In Bootl 272. PaQee Virgin•• Pelllno K-o441t 4•. 45 encl •8 ol Mlecellene<>u• Thi' 1111ement wu llltd with tlle .. u H I c I .. A L c 0 u R T 0 , M8')8, In the Otf\ce ol 1111 County Counly Clerk or Or•noe County on CALIFOflNIA Recor<* ol Oranoo County. more Martn 22, 1963 COUNTY Of' ORANGE commonly known u 1020 Pet'khlH '2t:IA02 Publl•h•d Orang• COHI Dally Pilot March 30 Apt11 6 13 20. 11163 CE""'AL OflANQll COUWTY O.IYI, Coeta Meu. Celltomle. JUOfCIAl OlaTIUCT Term• of 1111 CHll In lawful 700 Clwk: C911tlf °"" W•t money of the United SlalH on ..,,, • ..._,.., Calttor!M l2701 oonllm>etion or Mii. or pert eean P L A I N T I F F W I N ST 0 N end belance evidenced by note NET WORK INC • D•••w•r• -.a by MOt10IQI Of Truat OMO corpora11on on Ille property to IOld. Ttn pet PUBUC *>11CC '~ t-113 AgV~~T~S~Ng A& NJARK~:.:G~ ~ :;1~ :,wnounl bid '0 bt deposited ... 11 pertnerah1p cont1111lng Of MlelhHI BIO• Of oltwa 10 be 111 writing .,.o NOTICfl Of' aALa CW Hetl &•ell co-l)lrlner · end Slltney wtll be ·-...a 11 tllt eloreuld MAL f'llllOl'9" Y AT l.H co-parlntr MICHAEL NEIL tile t 1 11 1118 llrel .....VATa IALI BRETT an 1ndt•ldu1I SHIRLEY o • 1 eny •mt 1 er No. A•11M1t Dot pub11C81ion tllfeol end belort dlll In 1~ 8,..,.,•-,, __ ......... SI-• LEE en 1n01Ytdu11 eo.110 X. or.... ,,. ............ """"''"' .... ... Co . Doe COIPOtlllon Oiled thlt 8th dey ol Apnl, 11193 of Cellfomll, In Ind tor ltlt County CAif ·~:·,.,_. ~tt~,.:ible ot 1~::::'M11tef of tll• E1t111 01 NOTICE! YCHI MYI tMlft •'*· p bll II d O C t O 1 HENRY GRUMET, 0.0-.0. The _, ll'llf dlci.e ........ ,.. U 1 I 11".},1 OH 11 y Notlel ft ll«tey gl-..tn 111•1 Ille wltlMM ,_ b1tftt llMrd ..-. PllOI Apl'll 13· 1•· ' 1983 underalgned wlll Ml It l)flYlte ..... JOU ~ wtltllll ao .,.. "8M 173~ to the lllGh••• end b .. 1 bldd«. I.he lf'lfonftetlclft ........ PUBlJC NOTfC{ 111bjeot to conllrrnatlon of M id 11 you willll ro INll lhl edvlCt of aup.1or Court on or •fl« the 20!11 an ellorney In Ihle m11ttr. you ftCTinC>Ut llU ... tl dl!Y of Aprtl, 1083, et 1111 offloa ot 11\oUld do to promplly to 111111 'fOU' NA.Ml tTAT .. llr'" DAVIO £. WALO. ~ .. 333 8eY9iCN """".., r11pon11, II 1ny. m•y bt Tiie follo•lng p111on 11 do•no Orlw . N9wpon ~. Counly OI llllCI on time bullntH It Orainoe. Stele ot CallfOtfllt, ell lllt AV It 0 I IJ I I e d II 1 a Id o SOPHISTICA TEO SERVICE. rlQllt, lltll end lnttr .. 1 OI Uld deme.,declo. II trH111n1I puecl• 13224 H9wpOr1 AYI •SA. T\1911ni o.c.dlnt, In end to all tllt Clttllfl dlcldlr COfttta Ud. 811'1 eurlhnda • CA 02610 , ... P'CIC*'Y llltvlte In the City of -qve Ud. ,..,..,. defttr'I Ron11e1 A. Otllfln, U~2' St •I 8111:11. County ol Or1noe. dt JO dtM.. lei II IMlnllHlaR.,. Newport Ave , •SA, Tuelln. CA Stitt of C1Uforn11.. perllcularly ...loll. 02880 dMtetlbed .. follow9, to-wit· ~I Ull•d dHll IOltOlllt ti Tlllt tiu--. It Cond\IC!lld by tn l.ot 108 OI TrllOI Htt, .. .,. c;on1110 da un 1bog1do tn ~II• lndlvldull. mtC> recotdld In llOClk 83, PIOll 1i .. u n 1 0 ' d. b.' I • h. c. (I 0 Ronald A. Orlffin to II ll'IOfllelY!L '?' MlltOlllentoue inrnedllllrntnt•. dt NII ~•. Tiiie 1ta""'9tlt .... flled with the M-. In the ~ ol !tit C0uncy 111 reac>ue111 NC11ta. 14 lliry algun•. Coufltv C'-11 of Orat1Q1 County on ~-of Orange County. more ~ -rtQletrldl • 1"""90 Mltdl fa tN3 ~ kllOWll Ml IOI UIGUna I TO TH~ OEflNOANT A dYll ' ,..,_. ......... teed\, Clllltomle 80?'°. cOf"Pll lnt II•• been lll•d oy 1111 Publlatiect Oreno• cout 0111y T1r1111 or , ... OHll In lewful plilll\Un flOllNI you II you wWI to Pllol, Merell )0, Aprll 8, 1a. 20, montr of tlle United StelH on ~ •hit·~. you mutt. wMln lfl!J..'l 11tT-N oontrma~ °' ..... Of j)lf1 wt\ ----.. ---.,.-1111\-1'11'-r----I H d•Y• aller tllll 1ummon1 11 a.-IC """-1no Mllnct evld•llotd by note n1uu" ""'""" -....o on you, lllt wltll Ulla ooun • ,._ ""'~ eawr.o ~~Of TNS1 a..s -~AC~iCimm110;'4'i;; .. iiwue1in•iiiitia--I .w111en ~ 10 lhl ~·· "°"1'K>Ue _.. on 1n. Pfoe>ett~ .eo told." Ten P* MAMI lfATW•'" ~ you do ao. :JOI" cltfMI .,.. MAm ITA,.._., a.ti~ amount bid to be~ ~tollowtru: IO l*IOl'lt .,, dolflO be tnttrtd on e p'plkllllon ot Ille TM 1--.., ~ .,. _..... wl!f\ 11114. e ll\d '"'' ooun ~.,.., • """"""""' _...... -.. 11c:11 °' oftlr9 tO oe '"M«JftO end IOtlnet ...... '°' tlle ,..., ~ M, _.. bt ftOtl¥9d •• , ...... 11A~·c1 r-f=.R~::v=~~ ' .., tlle c-..,,1, wtMdl ICAH0....0~ IOS OtOllld Offto. ., •llY ume .;,-;, t~fi;' .. Ht2t aould 111u11 tn glfnl1llm1n1 of AYetlllt ~ • 11• Oalfomla publloltlon 111t90f ano ~ ~ "°"'' Clllt._ Ohlll!d 1tet •llOB· talllno of money°' ~1>' t28.2J t N1tl111 IOI Orchid Of..._ T ...... , ~ ,._.1 ••--r L....,... or otfllf ttntr ,•qu1111d In tlle u• •v 1. •• O•tect 1111• acl111 d1y ot "4Wotl, ..::.::::. ... --. ....,.. -. .....,.,..,_ .....-..... A~ Cofone def Met,~ '* ...... -~.,.,..,... 02021 "*10ll KlnleY OlllllfJ11. 1IN Dt.ted Octow 11• 11112 Ollt NUl•ll. IOt Orallld t4AMV G!\"Mn Tltiltl °'" Coata Me9. c.*""8 flk>bert I l<llhll. A~CorOf\I def Mar, CelltOMll IMoulor"' lfll t:MH ~l. . • t2tlS ......_ °' Ttll9 ~ II ~ by I Ir.~ Cete)tt'Mll. Thlt ~ II condUctlld by I =.....~· a-t• ~.,,~ 01118M ~ ~. 99M'., =~· OAY'lt .. WAl.O Thll ~· WI l\llod wffn IM =";. Tllll 11~ ... llltd 1111111 lfllt Mell &ON t&IMTH, A COllnl'f a.\ Of OfM09 CowMy °" .,. ...... ....._ COUf'ltJ O!lnl Of Orlllf' ~l'f on :-:':if:~ Marc:fl 21. ,.., " ·=-..... QA..., Mwctton '* ~ OA - PuMINd Or~ co.:= (Y~ltt*I Or Oo&lt Oell)' ,llblltNCI Or.a~ Coeet Deity ftv ........ Or9ftff Cfftl 08ll1 "°'t ....... • Mltcf\ '°· """ •. ,~~ .. a~ No4 ... .,. '°·~ta. to.'"' PllOI ... ., IO •••• 1$, IOillN ,. .. ~ .. 1, ...... ,,_ ...,..A th•~ t ,.... • ,.it.a Or1nge COOll OAILV PlLOT /Weanttd•)'. Aprll 13, 1J163 Fluor signs big China pact Irvine fir1n to build, operate 600-mile coal pipelin e Fluur Ccrp • l rvlneo, haa llif\#."d an •avt-<•mt-nt Lo dt.-.tan. ht•lp bulh.t, the n oper~•· • 600 mile <.'Oal alurry plpttlln~ to Shanahal, C h i n•'• larJCu•t lnduatrlal t-entor The llfltt'Cmom wu 11lan~ thl• w vek In P e klns by t-'luor president .O!lvld S. Tappan Jr , and the C hina N1tion1al C.>al Ot!velopmont Corp •• which gave no flaures tor evcntwal co.t ot the pro)'ct A repre.cn\atlvc ot Fluor haa conflrmt'd the 11greement, but would provide no further d eu.118 The pipeline, from Chlna'11 coal-rich Sh•n><I Province west of Pekin& t.o Nant.ong Cit)', ubout 30 mlle.i northwetit o f Shanghai. will have a capacity of 15 million t.oru a )'l'Dr In tht> fll'llt phw;o and twlt.'t' thut In the second phase. Tht-Chine•<> announoemt•nt did not say whe n construction would begin. A Los Ange le11 r1e wspapcr r .. ported In its editions yesterday that the p ipeline Is c.-ert.afn w ro1t in the hundreds of mllllona o f dolllll"!l, making ll on1• o f the b iggest unde rta k e n with American cooperation. Enrher M onday, Chlnr•.;r• 1,...nrlr'r O!•n g Xm111.11ng met with Tappon •nd expn.wt'd hop. for 11.MX'\• In cuopttrallon b«'twt..<em Fluor and China, the oUidaJ Xlnhua new• agency ropor~ Xlnhuu d id n ot say whe ther ~i took up lht! lottJSt probh:ms troubling U .S .·Chlnu ttllatlona l"luor '11 P ek lng oHloo aald Tappun would havo no Immediate commcmt 1.m hi• meeting w ith l>t:ni. Xmhuu l!Hld Tappan'• d e leeailon urrived here a wt.-c.tk ago today to diacwla cooperative projot•w an (.•oal and oil dl•vulopmt•nt. It saJd Deng c:'Xpr...-.od hop<' thut Fluor and Chin cse departme ni. w ould m ukt• t:ommon l'ffort s lo e n 11ure th<! pro jeC'tl' BU('('l'U Jo~l uor has bel'n perCorrn1ng eng1neer1ne llt!rvlc{'s for modernization and expnnaion u f the Fu•hun OJlt:n·pll coal rrune In northeast C hin41'1 Llaonlng provm(."j· Xlnhua said Tappan, vlc-.. c h a irman o f the National Council for U .S .-C hina T rade, a!BO w lll go to Haanan island in south C h i n a to visit his birthplace, where his parent5 once served es 1r1lss1o naraes Real estate Kaiser Aluininurn post goes to Karcher kin loss $28 million Frank J K arch er has b~t.>n named vice president o f real es t a t e at Car l K a r cher Enterprises Inc .. Anaheim, owners and opera tors of more than 350 Carl's Jr. restaurants in California, Nevada and Ariwna. In this position h e will SU per vise SI te selecti o n O( restaurants In exis ting and n ew markets. Karc her's career with CKE began in 1951 when h e joined has brother. Carl, in the restaurant business. Over the years at CKE. h e has ser ved as r estaurant manager. restaurant supervisor and gen e r al manager. OAKLAND K aiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. has reported a $28 8 million locis-67 cents per common share -for the first qua rter of 1983. Sales for the three m onths e nded M a r ch 3 1 amounted o $586.1 million compared with sales of $733 8 milho n an the hrst quarter o f 1982, when the company rl'ported a ICM of $24.9 million, o r 58 cents per common share. Chairman Cornell C Maier a ttribute d the loss to poor aluminum sales. He said that besides "n o actual unprovement OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS in prices," the loss reflected tre ,<.'OSt or idled production facillties Aluminum shipments for t h e first q u a rte r totalled 179,700 torui, compared with 202,000 tons s hipped in the first quarte r of 1982 Although the agr icultural c ht.>m1cals d 1v1s1o n s tnc reased sales from a year ago, it also r eported a loss. Maier said th e company w ill soon bene fit fro m price increases but they "w1U not be enough to return us to p,rofltable operations an tht> current q uart.er ." Uf'S 1 \t'I. . ~;,. Up"'~ 1 I '-Up U3 , ... 'p _.. \Jp lll i•• Up lOI " • l ·, Up )t t .,, 1 .. Up 1•l l • , Up lt 1 1t!: • J~: ~: :~ ! H l', Up I• J H1, .. l UP UO It • 10 Up I• 7 41-'• l'· Up U I • • '-1 VP 14 J ) '• Up It > 7 • UP 14) ) .. Up IU • ._ VP II) • • I Up IU H J Up tJ • "'" 1'-Up I) S ... 4-Up IJ J ,, ' • 1' • Up IJ 0 ) .. • .. Up ll l 1 • Up t) l t•. UP l)S 1•• Uo tJ J OOWNi N • P(I " 7). t• ... , .. • t • I ,, . u•. , .. ". ,, 1'1 s j 10•, s•. ' n. l'> , .. , .. J-. ... 'fl • t • ,. . I Rt plh<I 0 ti I• I I '' Ott IS t .. °'' ,, • '• Off t)' j, Ott "1 I Otl 10) .. Ott IOJ "' Of1 IOJ ,_. m• too o, Off IO 0 1 Of1 ., ·~ Ott 'f 1 '' Oii t I ., 011 •• ' Ott •• I Off al Jtt °'' •• '• Ott I J ' Otl t J • ()fl • , Ott l .O j t• Oii " .. 0 0 7.7 .... Of! ,,. .. Oft ,. Orano• Oo.1t OAILY PILOT /Wedneaday. AprO 13. 1983 ,,_.;.... ____________________________ ~------------------.., NY COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 1u•r•tto4ift tfifC'-UP• ......... , .................... u . ,.(t•IC .... IOUOll DlflOtl ••o (lll(tll•lfl UOCll l•tMA•H\ &NO .. NUI D • .,, ... W.UD a .. o INUtlllt i..1.. ... •• I' t '''" (to~ c.,. ~··· .... , • l ""' ~ .... , ... ~,.. ,.,, p. ""' , ..... ,,.. Volcker criticizes interest rates By 'he Aaeociated PreH EconomJ1~ are divided over whe\her the 0.3 petten\ 1aln In reull ••l•• IHt month •Jc:e~· conawner-led economic recov«y, but Federal e Chairman Paul Volcker 11y1 no recovery will t>. IOl'IC·W\ini It lnterMt rates remain a\ curnnt level.a. A New York bank, meanwhUf", 11ya im.ertn~ effecta of the recetalon will hold down union memben wage incttuee thla year. The retail aalea lllCTUJle wu modest, but It al.lo WH the flrat gain since IHt November and an improvement from a 1.2 percent drop ln February, the Commerce Department aaJd yesterday. March aa!ea were led by a 3.5 peroent jump l.n car sales, the department aaid. Auto lnduatry analyata predicted that tor the flnt lime si..noe the pre-recealon daya of early 1979, aut.omakerw will have a profitable flr1t quarter. Ca terpillar Joss big? PEORIA. Ill -Wall Street analy1tt say Caterpillar Tractor Co, will announce a subetantial tint-quarter Joa at the company's annual meeting in San Francisco today. Analyatl Alexander Blanton of Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith and Thomas Bumi of Goldman Sachs & Co. predicted yesterday the company would announce a 1088 of perhape $200 mlllJon or more, aa well as another cut in itl dividend. VFW 'peace treaty' told LOS ANGELES -The United Fann Workers union aaya it has quietly extended a "peace treaty" with the powerful Western Conference of Teamaten in their bitter feud over control of agriculture worken. The one-year extension wiJJ permit the UFW to concentrate on fighting off attempts by rural legislators, aided by GOP Gov. George Deukmejian, to undo gains made by the union while Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr. was in office, said another source close to the UFW who asked not to be identified. In addition, neither union was anxious to get involved in another battle that could ooat each union millions of dollan. Job choice postponed BELL -About 200 workers laid off from General Motors' South Gate_ plant won't have to choose immediately between jobs in Oklahoma City next month or guaranteed income benefita after all, a union official says. However, GM 90 far has not agreed to local union members' demands that only volunteers be aent to OklaMma, said Henry Gonz.ales, a United Au.to Workers international representative hued ln Bell. seven miles southeast of downtown Loa Angeles. DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YOIUtlAP) ,11 .. 1 Dow~ .. fOf T~. ,,.., 1J WHtf NYSE DID HEW YOlllC (U ) ,,.., • 12 WHAT AMEX DID HEW YOlllC IAPI ...... 11 STOCltl ._... ~ ~ C-. Oii • 11111 li...A7 llSI • 11>4 Ot 11($.D+J 4lt D. lO su u soz.n so1 "• 011 W Ot 121-D IJA,jol 1U.A6 + 0 • a_JA 01 n "' U ... • • l.ZJ 1,68.1'0 1,112..D 1,m.• IO.M1.AD AMERICAN LEADERS -1 -... • y, .... . ""' -'-.... •I'- • ClASSIFllD CLASSIFIED INDEX To PIA ct Your Ad, C 11 LllU llll llfflllT 642-5678 REAL ESTATE •t•lflllt...I """' ............. " ~ .... , ..... .,., s.11.,.. .,,.,t, ...... ~ ,.,.n11.u ... ~,,,. .. l··'4 11, .. dt I Mtt• "••l.tt M•<tta• l\ft~ t 'hH•l •1 r .... >0-uru.on \ .. u." llut1t1tW'8•1 ~-t lhml U,.tt-•"'• ....... l 1lf\lho u .... h l 1t11t111 .. Ifill l l~"'''" N+af'-• 1 .. 1 ... 1 ... ,. M1 ... •11ot1 \111 N1 "f"•tl I'°• II '\ 10 l It f1M llh '-111J~tll1 tf .. •11 IU '-tlol,1 ,,., """ ' '"' .. ... •• , 1 .......... . ' I I 01 .• I 111 ,, \\+ 111 fl,.h I \I ·l>t11 II t1111 ''''""'' '•"'""'"''" f'-.. 1 f'h I• •I u ........ i'• •• ' .......... ,. fl ' ............. ,. .. lh•v~• u I ,.,, II·•• ... ,,, I• M ... t lnt1•111o1 111111• 1 110111 111 .. 1 P1111•I l • .t, I I '·•" M11ll1l1 lto1u1 I' .. '"' M,,.,,,..,.,n Cil .... 11 '"·•"fit-•.. I 'ut f' ·•11.mt I.Jut"' ~Wh u ... n.h."111 ... m. ~~ n,,,.~ ltl~· It£ Wani.d RENTALS II tU'-" > ~" '"'"*•,t "'"''"'"'I of11.1t1h''""' It uw .... ,_,~1 ... 1 " I lllUtth''"''' t llU.•"· ~ Ulft \ rnwl· i Hf f11\olot1tMIUJif' lu10 I ••V.11lu1U"'*''"t ' 111 lt!,tpli tll' ~ \tlH 1"141 """' l HI AtMrl,,..., n\A t ''"''~'·•"'' A1w11""'nu l'nl At•b, t"um ... • ul K.••Jlt "-•"'' A t\wht lt.'4•1' Mu" ... ~:;.7,:;:K:~ .. I\ V,,,. •1111'1 k1 1H~I •Hi owh '" "'lih•1• • H.. nYih Y. '"I'"' <• .. t•t(•~ 1·111 Ki ul \,)ff .. , tt( ""''' """''""..._ t(.n1,.1 c.·.omn·I H.•nWh ln.tr.nl H1 nwa-. ..,, r.~~ M1..,. K1 ut1la. 'AHHOUNCEMENTS Ai11-. .. ,,_..1 .. 1Hl• ··-'/Ii t 1""IMI , •• t .............. , ••• 'h-.1 A. .... .,.,. .... lto\I BUSINCSS &o FINANCIAL '""'"''"'~""·····"""·'· •Ku..11 .. -~ >vt•lf lurultf Etu...1..-"'·""'' 0 IM1,ln• I'll \~~fllUll1I""" l1o\1"t1111ut "'•l•l••l • \\1111111 \ h l. ..... "'"••", w .. 11h..t ''••llC .. M.'.., f 11 £MPlOYt.l'.NI I I• 111 v. .. oti .1 'f, '• "'•nh<i A..ULS M£RCHAP«>IS£ \t1•.._,, .. .... "..,.,h ..... .._ "·• ltolfl• tu.t,,i M•t•"•'' ('411n\il '--' "' .QU•t~ ft\ •. .,.i ........ ,'\ • t•"t , .. ',., t u11111\;r1 t ... r.,..~i. ... !tuu.,.·huM t •••·•~ J, °""'It' M.-t.10tr M1•1 U .. nt•iwJo \1,_ V. .. 11tnJ Muu. .. t ln•t,.J""'ttlt fWht •v1111h11t A. ... 1111"'• hi f11.61W ... ,_CJt.11f .. lt '-t•1rlt1•K C.,-..i. 1 \ H ... t1u 'Ii'"•• BOATS I t....-ttf tlt , ... .,. '•' ........ , ,,,, ""''-'"'«.i Slt1 M .. ""' [qui,. tt1.i.1n1 s. """ '"•·Iv,,.,. '."oi .. ., ...... '"m1-t.f .. ., ln.1r,., ,.,,., ............ ,,., ,., , .. ,. It.-'''°' l ,,._,,.,.. M11I•• l:t•"-•'" ·M'"'"'"'"~ , .. ,,,,., ~''"'" lhofnt. t<\ ,,.., ........ h •" t t, •.• ,... l llhl AUTOMOTIVE 1\u111 :ir.n_. • .,. l'•1h \lift•• "o1flh•I "•••h k..1 H~"l i 'Ahul Uto1 ···~"-\ "' \m .. ., ' ... ll"'UI ll•itt I ' • II o 11\nmt main channel vtew from ~!cent e Br, 6 Ba pool home. RedUOld S 1.CllW.000. IAYllM PUii UYRllT Spectacular bayf ront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up: 2 br, 2 ba dn. 2 boet •I*'& Reduced-$1,600,000. PElllllU 1111 IOWIFlllT ~ & jetty vtcwa. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3700 tq ft. $1.38G.OOO. Oceanfront. Liil llU ~led 3 bdrm. 2 ba\h + 1araie rec. rm .. beam cellinp, fum.laJ\ed, patim. $-120,000 fllllllll UHi llLLTIP New 4 br, 411\ ba. cuatom French Normandy F.ata~ 1.2 prime acre hilltop $1 .2~0.000. OlllUH OIYI UfflllT I •I I Coronado laland cuat. bayfronl Jol. a~· boal :: : dock PlaN avail Now $370,000 w/ienna . ..... llNf I lut BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR "· lj 141 11';' I ~111; , .. 1 11 fl,,r . .t• ll• •. ..., B r.1·, bttJ\ '·" : ·... Ital latat.1 It.: ... '" I U" II;' II~· ,, .. WJIL.! .... ... ... ,. ""' .10\ ,.,.qu .... ... . '· ...... ... ,,.,. ,., ... .,_,:../ Mio!' ,tU.M• IUIUIEI For Tuaeday through Saturday publlcatlona: 5:30 p.m. the prevlou• day. For Sunday and Mo nday publlcatlona: 12·00 noon SatU<day ...... .., l&lt lMI • 111 IUIT If Ill RWNIT ................ Live In 3 bdrm. 2 beth upper apt Commercial shop, office °' retell on tower level plu1 4 car perking. Price at $385, 000. associated I R<'> 111\ If A, •r I S l Ol' iA l e't>t • t' t t ....... TM• ectvantege or own· er·• dilemma on 1N1 one! He'tt~·MUST SELLI Fentastlc location ,_ So. Cou1 Plaza. .... 1011, your gain on Ihle xlnt Towne Home d•- llghl. Cell 759· 15-01 or 752·7373. •ll:l=~~I '·.!ii , ...... f.:11 6!.°Vl ": .. , ... ,., r .".'.1\ r;.',fH f.:.r.: ... , tCl111Uled Adi are the an-to a tuece11ful getage ~ ywd Nie! tt'a a better way to tell more peoptel COLDWC!U BANl(eRO \ f >I l / 1l F II • I A '\ •, I '' •, AUTOS IMPOtlTm \II; k••ttt 1 1\u1li ''"'""'' "''"' l11t•111t l\tl•U" I~ L ... -'"' h Utt1 .'"'' ,~ ... ,. hu/U J..,f(U.H ......... •-mt•lfl(hlfll ......., .. , .. ..... """ M .. 1.11.. M .... .-.. o M~11 .. ~t-tt. nt ~ ...... ,_, Ml• llt• I Pttnt•·r• ... '\tc-"tl'1 ........ hi ...... -..h 11-o11ott. .... ... _. ~ 11\.olwfw ,, .......... '"""''"' \11.th~•""4it'" \<1•~· .. ,_ ..... ~. ll..<o1' l .... 11. l"'-..ml.-t l~·­lhltJ r.lf"ft • ,...,. ...... 1 i.. .... .... .. _ ~k ......... o. ......... Dally Piiat Wedn••d•y. Aprll 13, 1883 · HERITAGE 14 f (,I I' >• • ' l.1ookil1g for a career i11 ·ales? Set• today' Help Wa111ed ads, e/11 · ·ificu1io11 .'; l 00. 21M 2 Br, frplc, ttep9 to ~ach, gerage, 1795/pr mo 851-8'187 2 Bdrm. trplc, c.,peted. rang41. patio Lee $775, ph 840-1177 View over China Coves, 3 Br. 2 Ba, gar, eundeck. prkg Avail 611 $1'400. o-873-3115 $535-$545 TSL Mgmt. 845-8122 &42-1803 - Fl O.an'ge Co .. t DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day. Aprll l3, 1063 A real dogface Athena, an I. I -year-old English bulldog, is in the driver's seal as mascot of the 3rd Battalion's Alpha Company a t Fort Ord. The Hhonorar y corporal" is owned b y company commander Capt. Kevin Clements and has he r own (what else?) dog tags. Tax refunds increase W/otlSHINGTON (AP) -Federal mcome-tax refunds th.is year are averagmg $723, up 2 5 percent from a year ago. DllTH IUICll ZENOVKA BARRY LEWIS ZENOVKA. a resident of Westminster, Ca. He was a truck d r iver f or the Advanced California Transponauon Company Cor the past 2 years. He IS survived by hu wife Mary, son Daniel of Bellflower, Ca., daughters Lauren and Andrea Zenovka, mother Doreen Bolock of Hemet. Ca., father Charles o f Te~ Services will be helq on Thunday, Apnl 14. 1983 al 7 .30PM at the Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel. The fanuJy request in lieu of flowers donations be made to the St. Jude Children's Hoepital. Services under the direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount Ohve Mortuary of Costa Mesa 540-555-4. PATTERSON JAMES H. PATTERSON. resident of Santa Ana. Ca Passed away on April 11 . 1983. Born in Texu in 1892. he was a veteran of both World War 1 and World War 0, he WU a retJ.red plumber and a resident of Orange County for aver 50 years. He was a1ao a member of The Spurgeon Methodist Church of Santa Ana. Ca. Survived by his wife Eula, ION Jamee, Bishop, Bruce afld John, sister Lola Sand ers, 7 grandchildren, and 2 great- grandchildren. Services will be held on Thur9day. Apnl 14. 1983 at l:OOPM at the Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel with Rev. Richard lsakaon, Spurgeon Methodist Church officiating. Final Interment tervioes al Harbor Lawn M emorial Park Servioes under lhe direcuon of Harbor Lawn Mount Olive Mortuary of Costa Mesa. M0-555-4. , MILLIGAN BENELLA M. (OLGA) MILLIGAN, pueed away on April 11, 1983 in South Laguna, Ca. A resident of Laguna Beach. Ca. Mra M1lhgan 1s survived by 4! daughters Ev ely n C . Crockett of Laguna Beach. Ca. and Dorothy J. O'Connor o f El Toro , Ca , S grandchildren and 9 great- grandch1ldren and 5 great- g re at -grand ch 11 d re n Sel'Vlces wul be held Friday, April 15. 1983 at lO:OOAM in the Chapel al McCormick Mortuary, 1795 Laguna Canyon Road, Lagu n a Beach , followed by interment at 2:00PM at Forest Lawn Memorial Park . Glendale. Mrs Milligan will lte in state from 12:00 noon lll 9:00PM on Wedn esday and Thursday McCormick Mortuary . Laguna Beach directors 4~-9415 DEMING NORMAN W. DEMING, resident of Newport Beach, Ca Passed away on April 5. 1983 He is survived by his w1(e Ann. Final Interment services will be held at the family plot at Mount Calvary Cemetery, Topeka, Kansas. Bain Be rgeron Smilh & Tuthill Westcliff Chapel Mortuary Costa Mesa. 646-9371 GROVES JOHN E GROVES , resident of Coe1a Mesa. ~ for the past 13 years. PUied away on Apnl 11, 1983. He was a member of the American Legion Post of Newport Beach, Ca. and was a Mach.mist for the Parker- Hanntftn Company for the past 30 years. He 1.1 survived by his wife Beverly. Private family arrangements were made under the direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount OUve Mortuary of Costa Mesa. 540-555-4 ARRIGO LILLIAN ELVIRA ARRIGU, r esident o f Newport Beach, Ca. PURd away on Apnl 11, 1983 In Newport Beach. Ca. Beloved mother of Vincent Arrigo of Newpo rt Beac h . Ca , grandmother o f Michael ----------. Arrigo of Balboa Island, Ca. and S t even Arrigo o f Newport Beech, Ca .. sister of 'ACIJfe YllW MIMOllAL , ... Cemetery Mortuary Chapel·Crematory 3500 Pacific View Ortvt> Newoort Beach 6'4 2700 WeCObMOI MOITUA•IU La<Juna Bear.h 494·9'115 Laquna Hills 768 0933 San Juan Cap1strt1no •95 1776 HAllOI LAWN-MT. OLIYI MOf'tUl'Y • C4'tmt11ry CremetQt'f 1~G1sletA._. Theodoala T h istle of T~. Ca, Lob Hal8ey of Portland, Oreaon and Mn Loretta Hensley of Torrance, Ca. She was a member of St. Joachim'• Catholic ChUJ'Ch. Mass of Chrllt!an Burial will be held on ThW'lday, April 14. 1983 at 9:00AM at St. Joechim'a Catholk ChUTCh, Costa Mesa., Ca., followed by Interment at Good S h epherd Cemeter y, Huntington Beach, Ca . Pierce Brother1 Bell Broadway M ortuary dl.rec10C'I. ltALLBACK.A 'Righteous few' venerated Christians who aided .fe w called 'pitiful number ' WASHINOTON (AP) In tho mJdall of thelr colebtatlon, aurvivora of NarJ concentra\Jon camJ* peUled to honor the momory of thme they c~U "the ri&h~ amoni the nationa" -Chrbtlana who rllked life and liberty to at~ shelter and 1uccor to Jewa. But, In a dLecuaaion al the Am4'rican Catherina ot J~Lah Holocau.at Survtvon, flve 8Cholal'9 a8TtJfld Yetterday that one thlns that char&CWrlwd "the rlghteout" wo.a their relat.lve rarity. Henry Careu. author of "A Chratlan Hiatory of the Holocauat," called It "a pitiful numbf-r - thol.lgh a lonoua they are -of 3,500 ... Hl1torlan1 of the holocau11 have found lnat.ancea where 3.~00 Chrilllana, amona Europe'• wartime po~ulatlon of 300 mllllo!'J helped Jewa avoid Hitler a death sentence. The Holoc.aust killed ·two-thirds of Europe's 9 million Jews. Rabbi Iarael Mowahowitz of New York City aaid he went to Europe to ask why the people of moat countries looked the other way while In Nazi-occupied Denmark the story was different: Danes rallied to help most Danish J ews escape to sanctuary in neutral Sweden In the face of certain brutal Nazi retaliation if caught. In moet places, Mowshowiu said, he was asked, "But what could we do?" In Denmark, he said, the questton was, "But what else could we do?" Today, as the meeting of survivors winds up, many of the 10,000 participants planned to go to Arlington Cemetery, resting place of many American war dead, for a ceremony honoring the soldiers who liberated the J ews from the death camps. At the discussion of "the righteous," civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, director of the A. PhUip Randolph Institute, said Americans could not take great satisfaction from the role of liberator because of this country's own record of indifference aft.er the plight of the Jews became known. "It was a happenstance that Americans came to liberate J e ws from the concentration camps," Ruatln aald "That wu not n rl11nnNt noble, activl' deed. "W '-'Ould have deetroyed the r11llroad trad<JI that led to thoee conoont.ratlon campt and destroyed the can whlch carried theee people and the c:&mPJ whJch buml'd them, but we dJd not," ht' Id Ru1tln alao recalled how In prewar days Preatdent Franklin D. Rooeevell tumed back the St. Loula, a ship l~dt.'Ci with Cennan refugC-t_'I that had reached Miami. Denied refuge, molt of the pa11engera aub1equently dlvd In Adolf llltler's conccntratJon camps, he said SUU, 1torles of heroic gcncrUlity were recalled: the Polish gardener who saved 30 or 40 Jews until detected, and who died wHh them as a result. the Warsaw zookeeper who hid Jews in the cagt-a or anlrnala; the Slat.en of Zion In Paris and Rome who gave shelter, fo rgtld pasaporta and helped hundreds of Jews etieape the Nazis without fil'lit demanding that they convert to Roman Catholldam. Sister Rose Thering of Seton HaU University said her own studies showed that the widet1pread toleration 'of Jey.iish persecution "had Its basic origin in an anti-Judeo Christian attitude." · While intellectuals and clerics were a1ao put to death by the Nam, she said. the fate of the Jews was unique because Jews could not escape. "All persons who had committ.ed the crime of having Jewish grandparent.s were under a sentence of death," she said. Holocaust survivor Alexander Donat, author of "The Holocaust Kingdom," said tus studies isolated no single type of person among those who sheltered Jews. Some were professors, some peasanl.8, some working men, some middle claas, he said. "Some did It for m oney. some out of idealism, some for religious or patriotic or humanitarian reasons. "No matt.er how much we talk about these people," he said, "it will never be enough." But, he added: ''The righteous of the nations of the world were only the tip of an enormous iceberg of hatred, indifference and bigotry." Chicago mayor had • • • • gigantic v1s1on CHICAGO (AP) -In 1951, Harold W ashington a nd a handful of black men, all of them dreamers and most of them poor, sat on the kitc hen floor in a rickety South Side housing development and vowed to become gianta. Today, 32 years later , their dream has come true. Washington told his friends he would become "one of the great politicians of all time." And for the 60-year-old congressman, his election yesterday as the first black m ayor o f America's second-largest city waa more than the fulfillment of a dream. It was a person.al triumph over past tax troubles. a suspension from law practice, and a history of unpaid bills. For his friends and his black constituency. it also was a victor y over cynical appeals to racism .. , Washington never s trayed from the prom.laes he made in the kitchen so many years ago, a longtime friend says. "We made a commitment to each other, vowed to support one another up and down, hot and cold, feast and famine." recalled Dempsey Travis, a real estate tycoon and author who la one of America's wealthiest blacks. ''Of courae then, it was pretty much { . .. arrune. Another of their companions, 09car Brown J r., went on to be a well-known musician and a fourth, Gus Savage, is serving his second term in Congress. Among the 11 black s in Roosevelt University's 1949 graduating class of 575, none was more driven than Washington, a World War II veteran whose infectious personality and voracious reading made him the natural "or ch estrator ," said Travis. .1:1 A sign of thinp to come was the UM8 election for president of the school senate. White candidates on the left and right split the vote, much as his mayoral primary foes would 25 years later, a nd Washington slipped in. "We knew then we had somebody on our hands." said Travis. Washington was born April 15, 1922, in Chicago, the son of Roy Washingto n , a Methodist minister and attorney. He served in the Army Air Corps in World War II. and attended Northwestern Unive rsity law school after college. A year aft.er getting his law degree, Washington became a Democratic machine precin ct captain . filling the vacancy created by the death of his father Ro1. who had railed his family as a single parent. A s a local party man , Washington was rewarded with patronage jobs, first as a city attorney, then as an arbitrator for Harold Washington wipes brow after learning of win. the Il linois Industrial Commission. He was elected to the Illinois House in 1964 and served three state Senate terms. A3 a legislator, he was known for oratory and hwnor as weU as ardent surport for civil rights, the Equa Rights Amendment and pro-union measures. In 1980 , he easily beat incumbent Re p. Benn~tt M . Stewart in th e l at US . congressio nal di stri c t 's Democratic primary, a victory tantamount to election. On Capitol Hill. he quickly moved into a highly visible role in the figh t for the Voting R1ghs Extension Act of 1981. West Virginia leads jobless W ASHINCTON (AP) -Thirty state9 had double-digit jobleasn eu in February and unemployment in West Virginia hJt 21 percent, the highest Cor any state since the government began tracking these atatistks in the late 1960s, the Labor Department has said. The stat e-by-state and m etropolitan area employment statistics, which are not adjutted for such seasonal variations aa weather and sch ool cl~. showed that nine stat.ee joined the list of tnoae with joblels rates of 10 percent or more in February. compared to the same month a year earlier. Twenty-two of these states had unemployment rates that reached or exceeded the national seasonally unadjusted rate of 11 .3 percent in February. and job}eea rat.es were above the national avenge in 100 of 233 metropolitan attaa surveyed Norman Deming Funeral 1ervlce1 were held In Kaosaa tor Norman W. Deming of Newpon Beach, who died April S. He wu 77, He la survived by h.11 wife. Ann. lni.rment will be made at the family plot ln Mount Calvary Cemetery ln Topeka. Balu Berseron Smhh & Tuthill WeatcUff Chapel Mortuary of Co1ta M e .. was in «lharae of arranaemeni.. Edward Kallbacka by the government. The st ate-by-state employment. a nalysis showed that in West Virginia, where mining industry layoffs have had a ripple effec::t, on the stat.e's heavily lnduslrialii.ed economy, the jobless rate toared nearly 6 peree.nt.&ge point.a over the yeu -from 13.l percent in February 1982 to 21 percent this put February. Following West Virginia on the roster of staleS with the hignest joblesa rates in February were Michigan, 16.5 percen~ Alabama, 16.l ; Oh io, 14.5; Pennsylvania, 14.1; lllinoia, 13.8; Tenneseee, 13.6; Indiana. 13.2; Oregon. 13.1; Idaho, 13.0; Washington State, 12.8 and Wisconsin, 12.7. Hawaii, with 5.6 percent unemployment, was at the bottom of the list. Kanau. South Dakota and Nebraska had relaUvely low jobless rates of 7.4 percent, 7.6 and 7.9 respectively. John Groves John E. Groves of Colta Mesa. a machlniat for the Parker-Hannifin Co. tor tM }Su\ 30 year-a. La dead at the aae Of 71. He wu a rnmiber of th Amenc.an Leg.Ion Poet of Newport Beach. Re la aurvived by hla wife. Beverly. Private tamur arrangem4mU were made under the direction o Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary of Ooe1a Me.a. Esther Juanita Coleman ''°TmOUe ....... NAMIHA,....'f' The loh0Wi119 P*'MM lie ~ nutll'lftt u IU .. f'l10C OONIT .. UCTION CO , 200~• loutll..., ''ont, a.itlo.t taltul(j Ce UN' 81~ ~I fhOtnM, 204!'"1 GOl.lth ley front. l.,0041 lllMO. Ca UOt2 T .,,.,"41 MICllMI JhlllTllell, 220 , 0 M••(llJlrllA, Coton• Cle! M••' C• 928711 T 1\11 Dullne61 It GOflOUC:le<I II)' e oeM• II pennerlhtp St'PMn A fllOmU Th11 1111-1 w" Iii.cl with 1114J County Clettl of °'"'99 COUlllY on M11cll 2&. IHl lltt .. Publlll'ted Orengt COHI O•lly Piiot M•r 30. A.pr II, 13, 20. 1083 14&1·83 POOllC NOTICC l(-cM427 "CTITIOUI llU8MH NAMe tTAT9MINT T II• toll owing pet1on la <101ng buatlleu H lHE RfEF, 820 W IVll\ SH.el, Co111 MeH. Cllll0tnt1 928211 AOQet L Emereon, 111900 AtgonQuln No 87 Hun1111gton S.ac;I\ C11fl0tn1e 112849 Thtt f>u•lneu It Conducie<I by "' 1ndlvtduel Roo•r l Em.,aon fnlt 111111me"' we• flle<I wlln ina CO..n1y. Clerk of O•enge County on Maten 17, 1983- f2t21)C) Pu1>1isll1CI Oreng• Coul Delly P1IOI Mar 23, 30 Apt 8 13 111&3 1425-83 flt&.IC NOTICE "CTITIOUI aUllNHI NAME STATUllNT r he followtng perton11 Clotng butlnen u 111 AtO SECURITY SYSTEM lb) AID SECURITY 5122 Sol" A_,.,. No 104 Hun1tng1on Beach Calltornte 92849 Oennle A Grubb, 8162 18th Street. No A , We11 mtn1•1r, C1111ornle 92883 Thie bua1neu 11 conducle<I hy an tndlvt<lultl Denni• A Grubb Thll ll811men1 WAI Ille<! wtlh Ille Counly Clerk of Orange County on Merell 17. 1983 "212115 Publl1hed Orange Co111 Delly Pllol, M1t 23, 30. Apt. 8, 13, 1983 1'24·83 Pl8JC NOTIC£ 'ICTITIOUI 9Ul ... H NAME ITATI!•NT The following pereon 11 doing bu91nMe •• TOMI SUSHI RESTAURANT, 21175 Irvine Avenue, Suite 1A·5, Coate M .... CAlllornl• 112827 Yoahlhlro Tomln1g1, 1506 Tonie C1 , Anaheim, Callfo•nta 92I02 Thi• Dullness I• con<luc1ecl by an ln<llVl<lwl Yoslllhlfo Tomlnega Thie 11e1emen1 wu filed wllh 11\e County Cletk of Ot•no• County on Aprll 11, 19113 '21rm Publl•ll•d Orenga Coeet Delly Ptfo1. Apr 13, 20, 27 May 4, 11183 tll33·83 MUC WJ11C( '~-~ Thi 1011ow1no pe11on 11 0011111 -·· ti cow A I cue TOM WHHL ACCl!atORtU, 2) Cl C CJ IMPOflTl!O CAPI & COVllll. ~ 8 Tart Cttcle, Anaheim. C. t290' Conni. Camlel ~k. 40t 8 Tart Circ;le A~ Ct t2IO• TAi.bu-i.~t)yM INSIVIOull CooW.C ~ Thie 1191-1 w• f~ Wllll Ille County Cletli ot Otano-Coullrr on MwQI 26. IH) '"-Publlall•CI Otange COHI Delly Pllol MA• 30 Al>' e t3. 20, IH3 1492 13 ,ICTITIO\I. M#eMH NA• ITATIMINT The following pereon It doing ~ .. OAROEN OESION8, 13t 8 Megnotle. No tO An111e1m, California 112904 Liii M Perker, 131 8 Megno111, No 10, An•h•lm, Callf0tnte 92904 Thll bueln ... II conducted by "' lndlYt<lutll Lita Pa.rket Trlil llelemenl wu flied with the County Cletk of Otange CounlY on Apttl 8 1083 f'l1JTIO Publl1ned Orenoe Cout Delly PllOI, Apr 13. 20, 27, Mey 4, 1983 11187·83 PlBJC NOTICE 'ICTmoul llU._18 NAME ITATI!lllllNT The tot1ow1ng pet1on la doing Dv11neH H KA DISTRIBUTING. 4 Eec•P•<le Couri N-porl Be.ch, Ca1110tn1• 92663 Kert Renee Rlcllerdton, • Eacap•<I• Court. Newpotf S.ac.1. C1t11f0tn1e 92663 Thia buSJMISS ta cooducie<I by en tnOM<lual Katt Rlehardaon Tllte llalemenl wH ftte<I with lhe County Clefk of Otenoe County on Mltctl 18, 1983 "212004 Publllheel Orenge CoHt Delly PllOI Apr 13, 20, 27, Mey 6, 1983 11141-43 P\alC NOTIC£ FICTmOUI aUllN~ll NAME STATffftNT The lollowtng pereon 11 doing bUSlne81 H UNIVERSAL CARPETS, 3100 W H11ver<1 Untl •3, Sente Ane CA 92704 Mtenlet Scott Hlllll, 216 151h S1ree1 •2 Hunllnglon Beach. CA 92848 Th11 bu11ness 11 conduelecl by .,, tn<ltvl<lull Mtel\684 Scoll Hlllla Tl\11 11e1emen1 waa hie<! w11n 111a County Cl-of Otenge County on Mt11en 21 1983 F2'2''4 Puollelled Orenge Cou1 Dally PllOI, Match n , 30, April 8, 13. 1983 PIS.IC NOnC£ FlCTITIOUI IWSfNeaa NAME 8TATEMt:NT FlCTITIOUl llUIWNl!t• The fOllowlng Pltton• ,,. Clomg NAJllll ITAff•NT bu111ness as The fOllowlng peraona are doing LA FUENTE TAPATIA •2 5•25 ~ M: West 111 S1ree1 •0. Sania An• Ca A-t TELEVISION ANO RADIO. 92703 573 w 191h SI'"' Coll• M.... Roootto G Campos. 801 South Callfornl• 92627 Oatsy S1n1e Ana Ca 92703 Abl<I Huaaalrl. 13501 Laurin<!• Btence Campos, 80 I Soulh Way, Senle if<na. CeUfornla 112705 Dally Sen1e An• Ce 92703 Ju<lllh L Huueln, 13501 Thi• bua1ness •S con<luclld by Leurlnd• Wey. Santa Ana. tndlVl<lua111Husband&Wlfe) Caltl0tn11 92705 Ro<lollo G Campos Tl\la bu..,_ is con<IUC111<1 by an Tl\11 t111ement was hie<! with 111e tn<l•IA<I~ COUf111 Cieri\ 01 Orenge County on Ju<lltl\ L Hunaln MlfCI\ 25 1983 Thia 1111_,I WU hi.cl with 11'141 F21-1 Counly Cl«!I ol Ot_,. County 00 Pu1>1tanee1 Orenge Co111 O••ly April 11 1963 PtlOt Mii 30 ArH 6. 13 20. 1983 . f't1nt:2 1536-93 flt&IC NOTIC£ Publlsn•<I Orange CoHI Delly PtlOI. Apt 8. 13, 20, 27, tll63 1571.al PtllllC NOTICE FICTmOOI 8UIMll NAflltf STATE•NT Tne lotlow1ng peraon •• doing l'lCTTTIOUS IWllHEll bu1iness u HAIU ITATOMNT KAP MARKETING COMPANY The fOllOwlng petlOt'll are doing 500 Newport Centre Drive. Sut1~ Dvetneu n 660, Newport Beech, C1111orn1e l'IELDS & SONS ROOFING, 92680 830 Santiago Roa<I, Cost• Mesa, RaJei Kur<I. 802 Promontorv Cellfomle 112112t Or Ive Weal, Newporl B .. ch. Calm c F1e1<11, 830 Senttaoo Callfornlll 112680 ROe<I, Cotle ~. Cellfomla 9~ Thll bu.W-IS conouc1e<I by en 8renel• l'leldt, 930 Senllago in<IM<lual Pl-. Coll• Men. Callloml• 9~ Ra)tll Kurd Thi• buSlness II con<IUC1e<I by .,, Thi• 11•1emenl WU Iii.cl will\ ,,.,. 1nc11v1<1u11 COl.lnty Cl«k ol Orange County on Brenele f'k!lele A.pr-II 11, f983. Thll 1111ement wu lffeO wtlh lhe County Clent of Otange County on M1tch 25 t9S3 ,,..,, f'21 ... Publteh•d Oreng• Coe11 Delly l. ~ 13 20, 27, Mey 4, 111&3 t846-63 Publltlled Orenge Co11t Dally ..... .,. N()Tll'C PllOI. Mii 30. A{>t 8. 13, 20, 1983 ~ \IUU\I 1 iw. Nil.IC NOTICE 141a..ea --rric-rmoua---~---8-1-­ N,.,.. ITA~ The followlng peraon 11 doing F1CTTTIOUI 9U ... ll bu.W-" NAME ITATIMEfT ORANGE SAFETY HOUSE A The followlnQ penoni -<loing COMPANY, 2706 Sterblrd Drive. bu•ln4ISI u · Coeta M-. California 92626 COMPUSEAV, 3501 W Moore Carol Ann Meru. 1'0 Oek St , Sle -0, Senti Ana, Ce 112704 F0tM1 Clrele, Glen<lore. Calllomle luenle Suezenn W•bt>, 2521 W 1117 40 Sunflower 'R-3, Santi Ane, Ca. ThlS bUAlnna le con<IUC1ed by an 112704 lndMdual. Oeboreh Lynn Oe<1g1r Klenl, Cerol Ann Mertz 2521 W Sunllo-• •R·2, Senll Thia 1181-1 WU Ned Mlh lhe Ana Ca 92704 County Clertl of Ol'ange County on Thia bu..,,_. Is eon<IUCle<I by e Al>fH t, 11183. genetll pennwahtl) f'l1UM Luente s. Webb Publl1l'l•<I 01•"9• Co111 Delly Thie s111emen1 wea Ille<! with !M Piiot, Al>f. 8, 13, 20, 27, 1983 Coun1v Cieri< of Or•no• County Ot1 182.2-83 Merell 26. 1983 F212111 ___ Nll __ IC_NO_T_IC£ __ _ Pul>llSlllCI Orenge COHI Delly Pl4o1 M11 30, A{>< 6 13 20. 1983 1691-92 l'ICTITIOUI _, ..... Nil.IC NOncc NA-ITAn•NT The following ~IOf'I le <lotng buelnMI .. PRECISION GRAPHICS, 711 ,ICTITIOUI •u•••• w 17th SlrHf. Unit 0·11, Coat• NAMI ITAn•NT Meea, Ce.tltornla 92827 The loCIOwlng i>«aooa are doing Rlc'1arel E. Andereon, 200'A bualnesi 11 8elbo1 81vel • Newport Beech, BEAUMONT INVESTMEl'i!TS CaHlomle 92881 l TO '7711-B Mllche ll Noro1' This bu.._ 11 con<lue:ted by an lrYIM, CA 92716. ' in<IM<lual JOM w Watt• 2339 Arbutus Rlef\ar<I E. An<l«eon N..-por1 8Mc11 C,•,' 92&80 ' Thie 1111-1 WU filed with Ille L Euo-'Plcll•ll co . In<: .. 1 County Clefll of Ol'ange County on C1lllornl1 corpor111on, 11111.9 Aprff 5, 1993. _ ...._ Mllchell Nonh. I~. CA 92714 rat-J e 11 r e y A Klplen. 777 Publl1he<I Orange COIUI Dally WMlhOlme A~ Los Anoe* Piiot, Apr 13, 20, 27, M.., 6, 1M8 CA 90026 ' ' 17'243 Thom• T Tllum. 2U 8ellin0 OflYe. Pacific P~. CA 90272 Ml.IC N()TlC( This ~ le con<lucted by • f'ICTIT10UI .,.._ .. Hmlted pettnerehlp !«AMS ITATl•NT l . ~ Pic:iltt 'nle foClowtng pereona are Oo1ng Co •• ll'O """,,_ as: l tUOfl" l"ICll .. t 0 & H I' E N C f N 0 & Pr..ideM CONSUWCTION, 1100 Cley Thie flat~ WU llloeCI wlll'I ll'lt A..._. Newport 9Mc:tt. Cellfomle County Olelil Of Ottn0t County Oft 9*3 l'l9b H. tH3 Larry 0 Htxlmef, t 700 Clay nwra A...nut. Nf'W'POt1 IMc;ti. Oallfor1* Publl1l'le<I Orang• Cot•• 011~ tatN Piiot. a.l•rCh u . so, Aptll •• ta, ~tlrfl H, Cantllton. 1700 Ole, 1"3 A~. HewPot1 8-ctl, Cellfomll 1429-83 • ., .. -.,. -.-Tillt bulll'ltM .. oonduiot.o by • r-... nu•tW. Ol'*tl f:*tMf'INP, Costa Meu ~s~ EDWARD LENARD KALLBACKA, tteident of Coat.a Mesa, Ca. P-..d away on Aprl) 12, 1983. He WM a mt-mber of th• Ooofoffera Club, the Ma10nlc Lodt• J'&AM #OU of San Bern•rdlno. Ca. and th• Prlvac. funer al Mrvleet ant tcheduled for S h r In• r •a Lod 1• A 1 .. .a ---' T ---....a v-nt..--t..-ot "'--M bod"..., Malaktah Senior of Loa -..wan.a ""1n1&IU nau~ ~... .,.., w !-" ,__________ Utty 0 .....,.,_ Funeral ~ ~,.. conduct.ed th1a momtna ":r.:f:1.~ Tiiie '"*"*" ... NtO"""'"" for llltber JuanJta Coleman of Hun~ ae.d\, Th• 1011owtn9 P..•on 11 dott10 &:' 3'1".:' o._,. OovM.y on • Anaela. Gt. He ta IW'Ytvtd ~ at the ace of 79. by nla wUe Lola. dauahtar He WM a member ot the Goofofftn Club. the Alberta Drabrotn, boili of San 8emardlno M..uc Lodae and the Shrinen' c 0 • t • M • I a . c a . I Loda Al M••••kab Sen.I« of l..ce ~ ~uehtet 8~Uy LMh "!>unttvina IN hJI wUt, Lola; and c:t.UC)\ter of Coate M•aa, Ca ., 2 Alberta Drabman, HCh of CO.ta MHa. Alto ~Pr1a:: ... a = .u.Jri aumvtns are • .nndda\llh.~1• Shelly LMh, of b9 held under the ~ ec.ta 11 .. , two '&v\.hen ind mr. ~ all of of IWts Bec .. w Sml\h • Utah. Tuthill WnkllU Chapel Swuba wtU be held under t.hl dlriCUon Of MortlJary of eo.i. M.... Beltz .. ron Sinllh • TuthW Wancllrt ChipeJ • 840-9371. l Monu.ry Of Calta M-. I ' who dJed Sunday at dw •of 74. ~~~.A~ o, 1o11w,O~T 1tu1>1ttneo or1rioe 001:.'=: Dom In RoiweU, N.N .• Mn. Coleman WU • =~"':a~~ Colla f'tlof. M• '°· A#ll 1. 1$. IO, ,~ member oi the Downey J"rw Metbodia\ ChW'Ch. MllY MvrOOOll tt11M;. 204t '11a-.a She la IUl'Ytved by her huttiand, Ra~ G. ~;;;,;·· com Mo•. Deily PllOt Collman, and two dauaht.en. Wy141M C. Hacaway ™'.,.,..,..11 ~.,.,... clautfa.-...... of eo.i.a M-and PaU'Icsa Rae a.man or Garde!\ ~ ...... Orov,. .;..y,..,...._. · Woi'tlfW Aho 1urVfvln1 aN four arandchUdren, a 0::,"~:::.--o:=,-: .YM. Qll __..,.ll'fl'ddli&.llht« lad I ..... Alta .... DlXOn; --... ,. Ml·5'71 a ebUrch rn1111anary tn ...., ~ ._,_ II Ora*de ~ wen Cooducwd at Roee ..:''.':.Piefo~ ~·· ;;:J ""'"~ell Kll.11 Memorial Pwk. \ 'l . ..., ~''°" C•lft Nlel. I l I I I Orange Co I L DAILY PILOT /Wedn .. day. Aprll 13, 19113 --~~~~---r.==============:,..--...i ............ .,.:::!:=========-~TK:l----------_,,.------r-----------+----------+---------- 1'3 MUC ft011C( ,..,c MOTICf NllC fl>nct MUC MOT1C[ Mt.IC ftOTICC AH1l•t1t1, Y•'· U"''"''· ,... a..rtw, •. PtJ, ":In.-,1.=:r '':~~1.~:'J• '~ur~:.~.r..~· '':Z::~:.~~=· "~=~~:"'t:~· 6 ... c• ... • ... t• ... !n ... IOOl•--.. 11 .. u .. en11 ""' "" i;UH.t.., UM Th• follow1110 ptfaOfl la 1101no TllCI ·~ --.,. G04nG '"• 10110 .. lng peraon la llolng file IOllOWlftO Pl'~• 819 ll01119 ln.t ll)llow1ng l*tOll• •• a Gol!tll 2 ,, I •• w/gu•o•. I " t •• llundt)', ·~-~ ~GUNA 'lNTHOUll __.,_. .. lklllMel .. tlvW-.. bll-.. lw•I•.... .. 2042 Mtly* Pl IUO/mo l*t\I, no~·· M~/mo l'llbWOIMI 2 ~ den, 2 IALIOA Ml'Q,, 1'1J M11rO)' Ill ftHL IMAOH, fill AIAL IOUTH WHT ACOIPTANOI. A"CHON PRl!Cl810N 1130 MAR VllllA. ,10 Mt ... Mey., 4 OA2-03&0 Ht "I ' (. 11 th Pl h , wtwhlte _.., *-Oltde, tiuftllfltton llMGh, Otlltornl1 IMAQtl, t•Mt Tab\lel\01, Mlatlon 0 AU I 1 IN , II 0 I 0 AU If IN Pla~ttla •1, Unit b I t;Otll• Meaa, 080 Ne,. pot 1 Center Otlve Sulla --OA4-0452 lnol frplo, 2 ltQ dNlll HIM Wteee. 11141 WOOC1r111f V1t10. ClllfOlnla .,.., A M I" I c AN I I! 0 u "I ' ~ 0. G25J7 •r.o Newport ~II, CA 9H60 Large 3 Dr 2 8 • Town gourmtl 1111 ·~160/mo ..,_, ~. Calltornll toaO MICllH I W Hatklna, U H i MOfllQAQf Ml!All l'INANCIAl lony O.valk 1&•00 Uelg••(I• Ml<.11"4 l Me~. MO Ne'"POll !IOI.I .. lft qulel c:omplt ll , I!! tldt 0 M oute blCMiof, fnol utll •t 4-t54t t I Tllit ~II CICINMlted by en l 11>uenoe. Mteel(ln VlejO CallfOrnle 0HARl.f8, OOUOLAI 6 CO II Apl 103 WHlmln•I•• C • I •nl•• Olive Sulla 160 Newpofl llfge pool, glfden Ml 131111 1300 N C Joye• pm ~. 9'eU JAMH ANO COMPANY, CAUlllN 82UJ llH•h Calil(ltn .. 111660 ting lll75/mo 046 3381 Wallt• t31·12tfl. llQ'I ---------HtN Wi-Ca ti JHn H.,1.rnt 24111 A NO Al•OCIATll . 4 000 lenrtarO Q Blogg 1004 l'o•t P•ul J (;ot19n, ~007 Hlljrtl•nd 2 --~VI.I, MW 1 Bt W/VQ nM tllW!Wll wu fllecl With Ille labuenea Ml11IOn 111110. C11tl0<nla Meo A•lh11r Blvd , Sult• 410. Ao , Cu.11 M•• Ca 921110 (lllv• N-pu'I Ueacn CalllO<nl• llllll Ill APTI •Oltl"r" Wtlt .. t deot(, No end, cloM 10 e-iiy C'-"' of Of11109 Couoty on 112882 Newport luch, Ce 82MO Tlllt ~ 11 ooncl~lecl by a 11111 l>Y&lnMt la COndUCleO by • 8HUUl11I 1 8f 5450, 2 '\ 3 br, t480•W 5 Im-b e I C h I 6 8 6 I m 0 Aprtl f 1, 1"3 Thia lkltil'M• I• oonclucteo b)' .,. l\oC>at1 J-Cevllln 306 w Qll*al 1)811118tll\lp <ffllltal petlne<tftlp lltge 2 Or ••H m . d 0 c 0 w •I k I 0 49.4· 7078 ....... lnOIYldHI l>romontory !>five, Newpor1 IMcll. lcec)lllfO Q BIO(lg Mtc:rtMI I M~r 1131 w lllth SI ICllOCX•" ~ ,, .. _....,. _____ __,,___,,.., ,.11blltllt0 Oren111 Co11t 01lly MICflM4 W H.,111n1 01 HMO ll\il l l•l-1 w11 ft1e<1 wllh Ille Hiit 1t11-n1 wu llleO with lh• 548 ~,02 aru & Otl ltl PoOI, MW l.AOUNA PENTHOUll Piiot. ~. f, 13, 20, 17, 1083 Thlt 1lelem91)1 wu nled Wllh lhe Tl\11 bu1l1-.11 oonC11101ecl by 111 Cwntv Clelk of Ote""" Counfv °'' County C1e111 ul Or1ng1 C01Jnty or1 er I • d p• p ll P'Uuloue 2 + o.tl, 2 k , __________ ,u_s_-13_ ICounl)' Cle<k Of Orange Counly on lndlvf011tl M11re11's1 1883 .... -, MllCh 16 1\1113 • llW ••H gr o·u ~ d ,., ! 0, t whit• w•t ... view•. large •-,,,. N()nl't !AP<N 11 1°'3 l'loOert J-Cevtlln "1>1t6 P2H... 2 m111er bdrme. 2 cer 557-41lb No pell d • c k 1 • • t c ..--'~ '""°' I nit atetemant wn flt•d """" Publl111ao 01ang1 Co111 Oally PuDll•h•cl Or •'•II• Co111 0 1lly 714/484-8541 '10TITIOUI IUllNlll P11bll1'1eO 011nge Co11t Oelly Ille County Clefk of Ore11Q• County Pltol Atx 8, t3, 20, 27, 1g13 Piiot Mar'll 2'I 30, Au•ll 8 tl, 5 111flQI, lrflc;, mlC:tO· .... ITAT1MaNT Piiot, Apt 13, 20 n . Mey 4, 1913 On -"P"' 4, IHS 1wa.11~ 11183 w Iv. e 3 . 7 2 0 2 . Tiie toltowtng per1011 11 doing 17'7_.3 n1J1.11 •-------------14l6·83 _5_6_8·_1_7_111_ !!!J!rt .... ~ UH NO FEEi Apt .. Condo ttn Ille Villa FW\lala .,.,...,_ M: •-ic aonfll'r P111i11111eo or1no1 ~0111 Oelly PUBLIC NOTICE 3 er 1·~ B•. Ellllld• utU Nl!WPORT HEIOHtS TRAVEL .. """' """"" Plto1 A'1' e, t3, 20. 27 t8U PUBUC NOTICE p d • A c: • p 1 • 1 1 c: lnWI ..... 18AY logo APAITllllTI Be1utllully 1andtc:1ped g•nsan aote. POOi & 8~ P11loe/decka No pate. l lAVICI!, 206 Alve ralOe Drive, --,-,-C-Tl-T-IOU_l_l_U_l""IH""a~l~I,.---1e'O·U 'l<:TITIOUI IUllNIH 6 l6lb/mo 851·116'47 ~ &Mch, Celll0<nll 112MO NAMI ITATIMINT NAMa ITATIMINT ITATI Jill NT Of AIANDONMINT ,,,..,, ~v~::i;. 2~~~;~:: bu~~:-11\Q peraona 811 OOl11Q NILIC NOTICE bu:~~~:wlrtg pef.001 ••• llolrt0 "CTITIO~: ~~=.~: .. NAMI s~~~_m~·d~B~m, ~=r~:. UM3 UN 1 \/ER SAL p AC IF IC 'ICTITIOUI ltUSINlll ALLIED GLASSWORKS L TO T ha tolluwlng per10111 h••• Miii lloree 1 6drm "85 161 E 18111 &42-08M 875-4012 "'*• WllTll lllTM.I 3 & 4 8r Clote IO waler, fu1n & unlurn , reuon· a ble , a ll a m t nltl•• 9'0ktl' 876-40 12. Thl1 bullneN laconOuctl<Stiy an INSUR ANCE SERVICES OF NAMllTATl ... NT 17330 Mo11n1 Wynn1 CitCI• •b1nOon9'ltll•u11 ollhell\.llllou1 7 366All°'ld0 lndlvldu., NORTHERN CALIFORNIA 39e t n ... IOllOWll'g PN•Onl Ill Going FO\Jnl•1" v11llov, C1llforn11 01708 bUllnen fllll'll TSL Mgmt 642.g412 B11b11r1 E Valcl\er bullnM• •• NEA E111e1prltH. il'IC . I FIELO & SONS AOOflNG 830 '1l'192 MecArthur BoulevllO, Sulla lOl. HA LLADAY INDUSlRIAL Calllornl• ~orpo1 111on P 0 BO)( !J1n11ago Ro Colle M11a CA E Sidll 2Br, l'ABa 2 aly Nowpotl S..Cl'I, CA 92860 CENTER, 4282 Camr.1 !>ti_,., Sulll 5551 W1lnut Ct .. k, C1llfOrnle 111828 condo. frplc, blln1, pool, 131 E te111 6-46--68 HI 2 Bdrm l'I• Be S&60 2250 Vanguard 540.992e Un1ve111I P1clllc ll'aurance ,, .... . Publllhecl Orange c0111 0111.. C. N-pott e.tch, a 82e«IO .... ,.,v Oav10 B F1et01 172 4011'1 St l&OO mo 6411 1372 PllOt ,. .... , 13 20 2,, .. 4 1.,u' Comp•ny. a C11lll0<nla corPOrelion, 0 D 1 Thll bu1l11eu It ,o,,ducted Dy • Nowporl 84!1.1ttl CA 92860 8 DaH Poiat 27U COUNTRY CLUB LI INO ,,..,... • · ' ... ay 1•114M3 31161. Mac:Ar1hu1 Boul1v11a, Suite CellfO<~~ ~m1t!s":~~~1~:. 42b; corporellon DouglH P F101oa 1n 40tn 61 •EW IRIH APTS. lOl, Nirwport Beach, CA 112660 Campul Drive. Sulle c, Newport NfA E1111rpr11 ... Inc Ne"'porl Beatri. CA 82680 BeAulllul 1 Br wllolt & IOUI YllW IN NEWPORT BEACH &lnglu I & 2 Bdrm Ap1rtmen11 & Townhou- ... Some are eleOlfllly lurnlahed PUBUC NOTICE '"" C>utineu 11 conoucteo b~ 1 Beech, Ca 92660 Rot>e<t Shir Caivtn C r lt1I01 e30 San11..gu Bech wllolt eocllld gar torpo11llon 0.vll Olo~ll Comp111v, VICI Pretldent Ao Cott• MIH CA 9262e ...... p11v1le PlllO nAAi 0 F1om Dane Po4nl'a moet HCluded ecenlo blulle.I llke newl 2Br w/11plc, •tra lg pvt pallo S750 mo Cell 661·544 l 01 M·F 9.5 643-0212 flCTITIOUI IUllM•• un1ven1l PISClllC , Thia , .. 1.m1n1 WI$ 11190 wllll lh• B d L ~ 10 830 s II ·--· ' .,.,..,., NAMI ITAT9MINT lnauranc;o Con1p;111y il'c <• C11lllo11'111 corpo111llon), 4262 C 0 C re11 a le • an ag,, •P•, rec room 11•• g w11111m l<nlghl Campu1 01lv1, Suite C, Newport C01Jnt~ 2:11111r~8~1 '•"~" ounly on II() C..01ta Mo10 (,A 92828 w11111r paid From $'4116 bu~~..'....~o .. uo_wlng peraon '' 001ng Secretary Beech, ca 112eeo March 1 .,21,......, T1111 bu11n .. 1 wH conouc111<1 oy1 No pvlS 393 Hamlllon FtQm $696 On JamborM Rd II Sin Joaquin HNll Rel --I Thia bullnen 11 ConOUCteO by • .-._ g•""""' p1rll'e11hlp TUF ENUF ENTERPRISES, Thia 1111emen1 was ll.O "'"" lhll Publl1h•O Orenge Co111 Dally Brenda Fl@lo• 645-441 I 5200 lrvlne Blvd , No ~Ill, Irvine. ~::;'n~~.c~~ ol Or11ng• County on gttntlfll PD-.:~~.,~:ioprnem PilOI, AIJr IG 2Q 2'1 May 4 1983 lnis 11a1emen1 was 111od wilt• th" 2br. 2bl condo bale 144-1100 CalllomlR-~82L71~0~1. 5200 lrvlM Allen aftd Flltl Comp1ny. Inc • 1736-83 C..oullly Cl(!r~ or Ur•n~• Cou111y nn pool, epa, nr So Cll _,,, -Calilornla CO<l>Ollllon .,._IC NOTICE MlrCh ~·5 t983 p I 8 z a S 5 2 S Blvd , No 4 1e, trvlne, C111fornll AttOln.,• •I L•• By Steven H Davis ,...,._ "212"~ 2 31827 8653 Baal. leac~ 2140 OeluKe poole1de •Ira large 2 b•, 2 ba. bll-ln•. d1wanr 1'A mlle6 beech No pell S500/mo 536-8362 2 Br 2 Ba $525. No ~ta Located acrou N.B. Goll Course. 545-4855 112714 4400 MeeArth11r ~hd~ 370 Pt .. l<lelll I TATEMENT Of WITHDRAWAL J•.,0111neO Orar•ge C..•101 Daily I 1 - Thi• b1111,,..a ta concluetecl by an Newport .. eel\, A r I I h hO FftOM P1101 Ma11;r1 JO Apt11 b IJ ?O D 1 Br 6tove. 1el11ge c;a, lnalvldu•I <714I 7S2-147• "210275 cou"~~y ·b8~~~4:ito~:~~ eg~~ly 1 on PARTNER8HIP OPERA TINO 1983 port no pet• ~ 17 w Robyn L Powen PubllalleO OranJe Cont Dally -"prll 1, 1883 UNOEA FICTITIOUS 8U81HE81 ____ 1_:-._3_7-_8_3 18th SI "D" $360/mo EASTBlUFF apacloua I br, p1110. view, pool. $595 mo N o p ela &«-4787 Tllll •t•te<nenl WU Nied wllrt tlll ~ F21Hl5 ... ME 1-------645· 1926 Coc;nty C*1I OI Orange County on ~~~~ March 23 0 April 8• 1"· Pubhlflllll Orang• Coall Dally T rte 10110:7ng person haa PUBllC NOTICE WltlWE APTI Aprll 8· 1883 1•28 83 Piiot ·~ 6 13 "0 27 1"83 ~11horewn a1 a geA-al partner from A Condo 3 BR 2'"-ba, ciea ... f'Jt37'91 .. • ~... ' . • ' • 1821·83 ~. parlnerartlp o~;allng und1111118 PUILIC NOTICl $750 mo 2 car auach Publl1h10 Orange CoHI Delly 1_____________ l~ltlout t>uslnui namo 01 PAVO PUSLICATION OF CHAllTEll gur, w/open&r, O/W, ml· - Pl-'°-'_· Afx __ 13_·_20_·_2_1'_· _M_•_Y_~;.:'se:::'t.:..83~83 , ____ PUBl __ l_C_NO_T_l_CC___ Pl8LIC NOTICE PROPERTIES ANO INVESTMENTS ~~n=g~Ll:E~~J:$ crowave, central vac • .-1·11354 II 16021 Sky Park Circle S1.111a c OU'AllTMENT 11 a I BB 0 . we Iba r Lrg 1 & 2 Bdrm among pines & stream• Sec: gales, pool, gym & spa No l)els From $4 60 846-6591 Ouiet 2 Br, t Ba, pool, gar, patio. No pet1 . Nwpl Hg11. 160 1 15th $1. S800/mo. &42·7340 _____ __, Nit.IC NOTICE flCTITIOUI IU81NEH NA• ITATUMNT The following l)el'IOnl Ill OOlng boslneu .. : 8YNOPll8 OF TI4E ANNUAL 8TATEMENT IN1ne. Cal1f0<nla 927 t• OF THI UNITED I TAT£8 I 1101eolln111tcom Mo/Mo YEAft I NDED DICEM8Efl 31. 1 .. 2 Th• flclltlOUI businau n1me WAIHINOTON, D.C. only Steve Arndt . of alatomeot for the partnerahlp wu WHEREAS aellafaclory evidence 5-46-23 13, agl 01111 lneuranc• Compen1 flleO on October 2, 1981 in lhe h11 been pr11en1eo to I rte Hunt1n111on Creek Apts. Luxury adult 11111ng 1 g 2 Bdrm, wll'1 garages. heat & w11er paid, lelevfsed security From S510 Call a.48· 1613 from 11·5 YOI IEIEllVE m GATED VILLAGE COM· MUNITY 2 & 3 Bt 2'A ba 1600-1600 sq.It of PURE LUXURY G1r- a ge1. SPAS In avery home • m111er eulle . dining room1, wood burning llrepl1ce 1. ml· c1ow1ve ovtna, p1lv1te CO N SU M ERS CLUB INTERNATIONAL, 377 Wiiton. ft9. Cotta M-. Ca 921127 Kevin Bruce Patterson. 377 Wilaon, •II. Coste Mau. Ca 92627 Robert Don110 Ferraro 99 Jumlne Creek Ot , Newport Beach, CL 6510 a.llevlew, K-• Cll1, Mo .. 111 County ot Orange Comptrollor ol tl'le Cutr111cy lrtat (~I ell imoW1t• In The lull name eno residence or NATIONAL BANI< OF SOUTHERN L Toter eomltleO HMllS T Ole! llellllttles Special surpk.11 lunos whole doll1r• (onl1)) the pa11on w11no1aw1no u a CALIFORNIA 1oe11eo In San11 Ana, S229,573,676 pinner State ol C111lo1nl1 hae cornplled 128,391.555 Jeramlllo Fr1nco 180' I Sky wllll all prov111ont of the 1111u1ea ot 0 Park Ctrcle Surte C Irvine trte UnlleO SlalH requ1reo to be Thia lklal,_. I• eono..c1eo by • general pertfll(ll\19 Capllal peld-up/Guar enly C1p11111 S111u1ory Ooposll 5,000 000 Groaa paid-In at><I con,,llklteo tu•pt11t 60,623 •85 Uneae'Oned funds laurplut) 35.558 635 Surplus .. u1gato1 pollCyhOld•ll 101,182, 121 Calltorn11 92714 f Jaramillo Frinco complied wllh be ora being y au1hor1z1tO 10 commence lhe Tlllt ll819n'lel11 wH tiled with lhe bualneas of benklng u • N111onal County Cieri<. of Orange County on Banking Auoelallon APrll I 1883 NOW. THEREFORE I nereoy Kevin B. P111er10I' Thll atatemenl w11 lllod with Ille County Clerk of Orange County on M1teh 25, 1H3 lnCOITll lor lh• VNr 133,677,463 Dltbureemenn tor the yHr ' 101.839.908 f .172354 ce•llfy 1n11 lhe 1bove-nameo Publ11rieo Oiertgo Co111 Dally •••ociatlon 11 authorized 10 Piiot. Apr 8. 13. 20. 27, 1983 commence me bullneu ot banking F212890 Publl•h•cl Orang• COHI Oally PllOt Mat. 30, Apr, 8, 13. 20, 1883 1•78·83 we llereby certlly that the 1b0ve 11em1 are 1n accordance wilrt lrte Annual Statement IOI tho y111 enoeo Oecem~ 3 t 11182 maoe 10 1111 lntorence Comm1asion.< oursuant 10 law MLIC NOTICE 1625-83 81 a Nallooa1 B1nklng Asaoelaliorl IN TESTIMO NY WHEREOF w11ne11 my 1lgn11ure enO aeel of Tllomu 0 Nimmo Vice Prealdent Thtlfen F Gore A .. I Seaetary NOTICE INVITING llD8 office lhll IOlrt day ol January, Notice 11 hereby given trtal 1ne 1983 Ml.IC llJTICE F'ICnTIOUI IUt .. aa ..._tTATl!Ml!NT Tiie tollowlng peraon 11 doing ~-SHO ENTERPRISE, 212 H11nllngton St .. • 7, Hun ling ton Beeell, Ct. 112~8 Shoro Inoue, 212 Huntington St .. •7. Hunllnglon Beech. Ce 82044 Thl9 ~ 19 conducte<! t>y an lnOMdual. snoio Inoue Thie llllement wu hied wlll'I Ille County Cletk of Orenge County on M11c;n 1e, 11133. 1'2120M Publl1heO Orenge Cout Delly Piiot Apt II, 13, 20, 27, 1983 Ul07·83 l'talC ftOTlCE ACTmOUS ltUalNEH ....-aTATl!*HT The lo41owing per'IOnl ... doing ~ .. : O.W.F. LTD .. 2511 Sunno-. No. F5, Sll'lll Ana, California 82704 1 Wlltllf A Atr.o«W<I. 25900 Oe.11 StteM, No I 18, C.Otnlla. C111tornle 90717 PubllsheO Orange Cout Deity P11o1 April 11 12 t3 14 15, 1983 1666-8'\ Pl8LIC NOTICE POOllC NOTICE 1·1WI I YNOPlll OF TlfE ANNUAL 8TATEMUIT Yffr Ended December 31, IN:2 OF ATLANTIC '"llMAMCE COMPANY *°" CedM ·~-~ Teue ns1t (lleporl •It lmcH.11'11• lfl wllole dollMa(only)) TOlll IO,,,.tted UMll Tot1l ll1bt111tn Special surplu1 lunos Cap11tl pal0°up/Gueran1y Capllall s s 17 804.307 g 339 036 .(). Statutory Oepos11 S ? 000.000 GtOll pa10.in and con1t1but80 turptut 895.482 \JnuS'gned lul'OI (torplul) S 5e9 789 Surplu1 u regarOt pQllCyhOIOers 8 •65 271 IMOme tor 111e year 7 ,923 ,•45 Oltbu,_,_,11 fOf 11141 y... 1 110.314 We rtereOy c.tllly lh•I 1111 8l>OYI ,,...., .... 1n ICCO<O•r>e• wtll'I 1111 Annual Sua1-1 tor Ille yMt enoed Oeceml>lf 3 \ 1982 m•O• 10 1111 lneuranee Comm1u1oner. e>vrsuant 10 l•w ThomH 0 Nimmo Vlee Proalclenl rner ... F G0<e Aut ~relat~ Publltl'llO O•ll>O• Coaat Dally Pllol Aptll 1 I 12, 13 14 1S 1983 1689-83 Dl•n• M. Hoeg, 25900 0•~ StrMt, No 118, Lom11• Calll0<nla 1-------------POOllC NOTICE 90717 •~ II c:onOucieO by • pertMnt\lp w alter A. Fltzoe< akl ' Thll st•t-1 w .. Tu.a wltll Iha Coun~ Cleril of Orenoe Countv on AcW1t , 1983 F21171t P11bll1hecl 0 11nge CoHI Diiiy PllOI, Apt 13, 20, 2?, May 4, 1983 1738-83 Ml.IC NOTICE PUBllC NOTICE 8-1all L.lf'E AND ACCIDeNT AND HL\L TH IYNOf"lll Ofl' THE ANNUAL ITATIMINT ~--ENOEO M ClMNll JI. 1"2 Of le6ect In--Company »11 Cedar lpr1no1 ftMd O•"-· Te( .. fU11 (llep0!1 all 1mount1 In Whole dollMt (Of\tJ) Boero ot Trust-ol Ille Hun11no1on Beach Union Hlgrt SCllOOI D111r1c1 will receive 11a1eo Dt01 101 topplylng Carpet Cre.n1ng meeting or 1qu111 to the 1pec1llca11on1 011 Ille In the ottlee of aald D111r1e1 BIOi 1hall be clearly marlleO Carpel Cleaning Bid No S 19 eodreued lo Allyn F Rowley Purchnlng Manager, Hun11no1on Beech Union Hlgll School Oittr le1. 10251 Yo1ktown Avenue Hunttnglon Beacn Caltlornle 926•6 ano raee1ve<1 al °' before 2 00 p m . TrtursOay. April 28, 1983, al which lime and piece b101 wlll be publtely open1<1 an<l •••<I In bu1ld111g C room 3e1 Eeeh b1<1 shell 1em11n veho for a period ot 30 d1y1 alter lhe Oale IP«lfled tor Ille ·-•pt Of blOI The Boero ol TrutlMI anall be th• 1018 1udg1 01 the qu1111y ol 1qu1pm1nt ollereo •"O r-ves me right 10 re1ec1 any °' 111 bl<I• at><I to waive any 11ruogla111y trterl!ln Il l Allyn E Rowley Putel\U•l'Q Manage< Dateo Al)(ll 12 1983 PublltrteO Orange Co111 Oa11y Pilot AP< 13 20. 1983 PUBllC NOTICE HOTICl OF TftU8TEE'I I.ALE Loan No. 11122190-4fTHOllNTON T.8. No. D-027S2 UNIT COO£ D t1EA M ES FIN-'NC I A L CORPORA 110N H Outy •PPOl11llCI Tru11eo under 1he lollow1no OOSCllbeo 0..0 ol tru1t WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH ANDIOA THE C ASHIERS OR CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIEO IN CIVIL COOE SECTION 21120 fpeyable al the 11,.,,. or nre In lawful money or fne UnlleO Slatu) •II PICTrnOUa IUl .. 11 Tolal aom1111e0 uMta $711,•90.'79 11g'1t ltlle al'd 1n111es1 conveyed 10 NAm STAT'DleNT Toll! "•blHt... 511 12•. 13• ana now he4<l by II vnOllf TRUSTOR The ............... O""-~ ~ tuna• $ .().. MICHAEL THORNTON ·--""'per.anti -_.., Ceofl.,peld-vp/Qu11anty C&p1tlll BENEFICIARY MERCU RY ~U~H EA N CALIFORNIA B111utory Depoalt 1.~.000 S A v I NG S AND L 0 AN 81Klul GIA•., 230 E. 11th St 1 Gt~ paiO·ln and conlrlbuleO ASSOCIATION recOf<le<I March 4 ....,, rM · 13 805 2311 19• 1 •• 1n1tr No 5773 1n Book Colt•..._, c 11tt0<nla 82e21 eurplul ...... • . .. J-H. Berne.rd, 1801 E 8«y Unuelgned tunda (IUrJ>kl•, 5,061.105 1"39611 P•g• 7 74' ol OlllCl •I •--· e.i~ Celltomla 112961 Sutp1u1 .. regard• pollcyl\OIOets 20,38e,345 Recorot In I rte 01t1c1 o f lhl Dente l P. O'Toole, 3357 mcome tor Iha yeer 85,fl.42 822 Recoroei or 011no-County aekl Al1b1m1 circle. Coate Men, ~~la fOf tlle yeer 3&,590,802 Oeao or truat duc•lbll 1he C_,tt nil 112627 We hereby <*'tlfy thlll tlle abow l1em1 ere In llClOO<Oanoe wltll 1111 lollow1ng n! ~ 11 conducleO by 1 Annual Sl•t-t for 11141 VMf ended Oec41n'ibef 31, 11182. midi 10 Ille Loi 1 ol Trec:t 18•3. Clly ol Colle OIMfll pertnerW\19 trwvranoe Cornmtuioner, ~t to llw Meu. 11 per Map rec:oroeo In BOOk Jim H. Bem•d ThomP 0 Nimmo, 89, Paoe 42 ol MllCCl4laneou1 Mepa, Thie llat-1 wu Ille<! with Ille V\Qe PrMidenl Rec0<d1 of 9llO County County Clllftl ol Orange County on Thar-F Gore, YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A ~II 8. 1983 ANllltnl Secltelary D E E 0 0 F T R U S T 0 A T E D ' '211'1'19 PuOllahecl Ofange COMt D .. ly PllOI April 11, 1,, 13, 1• t5. 1983 FEBRUARY 27, 1118 t UNLESS YOU Publllhe<I Ortnll• Cou 1 Dally 11188-83 TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR 20 27 1183 ------------------------PAOPERT'I'. IT MAY BE SOLO AT A Pllo1, A~. l:S.. . . Mey 4' 1 P\8.IC NOTIC£ Mt.IC NOTICE PUBLIC SALE IF YOU NEEO AN ------"'"'.".':-:::::~:--1_M_4-11:_, 1-------------EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE l'talC NOTIC£ •• ,.. OF THE PROCEEDING AC.AINST ~AHO ACCtOINT AND .._ALTH YOU YOU SHOULD CONTACT A K...,.. 8YNMSll Of THE ANNU~ ITATIMENl LAWYER f'IC1TTIOUS IU .... ll YIAll INOl,O DICIMHft 11. t"2 Trte 11r .. 1 10d•lll of 1110 NAM1 ITAtt•NT of properly It 837 W Wll1on SI . TM followillO penon.a are doing l11ew.,_ Compel\1 of Pacific C-t Co1ta MIH, CA No we1tel'ty II ~ 11. 1113' Von Karmen Avonue given u 10 111 c;omp1111n111 01 F STOP PHOTO, 1011 B1i0e0 '"'-• Ce. 92715 correelnest) Tiii beneflClaty under Orllle, Coat• ....... CA 92627 ("9c>ott .,. ln'IOlll't• 111 MIO OMO of Tru11. by , .. '°" of • Lomberd SlrMt 1nv111men11 w+.o4e dofl1n (Of\tJ)) b<eec:ll °' delaull In thl obllglf10n1 Lid., Inc.,(• CINl01nla c«poratlon). 11cu11d lhe11by, herllolore 1011 8"olO 0r1 ..... Colt• M-. CA Totll llOmttteO -II l2!1,777.ot9 UCICUllO end Oellve••O to lhl 112827 Total Hablllo" 111. 706 03e ut><11tliQneO 1 wrlllen o.c1arallon Thie ~ la conOUcteO I>)' • 8PMlal eurplut lvncl• S .o ol O.l1ull end Demand lor Sile, OOIPOf•llon. Cepttal l)llO-up1Gu1WMIY Ca.pttlll at><I wr111en not~ ol breach and Of Lomll•rO Str..i 4retutory Oepoelt ... .. l,000,000 e1ee11on 10 ctuM the unaertlgned 1,,_tmenl• Oroee paid-I" and conlliC>uteo to Mii Mid properly 10 .. u.ry MIO Lid., '"'-M·"-. Un~!.... .. ~~ 1_·: ...... ,, 3 ~.000 obllg1llon1 end the reaffe r the Aeymond ....., ......,,._ ........ --2,671,062 u~algnecl CIUlld Nl4 nollee Of Prttldenl Surplue II regatd• polla'(llOIOer• • 7.071.062 breac:11 ano ol el1 c11on 110 b e Thie 1111emen1 wa1 flied wtll'l lhe lnaom1for1111 )'Ill ... ·· ·· 14.C>Ae.010 rKoroeo Novemti11 10, 11182 H County Clllf'll of ()rer>ge County on Ollb\llt«Mnll IO< Ille VII' . 13. 760.0M ln•t• No 82-3116217 In OI Offk!lal Mliref\ 2 IH#. W• hereby Olf'llty 11111 Iha abov9 llemt .,. In CICCOIOl llOI with,,,. R1c;o101 In th• Office OI ,,.,. • ,.,_.. AMII., Sl•t-t for tile YMr anded Oeoelnll« 3 t 1oe2 me.Cle to Ille A.c;01C111 of Orange County, P11bll•h•d Ot1nge Cou l Oelly ll'eutltlOll Colnmitllolllt. Ollttuent lo 1-S110 Sele .. 111 be made , but Piiot, M11c11 30, April 8. i3. 20. 1nom11 o:~rmmo. wllhout cov1 111nt or w1,,a111y, 1N3 \/IOI PrMIOenl 111pr ... Of Implied. reg•rctlng lllle '"143 Tiier-F. Oote. poa...ton, or encumbrll'IOet, to ------------Alllatant hcnllt'f pay the remaining ~ IUl'l'I ot P\aJC ll)TIC( P\lblllned Orenge Cout Ottlly Ptlot Al)(ll 11. 12. 13, 14, 15, 1'83 • Ille no1e MC\WeO by ~ Otld ot K-OMl1 ...cTmOUSllU9M•• MAim STAT'lmNT , lN7·1~ Trv1t, w1111 lnterMI u In llld note ---.. -91-.,.---T-"'_r ___ •11111111' llftTJC( PIOYldt d, ldlflnoH, II any, undet ..--"' nu n.1. ,._,,, "" Iha term• of Mid Deed ol T1u1t, ~ ~ ,,.,__ •• nMOHilt CW Ji.1r:u~ ITAT'DmlfT IUILDIA•' MANAGI MI N YLUI...,.., DSC111911t It, ffa H fllVICH. 2183 l'•lrvtew fllo•d cw luM 203. Cotti MeNi CA t2t2l' C....., ......,_ ca.,_ .... , Tro.,. llMI 1!111t• Co , tno. 100 at. 'eul "-• ~ Md t1• t'81 l'el'111ew fto•d, t11ll• 10J (ltlpen .. -••Ill ==CA 82627, • Celll Tolll N rnltltd ...... . ....................................... ~.~.~v. Thie~ le GOl1duc:teO t>)' Tottl lllblltlta ........... .. •. ...... ..... , .......... t.211,set corpor~,.... ~ =:,c.,,jy c.o«.i.,..... . . • .().. .... ,.Co., lne. l tat\llor; o.oo.11 ................ " .............................. 4,I00.000 ~Condon. Gr:,::s-~.~ .. ~.•.rlbllled ..................... -..... H.4tUIO ~ '&:."':f C::.,..,~ ~ ,:=.~1· ...:.::·:·::::::::::· ':.™'· '37 2s .m.41a Plllerdl 22, ,.. lnoomt '°' llle ~ ,,, .................... """'" ' """ 1,471,11' ...... ~....... Olllbuf. w~ oert~: 'iie"ab<M nt.N·;;:;·iii"IOC'D;'CiW.::·!:.~·~~ ...... ~ Annual I~ tor IN,..., erlded OeoltnCMr 31. ltl:t, meot to the =::::s-1 OA "= """"'* Comm.1111-. O\IBUlfl4 to i.w ._ • ~ Tl\OINll D. Nlnlmo -... Vice Preeldllflt o.u, "*-" Oot• •-. CllltOM and ~ of the Trval• and of Ille lr11111 CtMted by Mid 0..0 Of Tniat. &.ld Nit wUI be lllld on Wtdneee!1y, Apr~ ~. 1983, at 2-00 O m. et the Chlomln A~ .• 1 ntrenc1 to lh• Clvlc: Ce ntet ll11lldlnQ, 300 I . Ch1pm1n Ave .. Or111ge. CA At 11'1• 11m1 o r 1111 lnltla l 111.1bllOlllOn of 11111 notlol. ,,.,. 10111 emount or lht unpaid bNlflOt ot the oblloallon NCute<I tiy Ille above dH Orlbt O d••d of 11111t 1 n C1 e111m11tc1 cotl•, Hpen .. a, and edvmnc. 111101,2 ... 11. The Ol*llnQ ~ may be o«>lllr'ltd t>y e.llnO (? f4) ~7.otM tl't4 dr; !Ml~• Ille .... Dalt. M111Cfl 21, 1913. HlfllMU flNANCIAI. CORP Bl Mid TNCtee, ~ T 0 llRVTOl CO , AQIWll Maroo .,.,... ._,, llC One City lfvf, w ... °'~~:12 ... {7141 HI 14, \I, tltt ,ublltfltcl C>f•nt• GoH t Oally , ... _,, "°'· Mll'Clll '°· ~· I, 13 I~"'"' Hoc, Mel'tfl IO ti, 20. A ...... ewy 1• ,....., ~ Otlt!OI Ooelt Delly Plot, Apri , 1, It, 1) , .. _ CI CONO\/ER Comptroller ol 1111 Cutrency Chlf111f No 17623 Publi1hecJ Orange Coast Dally Pilot, M .. c,., 9 15, 23, 30 Aptll 6. 13, 20 27, May 4. 1983 1223·83 PtaJC NOTICE CPP 40157 NOTICE OF TRU8TEl'8 8ALE T .I No. F-2701/Het•ll NOTICE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER DE E D O F TllU8T, DATE JANUARY S, 1N2. UNLl!ll YO TAKE ACTION TO P"OTEC YOUR PROPERTY, IT MA Y t I CX.D AT A PUtllC I AlE. IF YO NEED AH l!XPt.ANATION OF THI NATURE Off THE PllOCIEOING AGAINST YOU, YOU IHOULD CONTACT A LAWYEfl. On Mey 4 1983, at 10 00 a m 1 BUCKEYF RECONVEYANCE c 0 M p AN v a c 8 I 1 I 0 r n I•' corpo1111on u duty tppo1n110 Tru11eo unoer ano pur1uant 10 Deed of Truat oateo January S 1982 recordeo January 21 1982 as 1n61 No 82 024 15 7. ol Oll1c1al Recor<11 1n tl'I• olflce ol lhe County Recorder of Orange County Sl.{e OI C11tl0<n1e E.cecule<! by JAMq ROY HARSH an unmatrled men, " WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTIOpN TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (payable a1 tlme 01 ael• 1n 11wtu1 money of tlle Un•leO SlalHl al tlll lront outllOI 1n1rirnc1 to Ille Conllnental Home Loan Co bull0111Q, 1oea1e0 at 434 S Euclld An1111<m. C.lllO<nia, Ill rlghl lllle ano 1n1ereet corweyea 10 ano now rtelO Dy It uno .. U IO OeeO ol Trull In lrte property sltualeO 1n sa1<1 County 1no Stal• OHC•lbed .. l •hlb41 k A" Peteet I An unOIYIOed II 1051h lnl-•1 In 410 to LOI 2 ol Tract No 8241, In tlll 't:lly ol Coata Masi, County of Ore.nge State of CallfOrnla u per map rec0<cle0 In Boote 3-41 PAQ8 22 ol M1scellan-.e Maps. 1n lhe of11e1 ot Iha County Recorder ol ••10 Cou"I)' Except therefrom Unit• 107 through 2 1 I u 111own upon 11'1• Condominium Plen recorOe<l In Book 11871 P1ge 1813, Ollicle l Rec0<01 Percel 2 Unit ~09 H Sllown 11pon the COl'Oom1n1um Plan ••fen.a 10 In Pare .. 1 1b0ve Parcel 3 An auemel't for 1ngre1t a110 g1111 and enjoymenl over 1111 ommon AfM in Loi 1 of Treet No 8241, 1n 11141 Clly or Coale M .. a. County of O•eno•. S1a11 01 e11101nl1, u per map rec:O<ded In Boot< 341 P8Q8 22 or MllC*le.neout M1p1. in Ille offl<la or 111e County Recoroar of 1110 County, •• 1tcr1b1a In th• D1cier1llon of Covenenu. ConOlllona 4n0 Re11r1cllon1 lor ' Broo kview onoom1n1um 1ecoroeo May 30 197 !I 111 Book 1 u 17 Pege 1 ol lf1C1a1 Recotdt Thi 111ee1 1d01111 and Olhll moo o .. ionatl0f1. II 111y, ot the HI properly Oeec:rlbed 1b0111 11 n>Ort.0 to be 60• Reinier Wey oe1a M .... c a1110<"'' 112e28 Tht unOer11gn•O Tru•I•• 11cl1lm1 any llablllly for any or1ectr>n1 ol tlle 1lrM1 lddr- nd 011>11 common oeeionauon II ''I· lhOwn herlln S1IO Ula wlll be m10e, bul llho111 coven anl or w1rrt111ty, -Of ~. teg11dlr>g title, Ion, or encuml>r•r>OM. 10 'f Ille ....,.,..n+ng ~1ne:1911 eum of no11(1) llC\lled by Nld DMcl of r1111. wllll lntarH 1 thereon, u ovl<Sed Ill .. Id notl(•I. ldvencel. '"Y· ulldet the 1arrne Of MIO Deed f Tr11 11, I•••· 01\1191• and xpen ... of Ille TIWI• llllO of Iha r11tl1 cruted by H id D••ct o l r1111 Th9 IOCal arnou11t of 1111 yfl9l.ld anot OI the Obllo•llOl1 ~ )' !ht ptOptll)' 10 1>1 10111 and euon1bl• ••llm•t•d co'1•. iJl'*'9tl Ind ldV.,_ II I/It 11/M I tllt 11111111 p11bllo1t1on ot 11\t otlct of , ..... 824,297.12 ~ under Mid Died Of ru11 htrttotott e11101111d tnCI ellvtttd 10 tllt unlltrelgntd • tten OedetlllOn of DeflUlt and emend for ..... and • w1l11111 otk4 ot Ot1"111 flllCI llectton 10 TI>t ~ _,., Mid otlc;e of o.t.VI~ llectton to 111 10 t>e ~ 111 tl)e OCNl\IY the reel ptOpttty le ioe.1tcl O.le. M•Cfl H. 1"3. t 11okt)'t ~•oonve~anoe p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 H TllE ILUFFS Ou1et 1 g 2 bdrm aple close 10 oeac:h Batcony encl gar Flreplace $500 & $625 mo Co1al Tree Ap11. 2163 P&clllc Jell, Mgr, 545.4530 apl 17 2 Br, bllna, crpta/drapea, dbl gar w/O $5115 • (duplex) 536-0921 SUWIH YILUll 1 pallos & y11da, gard_, provided ELEGANT LIVING only 15 mlnulet New I & 2 Bdrm lulluryl from Fathlon Island, 7 apts in 14 p11111 1 Bdrm mlnutee lo S C Plu1 lrom $640, 2 Bdrm from Juat Ent of Newporl $595 Townhouse l1om Blvd & So ol San Diego $535/mo 2 Br 2 Ba up $665 + pools 1enn11. Fwy From $1,000/mo. per unll. balcony, faun-wete1lalls. pondal Ges 631-54311 2473 Ot1ng• dry 1m car poll Av11I 1 k 1 A ,.._ ••--lmmod or coo Ing a heatrng ve., .,.,..,, ..._. 2195 Maple paid From San Diego VERSAILLES TSL Mgml 642-1603 Frwy drive Notlh on VILLA BALBOA Beach 10 McFadden and WTSIH weal on McFadden to CONDOS FROM S800 Se1wlnd \/lllana (7 I 4) ___ A_G_E_N_T_03_M_960 __ 5 min from Ocean 2 & 3 • Bdr . 2 Ba apl 693·5198 2 Br. l 'i't Ba. No ptta $800/$625 1828 Fuller· * $360/mo up Bach, 1 & $450/mo. ton Ave 2 Br unl\Jrn & furn, pool. 548-2682 1 Br etove 1r1g ulll pd •P• 18992 Florloe Newport Heights ueep- No pets W/slde 820 8'42·28~ 842-3172 llonll "'-• 2 Br, 2 Ba, c en I er s t s .. 1 5 MARI NERS WALK Id e a I I 0 r c 0 up I• 648-4382 2 & 3 BR•apla nr Hunt _63_1_-'_060 ______ _ $575/mo, $500 d419<>all Hlrbour Oswllr real NWPT PENIN Yrty IM, 2 36A i6th Pl. CM lplc yd. dbl car git W/O Br ouplex, w/gar, pvl 546·413 1 h k u P From $ 5 6 O P•llo \/t ry cute. $725 840·6807 955-0096 2 Br 2 Ba w /ger l55CJmo A~ lot Chit· 1 BR, ~I & em111 child 3 BR 2 S. upper duplex 1ene oays 644 5•60 ave5 OK "465 mo $800 mo No pets End 6'42·6850 or 635-3418 , ____ 960-__ 1_1e_s __ -l Qll, 67!>~ any11me 3 Br 2 B• LR , O R , lrplc, Condo, Big Cwtyon area c--, .. -n-2_B_r_n_r_S_l_Or-es--bu-.. g11age Mi75/mo 1300 Sea lslend, 2 br, 2 b• naw LR cpl pool & sec 7781 Cypreu S1 $900 mo Mrs Long beam• 226" M•ple 963-8842 111 5:30 wkdya _6_50-__ 1 _1eo _____ _ $4 10 642-1603 or pr TtWI IHSI Lido Ille . beyvl-. 2 Br, 6A2·3 t53 W11h le.rqe encioMd Pl-deek, 9*: g11. 2 ~ 2 Br 1r11 closels. sunny llo LOY91)' 3 bdrm, 2 t>a No pe11 S800/mo lH deck, relrlg avail lndry cioee lo OCC and beecfl _6_7_5_-<>_3_7_7 _____ _ fac $450 642·39i2 No tecllon 8 , no peta Weatclltf 2 Br No pelt EHlalde sm IBr Stove. S600 mo 752·21117 S560/mo relrlg, l260 mo ulll pd PllYATt a fllO 5'48-7533 458 Broadway (tear) Lrg nu 2 Br, 2 Ba, frpl. Lu•ury 2Br, I t>a apl, nr 2 B t f I 1 gar & lndry $540 111 b •I ch G Ir• g • '· s ove , 'g, poo plus He Avail 4115 $750/mo I• 972·8861, $500/mo plus $250 dep '""!.()~"" 548·7237 ell 4pm 17 I 11 Ash . Apl A _..., __ ~------- 499-l6t7 B1ytront 2 Br . ..._... air•. Eelslde gor11eou1 2 B1, 2 1--------"If. Blk• 10 ~'h, .... Ip Ba yard $575/mo Lrg Su~r clean 2 Br. I ., --.. .. · Ba . gar, cloae 10 bch. 1v1ll. $845 673·63311. 631-3537 ••2 ............ $495/mo Call 8112-8115 .,... """"" Eutslde I Br small but °' 9&4-8&70 cozy. 1011 of n1tur111----------3 bdrm, 2 be., 11111'9QI 1 wood S395 851·9522 But. lar .. u 2742 bloek from beectl. $720. 832·2080 U6t tor JOhn Euttide. sharp 2 BR 2 Ba. •YIU Ill UI• new cpl•. drp1. encl gar s 100 otf 2r>d mo r91'11. MW lllTlll & P•llo Bnna, no ~ti Large 1 er. 111 bullt-lna $575 mo Call Pam 11 lnciudl dlltt '* 111 8 H utllul p en lhouee 2 5'40·1158;&1161179·38•8 ng WIS ' -bdrm, 2 bl C:Ondo 2 ed b1lh, Uled c:ounlt r llory club houM , ep1. SPACIOll WTSIH IP-. newt)' decoflted, Guard 11a1u. U 15 Sh 1 Bd 1 b h pool, bbq, laundry, ..,. 998--82 11 arp rm. 11 cl1cl g.,a11e Cloee lo ~~~~~~~~~~ Fealuree ctpl, drpe, new Oule M - Ptlnt, pvl gar.,.... Loc:lt· beech. 1 &dull I ng. -·-$495/mo. Sllop 11 hOIM. It'• Ml)' ed In Quiet 3 unit bldg. 7 14/&46-1755 wtlh elaMlf'9d &42·5871 $450 mo 2426 Orange, 1-;:========1========::::; •B (upa11111). lmmeo• 1 oc:cpy 631·5155 WALUOIWMIS 759 w 191h. LUXURY 2 BR 2 BA Mlnulea from beach M1rble Pullman tops Oec<>fat()( drapee Pl111h w/w c:arpell Walk In C:IOMll P11v11e PlllO Oou1me1 Kllchen Carport w/ltOfllQI Spe, ou1door BBO Llur>dry 548·4¥0 Nice 2 Br 1 81 In 1rl·plex Ca~ll. drlPM & Piiio $475 No pell 5'0-«84 N••I ••orft ......... "."' f •u .s. Jl'or Clwlllfd AcS ACTION Call A OAlU ,IU>T AO.YUOa .U·Ml'I USITHI DAILY PILOT .. ,.,, lllULT .. SUYICI DlllCTORY For Result S.rylc~ Call 641·1671 111.UI One or the ways homes are being bought and eold today UI with Seoond Mortgac1 A second mortgage Is a met.hOd or nnanctn« whereby the buyer le provided w1th &n additional or second mortgage when there le not enough e&8h to assume the exlsttn« mortgage A second mortgage can &leo be t&.ken when the flrst mortgage and the down payment fall ehort or the sales prtoe A eecond more.gage can be provided by either the seller or a lending Institution. Paymente a.re made both to the seller or lendel' on the second mortgage and to Ule lender or the underlying mortgage hnpao\ on buyer • Down pa.ymtnl m11.1 be n .. 0\11\eG • En1bl11 put0h~ or home wt\h axlll\l"-C mor1t..,e requll'tnC 1a.rce Clown p11.71T1enl • WUh HIUftlP\101'1 or l llU\1n& moc-14'4•. • ruorable tn\ll'M\ Hi. 11 poH l'blt llft,paot on ••ller • &m&u.r oown p~men\ 11.lU'aola mote Po\11\\l&I '1N1et• • AdotuonllJ profll •llll 1n1a""' ,_,., .. on MOOnd mor\pP • "-!H e 11J1 tun01 If lencS1nC lnl\l\UUOft Pl'O'flClll llOOnG mot14'41 There &i:'I • number of au.uauona in "Moh \ht MOOnd mo11Ca1e can raciu&ate U\t pu1'0hue or M!e ot a Pt'OPtr~. OontAO~ your 1'MJ .. -.'- lll])al'C. \0 &11&11\ you ~ t f ~ i I t I • ·. f~ .. Or•no• Co11t DAIL v PILOT /Wedn••d•y. Aptll 1G, 10~ ·if 10-JO. 1g&3 I '' ~rrct1qtFt ~f a na ti~r1 l irs i t1 tftc homc5 ~f 'its JlC~p{e. !<.. llNCOIN Thia week, Realtor• all over the nation aalute you, the homeowner. Thank you for giving ua the opportunity to serve you. More Important, thanks for all you do to make our nation etronger. .IB REALTOR' On brand n•w Town. Hon'" In !u1.1ldt• 00.1.1 MCIMI. 3 bodroomt, ! bath.I, attached double car aar-ata whh automatk door op.ners. Larae pl'lvalC! peUol for all u11J1.1. and a NUple even havet etxtra larp yarda ANO-you can l't-your own culor l)f w&U IO w&U CArpeUl\&'l. Builder w1U M lp flNt.OOe with IRIAll down Pl'Yln('nla Pnt• u low u $134,~!! Sett« check on th- exl'lttna NEW homM tor th•• low 11rl~ TODA v• llWNIT WOI '"1tl 11 .. 1111 ., lH· nn WALKBR&LEE ~ Real Estate L5.r ~. AC.-...... ~ ,....,_ ...•. ,_.. ... ,, It'• Tim• to Buy ... and •nJ01 1our ownerahlpl We !'In• propertl to 1u1t ever, llfe 1111• •nd ftNncl1 poaltlon ... Call for ct.tall• 011 tM98 • • and •• hav• other•. .. ,boe lillU'd .. ,front ,., 1uao.ooo Unda 111e ••rfronl 11.ne,000 0091nffont tar & den 1'1 .. 71,000 ••r•hor .. aar 111t,IOO .... mine CrMll 38r un.ooo C.M., pool J9r 1122,IOO Newport 281 ooncto 1121,000 Npt bptx ,_,. 12'75,000 Lido llM 4Sf 16'9,000 WATERFRONT RLTR8, INC. 831-1400 873-8900 OlllEY ... soon1 831-2242 "A Family In C~llf Real F.stat<.> tor over 30 yt.•ans" thank you tor your patronage and looking forward to a great 1983 ~Sunho\\ ltcalt~ 0 ONA del MAR tll ......... flftkl arfra4t , .. , • .,1., ...... ,,.,.,., " .... , ... rttl.HH •ttll th llflt t~lltr ftt fWt Htf 11ttlt ea4 r ... , 4 Wftl I~ h lltet i. a WILi YI 11111 111111 llllLllll IHttlt1 •ltll .,........, ...... ltleH M4 ~. frttt4 llLIW tllNtef .. ,.. ... at .... ,... fM, 1nw ••• 1111,IM ... .., • ""' • .,.,, '" "· 041 NLIM rUHOT Ltllnll '"'••·a Nth,.....,.. .......... N4 ..,_. , ... ., , ............. ,.,. ... ltf ., .. l ..,... .. ., ..... ,, ..................... . ... " •M•t .. ..., • ., ..... . MUINWIJtl,IMHI ....... .,. .............. ,.,. .......... . let • • I •ltfJ I Uni llMll 1.-., r• I ... Jttetl PUS a .. ,.,,,, llftl•t'• 1t.•ll1 la a 11•"1 ,., .. , H"ial• Jm I 11Mri .... tt tell ...... lllEL HILEY All auoo. 144-1211 TlllTU llOI YllTI a bdrm, 3 b a. P i na M odel. Pre mium greenbelt location. ProfNalonally decorated wtth top qualJ ty ma teriala. St.epe tO pool and tennla. $299,000. R!•sor -l("lty 651·TI77 HTAOIH otlH IEWPOllT 2 Bdrm and den, 21h bath, formal d1rung room, open beamed ceilings, large 5,000 sq.ft. lot. $210,000 30041Emtloptat BtlJ WutH 9100 Belt WaatH 510018•11 WHtt4 9100 1111 Waatt4 51001111 Wu... 5101 Btlt WHIH 9100 OATUlll llfLP I ESTllOICl&I L~~ ni:;:~ Appllcat~ IFFIOl lllLI IEOIPT/llTIY FOUND ADS 1;;;.:;;;;;;iii;iiiii~~ needed Experienced Unutual opportunity tor for tKp llmou":i.=era Career minded ptraon Local devalopmtnt/ Office ltatah 2114 Lest., .... [" . ' -. ' .... MIUlll YIUI IEllllHS IEUlllT ACCOUNTANT $25.000 with ca1e11ng Irey• & 88· people wt t>ackgroundt for preatl lous NB 11_ wun good lyplng ablllty, home bulldlna co 0 ••• 1 •.... , ARE fR[E 08Qrl8d Two years raal lad dtcoretlona Light In cosmetic u111. exp'd moualne ~ervlce Mull bookeec>lng fllP«. l'lelp-We requlrt front otflct .,_ eattte experience baking du11u Sa•er.y In the held ot detmatol-know ell aapec1a of blJal-lut Atk IOf Shelley Fa-apptarenct and good llHmllL Accomplllhed Personnel Oe>en H" llexlbl• LOfl 11 ogy Mull nave cosmetle neaa Send resume 10 • l'I Ion 111 • n d a r • • teltphon• ptreonellly IOHTIHIT Call• Strvlces. Inc Kitchen llcanae to work lor American umooalne. tOt 720-0202 Addltlonally you will bt 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, den, 2 car garage, quiet cul de sac. Canyon view. $147,500. Propertfetl Excluelvety • 3300 lrvlna, # tO 1, NB 979-0747 French Cosmetic Co In Scholz Plaze Sia 22 t, lff·llllE Ill *" HCrtlary to •el•• end 144-4110 142-llll 545-997 t 100% free O~lre,raotlo Allt major depl Slore Inell· NB, ca 92663 marketing mgr. who r• ~~~~~~~~~d~~~~~~~~~~1,~;;~~~~~~~I lute. Exit po1ent111 for No Hperlenoe neoeeaary qulrM good lyplng and Part/time 63 t·779 t aggressive, peraontbll, UVE·IN POSITION U.S and oveneu dlctapllone 1111111 u well n.-... Aoort PaJaltle OlaB Cle<lcal Free Joba sales oriented lndlvldual Cerino. honest lady to Fee for Directory H orga11lutlonal ablll- Olllce wanted Bl 500 or Loat. ""ll• Blk & Grey, M, Poalllon with Newport I N If Salary & Commission care lor 95 yr old lady 1·312-888-3338 tlH. AHi tatatt beck- 550 Newport Center Or Keetl'IOUnd. So Laouoa. Beech 1nvet1ment Firm • IMrl 8'40-8255 Ive mesa C M 5AI0-4 t37 evt E.llt. E-t530 yround htlpful. Call S300·S•OO range REWARD 496· t222, • co ta bl d lee• PaJ 52 7"•" .... I N 0 9 .. c un P•Y• e an LOSE WEIGUT w .. ,,. PUTl n•r __.. .... -~ -Of anet-6" -89 t a&k tor &lsan '495·9006 Ansl'Vers to computer axper rew'd :l leetl Jeltl Experienced Rental Car n " .,._ It Bogle Clll 553-09'40 person needed to wrtte making money. Part Wanted edultt over 22 .,....:_ NB aprox 500 sq fl, t ba. Y1taltt11 contracts. 7-t t Rent a time/I lime. 8'46-7807 wtlo enjoy wontlno w4th ._....,tlonl9t :i:0:~~~5~1~j.~,:-L,?9S~9 ~-isn·~:~:~ c:,~ ATIEITlll Referral l1H1tl Car 650-1t80 LOT PHSH IEUH youth M uat be wtll llSJA lnA Upstelrs office su11e avell· C M Rewerd 5'4&-4289 t 2 people needed tor Expertenced Baker ( tO lor 7-t 1 Rent A Car groomed, pereoneble, a UWDIW AlllOY ~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~u 11mportry part/time ol-we are n1r1ng yrs) ltalren and French Wlllh & detail 0 ... poe111ve mouv11or S1art Need• • FantMUc Riec-able. "Old Oownlown· FOUND Parakeet. Greer1 Ilea promolton work et car• n., et $75 ptr wHk. Call -t•--•-t 1 HM"" ............ . V Breads. Pay Top Dollar e•p people apply -........ ., ... ~~ A tall UaJ. ltatab tt SLa•t •-•, erea In Huntington allty. nr Euclid/ Slaler the WESTIN SOUTH Rtce,lltlllh Cell Balboa Bakery 650_1t8-0 2-5prn.64&-702t (utif0f typing, public contlct a• «o-. Beach. Close to Danks. FV Cell to Identify, COAST PLAZA HOTEL ll Pulse Board 673-20'40. Aak I<>< Paul 81'1.,ron). experi..nc., per90ne1 ee· • ..,. ..... ~ 2769 M/F to •hr 2 br condo, posl ore & mOft $250 to 963·9'467 Mutt have pleaaant VOi-Horizon L VN Busy back office, PAIT nm curacy' excellent •P· own bath. N.B. Nr beach. "450/mo Cell 538-tAl35 Found· OoJtlil. No COiia ce Houra available· 9-t. .FASHION COUNSELOR non·•mkr. lull time peerance 1 muetl Full 2 br, 2 ba upper, din. rm, Pool, Jae, 0.,. $350 Incl 2•00 •A " Meae. Call 10 ldenllly t-5 or 5.9 $4.50 to StO leortlarltl $12/l'lr. PIT. Ladles Ap-Contac1 Mrs Mllovcl'I nD/Wlllllll time Cell Lind-"'--11 b.ICO u/p ti N • -hr for quallll-d person· parei Business 730-9080 83~-t t66 _, QVO.I ' n, • O, gar. r ullla. Barb 6"5-4-450 ••Ice ottlce sp•re at Weal Call 557-5574 u 0 S .. Make t>Ctre SS helping 1 O am to t pm . Hoeg Hoap. $625 mo, ... -nel. Must apply In person letaphone. l'lortl'lend or 731-43'47 youth carriers promote 556-0'460. tat, tut & dep. &42-2949 Shere 2 br W/alde C.M. 17th, CM. Good tor A & Found· Puppy, blk/brn weel<dars 9·12 or 2·6 at Meld• 01 Orenge County their own eatabllal'led•--------- evt/wknd duplex . $275/mo. 'It 0. design or computer mixed breed. nr Adame lmperla Bank Building. Tr•l•h ~~~~~~~1v;r~~~!)~1~ 11 KGePtlno eppllcatlon• roulH. Mature, outgo-Rec/ Typlat, p/t, 80 wpm, 3 Br 2b. ,.. F....,. bl Ulllt. Cell Bob bet 8&5 tBr11n1no. ModHt price & New I and o4 I t O 61111 Town Center Or , 50 1o 60 plus WPM uperlence, beautiful 1 1rvtornper0!·rea"ou. 18$5 chleanerr. uou•-Ing. attractive parental ottloe akllla. Nwpt Bcl'I. lint. Nft l;,i~. ~soi mo: _M_-F_._2_6_1_.1_ooo __ •_xt_._2_11_1 ob ~~~::~8533 1162-1863 10th Floor. Costa Mesa showroom, ltberal com-• 1 w 1 ;, • ...,, e 1c 0;;, 8 • type peraon, pleaM call Cell 71'4/851-tt t5. Step• 10 1and Avail Re8'I rmmatt wanted to -----Lost Sundey Aprll 10 ·53 PleaN do not phone Wer• PreOHHll minion Call Mr Terry 63t-6222 rv mMU08 2·5PM M·F. &4&-7021. Restaurant 6183 800/252-0262, t>CI al'lr llvlng t>CpenHa on Newport Beach/ Koll In Irvine Univ. Park vie Automotive IBM Wekl'I, 714/75t-232'4 Pl'IOto L•b counttr per-Food 88'Vlce Worklf • 39 Of 2131374-1013 6 to Balboa Penln 1260 mo & Center, deluxe 0111ce. Oomeatlc lhOr1 heir cat Mally • ,,... Xerox FUNNIEST PERSON IN UUlllS IEEIEI ton.· part time. uptr eflernoons. Mon.· Thurs 8pm. ulll 873-5607efl6PM custom deatgn. lawytra ltmale 12 yrs old ' •,;••1 "' Wang TOWN W . 1 Earn "450 to S800 per prtl Apply In paraon end Sun. AM. Ideal )oO I •-· Employed ltm 50 10 tl'lr aulte. Avall 5-t5·83. Orange Tebt>y Tutti of II boolc & ne!c;' wn 1~ • Week If you have a ata Snapallc)t t HOUt Photo, IOfcollegettudent ~ull Hll ... 2118 2Br, 2Be, nr So Cat $550-$650/mo lncldt hair on ear tips and wrot Y~•'ll find 1 world 01 O"-GREYHOUMD Pl 11 tome! .P weoon Of van and enjoy 1'411 Rhfer'alde Aw. N.B. be neet, clean & ,.U.bte lurnlsnect secretary st•· tip on end 01 tell 11 you ~ .. ft •ase ca us 1 you re wOfklng with tMnager• Af>f*I 10-12 AM Of 2-'4 0 1ELUXE ~R CONDO. ~~.w~~·ln~11 ~ lion. conference room. have any 1ntormatlon, portunlty et PEP BOYS. Temporary Peraonne4 funny. Yoo don't nave to Call Mr Rountree 11 PIANO PLAYER for prl-PM M on-Fri. Lor1·1 =~·upgre~:'.~'•c:'.:~ 5'40-3233 Dot librery Share coat of pleue ull 552-0990 With 80 yeers ol e•perl· t5'10 t ·C Rednlll Ave be• pro 6"5-'4796 5'48·7058 btwn 1 tAM & v • I t c I u b , Ktteihen 3077 So. Harbor plett privacy. "465/mo. ---------I receptionist. privatt ence, we arttheNumber Tustin 71'4·730-471'4 a-11 oHIGe 3PM week days t1:30AM·2PM. Mon-Fri, Blvd. S.A (Harbor et 857-291• ~i: ~:/,:;5 "f:.!°~u~ ~~~;:sesl.'~'.7ox c~~~~~ L~~~k~~. t~o~r t.~11~·.i::,· ::~:~r~~~~~ ~~°:. ;~ CLHI TIPllT Pt1dt1 Piii MARKETING & TRAINING p~~t::: Al 752 • 7903 Cerrlege). Seal~ Laiaaa %716 _&4_2_-1_•_1_•_•_11_._6_. ---I 7 1 •I 7 2 O. 5 O I 2 or Reward. 963-9739 secret of our auccess Is Full llm• poa111on 10 U•l1lstrater Co. needs a peraon wttn Reet*'rant -838-t9'49 Found white cat. tan our Pil<>Plfl we undert-ans-phones and varl-Experienced In paper experience In either Exper FIT. Mon-T~ CATERING atrvlce Cozy t br1Dt, ooeanvlew, Fe non-amkr, 25-35 •""t• t bluQ/I orn .,.,e tand that you are whet eel office duttes Requl· work maintenance of teaching. tralnlno. enter· Thur ... Fri· Sat, 9-5. All need• food prte>1tallon sundtcll. Walk to beeCl'I. Twnhae, $307/mo WO<k l11iau1 ltatal12916 <rc;1& Mesa St fµS-o6'e7 separates ua lrom the res good typ1no skllls pension plans, profit talnment or selee Must ~J>~YS~~~· ~ worker•. So4 per hr. Full ~;::·.s.:;.::;:"mo Incl. ::2~~~~0 2 or home IELIU lfFIOE 11ms Found Perekeet. yellow. crowd, end we encour· Please Cell Rachael at :!'~~~o;.:~: :,:~,'~l:~gg r:~,·v:~st~26 alter Plecentla Av•. Coate r:,~ .. 5:.~j,~:~.o 3~~7 Baylronl bldO 700-t.007 .., 1 c w t g 1.. c •• age YOll 10 join us and 556-3946 12 M... Her I> or BI v d S A ... .--Female rmmtt wanted. " .., play • mejOr part In our knowledge of tax lawa pm. al .,~ non·amkr. Hunt Hart>our sq ft avell lrom St 25 642-393t continued expansion We C.l.A'a I.A'S end tnvestmen1 prlncl· MEDICAL ASSISTANT P/T •••-9711-07'47 BASEMENT SI 00 aq ft • 0 I i N k I'd -••-•---------Sl&L.Alll Mm apt, muter bd & b• 2500 sq 11 Cell Mon·Frt Found Btk k111en w/wl'll are acctpllng appttca-81 ••••• "'-P• • on-sm r pre Famlly practlee. El TOfo Dally Piiot ntwapaptr Rest-1111 Wkly rental• now evaJI. Po o I . a• u n • a I c 9.5 cl'ltn, vie Mesa Verde Or Ilona for tne following 1mmad opening• all Excellenl Ulery and be-7 t41770-1950 daaltr In lrvlne area •AIM'W'T $105 & up Color TV $350/mo 8'46-722t 642_.644 & Country C 1u1> po11t1ons PIH•• apply s1'111ts Call 881-740 I nellls Call Ma Corlel Approx 20 hr• pr wfl. A 0 r 0 wl n g orang 1 Pl'lonet In room 227• l;::-:;:;7:'~'.'::"-;;:'~::""=:1 ---~~~::.--5'49-0890 "our WMlmlntler stOfe blwn 9am end Jpm. Mon 2t3·595-035t •e41caal lecrltlfJ Atttrnoona & tome -County baed lood -· Newport Blvd . C M c;'~7~f~:1r ~t~b~:gt Oll1ce. storage. retell. Found lerge Rtbbll C<me gn Tnuraday. A:fc{ll j~ thru Fn Almand 1 Nurt-IElllAl. lfflOE Expe< bllllng Ins, typing kand morning•. Mull vtoe ~ l'louae Chain &46-7.._.5 720-0882. 833-5566 snop 19aoe avellat>te 11 Mesa PNLY, from t. ·4 Ing ~rvlce Experience ntceuary and Ille sl'lortl'lend, or l'la..,.Oependab68V9hlde. -k• axperleneed m•· 50c sq II 548-72'49 M ' speed wrlllng NB ArN preler llgnt truck w/ nag«•. women encou-48~r0~:innea~r :?15 ~v& 1 .. tala Waatt4 2909 Costa Meu Z<>r*I C-2 650· I 1'42 •ECIAllOS '1.:1~~;c!:i Produc· ~t>~l~~:.·pr~l~c~:n~:P~~~ 760-6086. 6•0-Al.4'40 camper lt'8ll Only neat. reged to apply. Ground S2'40tmo. 3"•• B I E "--J It tale 2111111 Found Ladles· watch \Full Time) Hon Facility Is Interview-llourM tO key by touch Mtdlcal/ClerlcaJ. Mature rtaponalble Ptrsona floor opportunity tor ...... us ne1s xec nteds -• a -. downtown L~una, Jan w••flOl•t ' Beck 0 111-"'""P ---'ed. nted •m St.artl"" •"-..-.mot .. ·at .... lnO ......... . ---------Hoo1e/1Dt w/encl gar & "" • ing people In the beach Excellent company bl· -,...., ,......, ... ....... -· ,.. _, , .. ......, Furn rm In pvt home nr · Commercial C·t W 1911'1 8 Clelm at P Ice Dept (LA Area) areas for swlm-ar. fa· nellta lnlormel olllce Perl time. non smOker pro• "4 7 hf & mHellge. ~l'I leederlhlp qua6l11M SC Plan. tl'lr bath. w/d l'lkup. CM/Npt area St C M Prime location F IEOtllITT 11a•1 Shlon bMr C.M Cati Miiiie alt 9am. Apply P 0 Box 1027. Cell btwn 9·30-10:30AM ~Of ~tment, p6eaM S 8 5 /wk , n 11 m k r 846-9017 Of 642-0783 •Int terms. 2 Br t Ba · ound yng m•le Cocker "" & soltsud~i~~rtlH-6-45-5800 Sen Juan Ceplatrano, only Mon-Fri, Hit for c&ll 972-282'4 (S.-11em) 556-1737 Gent emplyd tn NB, non· private l'IOUM wltn lerge Span • vie Newport (LA Arffl menta. Tl'lete we lfl'\aJI ' 92693. Ca OrtQ Hyde, clrculallon. -RET--.,-L------ dt1nktr wenll ""ecioul yard UM as office, drMS Sl'l«M area Cell Claudla bl11 • b• .... n•ou·"' r'""ls G_,111 Hetp &42-432 t "" OCEAN BREEZES • Jnn • ..., 6-45-7'405 tw1 Stcurlty gutrd appllca· 0 -,,. "" "' S325 wk 1 .... u al II ,tf·-t-a '---------1 II I h •--£ -· room/bath & kit prlvi shop, antiques, 11c Start 0 n 1 y B y • P P 1 ly, ma1 proc.s-... o eoa '""" •·I lttl --or blllt to bcl'I. llgl'lt/ • A G Ilona requlrt e current 51 !vii PIT PIT new.paper delivery, bright turn rm In twnl'lte legea tn quiet NB Of CdM M K 1 N MONEY 1 Pt1M1a.11 3012 Cellt Guard Permit Ac:>-2t3-&'49-3069 ng. Of no exp-Exp'd In all aspec1a lronl 3·61m. 1425/mo, plua At Ille ,......, ...... I t wortclng l'IOme To S300tmo lnc S550/mo +MC pllc•nll lor other poal· ., oeceasary FOf lnlor-office woric. acheduling, bonua Alt ~tied In Olnnerwwe ..._ P90Ptl ~= u~~ neat, Yfll'/ t utlt. Jol\n &42-8589 dys 5'43-5-442 770·5629 CIRCUS Of Ilona should l'leve ti COOi ~d·~:~~.=~~d .. :,:P•~ld g~~oerd. collecllon• beg. All you Oo II ~up c:aahlers . ..-Ja1oc:k. AD quiet 1table non--amk IUU le I -14 Approx. 3t00 1<1 ti store, laHI 6 montl'la experl-Need nice person lor ~,... re.uma. B. Kehlet, & dtill\ler cell 7511-()83(), IUll tim.pett time ~ ' • r. )VUlff at•. ..~ E 11ssa~E envelope 10 Royal Pu· t631 Orange •A. Coate • • tlonl . w.-end avalt•-non-drlnktr, cheerful. glue front, 17th SI. w ance In tl'ltir field We cooking. 1omt uperl-bllsl'lers. 38 Montvalt M"8 92621 o-v pm blllt 1 A 1 TV, kit prlv, pool, Jae. 1817 Weetctllf. N.B. 278 C.M. S2600 mo. Bkr, 7t9 NO. HARBOR BLVD olftr exctlltnl aalari11 ence Qood pay. pleas-Ave. Stoneham, Mau PIT Sec' /Recepl Y • mua · pply n $300 mo Incl utll. Refs. to 3600 eq. ti. 2.'435 aq. 645-6266 FULLERTON and benellU, aecure Ing tnvlronment Senta 02t80 MOTEL MAIO: Mldt llPPly Medical IU~ co Meds per90n: 12l2 So. CoMI 631-2268 ft. Suitable for mtdlcel or F S llO·l112 career growth within a Ane. Call only 9· 1 tem In person. Best Weetam well Hwy,~ 8eectl .,_., 1 1 3 dentel. .Agent 5'4t·5032 ~:~~rt!i!d F0 ~~ last pece<I environment. 556-t30'4 lair•rtHtr/ All Baba Mottl, 2250 lor llt~~~ &~ Retail Store Mngmnl '"""''no pro malt OV8' 5 t2 noon to • AM end complete tralnlnn for Maaloir....... N~ Blvd. CM afl 3 ... ~-.._ ,.............__ fOf FV pool home. Prima Fountain Veltey 01-tpace 600 S.F ware· YI & E .. ., C.t•etle 11n .",...,,' Call 760-t ... -642-2917 fie•. 884 sq ft 10529 house Attractivt lac•-l I& W El advancement h•entrater New salon In Newport pm --------~ Start .......... Good F 1 V•..._ loc SI• I er . ( O I ck) tlon. edJ John Waynt ATTRACTIVE PEP BOYS 8eactl roqulr" l'llgn I•· Needtd Shampoo Ault· llAL UTATI 11 th Id 1 111 oun a1n ......., 71'4/9M-1 t34 airport. S.75/S F offices. MASSEUSSES EKperlenced prtlerrtd. 1hlon hair atyllll end tent fOf busy salon. Lie 1&&.11 ...,.h ~ .:. ee no Bdrm. btAh, kit. & lndry S.35 SF./ warahouae TO SERVE YOU 11H1 hH~ llY4 Full time. E.>Coelltnt be-mantcur111 wttn ctlentele raq N.B 63t·t3llO Opening• In well eata-• ....,.. IMr ac>- lec, prkg. Meture F. lllWftlT IOTlll C81175t-5992 COEDS-Would love to Wtstatlalttr, CA neflta. APPLY We wtll pay ttte hlgtie.t blltht d lrvlnt Firm. pertl tor a dynamic $300/mo. Incl. utlta + 1st Full Setvloe Sutt" PERSONNEL OFFICE comm and prov1cf1 all Training, a11latanct, ~ ciompany with 21 & IN1 968-11623 -_. ...,.. •• 3300 aq.n former Venus party w/you Call Sue <>< Equal Opportunity 10 .AM 10 3 PM EOE .. _ _.1t• N.ed pert-time per.on to a10f91 In t2 n\llOr martl· ~ -· -,•• fu -de Milo. 103 E. t7th St l<etl'ly eny11me (2 t3) Empioy.r MJF/H T-.t Ir••-.....,p•""",•97 Ul.ll 11.,.1 a11111 H B Dally Piiot gentroua ccommlaalon 111 appeal• 10 YoU. we 4 Bdrm hou1e, 2 Ba. .575. Furn un rn CM., al Newport Blvd . 8 3 •. • 5 7 t , ( 7 1 4 l -• -.. ... d 1a1 er we 1 It day a •cl'ledul• •II Dawn. went you on 0vt swot-- wutt.r/dryer, ate. C.M. All YOU nMd IOf one avail '4115 675-6900 527-7186 &m ..... , ..... rt..... ,..HI 1411411 4 30pm·7.30prn. Sat/ 85t·t177 tlonal management S2'40/mo. lncld1 utlls. Monthly Feel SPIRITUAL RUOlNOS Automotive repair ll'lop I 47 Futtlon t.iand • Sun 4am.7am. Need c». REAL ESTATE tewn. S20 d1po1tt Call 840·5'470 ld11t. ltatab 2t20 General ahop tabor Newport 8eectl HAIR DRESSER, CM l*ld•ble car. Cell Mario ., • .___~. u---o 1 a v. We are leeltl~ br""ht. &411-8388 or ~1220 Advice In all mauera •• 1 1 w d S 1 P I --· ._ -,. * -LIUtffU.•* •S775 up. 1900 tt lndu· .., n mum w &gt Couple to men•t• 18 • -• re tr tome 6'42-4321 txl 2tt Lv parlence d per1on In aggre11lvt In lvldue11 .,.. ...,. love. marriage & bual-831·7270 lollowlng. 5'48,...2111 name & ....,..... E o E. com--' ... " ...,,.._._. •• with a hlatnrv of ..... Room 4 rent. male. o......-t MO FREE RENT •lrteJ office t8t01 R• ne11 Al•o counaellng unit• In Coate tH 557' · · ,,_..,.. • .,...,....,_ end., minimum 35, non arnkr, Cnmtlen t room to 7 roomt Adj dondo Clrctt, '"R". 1615 So. El Camino Real. Baby11t1ar. mature lor t Perfect for retired. aeml· h•t O•••llfer s.e.1 reel Mt•t• for a euccea. ~ ._,1 •,..._.,1 ,,,.. morel•. Pool,apa&vlew Alrportwlnn&Frwya No Hunting ton Beach San Clem.492-7296 eve t day per weal<, 20 ratlred.SendRnumeto: 632·7306lvmeaaaoe N-apaper «Hllvery, pit. afUl&growtng""'1. n~t~fOf home. NB. 851-1910 leaM required. 8'42-283'4. mo. Old boy & t on the Muriel Robina, 5782 Ra-3-6am, 1425/mo, plus Beet WOf'klna COf!Olllont lmmtdlate manai•rlel Call AM 833-3223 llOHTI I •tllLS w • y . My l'I om e . venapur, #5t2, Rancl'IO Hop Slng'a laundry now bonus. All papera tied in In Newport Beach Fum 1 room; no kltdl, ·~ In Laguna Niguel. Crown OUTC.ALL 835-91119 &46-5551 Palos Verdea, CA 9027,. 1ccept1no appllcatlona beg All you do ta deltvw 714/84e-5051 opening In our outl'I blk Ir bdl, yrly. Lndry, Airport erea-Exec Valley Patkway, al>Pf'OK fOf dell119ry driver Good & pickup. Call 75~ Coaet Plua tlOf•. W• $325. 873-9327 Sultee from 225-450 11 t&« 9<1. tt. 645-0215 Pro! Man Hak• Ftm BabyaUler, 5 yr Old. 2:30 011111 lllP MS driving rllCIOfd Apply In 8..e pm offer very competltlvt ltttla, .... la 2tl4 St per llQ ft/Many x1rH 1100 11 2 olc & W/l'IH nlllng com pen Ion. pm to t t 30 pm Call No uptrltnee ntOH· P8f'IOtl Mon-Fri 8-tOAM ulertu, • complett P .__ .,.:....,, ........ on "···t Call 551.1010 1700 sf wrl'lae apace. wknd1 & aummtr crul-bttOf• 2 30 67$-7537 ury Exclllng car-op-tOOO N Coast Hwy, La-lttne hmt.n trlngt benefit pacllagt ..... "'""....,... ........ .rirr lrwy clote. IOp roe -1-529-3'458 BABYSITTER. 2 wtcs 51'1rt portunlty gun• Bci1 CNA"• & NA ~ all lncludlnO bonld & proftt Hwy, N8, at'!P9 IO ocaen. ~"11YI llml• 675-625t Alltntlon buslneHmen. dey lor my 1'4 mo old F• fOf OlrtctOfY. -••j~ tl'llltt Apply Mon tl'lru ettarlng program & op-Wkly ra'8le. Ms--0440 I MO ~EE RENT AtlrtctlW young lady will eon, In my home. Mutt t -312-866-43A17 ... ,"_ ... , Fri llAM to 3PM New·• pof1unlty lo adVance & .... ·•· tt SL·-.aAe With tl'lort term ltH•. 2,000 llQ tt unlt wltn office model Call lOAM· tPM new trantp 552•11645 Ext. C-1S33 Part/Oma EJtperlenced port Conv Centw 1555 grow. ... mu• .....-lull awvk» aul1M Keep Avail lmmed -Co1te lor 1 t...W.W e39-3080 Apply In perton Betch Superior Ave, N . B For • P8f.onal lntetvtew, Mlle roommalt wanted to your ovtrhttd low & Meta 30$ aq tt Min t yr n Btbyttlltr. pan time, 2'11 l&llf PILIT HOUM, 819 Sleepy Hol-6"&-77&4 call Sanlne Watkin• It :•:,.t~';~..!.!:.:..~ I ~~:-'0r~t:i~ ~·11~fr ,,,., 6 PM laalan1 I ~:~r:,.;:,, \~ :':.!1! Th• D•ltr Piiot l'lu iow ~.Laguna e..ct1 Nur ... A1d11eompan1on llllPTWT s.t-2243. ..... ._...., N t B h ""-tr-~a. rel"• r..,,ulr-openlnt: lor pert lime lllllOWllll Lit• HOp'g, Meturt, 1~ .. , ............. ~ ........ __ "-,......, West Ible, 25-45 preherred, • w P 0 r • • c · 2600 ft IOc t.... Fl i l ..,....,, -· """ Rout• •n&h&r• to • ~ ...,., .. _, -"'"'-Cell Jerry at 650-32'49 631-3851. Hth ,. Plioe:tj;'. ~r alaC I ed. 7t'4-851-8063 perlli .. carri;;, Mond~; Mutt be thbrougl'I, dt· :'~"din lo~ ~mall• e~d:rly t1nl office, O.C. Airport 5a1ea • .-ay •tr•• $695/mo. 6"&-1 t6'4 l1dan111 BABYSITTER for 7 moa tnru Friday. approll 2PM Pttld•ble. with trana. P11 J.. n. r ' ar ... N .. t appearance, Earn S200·S800 ptr M/F to al'lr Al Br l'louee, ""'rww .,_ to 7.30PM Muat nave time. SAl.25/hr. Leav• 842· 481 pteaaant pereoneUty, In· week pert lime. Up to btwn ~ & Oc:Mn. NB. OFFICE/ WAREHOUSE. 2500 aq. fl. near Hoag fer l&lt 4012 ~~~1:•J:e. m/,~~5;~: dependable •lltlon wa· ~. 96'·9766 Nurtlng cldentel but accurate $1000 bonua for oloaar & eeo-293 ""8· IOOO 11 10 2700 11· At· Saparstt olllct a r•· llln ... loroet .... of wood M-F. M1turt non-1mkr gon -van Of arnall plcicup HOUSEKEEPER, Llvt·ln OllT. ••m URS 1YP 1 n II r • q u 1r 1 d · cloM. Wiii ~t any deal. M/F to thf beau1. Back trac11v9, W9ll maintained •trooma 35' per eq fl & metal bual""9. good lady prtl. rth req. end current lnturance. lor beeutllut Bal Penln 3pmtot1:30-.P ..... &4t-Olll1 (Wtndy~ Start today maltlno big modern building• on Bkr, 845-82e8. ..... SSS. c .. &$4-7082 Bay condo. Pool, J•c. qultt itrett AHlgned Income, room for expan-841-057'4, 657-2732 WMkly ltllty $150 end home Hak~Chlldcere call~ 10 am end HeYt you read today'• l«lnla. '300. &45-5t23 parking, gartQfl evall· 1200-2500 llQ It WMt Ir-•Ion, equipment plua Bak /Reat t ~ Company 8enellt1 plue lor 6 yr old , altnoon 4 pm only, Mon-Fri CltHltled Ade? II not. A I wa y • • •a I t In 111ne area lncid• oftlclee. Ttrma avail. 96&-6187 wy auran mMMge Ind commlNk>n & evea Mon· rl Non-Country Club Convale· ~·re milllno ttle beet ct...ift.d-rMd the ada M•. "°""'81ftkr, straight, able. lrom •5•0 mo, Tom, countt r ht lp. Pref Ft. opportunity ApplL et tmk muat driv. R a 549-3081 bet ........ Int I _., "'-. M2--M71 2 bd, 2 ba 1250 + 'A &46-AllOO, 8"&-3323 d• • Kea-tt I.Ma ..a•u C•I Balboa Btktry, . · r, m -'1· --own .,.., utllt . 842·SU8, d:6•· 85t-$928 !.!. !!" 87 ,., .. ,. .... I p circulatlOn off1oe 3P lo b o 1 rd + I a I a r y • I RA•lt ••--1 -3-c_... ,.._ Of tM.11 5PM °':l:. Cout Delly 87!>-3793, 523-.4920 -•ft• 8, 842-M ~ 1100 aq ft w/olflce. be & ---••• ....... Piiot 330 8 s H ll•••nm ... ..~ -"-·1 Banking ,..~,·. Mt ay t., HOUSEK"'EPER Meturt, ~ ~t'.00:,,!': ;Me;a :~::5;op loc, twy = P~:'°~':C,I:, Lill Ollll ....,. Mete IOI/Ing r"'o cart for t>Cec, furn, lrplo In bdrm. P.:" ~ndt• .... ioc. 300 Worllthop. 951-50•7. Entry level poeltlon with Dell\ Cltrtl wented, AIO hf 4 yr old. Mon-Thur. &40-42e2 I • ant pa ... 1no. 1 eq.ft. tront olc, :y: eo11ec1, 2• houfe, Mortoao• Benktno Firm ~. $4/hr. AWY s.. 12:30·8. Good Orl11er, lull ~2-~= S165. reat, drive In door. $4 5 126,000 10 1500 000 for pefaon wlll'I Pf'Of... Llrll Motel. 227AI N--non-amkr. ult rel HARBOR RIDGE Palattal 1 _________ 1 ~.mo5~~~~~~t.1":vs~. and• F•'1 epprov~ and 1lonal phone manner ~~~8,:~~· C,M blwn &40·e224 or 840 ... 3011 =re1•o lhf, $500 mo. CdM ~/Dent. 1000 aq, M&-Oee1 ' · funding. Call 451-11135 end bUllneu offlCI ltl· tn1uranc• Secretary lt'lr ---------ft. At<;, pr'I. beth/th-. Det\M Corp CdM Doug qu•tt•. Mutt bt .,,,,.., or-"'"' bu9Y st .. • Ferm omoe H~~ :::~;.~! ~~·M-=~~~-C, !ltrllt ltY 8uNey Bkr. • . !;'~~·~.~t~e':I~~ ~~ Mutt fla¥e tma11 cer or H.8. MW4'10 tlfM wlf~. W/D, tully Uiguna Fcnet A¥e, prof ~~~-:5'= ll!!tt!I"· T.D.'14"1 111 .. ae ~:'~· r~':n:'d~ LIU&. lllMHIY fl#n, pool, ""'315 mo. oflloe ~. lk)4ltt 225 0 f m • r 0 h • n Cl I • • .... um.m wortt: Put tWI :=.utll. ••o-tt11 Iv ~~1~triow.t !'_!-178G1or 141-1741, ~It..... f ......... Nlhn t Cell·M~ ~IU"''*.=1~.l~. & -~------~~~==~==~-1 . .:""""=.:"'~::#Y:!...----I 8 In 111 & 2nd Of-II -tafon ln ewport DAIVEA wtwhlclt to tow '' ...... 2 .... 2 ... Apt. with •DELU>Ca OFFK:U• TD'• tf4t leaoh.. bptrltnOtd }\air 23' trtv. trlr to ..., P• famtly .... 8el•ry oom-:1~0~~ ~r!"'9·; t:~':!i': :.!w°p~ 19:\:: ~~ AutlM•gta =T.a=:r Bd .:~~ ~·1e~',1~ ~~ =~ r1 "'°°· ;"""1~•,·1 .. ~~.·o:~': fa':~ IUO/rno. lnc:I. ut111. 148-tON •---.. ~2 1 .it 120-' .., - 142-0H6 ,,.,... ... ma -·2' , 54&-0e11 ILllTll• -LllM. WTUY People Ofi.t\tecf prof ... °1:1~~:.~,741. UPIOllTl11ft WIDOW HAS HI for ftl•llU Newoorl Ce,,ttr RHI .......,;..., ....._ ....... ..-t _ T,0 '1, t10,000 up. No 1 b d C le I I. ti I Fl _.. _ _..._ -·,--O A,..,, Clfound fir. 108 El ..,. c:rtdlt cMck, no penalty, rv. au O, Ht 8 et•tt I O•l on rm "*9 2 Ir. fl#n. Cit. wt Camino Dr .. CO.ta MtM. 0 111 Denl aon AHoo. hnCft Teoh with a ~· ,,...,. tNf1l, t.l(l)'d ltQtf 111r111111t. C.M. Obra 1 bl!• f. ot l'alNtew l' .... " t 73-'1'1t ••P· Trouble •llootlno1 lto'y. Xlnt typlnt, dlo\t.· 1414M1 • ...-1 AIMIM. WI 1111 dlgltal I Melot Glroult phoM. _, lhoriMnd ic.. -..... H • .,.., I br '154-tCMO Mt. Treey .. ..,.... ..,.. .._. ha£.. .... 2.nd TO'a from N .000 io bOalda for Cf!IT" .. p(int· mult. •elarr opt" • .., _,, .... • .... 7 ... ,. .... 1111 ,...,.., ISO,OOQ hl9fl ylefd .... .,. a modema to OClllfto ..o-...a ~\t·Mft-::..= .. ....,, ........ M=r. Troubtea?I DI· cured~ •ltl0t9 f•mlly pon•n• 1•¥•1 ••lary l.IOAl llOAITA"Y· ~-==· ........ :z· ............. t::.:i~1~':::'!1~ =rn:.-J~1n8~"n.~8:~i OOIMlll!Mr ... ...., 11111>· HI ........ ice~-Clllld Ab11u?I Clllld 0.Mll (714) ..... u. IOYI . CJ•A'-1 ~'."1'.:0 'r'd ,..ume. .. ad. ... typllt '::L ~ :' ::; I • I • I • I I t r Cu1tody'1 lmmlgrtllo" ~rl M. :!"'bMn~c:'I:.,~ Hl 1t, 711~?~: ttMQO • a.ao,. U. .. D.~. -"-.,,... (~~cu,• "9ot .,..., In HI C11 Kroeger lOI Liff.,, •""fllflt 1tllfl a ~-~1~,,.,.....~~~Ct~Mal!~,~l)~·ij~~;~~~;1 .,.._ Mardi to ~: to w..o 1u..qa1 _. 1'1 Dlllr ,... CtllidMI Ad :-l1 ... 1""4l ~ • t• .._ L NfM I. a:::: Mme*? .. • ........ ..., • • • a ea. CIOllect. t• ht ....., *'· 142.117 Ml..,.,.,, u:•::-=.: .....,.~=~-;.J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!~~~~~~ USTlllE OHTA •EU 3 Units with ~h flow $150,000 AIEIT H1-Hl1 Newsp"* KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! \ ,.,. Orange Co11t OAtLV PILOT/WednHdey, Aprll 13, 1933 t'I llissi•nml Service Direclary 5J . . . . . . ,.. , .... __ NW Cut lt•m ..., lmk -;; l! .. Dtl $1.84 per day .. STAl'llY OONSTft l.oYlno ' Reeponlli>i. 8PAIN08·HINOH·NIW * • •HOMll F\VAIA New I rW!Od. flnlah oer-,,... Week. 1letlOeCI yd ()QeMrt. All~·· l.lec·Plunl~tr)' Tllet'I Al.I. ~ pey pen~ door h1n~11g C.M. ~ 1-1121 wttdyt fmef~ MtV. Lowell P1tlo~~ ~· '38 1. t$1 .. 371 lk• r1t111l 1 yr1 In O.M. ~. 1<.91th a.. ...... 72 )(J.,.~14 AESID. & COMM'l CHll.DCAAI!, Chtl1t11n f4)018& Tom 507-4480 Hom1, 160140 hr wk .. JAO• 0, Al.I. TAADl8 NMw·AernocW-~ I I 50 ht. Npt Helghl1, Oerege Dool 01>4tfllotl, Cell Jectt 11nr,1nw, DAlY 1.~ r•t• 914.s KATHY. 8&0-52141 1p1lng1, h1rdw111 F0< Dey 0< night. 75·3014 -T e..ar .. ttn. a...r11 a.rnon11111on. Seloout ONE CALL 0018 ITI PILOT 24N Newport Blvd C M. ~·Alt1t1llon• RemodllJAeplif•. comm. 842·S4llO P1 ln llnQ, oerpentry. 1oonng, crpt ••eem e1n- SERVICE Doof .. wtndOW9<1b1Mt1 & ruld. l.IC'd, bonded, !! ....... Ing, g1rdlnlng, yard c:ln· Ptne1.pe1io.tencee. ln1, FOf 111, 11112·11142 Jetty 1548-4413 Tlllll up, etc:. L-t 11111. DIEC TORY ................ STARR 1148-4471 Rm eddn .. P1t10 cover• Topped/rernovld Cleln Lie. 308888 Rtlmodel. REASONABLE RA1'ES oeot1 .. FenoM-lmprovrnl Add'nt & Clblnet1 up. new 1awn1. 751-34711 All tyfH of WOlk·rH/ 00 IT NOWI ' Atpen. Cllf ..... 7552 84e.ae&e 845--4844 comm 8~ & am JObt a..twlldr• llndeceplng·Yd c1nurn• R1modellng, flnleh ctr· Tr" trlm/remov·M• nt D1y Of n hi 1148·2174 Your Diiiy Pllol pantry, door hinging. PEEi. CONSTRUCTION. 1rrio111on Jim 851-0129 &ervict Dltec1ory Almoet lll'J kind of car· Home repal11. Sml Jobi ~1tlll¥1 pelnttng, r~, ellcltl· l)lt\tty Of r~r1. Com· Tll Ulll IOlll OK, pllntl:l, etc. cal, etc. 1131-83 1 Mitt• p1111 remodelln~ Gd G1ty 84 ·5277 PTL 141-lf. .. , Ill L1wn-1r ... th1ub ln1l1ll Repair/Im Joba. FencH, ret1. Lle'd. 631·54 4 Tr" trim/Removal Home rec>etr1, c11pentry, thelvH, per,ltlona. ,Lo Anaatlcal C.W.11 D!pall llwn mllnl/Rototll~ c:1bln111, ela c tr I cal, rat•. Stev. 752-11556 FrM Htlmlle 548-plumbtng, fencing Don N-& Reepr1y. Remod, Cul!• ltnltt DRYWALL/ACOUSTICAL Ci.tn-up1/L1ndec1plng llM-014 ~~UO.f414ett. ALL PHASES Shempoo & llHITI cleen. BUD (714) 552-9582 Hauling • Tr" Trim P•lnllng Int /ext. elec Ablilty rl 730-1llOO Color brlah1enet1, whl Fr•111 142-9907 cerpentry, plumbl~, AUldeaal ..... •l Dtctrical thHtroc:k lie. 545-81 crpt1 • 1 min. bl11ch. Relph Caballero & Soni Add',...DlllGn-R«nod. Hiii, llv/dln rms S 15; 1vg ELECTRICI AN Priced Comf,I. melnt, comm/ Haalia1 lop quall1Y. low ptlce. room $7 .50: couch $10. right. hM Htlmate on '" rM ltlmmlng & re- Fr.a Ml. Lie. 631·2345 chr 15. Guu. ellm. pet lerge or tmlll lobe. mo1111. cla1n-u~1 Frff DUMP JOBS odor. Crpt 1epelr 15 )'II Lie. 396821. 873.0389 "'· &<tS..4864 a . 4:30. & Small Moving Joba Al@&lt exp. Do work my11ll LIC'D ELECTRICIAN COMPLETE GARDENING Call MIKE 8411--1391 Rib. 554-0123 Drivlw•y-Pertclng Lot Oull. work·RMI. ralN SERVICE: cell Jlfry'a HAUL·MOVE·AEMOVE ~111'9-Slllcolt~ We Cere Crpt C111nera Tom 831·507211173-7544 L•wn Service. 831·4395 Furniture, Trelll, Tr- 548 ~ 631-41119 Steern Ci.en & UphOI. 963·5415 NORM Truc:tt Mounl Unit GUil RESIDICOMM'L/IND Gardening, cle1n-up1, Dvt Hallberg Grading Alu. ret•. 645--3718 20 yr1. Do my own woa. trimming. c:.mtnl WOfk. HAU LI NO a P1v1~. A11/comm Lie. 278041. Al 646-8126 545-1804 842-2986 Clelnupa, yerd/lr" ave. Uc. 3117 842· 1720 CARPET INS1'ALLATION RANDY, 642-7647 & REPAIRS 30 yn exp CHRISTY & SON UlllWI l&llT. ldnltttu a..s-9031 (bit 8, ,,, 4) 24 HOURS LIC'D Cln-upe. Alli 536-1810 Heulln~, cl1111-up & trM 536-8 121 Of 660--0998 trlmm ~· I 10 min. Babyllltlng, 1ny hour Thornton C11pet Sllea & 08fdenl~ w1nted, mow-55 -8271 Bob Neer VlctorllJXlnt refl. ln1111111lona. Comm/ Electrician-new & repair Ing . • glng. raking, Coe1• Miii. 642-8482' rNld, res111tche1 & r• All typ ... Low prlcu 1weeplnt free 1111· College Student with lerge ........ pelre, xlnt rel•. •430277. Llc'd. Fr" "' 831·2345 mlt•. S4 7541 truck, lowell r a11, Greg 556-5324 p1ompt. Thank you. lattrtaiaant IOIWAIU WISG&PI Cour1. 7511· 1976 e.lloon Promotlonl Unll-C.. / C. mlted: bllghl bouque1al tat acrtt• For your wedding. th• Sp1cl1l-comm/re1ld •••• ltein acouatleal beluty ot vol· lnd1<:p/ melnt 1erv 13 Seme City. 494.7550 I Cernent·Muonry-Bloc:k Wllll-Cu.t. WOl1l Uc:. ce & guller. 873-8496 y11. Fr" .. 1. 831·7494 Painting • Cerpentry l!lllul Fin Alua1 •381057 Rob 547·2&83 Tiie • Remodel. Bonded. Expert yltd cleen-up & Uc:. 1162-74321844-47118 Burgllt & Fire Alerm1 Concre11: amall or lg• Ftacia1 maintenance MrVIOM Centtll Alportl~ 1ob1. Remove old, re-Jim 545-eell8 1tl. 8pm Beatt Cleaaia1 "-/comm. 84 pl-w/MW. S45-8S12 C&H FENCINO/CONS1' Fencet bull! or f"el)llred JAPANESE GARD£NER ROBIN'S CLEANING Wint Ada Clll 642·6678 Clullfled Ade 842-5e7& CompelltlYe prleea. Free Ml. 875-6616 Melnt, cl11n-up. Ft•• Ht. 8118-1573 lft. 8pm. ~ • e thoroughly cleln hOUN. 640..()857 8111 Wut .. 1100 •••1 ...... SIM SPEND YOUR DAYS HOIOSCOPE AT THE BEACH BY SIDNEY OMARA TEL-l-CIRC -HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Tbanda~Aprtl l 4 FOR PART-TIME PERSONS IN TELEPHONE SALES DEPARTMENT AR (March 21-April 19): Del.ails come to light in connection with financia.I transaction. Don't OF LARGE ORANGE COAST NEWSPAPER be too trusting. Elements of luck and timing are with .you. Money windfall could be part of exciting •Evenings and Saturday scenario . Aquarius, S corpio person s figure mornings prominently. ·Commission/Guarantee TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emphasis on •Must be ambitious, self -expression, direc t approach . special pleasant and reliable appearances and appeals. Judgment and intuition hit mark. Gain indicated via written w ord. Timing ·Experience helpful, but wllllng to train is such that you will be at nght place at crucial ·This Is not temporary moment . Check with Gemiru. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): 1;!!fhlight diplomacy, recognize need for look beh' scenes. 642-5678, ext. 312 Focus also on respite from usual routine. Get second wind, utilize resources of c lub. institution o r between 5 :30PM-9PM /' toepital. You'll be dealing with Taurus. Virgo, 'bra individuals. "THE POSITIVE ANSWER'. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Focus on advertising, publicity, possible appearances before media. Emphasis on ability to gain allies, to influence others and to participate in successful lllEDIATE OPElll&S business venture. Define terms, streamline techniques and refuse to brood over what is actually Need telephone sales representatives to a minor matter. start tonight in Costa Mesa o ffice. LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22): A cce nt o n achievement, special community activity, career and opportunities for increased rewards. You'll be •Part tlme handling added responaibility, relationahip will •Must be at least 16 in~nsify and you'll be given chance to promote a •No experience necessary uruque auae. •Pleasant personahty VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Be willing to let go •Reliable of past -opportunities abound in areas of communication, publi1hing, travel. long-range •Gooct earrung potential planning. You have cha.nee now to gam wider audience, to complete important project and to be rid of unnecessary burden. 142-1171, ht. 312, 1ff. ltlO LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Light ia shed on areas relating to possible partnership, business investment and fiacal responsibility of those who Sllel/Hltdwlrl. IEOIOUY FT/PT, Cfown Herctw.re, would form business alliances. Dig deep, reject 3 107 EM1 Cl1 Hwy, CdM Airport .,.. tMI eetlla superficial explanations. You'll make valuable new lln1nc1 firm de1lre1 contact which he~ get to heart of matters. • UL.El Nlll1ll ecx:u<•t• typist w/excel p,remmlllcll lkHl1. pro-SCORPIO ( t . 23-N ov. 21): Play waiting Exciu911/'1 women·• 1tore la now lntervl-lng for aHlon11 1ppe1r1nce game, refuse to rush 1o judgment. Focus on possible Ind lemlllarlty w1th word lull or pert time 11111 partnership, unique legal agreement. You'll be poeltlon. lndlvldulll IP-procea1lnlooC1ll Dane involved in family affairs, decisions regarding basic pfyinQ mv'1 M¥I u1en-714/47&-1 aecurity. One who aided you in past is due to make 1lv• 1ellln\ end mar· lllHm ...... dlend~ '!found. ~P~· Excel bin.-lmmed. employment • we AGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Pen:eive nt1. Cell Mon thru Set. wlll trlln you. 29072 c .. from 9am 10 noon. mlno C1pl1treno. San potential, .ee picture in its entirety -leave fine 64().()119() 0( t4Q.099 ' Juen Capo. points, details for another time. Emphasis on tra~l. !:~!~/1m~~~lt. communication. increued aocial activity. You're due UUl/PwtThH to make important contacts which will aid in future R•U•n Furniture. TUH projecta. Ind Wed 10em lo IPM. of Ice. flllng, ledger, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Good lunar $5 tw a oomm. Mllure, Qlt*"ll office uphep. d1pend1bl•. bondeble 831-1643 aapect hlg~htl c reativity, change, c hildren, '*"°"· to rf:' & cloM 11°'9. 13~7 83 Ftn Vly. 9ervloe 811tlon Attendant, speculation romance. You'll have chance to gain Ex=ICld·~ more aolld emotional and financial ground . .... .,.,...1 .... ~" l • Newpor1 Aquarius. Leo, Scorpio natives figure prominently. Meture, hudwor Ing ..,.. ....... Restrictiona will be removed. penon to m1n1ge r•· AttM••tlTire ..... rrat>i. entr., lhop. F/ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18); Study Capricorn m1, 5 ay week FUii time, •xPlf, m1ture • me.age for valuable hints.. ~fer received in past (lnolu:C,lcil Sun). Muel w/11re ule ability. will be reactivated -views are vindJcated and your ....... knowtedge of a21s1wk + llte comm. entlq\111.. 142· TIM& NB. If you cen't 1111 tlt9I talent1 are appreciated. Get agreements ln writing, • do not lpC!fy. 844-7151 welcome lively lntereat exhibited by a apeclal ....,. ... Servloe Station w«k. PIT member of 7polite aex. M1rket1n81s11e11 Peraonnel e~t. heve IV'l'I I 150+ Pet 'Ml. PISCE (Feb. tu-Marc h 20); Dome~ , openlnJ' In '\P.ort Cell ~5780 2Plft-5Pm adjuatmenl occun, promotea pe.-e of mJnd Be•oh ln•nol•I rv. IUNll ..... lmprove~armony al home. Short trip could Good typing. eflotthend lnvolw Uve. Dlvenilfy, experiment. sfve full 111111.1,~r~·d. Oen .. ...,." ..... 714-1 II IOOklng IOt an enttiu- rein to lntelllciual C\lrtolity. Family ~her make1 llmlAIY ::.ic.J::.~ 1e1ture of conciliation, purchues glh to CCllNnl!mOnt.e • eenUrnental anniwraary. Co1t1 M ... CPA "rm. bUt would be WllffnO to Type to wpm. 10 key train tit. rlgnt r,:raon. ........... 11• ........... 1111 ......... 1111 adding macfllM. Noni ,..._ oontect. r. Mo-...... eom.~ D1nnoC1 ...... 1MO req, Ml!\. 3 ~ eicperlo &Al.Q .T.._.,.. 8AU8 111.a,HITMI .... Ill&. ~'!Z tooep ed f 01 prof fill llY·M llY IUppllnlent Y04li' lnoonl9 enoe. Ill~ St11. Cell Happy PoaltM Atmoe- Qooel peyl We n .. CI ~olno lntetHUno "•Mell, 1 4· 1040 for pMte .. ~ .....,, fr': fUlfiW'IO" •I~ to tettlnO· --"'°'1~ ptlOM _..,. to ..., Pl-one ..... wort& on mot• our &:ubllo• Ion by Ir--. r::r 0# MO nocllm9 I tout9 rMrWO-beMll of Nation.I Com-_.,., ......... ~In .... ""' ........ ,,., not• .. to o.lllW ....,,... pantee. Many lfllha to N9 AIM. 1 per90ft ~ Of PIT. hlely Of oom--.ntfel. M"9t be ~ tllpe In O.C. ""· TM dlOOM "°"" ... per "'· bper, excel! _. .. ~ d mliellof\. eonu... Hunt. ...... ~ money Is ...., Hunllnf-~wantMd, P1u1 luer• 11W201 loh. Call Krl•tl• •t --::.-= ........... _..,, "' bonu1 ~ram. M4-702 ~ .......... oom.ct 1t4/IM-Hft ..... .... d, bUt ~.,,. ..... NwyllO._.. wlll trtln the f10ht g:r· lot •m•O Nmo• "'"'· ,,.,..., wenttel, NtwPott ~ A"1 .......... '-" OOff OOUi'M. AfJIJ*r eon. '°' In~ 1111 lll• tvgino. """' 1ne1 ... .,...,... .. for ,... flotlln Of Undl .. In "'""· J 100 Irvin• fNlkU .. ~tllll oat• .................... llOOOl#I ~7J "' 10 ,..,. ~ 9-Crl. t .. "°''· ~'W MMTII train 114 TIO ~---n4n ci-t • y Pk.Ol TllMto~adlNHltel ltlLI. let .. ,.....,, with a ·:-:..~--= ·~ ......... ....,.. lllMOI DINGTOft'I' ,,, tit• e e11 ... ,. ~NetCIMIWM NetOll ••• ,,,_ .......... ...... 11 MHl1t. ·-..... ..,...., .. . .. ..... -. ... ..... I!! lltpenlle HouMlleeplng GAAOIA'I MAIHT • 81d0/ Vec I ~ lnohMd lflf pl(, It cat~, .,, Kitty 1-'t70 plumblf\O 4117 1 HOUM l Office c111nl~ !l•!!!Q A1ll1bl1 , lhorougn ~ulok. I 10 hr Olnge1 81'11Cl<WOAK 8m1u Job• 54-7321 Newpot1, Cotlt1 M .... lrvtne. "-11. 875-31711 HIOh Oulltty HouMWOrk MllOllry & 81UCCO: new & Alfi. I am lhl !>Mii 87$-7012 •fl lpm repllr All typet Oullity. Lowetl price. 831·23411 •llOLUllH BAICl<WOAK . Smell 01 836-022 t •t111noon1 111'0-JOb• & leplUll Loc1J refl 846-8512 Hou1eoleanlng . 1pt , hom11, condo•. Reier Cu11om Brick-Stone •fl 4pm ff2·21131 Debo-Bk>c:k·Conc:ret•Sluc:co rlh Aefl Fr" Ml. 549·9492 ..... lltti•1 ...... lmmeculete, rNponalbl• ·ABC MOVING· bu1ln111 wom1n. Lon~ Ume looll retldent wit Quick, C11eful Service. Lie. T 138048 852-0410 ref. Avlll June thru Sept or Oc1 1173-87 12 •&·1 .. " .. * Beat quality. 25 yr ••P FREE, honeat & rell•ble Aal1 1v111 Cell Paul Competitive r1te1. Butler 8'45-4840 X802 Lie T • 118,428 730· 1353 STARVING COLLEGE HOUM 1lttlng deelrld by STUDENTS MOVING r.OURjj, rM9QRllble pro-CO. Lie T 124-438 eHlonel for aummer ln1Yred 84 1 ·8427 month• beginning In WATCH US GROWi Mey. I will c11e tor pet1 Pa1atla1 1nd P•Y utlllllH. Cell 1175--4476 1tler 6 ~m '111 Pllmlt bi Richard Sinor Lie. laee.1 Tu 2 0644. 14 ytl of hippy lo<:ll cuatom4H'S. Feder1ted Tax Service Thank you. 963"" 114 Home/office •PPl8 1131-4871. t•wn P&1m11 D1ve'1: Moet I 10.$76 Of Prompt, ne•t p1olaH- 20% off lall yeer·a. Wiii lon•la/lo Ill• &:Je..7149 ,,..,.., 641--0929. P&llT YHI OUTLE Ladacapa, FREE EST. INT/EXT. REFS. LIC 3201181 fill un111n1 TED 714/871-8047 Sod, eprlnkler and lllrub INT/EXT. CALL JIM, ln1t1ll1tlon. Our work . ., ..... only look• expen1111e. Check our prlcM before INT/EXT PAINTING you bvyl Lie. 204518. & WALLPAPERING CALL 8411--1013 Cu11om work. Free HI u., •.• ,., ...... ., Reu. St111e 547-4281 SELL ldll 1tem1 with a HIYI aomtthlng tO Mii? Delly Piiot CIUllfled Ad. Clllllfied adl do II well. PttJ HH • ••• SS3S your pet, get!inglOst can be a death sentence. Now available for the first time In So. Callf .. a new program to give added protection to your pets. For more Information about this unique program, please write or call and leave a message. I y,•fll return your c all as soon as possible. r· Je'lvt:l 'd 1<itten '"-4 .......... --c·-.f 642-0558 ~~~ lel1 Wultil SlOO 1111 Wut.. 5100 1' ow T-f'UC:k ()fiyef neldecl. SWITCHBOARD operetor 1t luxury Llgun• e..ctl Dlye H~Bch. hotel. 4 d1y1 a week, l'lexlble houri. Cd Ooo-, ... ,. .. ,, "'" ne. 497-4477. Of A.H.T. wented for v .. T1L. a.•• terlnery Hosp1111 part time Mull be 2 1 or over. lmm9dl1te opening• In 4~1 lelepttooe Mlea. Mllfng ... PllOUSll 1Yb9crlptlonl to the Delly Piiot. Evening hOure end Olctephone Dual·Dlaplay Seturday mornings. axperlenoe. Mu11 bl the CommlHlon with gua· beatl Part/time. llHlbl• rant•• end bonu1e1. rioura. Contect 842-5878 •ft THE OFFICE 549·2188 6:30PM -'nga. Jells Wut.. SlOS A· 1 prof houaec:leaner w/ T~lllll ll&l M llUAll bell of rel1 In Nwpl & S.A Cteen everything Full or p1r1 -tlm1. Pu-1 • c •pt w 1nd0 w 1 . bllllllng compeny has 5 541-2434 evea except ,_ openlnga lot eorne T & Thur-. lucky 1>9<>ple Comml1-ue llOn or llilty. ~ Competent Mature NurMti la gre11er Cull bO· Aide. cornpenlOn drlYlf', nu-H. 8. Xlnt ref1. 549-8677 ULl...U IM-1110 , ... = .... .,. • '"4 " ...... ,..,.. ,., ..... .......... "-14-111~ .... , ...... .,. .... .......... ,., ......... ..,. ... ...... T~ 10 IOlk:ltor1 needed at once, lull Of p111 time. no expet lllCIH, w/tr1ln. Call •ft 1PM, tee-9151 TILUllll ....,.... WI N9d good people to 111 up ~olntmant1 fron'I our ti,,.... of· lie• In the evening for ~· ,.... trll'f9I + commi. elon + bonua. C•ll 751-4222 •ft• 1 PM. Thi o.lly Piiot hM Im• medl•t• op•nlng1 lor ..... S*IOM full or pert time. Gtwl Nmlng ~ tentlel, OuerwiMe e1i,_w lgelnet~ .• oetlllnt oppottunlly tot peraon w~ o•r•lt embftloM. ,__..,. to: ::E.~ OoMe ,..., t aat " ..... T .. W:- NOf UIOOGH TIMI '°" IUN l lXf~? ltewe'I ~-. II "°" tlltl~I ~nt people •o WH •rratte. f'oO• "o'"'· M•roeO•.:,.t ~ ..... Y°" ~ ltle Na INI\. ,,T Ot Pn.a1.-oo ' .. Mld·Wllt College Girl looking fOf Governeu or Nenny poeltlon In Nwp1 ., .. Rell lurnlehed 7011775-9416 Of write to P,O. Box 1305, Wllllaton . N. o.kote. 58801 APT MOR, Nor1hf09 Corp. retiree. •Cl• 58, m111 C1uc1al1n. (213) 1175-1220 Aai••ll .... 1510 Fe Amer E1klmo w/ ~ 1Yo yre. Belu11-f\.t $ 5. IM4-5167 91191-.... am.• 11wka.1175 960.0183 Coclcll' Spenlel Puppy r. m11e. bull, At<C reg'd . $250 &40-5130 Pltbull Ten1er UKC, 175 831·7287 Wiii met• A.K.C. rn•I• l.h111 Ap10 w/a1ma only. No fee, eve'•. 651-03et ...... ... ~ AW'/ OeldlnQ I YJ9, .2. 1h1tP·lncl 11ck. 9ACRIFIOEt I 1500, ...... 147-3toe "" IHI OIVI YOUR l'!T'S "" .... "°'.ction poe-llble. AvelllJ>i, tor tit. tit UtM In 8o Cellf • IM\ lnQpel\llW nit~ ''AMClll & "'°o~· :.i!""' wNcll .,,.. " pet found OI ll\)lnCt It .. r9CJllhot ,,... .. ~youWllbetooeWd 1. IMvt m-: to ~ ......... "T'Hm JIWB.'d KifflN •••••n ....... """' """' YGI' --rr..=1~ = tlllto .. O.W.Ooell ........ .,..... ..... ,. - )t!atlu )Mf •...=J--.! .......... -. - DAVIS PAIN1'1NO '*•&111&1'1 MA :rn••'landrm ln\/Pt Aoouttle c.illnOt. Expetl1no•d I p1of1t· ::~rt, tlo IZltl I . ~. v:r tMIOneble 74, 6U-I007 01bln11 ,..fln Ins ''" llt. #'9'780. 142·74711 ret• IOI' of YOUI PoOI Tilt IUl't PAllTill H nHdl. For e11pe1t ..,. vice, etU ~Ing• 5 p rn Tit. l Matonry: ,_ I r• Top quellty/RMI rllM to II pm If no en•-. ~alt. All ~· Ouellty FrM •limit• 800-71611 PLEASE kd: '.:trl I ,.. .... . e31·23411 Cu1tom PllnUng. lnlle111 (114) •a t 1 ,, .. s.rn- Ou111ty 8~ng 8~111 Fr .. Ill Vii 873·2031 20 yu exp Pool _..,, r• TIM Trt./le•tnl molding. E111y comple· OllTIM Pllmlt tlon, mllnl & repelr. 8tum:_prlnd. Sew 30% fr11 111 24 hr -v Lie fr.. Jim 156-111110 25 yra Lie 403114 1 Ina, 283e00 14H280 bondld. Rell Color ••· Tattriy pert. eM-0911 Rlch11d U. Prtt!rlt ltmcH Pvt Tutoring/ Rem•dl11 .... r1., ,_...lal 8urveye IOf hire lnttructlon. Xlnl rMUll• ..,. IH· ll4l K-8. (213)5112-37114 Flrthln~ lnterlOf Del~n lellal1kla1 I 'n!a• ltnlce HANG NG/STRIPPI G VIN·MC Scott 845-11325 J 0 Hotn Aeflnlthl T)'91l/WOfd Proce.lng EJCpert wellcoveflng In· ng Ou k, Ml)' revtalontl AntlqUM, kit. c1blnet1, Reuon•ble 851-1041 •t•llatlon. RMI ConlUI· tant Alllgnmt 581-MOO fine pllntlng. 845-0664 IMHa WIMewC1!!!1y Bleckwelder P1per111ng. I WE WASH WINDOWS Ing & Aemo1111. Oual Huber Aoollng-lll tyf:'. Fut . ProlM91ooll wO<f< only. 4114·3618 New-recoveH lec: • Oulllly work guer111teeo Pbt!frath Uc: #411802 548-9734 FrM •llmt1t1 848-7391 l8JI rHfla~ lll·fHI WtHl•t 1,.11.Ust "Let the Sun1hlne In" Color/a& 1175-4618 Fr•.... Jc •361042 SUNSHINE WINDOW REPAIR SPECIALIS1' CLEANING &42-1549 Plaster/ leeb Shake-Comp-Shl'lle Jolin'• Window Cleaning ED'S PLA81'ERINO 751·7716 551· 552 Free Ht. 12 yra exp. Quality pltchealtexturet •IHf LIAll UI* 640-1Cle1 Int/ext N11t. 845-3258 End of Ma1on apeclall PLASTER PATCHING One week only Local. lt.ttlnl ..... Re11ucco1. Int/ext 30 25 yr1 exp 75t-4384 That all contrlciora wt\<> yra. NNI. Peul 645-2977 perform wortt over 1200 ......... ,, .. PIUtel' & Drywall Including labor 1nd Ext/Int. Reatuccoe BudOet rll .. ·IOW min. m11erl1l1 muat b• II· Blockwalla. 586-4892 Rea. Comm, bolt trlra oenMd UnlloenMd con-........ Frae Mt. 641-7581 tractor• lllould IO lllt• l1irltaal CHutlia1 In their adllertlllng. Con· 2• ltr El 'V 14t-ll21 trlcior1 Ind ooneum«a, •ANGELA SPIRITUAL• contact Mery Grondle It WA1'ER HEATER Spec:lal Conaoltant/ Coun1111ng (714) 558-40116 with any Pool heaters'* Furnaou In 111 m1111re of Ill• 3uHllon1. Contr1ot0f''t lnatall-Replpe-Repalr 675-2495 or 873-97114 tall lloenee Board, 211 Free HI. Reeaonable. Spiritual Advt.or Civic Center Plue. Uc'd. John 831-1161 Room 890, S1n11 An•, In bu1ln111, marrlege, CA 92701. People WflO need People 1trea1 problems. etc. 6 3 1 -94 7 8 0I1 n e Thlt's wllll tile 831-8964 DAILY PILOT Thi IHIHI drew In the SERVICE DIRECTORY Find what dou want In Wut. • Dill/ P1 lo1 ,, all • boutl Diiiy Piiot IMlitledl Cllllllfled Ad. 64 ~78. ..... ••••riah IOH Fuaitv1 ms Merclaaa•i11 Solld oak 14>lrll atalrwey. Dini~ Room aet. table. II 4' dlemeter, new. 11cr. cha r1 & hutch 1600. Aalil!H 5010 $1900. 4~71153 Good oond. 640-11304 Anllquea. e1l1t• 1al1. Caatraa A WANTED On m1ttrH1 beau plecff. 111 tyP11. lpl1•tat IOH Ht. firm. reH. price. By IPPI only 777-3028 54&-820 1 1tl 4PM Large new conalgnment Canon AE 1 with one yr HIDE A BED COUCH wrnty, caM. len1/t1lpod 1hop ~ting n-M-Incl. $225. 848-5515 or Brown/rull pleld. $99, lect antiques, collect· 692-1877. 840-2142 1blH & contemporary plecH, large or 1m1ll. C•1•tt11 Hll Wrgt Iron tlble & 6 c:nr. Con1lgnment Connie· $ 100. Antique dr111er tlon Company. 81 1 W <Antronica Mdl M·150 Oo1 $50. Antq lrunka $50 ... 19th St C.M 846-8016 matrix par~ printer'• 850-055 1 •ft 8'wn 130CPS. 12 or olr A11UaacH 5011 Quantity dl1eount 1vall. Gar111 kin 840-3634 HOT OFFER! ,, .... , .. HU Cetta .... COLO CASH!! Fr" mixed lhel>hlrde, 1 Gerag• ••le, 4 famlly TO EDISON melt & 1 fem. 3•,; mos Thurs. 4114. Fn 4/ 15 9-5 CUSTOMERS Old 96(H843 879 Albor CM Get $2~ tor your openble Fualtu1 &OH lniat t«Ond refrigerator It's CHILD 'S WORLD costing you up to $144 or I llY fll111111 CHILDREN'S CENTER more • bear In elect.nc: Hetb 957-8133 2nd 1nnu11 rumm•g• b i II• ona te your **'BUY** Ille. Furn/lure. toya. do-operating aec:ond =· houMhold llema. relrigentor to one ot ~ FlllllTRE 16th, llAM to 2PM c:harit1e1 lasted below. Cu!Yet & Unlwrllty. end bto sun LO menUon MASTERS AUCTION this 1ptttal offer when ........ .., ... 21 l!!f!f! IMO you make the G1r1g1 1111. Aprll 18, arr•ngemenu. Gel a Rull Florel Sol•. 8 ', 9em-1pm Fum., c:lo1hll, plllOW·blelt. $2SO r~ipt. and Southern 9e3-40S8 toya. 3112 Brold St. N.B. Callfornl8 Ediaon will 845-5155 pay you $2:! Yo ur Baby Grend 3 y11 old Jntl!l 1214 d o nati on 11 ta x S4000 orig $8000. D•· dt'duc:t.tble. Free pickup elgnlt Hne couch & lo-. DIAMONDS: 3.5 kt Codi- by the c:herity. Thi• 1111 $ 1 .ooo orig 12500. 6 tell rl~. 11 beeut. 1peci.al ofru explrea May poetlt br ... bed $3000 11on11. 500 vllue, wtl 31, 11183 For details. orig $5000. Cell Sat/Sun ecc:ept bMI otr. Of tr14e phone or IYll 642-8392 on Ulld Cir of NIM va- Onng• County FORMAL DINING TABLE. IUe. Cd Linda f.4&.2330 Calvary Bullet. good cond. 4 Mu1t Hll Gold Rolu Lutheran Church c:Nllr1. calm pads. $595 m1n·1 wllc~1ter (71 4) W72-4687 833·2255. 581·0368 brlnd. Vllue , ... or (213) 402-0792 meng. 11400, xlnt 1175-2871 Oya Cluldnn'1 Hospital of Chiming Clock. rJnv• rl· llbc.UU..u 1211 Orange County ery v. hr. playt tune W· (714) 972-1242 ery hr $100. 5116-31188 LMIWMll or I (800) 841·7439 30 Hellum 8alk>ont del ~tlndustnt'S Dln•ll• •• , w/4 1wlv. 1ny1lrne Fun for Sec'y Chllra. 1176. C-bet. (714) ~~-8271 (2)4' MCllonl. 1100 ... 6 Wll, 4/20-251 673-44111 Olabled American etoo11. $40 H . 50" W Antique Slnier Treedl• Veterana 0'8nt.let wood mini b4lnd1. 2 pr, 8 Sewing •chine. ot Orange County moa old. S175 Ill. Red· S176/bet otr. 64~12115 (714) 547-081~ wood chelr w/cuahlon, Salvation Army $30, ottomon, $10. extra POOL TABLE (714) 547-0831 cu1hlon1, $7 Hemper. 4'x7' lllte, ouetom wood St. Vincent de Peul $5. 851-1804 dellgl'I. COl'MI w/blllerd (714) 133.g190 llOht & w1lll unit 'W/o.t. Olk ceblnet, 75x38x14. 3 Vllued II $2000; 111111'11 gtus lhelv9I. glue ctn '°' SSOO firm. M1~7 HARBOR ,\REA •bove. 10lld dtl ti.low. APPLIANCE SERVICE $200. 2284 Rutge11. NEW MATTRESS SETS We NII rec:ond .. gu11 C.M 548-5773 Twin 1Z $80, full ati. MS. ~. 549-3077 au-i 1106, King 1125. Upright FrHHr $1115. Andy 750-5832 I Ill APPl.WIOEI GrM1-gr•ndmotnw enll- Herb 857-8133 qu1 wood twin hdbrd1 MOVING SALE-R1frl9 $175 •• C1tm wood 1100, Dbl bed $150. Din 3-0 yr old cl111lc Stove. ,bo<*C&MI S 100 ... Twin rm Mt $176. Llwn mow- look• & work• pertact. bid lreme S 16. 720-03e5 er & ~ $50 ... Mt9c. $ 100. 548-3332 549-0S Dryer $75, oouc:h $55, Wltw/dryr $135 e&. Refrlg Cl'-1 dt8WWI 175. cr1b lt3 5. Frzr 1160, 170, c1tm boy1 b•d MAOIC·Mtmberlhlp In Dlhwshr $100. 846-58411 $136. 552-7848 exclualv• .... 8 . Ml~ Club. 11'50 + ®-. Weaher. cleen, work• Like n-Medlt. muter 1152-9431 good $85. Dryer, i"· bdrm tulte: 9 dWf d.-- clten. work• good 75. 11r. 1rmolr1, 2 night M1glc l1l1nd G•n•r•I 548-4415 111nd1, king ala ~. Mam berehlp. S 1000 . Wut'ter/dryer 11200. Sofe. S1SO. Ree· Incl'• tt1n1fer fee. $811 Mett, Good cond. llner. S 150. · 2 1wlval 11$9-1tll0 675-450e roctc•1. '400. Mutt 1111 8lldll\g Wlndowt I doof9. lmmed. Woodbridge REFRIGERATOR: Gd 551-1515 •lfloUa ... + Mower cond, a 100. 83 1·9538 Wiii mountld French di. door. 125/0r 9111. 1tter 5:30 pm. 7eo-tee1. s lhelf $125. Antique DAUO STOAE FIXTUfllEll; an.·-tll . Country dint lbl $ o. Hendcr:fted Ulld • mu11 Mii. lelll ce11 en. 8, 873-7801. sri•nl•h b1noh11 pr ofr. 213/5111·4417 .. k G.-E reftlg, good cond, I llO. Hld9+beel COUd't fof MeMn. 1100. Conatell11lon, seo. Lei 880 aao. Pe1nt· SCRAM-LETS HOOVlt tantc VIC, 1211. 1ng1, etc. 144-me. 242 Row 81, CM (""). leveled pl1t• 1• ... '°l-Ken gM ~ lof Ille •n ooftee t•* iono. • ANSWERS or tra • for •l•o wide. Sat on hvy ..,.lei 8464'71 OI 880-1727 bt ... IWlrl lefll. I 1'0, w,.. · l.GW!y M7-t200 T'Wllln ·~ ~·--WATI)ff ""1;;"°'· MO Deluxe K~ wewbed Orl!C'dm~ 2 ... 871 .,.......... . Thlngia "'"' out fletrlgerator, Ilk• new, M8-14A .. l1IM. but " tak• • lot ef ~ J'* to WATQt. fro«~ 2 door 1111. Mutt 1111 • COldl 11e • .:,t llMOIO OOnd..:: ::g.... . '=i::-......... NI.It. Hit 112 .. ·~ = ... '**"' 2 tov•H•t•, 1210 11. IOO . .......r URDl HA Aeelwood tO' eu11om ~~-.. Jx4,tdtong~ bef, 1100. W0041 cNM, •• 111.. ...2, l•t. 0 •11 .,, ... ••1-4101. .., "" .. ltooel, llct To PLH• your' MOVIMO Ml.I ,... em. f:.-en NOO. '14 IO MX Y .. I 1011 beel1 l full;._! ,... ... ,.. ... n11 ''Ful R"ult'1 ....-i.~a. .,,,,, ..-r fT'IMI: a.. s.rvtct Olreetorr OWIOof'-lebltw= ....,...,.....,., ...... ,,....,, ....... "°'" ... Id tall Now ........ ,.,, ....•.. ,....,~ ..... TeOll 641-1671 .,. •11•1,. • ~·"~" •ort• ..... ,., .... tutflu. "'!,,•'•~· w..m -. 1i· °*' TY k ··-• ... •. ....,!!!,-~ '"-. l Orenge Oout OAILY PILOTIW9dnnd1y. Aprll 13, 1983 ,.... 7911 ..... 1111.. .. ,,.,.I MH ,, ..... ,....... AalM, ••e•.. Al!!!,,.,. .... t3• TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE la'&" 1n1111abl•. C1ll4101tl '78 Mo-Ped. OOO<I co110, Very cleat! '84 OMC pick· D1t1H ti! 7 Nit11•ltla! !117 Yelk1w11ta Sul* Arlone, r11~ for S I 7 6 Mu• t • t 111 up ~T. 1011 01 ••trH, '77 Oatlun 82 to 2 dr. r .. 1 Drlvt & Price •73 vw Futbeck bod • 26HP. wood fir, u1td 648-4207 11296. ~8.0343 •uck ahlfl Aadlal1 48 1111 llW •tt• f ~i.. • 'YI '71 Cid 8 eden O.Vllle. ACROSS ,Cong,..... 8Wunlf1Q 10 l<ntft 14 "Bonnie - LAurle'' 16 Siikworm 18 AlbKOtt t7 P11n1., Jan- 18 Speecn ~ 20 Blf>lleal peak 21 Large land m ... 23 W11chlvf 24 -- hot water 28 tnaect•. 2 wd1 28 C8'>8 -. N.S. 30 Wat-.)' 3 1 Dynamo part 32 TlrMl!Mpera 36 Wing: pre! 37 Plett 38 Bodyar .. 39leutned 42 Proportion 44 Amerlnd1 45 Modern 48 BrMkup 49 Harnaq hOfM 50 Me10dies 51 Several 52 ArrMI 55 Face-off 1pot. 2wda. 58 Tragedy, e g 80 Noun ending 61 Perllcle 82 Devoured 63 Ovule 64 Acquires 65 Dl1buree DOWN 1 Elan 2 Cenltrward 3 Peppy 4 Trues 5 Ltglttator 6 Get going 7 Region 8 Metal 9 BOWier 10 Shlp'1 officer 11 Earthly 12 Not moving t3 Windmill bladn 19WtlgMd down 22 lnlqully TIJEIOAY'I PUZZLE SOL VEO 25 lndlan 26 Vexed 27 Uniform 28 Faatener 29 Capacity 30 Fee schedule 32 Pre- e11amin8d 33See-saw 34 Preclp lorm 35 NollQ8 37 Hurt 40 Kleked back 4 t Ered1ca1e 42 Drops back 43 Big seNe 45 Aries symbol 46 Fllh 47 Girra name 48 Because 49 D1111es 51 UK native 53 Last word 54 Music group 56 Tease 57 Belonger 59 Thwack 11 12 t3 3H $600 83 l·eofl7 . " ' •I p.,.11 • tlr• • tn0 lllr\ __ __ MtltrCJtlH/ at D1l1Un King Cab. 4•4. ooo ml.L ucel 1h1pt Turbo 8t•rlon 1!800 759~50 Bo11on Wh1i.<, 13'. 40hp le •otl 21.000 mllet, good cond l A1klng ~2100, 780·4262 Cordia & Trtdla fr4erc, wltraller, Hklng Mitri • 1 6900 . 846 ·9320, dy,833-0298e11. TurboDltltlP.U '00 VW Bug . perfect MW palnl, llf", muffltt Mu11 ••• 10 1ppre c S 1000 Arm 142-9805 &2600 Newl Nowl Righi 011 the 876-0581. ...J oond. mull Mii Imm.ct. 875-8229 ahowroom noor. Kim•· Trucit tor hlrt rental ..,1Flat 9123 ltilm~ t 1000IOBO "'"''" 77 Sod'" D.VIHo. ""' Sail 7014 llkl 660 Mull Hiii or wlll do 1m111 Jobi '73 850 Con11trll~. MW '80 vw Sclrocco, low ~:acr.250 873-599() $7300 negotl•ble Call 846-1741 (G81Y) top,,,_ eng, xlnl concl mileage $5800/0BO --------- IUIH PHL llOI John 860·9105 '77 T SR" M u• t ••II S 1 5 o o ---&36-09::-:-:-:-:":"78"""".'"".:~-I Clanrtltt tlll __ --oyo11 "· •Int oond 945 6304 - FOR SALE 0111 Bike ·79 K•wukl Shell. AM/FM ca ... anrl, • 2 3 · 'lO HITIAOI tlOO IEE II Fiim 642·4844, M-F~ (l...5 80 grHI cond Like $3450/olr 496-8352 '84 250 GTE I-OFF •lnl 499-~2 ) O' IEWNIT $:125/olr 752-5963 cond new paint 1n1 & MG 1141 _ Wt have a good Mlec· 2 Dive '69 Ford Stake be<I. 8 cyl, rebullt eng Muet IHI '89 Bug, 80K O<lg ml. 1 !Ion ot NEW & USED Sleeps 4. many e11tras ;--------4 apd, new paint, runa s 17 600 080 975-1022 '79 MGB 20.000 ml Blue owner 1lnca n-. C1111 Chevrolel1t g d con d S 4 5 o O 83 Y1rnehe 50, oll lnj, 80 we 11 S ~ O O O I b 11 · -----with tan Interior. E11ctl· car. runa auperb, mint 494-8232 rnpg, 81 mllea, under 551-5552 Hoa•• 9129 1en1 condition Auna cond, brand new llrea. Per1.-1hlp In Erlc•on 35, _w•rr SS~ ~8.3988 '76 Chevy Luv, w/shell. 77 ACCORD air. 5 spd, great ~~33 S 1 7 7 5 ° b ° Ch r 11 errec1 cond ricing & 72 HUSKY. new lgn lltreo,manyxtrat,gOO<I c as1t11e $29 50 4 • 56 1170--0548 cruising, allp In Newport sy1t~. xlnl cond. 1200 cond. $2850 545·8929 75t-7472 -.80-0l-"91--,,.0-u_n._r-.-4-apd~~.1 $6000 Call Lt11lle eves 7S t 8876 Tony 11flor 5pm ,80 Honda Wagon, 5 apd, Paaltra 9153 air. 111reo. mint cond COHMfll CHIYIOLET ')\,?\If .,r I• I 11 '"'; \ '¥1 t ~46-I 200 979·7543 :S0vameha4ii<>Spec lo '81 Ford FlOO 6 cyl 22K. 1mmac 65.000 m1lu, 13350 83l·3016 BHulllul t6' Wlndroae-ml runs great )(Int cond am/fm ste< caas. 3 spd am/Im s3800 673•500 t 72 P1ntera EX IMSA OTO .75 BUG Cal look New '85 Malibu 2-dr 8-<:yl, r .. BalbOa slllboat. 1 yr Old $995/olr 556-9536 w/od , ovru tires w/ rice c11 street legal paint, clean/.,.p. runt cond In/out, 11lnt cond FearurHlnclmotor.aa--.8lHarleySpor~ mega. more $6250, 'llOIYIO.SllO llc'detc.St3.900 grlll $32S0 /..-0 l r. Mull ue $1800 rary gear, trlr. cabin, Ii•· Mini cond, 7700 act. ml. 494-2069 ev 63 t· 1993 (2l3)33S-3014 M 8•9536 _5_3_&-_8_500 _____ _ ed keel. l(tra main.ell & exttH $3500 Vaai 9040 62 Civic Hatchback wllan PHtHI 9155 s B I '77 CORVETTE mo• e S 6 5 0 0 C 1111 645·4060 Robert S4 5 -'71 uper .. , e. •uper Sliver w/black. loaded. 551-6593 or 957 ·2533 .86 Ford Econo. •lnr cond, Int 5~20--0932 '81 Dal S05S. 29K ml, fully cond. 12500/0BO T .fop, mint cond, 40,000 S / 78 Honda 7501( Mororcy-eng need• rebuild Sun-loaded P P. $8900 W 640-8837 ml Musi aeel 9--S wkdye, 20 Newport allbo11 w cle. t0,000 ml, greal rool, mega $400 llrm II••• 9127 547-8059, H 6'C2·2223 '73 VW Bue. BuutlluL 731-8975 ~~~~·~~·si~~~ shape ahOpe, $1400. 536-8221 751-8876 Tony Ptncltt 9157 new eng & paint, fires. '78 Camero Z28. m int ~teer Yawl, be1ulllul Mttor Ho•H 1020 '65 Chevy Van $700 s2550tOBO 536•7073· cond, g1rage atored, all wood cl11s1c New Couple w1•ht1 to pur· 841-1276 MEISTER '70 VW B,. good oond new llrea, $4100/obo ~;::· s":~.~~~ 4°9~-~~~~ ~hJr'~R LH'6TJE.~?ir0p~LY AaClitH1•, PIRICHE/1111 ~~~~o c~n3o v;'2~08· 842-M68 I 9AJIS 642•9482 '73 Vega, auto. 4 cyl, or(213)583·1901aak for cesh 497-2280 HICI V'I 13631Harbof'Blvd. AM/FM 1apa1tereo. Nick •MOTORHOME ltt4 ..... ltf4t4 Garden Grove '63 Ragtop, rebtl eng, new Econ Gd Cond $975 Santana 20. xlnt day sailer RENTALS • l946 Foro Woody w 1. lalt1·S.n·lt11l11 In t/fop, look• & runs 857-8724 evea w1v1ry active racing From $195/wk All Illes gon, St3,000. SOUTH 114-111·2133 nkle St675 84t_.737 '78 Corvette, Sliver Ann, fleet 2 mains, jib, & 2156 Newport Bl cou1n '66 Sq Bk, rbll w/recpte. 3,700 ml, 1tored, mint genoa , trlr $8995 650-tSOO 1929Ford ModelATown 7591'4.black,xlntcond, nutnt,111/rt.12V.$2150. Stt ,500/olr (213) 975-1165 dys. 640-4490 IV' 1022 S • d an, S 1 o, o o o lllZU nu llre1, xtru Mull &ell. 846-7842 592-2048...,. eves/wknds I 675-6t61. $6800 firm. 751-4784 Forme<ly Jim Marino ---------'74 Super Beet11, mini '79 CHEVETTE 2 DR Spenctf 44 all cab Ost. 74 Winnebago 20·. aelf Isuzu 2-Plrelll llres. P7'1 235-16 cond. runa gre1t1 New Hatchback, 4 apd, IO m1, culler glass hull teak contained, good cond, '10 fllll 2 II "WE WILL IOT $100 paint . $3100/0BO muat sell. $2495/obo deck, lop cruising gear lots of exlraa $5900. V8, 3 spd, run1 & loolla 760-9133 S 4 0. 7 6 2 3 d a Y'. 499-5180 •tt 5. $99Mlolra PP 675-4895 ~ ... ~300Day8847·5866. Eves good, all orig. S 1400 IE •llEISOLI" '65 Cla111c, wht, •Int ,_8_7_5·_8_130...,..._ev,....n ____ , ---------~-Volume Sales, Service ,. '10 El Ollllll Spinnaker Sell lor 27' . obo. 842-0100, 969·122t and Leulng cond $8600/best olr ·72 VW BUG, n-Urn. 28K, beige/Ian. $5500 Sloop. running r1gg1ng Trailtrl, Truel 1024 t8111 e.acn Blvd 857-1933, 551-5098 yellow w/B1)1 stripe Of otftt 873.1585 Included Value S 1 00. Taurus '76, 19/ 'l't, FC/AC. Aattl, a.prtH Huntington Beach '7 8 9 t 1 SC, snrl, per! MUST SELL Bnl otter Asking $900. 493•9436 1xll cond, slpa 6. $4450. tlO'I (114)142-2000 concJ. nu paint, rubber, 1 __ s_2_4--_6_15_7_ev_n_. __ 1 '12 OllUll ZH Tatten 30, '80, outarand· 968·2742 .A.;;;•.;;;'1;;.... ____ _......_1_...:...._-"'---~:-'.'"'.=I trim, spt aeats. mlrrore, .78 Super Bllllt conv. lmmod. poll. $1 1,950 Ing w/prlme Npt moor-,80 ~m,.._ 35. unu!M.lal '78 Audi 5000. alfvtf blue Jaiaar 9129 air. cruise. etc 39,000 whl/blk, fm/t_.,., 5 tK, 875-IMl62 I"" $45,000 962·2384 ""' · Int. lully loaded $4500 1;;.;;.i_.-;.;... ________ ml $18,800 831·472t, mint •"'""" 9112-0620 '7" c Z28 T bar ··• cabin style, Cedar lodge MBZ wire wheels $250 XK140. commlete parrs. 642_6177 or 64g.1030 ..,.,.,.. • amaro · · t4\'t' Sklpjack "wltraller" model, xlnt, $897 5 673..&183 or 873.5339 · seats, cilerry wood duh, ---------·59 vw Conv. Clualc. Xlntr rouo0f0.~0a1cc. 0•0lldel~.goxolndt Self balling, tut. very gd 8'42-0795. 548-8823 ate SIOOO 556-4982 or '77';, 924, black. xlnt cond $5500. 840..0SS "' con d S 8 0 0 ob o ArlllO 18,,... 111 forces '74 FOX, ll1wlesa orig 833-9773 cond, low mlleaoe. Must buy . 842-8318 213·397-9872 sale fully conlllned cond lnalde & out. never 9131 seal $7800/0BO Ask for ·~~~WN~~c:...!a-;~k~ .8t El Camino. 1 t.OOO ml, S:::::l/SL· 7016, 673•7796 eves denied or repainted, JtaHa TI n 1 w 9 6 6 • 3 0 9 9 . ~, like,_, lo~ Asking ~-al I Iulo w/alr,run1 l1ntu-'74 Jenaen Healey new 831·3849att6 g.•1~;96$800 /obo $7400.PP.642-7726 11 ft lt1ror1ft 11 c • gr e 8 1 0 n g • 1 car cono . $7000. IHaalt 91 St 1-----..,....,..,..--~-1 Ski Boat Hull and trlr Aatomotive Sl69510b0 97o-0545 731-9260 ---------'74 Karmann Ghia Xlnl .,..,. 9317 only Sacrifice tor sum· ·ao Audi 5000S Anthracite • Al Ltw Al cond New b rtkes & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim mer $700 OBO IMPORTANT NOTIC E gray wlglus utro roof, •aa a 9141 ga muffler. am/Im cus, ale 'll OIU SHOO 760-8649 TO READERS AND AC, PW, etc Lo ml. Mull 9 /() Mlchellns, I o wner Low mlltlgt Good ADVERTISERS aell by 4. t5 01 assume ' $4800. 64 t · 1999 111 6 cond. 19' Sleekcralt Jet SklbOBt, The price of Items ad· lae Call Mike 650· 16'19 f1'nanc1'n~ pm 970· t484 Chev ang, wer stacks, vert1sed by vehicle deal· ---------,79 vw Camper Oelux, ~~~~~~~~~ xlnt $5300 553-9633, efS In the vehicle c1ass1· IMW 9112 On N-Ren1 111 I low :.. 675-1277 tied advertising COiumns • ale, ,_ ratllal I rea 72 Charger. runs good, Mariat E!•iJ. 7011 pllcable taJ<es, license. ~YI~ too 69 F11tbeck. ruel lnl, 536-9439 t111ea does not Include any ap-.ll"'J""" ~··R ~Or.anu<.• .. __ ml. S9200. 1173-5720 new tires/battery S1500 M•---n·-.... 0 Hobie 16. almost new tr1n1ler lees. finance ( oa~f •-O eulo. gd cond. $1300 '81 Ar ies K 4 dr 24mPQ, -~---------•-2._l .... I Pi .... I Or UI UZI -.P•.-•--tr _____ 7_._l..-.2 ...nne main & Jib S275 chargee. lees 101 air pol· Sales-Servlc.-Leaslng N • -•«> tOSll llSA 673--44 t5 See 10 app<eclate. Below 3ec> Pc Bronze flatware t,rfc1tt Pt .. 1100 3t Ber1ram FIB S/F twn llOt:>le 14 sell white. lullon cont rol device URIEST r1., .,., •m "" ") "" 78 CONVERTIBLE b I u e bk S 4 4 0 0 ~In &am w/ltandup 6'C2-0948 gas, rebll 82. many ,_ S225 675-4506 cerhflcel•ons or dealer llYEllTOllY SH US ~ ltlll ltJCt 91'1 Champ1gne Ed Plum 536-3234 c:tlM. W/Ebony handles. xtras Xlnl cond $49, Hobie 14 wUh Jib & T11ller documentary prepare-75 5301 • d 1 ..at YOUI , -w/whl top & Int, orig -,-.------- $800/otr. 645-1295 WURLITZER ORGAN 500 PP 6 7 3 ·64 74 , $1100 11· Seara lnflal· I Ion charge• unleu * ' .. •P " a r wtrTWAl DA. • 1J("'1V CARVER owner. $5300 855-6964 tr flit Frultwood. be1ut1lul 548-1365 P O\J d otherwise 1pec1t1ed by cond. (7 t5ZWKI "'-'I days, 770-6530 ..,.., ;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Motorcycle wlnd1hlefd cones. $550. 651-t804 -----able s7o 4H lboar lhe •dvertiMf • '76 2002, 4 lpd .• ., n•"' LY"'i I c.~ HI.A Fiii 2 II beel'~.llO+molda.--------84 'RedcrestAvon& St00673-143 1 Evee cond,(125RKKI ._... NJU-Jrt..Jl \...L VI t17S - 645-1295 CONSOLE PIANO, Ptrleci 4HP Evlnrude motor. Slit• I """'-L-7022 A•t• Semcts/ * 78 633c11, auto . -_. ... ~ ~ ... ., ·~·• •" va. 3 spd, rune & rooks cond. French Prov Pe-both good cond S850 _ .,__. Patll 9015 load~ (530062) · f&e:IJTTI ~-" •• · "..,. ·-'70 t42, 4 spd, lllr, perfect good, all orig. $1400 SWAP MEET ITEMS 2,000 can. Kohler/Campbell 6 4 6 . 4 2 1 2 or ( 2 13) Boat slips available New· ---=--~~-~~I * '79 3201, 4 •P<l .. sun 1111 11111 11 usa Mil.I IOIU4 OMt -n ,,.. dk green body. no nlekl obo. 842--0100. 969· t221 Pr 1 · • 1 r r In g 1 ·1 $2200/olr. 842-8311 378-9983 porl Beech 25·.35·_.o· SAVE UP TO 50%! Pro! roof. (547WRO) or dents, lmmac. Int $2000/ofra. &45-1295 . Call 642-4644 paint & auto body H B * ·79 7331, 4 spd lo•d· ;wsy OllPE 'II IEITUY·lLIT, Run 1 I 1nt11 t I c 'll F 4 Fiest _: ,. .. ___ Mem,,,_......,. l,..U.i ~ 5230 62 It luxury motor yacht tn Biii 842-0100. 9«19-1221 ed l971UXSJ 1980 .... d• 626 2 door $17,000. 533-4242 $t7951obo 970-0548 Good c'o'nd .••• 1/F•• -· .,._,_ --.... --Long Beach Fully malnt· Balboa Covn dock pwr * .80 528I 1 1 ,.._ 1-------~=1 "''"' "' .. MAGIC ISLAND $1000 BACKSWING $265. Sel· alnad. S500K, t or ,.., boat to 35· $200 mo Mr 2 Crager 151112 rims mlln. (SnZYL;u o · ow coup 1 e bCI ry 1 t 1 tal 1 allv 0 1r. Benney • Rolla '53 R· Iliac. fl 77 12800. 875-4506 °'make otter. Slt-2777 dom uaed. Only 5 left. partnership Flexible Long. 650-1190 FOf~f~~~~ ~~YS pr * .80 3201:~ro . sun blue a re n ttor ne Type, 11101 cond. new COme In & ... N-port -.7-0-L-T_O_W_agon __ ._h_vy_d_u_ty Lewnmowtt. 20" Jaco 546--0729 tenns. Grear fOf c:orpo-Balbo1 sllp lor 45'x t4' -------.,......,..~! root (1AHU8 owner. regularly Hrvlc· paint, S 12·500 OBO. Beech's tlnnt Mlectlon p1rt1, rebll eng, good ?! eon Mlf p1opelltd. S125.t-TV--W--l-e-::S-ttt-ff-::l -::23-::-::-2 r1te enterlatnment Roy be1m Wtr & elec 207 A•IH WaatM MZO • '81 7331. 5 , load· ~-fmlys~= ~~!.::'1~'. 97&-1022 of previoualy owned cond. 1950 760-94 10 .!: 562-7044 aft 8 pm BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA _964_-93-46_______ Edgewater $4 50 WE PAJ tO (1DOP949) recllnlng bucket sells.~ 1165 Porachet, Audia and '79 FIESTA llbe. Wu... 122t Color TV. 2 yr wrnty. Wtllor1ft 21 557·3288 ::X,;8(1~~2i911Pd · sun aluminum wheels Runs .74 SHb 99. rebll eng. Vol.._ Good cond, am/fm rad Nteduaed2nd bdrmMt: $148. Free dallvary SPort Bridge$49,000 Si4ttlt2lJaaa TOP DOLUR * '82528t:auto,load-grea1 -l1 great Reoently sunrf, 1u1t tuned. '3400/obo 840-8179 Full ...__. •~...__ built Open Sun AfhlOf't M8fir>t $223/mo 67"-3463 Ron (1EJ•47•1 detalled $5800 obO Cell S 2 0 0 0 I ba 11 0 Ir '83 T BIRO I 58 000 IZ .-.. ""..,_ TV ~·a 84~ 1786 6'CS-6015 .,.. fl• ISEI ft.tag ed "' .. An s we r Ad 4 4 4 . 642·7208 6'C2·902 t • • on y . In lilorege) ~.etc.I--------------------•wanted Side tie for 26. n Vlln * ·83 3201. 1u10 . sun 642-4300, 24 houre · 445 E. eoeat ttwy ml, $2595 846-0389 ~ 720-1910 25" Zenllh Tlbl• Model 23 ft S.Hraft cat1mer1n Rusa, lW •Miii roof. P1":~8!41>11 .79 RXJ Maid•, xlnt cond, Tmta 1111 Newi><>rt67 .. ~ '80 Pinto Hetchbk. xlnr • __ ,. __ 1 Remote Control Color Turbo diesel, AOF, Lo· 675-5674 or 546-9995 -1T1AO/lllAJll ev-• t -.....,..,., cond. New tires. brk1 ' ~--, ..... TV. 1200 XLNT cond ran, 2 radios. tower. ,.. 208W. 111.San1aAn1 n-tlrtt,1lereocaut· '78CellcaLlftback 12850.540•1168 ... .._ta ...,, ~2-1523 plank 3 518 steering, Side Tie tor 26' aellboll 2480 Harbor Blvd. CIOMCI Sundiy ta. a le. low miles Gorgeoua aparkllng 'l• lllOIUI much more $23 000 Newport Beacti S7 15 ti COSTA MESA $6200/0BO 548-5839 black body. 111 orig 5 Racing gr-. gull wing '83 Ford F1lcon, GrHI Ov~~I°':, ~::u~:~ ScY BetamaR X.2 '1'° firm. Call 548-1608 1•1·•100 l•l· 141l LARGE SELECTION ~F 78 Mazda GLC Sport Sip, apd, sunroof. air, lltrto, doors. ft b tr g 1a11. t r a n 1 p o r I a t I o n . , , built In P Ck· up w mocMI no. SL·&eOO, II«'/ WE llY cass, n-brka/shocka. $3950 970-0548 suede Interior. Pina Fe<-546-01t6 w ar 1 ' / ••••tte ecor •r. 6'16-0930 Evn. NEW & §BMW I aunrl, •Ir, im/fm 11., n1wtesa Int Runs great brown/beige leather & S 7 O O I O B 0 . J • f I volume. Base & Treble Oood oond. Aaklng 1225 879-2840 ""' Traa1tort1tiOD s s 261 •• d r1n1 11111an de11gn,1·,-------:--:":".,..... ' control >tint lh~. Beet lirm. 559-1461 aft SPM '74 Courltf 4 spd, magi. -1014 CLUI CUI ee 11 14 ... en o-'70 Corona Mark II, new hitchbeck, 21,882 rnl 74 Pinto wgn, S 1250 Ollar. C e ll Bonnie Reel w/L llrei. econo, tip• .;.Cut=&.f!;;..;1_,I ___ .....,_ All TlllCIS Ltll IUCI UW clno. "" $289 6 , tran1,goodcond l t200. St8000 T76-40t2 look• good, runs great. ~786 ~:.u~~:!v= 11: excel-l2' git boat w/Cll1mp OB UI' Colt camper shell blue VOLUME SALES SS2·4599 6'C5-0580 A • ~ • . 72,000 '":i 4 ~·1 ~tr;' RENT BAND INS T RU-lenl cond. 3 mos. guar. lrlr w/current reg Sell and wnllt. S200 SERVICE & LEASING •ercMH ltaa 9145 '74 Coron1 Station wgn. atta, --nhc CUI. nu r". - MENTS $325 llrm 494-3569 pkg S2200. 984-0591 492·5220 3870 N Cherry Ave. Alk about Xlnt cond. Orig ownr. lalck 1307 '77 Pinto, 2 dr, lo ml. >tint Su, Trom, Clar, Flute11---------·79 26 It Searay Sun-C Sh 11 f 111 LONG BEACH Tlir .. O _ $1800 499-1461 cond . $2000 . Home Cel Bob 87s-.:Jf1 1 1sterao Stolen · Must Mii amper e or am (No Cher"' exlt~SI 11 "'" Tri -L 1171 '80 R.lvltfa. wlrN/ llerao/ 55t-2. 233; wrk 640-5771 apllra. Brllld ,_ a1lll In d1ncer Sips 6. stove, truck, shrt bed. good ., o11aa ••yt YM aa-1 A b 1 Al.II-__ 1.__ I S250 CHEAP rtfrlg, It!-. belt, dlf, con d S 30 0 ob o Cl14) IH-lllO - -e re, • c . u u Y '74 T-bltd exll cond set< .,._ ......... box. deck chre, traller $23, 848-4862 l'radtt-ln1 Welcome thru our purchaM 1nd '73 Spitfire, 1500, run• $8350/bet. 553-9833 ml $2so0. ' •• nt SUI Bryan 842-9870 9 5 O • Ro g • r 'II vw 111a11-• WE Ill Convenlently Located leaM plane grt, lk1 nice. nw top. '81 Skytrtl Spl1 Cpe, era, 857-2879 ""'* Typewrtter NII co<-Conaole stereo. am/Im 7141873-68t7 ... _,..," P '11 lllMll S1300 Call 850-1482 air. 11areo, etc 4 cyl,1-,--------- rectlng, llkt nu tekt radio. tape deck & r• •---------POP TOP, cu1tom Int• USED CARS & TRUCKS & Competitively riced lllPtlTS 1173 $5350/blt 675· t277, 14 Mu1tang 2. wht. nu l350 546-8392 cord p11yer. CHI rec-II' S.trtfltlttr rlor. mech. ucellent. COME IN OR CALL FOR & S VtlklW!lta S53-"33 Irani. nHd1 eng, felr Xerox 2600, xlnt cond, &44-7512 aadtlf 270 Onan 811 KW 7141675-9305 Cormier-Delillo NEWPORT BEACH W Ca•Ulac tlot obo. DMnnt ~1801 · order, Ilk• nu S250 Jtfftr1el ~5 F/W/C Cru-s n r r s 2 6 o o . FIR &nlAIW, t301 Ouall trMt ® cond. Sacrlllc• $500 =~~.m:;rJ;:o~~.~~:t:::::::::::::::= ~~~r~:d.J'~f:,~~~ ~"f~ ... ,,. llllta IOli OllnltLn sa1 ... s.rv1ce-Laasing --H~·HOO ~ T ~ THE-WIEST ·12 Pinto 4-spd. 2000cxl. 19We60. INh ~~.~~~~r~~~."~ BlllYUI Mo-Ped S200 ~~~::oe:a:~ :ilgH ~ ~~ ~ •IZ HOSE 0!'mr ~9t-:'f l SEUITill ~t ;;;0~~~~:1110~~~: iiiii!f!!!!!iiii~1na;!;!11![:::11jog11 ICOOP bait tat*, 370 gaJ Alk for Dave 842"9057 Hl·IOll, 141·1U1 ..... ..-.. ,, .4__.....,,,, eng. ·A~.800 A of l1t• model, low ma..1_84_2_..SO_M _____ _ SfbiMf Fii '"" •••( fuel N1w canvat. Awl· JC Penny moped, good HlgMll cash lmmed 1°' .. .,.....,. •• • ",..,.,,.., 850·9748 1ge Cadltlac1 In Sou· '85~ Muiting ~•fl UlllllE 16' Schock ~Dory grip. Ei1ceptlon111 per· cond. $225. Call anytime our vehicle domeatle or ·79 3201. )(Int Cond load· 1979 450 SL MB. Mlltn SOUTI th41rn C1tlfoml1t SM us cond. auto, air. . 18M Correcting Stlectf1c 18' Alden OCMn Shell ~~m:'1' t~d ~1)1;' ult lor Shane 546-4207 rorelgn. 55t'..&2.85 ed. Extend'd Warranty, brown HI. brown leath ooum todayt MA•ir11 543-3381 11'1, ~ pltdl, wide CW· 185() ea/oner 759--9338 Fo11y Moped Motorbike lo mllee, mu1t Mii, S8900 int.. wire Wh ... 1. quick ~ LU.Ctla 9323 ..... 5 ._...., "·II...... 7t4/642-8448 Good cond. $250 RHU Tl ObO 545--0220 .... 714-875·6200 Y1U1w••11 "'" .. LUO rlaQe • ...., """· "' ""P 70121,..,..----.,,,..,--:---::-36-8221 Tiil alMW -'""" '74 Martl IV. mint c:onct, day eerW» wwrk an_!Y. Ud·l~twt-..-.r_-:-__ _,....,. 5 ._. I I bl ill '78 BMW 20082. auto, 69dK '80 280SE 4 dr. 1llver FortMrly Jlm Marino VW 2800 Harbor Blvd. luh ~· $2800. mlted aloe on .. an . Cta11ic 18' Lapatretce ---------n8V ng rou • H ng orig. ml. uper con blue, IO ml. 1nrl, perfect ,.WI WIU HT OOSTA MESA 876-8974 RIPPEl'S OFFICE SUP-Century bey boat, 4 cyl, 9010 :~ .~=h=~d Ill· $3150 831·3016 cond Muat Ht to IP· II lllllMll" 141• 1111 .74 Mark IV Cont Sunroof. ~.co. El Adobe PleU.. Gray. 13500 875-6181 r;:=======.!:=:::;::;::;;:;;:::~ ~ upl Help II on the '78 3201, lo ml, 4 •Pd. ~~.2~.t~~~~ofr Volume Sa*, s.rvtce CIHn, S2,H5 OB O '!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!·More fwnlllea are getting WHY BUY A CAR FOR $10,000 way. Aleo your Chevy, mags. air, llerlO, dr1vee and leuing 'll SOU IOl.1I 545-8808 PIP :" .! Iha camping "bug" 11111 loUUftA YOU CAN HAVE JT FOR S45007 Porkhe, Oetaun, Toyota, new. netdl 18700. '85 230SL. auto, both 18711 Beech Blvd. CrulH cont, fuel lnJ. I '78 Town Coupe w/eteo : 1·:r~.~~::Cc:dm:; year. II )'ou have a nnu1 vw. or any mike or 497-2S88 ~09•.7~t~d. 115,000 Huntington 8Moll ~. Xlnt oond. $5600. eunrf clMI\ $6600/~l '960,0fw/~deell& eemptrtha1'1notoetllng LEASE TO OWN'. modal lor only 10% of '72 BMW 2002, good rm. • (114)141·2000 Mt-2424 otr.842-3412 , rlbbOn• & ., ... 1~. UMd, ... tt now w1111 • the nnai .... price Make con d . n • w p a I n t lit ........ Y .... I • •12 9.-Atle c»tm dll, ca-. C _, 1 .. •1000 Ciiio. 483-6«5 Clatalfltd Ad 1urt your car f'lu rte· 13,000/olfar 840-5280, , 7 9 3 0 0 8 0 (Tur b 0 72 Suf*. a.tti.. HMd• brlo .. t lop, 13 000 ml, 79 ont. Mk V, , ... ow. 0 DOWN PAYMENT 1onably tow mllHQ•. 720-0858 IOmt body WOl1I Stereo l: 00 lnt1 etc. Sil o.i......., ... al Jiii leMrll 7011 •N body damage OK. end• DIHel), perfect cond Seorlllce 11900. Celi perfect cond. •22,5 . 42 000 ml, 181'00/bat. ~ •=::iiiiiiiiiiiii;;;-;:~-===--;;;; ••NY MAKE {)R MODEL good Mt of tire.. I'll dO '74 2002, ~ 1pd. 1unrl, White w/1addlt Int, 548-.9215 lfl 9 & Wkndl. M0-42t2 87g:1277 1 " your = & running. am/tm • .ir. new rblt dltf loaded wl txtrH Incl. •90 Cad S.vlflt 2.·tone 1,.,..--~~.,---:---:-*WE T•K£ TRADE-INS Don't GalltOdayl & olutoh, a lloyt , new eunrool . 1 17,500 . '7tDIE.9ElAA881T blk/tlvr Cf ui •tar.0 '73M..-rV,needeworil. " I ·,.... M ich & Weber 8n-15" -Only4t000ml,..,.,tlllno ceea. lihr, -~ a11. 11100.845-1296 b• -L ae 0 0 0 I m • k e of' Ill 'l 1 UL ten bOJY, ._ ac:rttOh-60 zoo. 971-7081 wkdye lltnm ~UI Plf.-SWll · UlllE DllllT BALBOA MARINE HARDWARE lnv1tea You to Our ·1M1UllllD•1n -IPllL 11th - I UI. • 4 P.I. 1111 •· ..... .., .. l.L 0-.0 I Ml8'· .... on hertd HONDA SENTRA """"' -111• 63t.a3ao ~. ,...... t111 1ni. e-s -l14/11Ml11 h fllJ Ci.an '5500. 9J&-30lll ~ Run• IUl)erb. ' '7t MONARCH C PE 1"3 "°"1A CMC 1113 DATSUN SOOlA 1-;-;:-".":":"&::;--:":'."'"'"';;WO:&il-::lb::z:U=.,_ __ ..,:~-.:.:. Mint cones ·~ 3000 Tur· . t7~ '7' ~CS. VIMe. 11000. X1n1 cond. atOOlobo. $1052' $11521 4 n"l J.st"' MM ·12 240Z, x1n1 conCI, nu bo, burounor, ellrotM •72 auo. ,.., cond. OOOd Good111 ~ _ -· ... ~.. o.y. M~~l "'+TAX +TAX •79 CHEVY BLAZER i>•fnt, aunrool, muoh whla, 1unroo . 181< rnl, runner Mii ''" $f$00. ---·-.,. _,.. .,.__ • .._. Ptr Mo. P• Mo. 4ll4, fUlfY loec*I, IUP8' mer.. Im'~~ wtn. 124.100. 84M79a 4M··li75 '12 llCIO, dl ... 1, lo ml. •74 O.Otils. 4 •• 4 19<f ~ Ml'OI. "'. AM/l'M hlOfl Mf'OI . tp . A .. ,,... CIMn, 11960. "4-4704 048-7 ,., t v, 780-382 'IO 3000 xlnl cond If, ... """' plcll ltk Md \WfdMn, brOwr*OMl ltlok. hot •-.cl. 1 OW\'W, ou .. 11• c., •••1 u 1u11• ou to•• .82 Jeep Scftttnbltr Au1o dy ooo c•;tlulty drivtl'I tilt eng, rlina l IOOl(t 111'1 clot.,, lotdecl. No Good cond. 1871. ~~:0.0.:.;.:.:~ !Mf:O ~;,·~ .,,, Pt/Pe. .. ereo. 12.( '77 8210,neiwpalnt.lllto. m4lM by~~. ~Int i1100 o uh. ~-~:i"'#ti:r. .-.at01. da: 14Wt7t, ""'·" l<"Wrtl'I•_, ;M104 ml uaoo 873-37~ recllO. Ofto. owner. xlnt 8eciktr int7im etttto l40-tlll eo 004 wkd•Y••"i'.~t.M~;;:;:-;;-;;;;::-; ' ' 0 0 n d , f2 I 0 0 0 b 0 ,.,,., llioy wMtle1 N\• • 1 I 171 Mof .... ~ ell ""' ..e'lt Al, .. IMert!M ..... ''!r.. tlCIO'""" ..... ,..,.,.. ,..... NH 141-t180; "46-0102 root, etUIM conl'fOll, .,~ 'Tl .. mu 14f-7'08 ... -.. dr, .,,.... ::.::=.•.=:•.::.::J:~"!.:::.:.:=:.: •tt C~ ~IOI\ truck, 'fl 111 ....... ·-150 Cell t4t·l414 en ,_. "'l•IOOO mt, ttfl. '79 lldO, ,7, 11114""" ..,._ 1..,_.._,M a t1Jn1 ,... • f 600 ·-IPM OM!lt, *' ooncl. ~,,L .. ., .. L .,.1 ..... tOOOI ... "'4'9 411U1 ' ~:OC,~~~Tt 'IH"'4"1fe0t,ll'IPl.t~ tttoo. 4tr.-1 IH11fb11 otl·•IH, ·n~•* •.iffi: ' ~ 1ilnt CIOM t4IOO. '17 VW 1118 tll-tm • I t 0 I 1 a' d 741~ 4 IPd. fMOlt • '1'4 2101. oood cond. 711.h11 • • .,....-.,atNo. -... •au -.'"74 _.. •1 •· ~ .. L.;:.;r~~ 12700, lllnHa IOfOH ,74 ••• --., bl,... ...... • .... ._._,,jiiji[i::;~-- tt'lr wl~'91'1t Itta. W .-. .,....1141 pall'll/t,p, '. U 1terto/ '1t WI l••.,...••11. n ,.,, ne• •.:::-..:i~ '*tlt200 .....-, .... ....._ .. Ml. Mint ''.!.!L_~ttftl ~oocl • .,,....._ .. , WANT N:.TION'P ,._~lillill:Ar~ eotlCI--., lll0.000 ··~ *· m llR tUMcl "'·"' • c......... Adi ...... ,. = ~ ... ":...; """ .. ,... ..... .,.., ... .,,,..,. ' ' Doctor's .. • · .pr.act1ce eyed in drug case A jud"o wu eixp1•clt<d to r caume a heiring loday on whether to shul down lhe drug detoxltlcatlon clinic o f Huntington Beach phy11lcl1tn Mark Hopp while Hopp Is being Investigated. Thi;• heorlng was requested by the state Attorney General's Office, which cl1tlme d lhat Hopp's negligence In preacribihg drugs to drug addicts contributed to the dealhs qJ at least 10 of his patients over the past lhree years, according to Deputy Distr1cl Altorney Chris Kralik. Krallck denied a report thal his oHlce would charge Hopp with involunt.ary manslaughter (See CLINIC, Page A%) THI DRANGI COAST oe11r ll'tlo4 '11oto Dr !UcMrd KMMw Bryce Van Horn with offer he could refu e. He's only 5, but Mesa kid offered 'loan' Bryce Van Hom has a<.'l.'Ompli.ahed a lot in hia 1hort lifetime. He can ride a two-wheeler, he goe11 to pretiehool and he juat turned ~. Young Bryce has also accumulated a great credit record. Never even bounced a check. At least not acc.'Ording to Union Home Loans, the company that sent him a letter last week offering him a $5,000 loan. Bryce's father, Michael Van Hom of Costa Mesa, called up the loan agency and told them Bryce was only 5. "The w oman who answered was hysterical," Van Horn said. Evidently a computer screwup had resulted ln Bryce's being placed on their malling list. Meanwhile, Bryce has kept the mock check the loan company sent him He wants to save it for when he learns to read. A real treasure chess Talk about your one-of-a-kind chess set. This one features solid gold chessmen. The asking price? See Page BI . CDASI f DITIDN Death Cancels scuba classes By PHO.. SNEIDERMAN °' .... °"" ........ Orange Coast College has canceled five acuba diving classes in mid-8emeSter, in part because a middle-aged ICUba student died during a class trip to Catalina h1and in January. A $5 million wrongful death claim has been filed apinat the Coast Commun ity College District, which Includes Orange Coast College, by the student's w idow . A separate $1 million claim h as been filed by hia children. The claim will be considered tonight by the district's board of trustees. District administrators hav e recommended that responsibility In th e matter be denied and that the claim be rejected. A claim la often the first atep in preparing a lawsuit. The scuba s tudent, Frank Walter Scroggs Jr., 57, of Costa Mesa, died ~cfuring a class trip Jan. 13. District offid.als and the (See SCUBA, Page A%) SA Heights • annexation plans eyed By STEVE MARBLE o<tM °"",... ..... • A passionate battle over the future of Santa Ana Heights has been rekindled by new efforts to have the rural unincorporated heighborhood annexed by Newport Beach. :· The beach city has resisted ibitiating lengthy annexation j>roceedinp for more than two years but now has agreed to COnaider an annex request from a group of Heights residents. · Councilwoman Jackie Heather Aki thia week ahe will lobby for ~n.nexation. The council will conaider the request in June. (~ llEIGB~. Pqe At> WEONESOA Y. APRIL 13, 1983 Many protest • expansion of airport By JEFF ADLER Of .... o.lly ...... •a.it Sever al hundre d Orange County residents jammed lhe Board or Super-Visors hearing room this morning as supervisors began considering the hotly contested issue of expanding commercial airline operations al John Wayne Airport. Deity ..... "'°'° "' ,..,. O'DOftMll Dr. Tony Protopappas appears at Harbor Municipal Court for arraignment. The boa.rd is expected to select among 13 modernization alternatives following the conclusion of what is expected to be a protracted public hearing. The alternatives range from closing the airport to allowing as many commercial flights as market conditions demand. Dentist pleads, jailed S upervisor Thomas Riley , whose Fifth Supervisorial District includes the airport, o pened th e h ear ing by recommending the board agree to Increase the airport's number of dally departures from 41 to 55. By KAREN KLEIN Of'tM o..., ...... at.ft CoSla Mesa dentist Tony Protopappas was expected to post bail today and be released from Orange County JaiJ, where he was held last night after s urre ndering himselC to authorities. Protopappas, charged with murder in the dealhs of three patients, was arraigned yesterda y before Harbor Municipal Courl Judge Selim S. Franklin. The dentist pleaded not guilty to the charges and was taken into custody in lieu of $500,000 bail. Though Orange County Deputy District Attorney James Deir ,.... ,._.. _, CMIY ",.._ Wendy Holliday (left) , Michele Roberts. Cloninger requested thal bail remain a t $500,000, Franklin said he would reduce baiJ, probably to $250,000, as soon as Protopappas could have his property put up as surety. Stanford Sh.aw, Protopappas' attorney, said he expected to offer the dentist's Laguna Beach (See DENTIST, PaRe A%) Riley also asked that an agreement between the City of Newport Beach and the county be drawn up to somehow limit airport operations at whatever Early We}'dy wins Pilot Oscar picks By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of1M0~"94·-You're never too young to catch Oscar Fever. Ju.st ask Wendy Holliday of Fountain Valley, who is the grand rize winner In lhe annual Oscar Fever contest sponsored by the ~ily Pilot and the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse in Santa Ana. Wendy 16 a junior at Fountain Valley High School, and her cinematic ciy.~ ball were sharp enough w.J>redict all sev!!n top winners in Monday night's 55th Academy A"tfards presentauon. Wendy wasn't the only Daily Pilot reader with a sharp eye for movies either. More th.an 500 entries were received and 21 of them accurately predicted lhe seven top awards. But Wendy Holliday'• correct entry arrived with the earliest postmark and thus she will receive the grand prize -tickets for two to en.joy dinner and the Harlequin production of "I Do. I Do." Wendy who serves on the Student Senate and on the yearbook staff at Fou~tain Valley High, said the prize will be shared with her Criend Michele Roberts, 17. a senior at the same school. The friends (See OSCAR, Page AZ) level supervasors agree until new technological innovations make additional rlights feasible. Five superv1S0rs all seemed to agrtt early on that whatever action is laken, it should include prov1s1ons to protect Newport Beach-based A.trCa.1, which uses John Wayne Airport as its bue. More than 100 AirCal employee. -many in wlifonn -attended the hearing. They have expressed concern that any change in lhe a1rporl's status could cosl them their jobs. And the loser • JS. • • A Newport Beach man w ho lost control of his car and plowed into a tree outside of Palm Springs reportedly was watc hing the Academy Awards on a portable TV while driving, a u thor ities report. Mark Brigham, 23, waa a r rested on suspicion of felony drunk driving Monday by California Highway Patrol officers, who reported the TV was still operating when they showed up at the scene of the 9:30 p.m. accident. A passenger. Theodore Kotecki , 22. of Laguna Niguel, was thrown from the car and auff e r e d h ead injuries. officers said. Kotecki remained hospitalised in Rancho Mirage today. Patrol officer s s aid Brigham's car drifted off the aide of O.te Palm Avenue, hit a trte and rolled lleveral time9 before comin8 to a stop .. They uid Brtgham WU not b\JUftd. ---------INSIDE·---.. 1--------~---:-..........::::--i Sell-1tyled eeonomi1t Howard J. Ralf wlll tell .... ,., .. , Cout followen ho• to eunt•e Md Umn alMiad. P.e A•. The Fountain Valley ff igh bueball team maintained a grip on fint place in the SunHt League with a ~-2 Yictory onr Editon letterday. Page E . • Cash In on news Got an Idea for a good news or feature story? Call us at (714) 642-4321, Ext. 226, daya, or at (714) 8•2-5686 evenings and you coukt win one of three weekly cash awarda. Top prize le $15. I \ Holocaust remembered Jewi1h '°"lvon of the Holocau1t are honorin1 Centilea who helped tMm in World War II, but aay their number le 0 pltifully 1mall.0 P.,e F2. Fre1h artichoke1 and can~ed ..tmon team in the kitchen for light, 1priq di1he1. Food Seeaion. Paae Cl. -------------- ~· Continued stories DENTIST JAILED. • • home, Bta Bear cabin. Coit• Meu offbl bulldmg end alrptimc H collateral. He ~stlmated Protopappu' personal worth 8\ $360,000. The 37-year-old dentist, looldns composed an~ wearing blue jeans and a swE;ater, sat ailently at the defendant's table during the proceedings He answered "yes" when the Judge legal . rights and was willing to: waive his rlght to a preliminary hearing within 10 days. The hearing was set for June 13. Protopappas' attorneys said he CLINIC. • • In connection with the deaths f.ll Uu.s time. "l haven't talked to anyone about that (new charges)," Kralick said, adding that no new c harges would be filed before May 5, when Hopp is scheduled to appear 1n court on the misdemeanor counts. Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Knox agreed to resume yesterday's hearing today after Hopp's attorney asked for more time to examine a -14 -page petition filed by the Attorney General's Office Kralick said the attorney general's petition reiterates much of what investigators have been claiming since Hopp's case began -that Hopp's negligence in prescribing drugs resulted in the addicts being maintamed in their habits instead of detoxified. was "•taytna with frlt'nd11 In 0 r a n g e Co u n t y " o v t> r t h t' weekend &tnd trylna \0 arranet' for bail. Catt.a Mcsu polk-c havt• been &earchlng tor him .,._. the murder c harges lnuea llllit Frlduy. Cloninger said he fear"'d Protopappas would lk-e the are11 If he was released. but Franklin disagreed, ciung the fact that Protopappas had turned himself in and hired two lawyera to rcpn.•sent him Protopappas surrendered his passport during the hearing. Cloninger t old the judge Protopappas did not intend to kill the three patie nts. but his '"wanton disregard for life" in tn:atment justified the second degr ee murde r c harges filed against the dentist R o bert Tullt•r , o n e of Protopappas' attornt>ys. said the dtmt1st had performed the same procedures thousands of tNtes without incident. Proto pappas has been proh1b1ted by court order since late February from practicing dentistry pending the outcome of an investigation by the state. Board of Dental Examiners. The dentist has bee n under inves tigation by Costa Mesa police sJ..nCe the Feb. 8 death of Patrieia Craven after she was treated in Protopappas' office. Two other patients, Minna Kim Andreassen , 23, of Huntington Beach, and Cathryn D Jones, 31. of Costa Mesa. dfod earlier after betng anesthetued by Protopappas. OSCAR WINNER. • • frequently see movies together and collaborated on the Oscar Fever predictions. • "lt was kind of fun because l'd never entered a contest before," Wendy said. "But we were so caught up an the Oscar excitement I was just readmg the paper one day and saw the contest and dt.>e1dcd to enter." The other Dally Pilot readers who a<.'Cura tely fore<.·ast the top seven winners were: From Costa Mesa -Elizabeth Manco, Dana Lee> McFadden. Chip W1gely, Ph11ip Harper and Murrav G Black From Newport Beach Ernesune V Towne. Kathv Harrison. Mildren Harrul\On, Thomas Ca.ssutt, Lmda Gregory and Shirlee Roberts. From Laguna Beach -Francine Kessler. Etlt~en &mette C Garfinkle and Jerry Halbert ' 1''rom Hunungton Beach -Ed Schmerler, Mark R Barre, Carol Kanode and Nancy Vogelgesang From Irvme -Jerry Rice. Manc:y JMn MOntoye. 111. ol Al!lem1><1 -.,.,...,., .,..,.,day 11 Pfomontory end 8eyllCle clflYM on tuaplclon of 11U1omo1>11e bufglety She WU 1>411<! on $10,000 ~I lnlfudera broil• 1n10 a nou11 on 81rlCNWl!o Court end loolt I r edoo. 11..- •Quipmenl • c.e.mera •no 1ewefry wor If\ $810 " ..... reported ,.., ... ci.., Coi,ta Mesa A l_..909' WU 81)Pfenet'Cled Nt'ly lllll morNng •fl•r he fled • hatdw•r• 1tore -• 11e ~°'°"'a _.oow end 1I01e $77S WO<th ol .-cnen<I.._ Tr.. jol•en•le WU en•led afl., a fool pur-...1 end IM good• -• r9COYl<ed TWO 1111'1 -e llOMn ffOM a South Co- Plaza 110<• all., a cu11~ 9lmply wall\ed out w<1n t'*" draped ~ he< arm TM coet1 -· v.....S ., ss.eoo A ..oman wu wr•led Monday ettw IN trllld lo UM a 1tOlen credo! CMd et • Souto Coa•• Plea 11ore Sr.. told POllCe -nu ,.~ ... 10 cards ll'lls ~ 1111<1 Q01 ,,,. ..,.. from 1 mo"11 WlllCl'I made loroe<Y toolo us, • Anthropologist big man on campus Di "'~overer of "tu ·y' f os ii offerfng new link in evolutionary theory By Gt..ENN SCOTT 0(1~ OtH~ l'llol II•" 011e C'llrt•(ul elimpee o( DoruiJd J ohanaon WllB <mough to l'XpluJn why ht• W«'f bc•tnu It'd 11rvu11d UC Irvine-yHWrduy by ll amiJJ but excited group o ( pt'Oplu Pinnt•d v n the• lltpt•I of hi• Navy blue blazt>r Will> u minluturt· golden rt1plka of th~· bont'll of o hund, a dL"tilgn that hall become bot h a prof<.'1111onul and commercial symbol fur him It isn't just u11y hand, though. Johan so n 1 s o ne o f anthropology's rising star11, a scientific advent"l_rer whost? dl5''0vcrics of fossilii.ed skeletons in Ethiopia have led to major revisions in theories on how humans evolved from apt•i. It's one thing to sift the and plains o f Eastern Afri<:a for (11•11111111 u11d qulW &moth •r to tum lht• flndlnp Into popular 1tuff. J ohal'\llOn h1111 rnuawrod both. 'l'hc• lupel pin l1 •n lmoat· of bone. dlsrovcn .. '<1 durlrl4J a 197~ c:xptldltion in tht.\ Alar Valley 'rht' •keletal hand ia the Nmi· n;mpoaue ft'atur..-d on the t-over o( tht> pruv~Uve book he co- ~•uthored: "Luer The Beginnlng11 ut Humankind ' Johanson tl.-w fro m h i• h<·••dquarters m Berkeley to UC Irvine yesterday to speak to an overflow <·rowd of more than 400 pooplt• In the Fine Arts Village Theater on the meaning of hi11 dlsooveriet1 and the work of hi• <.'Olleugues. His belief: Humans evolved from apes more recently than scaent1sl8 trad1tionally believed. It may have <X.'Currcd just mon· Cable TV chief Robert Lo Tourellf", 42. h as been nomed the new executive Vice president and gen eral m anager of Dickinson Pacific Cablesystems which serves Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, - Westminster and tan ton. SCUBA DEATH. • • From Page A1 man's family have declined to discuss the circumstances of h.is death. The $5 million claim was filed by his widow. Maurine Margaret Scroggs. A distnct report on the matter states that "the claim.ant alleges that the district breached a duty to provide the decedent with equipment in a condition capable of sustaining bfe and that this breach caused Mr. Scroggs' dt•ath. The claimant also alleges that the d1stru.:t failed to have on hand pro per s upervisory personnel an the event of serious injury and that this failure also caused Mr Scroggs' death." Ball Gold, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Coront>r's offtce, said Scrow' Jan 17 death certtftcate hsts the cause as an accidental drowning. Laguna Beach Bu<g11r• 1><00.1 onto a -"' 11>1 X>OO block ol H1IMew 0.1ve 10 1ng 1 1 .... ,...,., .., va!ued a1 S•50 An1m•• control ott1cer1 cepluted 1 w1ywerct 1kunk 1n lite 500 l>iocl( ol 011mond Street , ...... no the IW\M"nat in a mot• r-u••I .... Irvine A boa ol 36 vl<Mo Ha1nmg lapea '"°'Ill SnO W91 r~led llOlen ye1lefd9Y from Ille Cenlury 2 t corporal• oltlc• II 188 72 Mec:Arthut Blvd Nor111-Communoly P1rk 9'11>9<VllOll !Old DOllCI yHll•Oay • pl1qu• •On tor arch11 ectur-el e:.:cettence ot It'• n•w ctutJhouM w11 1t04en 1111 weeklf>O Tn"I ot•oue valued 11 '30. wll n1ng1ng nn 1 w•M 1n the clvbhOUM • Orange Coast College s pokesman Jim Carnett said college administrators decided last Friday to cancel the five scuba classes n o w being .. ·onduc ted . M o r e than LOO students w ere e nrolled m the classes this semester Carne tt s aid several fac tors <'Onl r1but.ed to the decision to halt th~ classes: -The legal clauns associat.ed wtth the scuba student's death. The state's reluctance to conunuC' funding scuba classes. AJthough these classes were on a state "hit list" last year, Orange Coast was able to continuing offering them because they are required for students seeking a vocat1ona.1 ceruf1cate in marine lt.'Chnology. The marine technology program is being discontinued after this semes ter as part of various program cuts approved by d1stnct trustees. College officials said scuba students enrolled this spring wllJ receive l 1/i credits because they completed half or a three-credit course Students who need a half-semester course to maintain a full schedule will receive help finding one. college officials said. Also. the $30 fee that would have been used to pay for this term's Catalina trip will be refunded than 4 mllllon yean aao raUWtr than 1& w 20, ho l&ld. And he •u1ceat1 Homo uplen1 (at hum.u\» aro called) lan'l the lat.ett 1tA1e ln a dlrt'Ct hwrarchy from ape11, bl.it ls the end rwult of llll offshoot, an evoluUonary turn 11purred by the IUCOClll of tool uac and brain oxP'Nlon. Hla theory dn.w1 on what 11elent.lata l arned In 1974 when Johan1on and a collea1ue &tumbled l.lpon the bonH of Lucy, a female hominid estlmated to be 3 ml.Ulan years old. She walked on two feet, not fou.r u apes, but her skull wns mot'e ape-like than human. Johan.Ion theorizes that Lucy'a people, he named their t.ype Australopithecus afarsia ("Afar ape-man "), preceded the evolutionary tum that aeparat.ed Transit study rapped the human 1traJn from a ~ primlUvc, plant ting epedm of t\omtnlcb that eventually faJled \0 adapt und dlt..-d out. Shc: wtt1t, In effect, the mother of both groupa. he uld Whln the tint apes 1&00d on two feet remains • my1t.ery, thouah. Johanson 11ld he'• confident the antw~r llea ln the East Atrlcan 1011. Meanwhile, he 1ue1eated humana are on the brlrik of a now and equally algnl(lcant evolutionary change, this one cauaed by cultural preeeu.res to ti d apt to technology. "My big fear la if we don't mak e the right career choice. . somebody is goin.g w puah the wrong button and there won't be any descendanlA w aak where they came from." • HEIGHTS ... From Page A1 "It's the only pie<·e of land that's within the city but isn't a part of the city. That's not good government," said Heather. Santa Ana Heights is situat.ed directly above Upper Newport Bay and is h e mmed in by Newport Beach on three sides. The area, descT1bed by some as a By JEFF ADLER hodge-podge and by others as a Ofttte o.uy l'tlol 11•" pastoral community, is directly The ttem on the Board of under the takeoff pattern o f _ Supervisors' agenda yesterday John Wayne Atrport appeared innocent enough. A group calling itself Santa It authorized Board Chairman Ana H e ights Annexation Roger Stanton to circulate for Committee is asking the city to public comment a much-heralded begin pre-wrung for the area, a inquiry into how the county first step toward annexation might go about financing A second group of residents transportation improvements and landowners -known as during the next 15 years. ABCOM -has put Newport The report, prepared by a Beach on notice that it will fight consulung firm under contract to anne xati on The acron y m the county, recommends a rmx of ABCOM . represe nts the firs t tolls, taxes, fees and fares be used letter of f1~e area street names - to pay for $1 3.7 billion in rail, bus~ Acacia, Barch, Cypress, Orchid and highway improvements and Mesa. planners envision in the county . Both grou.ps .claim to represent by 1992. e1t~er a ma.)Onty .of. the Heights But the plan and its premises residents or maJOnly of l~nd- drew early fire from an agitated o w n e r s . I n a n n e x a t 1 o n Supervisor Bruce Nestande, who pr~mgs. a protest from more questioned the way the study than 50 ~rcent of the property was prepared and the conclusions owners kills an annex move. it had drawn. l;l eathe r said she doesn 't For openers. Nestande said lx•heve there are en~ugh votes on some of the premises from which the Newport council at thlS time wide-ranging conclusions were fo~. anne~taon drawn "defied logic." The city hru. never been eager He also said be disagreed with to 1:3ke on the costs of Santa~ the mix of transportation projects Heights. An~exation would bnng that were used as a basis for the on more.dehc!ts than assets But study's dollar projections. The the real issue as good government study allocat.ed 50 percent of all annexation ,r,nakes goo d transportation funds to mass government sense transit projects. Nest.ande said. "I don 't believe in that distribution.'' the supervisor, who has been critical of mass transit projects al th~ expense of highway projects, commented. Nestande also questioned the logic o f considering capping o p erations at John Wayne Airport (to be considered by the board today) at some level while proposmg \0 build a tram or rail line into the airport. "It wouJd be hard to keep a cap on in the future if we have a tram or rail system feeding in," he said. He added It might be "irresponsible" of the boa.rd to pr oceed with pr o p o sed trans portation improvements when so many other capital projects, such as the Sant.a Ana Flood Control Project, remoin in question. El Toro Road work begins tomorrow Work is expected to begin to- morrow on a 1.3-mile siretch of El Toro Road where it meets 1 Laguna Canyyon Road, and caty off1c1als warn motorists may suffer some delays. Sully Miller Contracting Co. IS to resurface a portion of El Toro Road within the city of Laguna Beach The $256,000 project is expected to be comple ted by early summer, s~ud Ross Cox, the city's engineer. Fair weather Sllll. one person associated with an OCC scuba class. who asked to remain unnamed. voiced <.'Onc::ern that the students may be left dangerously "half-educat.ed" regarding scuba diving. Students thts term have practiced only in calm pool conditions, bl.it the source said some may feel they have enough skill to ICUba dive in the ocean. although the clas9e9 had not reached that type of training. Despite his reservations. however. Nest.ande joined the board in unanimously directing the report be made avaUable to community organizations and interested individuals for He said there will be short delays to traffic while the work proceeds, with occasions when flagmen will direct traffic. Ross also said there will be about a four-day period dunng which motorists wishing to go east on El Toro Road will be diverted north on the canyon road Coastal felf. Co111al low 58. Inland 46 eo.tel high e.6, Inland 70. Wal., 51. Smell eteft advltof'y In •ff9C'I from PIHnt Conception lo 1n1 ~border. ~wind• 20 to 30 llnota over outer weten with 8 to '~'°°' -throuah ,_,,_. • Inner -1--. wind• becoming ll(lllt and nrl•bl• tonight anil ,_,a. morning end _, to aoutllw••• 10 lo 16 knota temorr°" afl•noon Wltld -3 to 4 .._ W•terly lwe4ll 4 to & ... 1n•n • toot of snow )'Mle<day MOia 111\0W and wlnda up lo '0 mpfl -· IDrllCUI today Temperatures ltlATIOf' .. Lo .t.lbel'\y 51 31 Albuque<que 57 28 Amtlllllo 70 35 Anc;tior999 3' 29 Alh9Yllte 72 39 At'8tlt• 75 51 At'8tlllc Cuy 55 42 AUtlln 82 fl7 BaltlmOf• 59 34 Bllllngt 36 21 81rml~m llO 55 Bl111'9tcll 36 21 Bolte 53 29 8oeton 58 ,5 Browns.,.... 86 73 eun.io 49 30 8uf1fngton 45 28 c.,., 29 20 Chat1M1on. SC ea 54 ClwwtMton. WV 62 '2 Cnat1o11e. NC 67 45 cney.nne 29 18 Cnlc~ 69 47 Cincinnati 83 63 CleWIMld 49 43 ~.SC 73 47 Co4umbua 57 4e 0111-Ft W0t1n 85 87 o.yton 55 45 Dan-37 22 0. Moll..e 65 43 O.CroM 5-t 41 ~ 33 ,, El,._ 81 40 Flllrt>lll'l!a 26 14 Fargo 46 28 =~tn• )5 u 42 ~ ~d A Thursday. Aprtl 14 ... Fronh COid ..,.. Watm _.. Occluded w.- H.-n. 44 26 Honolulu 6& 88 Hout ton 71 se lndi.t>apotla 61 60 JllCkton, MS et 54 JtcktonVllle 73 49 ,,_ 41 41 K.,, ... City 71 39 LU Veg11 53 39 Utile Aoc:tt 71 81 Loe Ar;::-82 49 LOUltvll " 87 L.ubl>OCI< 73 43 Maomptlla 79 6'4 MIMll 77 72 Mllwauk .. 45 4 1 Mp!l>SI. Paul 44 36 N..,..villa 79 $3 ,.._0.IMN 79 82 ,.._VOtk se 44 Nolfotlt 511 40 Hottll Pl•ll• 39 t7 OllltllOn\1 City 71 4$ Omlile ff H °'~ II Ml Phil~· 57 35 ~· ee 47 P11t1bu19n 52 38 P0tt1and, Me 51 40 PorttanCS. Ore 57 36 Providence 59 46 "':':t 84 39 A Clly 35 23 Reno 47 21 fllctwnond 85 40 SI LOUlt 63 85 St ...... T.mpe 79 llO San 1.ak• 48 3t Sa" .t.ntonlo 62 87 San OMQo 63 62 San franGIKO 58 "3 St Sta Merle 52 32 ....... 64 31 ~ 71 8& Sioux Fiiia 43 14 SP<*-82 21 8YflOUM 41 21 TOINlk• 71 42 Tuoaon 47 ~ TUIN II WMNl'IQlon 81 41 WIGNl1 71 " Tides TOOAY leoofld !OW 1,51 O ITI 0 t leoofld Ille.II t 1' p 111 S.4 TOMOMOW '1m low 3.AI Llfl .0 2 flrlt lllall "42 • "'· u 8-lc{ low 3.37 p.m, t O '4loolld lllall t .H o.m I e 11111 .. 1. e:u 0 "' , ,, ... tomorrow I .24 a.tn MOOI\ ••It t .H 0 m , 111•• '°""°''°" • 21 • "' comment. WATCl4 FOR . Crown Hardware1 s FAMOUS ~ . ANNUAL PARKING LOT SALE Coming Saturday, April 23* At Our Corona del Mar Store - 8:30 5:00 P:M. . Coast •Note, this sale Is Saturday after next, Aprll 23, not this Satur~ay. , " ... Orang• Co11t DAILY PILOTIW•dn11d1y. Aprll 13.. 1093 • It Primer for prosperity Noted economist heads convention in Anaheim thi w~ek ' By LARRY D. SPEARS or-.~ ........ Howard J, Rutt ta oonaldered the foremoat 8W'\I of America'• 1old bup. and thl• rt'putatlon la well deMrved. H1a booka, "How to Proeper During th~ Ctimlna Bad ara" and "Survlvt a nd Win In the In.fla £lahUee," have been read by million.. Hll ne ett.er, with more than 160.000 subecrlbera, la one ~he moat widely followed financial ad Mrvlc.. in the world. He ha• hls own teltv1alon ahow, and hil radio program ii carried on more than 200 1t.at1ona. All promot1n1 the glorlea of gold as an lnveetment medium, right? Well, not exactly. True, when 6,000 people pour into the Anaheim Convention Cent.er tomorrow for the start of Ruff's sixth annual national convention, most wiU be ther~ to hear has latest projections about gold. But Ruff's personal and advisory philosophy is not chained to gold. It is. instead . a philosophy of financial survival and investment s u ccess, ad justed constantly in the face of changing political and economic conditions. In other words, 1f Ruff felt pork bellies we re the best investment under certain conditions, then he'd tout pork bellies -Howard J. Ruff and have no qualms about it. • "Gold 1s not always practical except as a basic part of a long-term portfolio. a store of wealth," Ruff explained. "When gold has gone up beyond reason , when everyone is raVJng about it, when gold is on the cover of Time magazine, I'll sell, because gold will no longer be the best investment." Why. then, is Ruff so closely assoC'tated with gold? One of the biggest reasons is taming. Ruff came to prominence in the mid-'70s. just at the start of the most inflationary period in history. And, according to Ruff, "inflation is the single most important factor in the price of gold." He called the onslaught of double-digit inflation, and with it, gold's meteoric chmb from $200 to more than $800 an ounce an less than five years. And then he called the other side -the run back down. could be torecaauna a prcmwturti death. "The function of IA pruph<•t of doom 11 to prcvont doom," Ruff Nld . "That'• what I'm doina wht-n I rNk predict.Iona of lntlallon; hoplnj Jt will prumpt P,Ollcy chan1ea that will provmlt that Inflation.· And dMS Ruff eN more lnflatJon ahc•d? "There'• n o question we're In for more Inflation. The aituatlon now la almllar to 1976, only wonie," he aald. "Then the government had IA $60 billion deficit and wu baiUn1 out Lockheed, the Penn Central and New York City. Now the deflclt 11 $200 billion and we're balling out the banka, Social Security. Mexico and Brazll "The government has to have more money to dc&l with these problems. and the only way they can get it is to print It!" That's the biggest reason R4ff is going Into the Anaheim convent.Jon with such a burnsh stance - not just on gold, but on other hard -asset mvestmenta as well. "Right n ow we're seeing a very rare opportunity for investors.'' Ruff said. "We've just had a wonderful, classic correction (the 20 pen.-ent drop in prices in late February and early March), we've had a good consohdataon phase and we should be seeing the cyclical tum within weeks. if we haven't already. "But right now, there's more money to be made short term m Investments other than gold. We got a buy signal on gold mining shares last week (Ruff as a strong advocate of technical analysis, charting trends. price movements and sales volume). Silver looks better than gold right now: platinum is better." What about the long term? ls gold the answer for the Eighties? "I think so," Ruff said . "Our charts say $3,000 an ounce gold and $100 an ounce silver over the long tenn." How long a term? "I'd say a viable timetable would see those prices by 1985 or 1986," Ruff said. The Ruff convention gets under way at 9 a.m. tomorrow and runs through Saturday, with registration still open prior to the hrst session CORRECTION Lane Kirkland spE-aks in county Top labor official set s county talk Lane Kirkland, AFL-CIO president, will speak tonight al a building trades rally to be held at the Anah eim Convention Center. K irkland also will make appea rances tomorrow and Friday at the Los Angeles Hyatt R ege ncy Ho t el where he 1s attending the AFL-CIO regional conference. The union leader's Anaheim appearance wall begin at 7 30 p.m • seminar Mining slated in Newport The Callfornlu Mining Aaaoclation. which repreaenta Interest.a from oil tu gold, w!ll conduct a three-day seminar In Newport Beach at.ardng tomorrow The meetJng -utled "There ia Light at the End of the Shaft" -will deal with advances In energy project.a, export and community relations. Included in the talks wall be an address Thursday noon by Harry Conger, chairman and president o f Homestake Mining Co. -the country's primary gold producer. The meetings will be held at the Marriott Hotel an Newport Center. For more information, call (209) 223-1129 • S1gnups are being aCC't'pted ror a beneftt relay race for Chlldrcns Hospital of Orange County Saturday and Sunday at Orangt• Coast Collegt:' In Costa Mesa About 30 teams are expected to parttc1pate m the race that begins at 9 a.m. April 16 Participants are expected to run a one mile lap For more information call 833-9550 -----· •The 10-year reunion of the Newport Harbor High School class of 1973 has been scheduled July 30 at the Tale of the Whale Restaurant in Balboa. Alumnus are urged to contact the school at 760-3310 •Fonner Orange County Republican party leader William Dobr has been named by U.S. Senator Pete Wilaon to head up his Los Angeles regional office. Dohr, a Santa Ana resident, has served as secretary to the state Republican party, finance chairman of the Orange County Republican party and lost last year in a bid for the 38th Congressional District. Sen. Wilson also has dist.net offices in San Diego, Fresno and San Francisco. But not all the response to Ruff has been golden. He has been criticized as a doomsayer , thriving on bad news and playing on the fears of people living in the shadow of econonuc upheaval. global conflict and a possible nuclear holocaust. In th• Seer• Aprll 13 edv.,tlelng ••ctlon, th•r• I • en edv.rllHm•nt on th• b.ck peae for "Femlly Winner 11 Athletlc Shoee." The prlc•• ere corr•ct; howev.,, th• color llluetretlon I• lncorrKt. Th• COfrKt color of theM ehoee le derk blu•, light blue end whit• trim. We elnc.,•IJ regret •nJ lnconv•nlenc• thl• m•J haw. ceuMd. ORANGE COUNTY MASTER CHORALE "That's plain bull, that doomsday view of me," Ruff said. "It was plain bull then (when he first started making predictions for hard times) and it's plain bull now. "I'm just a businessman trymg to make an honest buck helping other people make an honest buck. There's nothing doomsday about that," he continued, warming to what is obviously a sore subject. ''Any insurance salesman sellin g life insurance could be called a doomsaver because he I Sears I SPR\NG UUo SUMME~// wet~ out Sp<~ . ~ c.leCL<Cl.ACe. .~1 ~,, DP\Y5 O~t.,Y_,Aftl.lL>'4>154Kof .?" :!>!> &Jo~ 50%.,15 % ~~ore, ~ ~ selec!.i<f f\.Dtir44 a.ML ~ ~ -f~-> ftut4st[c_ f5~ aJti '1rf1 ~IN ~! ~ ~H cat£ EAeutl lo13-'1510 q:sg_5~ AU.. ~l£S ftN~ THI HAM SO GOOD WI IUIL T A STORi AROUND IT. • Boked ond ..-nolt~ up to 30 l'louta. . • Soitol Ille~ Q(ound the boM. • Cov«~ wttl'I our tectet QIOt• •htt ot room ttmPeroture t0 no heating n9C•»orv • Jult col. Ol'def ond plolt It up. WE DO CATERING •GIFT CERTIFICATES 1 n It s 27 th Concert Season l)r. M,1uricc AllLH·.9., Music Director invites yo u to' t he 150th Year BIRT Hl)AY CELEBRATION of JOHANNES BRAHMS a~ \VC pcrforn1 hi erman \\Ith 11.ll l<l lLllh l'l'llO\\llL'd -.0101-.t -. lklcrn.1 \tL·vcn-.n n \n pr.1110 and 1);1\'1d ~nrd, B:nttnllL' \\ Ith l hL' M.i-.n:r \, mphrnn 01thl·~tra I' h ii I I' w l' .... t Ill , M ll ' I r n llT <.:t ()I Saturday, April 16, 1983 8:00 p.m. • Donald R . Wa h Memorial Auditorium Garden Grove, California l 111 l'h1111, 11,11 "·'"" '•'II It ti "' \11111\'tll Ticket Order '' .11111 1111 ti\ I ... 'IHI 1 .. 111 \'IHI ' l h.11i:, n '''·' n "'·''" •l .11.1 1 ,,., 1 >.11l A• l 1111111 • A,111h1•11 "l'1>:n.11111,• ---- l'k.1•\ 111,111 Ill O t.tllj.t\ ( tlllltl\ /\\.t•ll'I l h111.1h f'() Ho\ \I~~• l\11,1lii. 111 l .1111 •,ll1<0~ l'l,,t•\ ,11d1t•\' .I •1.llllj'l'll ''" ,1tltl1 ""' \lt\\lttp\ IHI 1\111111 111 t tdt \I • I h.111k '11111 '"' .:11•111''·"'' '" 11th.1 1111111111.1111111,.tll1h, l h1111I. llt1•tlll" l )tf1,, .11 'II •\..01 ;.~ N11 lh 11111J, " ' -Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wednt1d1y, Aprll 13, 1983 • 07 FactoTy-made food products not real ·thing By D OROTHY A . WENCK 0r....-c-11 ........ .., .. 0t c.._., •• '" l11t4"\elon Many or thl' fouds we eat today ue factory. made. That la, they arc fabricated Crom food Ingredients, oftt:n In a form that lmltatea the "real thing." Some examples of these formulated foods are Infant formulas, imitation and "nondairy" products auch aa milk, ice cream, cheese, sour cream, coffee creamer; margarine and imitation margarine ; egg substitutes, imitation meat, chicken, sausage, baron strips and bacon bits ; and instant breakfast drinks. When the real foods are available, why choose the formulated product instead? Rea.sons in c lude lower cost , greater convenien ce. allergies to natural food ingredients not found in the formulated product, and desire to avoid certain food substances -for exa mple , cholesterol in eggs that is not found in th e substitute. Sometimes the consumer chooses the formulated product without realizing that it Is not the same as a real f ood or because of promotion efforts have led the consumer to believe that the formulated product is lower in calories or in soine way better than the food it replaces. Instant breakfast drinks that consist primarily of sugar, flavorings, color, and a few added vitamins such as C and A. have been cleverly promoted a s having "as much vitamin C as orange juice" if not more. Yet their overall nutritional value is no match f or the muJtinulrients found in real orange juice, which contains significa nt amounts of potassium, folacin, thiamin, and vitamin A plus otnN nutrients. ln inst.ant drinks, 100 percent of the calories come from added sugar, compared to zero percent o f the calories from added sugar in froz.en reconstituted orange juice. When manufacturers try to duplicate the flavor, texture and other sensory characteristics of the conventional food. the nutriti o nal composition o f the formulated products 1s often a secondar y consideration. Imitation milk is an example . To avoid problems with flavor and physical stability. only tow levels of sodium caseinate (a form of milk protein) or soybean isolate (protein from soybeans that replaces milk protein) may be used. As a result the imitation milk product may provide only Ya to 1h as much protein as real milk. Vitamin and mineral levels also may be inferior to those of real milk. Because coconut oil, which is more saturated than butterfat. has a Ginger adds zest True ginger flavor comes through GINGER SHRIMP 1 p ou nd shrimp (about 17). peeled l 'h tableapoons very finely chopped fresh gjnger 2 scalllons, finely chopped 'h teaspoon aalt 'A teaspoon 1ugar 2 'h tablespoon• veaetable oU 3 tablespoons sherry In a lara• bowl. mlx t oaether ehrl mp, 1 tablespoon of the ainler. ecaWona Nlt and sup.r; let ;t;;;d for 30 m1n\&ta. In a wok or a larae aklllet, over moderately hlCh heat, heat oU: add 1hrlmp and marinade with the remalnln1 =~ 1tlr-fry about Stir in the 1herry; cover pan; over low heat. cook JI.lit unUI •hrimp are cooked throu1h - about 2 more mlnutet. Serve at once. Mam 2 tef'Vinp. b.•tlt'r navur und I.I mof'\• 1t1.1blc thon poly · un111tutul4.'d 0 111 11ut·h 11~ soy or l'Urll, It 18 utt~n addt'<i 11,i, th\• hll In M w I d t• v a r I ~ t y o f 1m11.utlon mllk p1-odul't# Thua, tht• person whu uses these to try to avoid aacurated butterru. ia actually getting a fat that i. even leM doorable. A consumer who takes the tame to read labelJ and compare the nutrition s tatements of one pr od uc:l with WHOLE OA All HALF 8-0Z. PKG. unother <'lln dl9''Uvt•1 th It Imp or tant nutritional dlffor nett• ~twt-on formuhatt.-d and n·lll fooda. QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED: .Q A frlt-nd jut1l 1tarted going to a fllnna ' nter and the Clrat thin" they did was submerge him in a tank or water supposedly to measure h11. frat contt'nt Ia this method on the up Knd up? A . Weig hlnl( a 11L~ &c II~. SCHLITZ BEER \ • lllOU~ll Oii L .. NT tM>L CAN,~· - ~-~~~~!!!':f'-'-'·~~~M'""'"' 1:21 • ~~~~!1.!J,~~ ........ -·~·· 1•u• 711 11 KAMCHATKA VODKA I ......., -• ---t."4Tt. OO#'f' '°"°8f rH• 11111•• Allll 108 OllM•I "'" .. HOUIOIOLDW.UD ...-oz. IOX .... .. 1 ullpt•• In gl'ncral, when u •lt111folt.I m«JUIUrtU ubovt· u11 l n c·h In thkknt•1111, 1tw pc.1r1on 111 con1idbrt•d to huvt• too mu,•h tat in pro~rtlon to lt•u n . or lo ht• OVl'rWl'it(hl l":m1h1b1t• fcxll.h 11uc:h ua l'OIWl(u cht'<.'M.' T1.1k1.· c·urt· or tho cot tu u•· 'h 1•t•11t• whl•n you UM.' 11 don't lt•t It 11uan<t out ul rcxm1 ll'm1x·rnturv u11y longt•r lh>1n t11.-c~.aary • • • th~ pt'Ul·h~ be Aft• lo eat., A If the jarw arc 111111 ll&htlr K'UINJ with nu 11ll(r\lf u leakage, and if there'• no sl1n of moJd or other ~rowth In t.h r•r, tht• peaches wtU 1t1ll be aafo to eat. However, J>t•1'*4Jn 1.mdt•r WMkr h1 u icpt•l·l11l tunk 11 a I l0 I u t 1 Vt• I y U l' l' Ur 41 It' nwthod for du~rn1lnlng thto amount of fat he or •hl' h • In relation to I t• u 11 b o d y m a 1 s llowev<•r, thl1 111 nut u vt•ry 1."0rwt'nlt•rH ww.y w ml•asure body f t. A 11impll'r more Cr lqUt:ntly used method. though llOmewhat leas occ.·urat.e iJ called the sklnfold teat. It involves measuring the thickness of a pinch of skin with a s pecial • • • . Q I ' v c b t· l ' n having trouble kc<'ping cottase cheest' frt•sh. llow long ii It suppobed tu kt.>ep? .A. Cou.agt• cht'<.'6(' Is a vt>ry pertahubll' food 1md you ahould try to u,..' It within a WL·t·k allt•1 you huy ll Wtwn buytnf( I I • l' h l' (• k t h (' d II t l' 11wm~·d on tht• vuc:lwgt· Thh• f11 tht! ''pull datt·" utter whlch tht• rnuag1.• L'h l'l'lll' 11huuld not bt' i.uld. The later thb date, thl· lo nger you can c.• x pt'<~ t t o k c c p t he l'OtlAg£' cheeae. Allio be 11un• your refrigerator tt'mpe rature 11 cold enough -It should be no higher than 38-40 dcgree1 F for ~1ng Q I recently found they probably won't 111omc home c·anned taiite u good now, u pl'at:he11 in my punlry they would have lf that havt' bel·n tht•re they'd been eaten when four or five yc•an. They Creahly canned . The I o u k s o m e w h & t discoloration ia ju.t one discolorl'd but the JOrs sign that the quality hti are stall ii<•Jled Would--=d=-=e~te~r..:.:1o~r.=a.::led:.:.:... __ ~FARMIR Ill• FRiii PIRH IALE I LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR ON FARMER JOHN PORK! FRESH PORK ROAST ,AllMlll JOHN l'ICNIC IHOULDlll BOSTON BUTT PORK ROAST ....... '°" ....... PORK LOIN ROASTS l.t.llNllltllt '°""' .._OM lti!O !~~.!.~ P~~."!AtJSAQE TURKEY DRUMSTICK S ITALIAN SQUASH UTllA,AffCY ZUCCHINI ROASTED PEANu.TS u .. ruo.vttl.A .. to twTMet.lll-& LARGE ART ICHOKES PMaMA•C~ACT SNAIL PELLETS OR MEAL ~C,1"'f.l"a.t.a.•Oa ASST. SANSEIVERIA PLANTS 1#4•1 P\A•t ltMOI lfllt '°"'I .. HK::M 11n .OT OXYDOL DUlllGUIT, M·OZ. IOX INCll. ft' OFF KELLOGG'S FRUIT LOOPS CUii.AL t t-OI.. IOI , ORCHARD SWEET a TANGY cn·•u• P"VtlCM,M..01 ••t IMITH'I ORANGE JUICE c~o • ....oa.c"' IMITH'I MARQAAINE 71~,. .,. 1.e •• 121 .. 98' .. 49' ~98• .. 79-11t 311 IORDIN llNGLll 1" __ ......... -., ............... ,. .......... _ .... -... -99' smif!UA~~~ -............. ... ·-1 •• COTTO IALAMI ,_ ............. ~ .................. ,... ~ .. !::..'! .. ' -S!L'.!~.!!!~"" :.: .. :=-~~ 1" QUARTERED PORK LOI 1~ 'AllMlll JOHN SLICID SIRLOIN CUT PORK CHOPS 149 IA•flllll" JOM• PORK SPARERIBS •• 21 ....... )QttN cou .. nt '""' LOO• .• 1 WHOLE FAVER LEGS .. 69' CHtCaUt PORK LQIN CHOPS .• 189 flAAMUI '°"" CC:•ll• CUf LOI• 4:$1 .. 79c TROPICAL MANGOS ""-' O• n•YO'I 4~s1 ONIONS OR RADISHES Ollft'-o .. +Olfl •ID ••OttMllt WWC.NCI 311 SPIDER PLANTS, POTHOS otl M6•e'-.I OUl.IN.l•lllK;H 1111 P'Ot 311 POTHOS ON A POLE PLANT I .-CM MJ'l lli'Ot W'Mtll I U ... \ltl Ult 4i$1 POTATO C HIPS 1ic.tiwira• Kvoot .... UrT~~t:Ollttt~ t-..N- RC, RC 100, DIET RITE CO<.••· ... -......-... _., .-.c ... MOTHER'S COOKIES 89' 6:111 111 tCt 0••1atM ANitlUI CMOC CMt-OA.OM_Al-.._I lllt r•a1 121 OAE-IDA DINNER FRIES 0-L.at .... AI .. 1A1MI .-_ .. L ,...,...._ CENTER CUT LOIN RED SALAD TOMATOES RIPE. FULL Of FLAVOR il .; J f 1. l'fllMIUM GllAD~D 'OTA TOH MIRACLE WHIP .. KRA"1, SALAD DRflllNQ, 32-0 Z. JAR 1s~ 41~ 3:s1 11~ \ I •• NB Orange Coat DAILY PILOTIWednHday. Aprll 13, 1193 NYS ~OMPO SJTE TRAN 'ACTION OUOf "''°"'' •ltCUIOI l llAO .... , ... lf1• 10•• ....... ,.•&Cl"' ..... •ono• 01 ........ CllllC•••afl tTO<• • cCM&llllU &NO Hl'OHIO H 11!1 MAtO AWD llUTllU f hi.. .. •• t' t IWI• 110.. I "" WI" Ntl It I net• I kiw '"' .. 1., "'" "'""' ,, ... '"" I, I Dow Jones Finai UP 11.32 CLOllNQ 1, 151.M (RECORD) Volc ker c riticizes ~nterest rates By Tbe A11ocla&ff Pre11 F.conomiat.a are divided over whether the 0.3 percent gain in retail sales last month 1il':t!' a consumer-led economic recovery, but Federal rve Chairman Paul Volcker aayit no recovery will be long-luting if lnterest ratel remain at current levela. A New York bank, meanwhlle, aay1 lingering effecu of the recession w1ll hold down union membera' wage increases this year. The retail sales increase waa modest, but ft also was the first gain since last November and an improvement f rom a 1.2 pereent drop m February, the Commeroe Department said yesterday. March safes were led by a 3.5 percent jump ln car sales, the department saJd. Hilton Hotels income down BEYERL Y HILLS -Hilton Hotels Corp. has reported first quarter net income of $14.4 million or 54 cents a share, down from $22 million or 82 cents a share a year ago. Hilton said revenues for the quarter ended March 31 fell to $145.7 miJlion from $155.3 million in the same 1982 quarter. Job choice pos tponed BELL -About 200 workers laid off from General Motors' South Gate plant won't have to choose lt'P· ~tely between jobs in Oklahoma City next mon .1 or guaranteed income benefits after all, a union official says. However, GM so far has not agreed to local union members' demands that only volwiteers be sent to Oklahoma, said Henry Gonm.les, a United Auto Workers international representative baaed in Bell, seven miles southeast of downtown Loe Angeles. AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS Pitt. Up 11.• Up U I Up IU Up 11.• Up 10,I Up '·' Up tS Up U Up &.1 Up &.S Up &.1 Up .. , Up 1' Up 1.1 Up , .. Up '-' u.. ... Up u "" u Up 6 7 Up U Up u Uo u Up U Up 4.1 Pel Off 7 ·' Oii JI Oft ,. Off •• Ott • J Oft u g: t~ ()If 4.1 Off S.1 Off S1 Off u Off u Oft u Off S.I ()If u Off so Oft ... on •.t Off .. , g: !j Oii u Off u Off ., GOLD QUOTATIONS e, Tiie h ur.11 • ,.,_ a.c..ci WOfid "°'° ~ loo.y- L.-..... rn«Nng lh•"'G "421 75. of! .... 00 1.--... allernoon fixing IA2t.25. oft 13 50. ,..,.. etlwnoon fticlng ~. 13. oft '5.39 ,,.....,. llxJng $430 00, oft 14.00 z..tdl .... .,..,_ lbiWig 142.1.25 bid. Off 14 50: 1421 25 ..... ., HeA4r I Har••• (only deJly quol•I 1421.25, Off S3 50 ~ l°"'Y e1e11y QUot•I 1429.26. on SS50. In•••-tet1<1c:e1..:1 (Giiiy deity ClllOl•I "45071, oft 13 ... NY C•.,.•• gold apol mOl'llll Tuet *43 I 90. up IO ..0 SILVER STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT