HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-10-13 - Orange Coast Pilot'
NI l) t; t • 'l I A l ' 11 I I 1111 I• ' I •I
Owners visit some of I 00 hones quartered at El Modena High
School after they were saved from Saturday'1 fire.
-.__ ., PIPll
l > I~ A N < • t l < > l J N I Y t A I l I < I I < N I A I '1 C ( N T <>
NRC will probe
constructio·n of
plant at Onofre
Charges of faulty conatruction
at the San Onofre nuclear power ,
plant have prompted a Nuclear
Regulatory Commi11lon
lnvettJgation of the controvenial
facility.
A group of NRC inspectors will
be conducting testa of the newly
conatructed unlta 2 and 3 of the
nuclear plant later this week,
NRC spokesman Jim Hanche tt
said today.
The allegations were made by
Elmo Earl Kent of Cypress, a
former quality control lruipector
for Bechte l Powe r Inc., the
plpnt's main contractor. Kent, 56.
was fU'ed last February after he
failed two job certification testa.
He h ad been assigned to San
Onofre in October 1980.
faulty construction and detign a
virtually every power plant i
the country. He aald one'\
investigators study the Sa~
Onofre and Michi~an plant.I, I(
report will be made public in ~.
few week.I. I
"We don't aee an y thin~
signific ant in hia (K ent 's~
allegations,'' h e aaid. "Thla ii•
t ypical of the conatruc tlol'll
deflciencies you would get in a.
large ~truction aite." i
!
Bechte l s p o k e sm a n Ji~
Mackin said Kent was fired las~
February after he failed two ~
certification testa. • ·
Power line blamed in canyon blaze Kent has charged that faulty
welds in critical safet_y systems
were approved at San Onofre as
well 81 at a nuclear power plant
in Midland, Mich., where he was
transferred following his Orange
County assignment. The NRC
also is investigating the Midland
plant.
Kent said he djdn't go public
with his criticiama until he had
b een fired after repeatedly
complaining about the welcb at
the Michigan plant. He said he
started working for Bechtel as a
senior quality control engineer at
San Onofre in 1980, tfien was
transferred to the Palisades plant
in Michigan and fin.ally to the
Midland plant in December 1981.
By DAVID KUTZMANN Ot'llleDlllr .........
Fire officiala have det.ennined
thJt a deatructive, 16,800-acre
fireatorm in eastern Orange
County was sparked by a fallen
power line suppo rt at a
McDonnell Douglas test facility
in Gypsum Canyon. \
Orange County Fire Chier
Lawrence Holma announced the
findings of hia department's
investigation Tuesday as the
~e m n a n t a o f a m a a s i v e
firefighting force continued
~-up operations in rugged
country eaat of l.rvi.ne Lake.
Holma, who gave the Countv
-.
Board of Supervisors a fire
update earlier in the day. told
reporters that his investigators
felt certain the cayae of the (aat-
moving blaze could be attributed
to a fallen power line cross bar
owned by McDonnell Douglas.
Southern California Edison Co.
lines were not involved, he said.
"We feel confident that that is
the abeolut.e cawie (of the fire) at
this time," the county flre chief
said.
Holms said it appears almost
certain that powerful Santa Ana
wind conditions caUled the crou
bar on a pole at the McDonnell
Douglas facility to fall to the
Newport bed tax
hike bid defeated
BY STEVE MARBLE ........ .,.., .........
An eUort to hike the Newport
Beach dty hot.el and motel bed
tax -a move voters defeated
twice at the poU. -haa been
ts.a.med t.ck for a third time.
• 'Ille city council. armed with a
*>Urt ruling that would have
.aJowed it to bypua the voters.
eame up a vote short Tuesday
evening of increasing the tax &om 6 to 8 percent.
"I've been in favor of the
increue all along but I believe
thia would be a breach of faith to
approve it now.'' said Mayor
Jackie Heather who was joined
by council colleagues Paul
Hummel , Evelyn Hart and
Ruthelyn Plummer ln striking
down the tax request.
The council had been nearly
unanimous in ita support of the
measure when it was placed on
(See BED TAX, Pase AZ)
;Mesa development
-! I
decision postponed
• A dedalon on a much-debated
Co1ta Me1a development
proposal haa been postponed
&1ntll next June at the request of
'Pl'Oject bllcken.
'nw delay WM approved this
1teek. by the city Planning
Commiuion in response to a
~from Amel Development
C.O. The firm is leek1nc approval
to build 210 condominiwm and a
.(3-acre commercial center on !land near South Cout Plaza.
: The plan -which local
t.omec>Wnen have critidzed u
"°loo denle" -WM 8Checfuled to
be aDnlklered by the dty council
Nov. 1, the eve of thia year'•
council elec:Uon.
Under the revised planning
commiuion schedule, the
proposal will not face council
action until next July.
The t::rty la bounded by South Drive, Bear Street,
San Diego Freeway and San
Leandro Real.
Robert Mickelaon, an Amel
planning consultant, 1aid the
flnn'a request for an extenlion
wu based aolely on financial
conaideratlon1, indicating the
company la 1atl1fied with the
plan IUbmitted 1Mt June.
(See DECISION, P .. e Al)
ground, emitting sparks which
ignited nearby brush. He said
there is no evidence of negligence
on McDonnell Douglas' part.
The blaze was first spotted by
a patrolling sheriff's deputy just
before 9 a.m. Saturday. ~hough
fir e o fficia ls we re q u ic kly
no tifie d , the flames spread
within minutes into inaccessible
terrain, Holms said.
The bla ze p r oved cost ly.
C o unted destroyed w e re 11
luxury homes In the exclusive
Crest de ViJle community in
Orange, two homes in Anaheim
Hilla and another large home in
u n in cor pora ted a r e a n ear
Santiago Canyon.
Damage estimates were placed
a t $1 1 million, down from a n
earlier appraisal of $16 million.
More than 140 people suffered
minor injuries and two horses
were killed during Saturday's
chaotic evacuation.
Also harmed were 3,000 acres
of habitat for rare Tecate o-presa
trees.
Mc Donne ll Douglas Corp.
officials In Huntington Beach
said Tuesday their company is
study ing the county F i re
(See FIRE, Pase AZ)
"As we do in all cases where
w e r ecei v e alle gatio n s o f
construction deficiencies we send
insp ectors to look Into the
matt.er," said Hanchett, add ing
that he regards the situation 81
"not terribly seriou s at the
moment."
"They are not major problems
at least at the surface but we
really don't know until we take a
look at them."
Hanchett said the N RC
rouUnely receives allegat.iona of
He said after he was fired, he
went to J a mes Foste r in the
N RC's Chicago off ice a n d
repeated his concerns.
Foster said his office conducted
a s p o t in s p ec t ion , then
subsequently orde red a full
investigation. But Foster said he
hadn't yet told NRC officials in
California about Kent's concerns.
The complalnta in September
involved four, suppoeedly faulty
welds on hangers for pipes in!
San Onofre's Unit 2. '
I
Dena Farrow recalls ~ ... the more they operated,~
the more injuries they found.' .
Brush with death I
still haunts teen 1
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or111eo.., ........
The terrible event.I of Friday,
Aug. 13, atll1 replay them11elves
In 15-year-old Dena Farrow's
nightmares: the rifle ahot, the
bumina and bleeding in her back
and andomen, the difficult
breathing, the sight of her best
friend alumped over in front of
her, the ambulance ride to
-F.ountaln Valley Community
Haepital ....
Her aunt., Jo Ann GudmUNOn,
remembeu waiting at the
hospital that night as Dena
underwent ai.x hours of surgery.
"The doctors didn't give ua
much reuon to hope," her aunt
recalled, "becau.e the more they
operated, the more injuries they
found. Every time a doctor
walked out, her mother and I
nearly died becau.e we knew It
waa IOin8 to be t.d newa."
Dena loet a kidney, her spleen
and parts of her pancreas, liver,
atamach and intestine9.
But ahe · 1urvlved that night
and eeveral more nights on the
critical Hat, attached to llfe-
IUpport equipment. She endured
additional 1urpry and 11evera1
life-thretit.enfna infections.
Dena •ys much of~ credit
for her recovery muat 1JO to her
loving family, some devoted!
friends on the Mari na Hlah,
School girls volleyball team and!
to her idol, Rama quarterback,
Vince Ferragamo, who railed herl
apirits with two autographed:
pictures and a telephone call. ;
Today. the pretty blond e !
Huntl.ngton Beach girl la well on:
her way beck to a normal teen-1
age life. :
'Though her brush with death!
and the moet difficult daya of,
recovery are behind her, ~i
Farrow still has nightmares that
remind her ahe wu the luckier of
two shooting victlma on that
fateful Friday the 13th.
Dena met Rise Lou Tucker.
daughter of Rosie Miclette, a ,
popular parking enforcement
officer in Laguna Beach. when1
the two were in th~ elghth grade 1 at Harbour View School In,
Huntington Beech. :
The twO became fast friends, I
and 1pent many summer daya;
shopping toflether OI' eoin& to the.
beach. ' On the evening of Au,. 13, thel
two girla went to a party, then1 visited a Huntinaton Harbour,
physician's home whe re an'
acquaintance, Nchard Berp. 18,j
WU ltayina. 1
The ltr& weN preparing to,
(See IDOL, Pqe A•>
Leisure W oi-ld action escalates llDEI
Are Americam
1etting their
money'• worth for
the 1287 billion
they would 1pend
each year oD
health eare? Why
are medleal eo1ta
10 htp? Amwen
appeal la a 1peeial
packap of 1lorie1
OD Pap CIO .
I
i1 ITEVE TRJPOU ... ...,,...-
• The -=alatinll conflict pitting tw Nlidenm ofl.eiaure World in =Hili. ~Irvine, the J>ie\, t Co. and
Co. hM opened on a new
ftom. : Onpae County 1upervlaon
anaalmoualy approved a
feaolution Tue1day aendtna
'-•laure World'• requelt to
..,_ ibe county'• 27th dty '° th• Local A1ency J'ormaUon
tu; "*"'• wbkh hll final MY ~.a mmuMI.
~ · 'ftle ae1iar1 came ._ than M ~.,.....,.., poup .... ... i• ' 'an ID .._ 460 M.19 "91 1be 1-t al Lmure Wotld
.......... ll to Jmne. .-:. Tlt• llm~ make• no t"'..:t.;-the m::r:: wW • ,,.. .... IUl'l"OUndlal .... two • F='-r:::t='-.,-Z:,
Residents view joining Irvine as
threat to their autonomy.
•~~-acre parcel will be developed
in10 an office park.
The Koll Co. hu an option
to develop a 189-acre park on
put of the Roo9moor--owned
land. &.noor appuently feela
then wW b.-a betW chanlle of
the ct.wloslmenl belnc pmmitted • Cr°' lrvtm ........ pan of anponted 1Maun World.
Irvlne, which WH Ulll
1tudyln1 the pro/01al, a,...,....11, le latKllllF In the
lnereaHd tax re•enue1 -
........ at n.e ........ "' the
Uret year -from 1ueh a
........ t.
1Ae1in World l'tll6dlntm Ytlw
the -aoor ,...._to a. )leMd
to lrvtne M a threat io their ••-i;bMNwr. Jotu~ u"'""'. crhal ..... "
Lellure World'i Committee on
Incorporation, haa Hld lut
month that the community i1
"not really looklna to It (new
development) for revenue.'' H~
added that any IUCh decia(on in
an lncorponted Lelaure World
would be UJ> '°the newly elected
dty counc:Ui..howewr·
An LATC official aald
ROllmOOr'I requ•t 1hoW1 ll'l•t ibe campMY etc. not WUlt ltl
Ctarcel to b• part or an ~ pontld .......... World .
County 1upervllora1 In
approvln1 Lel1ure World:• l~r.JM>rallon petition to the I.An:. .. a dim .... of the
&.noar·Koll·lrvlne effon.
The rival requHI "would
.U.Uvely If.' aa ... Mtlhed
e9Mnl•alt,w 'Nl
0
d lu.-rvlaor
Thomas RUey. 'I'he l~Uon
of Leiaure World would 'protect
the environment of Lei1ur•
World and the Leisure World
a~ ... heaaid.
Board C,;halrman Bruce
Nestande calJed the ao.moor ·
propoeaJ "forum 1hopplq.'' a
term he ha• coined for
development IJ'OUP9 who "thop"
fdr the pernrnent ~that wm arant them moet of ll'lelr
development aoaJa lot a Dlll'Cel.
"They (Leis ure World
reeldentl) have no choke but ID
• atMM and try '° lneo1 pqrate ·&o uve thelr cornmunlty,"
....... llkl.
SuDerYWor ao.--81antan .ad
the board'• action doe• not co•lllute an endorwmenl of
Lel1ur• World'• cltrhood Ti:1"A howevw. be L FC 11 expected 10
---the IWO ....... W'ly ... ,..,. ~
. 1
:nt'I flndlnp regardln&
bJoe.
poketmen for the firm uld
Gypaum Canyon telt facility
noi ln u.e the weekend the
broke out. They uld the
acre test alte only had been
sporadically during the past
ears.
he c omp•n y sa i d a
ntenance crew had cleared
area of gra11, w eeds and
h two months ago and that a
taker stays on the premises
round.
e Gypsum Canyon facility 1s
for experiments involving
• • •
hlsh n olte lc•vele and f o r
equipment ioo bulky for UICI at
other McDonnell Douala• teat
sltt'fl
An equipment trailer and a
tool shed at the test oonter were'
destroyed by flamet Saturday.
Of the 14 homes lo.t and &Ix
damaged, county fire offlclala •
said, the re were two common
factors -they had combuaUble
roofs and they were perched on
s teep hillsides overlooking
canyom covered by an e>eplOlive
carpet of tinder dry bruahliU"ld.
Holms said the homes would
have fa r e d bette r witho ut
combustible roofs.
ECISION DELAYED e e e e
OSLO, No rway (AP) -
Sw•dl•h peace actlviat Alva
Myrdal and forme r Mexican
Fortilgn MlrWiter Alfon10 Oarcla
Robles were jointly award4td the
1982 a.ob4tt Ptr!M.'e Prlzc today tfor
the ir work In Int rn1tlonol
dla&rmatnent neaottatJona.
In announdnf ~ay's award,
the chairman o the Norwcalan
Nobel CommJttee, Egli ABvlk.
eald the two winners "for many
years had played a central role in
the United Nations' disarmament
negotiations."
They were among a record 79
candidat.et -60 individual.I and
19 organization• -nominated
for the prir;e, which carrlea a
stipend of 1.15 mJWon Swedish
kronor, equivalent to $1 57,000.
Other candidates Included
detained Pollah labor leader Lech
Wale.-, U.S. Mideast mediator
Phntp C. Habib, black South
African biahop Desmond Tutu
and jailed Soviet human rlghi.
actJvist Yuri Orlov. ,
Last year's prize was awarded
to the office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for
Kefua.M for lta work wlih \h9
worlcl'a mUllona of hornt1-.
In the prevbla live yean. the
award went co ~ntlr\e human
rl1ht1 advoc•tt Adolfo Peres
Eaqulvtl; Mother Tereu. of
C..lcuua. India; the late Eayp\Jan
Pr 1ldc nt Anwar Sadat and
Iaraell Pr • Mlnlat.er Menachcm
Beg i n · th human -rlghu
o rg o l~at o n Amn es ty
lntornatlona and Northern
Ireland peace tlvlata Malread
Corrigan and tty Williama.
Of the individual winners over
the Nobel Peace Prize'• 81-year
history, Americana have won 16
times, more than any other
nationality. The last American
winner was Henry Klsalnger ln
1973.
Th!J year's first Nobel Prize, In
medlclne, wu awarded Monday
In Stockholm, Sweden, to Briton
John R. Vane and Swedes Sune
K . Be rgstrom and Bengt 1.
Samuelaaon for their work In
hormone research.
The Nobel Prizes In chemlatry
~ physics will be announced
next Monday, and the economi<_.'9
prize Oct. 20. The date for the
.
Peace Prize
announcement of the literature
priz.e has not been diacloeed.
Th e prize aeries was
established In the will of Allred
Nobel, the Swedish Inventor of
dynamite.
Hecauae ot the lower value of
the Swedish ktona aaainat the
dollar this year, the 1982 prizes
are worth leas ft\ dollar terms
than last year 's, which we re
equivalent to $180,000.
; ~t'a like everything else these
: d'&ys. Nothlng'a happeni ng. I
: think tt's timing more than
;:anything else," Mickelson said.
~ "Most likely we'll slick with the
: plan we have." ·
• North C os ta M esa
:·h omeowners , who won an
!i nitiative that bloc k e d
I :;development of more than 650
:•homes and apartments on the
~..ll[2perty in 1978, have opposed
thelatest plan, as well.
"That is not correct," said
Rinker , o f Pavadis' re mark.
"We're not playing a game of
starting with 10 and hoping to
get five."
In a dd i ti o n to th e
condominium development, the
plan calls for 12 acres of two-
story garden offices and 31 acres
of low and mid-rise offices along
the freeway.
'Cheap' NB housing hit El Toro
"The board has b ee n
tippolnted with the density,"
Jon Paradis, vice president
the N·orth Costa Mesa
Homeowners Association. "The
'9Q}y thing that pacified us In
,JJUtker's remark to me that he
' thought it wouldn't pass."
.:i Jbrry Rinker, a partner In
;
el Development With George
.,;. yros, denied having made
, a statement. He said he is
.,.'f\'xloua to meet with
·hoQleowners before the Planning
Commission hearing in June.
•'lllJ
Als o in th e plan is a
r ealignment of South Coas t
Drive to connc:<:t with a section of
the street already completed near
San L ea ndro . Nearby
homeowners had requested the
street be moved away from their
property.
Last December the 4th District
C ourt o f Appeal In San
Bernardino declared the initiative
invalid, thus clearing the way for
the developer to proceed with
its original plan to build 537
apartments and 127 homes.
Arne!, howe ver, revised the
proposal to its current form.
Plans for the first affordable
ho using project in Ne wpo rt
Beach, which has been met with
a wave of protest, have been
pulled back for a second look.
City council m~mbers had been
acheduled Tuesday to vote on the
controversial plan to build so-
called affordable units near the
fa s h io nabl e Eas t b luff
community .
Residents of Eaatbluff have
blasted the building project as
being too dense and suggested it
would bring in too many people
and too many cars. Seve r al
people s uggested the proje~t
would bring in people who don·t
fit the Newport Beach lifestyle.
T h e c o unci l, with little
comment, agreed to ship the plan
b ack to the ci t y Pla nning
Commission for public hearings,
likely to be held in December.
Although the building project
w as proposed by the city, it
w o uld be constructe d by the
Irvine Company on 35 acres of
l a nd b e tween MacArthur
Bouleval"d and Jamboree Road,
north of Camelback Drive.
The plan w o uld p e rmit
c.'onstruction of 7~ housing units
instead of the 120 now permitted
a t the site.
The "affordable" unlta would
be in the $8~.ooo to $126.000
range and would be offered to
families w ith annual incomes
from $21.000 to $43,000.
Some residents who neighbor
the project site c laimed the
houslnst would not flt in with an
a rea whe r e h om es g o from
$250,000 to more than $1 million .
The city Is facing a lawsuit
filed by a coalition of legal aid
a nd fair housing groups that
allege Ne wpo rt B e a c h has
discriminatory housing practices
that exclude low and moderate
wage earn~rs.
• a1rpor~
opposed
Orange County Supervisors, in
a split vote, have voiced their
opposition to the use of the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station as
a comme rcial airport, but not
w ithout vocal dissent from the
minority that opposed the action.
p amage weighed at UCI Arts Center • given
Supervisors Ralph Clark and
Roge r S tanton opposed board
Chairman Bruce Nesta nde 's
resolution Tuesday. Both saJd El
Toro has not been adequately
studied and therefore does not
me r i t rejection as a p ossible
airport site.
By KAREN E. KLEIN Of tlM DeMy Not • ..., after e x plos ion, fire ., ,•.
UC Irvine o ffici a ls w e r e
JHIWSSing possible damage to
.~ropus researc h experiments 'P'fft.:t following an explosion and
~ fire Tue9day that knocked
-9-Yl pow e r to the entire
'""'f)l verai t y .
County F i r e D e partment
f ir efighte r s arrived at the
un i v e r sit y . Cause o f the
e xpl o si o n h as n o t b e en
de termined and county F ire
De partment spokesman Capt.
Gary Stenberg like ne d the
situation to the blowout of a main
fuse box at a home.
The Los Ange les-base d
Security Pacific National Bank
has donate d $350 ,000 to the
Orange County Performing Arts
Cente r , se tting a •trong
precedent for regjonal support
for the center.
' ·'No injuries were reported in
the 11:36 a .m . blast at UCI's
c;.e,ritral plant, which provides
~ctricity and other utility ,fe¥cea~or the campus. Power
•WfS out from 30 to 45 minutes in
19~ bui!dings and as' long as 90
f9i!QUtes m others.
Auxiliary power immediately
s witch e d on follo wing the
e xplos io n to the electrical
terminal. However. firefighters
ordered au power to the campus
turned off so that Edison Co.
officials could examine damage
to the utility plant.
The gift Is the largest the
Security Pacific Foundation, a
charitable organlz.at.lon, has made
to date, according to Carol E.
Tauter, foundatJon presl~nt.
The arta center, scheduled to
open late in 1986, is expected to
cost over $60 millioh. All the
funds will come from private
donations.
The po w e r o uta g e was
re portedly the fi rst in UCI'a
history.
Security's chief executive
officer, Richard J . Flamson, said
the donation was made to the
center partly because Security
Beach fog ~µe
10 26 mph Thurlday Hlgha tn T .. - F t F 8• EOt .
.-them cMl«t• may ,.,. from ... oreca• °' p.m. ....... tnowl!!J
78 10 ee w11t1 towa trom 31 co 50. ThurSday October 1 4
Sou1nern ~high• w~• 10 e rem' llu<K .,,..,,,, '"'"Ml• _...,......, ________ renge ffom aa lo 95 wl1h IOwt tn .~;;&.;,.w:;.;.;.;.i:~-..;o;:.--.--..... ----
-. Ille 50L
Coasta l to~~ti':,,O:,=
C. teer end 1unny today with llght verlebl• wind• through
, renQlno from ttle mld-7.0I at T h u r a d 1 Y • b t c o m I n g bMcMI 10 mld-801 lrArld. -"-'«IY II 8 to 18 knot• In lonW!t encl Thut90ey el!Cql( the mfttmOOn with I 1-to-2-loot
lflO ..... IO~oflelenlgM -nllwlet ...... ~morning fog llkirl8 h --------"· Overnight 1ow1 In •II• 'T ... a •ur·e; 80L Coaler on Tl'lufwdey wlVt e mpe.' " o In the 70. to low eo.. •:::.ro~r~c> :~:~.':.f~;~ NATION .. c. ~
end out eo m11M: Light Alt>eny e 1 32 labl• wind• tonight an~ AltlUqulfque es 42
Thur9dey montlnQ, but -1 to Anc:flofege 32 30
eou1t1w11e ""'°' f to 11 knoca 1n AIAMl• ea 1 1 ..... ..,,... ..... ,,,~ .,.,,.< ~
.01 1>tOU u !> e>eo1 o• COtN'I"' •· the.,...,_ Wind_,,,.. 2 to 3 Alllntle Clly 58 64
feet thll alletnoon S°"lhwffl Au9ttn 17 51
..,... of 1 to 2 ..... Mowtty fllir 8tftmore sa 54
.21 Fronts. Cold .,. Warm WW Occluded ~
.01
today lllfOUOll Thurldey -.capt 8!rmWlgtlem 78 12
for 1ome f09 In ouler wettr1 Bolton 54 40 Pfovldenct M 38 •odeV. lncreeiina enct IP'MdlnO Bufleio es 54 .oe 1W1o e ao aoulhw1rd lonighl end urty eaeper 51 35 8tlt Lek• 55 37
Thwldey. Cflattellon,s.c. 72 ee .oe Sen An1onlo 11 54 .37 .----------a..ton.w.v 74 s1 Sll!Otego u 12
U.S. 8ummary · ~ H.c. ;~ ~ =~enc11co :: !~
----.... .... 81.loulil 6t 48
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Ille UllC* ONo Vlller. °'""' f>1 30 Wlllhlnflot1 11 H
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8an 8ernardlno
8an Oebr1tl
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Slllta Merta Santi Monie•
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S2 51
90 50 1111 5t.
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71 47
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17 80
Owet u9per Mkllllgen end Ille El ~ ;; :: CAAIONllA 76 35 PM ~AM
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dotted tll• oountrr from tll• ~ 4t 44 l.M .,,.. 75 41 H-M
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Smos
Pacific has a large client base m
Ora nge County and pa rtl y
because of his own feeling for the
county. He has resided in Corona
del Mar for 15 years.
Security Pacific will not be "a
one-hitter" in ill involveme nt
with the cent.er, Flamlon aaid. He
aald he hopes Security will
become pa.rt of the center's team
of planners and patrons.
The center, which will feature
a 3,000-seat theater deslgned !.or
o pe ra, symphony, mualc al
theater and balle t . and a
1,000-se al theater for smaller
BED TAX e e
From Page A1
the ballot. spending $25,000 on ·
two elections within one year.
In both elections. a majority of
the voters went along with the
tax lllCJ'Q9e but {ailed to provide
the two-thirds margin needed. A
recent atate Sup reme Cou rt
rullna, though, cleared the way
for the council to up the tax
without even gotng to the voten.
performances, "will add a lot of
c lass" t o Orange County ,
Flamson said.
"We need to fulfill all the
r~ulrements of the residents or
Orange County.'' he added.
Alth o ugh moa t c o unty
dwellers think they're living in
paradise, he srud. there is a lack
of cultural exposure in Orange
County.
The cent.er, which is scheduled
for groundbreaking in early
1983, will be located on five acres
in the South Coast Plaza Town
Cent.er area.
Over $24 million has been
raised toward the cons truction
and e ndowment of the· cen ter,
along with the site, valued at
more than $5 million, which was
d o nated by the S e ge rs trom
family.
Henry Segerstrom, chairman
of the trustees for the center, said
Security Pacific is the fourth
major banking Institution to
donate $100,000 or m o r e ,
bringing the total commitment
from the banking Industry to
almo8t $1 million.
Clark accused board members
supporting t he resolution of
doing so even though they had
not yet seen a four-year, $500,000
study of possible airport sites.
"I just don't believe that this
board has enough infonnaUon at
h a nd t o mak e the kind o f
decision this resolution calls for,"
said Clark. "We don't have the
{acts, we haven't had any public
testimony and we haven't heard
Crom our cities or the business
community."
C l a rk r e c o mm e nded a
substitute proposal that would
have called for county aides to
report on the count)41 aviation
future. That idea failed with only
Stanton's support, however.
Nestande. in introducing the
resolution, continued his attack
on the ne w sit e as one that
would "destroy years of land use
pla nning a nd communi ty
building in that area." The site is
in Ne stande 's s upe rviaor ial
district.
The r esolution stated that
there is no other feas.ible site In
the c ounty fo r a r e gional
commercial airport.
DANSll
10111111
ID
11111
CAFE UITEll
'15''
.... $19.95
DAISI
IOUQID VISE
•14••
.... $11.95
(Not Shewn)
.... $12.9 5
11111 CUSSIC
WllE GIUFE
1 ~ Uter
•14••
Prloee Oood thru 10111112. (~ Te ..,,..., On Monti)
•
NATION I
Interest rates failing
but recovery cloudy
By Tbe A11ocla&ed Pre11
lnterett ratt,'I haverto lento
their lo west leve since
September 1980 w 11ome
bankers aaylng they'll go allll
lower, but a presidential
adviser cautioned there are no
1i1Jl• t~ economy will
improve immediately.
Four major bank.a cut their
prime le nding rate to 14!
percent on Tueeday, and the
government said it wa1
lowering the lntere1t-rate
celling on certain federally-
backed home 19an~bW 12.6
percent..
Meanwhile, the average
rate paid on new alx-month
Treasury bills auctioned to
the public plunged nearly 1 \.\
percentage point.II , to 7.734.
Budget cuts hurt needy
WASHINGTON -A
1urvey of 55 cities showed
that more than ha)( of the
p eople wh o ne e d~d
emergency services in the
put f~al year did not get
• them bel"'aus e o f fe d eral
budaet cuts, aocording to a
report releued today.
The report by the U.S.
Conference of Mayon -on
programs relating tO health.
unemployment and other
human aervices -18id thlnp
are likely to get wonie thh
year.
•
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Wedneed•y, Octe>Oer 13, 1ff2 8 41
High o.c'tane
Chrysler talks resuming
DETROIT -The United
Auto Workers and Chrysler
Corp ., fa ce d with
"overw helming" ra nk-and-
fUe rejection of a tentative
contract for the first time in
the history 'pf the Big Three
aut.Omakers.tare heading back
to the bargaining table.
President Doue A. Fruer
said Tuesday. 'The principal
problem was they expected to
get a wage Lncreue. u p front,
immediately."
Art Lacy of Milwaukie, Ore., signals thumbs-up in front of his
gasoline station where .... World War II-era . B 17 bomber mounted
over the pumps has been a ttracting attention for 35 years. The
station's 48 pumps dispens~ 5. 7 million gallons of gas last year,
he said ..
"This contract does not
meet the expec·t.ations of the
Chrysler workers," UAW
V o ting on the pa ct
continues th.rough Thunday,
but Fraser admitted it was
being soundly defeated. "It's
resounding, it's convincing.
it's overwhel.ming,'' he said.
When Reagan talks,-networks listeh
WORLD
Poland rioting continues
WARSAW, Poland -Riot
police ringed the ne wly
militarized Gdansk shipyard
today a fte r two d ays of
strikes and bloody protests,
and officials warned workers
they face f ive-year prison
terms if they stage mor~
d emo nstr ations over the
oul;lawing of Solidarity.
Workers claimed some of
their colle~gues planned to
ignore the warnings, but it
was not immediately known
if the yard was struck again.
Unconfirmed reports said two
people were killed and many
injured battling riot police in
Gdansk during the night.
Soviet slave labor probed
WASHINGTON (AP ) -
Presid ent Reagan 's plan to
delive r a speech on the economy
tonight is causing headaches for
the major television networks
and their local affilia tes and
giving Democrats a case of
political apoplexy.
W ith the congressi o nal
e lections only three weeks away
and Whit e Hou se
acknowledgment tha l the
president has no plan to lay out
any new programs, Democrats
insist the speech has politics
written au over it.
Reagan and his aides say it's
nothing more than a president
reporting to the people on a
major national problem. En route
home Monday from a campaign
rally in Texaa. the president
grinned broadly as he insisted to
reporters that "the broadcast will
be non-partisan.
"Doesn't everyone want the
economy to get better?" he asked.
Democratk National Chainnan
C harl es T . M a n a tt sent a
telegram to ABC. CBS and NBC
Tuesday , urging them not to
carry the address. To do so would
"create an unfair advantage for
the Republican Party that you
cannot possi bly r e dress b y
providing time for a response,"
he wrote.
Manatt n oted that the
networks had dedined to carry a
s peec h planned by th e n -
President Carter on "important
national Issues" four months
before the 1978 congressional
elections, fon:ing Carter to cancel
his speech. E xecutives at
CBS and ABC said they were
studying the matter.
"We don't tell them how to run
their business," deputy White
House press secretary Larry
Speakes told reporters. ''You
don't tell us how to .stage the
news and we don't tell you how
to cover it"
He said the speech would be a
"progress report on th e
preside nt's economic program
and his intentions on how he wlU
keep steady on the course. I don't
l oo k right n ow for any
a nnoun cements or a ny n e w
programs."
Even if all three ne tworks
decid e to carry the speech .
there's no guarantee their local
affiliates will air It or any
Democratic respon11e. An affiliate
always has the right to reject a
network program, but the
si tuation is e ven mtdre
complicated Wednesday.
That's bec ause of lhe
particular time -4 :30 p.m.
PDT -chosen by the White
House to avoid conflicting .with
the World Series -an event
coincidentally being broadcut by
NBC. '
The 7:30-to-8 p.m. EDT time
slot at TV stations in the E!tft ii
known as the prime time ~
period, during which they air
programs of their own chOO!ling.
The period is important to ~
TV stations because they"r-e
e ntitled t o k eep all the
advertising revenue.
LONDON -Several West
European governments are
investigating charges by two
human rights groups that the
Sovie t Unio n is u si ng
thousands of p o litical
prisoners as slave laborers to
build the Siberian ga s
pipeline.
confirmed the charges.
The United States oppoees
the project for commercial
and political reaeona ~ hu
tried to delay or halt 1t by
preventing European firms
from using U.S. technology in
fulfilling pipeline contr8",.ll.
Britain, France, Wi!'it
Germa ny and Italy have
condemned the U.S . embargo
and their firm s are
proceeding with deliveries.
Rivals wooing Tylenol buyers
"Let's face it, this is a time
period that's very lucrativ~:for'
the atatione," said Scott M1cKe1a,
a CBS vice president for aff:IHate
relations. "But normally OUT
affiliates want to cover the
president and if we carry (t. I
expect they'll pick it up." ,
"I suspect that meet alfillalea
would prefer the ~ empt network time,'' Al
Flanagan, pre sident of •the
Gannett Broadcast Group, wldct1
ow ns seven network-affiliated
But the gove rnme nts.
which have a large stake in
the pipelin e and o ppose
President Reagan's sanctions
against it, say they have not
NEW YORK (AP) -In the
week after seven people died
fro m taking cyanide -laced
Tylenol capsules, sales of other
over-the -counter pain relievers
jumpe d 10 percent. And for
many consumers, an aspirin-free
product was hard to find.
Salvador fighting heavy
"There's a Jot of empty space
on the shelves." says Howard
Diener of Rite Aid Corp., which
has 1,020 drug stores in 18 states.
Until 12 days ago, one of every
three dollars s pent on non-
preecription pain relievers went
to Tylenol. SAN SALVADOR, El
Salvador -Troops backed by
U.S .-made w arplanes and
artillery battled leftist rebels
holding a northe rn town
today in fighting that has
killed at least 40 people, cut
telephone service In the east
and snarled highway traffic.
STATE
Military spokesmen said 1,-
300 soldiers were pushing to
retake Las Vueltaa, a town of
5,000 people 50 miles north of
here. which 700 guerrillas
seized Sunday night after
overrunning a 200-man army
po8t.
American Home Pro<tucts
Corr. is one company rushing to
f i l the void left b y the
withdrawal of T ylenol capsules
from ttu? market. It has boosted
production o f Anacin 3, an
aspirin-free pain reliever that
had bee n a distant second to
Tylenol in sales. Plants in New
Jeraey and Indiana that normally
op erate two s hifts are now
working around the clock, the
co m~ says. to meet an
Meteor lights up coast
"unp ented" demand.
The oompany is .continuing a
aerie• of televisi o n
advertllemen\11 in which Tylenol
ii mentioned by name. In one ad,
a w o man complaining of a
headache uys. "My doctor said
no uplrln. With thil headache, I
gue11 I'll take Tylenol."
SAN JOSE -A brilUant
ball of green light -half as
bright as the moon -that
dazzled airplane pilots and
earth-bound watchers of the
night sky, was most Ukely a
s p ect acular meteor, a n
astrono me r's he lpe r said
today.
Keith Baker . a technician
at Lick Observatory o n a
mountain east of San Jose,
We're
Llatening ~ ••
842•6088
was checking the weather
out&Sde the gjant telHCOpe's
dome about 8 p.m . Tuesday
when he noticed the trees
suddenly w ere Wutninated.
"I turned around and uw
. . . a fairly brilllant 1reen
ball ... whJch produc:ed half
u much lf&ht aa a full moon,"
Baker t4aid. ..It wa1 quite
spedalCU)ar ... much, much
bright« than Venus."
A companion advises her to
take Anacin 3 Instead. "Right,"
chimes In an announcer , "like
Tylenol, Anacin 3 la 100 percent
uplrln free." Both Tylenol and
Anacin 3 oontain acetaminophen
ipatead of upirln.
John Wood, spokesman for
American Home Products In New
What do you Uke about the DaUJ Pilot? Wha t don't you IU~e?
Call the number at left and your mwaae will be recorded.
tranleribed and deUwred to the appropriate editor.
The aame 24·hour anawertnc Mt'Vice may be 111ed to rtcord let·
ter9 to the editor on any topic. MaUbo• contributors must include
their name and telephone number for vertfkatlon. No circulation
calll, plirue.
1'elf ua what's oa your mind.
CIHIMM ........... 11W4a..71 All ...... , ......... MMll1
Jone Amerl
htcllf••• ldllcw ..........
~;;;
l . IC.y lchuth viu r,....,_
OllCi Qt1t(IOI ol ~
York, says almJlar ads have been
broadc:ast sh~ January and the
company has not c hanged its
advertising to capitalize on the
troubles of Tylenol.
"No change is planned," Wood
said.
Tylenol is still sold an table t
and liquid forms . and ita
manufacturer has o ffered t o
exchange any capsules for tablets
or cuh.
The potential for Anacin 3 to
claim a larger sh are of the
market for over-the-counter pain
relievers bu not e.caped notice
on Wall Street. From Sept. 29 -
a day before lt became known
that Extra-Strength Tylenol
capsules had been contaminated
with cyanide -until Monday,
the stock of American Home
Products climbed 13.8 percent to
a one-year hich of 47~.
In the period, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average was up 11.8
percent.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certifi~dJJ~molcwl1t, AGS
THE DIAMOND
MAMn
... up or dow•r
Like all valuable commodltJH,
diamond• are aubjfft to a value
l)'ltem nt.bllabed by the 1taee of
the world~-In other~
a diamond II worth what 10meC1N ii
wiUJnc to pay for It. Yet. throuah
f1l09t of modem history, we have
aeen diamond valun conunue to
climb -e ven feuer then the
1eneral 1rowtb ot the world
eronomy. Now, we an beuinl end
readlna aome rumors &hat Would
heYll ~ believe that \he dMmclnd
market ~ in IOl'IW kind of tlump.
That elmply isn't d\ae, lteMatch
lhowe that u P'ft9'I °' Nnlrtmn married womtn IDC a MW ..... ol dl8lnond jewelry In IMI. ,,_,., 1J
perttnt more than In ltlO, and
more than twice tM number ol,
1974 ...... ...,,. "'"""' ...... ll*Ula• In cUamondl. tlw valoe ti t'h e ve.,y rere '1 D-flawJ111"
top•1rade dlemonda has bHn
1Ubjldtd '° '°"" wide prtm .... Yet. • o.nawi.. that wM worth
about .J.02& In 18'71 19 now wocth •
about p0,000. ,,_. ltfU'W .. rat tMnwetwa.
,.
"Investors in a bull market will
setu on anything, and here you
have a huge void left by
Tylenol," says David Paialey, a
drug company analyst w ith
Merrill Lynch.
"I think in the wake of the
Tylenol scare, most coneumers
would want a recognizable brand
name. The name 'Anacin· ia as
preati&ious as just about a ny .
Anacin 3 is the only avaiJabJe
nationwide aspirin -free
competitor to Tylenol," Paisley
says.
All Anacin products, including
those with aspirin, made up l2.3
percent of the $1.2 billion U.S .
market for over-the-a>Unter pain
relievers, 'the so-called ana1g"1slca,
according to Advertlsln1 Age
magulne. 'Ibat's about a tl\1rd of
Tylenol's previous market ah.are.
Figures· for the market ah.aft
of a apirln-free Anacin 3 ,
introduced in 1977, were not
available .•
.
stat.ions. •
Flanagan suggested the time
1lot "could give the Democrat8 a
much greater problem" in getdn«
access to an iden tical slot. on
another nJcht to reply. l
"It's th e president'•
prerogative to select a "°1e
period and that doesn't cauag ta
an y problems," said Rldiard
Ballinger , vice president for
programming with Metro~
Televllion, another large gz:dlp
owner.
Ballin1er refused to ••Y
whether Metromedia's stations
a utomatically would carry a
Democradc responae. "We haw
to aee what the llftSldent doee;'
he Mid . "We don't even ~
what he'• png to uy. It mWtt not be cont1ovenial." --r--
1111111111
IREll'T
like peas
Diamond V alue
Is determined
by careful analyala
of each of the
factor• that
governs value.
• CUTTINe •COLOUR
•CLARITY
•CARAT WllGHT
.... LEia
EXPU•
..... ....
. -· Q I
~l
... Orange Ooa1t OAILY "LOT/Wedneedav, Ootobet 13, 1112 .
t Have a transportation· idea? Hearings planiied
Orana• (:ounty'1 Tranaportauon CommlllJon
ii .. kina commenta on futur~ local tranaportaUon
al&emaUve1 at two public hearlnp acheduJed lAtter
thll month. ClllTY 111111 . ' . One heartna wlU be held In the C:O.ta MOM
Ctty Council Chambera on Fair Drive 1tartJna at 7
p.m . Oct. 26. The other will take plaice In Fullerton
I Oct, 26,
tho prosram Tuelday. Jl'ourtHn employeee, whoN
ulariea will be paid by leet charlf!d to the Llrmi
they lnapect, will fonn the wat.chd<>i lfOUP·
The program, designed to decreue the IUcgal
dumping of hazardoul wutes, wlU at.art Jan. 2.
1983.
* **·
.. 1be commlalon currently ll conatderlna elQht
# different comblnaUona of road Improvement and
OOMt.ructlon plua ma.. tranlportat.lon. Aft.er the
, current round of hevtnp three al\emativee will
" be cha.en for 1tudy, and from theee will come the
plan. *** ,.
t, THE COlJNTY WILL officially have lta own
1 program to monitor flnna that generate huardoua
' wastes •tarting next year
LOW INCOME PAMILIES, aenlor cltlzeru
and handicapped county reeldenta wiahlna to be
placed on a waitlna Uat for rental aaaiatance -
lncludina aaaiatance with mobile homes •J>ACe rent
-can do 10 through the ' county Houalng
Authority.
' Orange County Suj>erviaon offlctally created The authority will a ccept re queJt• by
••
l'DOL SPURRED RECOVERY
ol from Page A1
leave when a deer hunting rifle
being handle d by Berge
diacharged. During subsequent
questioning , Berge told police he
wu return.Ing the rifle to a shelf
'f'hen it accidentally fired. No
~lminal charges have been filed
againat Berge.
Dena Farrow said Monday she
waa not even aware there was a
ollle i n the r oom. She was
standing near the door, facing
!U.e, she says, when the firearm
nt off behind her.
he single bullet entered her
er back, exited through her
omen then struck Riae in the
, according to police reports.
'I don't remembe r falling
d wn," Dena says. "But I
r ember feeling it. I didn't
"'°w I was shot. There was a h4minR feeling." !Dena says she saw her friend
Rjle collapse in front of her but
~an't sure what was wrong.
0,hera In the house called an
ambulance while Dena remained
oiJ the floor, having difficulty
b ~:g~ n I w a s i n t h e
ulance, It wasn't so acary,''
ecalls. "The worst part was
there (in the house). That l~ minutes before the ambulance ~there, I thought I might die."
"Dena and her family have high
pifaiae for the trauma staff at
FJluntain Valley Community
HtJepital. Several speci.alists were
tliere when Dena arrived and
pfrtlcipated i n the six-hour
osteration to save her life, she
-~· llJena remembers little of her
first days in the hospital's
· tensive care unit. "I was
ake, but I couldn't move and I
dn't talk," she says.
~entually, fhe was able to
I
l
"My family was
there 24 hours a
day. It was such a
close call."
communicate b y writing
messages. She says her first was,
''I want ll Coke."
She abo wrote a question to
her mother: "Did Rise die?"
Her mo th e r nodde d y es.
According to police, 14-year-old
Ri.ae had been pronounced dead
at the 11Cene of the shooting.
Dena says she was saddened,
but s he tried to keep h e r
attention on getting well 'herself.
"My family was there 24 h~urs a
day," she says. "It was such a
close call, and that was the most
. rtan t thing ... ~ring her freshman year at
Marina H ig h Sc h oo) i n
Huntington Beach, Dena was a
member of the girls volleyball
team. S he had insiste d o n
wearing No. 15 becauae it was
the number worn by Vince
F erragamo.
She wasn't an avid football fan
but had seen th e Rama
quarterback play on television
and found him to be quit e
ha ndsome . While h er school
friends collected pictures of
television stars Scott Baio and
Tom SeUeck, Dena clipped ever y
photo she c o uld find of
Ferragamo.
When the m e mbers of her
volleyball squad learned of
Dena's injury, they mounted a
campaign to coax Ferragamo to
visit Dena. As a result of their
eff or t , Dena received two
autographed photos of the
quarterback.
The Rams star al.so called the
hospital and spoke to Dena's
physician . He then called the
FLOORS.
• • •
home of Dena's aunt, where the
teen-acer .Vu recuperating. Dena
wu thrilled by the surprise call
and the chance to chat with her
Idol. .
"I waa really happy," she says.
"It cheered me up a lot."
Altho ugh Dena ca nnot
co mpe t e thi s season, her
volleyball teammates are holding
No. 15 for her. According to her
aunt, Dena's youth and good
physical condition were cruclal in
her s urvival of the s hooting
ordeal.
"I wouldn't have thought I
could have gotten through it all,"
:ihe says today. "I don't think I'll
ever forget It. Right now, It's still
a little hard to talk about it.
"I get a lot of nightmares,
mostly because I saw it all
happen. A couple of times in the
hospital, I had to have the nutses
in because I'd reUve the whole
thing, feel the gunshot, have
trouble breathing and see Rise
over there ... .''
Now. hqwever, her mind is on
the future. She must undergo
one more operation but hopes to
return to Marina High for the
second semester. (She Is now
belng tutored.)
Her doctors have even assured
her sh e'll probably be well
enough to play volleyball again
next seaaon.
"I'm not going to jump into it,"
Dena says. "But as soon as I feel
up to it, I'm going to get back in
shape."
Her aunt, Jo Ann Gudmunson,
who waited through that Friday
the 13th night when Dena was
clinging tenuously to life, isn't
conce rned about volleyball
oompetition.
"I'm just .a grateful for every
day that I can wake her up,"
Dena's aunt says. "I just thank
God I still have her with me."
tel ph9nc from U:30 ai.m. to :t p.m. until Oct. 22.
Central county retldenw 1hould call ~47·9133, and
IOUth county nitldcnta 1houJd call 708·08 11.
Quallfylns realdonta m ust nwt•t Income
auldellnm. ***
THE C OUNTY H UMAN R e lation s
ComrnJ•lon hu 'set ulde tlmo for pubUc comment
on local human relations problems at Ill meeting
Thunday.
Th' meeting wlU 1tart at 7 p.m. at the Corbin
Cent.er, 2215 W. McFadden, Santa Ana. Anyone
withing to 1peak on problems such as racism.
dt.crlmlnatlon, prejudlcie and bigotry In education,
housing, health servlceti, employment or pollcc/-
conununity relations can do IO.
Thoee lnt.cretted can call 834-4796 to reserve a
time to addret1 the cornrn!aalon.
THE IRVINE UNIFIED School Diltrlct wlll
off er S6 million In bondl tor Mlo to finance achool
c.'Ol'\ltructlon and rt=1\0ratJon ln that city.
bluance of the bonda waa approved Tu.day
by Orange County S upervlaors. The aale, tht
clathth In a .erlea authorl:r.ed by Irvine voten In
1972, will nearly complete the oriatnally-t.arQeted
$~0 million In 11ehool bond aalea.
The bondt will be oflered before Dec. 1. *** COUNTY SUPERVISORS have approved a
new revenue planning policy for John Wayne
Airport that will allow the airport to offer Ill
11ervlcea at competitive rates.
The policy, adopted Tue.day, la the product of
a study by a private conaultin& firm whk:h advised
offlclala of current charaea. coeta and practk:ett In
the airport Industry. The poUcy la expected to be a
bale from which airport offldala can make futUtt
financial deciBions and rate adjuatmenta.
.,.., ...... ,..... -., a.tee ...,.,
An autographed picture and phone call from football star Vince
Ferragamo speeded the recovery of Dena Farrow.
Our 44th Birthday Sale
continues with 20% savings
on coats!
Choose from a selection
of full length, all·weather
coats featuring zip-ou t
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Available in assorted colors
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I · 1
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Doctors repair
2 severed arms
SPRINGFIELD Ill. (AP) -Docton hope to
know in about a week whether a marathon opcruUon
•ved the ~red anna of two teen-agcn1 who were
injured 1n a freak hayride accident.
The two 13-year-olda were in fair <.'OndlUon and
.. ,_Una comfortably" 1n tht> pediatric lntenalve-care
unit of St. John'• Hoepltal, said Nancy ZJmmen, •
spokeswoman for the Southern llllnols University
School of Medlclne.
Two teams of doctors from the achool performed
an 18-hour operation over the weekend to reattach the
arm1 of Llaa Million of Murrayville and Tim
Hutchcraft of Manchester. Llaa'a left arm was severed
below the elbow and Tim's riaht arm was cut otf
above·lhe elbow In the Friday nJsht accident.
Zimmen Mid Llaa wu taken Into surgery again
Sunday for a check of reattached blood vessels. She
uJd IOme minor adjustment waa made to a vessel In
the lower part of the arm.
Docton will know In about a week whether the
operations, which began Friday n ight and ended
Saturday afternoon, were successful, Zimmers said.
The physicians, led by Ors. Reid Han.en and EloC
Erik9on of the university's division of plastic surgery,
med microecopea and special surgical equipment to
reattach nerves. ·
The Morgan Coun ty st-eriff's oflice said the
.Odent occurred about 8:30 p.m. Friday, as the teens
rode along a highway on a farm truck carrying 16
children from a Sunday school class at Murrayville
United Methodist Church.
The two limbs were severed when a red pickup
truck with stock racks to hold cattle passed in the
other direction and apparently sideswiped or nearly
hit the hayride vehicle, authorities said.
Fringe benefit
Pampas grass, a South Ame rican pla nt that
grows wild in Oc tobe r and November in
California, frames traffic along Clilf Drive in
Newport Beach.
Robinsons
Orange COMt DAIL y PILOT /Wednetday, October 13. 1882 ...
School board backs
·Banning project
Trua~ of the Newport-Meta
Unlfled School Dlatrlct wa nt
Newport Beach voten to support
development of the Banning
'Red-handed'
bank robber
dumps money
A holdup man who robbed the
First Federal Savings and Loan
In Co.ta Mesa may not have been
caught red-handed, but he didn't
get away with the money either.
Police said the gunman
simulated a gun and lnatructed
the teller to fill up an envelope
with money Monday.
The money was "baited,"
according to Lt. Tom Lazar, and
a packet of red dye exploded.
It is not known today if the
dye splashed on the bandit, but
Lazar surmises the man became
alarmed and dumped the money
i n the parking l ot of an
automobile agency near the
financial Institution at 1455 W.
Baker St.
The $518 taken in the robbery
was recovered, Lazar said.
Ranch. And tru1tPc1 ar
promt.lng a vlgo~ campaign
get their poeltlon known.
B.J . S kll llng, pre.sldcnt of th
achool board and C.'0-<ihalnnan o
the newly formed Citlutna for
Better Newport, 1&1d tru1te
have r.aued a reaoluti o
support ng the city councU's pl
for development of the ranch a
are urging a no vote on th
referendum measure Nov . Z
seeking to overturn the approval
The school district owna 11 .5 of
the 75 -acre ranch in w est
Newport Beach. In March the,
council approved a compromlstr
plan to permit construction of 379
homes and a.s much as 400,0df
square feet of office an•
industrial space on th.e sandy
property now spotted with ~
wells. ,,
Angered by the council'''
approval homeowners formed "'1
group known as \.he Wet/'1
Newport Legislative Alliant~
which led th e successf\rl
referendum drive. r
'i'· Other leaders led by Skilling
and former city mayor DQo,.
Mcinnis responded by forming
the C itizens fo r a Bell ~~
Newport. 1.R
)I
' .:
FALL SALE AND CLEARANCE
(_
330/o OFF
THIS FALL'S
FINEST BOOTS.
4 DAYS ONLY.
Make the investment of the season. now. Here. In our
outstanding collection of choice styles and very important
colors. This fall. one beautifully designed boot is all you'll need
to bring together all the Ire.sh , rich looks you love.
Over·the-knee boot from Alberto Molina. Beige or black nappa
leather Reg. $280. Sale $185.H .
To·the·knee boot from Alberto Molina. Rich taupe or black
nappa leather. Reg. $200. Sale $129.99.
Over-the-knee boot from Hanna Mackler. Napps leather in
palomino or brown. Reg . $190. Sale $125.99.
Pull·on boot from Barefoot Orlglnals. Black, taupe or gray
calfskin. Reg. $180. Sale $119.99.
Zip-up boot from Barefoot Originals. Brown. black or taupe
calfskin. Reg. $165. Sale S109.99.
Styles may vary by store. Robinson 's Women's Shoes,
47/Shoe Salon. 64. To order. call totl·free 1·800·345·8501
Roblnaon'1 Fall Siie and Cft1r1nc1 endl tutdly. Octot>er 18. Hurry In Whll• quantities are qlentlfut
1nd -.c11on1 t>etenatve. Air ltema IUbJtct to prior aa• )
1·
J.
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A• Orange Oou• DAIL v PILOT IWedneeday. October 13, t812
Airport parking plan
no basis for new s uit
As w e have o bserve d
repeatedly, John Wayne Airport lB
beset with problems that can be
resolved only through a
cooperative approach between
Orange County government and
Newport Beach.
The two sides at loggerheads
over the airport expansion issue
m'uat put emotions aside and work
together to find aolutions.
Further liUgatJon over airport
issues is not in the public interest.
For those r easons, it is
somewhat dlst.ressing to hear that
the city once again may be gearing
up for a legal assault on a county
government airport proposal. This
time, the city is concemoo about
the county's preliminary plans to
construct a parking J6t in the so-
called "clear zone" -a vacant
area of land north of the San
Diego Freeway.
Under the county proposal,
1,800 cars could be parked on the
land located under the typical
approach pattern.
This additional parking is
necessary. One does not need to be
an expert in airport matters to
r ealize that more/arklng is
needed. That nee can only
increase as passenger demand
continues to mount. And such an
increase in demand is a virtual
certainty. When the economy
Improves more poople will be
turning t o air travel. The
additional jetliner capacity already
exists to serve them -lar1ely
through the Introduction of larger
jets that hold 50 percent more
passengers.
The argument advanced by
the city ls that the parking project
would violate an Orange County
Superior Court order prohibltln&
significant changes at the alrport
pending new environmental
studies on airport expansion. The
city won that order shortly after
mounting a successful challenge to
the county's alrport master plan, a
far-reaching proposal to incr~
the airport's capacity.
How significant a change
would the parking lot bring? By
some accounts, its effect would be
positive. Cars that o therwise
would be forced into the already
congested airport terminal area
would be located some distance
away. This couldn't hurt.
Newport Beach's response to
the county's proposal seems to be
of the kneejerk variety. Once
again, we urge the city to think
twice before heading for the
cou r troom and to meet and
negotiate in an attempt to reach an
acceptable compromise.
Library a public asSet
Public libraries have been
ha rd hit in recent economy waves,
often obliged to reduce hours and
staffing and cut back on book
purchases.
The Huntington Beach City
Council was well advised last
week to recognize the important
role a free public library can play
in a community.
Seeking ways to Lmprove the
city library's financial situation,
the council considered, but swiftly
rejected, a proposal to charge for
library cards.
The city's community services
department had recommended a
fee of $4 a year for people 17 and
younger; $4 for senior citizens; $10
for adult residents under 62 and
$1 5 for non-residents.
The fees would have raised
an estimated $160,000 annually.
Council members wisely
recogni~ that the most constant
users of libraries are apt to be
people who cannot afford to buy
books, s tud e nts who n eed
reference material and families
who w ant to introduce their
youngsters to the pleasures of
reading with out going to the
expense of investing in stacks of
now rather costly children's books.
For many of these, a card fee
could be a deterrent to library use.
The councll did,. however ,
vote to increase the current library
enrichment fee on residential
building permits and to impose a
similar fee on commercial and
industrial permits, formerly
exempt from the charge. This
move is expected to raise about
$200,000 for oper ation of the
library, which costs about $2
million a year.
Since the existence of the
library enhances the community
as a whole, thl.s makes good sense.
Job training not enough
After some initial resistance,
President Reagan now is lauding a
$3.7 billion job-training measure
enacted by Congress to replace the
expiring Comprehensive
Employment and 'I:raining Act
(CET A) that has provided
hundreds of thousands of pu blic
service jobs.
The program is designed to
equip poor, unemployed and
dislocated workers for jobs, with
emphasis on re-training for
workers whose skills do not fit
current employment needs.
The measure provides that 70
cents of every dollar spent will go
to actual training, including
limited work experience, with the
b;llance for administrative costs.
Under the CETA program only 20
cents went for training. with most
of the funding used to subsidize
wages paid to employees hired
through the program for public
eervice jobs.
It was only after h e was
aasured there would be no creation
of public service jobs that the
president accepted the job training
meuure. Congress may have additional
ideaa after the election is over. Job
training is a U8ef u l step, but it does
little or nothing right now to
combat the shocking rise in
unemployment that finds 11 .3
million Americans out of work.
At bes t , training or r e-
training is a long-term approach.
The goal is admirable, but it does
not answer the immediate need.
For that reason, there is a
move in Congress to drive for a
massive stop -gap job-creation
program, perhaps similar to the
Works Progress Administration
(WPA) of the Depression era.
Like CET A , the WPA was
Jrnuch maligned for creating
make-work jobs -but it did put
pay checks in pockets and food
on the table for people who
otherwise would be on soup lines
-and restore at least a little of
their pride.
Unfortunately, the latest
statistics reveal that th.ere is aome
reason for comparison. The 10.l
percent jobless rate reported early
this month is the highest since
May of 1941 when unemployment
hit 10.9 percent and 5.7 million
were out of work. Just a~out
double that number are jobless
right now.
Political ideologues may scoff
at make-work, but under some
circumstances it can be a great
deal better than no work at all.
And, unUl the effect of the Job
training program is felt a cou ple of
years down the road. thl.s might be
one of tha11e Umee.
L.M. Boyd/ Train buff special
From London to Hong Kong, \Mt'•
\he 9,331 -mlle train trip mott
pref.iirred u.. day. by thoee •portl'
wholride the re!lrmda for pleMure.
RequJnm about • monlb, live or take
1 week. Depend• on connnectlone
betwen aewn tnlna. And It coetl
epproidmately M,000. I 1ue .. the
United S"tel *''' the only ~ntry In
ORANGE COAST DallyPi~
the world wtthout 1ood pauenger
train .wvtce, but It'• the only country
that eutomobU~ l\I train• out of
bullnell.
T h e law tn Shreveport, La ..
prohlbHa funeral dlrectora from atvtnc away book metchel..
n-Ma , . ...., ,.....,
J-.A_.
lM<lllM fdleot ....... .,.......
1111orwr.e.. n.-MIC-~.._
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Q:utt\I\',
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Brown vs. Wilson on the
'•I • • I air
LOS ANGELES -AB the October
stretch drive by Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. to save his career harped on the
economy, Republicans readied a political
blunt lnstrumen't int.ended to take the
voter's mind off unemployraent,
bankruptcies and economic stagnation.
A new television commercial features
a photograph depicting Brown with that
famous left activist team, Tom Hayden
and Jane Fonda, showing all three with
upraised , clenched-fist salutes. The
grainy, black-and-while photograph,
says one aide to Republican candidate to
Republican candidate Pete Wilson,
"looks almost like it was taken in
Moscow." This need to return to the
campaign spotlight to Gov. Moonbeam is
testimony to the resurrection of his
once-forlorn campaign for the Senate.
JUST TWO months ago, Brown trailed
Wilson by more than 20 percentage
points. attributable to extraordinary
negative ratings. The race probably
could not have become the present dead
heat without blunders by Wilson. the
longtime mayor of San Diego in his first
statewide general election campaign. But
Brown's resurrection can also thank
Republican "difficulty nationwide with
Reagan and Reaganomics.
From the start, Brown's strategy was
to take attention off eight exotic years as
governor and particularly last year's
Medfly fluco and focus it instead on the
economy. However. his plan last summer
to wrap President Reagan and his
economic record around Wilson's neck
hu changed. Reaganomics, yes: Reagan,
no.
Bro wn's key comme r cia l i n his
October telev1s1on buy has the governor
on camera asking: "What k ind of
economic program raises interest rates so
families can no longer afford t.o buy a
home? Or allows more and more of our
cilizens to lose their jobs or their
~1~r:· 1-,.-•• -/-11-11-1 -~
busihesses?" The theme is echoed in
Brown's dai ly speeches. indicting
"monetarism and exc.-essive tax cuts" as
the cause for recession. But never is
Ronald Reagan's name mentioned.
Why? "I think I can work w ith
Reagan (as a senator)," a ~traight-Caced
Brown explained to us. "I want to work
with the president." The tactical shHt ls
caused partly by Reaga n's resilie nt
popularity, but mostly by Brown's
perception that Wilson has become a
much easier target. Brown hits Wilson's
"senatorial capacity" as an issue, and
Republican politicians sadly agree that
their candidate's own blunders have
made this possible.
Actua lly. Wilson's supposed fumbling
is exaggerated. His offhand remark to
reporters that federal judges (including
Suvreme Court justices) ought to be
s ubject to recall by voters as are
California state Judges is viewed by
Brown as a major fumble but ge ts
overwhelming voter approval In private
surveys. The WU.On blunder that really
hurt was his suggestion of voluntary
Social Security for younger workers, but
the devastating Brown te l~vision•
commercial clipping away at a Social 1,
Security card was in the can before
Wllaon stumbled. '
Once the Social Security scare cloaed
the gap, Wilaon !aced problems common
to all Republicans dealing with the .
economy this year. He has one television
commercial blasting Brown as a taxer
but it ia not reinforced by daily speeches.
The tax-cut issue, in fact. wu devutat.ed
by Reagan's $100 billion tax increase
which Wilson opposed ("ridiculous to
increase taxes at the h eight of a
recession") and Brown supported.
WILSON'S EFFORTS to capitalize on
crime by a ttacking Brown's more
controversial and eccent.ric judgeship
selection has fizzled; the TV commercial
has been withdrawn. That still leaves I
Wilson with reasonable hopes that1 Californians have had enough of Jerry
Brown, bum economy or not. To portray
him with brother Tom and sister Jane is
a memory -jogging exercise casting
Brown on the radjcaJ left.
But the governor keeps far away from
Hayden and Fonda this autumn. Gov.
Moonbeam is on vacation, spinning out
no innovative and outrageous new ideas.
"I don't shoot from the hip," he told us .
in refusing to end orse congreuional
Democratic efforts to force down intetts:i
rates. By showing such restraint now
and sticking to bread -and-butte·~
maulif\8 of Reaganomics. Brown, at age
41 . is planning on six yean of
unrestrained hlp-ahoo\U)g in the~~
and an inevitable resumption 10me ~
of hia frustrated quest for the White
Hou.te.
••
Trip to the dump can he uplifting :; ..
President Reagan says thus country is
in desperate need of a moral revival. He
isn't the first one to say it, either. Almost
anyone who says anything has been
saying it for years. The trouble is, no one
knows how to revive us morally.
I have a simple idea that might just do
the trick. I say. we should all take our
own garbage to the dump. Every able-
bodied person in thE: country would set
aside an hour twice a week to diapoee of
trash and garbage. There would be no
exceptions. President Reagan would
pack up what.ever wut.e was produced
in the private rooms of the Whlte House
and take It to the dump juat like the rest
of us. A president should keep In touch
with reality, too.
GOING TO the dump is a real and
exhilarating experience. It is both
satisfying and educational. It makes you
acutely aware of what you have uad in
your home and what you have wasted.
There's no faking it with garbage.
In a family. dump duty would be
divided up. The kids would take their
turns 1oing to the dump with the adults.
A kid can get to be votinl qe without
knowing that the was\ebuket or the
garbage pail isn't tht• end of the line If he
or she has never been to the dump.
Children too young to drive would, of
course. accompany an adult lo the dump.
The first thing you realize when you
go lo the dump la that we should be a lot.
AllY lllllY
more careful in separating what
professional garbage men (or·
"garbagepeople," if you prefer) call "wet
garbage" and just trash. All garbage ls
not the same. Trash Is cans. bOUles.
papers. cardboard boxes and broken
electrical appliances. "Wet garbage"
comes from the kitchen.
Second. you .have to get over that
natural feeling of revulsion that garbage
tends to induce. Keep in mind that coffee
grounds. watennelon rinda, potato peela
and com cobs were not revolting before
we made them what they are today and
mixed them together in our garbage paU.
Think of them separately and in thelr
Drivers we can do without
Motorists Whose L lcen11e• 1 Would
Gladly Revoke:
The Gar.er: He is juat touring around
and doesn t know where he's golna, and
doem't care. He is likely to atop on a
dime. tum right with hll left blinker, or
turn le ft with no blinker. All hi•
dec.iaiona are lmpu)ltve and unleta you
are a mlnd-retldet you are be.st trailing
him by a full block.
11M Tallptet: Next to the lnebria\ed
speeder, the rno9t danproua man on the
oblivious to all the -facts of vehicular life.
The Punk: He uses hla auto as a
weapon to demonstrate his dubious
machlmlo. The only predictable thing
about bl.I driving la th.at he is totalJy
unpredk:\able. If you value your nubUe
dau,htet'• life, keep her out of his heap.
Fortunately, his numbers are reduced
annually by running lnto trees, rolling
Into 1or1" and "beating" trains to a C'f'Omin8. Unfortunately, he often taket
lnnoaent perdea along with him.
TllB WISHY·WASHY: This motorlJt la
80 afraid of traffic that he ahould be
drtvtna a tricycle on the eldewalk. He eornmr .. the oppoa.ite aJn of the lmpulalvc
drtwr: tndec:Won ii hll middle name, IO
thal thwe ii no way to tell when he la
.... to ltop. atart. tum or ao stralaht
jheM. l..Ake the StMdy, he la reaponeil>le
fGr 1 ~ number of acddents involving ~ odWr than hll own caUled by the
.._. fnatn~ of hll fellow motoriatl.
The Keadli*hi..r: He ·comd in two
c118Unrtly different blwda. OM bl'ffd
Ina h1I Ulh'8 until It II t.oo dark to 9N
The Sweely: U...Uy a nanl mMDI 6it him: be fallt &O ,....p the potnt that weuine a hat. who drtv. 11 1 "'9dy bMdUah• 1t dulk an not IO .. with,
1low patt, •• thou1h ln 1 vacuum, bu' to be ..,,. by. HAI ODD091te number
paJinl aa.olutely no atllndon ID .,:r ac..,. hll bftCh• an all "the time; tf he
CMMI' lrlltlc baa. dlll II '1111'' .• dam dim u.n a& 1fM! approM:h. he._
Re II ....,.....,.. ror a lncaJwllbl• '° la• and nl&ldilndy -and he never numbll' of mddlftll M II nal lnvolwd in ,...... that M lhouJCt do 80 aJlo WMn
... knDwl nochiM llllaiuC. ...... M II ' foUotlrl1W I ml' ll ...... L
I ~ A t
' ...
original state' and make a Utt.le game ol
breaking down the odor into its
component parts. ·
It is pcmible to be overcome by a .en.se
of your p~ In history at the dwnp. ·
You are. at that moment. • part of the
future of the univene. Yau are helping
to rearrange the planet Earth. Man has
always considered hlnwelf aieparate from
nature. but a trip to the garbage dump
can make him aware that he la not. 10 t~ millions and millions of yean Earth
has existed, there have been conat.aot
c:Unges taking place. You probably live
in a dty that wu once a lake or an ocean.
The mountains you see may have had
their cliff• 1heared clean by a glad'-".
when It moved relentlessly through y~_,
area an eon ago. dropping rich, loam)',
topaoil In the valley when lt, meltedi
Now, like the glaciers, you ar~ doing
your part to rearrange the location of the
elements on Earth.
U'ITLE BY LITl'LE, we are ~
up material from the ground in 1er8':.
amounts in one place. maki.ng 90methiJjg.
of it, shipping It acroes the country to
other places . using the ten thousand
separate Uttle plies called dumps in other.
places. ln the process~ we often ruin bota
places. ~
If being in on this cosmic kind Q(.
cosmetics doesn't interest you to thirik.
about at the dump, there are other
pleasures. There ls a cathartic pleMUre ~
be got from getting rid of stuff at ~
dump and there Is a camaraderie ~.
neighbors there that doesn't exllt at ~
supermarket. Crime and unemployment
are almoet non-existent. Everyone at ~
dump feels he ls doing a good and ~
thing and lt gives him a warm aer.-~
fellow-feeling to know that othera, many
with more expenalve can, are doinc the
same grubtu'. down-to--e.rth job. at--
Nowhere 11 morality hlaher ill'
America than at the dump Satu~ mominc and I recommend a trip theft •
a pomible cure Jbr what ai1I ua .
llml•
Tell Penny Pincher (Gua, Oct. I) that
admtnl1tr1ton ln the Newpor\·a
Unified School Dta~ achedule
"retreata" at \he Cotta Me
Netpborhood <Ant« -hardly _.. ''the nat expmwlw ....._.. -~:'!'!
IU.8.
I I
-Orange OoHt DAILY PILOT/WednUday, October 13, 1982 A7
• ANN LANDERS
•HOROSCOPE
• DR. 8TEINCROHN
Surgery answer to ,solving male impotence
DEAR ANN LAND.ERB: Several limca I have
eeen Jeti.n ln your colwnn about men who are
lmpo'8nt, but 1 n.ver ~ h&vlng read anything tua-tina the aurstcal procedure known aa the
peNle Implant or penile proatheeia.
1 am a u.ro&ccY nu.ne ln a large hoepltal and we
have don. eeveral 1uch operations here -all
.~. There are two typet of penile lmplanta:
the rod proau..m and the Inflatable type. FJght out
of 10 men prefer the lnflatable.
The men we have had here are bet ween 29 and
69. Moat were impotent because o f diabetes,
endocrlnolo1tcal or neurological problems, or
lnjuriee. A few were lmpotent because of severe
peycholocical problems that could not be worked
out with a theraplat.
Pleue tell your readers not to be embarraaecl
Rout di1cu11lng this procedure with their
physician. UrolOfiiata are the specialists in this field.
He (or ahe) will explain the differences In the t~o .
... In our hospital the patients must meet certal.n
•9lndard1 before they will be accepted as
111
l ....
~y PHIL INTERLANDI of LagunaSeach
h
...
( I
"•••>'""'' .. ,vi .. ,~ ... ..,,,. "'"'""'"'"'''j .... ....,
111
1,..1" ·•••"'\•
l!tJlt was designed by a crossword puzzle 1freak."
cancUdata: (1) 1trong eexual desire; (2) the pretence
of tome penile sensation ; (3) a willing and
au pportlve sexual partner; (4) freedom from
gerontourinary problema. Some paych plogical teetJ.na ta a1ao requinld.
1 hope you wW ah.are th1a lnlormatJon with
your readen. It could chanae Uvea. -UROLOGY NURSE IN THE SOUTH'Wt.ST
DEAR NURSE: TUak JH for dM oppommJty
lO tell my reader• U..t ,..Ue lmplub ...... l
laave pri8te4 atvtnJ coa.mu oa Wa Hbjeet, ••
well •• lttten frem mea .. ,,......_ sratltMe for "a 1ew Wt."
Tlal1 Hr1tcal procedart 11 a metlc.loua
teclmJfl.e, b•t well io1,ra&e4 by &Ile P9lltnt 11Dce
tlaere 11 llUle 1011 of blood, no cattln1 Into major
or1u1 ud mlnlmal llHH dlat•naace.
Tile paperback edltlOD of tlae Ann Landers
Encyclopedia Illas a ·splendid claapter on tlal1
subject by F . Braatlty Scott of ~ouaton . He
l.AllDllS
Implanted tlte first nclil device la 1973. Tbere ls
alto a U1t of H major lao1plt1l1 wbere penile
lmplutlDI 11 bel•I done.
BeeHte of &Ile reaaons ll1ted, not every male
It a saltable cudlclate, but It 11 certainly wortb
looklD1 l1to.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A married female
acquaintance of both me and my huaband has been
giving my husband the come-on for five years. He
does not encourage her to my knowledge. Her
aggreaive behavior haa been calJed to my attention
by others, so It isn't just my imagination.
•
Thia woman work8 In a place of buslneu where
my h usband ill n.'tjuln.'CI lo t'h<.'C'k In regularly, 10 he
cannot avoid her enUrt•ly. Fronkly, l um •ick to
death of lt.
Who should tell her to lttlock It off, my
husband or me? (We are equally clOllC to her.) ln my
opinion it would be more t•Hectlvc (.'Omlng Crom
hjm. -KEEPING MY COOL IN CLEVELAND
DEAR COOL: A woman wbo 1oe1 to a tblrd
party ud says, "I wut you to atop mrt1n1 wltb my
buabud," comes off looking fri1latened and fooU1b.
A1ldn1 your b11bud to tell ber lO lay off 11 an
adml11lon tbat r.ou feel threatened. If notlltaa la
broke, dear, don t try lO flx lt.
ls alcoholism rummg your life? Know the
danger signals and what to do. Read the bookle t,
''Alcohobsm -Hope and Help," by Ann Landet'B.
Enclose 50 cenis with your request and a long,
s tamped. self-addressed envelope to Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11995, Chicago. fl/. 60611.
Everything up with president's po·oh
Whom s hould I share an elevator with the
other day but Winston J . (Winnie) Pooh, counsel for
the president's chairman of economic advisers.
"Up!" cried Pooh on entering. But u we were
on the top floor, u.e elevator lnaiated on deteendlng.
Pooh didn't set!m to mind. He looked about,
beaming, and said to no one ln particular: "Every
one of our latest K'Onomic indicators Indicates the
economy I.a soaring."
"Come, come, Pooh," I said. "What about
housing st.arts? No one but a coke dealer, an oil
baron or some other crook can afford a hou.e these
days. And, as for new car sales, who's got ten
grand?"
"EXACTLY," SAID POOH. "Our earlier
economic indicators no longer indicated a thing to
the average American. That is why we have
replaced new car sales and houaing starts in our
latest economic indicators."
"With what?"
"Used van sales. Particularly thoae with room
for a family of four in the back. And believe you
me. they're booming. Used vans, baUng wire and
duct tape. Yes. sir, we're on the road to prosperity."
I s ho o k my h ea d . "What ab ou t
unemployment?" I uked.
"We look at employment instead," he said.
"For example, think of all the happy lawyen who
-·
AtT HOPPE
THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER
are making small fortunes on bankruptcies and
foreclosures. Panhandling is also a growth industry.
And I think I can safely say that loitering is making
a stunning comeback.•· ·
"But there are close to 11 million unemployed,"
I said.
"Yes, and that's been a real shot in the ann for
television viewing. library book borrowing and
sex."
"Sex?"
"It sure beats a $5 movie when you're out of a
job. And more slenderizing, too, than all that yucky
popcorn. Shows you how our latest economic
Indicators ae concerned with the good of the
nation."
"They are?" •
"CERTAINLY. TAKE ENERGY conservation.
We .rsed to measure the production of clothes
driers. As that's not a significant figure anymore,
we have diacovered that KJinger'a Clothesline Co.
GOif i ON lllDGf
BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
of Cleveland turned out 27 ,683 more feet this
August than it did last Novcmbem:.. Let it all hang
out, we say."
"That's good news."
"And recycling's finally catching on! We've
found a big upswing in used clothes, experienced
furniture and designer jean patches."
"Are you talking about Gloria Vanderbilt
designing patches for jeans?"
"No. I'm talking about paiches designed for
Gloria Vanderbilt's jeans. But they fat all sizes."
"That will help the environment," l agreed.
"You bet. The shoe repair business is up along
with shoe repair materials. such as cardboard
insoles. There's a tremendous demand for coupons.
And cat food consumption IS gomg sky-high."
"I DIDN'T KNOW WE had more-cats."
"Who counlS cats?"
We reached th<.' lobby. I followed Pooh out onto
the sidewalk when .. he attempted to hail a cab by
holding a forefinger in the air while cheerily
crying. "Up! Up!"
"J ust a minute, Pooh," I said. "It seems to me
that you've select<.-'d only the cconom1c indicators
that indicate the e<..'Onomy is going up."
"What 'else can we do?" he said with a sigh.
"The rest of the economjst.s are using all the other
ones.''
North-South vulnerable.
South deals. Opening lead: King o( 'V. No matter what he did. the
defenders could get no more
tricks. 'NORTH +uu
'V 753
0 lUS'
•KU
WEST EAST
• 7! •• ,
It was a 3-to·l chance that
one of two obvious finesses
would succeed. But declarer
made his contract because he
round a third finesse!
Wesl attarked with the
king or hearts, and the
derenders raked in their l wo
tricks in the suit before
declarer ruUc•d the third
round. He drew trumps in
two rou nds and it seemed
that a II he needed to do for
his rontrart was to take a
finesse in each minor suit. If
Eaal had either minor-s1,1it
queen, declarer would be
home. •
Purisls might argue thal
the end play stood far less
chanre than two finesses. But
lhey would be overlooking
l he nine or clubs in dummy!
Suppose that East won the
l hird diamond -declarer
would still have a 3-to-I
chance for hil' contract! II
East has either the queen or
ten of clubs. declarer will
make his contract by letting
l::ast's shift to a low club run
to the K-9 In dummy. If West
comes up with lhe Len.
dech1rer lakes dummy's king
and still has a finesse for the
queen availa ble Bul look al
the extra chances de·clarer
ha'! prov1dl'd for himself. He
ran drop a doubleton queen
or diamond ... or claim his co n·
lrart any 11me that West has
tht• qut•t'n 1n Lhat suit.
"KQJ8 'V Atl2
o QI082 0 975
• Q84 + 10785
SOUTH
+ AkQlOS
"'19' o AJ3
•AU
The bidding: ••tll We1t Nwtll Ea1t
l + r ... z • PaH + P ... P ... Pa11
The auction was routi ne.
South started with one spade
on a hand wort h 20 points.
then jumped to game when
his partner mustered a sim·
pie raise. As the cards lie
three' no t rump would have
been a laydown because of
the even break in hearts. but
the spade game was the
superior contract.
To everyone's surprise,
however. declarer continued
with the king and ace or
diamonds and, when the
queen did not drop, he oiled
with the jack. West won the
queen but he was end played.
Have you been runnin1 la·
to double tro•ble? Let
Charle. Gore. help you tiad
your way throqh the mue
of l>OUBLES for peaa.ltlea
and for takeout. For a e.py of
hi1 DOUBLES booklet, 11end
11.85 to "Goren·Doublea,''
care of thi1 new1paper, P.O.
Bo:a 259, Norwood. N.J.
07648. Mab check• payable
to New1paperbooka.
Vaccination has risks for elderly
. DEAR DR. STEINCROBN: J wut my fa&ller,
DOW 7i, aroad for a IOlll, ... , dme. J~e bea after
blm to 1et vacclaated a1alHt pnHmococcal
paeamoala. B•t •e 1tdbonlly refaea. "I feel fine now:' lte aaya.,.•fty .... Id I take Ute dauce of
po11lble compUeadoel' from vacelutloa?'' I aalled
~· doctor aboet It. I was 1uprbed wlaea •• a1reed
wltlil my fadler. He alll•lled apta1t vacclutMa at
dlt1 time. He saJlll •e .uda't IMlleve In vacelut1111
laealdly oldaten. Row •o )'M feel abollt It? -MR. z.
DEAR MR. Z.: l have not believed lt wu load
practioe to vaadnat.e all elderly Individuals. Much
depend8 upon their praent 1tat.e of health. l think
the dedsion of your fathtt'a doctor' la aupponed by
a recent notation Jn G•rl•trlcs. It states that
unive,..l vacdnatton of healthy elderly •lalnat
pneumonia la not .clviled by the American c.ou.
of Physidana. It naJllll1Wndl that patltnta lhould
be evaluated indMdually.
However, lt lhouJd be Uled in pat.l.ntm who
•
(POT SIOU
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
......
L .. T'S
MAKE IT:
DIEl'INITt:
•'~L Sar YOU
WHIEN I •EK YOU.
T JOUI llAl TH
DA. PETER J. STEINCROHN
face an incttued risk of death becauae of aevere
anemia, chronic alcoholiml, oonasuve heart failure,
cinhotit, diabetes, IW\al failure. Patlenta 1houJd
al.o be told that vacdnatJon doesn't eliminate all
ri.sk of pneumonia.
DEAR OR. STEINCROHN: My laHband 11
recoverta1 from a tntn Hart attadl. I &eJl Mm
M'll laave so eMale 1111 ••YI If M MDel SO Jive
..... He 11y1 M'lf t:rJ. I 111, "Y .. 11 U•• te do
..,. ~ try." b It ,....le for • mu wlMt •••
aJway1 ...ier &eMlM &e lean te nlas? -MRS. F.
two friend• wlto recently fot "accidentally"
tafeeted wbJle la a bo1pltal. s tbls common'? -
MRS. Y.
DEAR MRS. Y.: Unquestionably, hospital-
acquired infections need better con trols. One
estimate is that each yea.r, more than two miJJion
hospitalized patients become Infected. One simple
way to prevent infections is more fre')uent
handwashing by hospital personnel. Another ls to
UR dbcttUon Ii\ cathet.ertzatlon of patients.
FOR MRS. 0 .: You have not been getting
anythina "special" In the fonn of ascorbic acid to
pr~nt your c:otds from hounding you. h 's merely
another name for vitamin C. (And I'm not sure that
thia vitamin will prevent colds -or shorten them.)
DEAR DR. STEINCRORN: MJ h1baad'1
1ambll81 laa1 aboat nbtff Hr married life. It'• ~mpeltlve. He woa't 10 to o•r docter for laelp. la
&Mrt U)'U.ID1 else to do? -MRS. It
Di.AR MRS. K.: Undoubtedly. tuch flambllnc
is an addlc:t.lon. In eome cus, thaee who have bttn
kept from 1•mblln8 had withdrawal aymptoma
auch u 1we.ttJna. nal.lllM, abdominal crunpe -u lf
they were dJ'\11 addlctl without thetr drua·
Meenwhlle, why not have him jo6n Oamblen
Anonymoua? I've received a few lietten uylna this
hu helped. u ~l. a psycholopt mar help
by dtMnlluana him .,a!Nt the htbtt. Not 8'1·
FOR MRS. U.: If >'O" find thtt you can't take
•many uplrinl • fomwrly to control your arthritic
patna, Ilk your doctor about • new mecUcaUon
caUec:l CllnOril which hat bMn found helpful ln nattnc varicq fonne of ll'U\rttll. Tllken twa a
day, '' can be • •fr.uve bl many IMtancet u tak!N 1-12 MPlrlnl a day. There ~ be aome
a6de:.elf1eta uu d#at._, ..... or ._... -but
.... rwUoN.,. ....a.Dy mdd
\
'~· Or~ Cout DAILY PILOT/WednMday. Ootober 13, 1982
Avco must
repay customers
'IJ PAT HOROWITZ !If ... ...., ........
DEAR READERS: Avco Financial
Servlcea of Southern California haa been
ordered to pay reetJtutlon to more than 125,-
000 of l_Y-cuatomen In a landmark decision by
Loa Ariieles Superior Court Judge Christian
E. Markey Jr.
The case Involved Avco'a practice of
"flipping," or converting credit sales contract.a
Into Joana In order \0 charge a higher Interest
rate and to evade other consumer protection
law1. Avco al.o was ordered to Inform ita
cuttomera orally and in writing that the
property insurance it sells does not cover
theft.
The judgment require• Avco to make
netitutlon to all it.a cuatomen whose retail
lnatallment aalea contracts were "flipped" .me. October 1975. The '"te Department of
Conawner Affairs estimaufithat this Involves
more than 125,000 Avc..'O cua\Omera.
The restitution ordered would be the
dollar value difference between what
cona~n would have paid under the legal
in terest rate and what they actually paid
under the illegal interKt rate resulting from
the flipping. Avco muat pay consumers 7
percent interest from the date of the "flip."
The J>roce98 of returning the money will be
1upervt.ed by the Department of Consumer
Affairs and Patricia Tenoso Sturdevant,
at\Omey for the plaintiff. It will be several
months before Avco act ually returns any
money \0 its customers.
The plaintiff in the lawsuit, Amelia
Vuquez, was awarded a wt.al of $12,681.32,
including interest and punitive damages. She
was joined in the lawsuit by the dlrec\Or of the
Department of Consumer Affairs, who argued
on behaU of all California coru1umers that
Avco 1hould cease its flipping practke and pay
restitution \0 all victims of it.
In the judgmenta, tho court enjoined Avco
from lmpo11lng finance ctutraet In violation or
the Unruh Act, from ta.kin& • .ecurtty lntere.t
In lt1 cu1tomer1' 1ood1 other than those
purchucd under th~ retail inatallroont aale.
and from providing In It• contractl that the
customer a1rce1 to allow Avco to obtain a
deficiency judgment or In any way 1ubject1na
Its customers to the risk of deficiency
judgment. Avco allo must ulid a lonn when
refinancing retail lna\allment aa1e1 c:ontracll
which clearly disclose• tho term• of the
contract to It.II cua\Omers.
Ca lcium pills val uable
DEAR PAT: My motlier 11 81 year1 old.
Her doctor aay1 1be baa 01teoporotl1 aad tbat
lier boaea bave become fraslle aad brittle. He
told ber to take calclam plll1 to belp JllJI
coadlUoa. I wonder If tbl1 doe1 any good or lf
It'• a aeedle11 expeaae to ber.
F.E., Co1ta Mesa
Osteoporosis, or loss of bone minerals, is a
condition which affects between 80 to 85
pereent or the female elderly In the United
"States to some degree. This fragile bone
conciltion increases the danger of broken
bones as well as being painful.
A study conducted in Kentucky supports
your mother's treatment. It indicated that 11
out of 12 elderly women suffering from
osteoporosis increased their bone densities
''significantly" after supplementing their diets
' for six months with calcium.
• , Got a problem? Then wri;~ to
"
Pat .Horowitz. Pat will cut n;cJ tape,
gelling the answers and actJon you
·n eed to solve inequities in
government "nd busine5s. Mail your questions
to Pat Horowitz, At Your Service, Orange
Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. &x 1560, Costa Mesa.
. CA. 92626.
Sex Rx for cancer victims
LA JOLLA (AP) -Cancer-division at Stanford Medical,
1tricken husbands and wives Center.
could benefit from sexual The newly d eve l o p e d
intimacy if they are physically treatment methods have led to
able and their partners find It -better than 80 percent survival at
appealing, a psychiatrist says. five years for all stages of the
Sex can be an import.ant way ·disease, Rosenberg said. "Results
to deal with the depression have been even more dramatic in
brough t on by the disease, Dr. c hildre n . with 96 pe r ce nt
Theresa Crenshaw said in a surviving after 11 years and 93
speech Monday at the sixth percent permanently cured," he
annual cancer symposium at said.
Rosenberg said he and his
colleagues are working now on
even more effective treatment
programs using drugs with a
narrower s pectrum o f s ide
effects.
"It's a measure of our success
that in a disease that was once
invariably fatal, we ca n now
shoot for improving the quality
of life rather than just survival,"
he said.
Scripps Memorial Hospital. ~~~sc~e~3~~~ U.S. population up
of the department of human
MXUality at the University of
California'• San Diego School of
Medicine.
In another leSllion, a Stanford
University reeeareher said major
edentlfk advances have boosted
the survival rate among sufferers
of Hodgkina' diaeaae.
'Hodgk1na' di.aeaae "is no longer
as major a threat \0 the 7 ,000 \0
8,000 Americana it afflicts each
year ," said Dr. Saul A .
Roeenberg, head of the oncology
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
rate of population Increase la up
slightly, as the United St.ates hU
added nearly four ~Won people
since the census wu taken In
1980, the Census Bureau
reported.
The bureau estimated the
populatio11, as of Jan. l, 1982, at
23 1,012,000, a.n incre'ase of
3,992,000 since the census.
The bureau said the rate of
increase grew from 7.0 r 1,000
residents in 1980 to 7.2 per 1,000
in 15181 due \0 a alight increaae in
the birth rate and a small drop in
the .death rate.
Net civilian immigration in
1981 was 514,000, the bureau
said, compared to 654,000 the
year before and 499,000 in 1979.
Of the 2.6 million increase in
the U.S . population in the 15
months following the census, 1.6
million occurred in the South and
1.0 million In the West.
'NEW
9.50% =ualired
RM ACCOUNT
I 0. 11 % * Welcialiied
•a 2117to 31...,., Mlnl111u211 Balance $20,000.
Act today on this high rat.e account Stop in at your nearest Allstat.e Savings
office or call collect (213) 240-5913 and a member of our Bank-by-Mail
Department will be happy to help you. This account is fully insured up
to $100,000 by the FSLIC. "
AllSIBIB sav1nos
Allstate Savings & Loan. a member of the Sears fanily. Over S3 billion in assets. C l982AJlstate Savings & Loan
BEL&lll WAFFLER
BM• dellcate crtep ..m. time Mier
time. Thie* deep podllltl C8l)tUre frl.llt,
syrup, cream or melted butter.
lntrOduoed to the U.S.A. at the New
York world'• Felr, letglam Watrln
became the "Queen of the Fair." How
tMee light wamee. twloe .. tNck ..
U9Ulll OM be made about • fMt al In
an .i.ctrtc weme Iron. Try " for touted
Nlldwlchee too. HM noo.-lc* Interior and extetlor ror H ey cleanup. Our
Belgian Waffler hM two temperature _,...to...,,..., IM*lnO on toP of
ttla .. 0¥9. ~ llze 15'W'x 11W'.
SALi PRICID
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.... Pl.SO
~
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WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13, 1082
ENTERTAINMENT
COMICS
TELEVISION
88
87
88
Tele¥isi11g the World
eries is a pitchman's
dream for NBC. Page BB.
..
D
0
Flying Samaritans bring medical aid to the village people who live in El Arco. The town's clinic is open once a month.
~lying Sams' practice sea-t-of-pants medicine
By SANDIE JOY ,,. .................
A clearing in a cactus patch was the runway.
A well-worn, formerly blue F ord p ickup
Provided ground transportation. .
A dozen or so Orange C ountians piled
~heerfuUy into the back after emerging from
private planes.
Their destination: a duaty mountain village
aeveral miles away.
You can take in the town at a glance.
A stucco church with a neatly manicured dirt
yard presides at the head of town. An old ml1l is Perched on the edae of an arroyo oU to the left. ~here are two parallel dirt atreeta lined with
~ 1'81mMckle dwelllnp and a ,eneral store.
A few chJckftla run loole, pecking in the dirt
and duddna. Here and there are clua1en of huge, ~_purple, red and pink flowers dotting the ~brown-toned eetting.
Several hundred "people live in the remote vm.p of El A.rcO in the aouthernmoet P.Ortion of NortMm Beja California near the 28th parallel.
Tha&'• aeveral hours flying time in a small plane
from Orange County's John Wayne Airport
incl~ fuellna and customs checks at Mexicali.
On the riglit, u you enter town, is a small
ltu~ four-room "clinica" open just one day a
month.
1El Arco residents and sometimes their relatives
and ~nds from other remote Beja ~es are the cii~, grateful patients. -TThe clinic provides the only medical and dental 1 in the village. All its eervices are free.
But the doctors, nurses, dentislS, hygie nists,
•UJo1rMUJ1DU.Josists and other medical specialists who
the patients must pay with their time and
~*>r'lial finances to participate in the clinic. So, too,
the volunteer translators and the pilots who
the whole crew to El Arco from Orange
Illy in amall private planes.
'l1le medicaVdental staffers, translators and
$1 are members of the Flying Samarita. ns'
County Chapter, a group formed four years
Newport Beach bus1neMman Gordon Grey,
w~this particular day wu one of three pilots fl the Americans into Mexico.
lthout the ny1ng Sama, the El Arco villagers
have to travel many hours over a tortuously
tive road to Guerro Negro on the other sJde of 1" to get medical and dental care.
he Orange County team, one of seve ral
of '1ylna Sams -each with their own
•w_. .. to care lor -wastes no time going into once the dusty clinic la unlocked.
aUents begin 1i.JUnc up in the reception area,
foe a nune volunteer to pull their medical
charts from cardboard boxes set up on sh aky
wooden tables.
Villagers, most in their apparent Sunday-go-
to-meetin' attire, grin and chat quietly while they.
wait their turns, seated on wooden benches lining
the otherwise barren room.
Samaritans' President Clara Gallegoct, moves
qu ic kl y from r oom t o room , giving
inslrUciiona and advice to first-time medical staffers
and pausing only momentarily to offer warm
greetinp to various villagers.
Pharmacology volunteer Jim liaMen, from St.
Joaeph's Hospital, works efficiently with translators
and nurses, sorting through donated supplies,
checkJng expiration dates on medications.
The three pilots, their rnitaion fuUilled until
the clinic cloees late in the afternoon, lounge around
the pharmacy room. Besides Grey. pilots for this
particular trip Inc luded Chuc k Ni beel o f
Huntington Beach.
In a back room, nurse Gail Mason, wearing a
M.A.S.H. T-shirt, assists Dr. Roy Graveson as he
checks an obstetrical patie nt in a ma keshift
curtained examination room.
Outaide, dentist Jean P~uette, from Anaheim,
and his dental hygienist wife Linda have set up an
old airplane seat as a dental chair and are busy
painUfll preventive sealer on Heraldo Hernandez Ava.lee' teeth. •
Avaloe, a shy and rather small 14-year-old,
quietly endures u only dental paUenca can.
'The Pacquette. explained that they hope to
alleviate aome of the villagers' dental problems by
pracUcifll preventive dentistry. They've brought a
good supply of the llealer alone with them.
The operation Is efflcleJ'll, yet friendly.
Everyone leel'DS to know hla job and goe. about It
with a minimum of fwa.
"Everyone la indispensable," Dr. John
Bridgeman of MlMlon Viejo, another Flying Sam,
had e xplained during a planning meeting.
"Everyone -doctors, nunes, translators, pilots -
does his own thing ... And, we're practicing
archaic medicine here, flying by the seats of our
pants."
Not all Flying Sams go on every trip. Usually,
the group is divided so there's an appropriate
nwn6er of doctors, nurses, etc. on each trip. Most
Flying Sams make no more than one trip every
other month to El Arco. And, on each trip, there's
always the new members, the ones who are trying
it out for the first Ume.
Not counting preparation time and planning
sessions, it's a two-day trip for each volunteer,
departing John Wayne Airport at dawn on a
Sat~y, and returning early the next evening.
Once they arrive at El Arco, the rest of the day
until just before sunset is spent working -and
working hard with relatively primitive reeouroes
There's no .electricity and no indoor plumbing.
Then cornea the payoff. Saturday night the
entire Flying Sam troop is taxied to a remote beach
where they eat and sleep, often riaht on the beach,
apend a morning relaxing and f rolicklng in the
water before the journey home.
The volunteers all pay th e ir o wn
transportation costa -$85 round trip -plus
prov.ide their own food and sleepi ng
accommodations and, often, brtna along their own
medical supplies and other donations for the
villqft9. They don't do major aurpry at the clinic but
they have been known to patch broken bones,
provide pre-and p09t-natal care, infant care,
For additional information about
the Flying Samaritans Orange County
Chapter, to volunteer services or ma.Jee
donations, con tact President Clara
Gallegos at 633-5140 or write to the
Flying Samaritans, P.O. Box 7200, Carta
Mesa, 92626.
remove a strange bug from a little boy's inner ear
and treat such ailments u arthritis and diabetes.
Sometimes there's a special caee such u the
teen-age girl born with club feet. They flew her to
Orange County whe re they had arranged for
surgery at UC lrvine Medical Center, then Oew her
home and provided aftercare. She now walka more
easily and comfortably, not to mention gratefully.
Another special case was an extremely bricht
little blind girl who needed to learn English 80 she
would be equipped, when she growa up, to support
herself with employment as a tranalator.
Like good samaritans, the group's membe~
rallied to the cause, arranged to have the girl board
during the a:hool year with a Fullerton couple while
attending Braille Institute c1uees in Anaheim.
In all, there are more than 10 free cllnics in
Baja California run by various Flying Samaritan
chapters.
The Flying Sams originated in 1961 during a
toylift to El Rosario, Mexico, during which a San
Diego physician was asked to care for a sick villager.
When he learned the nearest medical clinic to
El Rosario w as a five-hour drive. the doctor
promised the villagers he would return. As
membership in the Flying Sams increased, they
branched out to set up clinics In other remote
villages.
The El Arco cllnic, run one Saturday each
month by the Orange County chapter , Is an
ou\growth of that effort.
Speaking through an interpreter, El Arco
residents expressed their appreciation for the
Flying Sams' work.
"They're very good doctors," said one woman.
"The doctors are very nice," said another.
"I've been coming here alnce they bepn," Mid
Senona Aguila, "and they've done • greet many
favors for us. We are very, very gratefW."
"So generous," said another patient. "Very aood people. My brother w• in a car acddent and
they treated him here."
..
I j
•
J I/
-Orange Cout DAILY Pl~OT /Wtdneedly, October 13, 1912
.
She's alone, but nOt the 'loneliest
•
lb THOMAS C COTHRAN thom, Benny Ambrose, died
• ••1 ••1•••'""...., recently. That left Molt.er, 7D, u 8 0 U N DAR Y WATERS tM only resident -a d1aUncUon
Woman'
email illa(ldl In K.nlf e Lakt to I
her. f 8tw ...u. homemade root beer
. Dorothy Molter, 75, lives alone in Minnesota's wilderness area.
WATCH
tor (lUt
GRAND
REOPENING
Saturday, Oct. 16
Come in now and
register for prizes
to be given away
MIT Via Udo
Newportheoh
17M510
RECYCLE YOUR CARI
Donate it to OCC's
Recycling Center
Do you get Indigestion just
looking at that old heap t itting In
your driveway, garage, !Jack yard.
or patio? Want to get rid of It once
and for all? If your car can be
driven or towed, DONAT£ IT to
Orange Coast College·a Recycling
Program! You can receive a tax
deduction-and feel goo(j. about
helping a strong recycling
program to become self-sufficient. c -
If you'd like further Information about how you can RECYCLE YOUR CAA.
contact Curtis Fleming In OCC'a Student Affairs Office at 556-56-46.
Orange-Coa1t College's Foundation exist• aa a duly regl1tered organization
with the t.R S .. and can accept tax deductable gilts.
{\~~Stf16!-$
EXTENDS PICK-UP & DELIVERY SERVICE
Harbor Ridge
Spyglass Hiii
Sea View
Westcliff
Eastslde
Newport Heights
Harbor View Hiiis
Big Canyon
East Bluff
West Newport
·Lido Isle
Bay Shores
Baycrest
Dover Shores
Bayshores
Bdlboa Island
Balboa
Peninsula Point
• DRY a.EANING • HAND FINISH • FINE LAUNDRY
CANOE AREA, Minn. -"Juat 1he _,. 11 no~ apeclal.
don't uy I'm the lonelleet woman "I • m n o d It (ere n t from
in America," plead a Doroth~ everybody et.e," 1he laid. ''They
Molt.er, the only penon t.he U.S. come here and they like It and
Foreet Service allowa to Uve In 1they'd like to atay here or they
thl1 northern M l nn e1ota don't. I'm juat uud to It. I
wllderne11. wouldn't know how to live In the
How can ahe be lonely, 1he city. Thi.I la the only place I've
reuona, with more than 6,000 had that I could call home."
vtliton a year? Still, on the wall She didn't come seeking
of her olive drab kitchen tent ii a refuge from ciUet or people, 1he
framed copy of an old ma1utne said. "I never felt that way. I
arUcle aalllna her the lonelleat didn't come up to get away from
woman In the nation. everybody."
U not lonely, ahe LI certainly Canoelata find her small tenta
alone ln the winter, when the and cabins as they round an
lteedy flow of grinning, T-shirt Island In the lake and suddenly
clad, unbathed canoe trekkera face a atop sign. Nearby la a
drope off 1harply. wooden figure of a cheerful
In 1981, about· 7,000 visitors policeman with his h and up,
1l1ned her gueat book. She atgnallng one to atop. •
expecil eeveral hundred fewer to There are old boats with
come by the end of this year, a marigolds growing out of them, a
decline she attributes to bad garden fenced with bri1ht1y
w tather, the economy an.d a -oainted broke n paddlea, a
mnaller number of pem\Jta being wooden Indian amokina ct1ar
l11ued to vlaltora to Superior and an ancient c.oca-Cola cooler.
National Forest. -In summer she lives in a tent
The Foreet Service bought all by the sho&e. But In winter,
private land In the Boundary Molter moves to a three-room
Wat.ens Canoe Afoa -known to cabin. The lite ii juat an illand
Mlnnet0tana as the BWCA -away from the Canadian border.
when lt took over the 1.1 million Molter has been here for 62
acres of p~tine lakes, trees and years. A nurse working In
rocka In the 1950s. Chicago in the 1930s, ahe came to
A few l"e9identa were allowed care for her father and never
to continue living there. One of left. He dJed In 1962, leavinl the
to ~by. It'• the only M.'ed
drink to be found l n the
boundary wat.en, where an act of
Concr-Sivet the Forest Service
wide authority to bar auch 1'41m1
.. cana, bolt.lei and motorboaJ,1.
The lee comea from KnUt
Lake, and she cuta It her.lf with
a chain uw In winter. It U,pe
dw1na die summer monthl In an
Ice house on on e of the little
lalanda 1he occupies.
Ice-cuttlna fa one of many
thlno that keepe her buay -'hOt
lonefy, ahe at.relle9 -in winier.
"I f.et outalde everyday," ahe
said. 'I've got snowahoel. I can
get out on them. I cut wood
everyday whether I need to or
not, ju.at for the exerci.ae. I atay In
on colder da)'·'' ..
She apen<U that Ume writing
Jenera, mending thlnga a'nd
keeptna a acrapbook.
"There'• always eomething to do," ahe aaid. There are even
visitors, who Include tee
fishermen and anowmobUen.
Molte r has mixed Ce'ellng•
about the hoarda of viaiton wbo
come during the aummert: cheerfuijy welcomes them. ,
she 1ay•: "lt'a terrible. P e
just keep coming and comtftg.
They know you're busy, but lh•Y
want you to come out and talk to
them anyway."
·souTH COAST PLAZA"
VITAMINS
THOMPSON
!1o?,t<1~~I!~~.9row•E• 5.15
RADIANCE
111'11-MEU
SUPER POTENCY
VITAMINS & MINERAL
60 Caps. Reg. 9.99
THOMPSON
I 12 .. 2811"
50 Tabs Reg. 9.95
RICH LIFE
ATHLETIC
PllTEll NWIEI
18 oz. Reg. 8.95
THOMPSON
1111111 IELEllUM
200 M.C.G.
50 Tabt Reg. 8.95
RADIANCE
YITIMll C
500 M.G. w/Roee Hips
250 Tabt Reg. 9.95
THOMPSON
BUFFERED-1 amlU
8 oz. Reg. 14.95
5.69
4.95
3.95
4.95
6.96
4.11
COSTA MESA t
557-6161
LOWER LEVE'L CAROUSEL MALL
GROCERIES
CHICO-SAN
llCE CllEI
• SAL TED • UNSALTED
<4'-'i oz. Reg .. 95
NATURES BEST
LOii SPlllETTI
WHOLE WHEAT
1& Oz. P.ckage Reg. 1.05
ENRICO'S
ALL NATURAL
SPlllETTI SAUCE
15'n Oz. Reg. 1.49
..
GOOD STUFF
NATURAL
FOOD FIBER
11 llllllU llEID
2• Oz. Loaf Reg. 1.89
KNUDSENS
CllDT 811PI
SALTED-UNSALTED
4 oz. Reg. 1.85
DEAF SMITH
PUllT lunEI
CREAMY OR CRUNCHY
18 oz. Reg. 2.99
HEALTH VALLEY
CIT Fiii
• CHICKEN/TUNA
•HARDY DINNER
•LIVER and SAUCE
8.5 oz. Reg .. 50
WASA
llllP llUI
LIGHT, OR HEARTY, RYE
l'A Oz. Reg. 1.87
HAIN
llFFUWEI llL
.32 Fl. oz. Reg. 3.45
ALOI CAM ---ALOI WITH VITAMIN E IOL .. -.1.71 .
1.11
f
1.39
2.24
.38
rocc opens new
.. rec}rcling facility
' · Openlna ceremonle1 will be
"''Weld Wedne1day, Oct. 27, for ·~~!!!.f.!_Coaa t Colle1e'1 new U~Center.
.. v 00C hM operated It. facility
'1fi,r nearly a decade. The new
titnter II located on the north end
jlbf campus, on Adami Avenue, 1 &tween Harbor Boulevard and •l~rvlew Road ln Coeta Mesa.
•Gp..-klng u available. ·
1IJJ1The $98,000 faclllty w as
n• 1~;Uomecoming
::
1
:1'oes Hawaiian
··•J "Aloha '82" la the-theme for
'10t-ange Coast College'• 30th
1~npu a l homecomin'g this -w~kend.
>•HThe celebration will lnclude a ,,~aturday nlaht football. game, '1ilu1 .an after-aame dance
fiaturi.ng the music of 1960s surf
• king, Dick Dale and the Del-
ones.
,1
paid for by a grant from the state
SoUd Wute Mana1eJ)'lent Board.
Grand opening actlvlllea will
run from 11 a.m. to 3 p .m .
Keynote 1peaker at 2 p.m. wW be
environmentalist, Sim De Van
Der Ryn, a profe;:::Q at UC
Berkeley, who ltl p ent and
founder of the Farallo nea
lnatitute In Berkeley, an Institute
that demonstrates alternative
energy 1y1tema.
OCC'a Recycling Center la the
dflltlnated receiver of recyclable.
materials for the city of Costa
Mesa. It operates a 24-hour
drop-off service for recyclable
n e w spapers. magazine-a,
pamphlets, office pape r.
computer paper and tab cards,
glau, aluminum and tin cans,
ecrap metal, and automotive oil.
The center does not recycle
rubber or plastics of any kind.
F.ach Saturday until noon the
.center pays for aluminum cans,
18 centa per pound.
For information a bout the
center, phone 556-5981.
..
---.
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /Wedn"day, October 13, 1882 ..
Support honored
by Laguna scouts
Bobble• Burrell, a long-time
l'ftldent of Laguna Beath and a
re11J1tered Oirl Scout there 11\lce 19~9. wa11 honored recently with a
memorial service at the city's
Olrl Scout Houae.
A plaque, des. lgned and created by DIBna Deutach, was dedicated
Hiroko Folken tein
and Mary Fegraus ·
present Bobbie
Burre ll's m emorial
plaque to her
daughte r Linda ·
Burre ll .
In rt!COfr\IUon of dor\atJone ~
In BurrelJ'1 name 111\Ce her de9tl
ln 1~81.
The wooden trefoil wa1
presented Lo the h on oree''
daughter Linda Burrell bf
Hiroko Falken1teln and Marr
Fegr a ua, .c hairwoman anct
member of the aervlce team.
They recalled her many y~
of "conaiatent support for t~
service team and lta communllJ
projec'-luch U cr<9Walk ~
visit;' to nursJna homes and bHCll
cleanup."
Burrell had been a troop
le ader , consultant, uniform
e xcha nge c hairman, council
delegate and treasurer.·
Having been a Olrl Gulde In
England and Canada, she alto
was Instrumental In planning the
International Food Fair. In
England.. she alao served as a Red
Cross vOluntcer.
Amo(lg the many honors
Burrell had received were the
Orange Owl pin, 25-and :JO-year
pins and the Girl Scout lapel pin.
DISC OVER M OST ADVANCED
C ARPET CLEANING METHOD
'! ii • Immediate Use • Totally Dry
Wed. thru Sat., Oct. 13·16, 1982
c:=-r-~ 0 , • No Shrinking or Stretching
Ea1le-laiok Drr C1,,et Cl111in1
SerWot .. ef Or-.. C-nty
··-·~ ... <• ........ ->· IM ............ k ................ , .......... ...., ...... ......... ..,.,,......
841-0181
u., ...... , .......
LOW COST
CAT• DOG
VACCINATION
CLllC '
., "' ,,.,.u.c.1•
lllllls .................................. $3.9511111
....... (D.H.L) '"'"m"'"S4.2S 11111 ""' ." ................................. n.oo .. Doc "5+1" ....................... .$7.00 ....
Cat "l-in-1" .......................... $5.00 ...
DOii ml • LWllJ; CAJ1 • IOID, PUAI(
SM ClODTE
S-..1. Ocl 17, 1912
blpll'1 P1rUic lot
93 Callt De lndustf\11
ttOUltS: 9:00-12:00
MISSION VEO ~. Ocl 17, 1982
HOURS: 3:00-6 00
J1rssion Vieio 111111 r.c, lot
NOIPOIT llEACH
SllndaJ, Ocl 17, 1982
HOUIS: Z·JO.S'OO
Wntciff l'lw r\a. Loi
I 7tlt llld """ hi. 2700 Ctown V*1 ""'·
Presents
Northem Italian Dinner
wl1ll Ro,, Plllll"
A clelJdow •lecil.on
of redpa lit lCK • ......
Cold Vept.ables with AloU S.u.e
Bncciola -A Stuffed, Rolled Beef eerved with
Bolopte9e and freshly m9de Puta.
Fonccta del Rey -the Kini'• Pie
with Chant.illy Almond Cream.
,...,...., Oeaow 2ha 6180 p.m.
IW: ll0.00
TO EMIOU IN A a.A.19 ,.;-_. ...... Iii·-r. ..... .-...... _,... .......... ~ .......... ,..., ... ,..,_ Will M ecee,t-4 _... • .,.... ~ ..-lier
~/~ r.->•,..., ............. , .......
Pony Pack
leddlng P1ant1 !•5 3.44
hlobf15h pion!$ now IOI COior from
lole loll lhrOuiJn soring Your
ctv;>1ee of monv POO•JIO• foll fov·
Oftfes
........ ~ tye9fa11le.d
Ovctt~ lle<mudo IOwl\S
worn rye QIOU $4leO fCf 0 O!_. IO.m " rr-e ,..,,,, ..
10.00Ul\Cls net we·onr
Sulpnote OI ~'° IOI ~~~~e~~
$564
21 .. .=:. Color/Conto~ t:V
One knoll VHf/OHf etec:lronoc: ~ ouoro '""'no P'e
C•\• occu1ore ~ tunono Qel!Oble Z 1 cl!Ols.a-
100'11, moclYIOI o.sion Tri fO<:lli p.cture tut>e '"' out \fonding Plciure sh01pneu
Ret>ole Owecl
fforn Foe f OtV •.•
You
NelCosl •304
Whlrtpool,. Famlly Size
Copaclty Washer
4 Automot c <.,ties '1egu1or1
neovv Permo"er~ Preu Sr>Of1 ol'ld Soo~ COOi c:lowr ro•e lo• oe-mo ,,ert ,..,..,, •ob'<• h&O\ •eouee "''""'le:S E,.,.,gy IOY"'Q "'°'., rem c:>efOhJte .eteclOt wtln 3 WO\h/ttnse ooml:>tl\OllOl\s 3 revel worei tov•no
IOOO we ielecto> Moot4 ~JOO~(
The Sa ving Place •
Landscape Plants
AsporoousSp11nge11(1-Gol • > . 1.44
. 1.44
.1.44
1.44
lexos Wox l eo1 Prrvel (5-Gol • > 4. 9 7
,.,, cu n sleet monU1e
ruirv ooeo "'9e<J flee w:•eeneo 1eoov io use
1.97·
fltonter ....
n1 Cu n 100'\. 0toonic
Use 10 ef'rtcn OJI IOlls r our I h cu n OOgS IO !IO
tQVOre '"'
Cototftel
°'file! 1c ... ,. .......
COftl•ol
Tuf" t•1 "",. 11 1.1tt
A!l1\I\-o•,.. '" ... ,...,. S,."#' ••
VH• UH, C~.4'"""""' O•uDl"~·1,.•t -T';
thtAn~+• Qw' • ' .tno ldf'l"'l•l11 h<J..., tnll'
U>"'•••'O• •·• •' th•• T ,,.~, '' f\
""''• .. ~ C."'4111"1"' .. ' ,o, ti•OQ·•"" "''0 l'ft l'P'l•mo•, l £ 0
'"""~"''"'""' 0·•0'1'1' O"' "''
!1.58
lubmorln. londwlche1
• 9.88
Joy IHck
JCJy Stici. lo• use w11h Alori
V•c:leo Compuler System -
338.61
19" Dlag. Meas.
Color TV
Dependable color table TV
with one-knOb VHFIUHF elec·
Ironic tuning channel selec·
lion Auto-control color sys·
tern Model Y191~8
Save
..0.39
I I .
i
1
I 1
i I
t 'I i i
j .
. ..
• . • • I
{ .
f
, I
I
Jtack in saddle
!Sherifrs deputy Larry Congdon
holds a silver and gold-studded
saddle made for the late William
Randolph Hearst and valued at
175,000. S tolen in 1979, the
heirloom has just been
recovered.
I Merchants upset
~,at video curbs
I
: DACONO, Colo. (AP) -Fewer children are : playing hooky and stealing quarters a1nce a tough
new law putting restrictiona on video games went I into effect, Dacono offida.la say.
' "It's putting the kids in achoo!, where they
belong, and parenta are more careful," says City
Clerk Minnette Paul. "We haven't aeen as many
break-ins."
But the municipal law, which bans children
under the age of 16 from playing the games unless
accompanied by a parent, ia being challenged in
court.
Dacono, population 2,500, ia one of only a few
towns across the nation to have imposed such a
strict ban on the playing of video games.
The push to regulate the devices was led by
parents and police concerned that "Pac-Man" and
hia ilk were distracting tchool children and leading
to delinquency.
The Dacono aty Council adopted the law June
14 after hearing re ports that children were
. financing their video habits by stealing. One Dacono
. gl.rl testified she had performed sexual acta in
return for pocket change.
' · The dty council and the police chief since have
·been sued by the owners of Sam's S uper Foods, the
:dty'a only supermarket and home of a video arcade.
Supermarket owners Shao and Qlthy Shorez.
American dtlz.ena of Iraqi de9cent. filed the suit in a
.federal court ln Denver, contending that the law is
uncomtitutiof\al and that it waa adopted becau.e
they are viewed as foreigners by the Dacono
establishment.
Since the law wu puled. Shores estimates his
weekly revenue from video games hu droc
Crom $1,400 to $500 and hia grocery sales have
slashed by about 40 percent.
~irrors in sp~ce
~:viewed for future
f WASHINGTON (AP) -The technology ii
lavailable to station a aeries of giant mirron ln orbit !to reflect sunlight and Wwninate U.S. population
~ters at night, a space agency study reports.
· Even if such a maaaive project received
approval, the ooat and complexity would delay ita
1mplementatlon until the next century, officiala
said . The atudy aaid the idea la economically
fe-'ble, but pve no pricetag. ·
· The report aaid leCtiom of the mirrors could be !=ma!f ln a eerles of apace shuttle flights and ln orbit by M1.ronaut construction crews.
The research wu conducted by John E. c.an.dJ Jr. and John E. Allen Jr. of the National
A.roaautka and Sp11ee Admlniatration, Langley
Raeerch Center ln Hampton. Va.
The researchers ..td each satellite would
provide the llaht of 56 moona. They aaid most
peo_plt! probabfy would not like illwnlnation all J'ilht. and the most feuible ue would be to reflect
lhe sunliaht toward the dties fOf' about two hours
aurtna both the momlnl and even1ng ruah hours.
· lienefita would be a •vine of electridty, a
reduction ln automobUe aicddenta and more light for
oUtdoor activity.
; Canady ·and Allen limited their raearch to ~ the potent.ial for auch a project. They
... the ec:o~ i.mpect, auch as effects on plant ~toeynthesia and wlldllfe habits, could be a
poblem.
" "' don't --. -r Clft, offef iMpoftlftt snillp
• Oft .. iftsurMCt.
a.ti 'f04I' ~ from! . .-nt.....,
.. 1 OM Illa.,.. ""'-Illa ........... O...
llt-1NI . _ .. _ -
· 8 TINNIS
LISSONS
•ao•
\
Wasp blazes ocean trails
New Cliving suit maneuvers like a submarine
By ROBERT LOCKE ,., ...... .,,...,
SANTA BAR.BARA -A cro.
betwHn a dlvln1 ault and a
eubmari.,, " takiD1 ldentllw Into
pu1a of the ocean where they've
never sc>ne before -cold, dark
re1lona where lumlnoua fl1h
1pukle like atan on a moonl-
nl,ht. "The uahta are very vivid and
,brtaht and the eea la very dark.
It'• like looklng up lnto the aky
on a very clear nlaht, when
you're very far from the dty, up
on top of a mountain," aald
oceanographer Bruce ·H .
Robison of th e Un iversit y o"{
Call1ornia-Santa Barbara.
The cause of Robl1on'a
enthuaium i. called Wup -a
deep-sea d1vlng auit developed
eight yean a,o for the offshore
oi.f industry and belna Wied for
the flnt Ume by lclent.lata ln a
oOot profll'U1l 10 rnile9 out from Santa Barbara.
lntereatlnJ(," Roblaon uld. It
can work down to 2,000 f•t.
Conventional ICUba dlvina hu m~de ocean o1rapher1 famlUar
with the flnt 100 feet or eo of
ocean. Expenaive reMarCh aube
are openJna new worlda on the
1ea floor. BU\ ln be\ween la a v11t
reafon tha\'a llCal'Cely vtalted by
retearc:hers, aald RobUon, chlet
1cien\lat for the pro1ram
financed by. a 1290,000 1rant
frortt the N ational Science
Foundation.
Submeniblet work be9t on the
bottom, uaually offer very
limited vlalbillty throu1h
~ie. a few lnchee wide and
'the ldentlat never &eta to pllot
them," aaid Allee Alldred1e, a
marine blologiat at UCSB aod
co-prtndpal lnves~tor for the
2~-day prosram.
In the put, ahe aaid, ICientlata
probed the depths from ahl119,
hauling up whatever they could
catch in new or ln bolt.lei lowered
over the aide.
"It'• been like atudyin&_ a forest
without being able to walk
among the treea and pick the
flowers," she said. "With neta,
you only catch animals that are
n ot v ery faat and not very
fraalle.''
Amon1 the dlecoverle1 la a
dtnH, discrete layer of tiny
crua\acean1 called copepoda
a&n9d IC1'0ll the San\.& Barbara llMln about l,GOO feet down. The
lay•r -"nothina like lt hu ever
been reported belbre" -la about
23 feet thick with the quarter-
lnch creatur" packed 100,000
per c ubtc yard, Alldredge
aaJd. "What are they dotna. jUlt
ahttn1 there1 We're tryln1 to
flpre that out."
"In the deep, dark ocean,
where there are no rock.a or trees
or anythln1 to hide behind,"
Uvin8 flatwee become the buia
of whole communities, Rohl.Ion
aakJ.
He cited the dlacovery that
alphonophoree -thin selatinoua
creatures up to 20 feet long with
1t1n1ln1 tentacles -provide a
drifting habitat !'\" colonies of
anelt that find refuge amona the
threatenlftl tentacles.
The moet diatinnive feature of
the lljhtleu depth•, lloblaon
aaid, la blolumineecence, fiahea'
chemical lights that dot the
darkneea and are far more than
juat organic flaahllghta.
W¥P look.a a bit like a giant
yellow Insect or a legfeu,
humpbacked robot and worka
like a one-man minlsub with
anna. Its pilot fita anugly inside
the fiberlglaaa and aluminum
can ister, hla head look ing
inconsroualy small within the
clear plexlglass dome, well over a
foot acr ou, ·that to pa the
11,000-pound machine.
Suspended by a winch cable
from lta mother ahlp, Wup "ia
very, very maneuverable"
through a system of foot-
'operated thruatera that let its
occupant chase after fish or
"motor off to look at tomethina
Wont of all, acient.lata rarely
saw the animals ln their
environmenta.
Since the dives began ln mid-
S e ptember, R obison said ,
"We've been able to anawer
queationa we couldn't answer
before and really to frame new
quest.ions we didn't even know
enough to uk bef<ft.''
Robl10n aald the lights vary
by apeciea and sex and almoet
~rtainlr, helpa fiah Identify each
other. ' We .. ume it's uled to
attract prey or to let the animal
.ee its prey."
On t he deck of the New
Horizon. a reale8J"Ch ahip owned
by the Scri9p1 Institution of-
Oceanography, Robison said.
''Thia i. an amazing machine. I
don't every want to .;orne up."
.... ,,.6',
Biologiata Bruce Robison, James :
'RUFFELL'S .
UPHOLSTllY
I ;' I la--~
ttUHAlllOllUD.
COSTA MllA-141-1116.
We're more
· Than just the
Best place for
Dance wear
Come see our dfllJ/gner
•Active., .. ,
·• Footw .. r • c •• ,,.,., .. ,
Cell 142-1171.
ftul • few word• lo work for ou.
saddleback college
r==============cornD!unity services============~ll
King and Alice Alldredge (from 1
left) prepare for descent in
"Wasp" diving suit that operates
like a submarine. "
A variety of trays available.
Call your local Honey Baked
Ham for information. It not
only shows good taste,
it tastes good!
CATER
YOUR
AFFAIR ·.
WIIBA
QUALITY '
HAM
GIFT CERTIFICATES REDEEMABLEANYTM
presen~ I~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~
CONSTANCE TOWERS
in her one.woman show
How I Got From Whitefish, Montana
To The Mexican Emba•y
Current star of soap,
0 Capitol"
· Leading lady of
Broadway's music theatre
-broke records with Yul
Brynner in "King and I"
Movie Star.
-appeared with John
Wayne, William Holden,
and Glen Ford.
Hear songs from her hits:
"Sound of Music"
"Mame," ''I Do! I Do!,"
"Showboat;' "Kins and )"
·sADDLEBACK
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
South C.mpua rm. Arts Theatre
3 p.m. S.turday, October 30, 1982
TICKET PRICES: 19 and 18
e
ISG
l
If Referendum
Measure N is passed,
you lose ...
§ $6,000,000 in additional roaa.wys
A reN tint station
A pedestrian and bicycle CMtrPBSS
across Coast Highway
8 A reN Mt-acte park and greenbelt
$300,000 rnJ8lly to lhe School
District O $400,000 in net ernJll rewnue to
the City of Newport Beach 0 New chlNge f8cftll
. ..
. . . • • . . . . . . . .
~
f
Distant
quasar
' ound
PASADENA (AP) -
1tronomer1 have
: '9ported \he d1lcoYery of
moet diatant objoc&
'"" by man -a near the edp of
ot.ervable unlverw,
faint lt la only a epeck
• J>ho'°IJ"lph.
"Vie are •tralnlna our
" and lookln1 out
toward the· horiaon of
the wuvene," ..id Mlke
IDeln, an Mtronomer at
l JIASA'1 Jet Propulalon
WLaboratory where the
d18covery by American,
Auatrallan and Brltlah
aatronomera waa ~· n.. quuar la perhap1 lQ bllllon Haht-yean
way from Earth ,
eccording· to 'the way
utronomen commonly
determine dlatance, kleinMid. •-nu. ii an object that
• farther away then
anything elae we have meen to date," he said.
Quuara, flnt .een In
1983, are myaterloua
.R,bjects that look like
1tar1 but aeem to
1enerate ~re energy
than 100 blllion a~an.
They apparently are
elmer to the edae of the
unlvene than any other
coamk. objects and are
movln1 farther out at
Incredible apeeda.
A light-year la a
JllejlSUlre of the distance
ght travels ln a year -
x trillion miles.
"So you're looking
ln time -that U,ht
eft it 12 billion yean
10," and ahowa only
rhat the quasar looked
ke at that time, Kleln ~d.
That means the U,ht
1an ita journey long
fore our solar ayatem
aa formed 4.6 blllion
eara a10 and even
fore the birth of the
ilky Way, our own
-.JJavv, about 10 billion
ear• a10. Current
tea put the ap of
unlvene at about 20
yMn.
"It'• a little bit weird,"
leln aaid. "It'• aa lf
our 1reat-great-1reat
randparenta took a
icture of tbemselvee,
lled lt to you and it
arrived today ...
The object can be
tecied only from the
uthem Hemisphere,
nd the research
nvolved several
uatralian teleecope9. It
aa dlacovered by the
arks ndio teleecope ln
uuralla, precisely
led by JPL'a Deep
pace Network radio
eleacopea at the
idbinbilla trackl ng
taUon, and WU dated
Ith the viaible-light
nalo-Amer ica n
1-lope at New South
ales.
-Untll the new find,
de1l1nated PKS
2000-330, no quasars
were di8covered beyond
about 11 billlcn Uaht
yean and 90l'De ICiendsta
1u1pected that mlaht
represent their outer
limit .
.,,_,.,
..... Oct. i J. • Oct. lt,
1912
UMe Ille*: . 1•
l1llN II 1 ms 'Ficw .. .._ ........ "' .... .., ...
........ rt~ tell. A• tHMl"t ..................... ... . .. , .. --· .. '"' 141erl1•. Set lllii It A411tlc , .................. .... .. _ ..... , ........ ".., ...,s.•.
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l
Osmond boys sing 'clean' country
A sellout crowd is e xpected to hear Olivia
Newton-John perform at the Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater unday. A
Meadows poke men said Tue day that a
few tickets remnin for the lawn area at
SI 0 .50 <'m·h.
NA8HVILL..I (AP) -Thote
all-American, ever whoteaome
brothcrt with 1mll8 aa wide u
the tiN"•t Sall Lake, have gone
country. Muak , that la
Alan, Wayne, Merrill and J ay
-the orlMtnal Oltmondi -have
joined country mu1lc'1 well-
1tocked rotter of famUy acta such
u tho Mandrell 1laten, Lury
Oatlln and the Gatlin Brothers,
the Bellamy Brothers and
Loretta Lynn and little 11lHtor
Crystal Gayle .
The Osmond• can now be
h eard on country mu1lc radio
statio ns with cu rrent, no n-
Olmond songs auch aa, "She Got
the Goldmine (I Got The Shaft),"
"She's Not Really Chealin' She'•
Ju~t Getlln ' Eve n," and "Get
lnlo Reggae Cowboy."
Even sister Marie Osmond is
still venturing Into country
music . Her son,, "Back to
Believing Again,' was on the
national country music charta In
August and Septe mber. "Paper
Ro.es" was a big country hit for
her In the mid-1970s.
The four brothers, who range
in age from 27 lo 33, say country
music ls not that removed from
their musical upbringing and
what they used to sing on "The
Andy Wi lliams S~ow," "The
J erry Lewis ~how,' "Donny and
Marie" and o the r television
programs.
"We were raised on good solid
ha.rmony,'' Alan Osmond saad in
Dog's stardom ''fluke thing'
ONTARIO (AP) Gingt>r is a 10-year-old
dachshund-terrier m1x who went rrom IOCC'er star
to movie star with hardly s try-out or a screen test.
She's been froUcking wath a soccer ball ,since
ahe was a pup and according to her owner, it's not
been such a dog's life.
Now, she's ready for her Hrst appearance in a
eoon-to-be-released motion picture entitled "A
Minor Miracle."
. "It's a fluke thing." said her owner , Frits
Ra.enyeldt of Ontario. ln fact, when Alan Meeder,
owner of a string of soccer camps, told Rosenveldt
of a friend who wrote a movie script that needed
Ginger's talents, he shrugged it off.
Then last July, when the phone call came from
the casting department of Tom Moyer productions,
an Independent studio, Rosenveldt still didn't
believe it.
"I said sure, su re ... I'll call you back In 15
minutes," recalled Roeenveldt.
Before you could say Lassie, Roset'lveldt was
showing Ginger off at a Burbank casting call. She
was the only dog who could dribble so she got the
part.
Filming began in San Diego for a movie that
stars Pete, International soccer star, 11 talented
boys. and Ginger, who steals the ball and the show,
pumping up a limp-s pirited team and bringing them
a national aoccer championship.
"It's a cross between 'Boys Town' and 'The Bad
News Bears," said Moyer from his home in Goleta.
Dreyfuss injured,
faces investigation
BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -
Actor Richa rd Dreyfu ss .
hospitalized aft.er ·a car crash on a
canyon road, hM been "booked In
absentia" for investigation of
driving under \he influence and
dnag po111e11ion, police aay.
Police Lt. Russ Olaon said
Monday that a small amount of
white powde r believed to be
cocaine was found ln Dreyfuss'
car after Sunday night'• accident.
Ollorl uld the unusual booking =WU necessary becauae
waa immediately taken
Sinai Me.dlcal Center.
Dreyfusa, who e.med an CMcar
for hi1 pe rformance in "The
Go00bye Girl" and starred. ln
such films aa "Jaws" and "Cloee
Encounters of the Third Kind.''
remained hoepitallzed Monday.
Cedan-Slnai spokeswoman TMS
Griffin said he was in good
condition and his in juries
appeared lo be only superilcial.
Qt.on aaid no complaint would
be sought against Dreyfu.s until
lab test.a were completed on the
powder found in the car and
Dreyfu.s' blood.
-NJO .... IMIT IUal OMllll WHl-TUI ....,. YllfO Twon Edwalds Newpol1 CIMma c.n.oon.. Edwalds C:W-Wtsl ao-tttO &U 07&0 634 U53 191 3935
• .... "" l'laa sn.sm
"FUil.. OF SNAP AND WIT.'
l><MdAl\Mft lllW~WUIC
• telephone interview from
Provo1 Utah, where the O.mond
clan llvea.
albu m out , "The 01mond
8rothen1."
And even lhOuflh thuy don't
drink and hov~ 1n All American
lmaao, thu (our brother• are
maklna Uw round• of the c.'Ountry
mu1lc clubs whore thu liquor
flows and fight• often are
commonplM.'C!.
"Now Wl1'ru ~k w uur flrtt love cuuntr and aospul
harmony. It'• w ere our roota
arQ."
Their adlljlle, "lt'1 Llk Falllna&
In Love (Over and Over)." 11
moving Madlly up the country
music chart.a. Their first l'Ountry
music aong, "l Think About YOW'
Lovin','' wu released earlier and
reached the lop 20 of the ch.arta.
The~ al"W> have a country music
They slng no auggeatJve tyriat
and IT\Ollt of their eong11 have love
themes: "Never Ending Song of
Love," "You'll Be Seeing Me,"
"Blue All Over You."
>.. for the other members of
ttw O!lm~nd clan. brother Donn
11Excltlng,movlng,' · controversial."
Rooor Ebert.
CHICAGO
SUN-TIMES
•BARGAIN MATIN••s •
Mond•Y tllru S•turd•Y
All Pertorm1nce1 before 6:00 PM f~ 1,.cut Ellt1f1Mtllll IM H•1y1)
-~YU.•ln'M •.. Toentmt llAAM'" .,. ---...... Del9Qlll• Ill ---
"'9il'fUIN\'M .. , TOGl'TMlll...,.....,. ------
lAl<lWOOD CINTUI
SOUTM ""'"'" "'
.....
ANAHE IM r>lil\/I IN ,_ .... _ .. .,....IO
.... IMCllleOI .... -,...,or1111
tlll '1-.... ,
EIU~NA PARK 'Jll .1 '" u...--·-llM070
..
l IN COl N [Jl/1\/f I N
~.-..-... -llM070 ....
FOUNfAIN V.6Lll'f
CJlllVI IN
"T .. CHOllN"_ ..., ____ ,_
'"\.OOK•
TOMTOU'Tl"• -----
..,... 90AT" 1111 -~TM...-... _,._
"l .T.. -
T.-E~·nNm•TNAl." -"tl'lliteoelll A YUi" -
"CLA .. Of' ,.. .... _,
.... ..._.,.., __ , .. , -..cAN MOM .. YCIM" -...... _,._
-. ,..;=irtr .... "C" Ill ....... Uft -...ne ... r.,. •ne~~-_ ,._ _,. .....
~-... .., ...... , -· '" ...... ... _ .. _.
l ,; • ! " fl .. t~ . •1
-----
~ I.. A~~ v f , "
.__,.., •-c-.. ... ,
Juat mado a tel vta on movl , "No
Man'• L&tnd." and may do a
motion plcturo for tht•at
reteue
Marl r«X'Cntly wu married to
Steve Cn1IQ, o buketball player
a l Brigham YQung University.
She wnt be recording mor • liO
again 100n wit h c:ountry mwic
produce r Tom Colli n a ot
Nashville, who alao produces
records for Barbara Mandrell,
Ronnie Milsap ahd others.
J immy apeakll Jap&009C and
a televiaion atar In Japan.
,
"Can P J and me hav•
thost two cOoki.s?"
"PJ and I."
T•i
F-'lllLW
C:l•C:tl
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
·/
"Mutt JO'I ..., M 1tupld IUlt to IVIRY tooebll
..... goto?"
by Brad Anderson DENNI
~· Hank Ketchum
"Your new electric toothbrush tickles
Marmaduke!"
• 11 •: I •
PoP,1
POP! POP1
by Ferd & Tom Joh~son
He CU~Cl<ED UP ON !i
EVER'f11HN4 l WAS 1f
SUPPOSEP TO <ieT DQ'.IE I
9fFORE' CLOSIN~ UP. I
?l ~ ' ••
9'MOI COiet DAILY PILOTIW~, Octobtf 13, 1982
HAVE FUN 11\1 VAPIV'
Cl'TY, ~PU'TV?
WHENEVER YOU ASK FOR
SOMETHING, ALWAYS
SAY "MAY 1''
RNKl' WINK1Ea•E.4N ------·1 WA55AVI~
m.J L.AbT llME OOT R>R A CROC.IAL
6mJA'TlON !{
by Ernie Bushmtller
I'D LI KE A JA R OF
MAY-I -NAlSE, " ··
PLEASE
•
I ..
F 0
Cout DAILY Pll.OTIWednMdly, October 13, 1982
orld Series pitchman's dream
'I FRID ROTHENBERG ' ,... .... 1plrit of the 1how.'' Sohm~r aay1. I NIW YORK -Steve Sohmer 11cn1
attention. Aa NBC'• chief cheerleadec.
' •'• made promotional poln \1 w I th a
•umoroua jab for "Taxi.'' a .aophlltlcated Mnk f« "~n Steele" and a dramatic
At lhlrd-rat.o NBC, huwever, he hu to
llell thlnp dlfferenUr,. He nK'<b to penfl.iade
oeoole to try NBC. • Ju.t Watch U1 Now" lll
the NBC alogan, t'OmJ)Mroo to CBS' "Great
Momenta," emphasizing that network'• No. I
tradltJon.
"NBC didn't brlng you tho Emmy awarda,
but our 1how1 bro.,.irht a lot of them home. Twenty-three Emmya. Wow!"
That night, Sohmer had taken the unu1ual
1tep of lnlcrt!na llvc roporta of NBC'a Emmy •~ Into It.a Sunday nt1ht movie break.a. Minu~ after Michael Conrad of "Hill Streot
Bluet" wu named beat 1upport1n41 actor, It
wu on NBC.
~t for "St. Ellewhere."
1 You may not like NBC'a 1how1, but
're b<Nnd to notice lta program pluga ---~ .... ly thJa week. When Sohmer wu
away from CBS lut 1wnmer to head 8C'1 promotional department, NBC wu
•unaJIJJ.lf of the World Series, when a nation nee in for bateball a nd geta program f't.c~ in between.
The World Serlea is a wonderful
unchlng pad for our 1how1," aay1 Sohmer,
BC'1 vice prftldent for advertlalng and
Uve aervicet.
When Sohmer waa creating na tional
ifhenomena, like the "Who Sh ot J.R. ?"
~paign that kept "Dallaa'' RO hot in \he ii.unmet of 1980, he had successful shows tb
He could promote "The Dukes of
" with oompone and a hard aell. And
S-H" almost aold itaelf.
' "You do promoe that are faithful to the
\\I l>\;l '-1> ''
4:11 (I) (I) aNCIAL
Presid e nt A••o•n lddreeMe the nlllon on thl economy
For "Taxi," an 1.1ward-wlnnln1 oomed~
that waa canceled by ABC and picked up by
NBC, Sohmer tweake d ABC with the
• promotional tal{ line: "Same time, better
station."
F or a ton1u e-ln-c heck ah o w , ll ko
"Remington Steele," he offered a clauy
promotion, peued to the relationship of atani
Stephanie Zhn6aJlat and Pierce Broanan.
And for "St. F.laewhere," a hosplUll
drama patterned after the network'• popular
"Hill Street Blues," he aold drama.
"Newa hu·a lot more 1Ung when It'• hot
newa," 11y1 Sohmer.
Havlna a national forum, like the World
Serie., lt any 1nake-oll Niesman'• fantasy.
Fred Silverman, fonner NBC president, once
predicted that NBC would be No. l by
Chrlatmaa 1980 be<:aWM! of the plethora of
I plug1 during the Olympic coverage the
pre vlou1 summer.
"People need to be intrigu ed," aay•
Sohmer. "Glve them one mouthful leu than
they want."
Wlth few hit 1how1, NBC ls promotina It.a
dl1tlnctlvene11 -quality programmin11.
Soon af\er ABC'1 Emmy award tele<:Hl,
NBC was on the A&lr with this Bohmer·
It dldn 't happen. The boycott knocked the
Moecow Olymplca oft NBC. Silvennan now
11 an Independent producer, and NBC 1Ull Is
third.
The World Serlef, which alternates
annually between ASC and NBC, couldn't
have come at a better time for NBC. For one
week, NBC Is assured blockbuster ratings
and a captive male audience.
Vic Morrow, killed in a helicopter cruh
last s ummer, stars in "The California
Kid" tonight at 8 on KCOP, Channel
produced promotion: .
·~ed.
• MYINU.WW
CAMI" A young glfl I.Judy Devi•) le
tom between her dllirl for '* ..... thln-'**1 lcMW (Sem Nelll) lfld hit <*Ire
to pur-'*own c:e<-
ln lhll ldept1tlofl of ...... "'"*""'' ncMll Mt In thl lltoe.
tO:OO l~tftl WITCH
A powtrful Hoay.ood DOI-
lip cotumnlet ..... Alcll
end An\lnda IOt help Iller
a blollffl lt1~1 le midi
onllefllte. ........
..... STORY
INQA&.
"Nuc::IMr Wer: Thi lnour·
•bll DleMM" Thi mldicll
~of nuolMf
Wit II• dilwllld by ll:NI-
.. end Amerlcln phyW-
cl•n•; Hoddlng C1r1 ..
hoatl.
CCJMOVIE
13. The movie is the story of a vigilante
sheriff who resorts to any means to
enlorce the law.
TUBE TOPPERS
KNXT (2) 8:00 -"Seven Bridea For Seven
Brothers." Guthrie unknowingly teams up
with two poachen who are wanted by the
authoritJes when he diacoveni gold in a nearby
str<."tim.
KABC (7) 8 :00 -"Tales of the Gold
Monkey." Jake po8eS as a defecting American
scientist to infiltrate a myste rious island
e n campment whe re the Germans are
conducting an omlnous experiment.
KCET (28) 8:00 -"My BrlUlant Career."
Judy David is a young girl tom between her
desire for a lesiHhan-perfect lover and need to
pursue her own career.
.MOYIE
*** "Arthut" (11181)
Dudley ~oora. Liu Mln-
nelll. Whlll hie temlly
•1141fn9tl 10 loroe him Into
I pra-arrengecl merrlege, 1
dtunlten. hldonlstlC llllY·
boy fllle In low with I poor
or WO(lrlng girt •PO.
4:11(%)MCME * * '" "Clbln In Thi Slly .. ( 1943) Ethel W1t1n, Lena
Horne. A bMlcll women
t>etti. the ~ for thl
90\A of hit """ 1:2t Ct) MCME
* ** "Thi 0t .. 1 8"*
Hoax·· (111711) Ned Blltl)',
Alc:hlrd BIMhlrt nw ..
dilgruntlld bll'tll execu-
''-decide to 991 thl
rlctlel they llal they're
entJUld 10 by eteeino •
I• tof>lllty of lhllt own blnll.
-'PO' •:IOI~
MlllW ....,.,.. A bt ••
~ eongwr1elng -· h1111 meny ldvantut.
...... lrytno 10 ... out ••
Mng on IN oount~; em~.'PO'
t2:00 G **"'"The Trep"
( ttff) AlcNtd Wldnwtl;. ·
Tine Loulll. A eyncflc:aj!M
IMdlt l•torime •
town wNa ettempelno
.... ttll country.
Ct) * * * ·~ "The EJlpflMt' • ........ ,,., Jofvl Hlitt.
Anthony 14opklne. A dldlo-
clled phylk:l1n tale•
under hit wing • ~ deformed man .._ ..
untN "*1 had "-1 ..,_
1n ct-c> rr.-.....,....
'PO'
(%) •• * ~ ''The Pied
Piper'' ( 1912) Doftoww\
Oonlld Pl 111roa. '" .. 1300I, • ..,.,.., ...
llile IO 991 paid tor rlddllle
I town ol rodents ~
.... agelt'lt ttll '"" fllhln by epltldng ...
tflalr dllldrltl 1a::ao••······~ (1957) Fr9d AIUIN, 0,.
Dyan Cannon is a woman
with two husbands in
• •'I\ "Uttll Oer1lng1"
11HO) T1tum O'Neel, Krie-
ty McHlchol. Al --c.mp, IWO teen-109 glf19
~to -wtlo will bl thl 11r11 10 1o111 her wglnl-
®'~
thl bride'. • .. ·boyff1ind.
(Al G MOVIE ...... ''Thi 8111 .. .,, ..
( 11164) Hlnty Fondl. C#rt
RoblttlOn. Two Pofltlcl-
comptile tor thl ~
rnent of en lll-praeldlnt In lhlit ,_ '°' .... nornlnl·
t:2tai= * ... "Dlllh Vtlllay" 11982)
PIUI LeMll, P ..... 8illngs-
ley. A New Yortl rounQ1141f
le tent to Artz.one to Will
his mother end 11umblle
ICtOll • ..... of e<llly
rnt.ttdart. 'R'
* * "Cennonblll Run"
(11181) 8utl ~.Dom
DIWIM. Vertous oddblll
cNtlC141f• comptil• In •
COlll·IC>-COMl SU10 r-.
'PG'
(IJMCME ** "Cen You Keep It Up For A Wiii!?" Jer--, Bul-
lock. Aichltd 0'~1t1. A
ChlttMI. Alt~producer bKOM••
lnvotwed """' • ...,.... Aullllll agent In Pwll.
• ICNXT cceu
• l(NllC INllCI
• KT&.A (Incl.I
.l(AK (AllCI
• ICP:Me ICll)
• ll(HJ•TV Unit.I
•tCUT IMC>
• KTTY llnlt.)
'• IC~TV CINI.)
•KCITINIJ
' t • ll0,:1 I,_,
"Having It All" tonight at
9 on KABC, Channel 7.
(Q} On.TV
{JJ Z.TV
fM1 .. IO
IC> ((IM~lll
cwoi.1 NY.,N.Y,
Gl CWTft)
llS~) ,.,.,,.,,,.. . .,..,._
e cc...-......_,.,
\'
,,_ 10 lnlorOI the .....
In Ille ~town domlln
• ,,,,., IM.UAHT
~
A ~ girt (Judy o..Ml 11
tom ~ her dellfl lot
her .... ~io
(Sem Nelli) end her ...
to pur-her own c:ar-
ln Ihle ICMc>tetlon of ......
Ft"*lln'e ncMll Mt In Ille
11801. (I) ,. .... MAGAZJNI!
ITM-#AHCIUD
~
Aoblr1 OulllUme etM1I In
tNI Cllebretlon from ~
wood 10 '-111nd Amer9"
wNdl .... Ut. -al
America'• hero.,. ....
lltd :.:::-·
!MCME
•• 'A .. """" Number Cen
Ptly" (1Mtl a.ti Gable,
Aleldl Smllfl. All llOnelt
end ~ ..,,..,..,. ....
.. bel.c wlttl • ..... of
"~· Cll)MCME
*** "lodyHelll"(INtl
Wltlllm Hur1, IC...,._.
Tunier. A_....._ AortOa
._,.,llpeil U1dbyllll
IO¥tr '° --.. ,... bind."' (D)MCMR
*** "Al ....,_. Loog"
(1M1) 0... HMl!men. a.1Wa ..,...,.,..., Aftet .,.. ....... "°"' --PGt• _,... '° llflllln. .. _ .. ..,.,,...,, .
<Nd ..••• d "*''• .....
tltyle end ~ -•urned ~.'A'
*. "lmpfapet ~ ..
(tN1) Alen Min.,,..,...
Herttey. A _. of mlul-
cNntlfldlnte ~ •
lodll ---to 11.-pect Ille 6-~--...., of
• lllPel Med oouple .. Ille
wtctlnt of cHd lbuM. 'PO' .MOYIE * * * .. N ttluf" ( ttlp)
OUdl9y Moor-. Uze ~
Miii. MINI 1111 fllfftlly
..,.,,.,.. to lorOI him Into
• pr•errlnged merrteoe. •
dnlnUn. fledorllllttc --boy,... In IO¥e wC1h • poor
wor\lng gltt. 'PO' ... THI'°"'*
H 111 ITL. "°9PTA
RACK
• 90 YOU ntNC VOU GOTTIQ•a
•
IL80'f'ION 'M
HO (I) Ma ............ ._Wf191'1
Ill Old f\'tend --up .tltt
• P'fttY IMorldl on 1111 .-m
end 1 ''-* recoJd tor i..t
aMCMI ,,_.. N NA" (Prtmier1)
D.-1n C1nnon, Hert
IOdwllf. Ttle Mt-Miid ...
of • •ucc 11111'111 flilfllOfl
....,., with ofllce9 In
New YOl'h Ind l.09 ~ ............... ._ ....
..... llMOll ... GOeM, e.-w .....
~ T1IH•. Men ,..,.., Anti .........
~~ TlleedcnWtllle. ·--...... "The~
lore" (tl71) o.ot,. Burne, ..... .......,, , .. ..,.,.~ ...... ,........ ....
..... ~-ON...-sc:zoe.
Cl>MCMI • *" ''Olllln In Ttle lllf' 1,..lllllW-.,!Anl ....... ,. ... ~ ._ ..... "" .. .. ,!-i~-:..
"" --....... ........ -. .. ............... 0. ............... .. ..
••• °" ··La Ceee AuA
Follle" (1117t) U00 T•
RIZZI, Mlc:ftel 8erHult. A
nightclub owner lltle 10
prepetl Ille ,, ............
loYlr lc>t I Ylelt by hie IOll'I
fl 1 ncea'1 l1th1r, th•
morall comrnlMlonlr ot
Frenca. 'A'
(Q)MOVIE
• • "Clnnon.,.. Aun"
( 198 1) Burt Raynoldl. Dom
Ollulll,, Vlflous oddblll
Cfllt1C1er1 comptil• In •
coelt·IO<OMt IUtO 1-.
'PO'
Cl)MOVIE * • "Cln You KelCI It Up
Fol A Wiii!?" .-_., W-
klc;tl, RlclWd 0'~. A
~women..-10
m11ry hlf ~on the
conditJon 11111 ... l'WMln
~~for ..... ...... .MOVIE * .... 1lWty II A Dinger·
OUI Age, ~ltlle" (1 ... )
~ ~. A olalllcal
pllfllll ... ha """' Cl(lm;o POii i ms I ..,. before
,..,..,,_,.,_~.
tO:IO .....
•• mlDINT NITWOM .... "-1~•,.=-Hoet; ... Herwy. ~·: Tom ........... ._..._,_ .,,...,...
• • IMIDt °'·· •• __, ..... Uf()e''
I THAT QUiil.OW
9119TIOIMN MtJttOllOO
lton• mu1t loo•t• •
ttljeclred ltllPfMnt of
,~ tOlcf Wore tl'll
~ .... .. "-ported to*"""~ .....
!:-~
•• ~ "H9wtfront" ( ,,.,.,
M IMIW, CtwW Hl!y-
WOOCI. Two r1Y81 __...,
oomp1ni.. 1uemp1 10
ldQe MCfl ottllr out In • ,_ lot IN AuWlllln
-....... In Iha '408. 'PO'
,,:tO.(I) ~
IUMICa8 "-ACl
Edith'• frentlc ecurrytno
dole 8"11 to .._ Aidt/le "'*' 1'11,getl **· , .. , e8TOMGHT
Holl: Johnny C1rton.
au.ti: Tim ~ IM
dltlCI t'OllP Pllotlolul: Rey ....... wflO boCtllll
lkunklOlnt. e9MCNM8 NIQHTUNI
I YOU AllCIO P'Ofl IT
• ntl#IW•DNe Geotte end 1..-,....
_,.of lhelr lllOlll unlor•
..... .,.. lftd ltllltl~•
, ,,..,, 3)
ONeocmTY T'8aff
Hoel!.,..,.,..~.
Cl) NMtiCI! l'TOl.IN
'-OW ~,.
11:41 CC) MCMI
**** "LI ltr1d1" ''"'l ~ Qulnft, GlulltW ....... A..,..
............... 1111 .... ,.., !It .... , .... wined ..,. ........... .. ...................
lfl ..... ""° ._ ....
(ll)MCMI **.,. "Tattoo" (1Ht)
.,.,. Dim, --,....., Nt ........... .... -..... . ......... ....... ................ .,.., """ '* ...... . -i.:1;ow .. 1T
Alt---. ....... ............. ~
ff ......
LMIOl\T ......... .............. .... -. .......... .
1111 ......... ......
Ml -
lion °' lhllr perty. • MOVIE
***'~ "Thi Pritoner Of
z:.nd• .. ( 1113 7) Aonlld Col-
men. O.Yid N1¥1n A kld-
nepped king'• d~bll
llgtitt off ~· °' !I'll ltltone until IN rMI king le
'-*· .LOW.~ ITY&.a
··1.ow Md Thi Big 0-"
Someone le CflMtlng II btid09. ··1.ow Md Tiie
8-"1 TIMI'' It'• lfll cf*-
dren wflO •• COllOll ned
...... lhl .,.,.,.,.. .,. out
1et1on1dete.
(Q)MOYll
"Tlnlal Town" (tNO) Den--
.... Aire. Loni Hlnder-
l(ln.
Cl)MOYll ..... """"°' WNdl Wey You Cert" ( tNOI Ctlnt
~. 8ondr-. Lodi•. ..,,. aMtllr'll ~ ......
'* Gitt Ind pee orlfllll'*',
I Olt9 .... d tlghllt '911
llP ... ON ..... lloadwe
lftlKft, 'PO' .MOYIE
* * * "Sllvat StrNll" (tt71) 0.. Wider .....
Clayburgh. A mlld·
--booll edltOt 1ccld•nt•llY beoomH liwotw.d In • ..,..., .,,
,..,, ....,.,. -dUr1nO •
or~ ttlln ride.
?G'
1a:0t e (I) MOVIE * * "Fugltlw F1mlly"
11N0) Ncherd CNnnl.
Ollnl Baker. A gowrn..
ment ...,_ .......
c:rime !IC* .. toroid to 00 "*' "6dlng """ 1111 ~ IO eec.-ltla mobeler't U:IO··~~~wm4 DAVID Lil I LLUUM
OulN; OOfMdlltl .....
lc:Mf, WfiW E,,.... Prefer. ·~II CAN ~
"Low Md Tiie Oellr'8
~· Mll'lon Ind •
Frll'tcla meat ltlrougt! 1
~ dlClnO trllel.
''Low Md The ....,.,..
Couple'' Flober1 "* 10 borrow Illa u-epouee tor .,._....
, •• MCMI
•• '"nne .... In ...,di
Of A Bolt" (1"4) ~
Ven Ooten, To111111y
Nooftln. Alt ~or gett 1
~~halrtllto
IOlwe .. 1111ndt' ~ r•----·~ "PMl llull'' (tMI) Sidney Poitier. ,..,. ......
l'llln. A P* al ~
In .... ,.... .....
on~.
Cl)MCMR .... .., o...,~ (1179)
O•rvyn Coop.,, ICll'i
llldlllt.tmi
1:10• MOVll
• • ''Tiie 0.... ._.....
I 1111) ....... T_..,, A11119 .... A_... .... .,..._ ... _. .. . . ............. .. _..__ .......... .. ............
t:JO 8 8 Nee NEWS
OVUNGHT
(C)MOVIE
••• "Rmlntr• County"
(1957) Ellubaeh Teytof.
Montgomery Cltft. During
the CM Wer, a ~Ing
Southern bell ......
mined to hew 1111 men of
her crW>lce r991rdlaee of
lhl~.
(Q)MCMI
"Pay*(' ('1173) Ric> Tom,
Anni Capri. A country 11\d ..cem linger Mfllellly
mell• hie way to ...,dom ·
by~ .....
~ lhOle •Ot.tnd him. t:OO. CM NEWI
..aHTWATCH 1.:rfltM> ....
YON( llG lNf °"' Aober1 Klein '-la • oom-«t'I etlOWdown fMtlM1ng
,.... of Haw vc1111·1 111a1
ltlNMIP comlcl. tepid
.... .. Ille CopeceNna.
.MCMI * ** "ZOOI 11111" (tN 1:
Oenlel VlldR, ldwltd
.--Olmol. In t940I
Loa Angella, 1 C1U1a caie-
bt• lr\IPt9 -the frem-lng of_.,... of.~
no .. ,... geng fc>t murder.
'A' 2::IO. MOVIE **.,. "Oledly FllhOml"
( 1972) OOcumlnlery. A
e<oup of ~ dMtl
encounter treecflefous COf'8I ,.. Ind deldly
lh9ttlt Wflerl Ny -out on • pM4oerllphlc ~
lion. .MOYIE *.... "IMaclt Svnd1y" (tN1) Jofwl ,.._deoll,
lettler1 S.... A gltt
r9l\lml ll'om l'llr O"IW IO ... .-. tor .,..
burned ... Wftetl, t:•·= t:AI (! MOYll
** "Going Apel" (tNt)
Tony 0.-.. JllMc:e Wiil-
Mt. Tine~ hold
"'8 pur91 9lrlf'lgl to • 16-
~~·PO'
l:ll(ll)MCME
•• "Ttle Blue L.aeoon"
(IMO) lfOOke .......
Cfwl.eopw Atlllnl. Two
~~f"IWIO ldoeeaceia on a ,_.,
loultt ,,.., ....... Incl
~ .... """of ... lliWla. ....
t•(J)MCMI ** .. ..._..,. (ttlO),.,.
Mldlltl GleMf. 811Mf'1 HofM, A tr011P of ,_,..,
pettenll -mt.tfdeNCI
eccoidl110 to"'* lndMdlt-. ...._ .,_.
Ut{l)MCMI ... ,. .. ......,.. .. ,, ..
YM ........ Id~.
.... ... fttlfMbyAod
....... A...._ tyoooll
........ upln•Noll-......................
••• lllCMI *"'""" .... c.,.e•· ,,....J ...... ......
... 11111111 "91f1•11. A ....................... .............. ..., en *-'Y ._.....,...
ti'·
young women •-to merry hit boyfriend on lhl
c:ondltlOn !hit hi temaln
gainfully emiplo)'ed tor ...,.
en dive.
Tlaursda•'•
Dn11t l•r /tlo.,lr•
l;IO ct)*•** "Father Of
The Btida'' (IMO)~
T ter;y. Ellzabetll T eylof A
f•lher ...,,.,..,_ .. of
lhl )oy9 end hledldlel
lnvotwd """' the Pf9Plr• 11one tor hie dlugttter·•
~wedding.
(8) •• 'A "Thi Prtvele
Eyee" (IMO) Don l<notts,
Tim Conwey. Two bum-
bling Amertcen .. ~
.,.. calld In to "'-tiglll
...... of rnutdlra In .,..
~~.·PO' ..oo•··· "Zoollllll" "tH 1) 01nlet V1ldez, EcMard .,_ Otmol. In
1M0a LOI Ange!M, I
c:--. Cllebr9 INP'I -lhl frenq of _..,.of
·~--... -mutder .• ,..
...... tt~
C~" (1 tMI AIM!
Artlln, ,,.,,,.. Flnley. Scot-
llnd Yerd ..... Ille lid of
• bwnbtlng Franc:tt -.0.
11111 to IOlll8 1 rof>lllty. ca> •• ·~ "The Lat Dey9 Of ......,..,,... ( 11771 Rod
Steiger, Henry Fond•.
Half Ille end of tfll Sec-
ond Wortd Wer, ~ ,_
clet Pflmllt lenlto ..__
lint MWnpt9 to flea 11111
daleeled country. 'PO'
10:00 ...... "Sftlk• Hinds
With Tiie De\111'' ( 1Ht)
Jemee Caoney, Don Mur·
ray. A 9ludlnC trom ltll
U.S. ~ to ,...,..,.. "°"' oatUno llwol"9d In the llftderground ,..,....
ment cklnrig the lrllh
Aeellllol\. CC> ..... "Sliver .,..,.. ..
(11171) Mlctteel C1ln1.
Cyblll Sh1pll1rd. An
liCCOUntlnO oertM ..... 1n lnlrlCll• pl1n lo
--Ille wealltl by melllng -of the top
•ICUINw In Ille wortd °' high .,__ Ille victims of
.,.. llltreorclinery a.!ndll.
'PG' ® •• "Legend Of The
Wiid" (tNO) 'l'O' Cl) ..... Altlilte Of
Ootlil Glmt .. (1Ma)Oelll)le
~ ...... Ven.T.o
OOllegl ltlda ..,. ... a •
..... of ll9M'll9i led -ar:-. "Tlte Or..c Trlln
AollMry" I tt7t) ae.n
CCIMSY. OoNld Su!Mt·
land. ""° ..,_., turft.Of-lhe-Oen~ Oort lf11ett
........... to P'll off ...
~ lintlOlllbee l'Oll-
bsy ol ....... ....
....,.. .... ..,,.... iooo. ........ "°. 11•• ..... _, .....
(ttltlANY~ler·
..... ,...,lnlwortll
of ................ .......... ,...~ .......... ,, ....
~ .... .,..
11• lllJ •. ·-n. .......... ...................... .... ,,..., ..,., ........ ..
t :ao <ID • • "Splrll Of Tiie
Wind" (ft7t) 0.. Oen
0-ge. A young boy 0¥et·
~'*~to
become the WCW1d etiem..
p6on Dog Staddar. 'PO' ca> ••. 'Thi lncredtie
Shrinking Women" 11980)
Uly T ornlin, Chlrtel Gro-
din. A ~ 111"'9 II
h¥d to cope wMr't 11'11
IUdderlly beglrll to W"*
ln*-.'PO'
(%) • * ''Oc*g ,.,,. ..
(1N 1)TonyDlna.~
Wiiier. Three Of..,...
hold the purw ..,,.. to •
15-mllllon lnherlten~.
'PO' 2:IO. * * * ··Roy11 Wed-ding" I tt6 t) Ftld Astaire.
._ Powel. A -9-lfld-
dltlCI '8Sft ot-I PW• eor-1n England ......
time that °"Mn Elr.IOalh
N le putUng 1hl Ai'lll IOUC:fl-
.. on her 111etrtnlonllf ... a:oo Cl> * * ''The COnqusor''
( ttM) "°"" w.,... "-'
~.A mlgllty Mongol
wsrior ltldnlpe ........
._of I~ Tlr1W
11"'9 ltld ..... oontrol cl ........ .. <ID ..... "'"-,,,__
E)W" (lllO) Don l<notll,
T1m eor-.,. Two IMft..'
l*llO~~I
-cellld In to 1n.-1~ • _ ... of ""'""" In In
Et'Olefl cede. 'PO·
(Q) • * ... "Toby Md The l<OIM ...,_.. (1N1) ,...,,
HetYta. Liiie ~Ion lltd ....
INOon oomblfll to 11111 lie
, ... of • yourlg boy Incl .... ,
pee lromta In Au9lrMI'• '
ll'Ontllr deyl.
Cl) ..... "llldl 8Muly"
(tl71) Mn Llallr, w .....
-.. ...., on ltla Moll'l
by Aline 8-11. A proud Incl I _,..,. .,..,.,
..,,.. ......,_ rfWt.I' --.-. .. CC> "High _.. ( ,...,.
Oevtd J1n•Nn, TOfll' •
MueaMe, Tine ~ .•
ctmller'I .. ,__ "°"'
Ill Olllour-e --• ,... tfll ¥9llnt 9"or19 of I .... 1 ...,,.,.... ....... ....,....,°'*"'
,. .. (ttl1) Man Mir).'' ...........,.A ....
of ml1und1t1t1ndlftfe
~·eocw--eo .... IPKt .,.. I-year .. '
daugflWr of I llP I WM, ~ ..... ~of dlid --.·PO• I' •• ® •• ''Wtlo .......
The Wind?'' ( tl17) CkrdDft
.......... Joie '-'-· ~
yollflO -.· ... -= lllMllPtllrt9... I ...... _ .. cm .. ....., Dellll'• './'d
Docw'' (ttnt Or ....... ~ ,r.-."l'O'
Cl)** ''The .... T,_ ~,. Ctt7tl ... ,
COMtry, DonlN ~· ....,.., .... ~.
~ OOfl ... ,
....... to P'll Off ~) -··· ...... , .. ,....: lllry ......... ... .......................... , -.'l'O· .. Cl>* •• ,. ........ , ,,..,,Nil Tom, 0....
,,.,_, A ,...._ _. • • ,........, .... ,...,. ...... .. ,. ....... .,. .
by Armatrong • l•tlul
Brewers' Robin Yount watches his
uble drop into right field. It helped
dt:op the Cards, 10-0.
Illy Nit
Wl!ONl80AY. OOT. 1tl, 1812
~USINESS C6
STOCKS C7
a . ,.
Medi")'or im~ es
media blackout on
NFL negotiations. C2.
Brewers ·deal right .cards·
As a result, Milwaukee conies up a winner .
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Surprille, aurprlle.
The Milwaukee· Brewers can play Whitey
Ball, too.
The Ame r ican L eague champ ion
Brewers charged into the World Serles
with an image of sluggers who thrive on
the long ball, as evidenced by 216 home
runa ln the regular ~aaon.
St. Louis, on the ottler hand, got here on
speed and de!enae. a bunch of singles
hltters a11embled by Manager Whitey
Herzog and conditioned to z.lp around the
baaes at breakneck speed.
SO IN TUESDAY night's opener, the
Brewers put together ·13 singles, three short
of the World Series record, in a 17-hit
attack and rode the three-hit pitching of
• Mlke Caldwell to a lopsided 10-0 victory.
Herzog called it an old-fashioned, back of
the shack. rump-kicking. "I'm glad it only
counted as one game," he said. "I'm glad we
dJdn't have a double-header."
The jackrabbits at the top of the Brewer
batting order drove the Cardinals to
distr~ction.
Leadoff man Paul Molitor set a World
Series record with live hits, all singles.
Three were infield hits and one, driving in
a key run, came when he shattered his bat
and looped the ball beyond the infield .•
"It's the first time I've had three Infield
hits," Molitor said. "They weren't very
pretty."
NO.% MAN Robin Yount had four hits,
three of them singles. Molitor and Yount
drove in two runs apiece as Milwaukee
punished four St. Louis pitchers.
"I just hit the ball where the fielders
weren't," explained Yount.
How's that for Whitey Ball?
Just to make sure their longball image
wasn't forgotten, the Brewers also had a
towering home run by ex-Cardinal Ted
Simmons and a two-run triple by J im
Gantner.
"It's nice to score 10 runs," said Molitor,
''but we sUll didn't swing the bat as well u
we!re capable of. The Cardinals know we
can hit the long ball.''
What St. Louis might not have known,
though, waa the kind of performance
Caldwell had In hia 33-year-old left arm.
Shelled in his last two starts, he was pasaed
over by Manager Harvey Kuenn in the
decisive fifth game of the American League
Tonlaht'1 game -Miiwaukee at
St. Louls, 5:20 p.m.
Tonight'• pftchere -Don Sutton
(4-1) of ttie Brewers vs. John Stuper
(9· 7) of the Cardinals.
TV -Channel 4 at 5 p 1 m .
Announcers -Dick Enberg, Tony
Kubek, Joe Garaglola, Bob Costas
and Tom Seaver.
Redlo -KNX (1070) at 5 p.m.
Announcers -Vince Scully and
Sparky Anderson.
Remaining 1chedule -Friday's
game: In Miiwaukee, 5:30 p.m .;
Saturday's game: In Miiwaukee,
10:20 a.m .; Sunday's game, If
necessary: In Miiwaukee, 1:45 p.m.;
Tuesday's game, If necessary: In St.
Louis, 5:20 p.m.; Wednesday, Oct.
20 game, If necessary: In St. Louis,
5:20 p.m .
playoffs. But he came back with an airtight,
workmanlike game against the Cardinals.
"I WAS GETTING ahead of th~ hitters,
throwing mostly sinkers and a back-door
slider.'' Caldwell said. "I felt strong and
when I got three ground balls in the first
inning, l got a lot of personal confidence."
Simmons, the Brewers' catcher, knew
early that the veteran left-hander was on
his game.
"[could tell right away," he said. "There
was no question in the first inning. He was
throwing the sinker at three-quarter speed
and we were getting the ground balls. r said
to my.elf, 'This could be nice for a while.'"
It turned out to be nice all night long.
Caldwell surrendered a double to Darrell
P orter In the second inning, a walk to
Tommy Herr in the sixth, singles to Porter
and Ken Oberkfell In the eighth, and
nothing elae. He retired 17 of the first 18
batters h~ faced and threw first-pitch
strike, to 22 of the 31 Cardinal batters,
including 10 In a row at one point. He
retired 14 hatters on ground ball.a.
"That's aa good as he can pitch," said
Simmons. "You 're not going to see him any
better ."
BEFORE CALDWELL ever took the
mound, he had a two-run lead thanks to an
error by usuafly sure-handed Cardinal first
baseman Keith Hernandez.
St. Louis starter Bob ·Forsch had opened
by getting Molltor to ground out to second
baseman Herr, the only Ume all night the
Cards would retire the Brewer leadoff man.
Yount singled and Cecil Cooper walked.
After Simmons struck out. Ben Oglivie hit
a bouncer at Hernandez' feet. The ball got
by fo~ an error , scoring one run, and
Gorman Thomas followed with an infield
single for another.
"l didn't have time to move," said
Hernandez. who has won four Gold Gloves
for his defensive ability. "The ball was hit
very hard. I just booted it. I'm not going to
offer any excuses."
Herzog knew Fo1'9Ch was not himself.
"He threw 39 pitches in the first inning,"
the manager said. "I don't know if It was
World Series jitters or what. He dJdn't get
the ball where he wanted to."
In the fourth, the Brewers were back for
more. Charlie Moor~ opened with a double,
moved to third on a perfect Whitey Ball
sacrifice by Gantner and scored on
Molitor's broken-bat single.
AN INNING later . Simmons smashed
Forsch's fi rst pitch deep Into the right field
seats, but foul. Then he got into a little
guessing game with the Cardinal pitcher
and came up a winner.
''They a_!!Uoing to throw me slow stuff,"
he said. "·~·s what the scouJing reports
say and I was seeing screwballs and slow
changes prior to that. The ball I hit foul
was a slider up. I was geared to take the
gamble that they would throw me a fut
ball down and it was right there."
Simmons hit it over the right field wall.
making lt 4-0. Then ln the sixth, the
Brewers pushed across two more runs with
two out. Gantner and Molitor aingled and
Yount dropped a double just inside the
right field foul line, mak.ina It 6-0.
It's
"
a funny business
Meyer needs some help, and so~e points
~ BOWARD L. HANDY or. ... Deir Not .....
, .. Bill Meyer h.ai1B from Wea:>, Texas but he is
almost as w e ll known at Orange County
International Raceway as he is in his hometown.
Meyer, a familiar figure at all OCIR races
lr\,volving funny cars, will be on hand this weekend
for the Nat.lonaJ Hot Rod Association (NHRA)
Wtnaton World Championshipe.
11• He will be one of three drivers with a chance to
wtp thP. NHRA funny car championship although it
~ be an uphill battle If he iB to succeed. At the
mernent, he trails point leader Frank Hawley by
4M points with veteran Don Prudhomme In third p!ife some 338 points behing Me~er.
"YES, WE'VE FIGURED out all of the
po9lbilitia for this weekend to see where we have
tt['IO in order to beat Frank," Meyer says. "We have
~the odda figured out but it will al80 mean that he ~ to fall out fairly early for us to win."
Point• are not only awarded for winning
\hroughout the three-day program but for high
~and low el.apeed time, especially if a national
r«P~ is involved.
11, That's where Meyer hopes to pick up some
pound. .
"We own two of the four funny can that have
over the 2~·mile-per-hour mark and both of
will be running here this weekend," Meyer
during a lull in practice this week.
"' "Prudhomme ran 2~ early this year and was
fint to make It. Ken Venney haa done it two or
time9 but we have run ~-mp.rh or better 14
thil year -almo8t every week.
I "° ''THE FIRST THREE cars to make that speed
Pontlaca and they felt It WM the aerodynamics
did It. But we are awltchlng to Ford next year
our eecond car la a 1983 Ford \bat will be driven
by Tripp Shumake. He UC> tu.med 2~ with that
~at Fremont."
M9yer' rww ln about 35 r-.-each year and h1a m6W .. ..,,.. are from Southern California (Chief Aiio Perla and 7-Eleven Stores),., he make11 all of
t .. racea at OCIR and wlll return for the
Mllnufacturer'a Funny Car Champlonah1pe in a
... ofweeka.
isn't much danger. 1 burned a car here last year
during qualifying.''
While Meyer owns his own cars. he has a team
dJrector in HaJ Needham.
"He puts the package together and picks up the
sponsors for ua," Meyer says. "That gives me more
time to concentrate on racing. Some drivers try to
'We own two of the four lunny
cars that have gone over the 250
mph mark and both of them will be
running here this weekend.'
do it all and they lose their competitive edge
because they spread them1elves too thin."
Meyer ia 28 and figures he has at leut another
12 to 14 ·years of driving ahead of him.
"l started 10 young (16) that I feel I have a lot
more experience than most drivers my ap. I have
driven funny can ever since I started drag racing,
nothing elae. I don't want to ch~e.
"To me it's like being a dentist. It would be
hard to change to being a brain surgeon."
IF HE HADN'T gone into drag raci.nl after
ata.rting in go-kart.a as a youngster, he migllt have
taken up profeeslonal goU.
"I f.'njoy playing goU and shoot In the low 80s
most of the time. At home I can shoot ~tween 78
and 84 but on a at:range coune, I don't do quite u
well. But I get a lot of enjoyment out of goU,"
Meyer says.
Meyer and wife Deborah ll'ftted their first
child aix weelu ago, a boy named Adam . .ru,ht now
they are traveling with him and will probably
continue to do IO for wvera1 ye.n.
"At thta time of the year, the travellna ,eta a
little tiring and we are 11.ad t.q ,et home for awhile.
· But when the spring rolla around, we are ready to
go •Sain.''
St. Louis shortstop Ozzie Smith makes a diving stop of a sharp
ground ball off the bat of Milwaukee's Paul Molitor. Despite
Smith's effort, Molitor legged the smash ou~ (or a hit.
"
... ~ won two racee thia aeMOn. One wu l.n
•ver at the Mlle H11h Nationala where he ~ a tnck record speed of 240.00-mph. He eet
NHBA national record of 5.82 aeconda,
<;ardinals off er a tip of the cap. to Caldwell
and Md the all-time tMtst speed of
durtnc the NHRA Summematlonala at
'N.J.
11.,.r WM Do tM winner of the bia-t n1Ce
of the ,_.., the U.S. Nadonala l.n Mdianapol.is thia
IUIDmS where he picked up $N,OOO f« hil effortt.
~ .. 0111DJM1rt110n, the winner at OCIR thil weekend 4 '**up in the ...a,hborhood of fl7,000.
Wlnnlnitl the mdona1 chamll6onlhip maana an
ad4itl0Dal 'te&,000-70,000. All contracw wttb
.....,.. contain da~ f« eddtUonal money If a>w
drtwr Wlna the Ude.
One of the major problems for funny car
....... ftn.
ST. LOU1S (AP) -Catcher Darrell Porter
called It a "aood, old-fashioned tall·klddni" for him
and the St. LoWa Card.inala -a eenttment UC>
expr-d by Manaaer Whitey Hence -but Mid it
allo WM only OM pme. •
"Sometl,._, I think, It'• beti:s:. UM \hat than it .. 2·1.'' Porter aid f ~y ftilht'a 10-0 triumDh by &IN MU-.uac. ln
the tint pme of h World 8eri-.
''In them ...,,., your mind ..,. '°"" back over the nan.''
Apinlt a power-laden MUwauk• Uneup, the
c.rdinall had no ~ .-IO make.
"h w• jUlt am of them ....... I think." llAd
Porter. '"nMy aot out ID frant Of w ....Sy. You ldnd
of hope you can come bMk. but r: wen MWr in
At." t 1'
To a man, Cardinals Upped their caps to
Brewer left-hander Mlke Caldwell, the author of a
three-hitter.
"Whatever he threw he WM aettina the ball
where he wanted It; you've aot IO atve hlm CNdlt,"
aaJd det.lpted hitter Gene Tenace. "He didn't
throw me a cut fllltball. He JL-t threw me • ~. lllnlu!r and a curYeball.'', '
Cardinal ff.nt a-man KMth Hernandn Mid
he Ml8PIC'ted 101M of Caldwell'• deliwn• were
••queetfonable" tcnWballa.
0 He threw ..... , ballpme," ~ llld
bowewr. ""8 ~ apeid on the n.ht-hMd.d
batten. He ww &be cornen welf. Whether
U..,'n 11sewbelll • •nen. I don't know. But
yau'ft 11111 ... to .......... °"" the plate."
M lmf' .... W • Mllw.~·1 hfttinl---"'
WM to Cardinal ahortatop Ozzie SmU.h, ao Wf19 the
speed the Brewen demonstrated in leat.nl out
lnfleld hlta.
"When you pt to this ttace I think you cu do
more ttuln ;.t bane walll. Every dub th.et'• hen
can do a lot of thlnit." Smith Mid.·~ hav-a
.... t tam and they ahowed thet 10ftAcht .•
Herq aaJd the early prob&ema of Cardinal
star1« Bob FOl'9Ch involved mon than W«ld ~
jlti.n.
"He threw 38 pUchee an th• flnt lnnlnc."
He"'°' Mid. "Hernandea' error let in a eouple of
NN. but he (fonch) couldn't ,et the ball where he
want.-1 it.'' ™ Hernandn wu of tb• 'l,:• •Iden .h,_the four·tame Gold 0 (... .....Cl)
\ .
\ .
Rose Parade gets
Olsen as its leader
From AP dJ1,.tehl
PASADENA -Merltn Olten, m
the burly, bearded •W' of televilk>n'1 • •
"Father Murphy," hu been named •
Grand Mauhal of the 1983
Tournament of Ro.ea Parade.
Ot.en, a former Loa Anplel Rama tack.le,
·arrived at the Roee Bowl In Puederla Tueeday ln
a convertible, stepped to the podium and aid:
"I alwaya wanted to arrive in a football
atadlum on the back of a
convertibler Unfortunately,
my coaches alwar• had a
different appro.ch.'
The theme of thia yeer'a
Roa' Parade la "Rejoice."
Oi.ejl characterized the Roee
Bowl game, the oldeat of
college postaeuon oontetta, u
"trufy international" and a
........
"celebraUon of joy."
IOL .. • Tournament President Brewer catcher Ted
Thornton M. HAmlin Jr. announced the .election s· r II h h at the stadium, where the 69th Roee Bowl game _ unmon& o OWi t roug
will be played following the New Y~ar·s Day on home run swing off St.
parade through Pasadena. Louis pitcher Bob Forsch. Olsen played tackle u part of the Rama'
"Feanome Founome" defensi~ line ln the 19608
and 1970s. After retiring from professional
football, he became a sporta broadcaater and later Calgary posts first victory
won the title role aa priest "Father Murphy."
He is the fourth sporta flaure and third
professional athlete to be named Grand Manha.I.
Others who have led the famous parade down
Colorado Boulevard include Ma.ry Pickford,
Shirley Temple, Dwight D. Eiaenhower, Arnold
Palmer, Frank Sinatra and Bob Hope.
Quote of the day
Bob James, coach of the Republican
City (Neb.) High School football team, after
an 80-0 loss to Guide Rock: "We dJdn't pay
any attention to the 1rore. We had a real
good time out there."
Weaver denies he'll manage Angels
Earl Weaver, who retired last week after 14
seasons as manager of the Baltimore Orioles,
Tuesday denied reports he had accepted a job
with the Angels.
"There is abeolutely no truth to the rumors
of a job offer by the Angela," Weaver aald
in a pre pare d statement issued by the
~Orioles.
"I am under contract to the Baltimore
Orioles and will definitely fulflll my obUption to
them the next two leaaOl'\S," aid Wea~r. who
has atJD')ed on u a consultant for the Birds.
Weaver said the rumon about hia taking a·
job with the Angela may have been started
becau.e he stayed at the Angela' Milwaukee
hotel during the American Le.cue playoffs.
"l spoke at length to (AnaeJa owner) Gene
Autry and (exec:utive vice president) Buuie
Bavaai, but only because they have been JoncU.me frienda,V Weaver said.
The Calgary Flames, raced by ~
two goala apiece from Pld Ra11ell '
and Lauy McDould, became the la.st
team to enter the point.a column In the
NHL'• regular seaaon when they defeated
Edmonton. 9-4, to highlight action Tuesday
night. The win snapped the Flames' seaaon-
opening three-game losing streak and was the
first in the league for new cbach Bob Jonson,
who came to the team after a succesaful college
career at the Unive rsity of Wisconsin ...
Elaewhere, Pat Boutette scored his third goal of
the game with 1:04 remaining, rallying
Pittsburgh to a 5-4 win over Vancouver for the
Penguin•' first win of the year . . . Boston
defenseman Mike Milbury scored with 2: 11
rema.inir\g to bring the Bruins back from a 2-0
deficit and give them a 2-2 tie with New J ersey.
Howser. Colavito sentenced
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Kansas
City Royals Ma~ager Dick Howser
and batting coach 7Rocky C61avito
were 1entenced Tue9day to 90 days ln
jail for interfering with a police officer after a ·
traffic accident Aua. 19 outside Royall Stadium.
Judie Leonard S. Hughes also fined
C.Olavito 250 and How1er $100 after a Municipal
Cow1 trial TIM! guilty verdicta will be appealed,
said attorney Michael Waldeck.
Both Howser and Colavito d eclined to
comment.
Colavito's car wu hit by a 1eCOnd car -.bout
11 p.m. on Aug. 19 as he and Howaer left the
atadJum after a game with the Chicago White
Sox.
NFL Ha1on almo1t gone -Kleln
There ta "a bla ch1nn'1 tht Ell
rema1nder of the NYL alMOn could be • ' called otf, and "we're awfully clc. to
It," aaya OtM & .. la, owner of the San
Dle10 Char1er1 . . . Jl'orm•r Chlcaao Btara
cent.r Mlk• Pyle and ••·St. Louil Cardinali
all·purpo11 player Joll••f lhlaad were
annOunced Tueedliy .. the coechel for Monday
nJOt'a teheduJed all·•W' pme apoNOred by the1
atftklna NJ'L Playera NtoidaUon. The pme In to
be played at tho Colfaeum In Loi An1~le1 •ta.rt.Ina at 6 p.m, ... .Runs defena1ve end Jaek
Y ..... 1 ... aaya lt'1 t.lme J.O end the NFL play.,..
1trike and r beck to work ... Tex Sdlamm,
preeklent o th• Dallu C.0Wboy1, aaJd that the NFL ownen have a $1GO mWlon line ~redlt
which hu not been UNd and a.re more llled
than ever ln their 1tand uatnat the NFL Playera
A11oelaUon •.. NBC·-,.V announced h 11
dtopJ>lne Canadian Football Leaaµe game1 u a
aubeUtute for the striking NFL for ~t leut two
wee kl. ,
Sutton pays alllng youth a visit
MILWAUKEE -On hia way to • the airplane Monday which would
take him to St. Louia and the World
Series, Milwaukee Brewen pitcher ·
Don Sutton took t1me out to vlalt a young man
who hu leukemia. It wu not the flnt time Sutton remembered
Bob Bartholf, 17, of Waukesha, Wls .. who la at
the Midwest Children's Cance r Center,
Milwaukee Children'• Hoepital.
Amid the locker room post-pennant frenzy
Sunday, Sutt.On told a tele~on repor~r, " .. .1
think that because he (Bartholf) pulled for us
. . . it kind of helped us, and I hope that our.
going out and struggling today and pulling it out
can kind of inspire Bobby. We appreciate you,
pal."
'<'Bartholf's physician, &rton Kamen, said
the youth's leukemia had resisted standard
therapy and that n ew drugs were being
" administered ln hopes of another remission.
RllJnes enters San Diego cllnlc
Montreal Expos left fielder Tim Ill
Ral•es has entered a San Diego
medlca1 clinic for treatment of drug
abuse . . . Basketball star Qalatia · •
Dalley'• refuul to accept guilt for an asaau.lt on a
female nursing student led to a suit filed
Tueaday ,.gainst Dailey and the University of
§!n Frantjsco.1. the woman~attomey sai~. : .
Jim Crowley, the la.st surviving member of Notre
Dame's famous Four Horsemen backfield of the
early 1920s, was in critical condition Tuesday
after suffering a heart attack ... JoAane
Caraerfl,,the leading money winner on the
women's pro tour, was chosen as the 1982
LPGA's Player of the Year ... 8111 Virdon,
flred by Houston in August, oUicially signed a
two-year contract to manage Montreal.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: v v v v excellent: v v v
worth watching: v v fair; v forget 1t.
~ 5:1$ p.m., Channel 4. v v v v
WORLD SERIES: MiJwaukee at St. Louis.
Aueacer1: Dick Enberg, Tony Kubek, Joe
Garagiola, Bob Costas and Tom Seaver.
Milwaukee's Don Sutton (4· l) will oppose
St. Louis' John Stu per (9-7) as the Brewers try
to grab the first two games of the series in St.
Louis. The Brewers won the opener, 10-0.
RADIO
Baseball -World Serles, Milwaukee al SL.
Louis, 5:15 p.m ., KNX (1070).
Mediator has
his own • tactics
Blackout et on NFL talks
COCKEYSVll .. LE, Md. (AP) -A privatt
me diator who aay1 he hope• to outlHt the
advena.rlea in the Nadonal Football Leaaue ttrike
wu Llstenlns to both aldte apell out their postUona
amid a news blackout he ordered ahordy afi.r
t.aklna a aeat at the neaouaunc table.
'
1Mr, tactial are to Ure them out before tMy tl,.
me out,' San Frandloo attorney Sam JU&el aid
Tuctday night after holdlnc an lntroduetory Miiton
whh repreac ntallvea of the club ownera and
striking playeni whole walk.out 23 daya qo hu
resulted in four weekl of no'pro football.
Kagel, named earlier Tue.day to mediate the
NFL Players Alaociat.lon'• contract dlapu wSth the
NFL Maoage ment
Council, aald he aaked
both sides to be ready to
s l a rt Int e n sive
negotiat ions today. He
also a nno un ced an
Imm e diate n e wa
blackout.
"I have ordered all
parties. players and
owners throughout the
league, to make no
public comment while
the mediation effort is
onsolng," K agel said
rouowing the meeting at
a site in a suburb of
Baltimore.
Three weeks o f Gene Upshaw games a lready have
been bypassed, and earlier Tuesday the NFL
announced the games of Oct. 17-18 would not be
played as acheduled.
The 73-year-old son of a junkman, Kagel came
to the talks with a reputation aa a tough, no-
nonsense mediator.
The choice of Kagel was announced Tuesday
by Kay McMurray, chief of the Federal Mediation
and C.Onciliation Service.
McMurray discussed the selection Monday
evening with both Jack Donlan, chief negotiator for
the Management Council, and Ed G arvey.
execu tive director of the NFLPA.
Kage l , who serve d as an Indepe nde nt
arbitrator in three cases involving NFL players in
non-injury grievances, was quickly agreed upon by
both sides as a logical candidate to mediate the
dispute.
While both sides welcomed the selection, unJon
off1 c1als were quic k to a dd that Kage l's
participation was no sure sign of a quick settlement.
"I don't think the fans or the players should
ge t too e xc1t{'d oil this point. This is just the
beg1;rn1ng o f the bargainin g process, a nd
management has still not addressed the basic issues
plaL-ed bn the table by the players," Garvey said.
"We can't be lulled asleep by just thinking
because we are going to mediation there will be an
instant cu re," said union president Gene Upshaw.
"People think mediation is like going to the
doctor who gives you medicine and all is well," he
said
T he players' concern that the strike would
continue was underscored by their continued plans
for a series of union-sp :msored games.
76ers want McAdoo
Will Mauch he his own downfall?
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The Philadelphia
76ers are interested in Bob McAdoo but have not
signed an offer sheet w ith the center-forward of
the Los Angeles Lakers, Stxers' owner Harold Katz
said Tuesday.
Philadelphia may not have made a formal offer
to McAdoo, who he lped the Lakers win the
National Basketball As9ociation title last aea110n, but
Ka u admitted there have been conversations with
the player's agent. Bill Madden.
•
Nobody came ln on the noon balloon from
Sallkatoon and Mk.eel me, but. . .
• If the Angela replace Gene Mauch as
manager, one of the ww miCbt be fear of the
man'• incredible lnterwity and emotianal tichtnem
rubbing off on hia athletes ... Stranaely enough,
when moat of us first knew Mauch, he waa loe.e
and flexible with a great 8ell8e of humor.
• A hardship cue in the Natkmal e.ketball
Amociation is a kid whoee father only hM one told
tooth.
• The Santa Monica auto dealer who 1aya he ill
interested in buying the San Dieao Cliepert
franchile ahou1d 1ave his money md buy an l'd9el
dealenhip.
• More Mauc h ... Addln1 to Gene'•
frustration at not winning a pelinant in 23 yean
Md to be lta maddening fad he WM beaten by
Harvey Kuenn. who bed only beeD a JMnllel' for
four montha.
• 'l1M! IUY who first ruined cbe rurdn1 with an oliw WM probably a frwtrated umpire.
• U you really enjoy forward s-mtna, checlc
out John Elway and Tom Ralmey when Stanford
meets UCLA at the Rme Bowl Nov. 13.
• Nn.P A executive director l'.d Gtarwy may
be the only. hW"DAll bel.nc on earth who cannot eee
that the NFL ownera are not IJOlnl to llW in to the wage 8Cale demand of the players.
SPOATS COLUMNIST
Bll)
TUCKER
• In the matter of managerial braina,
Milwaukee'• Harvey Kuenn hu it over St. Louis'
Whitey a..,. like Elnateln over Donald Duck . . •
make It Goofy.
• What the Anlela needed . . . and need . . .
ii mon a-t.11 playen like Fred Lynn.
• U Gene Mauch did not want Andy Hualer to
l>itch to c.ed1 Cooper, why didn't he go to Tommy
)ohn or Geoff Zahn? ·
• If an athlete can live off a aingle
performance, CONider that lt WM 26years1CO that Don Lanen ptt.cbed bit perfect game in the World
Series and none of hia relatives has worked a day
al.nee.
• If the Lakera do not repeat as NBA
champions, there will really be 90mething to the
adage of no repeaters ... Why? Because the
Lakera haw the beat team. • Aaklna a dedJcated football viewer for an·
\
CARDINALS TIP cAPs TO CALDWELL. ..
liom Page c1 ; .
I infielder.
"I blew lt," he aid ln a ier. explanation of iloW he let &fl OsUvte'a hard-hit btlf Co throuch
I ~alow after two were out tn the flnt. 11l'm not
to offer any e~"
· ore than anythtnc, 1ald eec:ond bueman
Tommy Herr, it WM prot.bly~y not the kind
1 ol pme ln which St. Louia be npec:ted to
!come b9ck.
, ••• "We've aot the kind of bellclub that can come
beck after one or ~ nan.." he .ad. "With power,
I it'• different. But we've tot to wtn with def.,.
flnal out Md been recorded. "We got beat bad ln
two or three ballpmes, but I don't know when we
tot beaten by 10 runs.'' ·
Herq al8o WM uked lf the 9f:Verity of the
.etbedt would have any carryover effect when St.
Louil tau. the field Wilirht for Game Two.
"1 don't know lcnOW:""he aid. ''We'U find out.
Wt juat Col a good, old-fuhloned butt-klckln1
tontaht." "You're aolna to have nlahts like that. It
happena to all ballplayen. 1t happened to ut ton.tcbt. and comorrow nil.ht It c:ould be jult the
oppolite.'' Mid Smith, the -St. Louil ahort.ltop. "I'd
never '"" Milwaukee play before. Tomorrow nilhl. I'll be pl.aytnc...n.m a little d1lferently."
llnd rt~\, who by reUevina J'onch tn the llxth
~ became the aeconcl-olaeet player ever to
oerform In a World SertH, Hid the Carda
r.qbvkuly pla~ a Utde bh Oat."
t··· .. aui t1.u the kind o1..-we~' when NCAA nabs Texas ...,n behind." the u.,_,..old left • ...,.. aaid.
J
'1V'.llh our lineup, we'w llJl IO ,....., out In front."
" I IWthw the double be pounded .. .,. ear.·
Mnt hit In the teCOlld lnnlnl nor the -... hi deliYm'ld In the etcbth •Ulfled Parw.
• · ~· -· ooupl9 ol tu-. but I dkla't ltiftC the ball .............. Pclrter. 64lt -)Ill -ol ~ ....... ~ ....... -..... ..,,..... In 1112 by hll ....... llft 8 ~ a..aile ID WmMr ..... hll .........................
• I , .. p't IW szls, NallJ," ........... ~
I ~ •
MISSION, Kan. (AP) -The Untvenlty ol
Tftal hal a-. plMlld on protaedon for one,_.. few
two vlolatlona of NCAA rul• in l\I foo&ball
pro1ram, the National Colle1late Athletlo.
A9amUon announced 1\Meday,
Tbe JfCAA mid the penalty doll not lndude
IUC.'tlam. md lhl foolWJ tlmll Nm9lnl ..._.ble few
.................. end pal& llllGll play •
One of .... ~ ln"°"9d ncndtm.n• of • f~ pau p 1ct In J..-y 18U. the NCAA mid. ' ~ .
opinion on the w orst TV commentato r is
tantamount to aak:lng a doctor which disease he is
least fond of.
• Sporta Illustrated aays the Kinga will finish
last ln their division becau.e they .play ln Southern
California where nobody cares about hockey, but
that sh ould only make them finish last in
attendance figures.
Katz confinned that the holdup ln McAdoo
resigning with the Lakers wu cash payments
rather than deferred. Katz said Madde.n told him
that the Lakers' reported $500.000-a -year, three-
season guaranteed pact was not all ln cash.
Katz saJd that obtaining McAdoo would be a
backup, an insurance policy ,.gainat Moees Malone,
Bobby Jones or Julius FJving getting hurt. • It ii difficult to imagine a team which thrives
on plJl8 hits and stolen hues like the Cardinals
defeating a team like the Brewers who play real
baaeball.
If McAdoo signs with Philadelphia, the Lakers
have 15 days to match the offer and retain hlm or
let him go.
College lootball
aATUllDA.,.. QAISI ....
Wallhlngton SI. ,,... UCLA at RoM Bowl
(1:30)
USC at Stanford (Otlannel 2 at 12:46)
New MulCo ac Sen Oleoo St .• n Leno a.ch St. at Sen Joat St., n
Waltllngton at~ St. °"'°" at c.llfom4e Weber It. at PCW1lancl St .. n . Not1hem Color9do at eel P'*f (SLO). n
AedWldl at Az\M Padtlc
Clll LVU.an at Sect-to St .. n
Cal P'*t£:' Cel Stata Haywlll'd U.19'1 at LaV-Wtllttler at ~, n
Ocdd9nltll at CWemont-Mudd ......... Color9do St. at Nr ,_
r ... e Paao at ANona 11 .. " .......... vu
klaflO .. MontMI
1019a It. 11 MontMI It. ,_ .... ,....,.. ... '° ldMo It. at Ncw1flem AttlOM, II ......... v...-at Ulefl
llllClllO at Ut.n It Cal I I. FulertOl'I at WyoiTllno ........
..... T .... MM
Houeeoll II IMU. n T .... TedlMNoe r ... MlfttWI 11 aw~
NE LGullllne " Attl-It .... Oecw111 Tedi at AuN'ft ~·'*"'-' W.T-ll.•Alrtcle ._C......•""*14.,n v.,.....110eoflll
LIUll~.n WIM'°"!'!•~ .. fl I"§~"· ......... (fllla.)
TOUll t' 11 NcW111c.Cllfie .llNlwWIC.... """'-' .. '°""' CerGIM
De\lldtOl'I et South Carolina SI . Alet>ema at T__... Wea1ern Kantuelly 1t Tan,_ Taoh S. Mllalallppl at Tui-n
J-Medlion at VMI
W•t Virginia at Vlfglnla Tedi M11thell at W"t Catotlna. n
E. TannteNa St. at Cldadel, n
~at Loulelana Tedi, n
Aldwnond at Louiavtl ..
ClncW*I at~ SI M. T-SI at Murray SI. ....... , a... St at l<Alnt St.
N. Hllnol• at 8owl4nQ Oraan Toledo at c.ntra1 Michigan
~-·at ~a-OmMla. n
()No u. et E. Michigan
0No8t.et ~
lldana at Mlnneeol•
Mlcllloan at IOwa
tOWI 8t. et M1-lrl Ollllllome at ~ ~•tatNabr19111
Mleml (Otilo) .. w. MlcfllOln
Mk:fllgan St, al Wlaoontlll
Non~ a1 Punlw
Arllona et Notra Derna COlofado ., Olllehoma St •
8. llllOlt .. T Ulla. n
New Mu.loo St ... Wichita St ...
Autgen .. loalon Collage, "
·-at Cornel H-.d at Olr1fftOllth c.w. ,_ .. oaleWW•
COllMCltDll .. HOiy Cf-,.. .. := .. ... ·~It Ltfllgll ................. .,...,.
W.....l~lt~ SY'.,.. .. ,...,,
T .... MPltt Atfff'/ It lllrtnoaton lollOll u ... "'-lllend IUallftll ........ .,
COllllllll6I II Y•
JOHNSON
&SON
presents ...
COLLIGI ..............
NetNDatM
"9t
Arlaona ..
Stanfwcl .,,..
USC ..
UQA
•
(
•
Orange OoHt DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, October 13, 1982
For opener.s, it's Marina vs. Edison
Fountain Valley faces Huntington Beach as Sunset League play begins . .
By ROGER CARLSON OflM Dellr Not .....
Marina Hlah football <.we~ Devo Thomp10n
and hla Vlkings h•ve been walcng for 12 mon\hl
for thla one -a crack at F.dllon.
F.dllon Coach Bill Workman sayll, "Don't drive
the nail In the coffin, yet.''
Fountain Valley Coach Mike Milner •ys his
team's confrontation at Huntington Beach LI "The
moet lmportant game for ua since St. Paul ln the
semis of 1980."
Huntington Beach Coach Greg Henry says If
his Oilers are realistically looking at the CIF
playoffs, then, "Thls ls it, the loser could be out of
it."
Corona del Mar's season Is at stake against El
Toro; Newport Harbor ls looking for Its third
stra.l.ght Sea View League victory, and, ... well,
you get the gist of lt, this is one very important
week for area prep football teams.
Here's a look at this week's games:
EdlMon 11s. Marin•
Thia one started'building a year ago. abo4t two
minutes after an uphill 28-24 victory , which was
the difference between first and SP.COnd place in the
Sunset League. : . ,
"Marina gives about the same look as last
year," says Workman, "which makes Marina
harder for us to beat this year.
"The lineman, Bill Macias, is unbelievable.
He's among the very best offensive lineman that
I've seen, period.
"There was talk early that Marina's passing
game wouldn't throw very well, but that's
obviously been disproved.
"Our pass blocking has improved, but it's still
not good .enough to generate any offense."
Edison fullback Leonard, Simpson re mains
doubtful for the game, according to Workman, and
linebacker Tony Johann is out for at least three
weeks because of a broken thumb.
On the plus side, defensi~e tackles Mark Woods
(knee) and Todd Broussard (back) are expected
back.
''The whole season starts this week," says
Thompson. "I don't look for it to be anything other
than a typical F.dison-Marina game of the past few
years.
"They (Edison) have been playing some very
good defensive teams, so their offense is probably •
not as bad as it seems. And, they ought to be
figuring out what they can do now."
Matt Hombs keys Edison's defense from his
spot in the secondary. but is also a key receiver ,
along with Jeff Washington. Edison's running game
depends on Derek Griffiths.
Eric Karman is Marina's answer for Griffiths.
The Marina halfback has averaged 6.0 yards per
carry and is a blue chip place-kicker.
Marina enter.i probably without de fe nsive
tackle Jim Shandrick (ankle) and linebacker Dave
Abbott Chip pointe,r) is questionable.
"We've ended up stronger on defense than we
anticipated," says Thompson. "Shifting Clint King
to defensive tackle has really helped."
1''tn. t'alley 11s. Huntln•ton Beaeh
In the "other" Sunset Leagi.ae showdown on
opening night, there are some streaks on the line.
Fountain Valley has lost five straight non·
league gam es wh1le Huntington Beach (4·1) as
trying to shake 33 straight Sunaet losses.
"This may be the mOflt physical Huntington
Beach team of the past few years and Its skill
level is better than we've played in the past," says
Milner.
. "But the biggest improvement is the people
they have in the offensive line."
Although the Barons appear to be solid and
enter as the favorites, the fact remains they are 0-5,
and Milner says, "I'm getting real tired of losing."
With reality catching up with the Oilers (San
Clemente r.pped the HB bubble with a 28-23 upset
laat week , Henry says it may be a blessing in
disguise.
"We were getting real fat and ~y reading the
paper," admits the second-year HB eo:ach .
Fullback Danny Thompson is expecled to be in
top shape after nursing an ankle injury the past
couple of weeks, but Jimmy Dunn (injured) may be
replaced by Jeff Lopez, Buddy Noble and Z.OC.an
Katz aa the key receivers for quarterback Eric
Lawton.
"Fountain Valley has a thousand sets," says
Henry. "There aren't a whole lot of plays. but a lot
of looks and we have to adjust to the seta."
New,,.rt HarlHlr 11s. lr11lne
Newport Harbor hasn't won four straight ln
one aeuon since the Sunset League championship
.euon of 1974, but the Sailors are eyeing just that
(and a third stra1~ht .Sea View L«gue victory)
r-~~~~~~------~~~~~--:-~~~~~~~~-------
Edison's Mau Hombs will be among the Chargers cha llenging
Marina for S unset League supremacy Friday night at Cerritos.
against Irvine, which is on a twcrgame skid.
"The kids realized after losing to Cypress
(non-league) that you can't think in terms of
juniors, sophomores and seniors," says Sailors
Coach Mike Giddings.
"You have to be one team."
University must have felt Uke it was up against
two teams, however. with a 48-0 loss dealt by
Newport.
Among the Newport attack last week was a
19-play. eight-minute drive by the reserves with
eight eophomores in the lineuf.
"Irvine shiha a lot out o ita winged-T and la
very clever," says Giddinp.
The Vaqueros will be answering with a quick
Johnny Salinas as the chief runner and either 6-2 ~
sophomore Jeff Bielman or twcryear starter Mike
Zorn at quarterback.
Blelman filled in for the injured Zorn last week
and was h is team's player of the game.
El Toro 11s. Corona d el Mar
El Toro's Chargers are tough enough -but
Corona de! Mar must also contend with the
tentativeness of tailback Lance Martin, who has
been virtually the entire Sea Kings' offense with
his sharp running ability.
Martin, a 155-pound senior, has run for 473
yards on 110 carries and 2 touchdowns, but suffered
a broken left hand last week against Saddleback.
If Martin is held out he'll be replaced by
122-pound junior Matt Collins.
F.ach ls 1-1 in Sea View League play and El
Toro Coach Bob Johnaon says, "We're counting on
seeing Martin." Corona de! Mar's overall record Is
1-4 and Johnson responds by calling the mark "a
li .. e.
Jerry Eldridge, a 175-pound aenior, keys the El
Toro attack at tailback. He rushed for 127 yards on
25 carries last week ln a 23-19 victory over FAtancia.
"You can take a film from three years ago and
write your game plan," says CdM Coach Dick
Morris. Every year you think thelr tailback Is gone
(graduated), but they always have another one.
Eldridge is right out of the same mold, they juat "VI
right at you.
And the lineman, PauJ Svit.enko, he's a college
player in a high school uniform."
§addlelMek l'•· Cesua Mesa
Co.ta Mesa co~h Jim Hagey has his foe.
Saddleback, down pat. "With their speed," says
Hagey, "one letdown and it kills you."
Saddleback (5-0 overall, 2-0 in the Sea View
League), operates with Rod Pesak at quarterback
and Kevin Bradley at tailback, along with a solid
corps of receivers.
Up front the Mustangs appear to have the
muscle to stay with the Roadrunners, the key is
containment within the first five yards.
Mesa is healthy for the game with flanker Ron
Hayes back from an ankle injury suffered in
practice.
Cost.a Mesa's attack centers around the passing
of Scot Hagey and running of tailback Wally Grant.
(Mesa is 1-1 In league, 2-3 overall).
lfnl11erslty 11s. Esuanel•
F.stancia (0·2) In in Sea View League and 2-3
overall) may be without fullback Phil Sanders
(ankle), and if that's the case, Coach F.d Blanton
says Tim Zavala and/or Matt Wolf will take his spot
In the F.agles' backfield.
"University creates some real problems with Its
split aix defense," says Blanton. "There's a lot of
shifting on defense and I just hope we can play ·
well."
The Eagles played well a week ago and
absorbed a 23-19 loss from El Toro for their efforts.
Univenlty has aplit a pair of league games, but
Is coming off that 48-0 lashing from Newport
Harbor and Coach Rick Curtis d idn't have a lot to
say, but the tacit resporue may indicate the Trojans
will be ready to regaln.eome respectability.
Oeeaa t'lew 11s. tfest•lnster
F.ach ls 1-4 in non-league play as they open the
Suruet League and Ocean View will be trying to
make It three straight in this series.
Linebacker Richard Brown (ankle) and safety
Brad Weaver (wrist) ar~ doubtful starters for
C.,IA•mee et 7tJO ......_ noted)
Thuredey TheMfNI
Uni va. E1tenc1a a1 Newl)Ort Eatancla by 7
,,ld•1
Foontaln Van-r at Huntington a..cn Ftn Valley by 3 Edi.on va. Marina II Cerrltoa Merine by 2 <>c.en View at W"tmlnate< Wfftmlnater by t
El Toro VI. Corona del Mar II OCC EJ Toro by 8 Mi°wPOr1 Harbor at Irvin• NNPort bv 7
Sadd. VI. Cotta M•H at Newport Saddleback by 10.
Bonita II Laguna Beach Even
Leguna Hiii• at San Clemente San Clement• by 7
Cap)atrano Valley at Minion Vl•IO Cepo by 3
Mater Del at Plu• X Mater Oel by 7
a.turde1
Woodbridge at Dana Hiii• ( 1 p.m.) Woodbridge by 3
Westminster , which c:ould mean the difference in
what is expected to be a close battle. •
Ocean View is smaller, but has shown morej
offense behind quarterback Chad Pariseau and)
tailback Todd Parker. Westminster's attack revolves
around the size and strength of fullback-linebacker
Tal Tamamasui (5-10, 230).
Mater Del 11s. Plus X
It's the Angelus League op ener for bo th
schools with the h0&t Warriors of Pius X boasting a
3-2 non-league record, as opposed to Mat.er Dei's.,
2·2·1 mark. l
Pius X operates a multiple offense with splid
backs, and tight end Donald Noble (6-2, 205 sr.):
appears to be the key to the Downey-based:
Warriors' plans. ~
Mater Dei has lost linebacker David May:
(broken leg) and safety Craig Steinmetz and tight:
end Don Cone (concussions) are doubtful . t
' Bonlua 11s. L•••n• BeaelJ :
Bonita's Bearcats (3-2) are small and quickl
with a tendency to throw the ball out of triple sets,:
In Laguna Beach Coach Dennis Haryung's words.:
"A lot of things to coo ruse you . . . and we can be!
confused." · ;
Dru Murphy (twisted knee) is still missing:
from the Artists' secor.dary, which means more•
trouble for the Artists (3-1, 1-1 in the South Coast:
League). · :
Skip Croul will be back, however. for this!
non-league contest. Other injury factors for!
Laguna: Taiiback Sed·e Arabe (hip pointe r) isj
questionable a nd reserve Dave Christensen1
(po6Sible broken leg) is definitely out of the game. I
Woodbrld•e vs. D•n• lllHs
A matchup of South Coast League cellar-
dwellers is scheduled for l o'clock Saturday as
Woodbridge tries to reverse a two-game league
skid . J
Dana Hills is trying to end an even longer'
losing streak -which is now at 10 including five
straight league losses ln 1981. •
Matt Cooper guides Dana Hills at quarterback.:
while Woodbridge counters with the pass-catch i
combo of Kevin Burke (55-for-110 and 660 yards):
and Bill Russell (31 catches for 432 yards).:
Woodbridge ls 2-3 overall. • -·
Capo Valley 11s. MIS81on t'le/o
A South Coast League championship struggJf
is her~ with Capo (3-2, 2-0) pitted against the
Diablot (4-1, 1-0).
Mission's offense is a two-pronged affair with
q uarterback Klaus Leit.enbauer and tailback Roger
Brown (five touchdowns last week) packing the
punch, as opposed to the Burt Call-Randy Lanham·
Capo package.
Capo is bigger in every area.
The two tied, 7-7 last year, and shared the•
league title . Mission went on to win the CIF Central •
Conference title and Capo ad vanced to thf!•
semifinals.
Laltlln• Hiiis I'S. §an Clemente ·
-San Clemen te's punishing ground ga me is
Laguna Hills' problem In this South Coast League
skirmish. ,
The Trltons of San Clemente are 4-1, (1 -0 in•
league) after knocking off Huntington Beach.·
(28-23) and get the job done virtually without the
aid of a passing game.
Laguna Hills (1 -4, 1-1) is led by juniQr
quarterback Lee Plemel, with his favorite target.a
being Todd Williams and John McDaid. • •
..
Marina .the Sunset favorite
...,,... ..........
But don't count out Edison ... or winless Fountain
By ROOER CARLSON 0( .. 0.., .........
Before lt arr began, the word being
circu lated throu1hout Sunset League
football circlet wa1 that Marina H igh'•
Vikin19 and Edbon'a Charpra would be
the t~o title contender1, with Fountain
Valley the dark horae and Huntln1ton
Beach and Westmlnater liven a Jeaitimate
shot at No. 3 ~ a ClF Bit Five Conference
football playoff berth. ·
Since, the Vlkinp have proven to be
tough on offense and defense while
Edlton'• offen1e haa not matertaUr.ed, but·
the defen. appeen to be u •lr'Onl M ever.
Fountain Valley hHn't won a 1ame,
Huntincton Beach won four •ttal8ht and aot lnto the Orqe County Top Uf brtefiy
before ~etUna upeet by San Clemente.
Weatmln•t.er'a offenM, Ilk• l:dlaon'1,
' hun't showed ~ yet, and OciNn View la
atill ~"I· The Nlulla? I>eeple the upe and dowrw, lt rema1rw \he aame-. ff.,.•, the Dally Pllot handicape on the a.,u. .... :
The Vikingl bout an offensive front that
goes 217 from tackle to tight end and the
defense, spearheaded by end Jlm
McLauglln and a solid secondary, gives
Marina a aolid look.
i. EdlaH (l·l·l)., ln}urlea have cut
deeply into the Chatger1 armor, and the
ottenae appears to be a long way behind the
defeNe.
Deapite the Jack of a conaUltent runnina
SUNSET HANDICAP
or paaalng 1aroe, ~di1on '1 defense,
1pearheaded by d efensive back Matt
Hombt and U~ Andy Stnclalr (he'•
aoinl two ways now that ~ Tony
Johann hu been put on the shelf with
a thumb broken), We. a bKU..t to no
one.
a: P'Hatala Valle1 (l·t). WlnletS In
ptaylna the Sou&hem lecUon'• iou1h•t
lchidule, the Baroni an 8"UIW little to no
sympathy from the Nil of ihe lu1ue,
becau.a at'• evident l'ountain Valley can
and wW pl.ly with anybody.
sophomore taJlback Dave Swigert.
4. Hantln&toD Beaclt (4·1). The ou.J-
have been impresaive -but agai~~\
lghtly-regarded opposition (Los AlamitoS,
Bolsa Grande and Los AmlJ{os).
Stlll, the momentum created and th~
wlnning experience of a band of junJorag, t •
by quarterback Eric Lawton and full ·
Danny Thompeon, fives the Oilen
than jUlt reapectabUfty. ..t
They'll gain more reapect, howevft', ;..... ..
u ioon u they put to an ~·a ·ss-~ lcmna atrHk ln SUMet Leque play which
stretch8 back to 1973. •....t _,
t . We1tmla1ter. The Lions' offen.e ta.WO·
1how more thAn 48 yardl a pme ruahlna 6f
Wettminater ll to become a champlonlhllti'.
and/or p~yoff team. · .: .. ""'·
We1tmln1ter'1 d e(enn la aolld, with
llnebackera Ta1 TamamHui (230) •q4,
Richard Brown (22~). but there II mopl)
needed -ln front and behind the ,
Unebet'ken. . ·\ '
Marina lllP'• 6-6, 230-~nd Bill Maelu
1pearheacle the Vildnp' ollenel•e line
..... , Edleon Friday. .
1. Marlaa (•·1>. The Vikln1•' veer
loffenH, directed by Bill Marler at.
·quarterback and •pearhHdecl by the
NDNna et ba1n.tc lfr1c Kannan. .. the
dml .r tht ...,_ in Wini .i ott.nllw
output, with l·I, 210-pound offentive
tM1&1e aw M.-. ....,..., • •i,. Q u..
true bl-.. chi .. In 8ouCOlrft ~
~ ~ Lane and the ., .... ·~ to be on a I*' wtth llthlr Martna or ldteon, and the off•IJM hu 1hown
deflnl• Unpl'OYWMl\t with the prtion al
1. 0ceaa va.w c 1·•>. The s..ha= off qWddt, wtth a 14·' wtn CMll"
but haY8ft t won in a month althouih the-.
poeHU a pa1Hr (Chad ParlM•U) ancr
.,..... (Todd = who appear '° be -.. • .,.,. wtth the tlan. .
• 4' 1
' 2
\t ;
Or•no• OOHt DAILY PIL.OT/Wedn11day, October 13, 1982
~ . . " . ' "
WOflU> H"l81 .,..,.,. 10, Cerdlnel• 0 (0-1)
MILWAIHlH IT. LOUii
llOtlllill
McMket Sb II I 6 2 Hert 2b
Younl 22 8 I 4 2 L Smtlll II
COOj)et lb 4 I 0 0 Hrn<11 lb
SlmMOM c 6 1 2 1 rinelrtll. 11 Ogllvle It 4 I 0 0 T 9'111C <lh
ThOmU cl 4 0 I 1 POfttt 0 HoweM dll 2000 Gr_, cl
e-Money dll 2 I I I Obflljl 3b
Moore rl 6 l 2 0 0 Srrlltll aa
... '"bl 3000
4000
4 000
4 000
3000
30 ?0
3000
30 10 3000
Genl .. 2b 4 2 2 2 To1al1 42 10 17 9 ro1el• 30 o 3 o
a·f'lled oul to rlQhl for Howttll In I~
~ .. ., ..........
MilWeut... 200 I 12 004 tO
SI loult 000 000 000 0 E-~nandez OP St .Lou" t LOB Milwaukee 10, St Lou11 4 28 Pofle•.
Moor•. Yount 38 Genlner HR Slr.tffi0f11
ltl S -G•nt-
Mlw-*M CaldWe!llW. t·SI It. Louie
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HBP-Howe tt tbr Forac111 T 2 30
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TUHOAY'I e<:OM
Mllweuk .. 10. St LOUii 0 TONIOHT'I QAMI.
Mllw9uk .. et St loutl 5 20 p m lflllDA\''I QA.Ml
St LOUIS et Mtt.eull.. 10 2t 8 m IUMOAY'SO.U.
St Louie .. Mllweuk ... I 45 pm . II
~IOAY, OCT. ti QA.Ml
Mllweuk" 11 St loutl. 6 20 pm , II
"-:1.,..toAY, OCT. ID QAl!le
MllwaukH et St lOull , 5 70 p m .. II _.,
C0tnmunlty c;oltecM SATIMDAY'I ac .. oau
1out11 c-1 c.....,_
Fu11«1CHI at Mt San AntonlO ( t 30 P m I c.mtoe at O<enge Cout
GOIClen Wnt vs Groumort •• Grenot•
Hiits High '°""'-'" Cel COflt..•-Lot Angetff cc II Wnt lot "11(1&181 (I
p.m)
Eal LA at Cor\PIOll It 30 P m I
LA Harbor ve Rio Hondo et Y1111111er
~(130p m .........,coni...n~ Sen Diego CC et Santa Ana
P-et SaddteOKk ~elCtll'\ll ....,.......,c--.-
Long 8"cll cc •• Teti
EJ Camino et Senta Mooic.
P...oena at 8ell•1fleld • ....,. ..... eo. ...... _
Hencoc:k .... MO«parll et Cemetllo Hlgll 9"1M: ... ..._ COllelle Of OeMrl at LA Sou111w .. t ( 1 p m I
Cal Lu111«en JV 11 Mt San J.clnto (7
pm.I
LA VelWt at AnteiOPe Vllley
lmpefMll VII/wt at Soul-tern
USC JV al Ventura
(All .......... , ••• 7:30 P·"'· unlHI ..,_.....~,
• ..., polo
COlllllUNITY COU.O.
O....W ... l ,a.tlaAM4
Sent• Ane l 0 2 1-4
GOiden W-1 2 0 3 3-8 OoiOerl West ICOflng. 0. Velie I, Seiver
2, Lund 1, Wllaon 1, Gr .. 3
~ .... C-4 M, Cen1Me I Orenge Cou t o 5 4 5-14
Cttrltot 1 2 2 3-II
Orange eo..1 to0ttng si .. t>enZ 1. Brown 2, Brot1nlella 2 S1111mon1 II. Lewie l
SllOWYonekl t, Hewlllnt t.
HIGH act'°°'-._,... 14, MIM6oft Vleta 10
s.Mte 4 2 5 3-14
Milelorl Voeto 6 1 1 3-10
Min ton V••IO eeortng Roo91r1 t ,
~t I. HulChlnQI I, Hour)Oen 2. Ryen 6
C:... .... I. l.ell9 ~II WlllOfl I Coeole .._ 2 2 3 4-8
Long 8eedl Wileon 2 0 2 2-1
Coate MaH aeorlng Aahby 3, Ure 3,
Allunder '· Che..,, 1
0-View 11, Lall-ood 1
Ooewl v-.. 3 7 2-lt
Lllllewood 4 1 t 1-7 o-n View ICO<lno Hidy 2. Meve< t,
Moeller 3. Cttetlno 5
c.-..... 1, ._., Hiiie.
Cofone del Mar I I 3 2-7 Swin., Hib I 2 2 t -8
Corona dttl Mar acor1ng. tm1>ern1no 3,
MOHOW 2, Seotl 1, Teml)le t
High Kltoof renklnfl
C•4-A 1. c.-.. lier, I. .....,_. *"-1 3
Lono 8Ncll Wiiton. 4, Sunny HlllS; I. c ....
llMll; e. £1 Toro; 7 e>own.y; I Mwa eo.1e. t . ._ Peril; 10 HH W.._,
C••A t Tu111n, 2. Volle Petk, 3 'ootl>Hf. 4
Rlvarald• Poly; 5 S an Clemenle; II
Claremont 7. Mui<, e Sentt An• lleltey, 9
Hoov9t, 10 l.AQ\lnl HIN1 c••• I La Puente, 2 Cabrtlto, 3 LOI AtniOOI 4
Sen Mwlno: 5 hNfte; II. Rigl!lltl. 1 Senta
Fa; 8. Ct!ert• Ollt. t Oaro.n Otcwe. 10 I.JI
Quinta.
M9erlN •:.-= ......... (81 ......... ~,
1111 loenlon (U~.r.:. Mlle Wii.nder ~wedell~_.•·I. 1-0, l •t, YIMICll Notll
,..., -· Vfc'4lt l'9"t ,,.,~ , ... ... "-"' ......, (twjeaeolendj def~ Chip ._,.,(UA~M.M ... t. ............ ~ . ·c-.............. , ..... ,..... ......
Vfr9ft1le lh11lcl (1'1011111'1111 dal. LH
Ahl011111al9 (U.I It. f.2, 7.a, Andre .i...,., ~,:.! =.:."2.!.,.efldk* (U t ~= -..-cu•-~w.~ (U ••. J *11 JMll ...,_ IU I ), a.a.1 M , ~ ~ ~I) dlf ~lltY LOU P'lelll! CU.e.). M .. ,, a...-.......... (U I I def ......., WNte (U 111 •·I , l •I , l •t , AM ~(U..t1• '-C.....CUei.w.
•
DeWIM
Hol•blrd·S"llat IUI IOll lo '''"* ......_.,, 2 II, IOtt ti> I ully l ebbllt, 4 II, IU-t lit llA .. \'
S.b11tlllfl, 6-7. 11•1.nl>a MIOdlel0tt IVI totl
4 0 4 6 '""" fl l And•11"11 O"r1er l lll wO" 6 l IOel l (I J II
htancla IJ, Co<-tM4 Mat •
0 Mear• tC I ll"111~1 fl J U.. H<'-• M> del rui... 0 II ;;:t;;~ t( I ">ti J II ""~'
O t e t &rb.,..,o lCI 1<>11 4 8 """ • I
e' ~· t oncH••• -C1111111ngha1n It 1 t.l•I t ""1\1"
K1t1men, 1 II. del 8u•Qe Otl\Klb\>01 6 ti
oet o.ma11 HAtrlflOIOO. 0 3 t.. .... , flf•••
IE)IOet, ~ WCHI, °"'· 1·11 f81\ll ll••11 .. 11 tl l
IOtl. 3 e. won 11.3 IOel. 3·0
Et Tote U, CMta ... ,, t
Hen_. ICM) o!'tman II t Cle! l
Ceaa. 1·11 IOll 10 c c.... II , luc~ .. I( Ml
1ot1 1·11. 0-6. w0<• e.2. 811mor1 ct..MI1o11
2·6, won. 11·3 II·•
DouW.a
Jottnar·HugllH ICMI toll to 1 •r1ne1
Cooper•m11n. 2·0 loll to Mou1-.0a11ong ..
6-7 loet to Ellle\f-Cempt>ell. 4-lJ, SlmmOtl•
L•11on tCM) Iott. 2·11, 4-11 A-II Ben<t<ltet·
Duran tCMi IOll, 2-11. 0·11. 1·6
lntM 11, 11111111•11• 2 .....
R<ryn0101 ,,, loll 10 Pham, 4-e a.I R•o• tr t. det Truong &-1, LOWH Ill l<Hll, t 6 won, 11·2, 6-3. Manley (I) won 6-0. t.-0. 6-0
Doo ....
C111pman·P••onar1u1 (t) def L1n11no·
Ngyyen M> def April-Torr .. 6--0 Oel Vo
Lecadoo, 11-0 Cunn•ngham·Anelr-• (I) won
6-t. e 3. 6-t Stannek·PllUong II) won 6·3
6-0, &·•
Croee country ranking• lllEN'l4-A
I Malit Del, 7 Et Dorado, 3 El
Mooena, • El Toro, 6 Polo• Vardea, II
Newbury Perk. 7 Vitia P1rk I . Hllfttlf>tlClfl ~h; 1. u,,.,,_.ity; 10 T11o.iunc1 Oak•
•N'aJ..A
l MontlbellO 7 H_,llorne. 3 8aratow,
4 Conyon (S1ugu1>. 5 Soutll Hllft. II Burben~. 1 Sen M811no. II Mira Coata. II
8uana Perk, 10 Ille) Dana Hiii• end Le
Cenede
WOflllUf'l4-A
1. Unt.er.ity; 2 Foothill, 3 Tu1hn ldleen:
5 ROl11f19 Hiiia II Mlltlkon, 1 Dot "vebloe, L Coete Meu: I even.. tO ttleJ fllouMn<I'
O•"• •"<I Peioe v .. oes WOMEN'• J..A
I Moro Coate. 2 SllhOp Amel, 3 S•n
Menno, 4 Sougu1, 6 Hawthorne II
Artlnglon. 1 Rowland, 9 Di na Htllt 9 a....rty Holla, 10. ue-9Mcll..
• >'-·
Women'•~ COLUOI
Chrtlt Coll•O• del P•c;lllc c 11na11an 15-13, 15-7, tS·IO. Hlet4 ICHOOI.
Mat .. °" def St PaJI 15-8 . 1S·n t5-4
LeQun• a..c11 d•t WOOObrldg• Is. I
' 16-3. 16-7
Fountain Valley det EOllOn. t5·t. 15·8
15-7
....._,port Cllrittlan det Ube<'ly Chrlallan. 16-4, 16-10, te. 14
Sen Clemente det Cap11trano Valley
1s.e. l&-o. 15-11 Wutmlntter del Manna t5·0, 15·0.
tS.13
Newpe.rt Harbor det Unl•eralty, 1!1-3
16-2 11>4 Co<Of\I oet Mar de! &tenc ... 16-5 15-t
5-IS, 14-tll, 16-t
Dana Hll" def M1111on Voefo, t 5· t t
IS· t1, 15·3, 15·1
High .cltoof renklnp
Clf4-A
t Mire Colla, 2. C~ona del Mar: I.
Newport H•r'lter; 4. La•une aHc ll; 5
W"tmH11ter, 8 S anta Monica 7 S1nta
8arbere. I ....... Del; 8 Slln Clement•. tel.
hteMle.
•A ••hlbtUon.• TUHOAY'I acOMa
0.ttOll IOI, Lallet9 te
eo.!on t 13, ,._ Yor11 81
K..-Cltv I ti, Houtton IOI
Chle:aoc> I 50, San Antonio t3 I s .. 1111 t 13, P0<tland 10&
Co eae
·~. I . ~
NHL
CAWlll..&. OONPll'llNCI lmr•IMDM•tafl . .,,..
t 1lnlO<ttll<•
Wlfl~
V-Ouv., C~wy
Mlnn.aote
01 ~°'"' Ch11.aoo IOIOl>lO
°""°''
Moo1t1eat
Oott0t1
Ovall«
Uvlf•lo
lt•tlh11t1
W L TOI' OA"11 10111 7&
7 ' I) '' 23 4 1 1 o au 13 •
1 a ' '' 10 J t 3 0 II tll 1
..... rlo DMeleft
7 0 , 14 10 0
' t 0 I II 4 I I t t4 10 3
0 t 2 IU ti ?
0 7 I • 13 t WAI.II COWIMNCI
,elflell DMetafl 3 0 0 ti It 0
i) I 0 19 13 II
I 0 3 13 12 0
I ~ I IA t6 3
I 2 0 I I 13 2
I 3 0 14 10 1 Adema Ol•l•lofl
) I 0
:I I l
' 1 0 0 2 t
0 ' I r. ..... , .... ., ••
,. 13 •
If 14 5 '° 21 4 tt Ill I II 11 I
Kint• II W1Mlpeo i
f'•n•IN<e" ~ vancou-4
1Jnatot1 ' New JetMy 2 C•IO•rv ll. l l1nlOfltQo 4 Tan19111'• Gem•• •
l'h•l•oetpwa al Rew VOik ll•r>Q4Ha
W• .... ttgllN\ 1t lOtOfllO
'It l •IU" ti Cllfe41QO
King-I, .Mii I ..... ttr ,.,INI
'"' All04ll•I I t & W1t1tllf/41Q t I ) , .. ., ,.,14141
I W1t)ltlll•t1. I 111\tfllOloH t ti lileltttom, I •••Ill II ;,m 111111 ,. l (II Ariulll•• Nl(t1oll1 2
tlta11ly I \I• I It 00 Wiii l'eooallln
NII 11<.tlt I A 4 bl I .... Wllo 4 '9 hllfl ll
I A 8 llJ Nk ho)ill I A It 411 I •vie Wltl
11 Jtl
ie4l0fld '"'" t l ••• A•>Q""'• N11111.1111 Wu1••. ~o•I.
• 1n • t ••• .-.1111•1•• 111•kH•M• J 11111111n t.•tt•I Ill 411 5 W1nn111e11 (;llflOlle" 1
1M•1 I •-n H•tJ~ll•I I~ 4 f 11'111 II l 01
ll1111e1.. '"'"l• t 1111111111•) to 3~ P1111111tiea
I ... Anu•ln b•llrh OU! ... o ov Keli~
t4 4tl 111•111,., IA 11 12 M.c:lHll Win,
•• •i lhl•d ,., ....
Wuuu1u•ij l UHhll ""' • • oi • 'O•
AitUtil•• t 111trn•' ' Hi •o 1•er1i1ll1e1 ' ·"·" .. thnt1 •~• U\Hll l uo At'll"'•• II I~ I& 39
Wtoo•t .... th •• 10 •U hi~~:~:'.'.;'~· A•tycf:: 1 l ••ko1>.1 w1oo~peg
NAICAR •tending• , .... ,L..-n
I Bobby AllilOn 3,82 I
2 O•trell Wahnp 3,7114
3 Teuy LebOnle J.es2
• Harry Ga.nt 3,393 5 lllehard Petty 3.30 I
6 Buddy Amngton 3 235
1 O.•• M•rc11 3.721 e Dale Earnnaro1 3,0ll l
9 Ron Boutherd 3,065
10 Rlci<y Rudd 2 957
AIM aoff l'MUft1 .... ...n~·Prealdent'e c .. (M.Mcll pi.,)
PrM•<l<lfll'• Flight -I Ju1n1t1 Stefford,
2 Ann Warren Con101111on -Vennie
Sturgis VIC•·PrHldenl'I Fltgllt -1 Kelley
l a•Hn. 2 Fran Miller Con1ot•t1on -
8ar 11ar • RoOe<t • Seetetary'I Flight l Grace l•••lll. 2
Anita WMtlem1 Contotallon -Merga11t
Powe<S
Truwr.,·1 Fhgl>t I Berbar• 0.. 2
Wand• T r,IOr ContOtltlOn -Ehnor wooo
0.... ... 11 .... ng
Mr• LANOlfto ( ......... lfiNdl) -I I
angtlrl 3 baM I rnack•ll, 51 ~
OAWY'I LOCICllll (~ IMdl) -59 A!19WI 1 COW c:od, 2f maclittel, 412
rOQtlcod,
DANA WMAllllf -tOt angllt• 77 bale.
98 bonOo. 118 meckar•I 221 rod< lllh, t ~llaed 215 __.,,
MAL KACM -M enalet•. 5 bOnlto. 7 cow COd. 150 IN!Ckertl, 200 rock COd, 106
roek lletl. I& ICUIPfn, 4 wtllle lletl
T~~INC1tone
AMlftcM~ CHICAGO WHITE SOX -Waived $parity
Lyle, pitcher
...... Mii~ MONTREAL EXPOS -8114 Vwdon, "*"'09'. 10 • ._.,_ tllCl.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES -Sli!ned Frank r ••• , ... 11101tatop, to a mlnot l••gu•
conlract
'acMc c .-t L.....-
PHOENIX GIANTS -N-Jaclt MuM,
m1neg11
IAM<ITIALL NMloMI.-....~
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS -WllNecl
Melt WaldrCHI en<! 8ob 0.1111, lorwardt lf00T9ALL UllltHltetealf.....i~ BOSTON BREAKERS -Stgned Mike
Petrlek l)unlet. John Aoeen. quen.,badt; Jonn Sehmedlng, gutrd, JOlll'I Andreoli,
tn<ddle tlMback.,. Phil Ferratt, delenllYe end, Viel« Pluotll, ~ttt en<! Clwll O'Neil,
oflen11ve tlfteman
x-Washlngt.on 30 over Oregon State
Alabama 13 11'1 over x-Tenneeaee
Pittaburgh vs. x-Temple, no odds
x-Georgia 18 'A over V anderbll t
x-Southem Me thodilt 7 ~ over Houtt.on
x-Nebraaka 28 over Kanaaa State
x-Penn State 28 ~ over Syracwie
x-Notre Dame 12 over Arizona x-Artzona State vs. Texaa-EI PNO, no oddl
x-North Carolina 17 \.i over North Carolina State
x-UCLA 23 over Wuhlnaton State
West Vlrlinla 6 ~ over x-Vlrllnia Tech
USC t'I"" over x-Stanford
DJlnol.e ~~ over x-Ohio State
LSU 10 IA over x-Kentucky
x-MlarN, Fla. 6 'A over Ma.-lppl State
x-Flortda Stata "'· l'.Mt CarollNlr no oddl x·Clemlon 13 over Duke
x-Denot.ea home team
fFrom Harrala'• 8porh BeH, Rnol
Drops ies
Milwaukee third basemun Paul Molitor h a
handle on a ground ball by Lonnie Smith .
out in World erics action Monday.
troublt· finding th~
Molitor thr••w Smith
Sea Kings stay Ill first place •
CdM out la ts E ·tancia:, .4rtists gt•I di~putcd victory
In a battle• for Cu-st plac.'t.'. E<iwrwia l1 1gh gaw
vLSitmg Corona del Mar all 1l could handll· bdon ·
the Eagles finally suc.'Cumtx'Cl m five gamt.>S
Led by the middle blocking of Cammi<· Dodc•r
and the outside h1tung of L<.tUril Nwdnngh au!-
CdM remained unbeaten (7 -01 1n the Sea View
League with a 15·5. 15-9, 5-15, 14 16. 15-9 dc.'(;1s11>n
over Estancla .
Thl' Tntons w(•rt• ll.od by !.Cn10r rruddle blocker
Lori Luhnow and Mm1or J <:nn1f Pr Adams. who
M>rv<-d .i string of mn<· straight points during the
l'On l<•Sl.
In Sunss·t Lt·ague play, W(-stminstcr IS now 3·0
VOLLEYBALL The Eagles. who droppt.'Cl to 5-2, W(•re guided by
junior middle bl<><.•kers M1l·helle Lozorek Jr and
Shanna RIC'd<>n.
Elsewhere, Newport Harbor (fi· I) stayl'c.I right on
CdM's heels wllh a 15·3, 15-2. 15·4 drubbing of
University
after c..lropping Manna t 1-2). 15-0. 15-0, 15-13. Thf"
Lwns W('rt• lc'<.I bv the. s1sk r c·ombo of Diane and
Conn11· WJt.<.l>n , whu had 17 kills tx•tween them.
In the Soulh Coast League. Laguna Bcal·h stayt><l
perfect at 6-0 as the ArllslS l'a:-.tl y dis posed of
Woodbridgc (0-6). 15-1. 15 3. 15·7
The Lum~ also ~ut a strong JX•rformanC<' Crom
sophomore Jm·kw Ml·ndc•1, who sc•rv<.'<.I for 16 points
m the f11"!.l two game~ Sh£> did not play an thl' third.
The Woodbridge c.-oach. howC'v1•r, protc-stPd th<•
loss because of an unc.-er1Jf1ed n•fl•rc>c. The CIF 1s
expected lo rule 1f tht.' game IS a forfeit. whNher It
should be replayed. or stand as ts
One school that will definitely tx• mtc•rcswd m
the outcome is San Clemente, which stay<.'<i ::i gam('
off pace with a 15-8, 15-0. 15-8 win over Capistrano
Valley.
f'ounwm V<olk•y 1mprov('d 11.» ((•ague mark to 2-1
with a 15-9 . 15·8. 15-7 dt'\.'1~1on ovl'r Edison (1 ·2).
The· Barons were led by frc•shman middle blocker
Chn sty Sv;.lstad, who came off the bench for thc
inJured Rochelle Snydl'r (bad back) to record seven
kills Finally. Mater Dei is 2-0 m Angelus League
action wllh a thr(.'('-game SWl'ep of St Paul. whilt
Newport Chris t1an 1s now 3-0 aftt•r taking thret·
slra1ghl from Liberty Chr1suan.
Rookie goaltender
paces Kings ag~in
WINNIPEG. Manitoba (AJ-') -
Bernie Nicholls scored two goals
a nd r ook ie goaltend<.'r Gary
Laskoski turned m his sceond
s traight solid performance to
pace the Los Angeles Kings to a
5.3 decision over the Winnipeg
Jets Tuesday night m a National
Hockey League game.
Be n gt Lundho l m ga ve
Winnipeg a 1-0 lead at 8:20 of the
first period but Nlch.olls l.ic.'<i the
game at 18 minutes by knocking
a rebound Crom a goalmouth
9Cramble as the teams exchanged
power-play goals.
Nicholls put the Kings ahead
in the second p e ri od b y
de flecting Steve Boze k's shot
from along ihe boards as L os
Angeles completely dominated ·
play in the Winnipeg 1.0ne.
Leh winger Ulf Isak.soon made
it 3-1 at 10:48. scoring as he was
Calling down in front ot the Jets'
net. before Wi nnipeg's Dave
Christian put In a slapshot at
15:47 on a po\ver·plny effort.
Dave Taylor. standing free in
Thorpe is given
amateur sta.tus
LAUSANNE. Swltu~rland
(AP) -The Internatio n a l
Olympic Committee today
restored Jim Thorpe's a.mtteur
1tatu1 ind will return to the
family of the late American
athlete the medal8 he won at the
1912 Olympic Games .
IOC'1 Preudent Ju.n Antonio
Samaranch will present the
rnedU to ~·· daugh\ef In January. 1'The namtt of James
Thoroe will be addC'd to the Uat
of athl•tee who wertt crowned
Olympe charnplona at the 19 ll
18""1'" the IOC Mkl.
'
the slot. scort'<i h1s first goal of
the season to make 11 -I 2 Aftc.'r
Willy Lindstrom scored al 8.03 of
the third to narrow the lead to
one goal, the Kings hC'ld off thl•
J e ts un ti l Charli<' S1mm N
provided the msuranc.'(• tally wllh
24 sec:.'Onds left
Lask oski made several bnlliant
saves In goal for the Kings as he
lumcd aside 37 shots Wmnip<'g's
Ed Staniowsk1 a lso played W<'ll.
makln~ J5 stops
The K1ngc:. who arc now
unde f<'ated in thNr first three
games. JOUrnl•y lo Quebe<: next
for a Thursd ay night contest
with tht' Nord1ques
Sof thall game
henef its Hart
Me mbe r s o f the Orange
County and Los Angeles County
sherlCf's deportment.a will be
Involved in a 24-hour slo·pl~h
softball contest at Buena Park's
Bellis Park, beginning al 10 a.m .
Oct. 23. In a fund.rall!ns effort to
uslst lnjured Long Beach St.ate
football player Todd Hart.
Hart, whoec neck was broken
In the 49era same with UCLA
Sept. ll. remains hotpi\allf.ed at
Huntington Memorial lioapltal In
Pa11111dcna, unable to move below
the ahoulden.
The ron\elt has been labeled
th,e Todd Hart Ch•mpionahlp
and the fund hat bMn created to
tld in h.ia rehabiUtaUon.
Hart la a 18-ycar-old fornw-r
Servi~ High etar and a realdmt
of San Juan C.pittrane>.
Belllt Park ii located at Knott
Avtnue and 8£h Stl'Mt In But'~
· Park. Donations can also be
m1llttd te1 the T o dd Hart
Championship, P .0 . Box 241.
Sanui AN. 92703.
•
Mustangs,
CdM win
close ones
Scmur Mike Ur~ scored early
In the second period to break a
2-2 deadlock a nd Costa Mesn
High we nt on to stage an 8-6
victory over host Long Beach
Wilson lo h ighlight water polo
ac·uon Tuesday.
In other games at the higti
school level. Corona del Mar , tJw
CIF's lop-ranked team. held Oil
to t~ge Sunny Hills, 7 -6; Ocean
View outlasted host Lake wood,
WATER POLO
11 -7; and Servile overpowe red
Mission Viejo, 14-10.
On the community colleg',
level. Golde n West downed
Sonta Ana, 8-4, while Or••
Coast walloped Cerritos, 14-8.
The Mustangs Improved iheolr
record to 12~3 ovt-raH in beatint
131lt year's CIF championa. Tht I
Mustangs were led by Ure anf
Scott Ashby. wlth three goalS
each. and goalie Tom Ke~Y~
who recorded 11 1aves.
T h e Sea King• kept \he
record an unblemished 1 ~-0
John Morrow scored with 2:0
le ft ln the third quartet an
Sunny Hills could never catch l
visitor the rest of the way.·
Senior Mike Crl1tino toor
(lve/oela aa the s-Mwka
a 4· Ue with three pla ln
terond and were nerver MllllMlm..
At Golden W•t.. the R
are now 2.0 ln con(enmee and a; ,
ov~rall u .ophomore Tom Grall ··
c..me off the bench to lt'Ore two •
of hit three pit In the third S
period.
The vltlllnl Piratet (1-2) tot
their (I rat conference win H '
topho more Steve Simmon•
ICOred ahc pl1 and had four
..... OoUie Scott tw..n allo
had 21 MY8.
,,
! ••
Tu31·'
Alll FIL 11111
it.., ,_ lfOMMl•oleft lo '"" , .... _..; ................. .
,, ,.,.__, 1"11d ... _, ................
YOUR CHOICI
llXIOI I OI fOlt
a::, 79' CAii QT.
51lNIC ALERT SA-82
UNIQUI AUDlaLI ALARM SYSTEM
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AL TERIA TORS STARTER MOTORS
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Orange Coa1t DAILY Pll.OT/WednMday, October.13, 1982
4 WHEEL
HAND TRUCK & DOl.l Y
POI HOMI, GAIDIN 01 INDUITRY
• 400 lb. capacity w rtlcally 16• • 700 lb. capacity herhentally
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·-/2::;' . ~:·~n 19·~
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PEP BOYS STILL GIVES .A LIMITED ROAD
HAZARD WMRANTY* AT NO EXTRA COSTI
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Orenoe Co••t DAILY PILOTIWedn••d•y. Ootob•r 13, 1882
Uncle Sam gets tough
to collect big money
Prtme lending "•'•
t 9 "to-
WAStµNGTON (AP)-Uncle
• Sam, hard-preued for caah. 11
•bout to f et tough with 10me ot
the mtl lon1 who o w e th «!
1overnment billlont and aren't
paytns up. ·
The Office of Man.ajement and
Budpt estimates $40 billlon -
an •ver•ge of $400 per taxpayer
-la owed the government. The
flaw'e includes everything from
delinquent taxes to unpaid
student loana to overpayments of
Social Security beneCits. The
lnlerest alone on thoee overdue
debts coets taxpayerJ around $15
million a day.
"There's hardly a government
agency that la not h olding
delinquent accounts," said Jerry
;Bridge9 of OMB. "Wllo o wes it?
Every eegment of our society. l
can't think of a eegment over 6
-years old that isn't involved."
But the gravy train may be
slowing.
TKJS WEEK, P res!d e n t
Reagan is expected to sign a law
making It easier for the
govenunent to collect some o{ its
debts. It will allow some agencies
to turn over the ir debts to
professional col~ctors and to
notify credit bureaus when
somebody falls behind in
payments to the government.
The legial.ation was approved
by Congress with no fanfare and
little dissent. Its chief sponsor,
Sen. Charles Percy, R -111 ..
estimates it wlll bring in $20
billion over the r.ext five years.
Even before the bill was
passed, most federal agencies
were ste pping up their d e bt·
collection efforts.
Dickey O'Brien
For uxample, lh orflccit that
a dm l nl1tor num t>ro u s
govc>nunent loon progrllmli huvc
t o ughe n e d sc r ee n i ng o f
applicants. Th"' mlllw-y ll('l"Vlce!l
arc ch1malng f)!•yr<>ll OperationB
to uncover ch cuL"i. The Internal
Revenu e Ser vice la u 1ln g
automa Uon and boosting the tlze
of its .~rt to increase oollectlon
of past·d uc taxes.
The new leg1slau on has some
loopholes even before It takes
effect. For example, the IRS will
not be turning over any of its
overdue accoun ts to private
debt-collect ion ser vices. And
none of the procedures will help
t h e g o v e r n m e' n t co 11 e c t
overpayments of Social Secur ity,
, welfare or Medicare benefits.
Of lhe $40 billion in delinquent
accounts. O MB estimates. $23
billion is in taxes. $14 biU1on in
overdue loons and $3 billion in
over paymen ts to beneficiaries.
including Social Security.
MOST OF THE overdue loans
and overpayment arc divided
about equally amon g s i x
agendes:
-Agricul ture. for rural
conservation . farmers' housing
and crop loans.
-Education, for student loans
and for college housing.
-H ea l t h and Hu mu n
Services. for loans to medical
students and for medical facilit.ies
and for replacements to Social
Security recipients.
-H o u s ing a n d U r b an
Develo pme nt, for loans for
single-and multi-family homes.
-S m a ll Bu si n ess
Diaz Hector
Admrnl8 tratlon . for 1Ju1lncn
expansion and diMl.llt.cr loan.a for
homl'Owncn; tmd buslnl>tK ...
Vcl~run11 AdmlnJ1tratlon,
ror housing loons. loans aaatnai
tervlccmcn's ln1urunce pollclo8
a n d for overpayment o f
l'ducoUrm bcnetlUI under thl· C l
bill.
M os t p cop l u wh o a r •
delinquent in th1•lr tax paymcnl8
arc those who don't puy t he
mount due when they fl~ their
returns.. Others are added to the
Uat after IRS audits their returns
and concl udes more taxes are
owed.
IRS, which under the new
legislation will have to continue
to do ita own collecting, genera.Uy
h as six yea r s t o co llect a
delinquent account. The agency
iB reluctant to declare an account
uncollectable.
"If you're paying your past·
due tax'es on the Installment
plan, you lose your job, have no
prospect of getting another one
und have no assets, we may write
1t oH." cxplaint'Ci an IRS .oCficial.
Octobttr 12
AIMIJIJIAlslo
AP 1982
Rate slashed
Chart shows decline an
prime lending rate
from April to Tuesday.
New figure is lowest
level for key business
borrowing rate in 25
months.
PSA Sllliles at miles
Paci fic Southwest Airlines has reported Septe m ber
scheduled traffic of 235,030.000 revenue passenger miles, an
increase of 33.8 percent from September 1981.
This total reprc.-scnts a record for the month of September,
surpas.<ilng the previous high set in 1979.
Available seat miles during September increased 25.5
percent t'Ompared to the like month the previous year .
The average load factor of September was 55.9 pe~cent
compared to 52.4 percent for September 1981.
Wiiiiams Fenton
Econo Lube N' Tube announces
'
new franchise in Laguna Niguel
Tim O'Br.iea o f Newpo r t
Beach, executive vice president
of Econo Lube N' Tune, Inc .. and
director of its franc hising
program, announced the grand
opening of lta newest franchise in
Laguna Niguel. A part of a $1.2
million auto service park. the
new facility is located at 27912
Forbes Road.
Newport Harbor-Q>sta Mesa
Board of Realt.on has announced
the appointment of Dwi1tit
Dickey to its executive officer
position. Dickey, a resident. of
Newport Beach. ia a former
college educator and former U.S.
Marine offlcer of 14 years.
Ro-.ert A. Diaz has bee n
installed as president of the
A~nt A.od.ation of Orange
County, an organization of
3 ,000-plua members. The
auoci•tion involve• owners,
operaton and managers with one
or more rental units as well as all
others affl.liated with the rental
~industry.
Missy Hector has b een
appointed assistant concessions manaaer for Sr.abo Food Services
at the >.naheim Convention
Center. hior to joining Szabo,
she WM •ffiliat.ed with Interstate
United Food Service at Lio n
Country Safari, Irvine, where
she .erved as ooncesaiona general
manapr.
Jn Meyer. has been appointed
national ales manager. footwear
and acceeeories dlvislona of Op
Co., of Tuatln. He will be
raponaible for the total sales
activities of the two divisions
throu«hout \he U.S. In addition,
be wtD be involved in marketing
~ pron19tlonal activities.
DC BUSINESS
I
Kay Fenton of Mission V1e)O
has been selected as manager for
the recently-opened office of
Residential Escrow of Laguna
H ills, Inc. P rior to her ne w
position . she was an escro w
officer for Rffidential F.&crow's
Costa Mesa and Tusun offices.
She ·has more than eight years in
the industry.
James N. Williams has been
promoted to vice preside nt o{
cannery o pera tions at Hunt·
Wesson Foods. Inc .. of Fullerton.
He wiU be responsible for all
manufacturing. e ngineering,
technical services, planning and
administration o f U.S . a nd
Canadian cannery and specialty
products.
Gary D . Wilson o f Mission
Viejo has been named residential
ma rketing re presentative for
T it le Ins ura nce a nd Trus t ,
Orange County Division. He will
be headquartered at the Laguna
Hills office. 25200 La Paz Road.
Ricbard T. Coady of Santa
Ana. executive vice president of
Pacific M ut u a l R ea lty o f
Newport Beach. has been elected
v ice cha irman of the newl y-
created Life Mortgage and Real
• I
Fred Nellon, 39, has been
promoted to vice presidJnt of
operations from di rector of
operations for the Ca mbridge
Capital Croup of Santa Ana.
Nellon joined the group in 1980.
Estat<' Officers' Council The
counc il ts comp rised of tsO
na t iona l I d e ins u ra n ce
rt!prescntat1ves.
Paul R. Tucker has been
appoi n le d vice pr esident of
m ark eting fo r M S J Data
Corporation of Costa Mesa.
Tucker, 44, j oins M.Sl from
Honeywell Information Systems
whe r e he spent 20 years 1n
domesuc and intemat.1onal sales
and marketing.
Ne wport Corp., of Fountain
VaUey. announced res\ructurlng
of its ma nageme nt with the
appointment of Erwta Tomasb to
the board and the election of
three new vice presidents, Dr.
ADtboay Ht~ Waller J. Ladt m.
and Dennis \.:, Terry.
Terry Laagstaff of Fountain
Valley has been named rnaNger
o f tra n s portation for Carl
Karcher Enterprises o{ Anaheim,
owner and operator of 325-plu.s
Carl's Jr restaurants throughout
California. Las Vegas, and Yuma,
Ariz.
Adriane B. Miiier has been
'promoted to account executive,
public relations, for L e n ac,
Warlord. Stone Advertising and
Public Relations of Newport
Beach. Miller. previously public
relations spedallsl, has been with
the agency since February.
Harvey Fergason of Anaheim
has been promoted to executive
vice president of Valencia Bank
of Santa Ana. Ferguson joined
Valencia Bank in 1977 and was
m a nager or the bank's East
Anaheim office. He was elevated
to cashier in 1978.
Pension recipients to increase?
WASHJNOTON (AP) -The
proportion of Americana who
rec9Ye pem6on benefits will rt.
dramadcally by the tum of the
century. aecordtn1 to a 1tudy
doM for an lnautance lnduatry
poup. A uudy of penaioh plan
puUelpallon by mlddle-a1ed AmertNna In 1979 1how1 that
wbli. anlJ half of the nation'•
........ now have mme klnd of
pe~•race. about teven
out of the 40.oM ... bnclwt
..,. .. """" ..... by the
Um lht:y rcurc.''
The study. comml111loned by'
the American Council of Life
Insurance. was pre~ by ICF
Inc., a private economics reaearch
finn that utet population data to
study varlOUI trends.
O. David Hurd, chairman of a
counc il task force and vice
president of Bankcni Lite Co. of
Dee Moine.. Iowa, old the
lnduttry group 10Ught the study
becau.e It wanted to determJne
what proportion of workerw wm
obtaln pension cov~ u t~y
move through their working
yc.-an.
Tht' Aum of the pension And
Social S ecurity peym~nt• lo
tho9c retiring In the year 2004,
the council uld. will l"v• moet
retired people a majOr pert of tM
Income they Md been n.'Cf'lvlng
whlle working. •
"We ace the atudy H an
Important one for the lmmedlate
lnsithte It offers llnd .. • •W1.lnc place to atimulate debaie on
national polic)'." Hurd Mid. "It
conlradk ll t0m• widely held
bell •fl and erroneous
a.umptlon. on &he 1Ubjed."
MUTUAL FUND
....
S&Ls sµff ering
I
record losses
WAS HING TON (AP) -
Soving11 and loan WllOClatlons Iott
$3.3 billion In the fln1t h1df of thla
yo1.r , a 11 ><-mo n t h record
Amounting to more than double
the l088e8 in the i3Jne period of
1981
The Federal Horne Loen &nk
Soard report.t..'<i that 82 pcrc.-ent of
the government-insured savinp
and loans lost money in the finl
half ot 1982. The board a1Bo u ld
the drop was atlead of the $3. l
billion reported in the last 1lx
month.If of 1981. Lo6ses for all of
1981 were $4.6 billion.
"The slight increase in 108lle8
reflected a recfuction m income
t.ax credits which could be taken
b~ associations,"' the bank board
saitl .
The new report follows recent
passage of legislation providing a
he fty aid package for w e ak ·
savings and loans and gives them
new powers to operate more like
commercial ban ks.
Industry officials have said the
pack.age was needed to reinforce
the faltering industry, which has
been battered by the lengthy
spell oC high interest rates.
Savings and loans have large
por tfolios o f old home loans
agreed on yea rs ago when
interest rates were much lower.
As a result. they've been forced
to pay more for new money than
they've been taking In from the
old home loans .
ln its report, the bank board
said 2,942 out of 3,573 federally
insured S&Ls -or 82 percent -
lolt money In the first hall of th1I
r.ear. Seventy percent I01t money
n the fll"lt half of 1981 and 85
~rcent In the lut half.
The report al.to eaJd the S&l.A'
ratio of net worth to 11.abllhln
continued fallln1, decllnlna to
3.93 percent in June. That
compared with 4.47 percent at
the end of latt rear and 6.12
percent ln June o l981.
Auoclatlona are required to
maintain their net worth at 3
percent of their Habllltlet. Net
worth la the exce91 of aa1ets over
llabiU tiem.
The bank board al80 reported
that the difference between the
rat.es S&l.A pay for money and
the 8"10Unt they get from their
mortgage portfoUo. narrowed!n the tint half of t.hia year.
"This represented the fl pt
improvement In thl• spread hi
four yean and was ·the result of .
the first decline In the cost of
funds in five years combined
w i th another inc rease in
mortgage portfolio yield," it said.
The average cost of money,
which includes the coat of
borrowins money as well aa that
of paying interest on deposits,
fell from 11.53 percent in the laat
half of 1981 to 11.49 peroent in
the firat half of this year, the
bank board said. It was the firat
decline alnce 1977.
The average yield on
mortgages grew from 10.07
pe rcent during the last six
months of 1981 to 10.56 percent
in the first half of th\s year, It
said.
-"'
Pct_
Up V) UP 1'0 Up lt.O U p IU Up 17.A
Up IU Up 1 .. 7 UP u.e Up IU Up lSA Up IS.A Up IU
Up IJ.I Up 11.1 Up IJ S ~: H~ Up II.I Up II S
Up II • Up II I Up IOt Up 10.j
Up IO.O Up IOO UP IOO
Uo IOO
..
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-
Oc1ngt COHt DAILY PILOT/Wedneldey, Qctobef 13, 1982 8 C7
,OMPO ITE 'fRANSACTION
OUOf AJIO.• llf("UOI T•AOUOlf , ...... vo .. 1 .......... ~ .. , .... ,, ~·· ec>UON. O•T•Oll ••o , ... " ....... '10<11 •• , ........ 4110 ••N•no • ., , ... woo ••O lllU llflf Dow. Jones Final
OFF 9.11
CLOllNQ 1,003.17
Reagan heckler
loses support
SALINAS (AP) -G Richard Arnold , lht:
Republican candidate (or Congresa who verba lly
jousted with President Reagan in the While HoillW!,
hus lost Lhe financial backing of local purty leaders.
At o mt-etlng Monday nJght. Bertram F Rudolph
Jr .,v1t-e c?airman of the Monterey County Republican
Central ~mm1ttee, was gping to make a resolution
dt'C.'l<•rlng that Arnold wouldn't get any local ..,arty
funds unless he assured the l'Ommittee there would be
no more: "sensational provocation&."
H ealth plans probed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A stale oHlcial says
collapsed American Benefits Ltd. may be one of many
health-benefit plans covering thousands of workers
that e<iuld be un the edge of bankruptcy.
. "We'r~. !~king at half a dozen very seriously
~1ght now, 1u11d Frank Damon, chief deputy st.ale
ansuranl'C comm1ss1oner.
Armed with a new s tale law taklng effeet last
month, the state 1s c racking down on so-called
rnuJ11ple-employer trusts by clearing some of the
rl!gulatory fog that exists between stale and federal
agenc1L-s wh1c.'h are s upposed to ovel"!K'e the industry
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
GOLD COINS
1. ... •• .. . , .... ... "• "' ., . ..
P<t
Up lll Up 161
Up ISO Up IJ.I Up 11.0 Up 111
UP IOt Up 101
Up 10 1 UP tO O Up ti
Up ti
Up '' UP U Up I l
Up IS Up 1 0
Up 7.a Up IA Up 11 Up U
UI) 7.4 Up /.l Up 7.J
Up 11 Up 11 UP I I
NEW YORK fAP) Pr!OH llte h-Oey of
Qold eolnt. QOl'llptl.0 Wl1h F1lday • l)rl<lo
ICt111•tt•nd. 1roy o• S456 25. UP
S1125 ... , •• LHI, t troy O• S4 SI 25. UP
Sii 25 ..... ao "'-· 1 2 ''°" 01 •~37 75 up $22.26 Aut. tOO crown, 9802 lrOV 01 • S433 75.
up $1125
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW YURK IAPj 1iMM l pm 1 ... 00., IHIC<I ond net ..,..,. of Ohe 1 ... ,,_, IC!Mo
Am••c•n Stock Eact\1";.t •uu•• tr•d•"'Q nal!Onally ao .._. l"-tl SI
OOm•Plri 1,0M,.00 C ... mp Ho Ul.IOO OIQltOll Int J00,100
11 • ._0o1 u1.• W•RQ 8 73'.100 LuroaSon JIS,IOO
0..llC-0 1 ... .00
.. "'46'M 1 tt . .ao AZL Rn .. ,100 lmperOtl A o t0.100
MElAlS
• Vt
"' . .. . ...
'•
' . .. ...
NEW YORK IAP) -Spol nonleHOut
tMlel prices T.-ey C•lllN' 17~·10 cenlt • pound. US
clealonellOl>t
Leed 23-211 ceno t • pound Dftc 40.4 .. _,, •• pound oe1<.-ec1 "" se 3200 Mt1111e w-CClf'nC>Otlle •tt .,._.,_ 7e c;en1a a pound H Y
.._ $9 5eo s>« lroy ounc>9 NY Comh ""°• mon1n clOMd Mon. M«cwy $370 oo '* nwc l'telln11rt1 Sl't7 00·'303 00 Hoy ounce
N '(
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
erT"9 A~l'r-
S4iec1ecl world QOld pt tees T ..-dey
LOftdoft M«""'Q llA!f\g S«2 2$, up $ 11 2S
'-•ndon elternoon l1x1n9 SH I 25, up Sil 26
~.,.. ellern0011 1111nQ S435 :ie. up $6 S5
fronlrfw1 11•1"11 $440 ~a. up sa 2a
Zurtdl lete ell.wnoon "•'"II $43$ 50 oH '1 50 bid. $.437 00 .... ..,
"""'' I Hermen (only dtlly quolol "' 1 2,, up sa 25 , ,~rd 1oni., o•J'Y quo••1 .... , 26 up
lneefherd (only Ollly quoit! t111>11cat.u '463111, up $1111
SYMBOLS
Cl Orange Coa1t OAIL.Y PILOT/Wtdne1d1y, October 13, 1982
'Trader Joe' caters
to gourmets on budget
AP Wlrephoto
A sugar baby?
Micke y Rooney watch es as a young woman
auditions for a major role in the touring
company of Roone y and Ann Miller's
comedy revue "Sugar Babies" in the
Debbie Reynolds dance studio in Lo
Ange les. About I 00 young women
parUcipated in the tryout.
By RICHARD GREEN ~·--,, .... ,,.., SOUTH PASADENA
Conaumera may bu plnchJng ~nnit'I
in aome 11upcrmarket1, but "Trudn
Joe" Co\.tlombe Is selllna pl<mty of
pate, hormone-free ch icken and a
soybean-based ba<.'Un aubslltuw called
Ana Hog. ,.
Coulombe says thlrd-quarlt'r Males
at tlw privately owned chnln of 20
markets in Los Angeles and Orange
counties wer · up 27 percent from u .
year ago and predicts 1982 rcvenucs
will hit $50 m111ion. The 51-ycar-old
specialty grocer says he's prospering
by aiming at gourmets on a budget.
"We are deaUng with sophlstlcated
shoppers. but sophisticated should not
be confused with wealthy," he 11aid.
"Our best customers are not wealthy
people, but smart people who are alert
to value." .-
Coulombe said he hit on the Idea of
low-priced specially markets In 1966
while sitting under a palm tree In the
French Caribbe1m. He had a slx-storc
c hain of mini-markets h e had
developed for the Rexall Co. and
purchased a fter Rexall decided to get
out of the food business, but he wasn't
quite sure what lo do with thom.
Part o f Coulombe's vacation
reading was a Scientific American
article noting the huge increase in
college attendance. Anothe r was a
story about the dC'velopment of the
wide-body Boeing 747. Coulombe
realized that con sumers wt•re
becoming better educated and more
traveled and decided they would
trend away from meat-and-potatoes
fare.
Trader J oe's customers, he said,
"have devcloix.>d a taste for something
other than Velveeta by way of cheese.
something more than Grdinary beer
by way of alcoholic beverages and
something other lhan Fttlger's by way
of coffee."
Today. Coulombe stoc~s hard-to·
find items such as salt-free peanut
butter. preservative-Cree piu.a. frozen
quiche and pilchard (a variety of
herring that's similar to tuna but Jess
expensive). But ne notes that these
types of selections mean the chain,
which was bought four years ago by
the Albrecht family, can only expand
so far.
"The problem with big retailers 1s
that they arc so big that they find 1t
hard to stay in stock without turning
to 'plastic' highly standardized
products." he said an an interv1cw al
Trader Joe's headquarters in South
Pasadena.
"We're set up to deal in 'non-plastic'
A new Mount Rushlllore?
Granite carver dreams of honoring outstanding Oklahomans
G RANITE, Okla. (AP) -Bill Willis
is a granite carver who has a dream:
He sees a monument of granite 116
feet tall and 126 feet wide with the
chiseled faces of t~ Indian leader
Sequoyah, humorist Will Rogers and
athlete Jim Thorpe look ing right
down Main Street.
"'red rock mountain at the edge of
this southwestern Oklahoma town
may aeem to be an unlikely spot for a
world-famous tourist attraction, but
that's w here Willis sees hi9 Giants of
the Great Plains.
"Each figure will be 108 feet tall,"
he saya. "The presidents on Mount
Rushmore are only 60 feet tall. Stone
Mountain in Georgia is 90 feet tall.
and that includes die horses.
''When it is finished, it will be the
largest gr&n!te mosaic in the world."
And t hat's what makes Willis'
project different from the faces of
Washington . Jeffe rson , Theodore
Roosevelt and Lincoln that stare from
the granite cliff in the Black Hills or
South Dakota and the h or seback
figures of Confederate leaders
Je fferson Davis. Robert E. Lee and
Stonewall Jac k son o n Stone
Mountain.
While the Mount Rushmore and
Stone Mo untain memorials were
ca rved from the rock , Willis is
engraving the likenesses of the three
famous Oklahomans on two-foot-
square blocks of granite. Each block
then will be fitted together for the
finished monument.
He has the bust of Rogers finished
and said he hoped to begin work on
the bottom part of the monument
"when it gets a little coole r." The
project is being held up right now b)l
a lack of money, Willis said. ·
"We've received $20,000 in tax-free
donations and my dad and I have put
in $25.000," he said. "Contributors can
get thelr name engraved on a panel
outside the figures for $25 each. or a
family can take a whole panel for $1,-'
000.
"We need at least $1 million more to
finish it. We e nvisioned It as a $1 'ACIPIC YllW
....,llAl,AI•
Cemttery Mortuary Cl\aP41l·Cr•matory
3500 Pac:1f1c View Drive
Newport Beach
644·2700
1 Tape testimony
Mae~ MOITUA•S
LllQUfl• Beach
4'4-9415
LaQuna Hills
76&-0933
Juan C.p1atrano
495-1 776 .
'ltODll LAWN-NT. OllYI
Mortu.,y • C.me tery Crematort
1125 GIS .. f Ave ,
Cott41M.sa
540-5SS.
l'mCIOOn.11
m&.OOADWAY
MOllTUAIY
110 Btoadway
eo.taMeaa
142~91&0
IMft liiinON
IMrTMIMMU
WlfRf'r1~
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-I! appeerlng before a
jury would be too tra u -
ma tic, an alle9ed child
molesting victim could live testimony by video-
1ape under a blll aigned
by Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. He slaned AB-ZS by
Aasemblym •n Rlcl,ard
Mountjoy, R-M~.
111111mm
FINLEY
million project when we began. but
with inflation. it's gone up." .
Willis said plans caJI for a small
park at the base of the mountain and
a zigzag road to the top. "We hope lo
build a walkway across Main Street.
with a little patio. whe re people can
pose to' have their picture taken with
the giants."
Everything will be free, he says.
WilJis estimated the 3.41 6 pieces of
granite that will make up the
monument will weigh 512.400 pounds
It wiU rest on the granite mountain
and will be supported by a steel
framework betwee n 10 to 20 feet
wide at the bottom and 10 ftlet wide at
the top.
There will be a separation between
each 2-foot block "so the monument
will be self-cleaning and also to
provide a wind easement. We've
w orked with an architecatural
engineer, and he has designed it to
withstand winds of 160 mph. with a
safety factor," Wi!Jls said.
Willis got into the giants business
becawie of his reputation in granite
engraving. His portraits on granite
hang in the Wrestling Hall of Fame in
Stillwater, Okla .. an d t h e Greer
County Museum in nearby Mangum.
Coea.MeN
Me-«171 Everybody gete a piece
Traclc·r Jew Coulomb.-
spedalty items. the reby Imposing a
limit on our growth," he said. "Trader
Joe's 1s dl•hberately designed to be a
busancss of small oppor tunity, one
that dchberatt'ly went into waters.too
shallow for big corporauons."
In the lul • 1960s. when Coulombe
didn't have the money Cot u large
m•wspapcr advE-rtising· campaign, he
foundt'd "The Insider's Report," a
newslettt•r that regular Trader Joe
customers rt'<:e1ve seven times each
year.
"The Insider·~ Report" now has a
circulation of 380,000 readers who see
such hl'adlines as "Decent C hia nti
$1.29," "The Incredibly Common
Fromage du J our," or "Ready-to-Eat
Pate from French Canada ... About
as Cheap as Homemade Meatloaf."
The stores contain an unusual
mixture of alcoholic products and
health foods Many items are plaet..>d
l>n shelv~ in their packing crates and
boxes. Store employees d ress an
Hawa11an s hirts and other bright-
.colored clothing. .
Coulombe says he's proud of the
food the stores sell. Items sold at the
market fat nu:e ly mto the h1gh-f1ber
high-V1tumin C di e t Co ulombe
believes in
On the oth<>r hand. he says proudly.
"Trader Joe's sells the best $2 bottle
of wine you can find."
Trader Joe's house-label wines are
actually overproductions o f well-
known Cahfornia wines.
Coulombe says he has buyers who
travel around the world lO fmd exotLt'
tlem ranging from special brands of
beer lo cheese to sharp mustard. but
some of the best items can be found
dose lo home
"The croissants we sclJ (perhaps the
best m the world). come from a smaJI
baker m Los Angeles," he said .
In-hospital
birth rate
· stays level
WASHINGTON (AP) -The head
of a physicians' group says that
although ch ildbirth at home has
received considerable attention In the
news media, the proportion of babies
delivered In hospitals hasn't changed
in six years.
"Since 1976 the percentage of out-
o f -hosp1 tal births has remained
constant at one percent despite much
publicity and vocal supporters,"
according to Dr. William H. Pearse,
executive director of the American
Col l ege o f Obstetrician s and
Gynecologists.
"The highest rates o f out-of.
hospital birth are concentrated in
upper New England (Maine. Vennont
and New Hampshire), in Texas and
a long the Pad fic Coast.
LOUIS JAMES nNLEY,
r .. ldent of l!l Toro, Ca .
P....cl away on ~ 12 1982. Lovln1 h the r of
Palrick and Jam. Flflle)', s..-n r......u anct Kathleen
1'nley, 7 ~hildNn and
•liter• Ber nardin e
O'Sullivan and Patricia Pfl1~r. Recitation of the
Ro1ary wlll bt held on
J'ridafJ ~ 15. 1112 at 8 :00PM and Mau o f av.... Burial will be held on Saturda_yL October 18,
1912 at 2:00PM both at Our Lady Queen of An1el1
C.\hollc Churm, Newport
•ach, C.. Interment at PllMltV....._....Pllk. O'Coa•or La1una Hlll1 .................
Worken at the Hilton, N~ Y ., Apple Ha"eel Feetl•al cut Ulto what
Ol'IJanlzen believe ie the blunt apple pie ever made. The I ~ton~
18-foot cllameler pie WM• loot larser than the prevloaa reconl
ltCJlder.
' •
-·
rtalC NC>nCf
•IOTITtOUI IUl•H HAMI 8TATIMINT
'J K .. _ .. •:
•1CTITIOUl9UIMH I Tiie IOllowlno !*ION tt1 OO!ne
bullll4Nlt .. ...... ITATSMINT I ~
LI BALLI r PALLAS, IH42 A
Megn0111 Avenue, Sult• 711, 011den
Orov1, C1lllorn11 028'11
The l04iowtn0 pertot\• .,. OOlnt '
tllill""' ..
CIACUIT·TEIT, t160 PuHMtll
81r"1. Coet• Meet. OA IHll LI! BALLl!T PAI LAB INC , 1
C:1t1101nla corpo1111o n, t2842·A MtQnoll.1 Awnue. Sult• 79, 011den
Otovt, Cllfffom•• 0294 t
I NVllllONMlNTAL COMM• '
Tlll1 butlr\eM It C~VC:led by• '°'pot• liOn 0111411 Pell .. ll'C
J..n B•r•. Pr1tio.nl
Thi• tllltm41nt wn llMtd with t"41
Covnly Cllfk or 011ng1 County on Octoblf 11. t882 ,,..,,0
UNICATIO N • I N OOlll ·
POMTfO, • CllllOl'IW• -PGl'•llon. 3100 Pullmtn II , Cotta .._, CA
t2t21
T nit !XIII,.... It oonouetH by 1
c;of P«•l IOn (nwONnelltll Comm
Int Allet! J en.11en, p, ..
Thlt tllt-t Wll lllecl with Ille
Coun1y Cletk of Or1nge County on
810letnl>« 17, IH2 ,~
'" ...
' •' Publlth•d Or1ng1 Cont 0 11ty
P1101 Oct 13. 20, 27. Nov 3, 1082
... 37H Pubtl1h1d Or1ng1 COHI OlllJ ,...... " ... Piiot. Sept n . "''" e. t3. 20..12.-:::
M.IC NOTICE
I TATIMINT 0, UANOO.-..NT
°'UH OP' ,.CTITIOUI IUIMH NAMI
Th• t.ollowlng p1r1on h11
abanool\4KI th• 1.111 ol th• F1c1111out
81.11lneH Name:
4~2
f'ta.JC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUI llUl*IH
NA.Ml ITATIMUIT
The 1011owtno ~'°"' 111 d04no bu11neH u ·
A & K FENCE. 349 No.A
ROCihNl91', Cotll M .... CA 0241'7
ROBERT LEE ANTEL.. 349•No
I
1
I I . '· • ..
-~ COSTA MI S A CHRISTIAN
PRESCHOOL. 320 E 18th Str .. I,
Coll• M .... C1J110tn11 02627 A Roc htll•r. Cott• M•••· CA ...
Th• FICllllOUI Bu11nut Name flllllld 10 lbOVe Wll filed In
Otano-County on July 17. 1090
LOii Eiieen S heller. 77' I
Gon11g1 Pla ce W111m1natet CaH10tnl1 921183
024127 ••• GEORGE ROBERT
l<UNEFEL TEA. 302 I G1rlleld Ave .
Co••• Mesa. CA 92626
Thlt bullnest II ton<IUCl.0 by 8
genetal pannetlhlp
· GllOlge R Kknelellet Thia bullnMt w111 conducted by a
llml1ed pa11n1tahlp
LOii E Sh1f11r
Thl1 1t111men1 w11 flleO with lhl
Coun1y Cl91'k of Orange C<Nnty on
Oc1obef 5, 1H2
Thll ll•t•ment WU Iii.<! with lh• County Clerk ol Orange County on .. •
October 5, 1982 '• ,, ....
Publl1hed Orange CoHt 01lly
F1414N PllOI, Oct 8, 13, 20. 27 1082
Publilhed 0 ,.nge CoHI Dally 434H2
Pilot, Ocl 8 t3 20 27 1082
•400·82
PUBLIC NOTICE
Nil.JC NOTIC£
FICTITIOUI IUl*IH
N.AME ITATl ... NT
FICTITIOUI 8UllNHI
NAME ITATEMENT
Th• lollOwlng pettonl 111 Oolng ,• •
butlnet1 u ·
Thi 1011ow1no peraon 11 <101ng
bullnu11 •• KIRKWOOD AS SOCIA res.
2061 Bu11n1111 Cent or Drive. Suite
207 ltv1ne. Celll0tnla 92715 Joni S M11ea 280 Cagney
Lane No 20• Newpo rt Be1c h.
Calllorn1a 02663
Thll OOIMnlH .. tondUCll!CI l>y an
lndlVldual
Joni S Miies
PRIVATE PRACTICE ANO
CONTRACTUAL RELATIONS, 350
S H1ghl•nd, Pll()1nt11. C1lllornl•
921170
So C1111orn1t Prtva11 Prectlce
Special lnterut Group 350 S
H1ghl•nd. P11c1nt1e Cellfornl•
02670 Th11 1>u11ne.1 11 conouct.o by en
unlncorporeled 111oc1a11on Olht r
1han a partnership / \
Alhena Peru This 1t111men1 w&1 loleO with ltlo County Clerk ol Orange County on
Sep111mber 27, 1982
This 11a1ement wu,111.o with tile
County Clerk Of Orange County on
'111121 s.c>1em1>er 20. 1982
Published Orenoe CoHI Oelly F1tTTn
Pilot Sepl 29 Oct 6 13 20 1982 Publl1h1d Orange Co11t 01lly
4263·82 P1lol, SIPI 22. 29. Oc1 II. 13. 19412
-----------•1•9-;P PUBllC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8UllNES8
NAME I TATEM£NT The lollow1ng per son 11 dotng
bullnen 11
SMALL RACK CONTRAC T
025 JemborH Road. Suite 160.
Newpo<1 BlllCh. Cllllorn11 92660
Lonlee Lara 250 C1111 Drove
No 1• L•guna Beacn. <;•111orn11 924151
Thtll bullnlH 11 conducled by en
ondlYldul l
L0ttlt1 Lari
T hoa t1a1em1n1 WU f1ll<l Wllh Ille
Coun1y Cle1k of Orange Counly on
Octobet 11. 1982 •
F1"315
P ubll1hod Orange Cont Dally P1IOI Ocl 13 20 27. Nov 3 1982
4513·82
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 1ua1H£1S
PUBllC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI .UltNela NAME ITATl•NT
The following peraont are doing
bu.,nesa as
BEST·LINE SUPPLY CO. 1125
Alva111 Avenue, Orange. CA 926e7.
KIM S OO HYUNG. 2885
Fa1rv1ew Rolld, No C·205. Co.II
M"' CA 92112ll CHU,.,G S O ON KIM . 2885
Fa1rv1._. Roecs, No C·205. Cotla
M-.CA921126
Thia bullnen 11 oonclucted by an
lndlvldual
Soo H. Kim •
Thtl al81tmenl Wll hi.cl with 1111
County Clet'k ol Or•no• County on October 6, 1982
F1llOZI
Publl1he<I Or•ng• COHI O•lly
Pilot. Oc1 13 20. 27 Nov 3. 1962
•510-62
NAME STA T£MENT Pt&JC NOTIC(
Thi lollow1ng pe<11ons are doing i-----------0011nes1 H
H & 11 CONSTRUCTION SITE
601 S Euclid Anaheim. Calllorn1a
92602 VtclOI P SyQu1a 19610 lb••I
Certllos C1lllorn1a 90701
C•rol M SyQu•a 19610 Ibo•
Cerrnoe. Cahl0tn11 90701 Th11 1>ut1nes1 is conducled Dy •n
1nd1v10ull
Carol M Syqu1a
Th•I stal-nl wH ftled wtlh Ille
Counly Clerk of Orange Counly on
October 5. 1982
F111145
Publtahed Orenge Coa11 Dally
P1lol Ocl 6 13. 20 27. 1982 •370.82
PUBUC NOTIC£
FICTITIOOI .Ul lN«ll
NAME t TATl-NT
r11e following paraon 111 doing IJuiln-u ·
SOU\HWEST E N ERGY
RETROFIT, 19126 M9Qnolll SlrMI,
Su111 203B. Hunt1ng1on Beit h.
Cahlorrna 92646 Sieve Penn -Stephen Lou11
P e nn 2070 1 Ch•uc •r Line,
Hun1tng1on Blach. Clllf0tnla 92&48
Th1t 1>us111esa 1s conduct.a by en
1nd1v1dull • Stephen L Penn,
President
Tn11 118'emtnl wH hi.<! wllh lhe
County Cl«k of O••noe County on
October 6. 1982 ,, ... ,
PuDhlhld 01tng• COHI O•••y
P110t Ocl 6. 13 20. 27. 1982
U03-62 FICTITIOUS IU..,_18
N.,_ ITATUllEHT
The to1tow1ng per1on 11 doing f't&JC. NOTICE bullnlHI• -I~--_;;_:..:....;._.;._..;..; __ _
SAL'S S PORT HAUS. 1779 'ICTITIOUI 8U91MEll Newport Blvd • Costa M111. HAW ITATS•NT c1111orn1a 921127 The lollowlng P81ton 11 doing
Niii• 11 Bennem. 3000 Park buem.a u · Green Dr1v1 Corona del Mer. A· I MASONRY l CEMENT.
Callfornoa 02626 2• 13 "O" S F1lrvllw, Santi Ana.
Thll bullneu 11 conOUC1ed by an Ct11lornla 02704 indtvl<lull K..,.,, PalTICll Grlmafww. 2813
N-H eennem 'O" S F1lrvlew. Sant• Ana.
Thll '11fernenl w11 Iii.cl w11'1 the C.Ufornla 92704 ty Cletk ol Orange County on Thie bull,_. 11 oonclucted by 111
eptemblr 14. 1982 ln<lllllOual Ktvln Grlmtl\aw
..
F111'74
Publllhed Orange Coast Dally
Pilot. Oct e. 13. 20, 27, 1962 4404·82
Thie 1t•ttmenl wll llled with the
County Q!«k of Or111g1 County on
September 27, 1H2 • •I
F1tan .. .. .. _ tC NOTICE Publilh•cl Orange Co111 o anv ___ r_UDL. _______ 1 Pll01. Sept 29. Oct 6, 13, 20, 1"2
425t-82 . ' ACTmOUI llU ... H
NA• ITAn.NT a.D•te Mftftl'C'.
Thi lollowlf19 pe<IOnl 111 doing l----'"-UDL--""-'-~---
Dullness u ,IClTTIOUI au-•• CASSEY ENTERPRISE. 17092 NAME ITATSMDfT
Lynn S1r11t. Apt. A. Hunllng~n The lollowtng p1reon I• doing BMcll, C111tornl1 928<19 bullnen at:
• D•Vl<I Rol>el't Canor•. 1135 w pH 0 T 0 GR A pH I c
2101h, T0tr1nce, C1lttornla 90502 COMMUNICATIONS UNLIMITED. •,
.,
Cuti RlmHy. 17002 Lynn 3207 City Sttelt. Newl)Ort 8Ncll, Slr"1, Apt A, Huntington BMcft. CA 92tt3.
C.iitornla 92&49 GARY GENE HUFF, 3207 ce.y ,<) Thia buli,_ It conducted by• SltMI. Newpof1 BNdl. CA 924163. oener• per1netlhlp This ~ 11 conducted by .,,
David Rol>el't Cessor• lodlvkluel Thi• •l•t-t .... nled wtth ,... Gaty G. Huff
County Clerk ol Orenge County on This 1111ement w11 ni.o with lhl
Septembfi 20. 1062. County Otent ol Or•noe County on
'111111 OGtot>e< s. 111.82. • Pubtlth•<I Orange CoHI Dilly ,,.... . .. !
PllOt, Sept. 22. 29. OC:t. 41, 13, 1082 Publllht <I Or1ng1 Coaat 0 1tly
4212-82 Pllol. Oc-t e. 13, 20. 27, 1N2 -· •1 ,___________ 4344-• ;. ,
PUBllC NOTICE ' 1 '1 ·---------- ---.. ---.,.-Ml\-Tll'r ____ ' ,
'1CT1TIOUI ~II '"'-·"' ""'-. 'I.'• MAm aTATIMEfT ITATDllNT ~ wtneaAWM. 1•"·~ Th• touowlng per1on 11 doing ,... ,., .. , ... lllP ... ,,~
butl""' M ' ONMT*O UMDil' AAl,.80W 8 AKEAY. 17239 ACTITIOUl IUlll9 .. ..._
Brookllur1t, Fount•ln Vall1y, Tha following P•••on "'' Cattl0tnla t27ot wt .... ...--11 ..-ttom Ch•r~ Lynn Statnk1. 892 t '""'"*'" u •.,....~ ,.....ner lhl 1)41rlnerlfllp GP«•tlfte undef-IN er--.t 1\4, Huntington e..cn. 11ct1troue bu"'--of TAIM IT ~~-!~.·II oondUc&ed by .,, 8V$TEMS, 20901 PaMO li'lllo, El 1; ,,_ ---Tl>'o. CA 92e30. ~ ......... L""" Stelnk• Tiie llcitlllou• bu•lnH • nem• .,.j ..,._,. ,.~. **'*'' '°' ltle ~ ... Ttlll 1tet.,...t ,., .. llled wttn I~ tired on J1nwiry 21. 11'2 Ill Ille
Colinty Ctefll of Or111ge County Oft Coun~Wll8· ....__ Octotier , 1. 1982 • a.tea _......,, ,,..,, _,,_,._
'"""'"'" Or•no• Coaat Oally It T8", CA -..... Oct 13. 20. 27. Noll. 3. 1ff2 "'"" 44115-12 Publllllff Otenge Co .. t Oelty
.a-----------~PtlOI. Oc'I. 13, 20. 27. NOv '· 1Ma ~1-a 1,
Celebrate
Life! Al'\
Help the 'It'
March of Dimea
Fight
Birth Defect.a
( Cell Ml•Mn. J ........ ..,...
. .. ""' .., J!!· .
I
I
OrM09 COMt OAH .. V 'tLOT!Wednelday, Ootober 13, 1182 C9
"°""°"' ....... umnA..-r Tiie....._,....., .... ....__
THI NlTWOAI<, 140 I . :=zant ...... ltlend, Callfomlla
Alden & A .. oclalH, lno .. a
Calllornla corporallon, 140 I . ~-· ..... ~. C.ilforN9
Tiiie ._.,... It being~
~ A Cofpcwlllklfl. I
Aldan a Maoca. 1ne Cero¥1 c. AIOan,
Pr.!!!!!!!!t Thia etatemenl WM ftled with tilt c::oun.y aerti of Ofange County on
Sept. 20, 1Na '--...... ....,, .. ......
0.. ==.... ...... *" Ar. ~ CA-,tt7m
P\ll>li.Md Orange CoHI Dally
Pilot, 1a9t. 22, 28. Oct. II, 13, IM2 421~
Orange OOMI DAIL v PILOT /Wedneld•~. OOtobet 13, 1MI
How high is· high • in
Reasons
for the
big pay
ln lhe well-~d craft
of heallna, few make
more than the •urgeon.a
who tinker with the
arteries and valvet1 of the
human heart.
Often theae doctors
devote their U vea to a
alngle operation, the
coronary bypa11. And
their pay i• one of the
reuont that tbia la the
nation'• moat costly
operation: $2 billion a
year.
Dr. Ben.on B. Roe, a
heart specialist at the
University of CallJornia
I n San Francisco,
estimate•
Tension at the table is worth big bucks to
urgeons who specialize in open heart
_ conservatively, he aaya
-that the average gro.
Income of doctors doing
by~a11e1 la more than
$600,000 a year. In
Southern California, the
average surgeon's charge
for a bypua la $6.~00.
"It's not that I 'm
appalled at what people
make," aald Roe., "It's
how they're making it.
They're mak.lng It out of
the public's earned
pocketbooks, and the
public haa no way to
bargain about it."
gery such as that being performed here
at anford University Medical Center.
n1iracles n1ake
l care costly
Patients may benefit
from coronary bypuees,
but ao do the surgeons
who perform them.
According to a survey
Americans spend $287 ion a year thousands of heart bypass operations
for good health. But are t getting (each worth about $20,000) that might lheir money's worth? not be needed?
by the magazine Medical
Economics for Surgeons,
the average surgical
apeclallat in the United
States made $111,860 last
year art.er ex~naes.
• On the face or it, there is n~ to Can Americans afford lo spend
... From university medical rs $25,000 a year to filter the blood of all
to rural clinics, costly "me 1 whose kidneys have failed, when
miracles" of a decade ago ha studies show that three out of four of
become workaday routi ne, improvin , them can at beat lead homebound
Yet heart •urgeons t.ell
of colleagues earning $1
mlllion a year. Why do
they charge ao much?
itbousands of lives. ·ves. •
Cripples walk on manmade hips; ach of these queationJ -and
had hearts pump with fresh, new t e are dozena more like them -
..-ieries; kidney patten ls once doomed re th · n f technol g on
now survive on machines that cleanse the ls at~ l~v:~ ~~. ~nd
pteir blood. they becomi"' P'1'9re preulng
Doctors offer life to tiny infants -becdd~use'echnolosicaJ advances are
90me weighing less than two pounds a . ang to'\e naticit"s )nedical bill a\ a
~who would have died 10 years ago. d1zzyin.g ~
Dr. John Collins, chief
of cardiac surgery at
Brigham and Women's
Hospital in Boston,
argues that h eart
surgery la tough. nerve-
wrackJng work.
!:\ten the-terminally ill live longer. "Are the en ough health care
I But the rising cost of health care is dollart to tak of all the needs?"
outstripping the rate of inflation for a.ska Dr. Ric . am of the Bet1elle
1111 other goods and services, gobbling Human Affaus h Cen~ra ln
up bigger and bigger portions of the Seattle. "The no There are
limitations on the oi care that
rican pie. And some are starting
k whether Americans can -or ld -afford tradllona!, spare-no-
·•bP!rllle medicine.
We have a total system that is out
control," federal budget director
d Stockman wrote In the journal
th Affairs. ". . . We must rethink
basic pre*1ise and ask whether we
once again make health care an
k good."
brty-two years ago, the United
tea devoted 4 percent of ita grou
onal product to medical care .
y, medicine'• share of GNP la 9.8
t and growing. While Inflation
has slowed this year, the rate
ue in medical coets continues
t double-digits -12.1 percent In
12 months ending June 30.
government. which flnance9 29. ;w~'llt of American pertlOMJ health
through Medicare and Medicaid
not alone In I ta concern. For
mple, Chrysler Corp. recently
ronted the ltaue.
company aaya medical experlM!9
run about $7~0 per vehicle It
ufactures.
'llked -without suoc.ees -that
United Auto Workeni share the
t of medtc•l bills throu1h
~and co-payments. But the
n aald lt would cooperate tn
abulle9.
challenle Stock.man1 Chr)'li.r
othen ralle poeea hara qusdona
morality, ethics, IOdal ~m and
~competence:
hilt Jt may b• morally and
ally dHirable, doH It make
le ..,... IO epend 1200,000
to •W • baby who wetahl ,._
a pawMI and a half when oddl
IM ch.lid will Uve are llender at
doctorw and W. who pey out
btU. blMYtnl ln the ecionomlc:
IDMml of .:lde\y or t.hel'Dle)WI -* .. '1 perform, and pa)to for
• I
we are going to be a provide In
the future." ~
Among the coetly ta of
the past decade: .
-Newborn lntemlve ~ra are able to save tiny prema biea
who once would have died, b the
costs are high. Tbe -btll for 'One ~ often amounts to eever-1 hund
thousand dollars. Jn uns. it wa
estimated that this care 009t the na.tJon
$1.5 billion.
-Coronary bypu1 surgery. Thie
open-h eart operation relieves
sometimes crippling angina pain.
Even though doctors cannot agree on
who will benefit Crom the surgery, It
is performed on 137,000 people
annually at an estimated total 009l of
$2 billion, more than any other kind
of surgery.
-Kidney dialysis. Ten years ago,
most people with kidney failure died
because there were not enough
artificial kidneys lo treat them. Now
the federal government pays for this
care, and 59,200 Americana receive
three-times~a-week blood purifying
treatments at an annual cost of $1.8
billion.
-Joint replacements. Doctors can
now replace hips, knee and other
joints destroyed by arthritis and
rheumatism. In 1979, doct.on replaced
162,000 joints at an estimated 009t of
$1.1 billion.
"Americana, doctors aa well u the
public, have for a century been
educated to a alngle standard' of
medical care -the bett," notes Dr.
Arthur D. Silk of Garden Grove. The
reablt la that anyone who needs
expensive care gets It.
•
Sick people receive whatever
treatment docton think mlght benefJt
them, with nearly everything peld for
by tome0ne elte: Blue Cro. and Blue • •
Shield. private Insurance companies •
and govemmen~grarrua, such u
Medicare and M d. '.1, With little lncenlive lo hold down '·
coeta -and threats of malpractice
aulta ttiat encourage them to be
cautio us -d octora can order
aophlatlcated tettt and expensive
treatment al wlll . And the
development of new holpital pdptry
and aur8icaJ knowhow providet ever
frelh ways to spend money.
Many believe that lf med properly,
these lnnovatlont can lower the
economic burden of tickne-.. lneie.d,
experll say, a medical 1y1tem hu
evolved In the United Statn that
encouta,et doct.on to u.e nch new
advance that comet alon1, whether
needed or not.
"The <mi culpr1t II not technoloi>'
per•,'' •11 Dr. Arnold Belman, "but
only technolOI)' tMt It Ineffective,
auperfluoua or urwafe."
Reiman It the editor of the N•w Ens1and Journal of MedidM which
hH documented tbe brHk·neelc
arowth of thl• hudwar•. ff•
cont.endt: "We an~ blWonl ol dollan on proced1t1rft w• do not
n••d."
•
One p outble tolutlon to
Am•rlca11 out·of-al1ht m dlcal
btl.la LI shnple f'nouah: Deny all-
out care to the hopt1lttlly m.
The terminally akk, many of
them old people CONUmed with
cancer, wie up a bll ahare of th4:
nalion'a medl~I relOUra.ot. And ao, some mlaht ar1ue, perhapt
10Clety ahould chooee to fet them
die peacefully. Forgo their loat
months of painful lingering. Save
money.
But could Ame ricana e ve r
allow their elderly loved ones to
die without a fight? Can coat
alone decide who will be saved
and who will be loet?
The quesliona are hard. T hey
test moral values. Yet they are at
the center of a quJet debate over
the hiah cost of American health.
Laat year, U.S. health care
spending hit $287 billion, nearly
10 perceht of the grou national
product. Hospital bills, doctors
fees, medicine, tetlt.a and au tne
rest eo1t each man, woman and
chlld about $1 ,200 a year.
Not everyone agrees that is too ·
much to spend. Some think good
health la weU worth the price.
But a growing number o r
doctors, economists and other
experts think there is a Umlt to
the amount the United States can
spend on the Infirmities of its
people. And they say the time
has come to think about where lo
draw the line.
"I think you are going to tee
contraction from where we are
'today because the cocst.a are just
too high," said Dr. David J .
Cullen of Massachusetta General
Hospital.
"At a societal level, I think
there will be decisions made· that
certain procedures or problems
cannot any more be taken care
of. Maybe patient.a will get to a
certain point in a diaeue process
and nothing more will be done
rather than continuing lo go all
out."
But is It morally permi!aible to
• d e ny people the be~Cit of
available medical technology and .
knowhow. &imply because It costs
a lot? The question is critical
because medical technology is
keeping a growing number of
people alive -and fuellna much
of the increase in health care
~nding.
Daniel Callahan, a philoeopber
Art_icle by Daniel Q. Haney
A•f()('latrd Prf'•• Wrhf'r
and dtrec:tor of the H11lln6'•
Center In Ha1tlna1·on-Hud80n,
N.Y., thlnkl the answer It yet.
"Certa inly there 111 amplt•
pre<.'edunt In other L'Ountries for
e1tabllshln~ limits on servk't.'I,"
he aaya, 'and lt'11 not hard w
think lt'a going to happen in (his
country."
Callahan nows that In Great
Britain the elderly are often
denied free kidney dialysis, even
though withdrawing this blood
purifying process means certain
death . Until a decade ago,
treatment also was selective in
the United States.
"I don't see an ethical problem,
asauming the resources simply
aren't there," he said. "Then of
course one's hand-is forced. You
have to set limits, because there's
really no choice."
But aome say the United States
h&1 not reached the point where
it cannot afford the medical care
it provid~ it.s citizens.
Perhaps the limlt should be 15
percent of the gross national
product, says Dr. Thomas C.
Chalmers, dean of Mount Sinai
Medical School in New York. Or
20 percent. Or 6 percent.
lna&e~ of writing off the
alclc.#t ·~ weakest, Chalmers
1ay1, Amerkan• 1hould accept
the Idea that medical care will
~c even more exper\llve at
people live longer.
"What'• wrong with •pendtn1 1 ~ percent of the ,re,,,. national
product on health?' he aaka. "Do
we have anything better to spend
i t on ? T e l ev l1lon •eta?
Cosmetics?''
But uaumlng that Umlta muat
be established, the hard part it
deciarng who •hould get care.
Callahan says possible criteria
include the financial need• o f
patients. the odds that they'll get
better and the likelihood that
they will contribute something lo
society.
By these standards, he aaya, It
could be argued that people over
a certain age should not receive
extraordinary carf. The Idea
oft.en la mentioned ln this debate,
but no one think.a that :\dopting
such a polic>' would be easy.
"l think it's hard to stand up
on the floor of a legislature and
make the economic case for
terminating elderly people," aaya
Thomas Schell1ng, an economist
at Karvar<l's Kennedy School of
Government.
"On the other hand," he says,
"I think as people get more and
more conce rned about how we
are going to f inance these
te rribly expensive programs,
they will dilloover that an awful
lot of money seems to be wasted
by keeping people alive who, if
offered a nice alt.emative, might
much prefer the alternative."
If the nation is to tackle the
problems of ethics raised by a
need to curb medical spendjng, it
seems likely the lines will be
drawn first In the care of very
sick, elderly people.
Much or the cost of lingering
death as financed by the federal
government through Medicare.
Th~ prpgram pays $47 billion a
year for the care of 26 million
aging Americans.
An internal working paper of
the Health Car e Financ ing
Administration found that 31
percent of that money 1s spent
on the 6 percent of the recipients
who die w ithin the year.
The question asked is: Could or
should that care have been cut
off earlier?
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' WIONl80AY, OCTOIEA '13, 1812
HOME NEWS AND VIEWS
SLIM GOURMET
SUPERMARKET SHOPPER
04
E2
06
•Applet talce tbe calce,
! the pie and the pin wheels. . .D7
Junior cooks. are at home on the ral)ge. • •
Leamln& to cook can be great Cun for
boys and girls. It's alao an important "life
akill" they will need to know eventually,
and age 8 c:sr 9 isn't too young to start
teaching them.
If children are at least in the third
grade, they already have a keen interest in
food, and they'll love the grown-up
independence and senae of rxompllshment
Packaged pasta . ·r or ·beginnei-s
in the kitchen
Main dish recipes that begin with
packaged pasta dinners can help boys and
girts gain confidence In their cooking skills
because they can produce foods which
might be too dlfflcult for them to prepare
"from scratch." Blushing Mac Salad Is a
fun-to-make creation that novice cooks wlll
enjoy. It bealns with macaroni and cheese
dinner, whlch provides pre-measured
macaroni and cheese sauce mix.
Macaroni cooks In rapidly bolling
water. The water should be steaming, and ~
have large and fast-moving bubbles. A
time range Is given, because people have
Individual preferences about how "done"
or tender macaroni should be. Show boys
and girts how to test It for tenderness:
• Lift a piece or two of macaroni
from the bolling water with a long-
handled slotted spoon.
• Drain briefly by holding It over the
saucepan a few seconds, then run cool
water over It.
• Taste. If It's not as tender as you
like It, cook another minute. then retest.
BLUSHING
MAC SALAD
6 cups water
1 71/•-ounce package macaroni and
cheese dinner
1 teaspoon salt
'A cup margarine
11. cup mllk
1 1~ cups chopped cooked chicken,
ham or salami
'lz cup chopped celery
11• cup chopped sweet pickle
salad dressing
1 tomato, cut Into wedges
Take Out:
3-quart saucepan
measuring spoons
wooden spoon
colander
glaaa and metal measuring cups
large bowl
cutting board and small sharp knife
plastic wrap, foll or bowl cover
• Pour wat• Into saucepan and bring to a raptd boll'.
I • Add macaroni and aaJt.
• Stir wtth wooden apoon
I• Boll rmpktty, stirring occaak>nally, 7 to 10
mlnut• or to deelred tendemeu.
• Dr•n m8Caronl Into colander In sink.
I• Retum macaroni to saucepan.
• Add margarine, mllk and the cheeae _..max.
~Ix "'911. /
Tr....., to large boWt.
Add cNcken, celery, plckle and enough
1alad dress&ng to mol1ten, mixing
I • C,· bowl wtth plas\lc wrap, foll or
boWI OCMt and chill. • Add addttlonal ..,_. dr...,ng before
11tw1na."d111ec1. • G8f'ftli1t wllh torMto w 1dgel.
that comes from preparing food. AB with
other new experiences, they'll need an adult
"coach" to help teach them the rules.
Children learn with amazlpg sp~
when they're participating in an activity, so
provide careful guidance using simple.
nutrltioua recipes that yield quick results.
Your beginners will feel good about their
first attempts at cooking, and will look
forward to the next ''lesson."
Teaching children to use the range tof!_
is a good way to begin. Make your child 1
first cooking experiences fun and safe by
following these safety pointers.
• Stress the importantce or havins
adult approval before beginning to cook.
• Teach children to wash and dry
Junior cooks are learning that it 's run to tackle .the kitchen choreti or
cooking.
Adults should supervise ·kids
their hands well before beginning to cook. 4' Provide a sturdy 1tep 1t-00l IO
"short order" cooka can eee all the action.
• Demonstrate how to tum the range
on and off, and to adjust temperature..
• Select a wooden spoon with a long
handle for stirring foods on top of the
range. Metal spoons can heat and burn
small fingers.
Tasty grilled
cheese sandwich
made to order
Cheesy Grilled Sandwiches Is a recipe
your junior cook can "custom tailor" to as
many servings as are neede d . The
sandwiches are "grilled" or fried on top of
the range.
The key Ingredient, pasteurized
process cheese spread, has a pleasing mlld
flavor children will love. and It melts
smoothly and easily, making It Ideal for
beglnnlni cooks.
Show children how to keep the range
heat at low to medium when cooking
cheese products. When the cheese spread
is melted, It's "done."
Teach junior cooks these range top
safety guidelines as you work together In
the kitchen:
• Select the correct size utensil for
the amount of food being cooked. Use a
small skillet for 1 sandwich, a griddle or
large skillet for 3 or 4 sandwiches.
• Select the correct burner size for
a cooking utensil; large burners under
small saucepans or skillets can be a
hazard.
• Keep saucepan and skillet
handles turned away from the edge of
the range so they will not be knocked off
or spilljtd.
• Turn the range off when cooking
is completed.
CHEESY GRILLED
SANDWICHES
You will nee¢
Pasteurized process cheese spread
in proper use of kitchen knives
Raisin or whole-wheat bread slices
Apple or pineapple slices
Soft margarine
Take Out:
cutting board
I
Small ohlldren wlll require adult
aupe"telon when allolng end chopping fooda.
KMP ......... ., ............ In mind when
teechlnt J&lnlor oooka to UM kntvn:
• Select • lcn1/e thac your child CAn hold
ea&lly.
• U11e aJwop knlvm only. A dull lcnJ/e ealces
l110t:'e pl"f!8Ul'e to UR, «J lt may alip ...Uy and
alU. .oddmfl.
• Cut only on • CU"'116 boanl. Thtt will keep lcn1le _,,...,_.,,and wlU protllC1t counter
to,,..
• Cut .Jowly and CMWluJly, wl&h ~
kept out ol Che way. •
r
..
wire cheese cutter or small sharp knife
fork
table knife
skNlet
pancake turner
' • On cutting board, cot 2 proceu cheeM
spread atlcea for each sandwich, using
-wire cheele cutter or small sharp knife.
• For each sandwich, place process
ch .... spread allce on a breed allce.
• Top with apple slices or pineapple IHoe
and aecond brMd lllce. .
• Using a table knife, spread top and
bottom of 1andwlch with m=n•, ~Ing all the way to the of
breed.
• Place aandwlch In aklll•t ov• mec:Uulft
heat.
• Cook untH hlghly brOWMd on bottom.
• Ullng PMC81'• t..mer, tum aandwtetl. e Cool( untH ott. llde II lightly browned.
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Cout DAILY PILOT/WednMday, Ootober 1S, 1tll;
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Hom .. 't'• Moroooan • ~ c...w......, 11ood. 1mb, fi'oo1t ~·n~ WI'"-~= ~111111" oornl1h O•m• Hen, ~
,,_ •• , .. ..,.. Chlctten, Rabbit, l'rMh ~ NITAUf'A T OfllM ............. laked lrlld and M--.0-., DAVI "-· _... Morel Beer & Win• _.,_,.,,.,, -... ~n , .. , , #IOIA# --y Ollu.• hM 10.7S a.rv.cs. ..,__, n•
_Ex.f!!!.• ,0o11-12 2 11011 1 SPICIAL r:z_ JI A 2 Complete Indian Currr Dlehe• I '-'"zvrioroccafl-.J 1 .. ,,y oANC#:on;,.,.~:A1. Nl1W ONLY
l Tt10 WerMf' at 5pr1,.ctaa. M0-3024 lltO W81T COAIT HWY., NIWPOltT MACH "' '"'"'•"*' c:.. ... """""'.... ...... J L L.99 "·' , ... -.... ,. Mt-a11 " .._ ,., ····-········--~···················· .................................•.. ~
ThN Oct. 23.1982
Shrimp & Flsll ·
Special •2.99
It's a treat that's worth the trip! Four
big Gulf shrimp, our crispy Fish fillet,
plus fryes, slaw f., hushpuppies!
Shrlmply delicious!
3095 Harbor Blvd. \.
In Costa Mesa
Ou•• So<l•h ol S.n Oleto lwy. Kt-from
1r<1co. 14715 Jeffrey Rd. 11 w.._ lo.i o11 ..
~1.1 ,.,,. r..., 1 lrvlne
.. I --
Sampling Greek pastries in advance of weekend festival are, from
left, Poppy Sardonis, Miuion Viejo; Marie Cokinoe, Tustin and
Elizabeth Rich, ln:ine.
Greek foods, fun to "r'eign
at St. Paul's weekend f ete
S t. Paul's Greek Orthodox Church In Irvine
will stage a Grecian Festival and Food Bazaar
Oct. 16 and 17 on the grounds of the Town
Center Building, across from UCI on Campua
Drive, Irvine.
The event is open to the pu.blict' and will
lnclu~ HeUenic food and ~try deHc8del pl'--
tuch Nnerican favorites as hot dop, popcom,
cof(ee. aoft drinkB and beer.
There will be games, rides and music by two
Greek banda, The Olympians and The Bill
Soteropouloe Band. Ad~ion ii free, and hours
are 11 a .m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. Sunday.
Opportunity tickets' will be sold for tripa for
two to Greece, Hawaii or Mazatlan as well as fpr
other prizes. Announcement of winnen will be
made Suday at 5 p.m. at the festival.
The pa rade of Greek foods will offer
Mezedakia, which are appetizers of spinach and
c heese pitas; Shishl Kebob dinner with pilaf.
salad with feta chee9e and black olives: deelel'ta.
including baklava. Loukoumadea, Gei.ttobourlko
and Theples and -.uch Greek cookies as
kourableihes, koulourakia, paxemadia and
melom.carona.
The following are recipes for two of the
cookiel which will be aerved at the festival.
. P AXEMADIA (Zwieback) ·
10 egp, •panted
2 whole eggs
1 lb. box e xtra fine ,.-anulated sugar ,.
2 teaspoon anise seeds
2 teaspoon grated lemon or orance rind
5 cups sifted cake flour
Beat two whole eggs, add egg yolk.I and
1u9ar. Beat in electric mixer at medium apeed
abOut 25 minutes or until thick and light colored;
add anise seeds and lemon or orange rind. Beet
egg whites until stiff but not dry.
Place ~ of flour on egg yolk mixture; top
with ~ of egg whites; fold Into yolk mixture.
Repeat until all flour and egg whites have been
used.
Have ready 2 -13" x 9" x 2" pans, greased
and floured. Tum batter into pans. Bake at 350
degrees about 45 minutes. Cool in pans 10
minutes.
Halve each loaf lengthwise; cut into half-
inch to ~ " slices. Turn slices on their sid~
Increase oven temperature to 375 degrees. Bake
about 20 minutes more. Cool on rack. Wonderful
with coffee MELOMACARONA
1 cup butter
I pint Ma.z.ola
1 cup orange juice
Rind of one orange
112 cup sugar
2 cups finely cut nuts
2 teaspoon baking soda
Flour -enough to make a medium dough
Melt and cocl butter. Put in mixer. add
Ma.zola and beat until creamy. Add sugar and
beat thoroughly -a t least 20 minutes. Add
orange juice, rind, baking soda and 1 cup of nuts.
Mlx well; add ()our a lit1.le at a time until a good
dough is formed.
Take about a teaspoon4JI of dough and roll
into an egg shape; flatten to one side and lay on
baking sheet. Scrape top with fork lightly to
make shallow grooves. Bake in preheated oven
350 degrees for 30-35 minutes.
In the meantime make the syrup of: 2 cups
honey and 1 cup waler (Boil honey and water for
a few minutes).
While cookies are still warm, dip them one
at a time into the warm syrup with a slotted
spoon. Drain and place on a clean platter. Mix
together a mixture of 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 'h
cup sugar and 112 cup or more chopped walnuts
and sprinkle on top. Makes about 3 dozen
cookies.
Everybody loves the fresh,
moist taste of Sara Lee. And now,
during our ~ Price Sale, you can
enjoy many of the delicious Sara Lee
bakery goods for half price. When
,, you send us 2 proofs of purchase
___ .......___...__......___.u-__ (ingredient lists) rut from any 2 pack-
ages of Sara Lee~ you will receive a $1.00 coupon. This is approxi-
~ ~~~-g q ·
, . ..... . "
..... ... " • ', ' 4
' . ' '
mately ~price off Sara Lee Pound
Cakes, PUddin' in-the Middle Cakes,
and Individual Danish. Also, the $1.00
off coupon may be used on any other
Sara Lee item. Use the 25¢ ooupon to
whet your appetite for the great taste
of Sara Lee. Hurry! Offer expires
November 30, 1982.
Eveuince Mama Celeste
had her restaurant back In
the '30's, Celeste Pizzas
have been made wtth
"abbondanza"-an abun·
dance of aoocl Jnpedlenta.
Now, you can &et the
"abbondanza" t..ce for
2Se lea!
Abbondanza!
That's abundance from
Celeste.
c S.S. Ple<ce Co. 11182
•
Save15C
On Alff Style or Size Seneal frozen Apple Juice
'lnere are good
things in your future.
You will enjoy the
unLque. Oriental n,.vor
nlChun King • frozen c:sg rolls, entrees or dinners. And you'll do
It for~ less.
Tryouraisp.
snack ·St7.e egg rolls.
En1oy our authentic
Chmei;e ent rt't'S. Or find happiness with
one of oor complete
ChinPSe dinners.·
Home Sfykf Potatoes from Ore· Ida.
The potatoes with a peel.
Now there's appeal In the peel -It's the natural skins that ~lw our Home Style'"
Potatoes their hearty taste. And there's more than one way lo lca\'C skin on a
potato: we\-e got three delicious cuts yoo can ch~ from (Thins. Planks. and
Wedges). So (Of a different~ great lastin" way lo add variety lo )'OUT meals. try
Ore-Ida Home Stylc'v Potatoes. They're a natural , any way we slkc them.
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Orangf Co11t DAILY PILOT /Wtdnelday, October 13, 1982 ..
- -_.;. .. ___ _. _ - - - --II
·"""' ...... ..., .. ., ........
-,... ... fllMtacllt -.._,.,..' t!Ml41Hlf .,., 1S ,., ...... _
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~-Ml> ( l "-Vft • CAlllJ J VIJA
Cu411C<ft"" ____ .._.._
~------------
~·----------~
4171 251; ----------• ...,.. .\I ow •..,C""..,, ~ .... .,..1 ,..,. 111..i , ......... ""' .... ,__, .. ...
OFF any
CELESTE.
u PIZZA tLlt
-~IOll "9Ml(tl ~ ............ ,.. .. ..
'"'' ... "'"''""~""" 10..-.., ..., .... Vlf ftlJy CIOll#lilt hflA ~I ~If "'"""ti
111.11 ·~-tte1wn• c .. 1-~""
IJ• '"''""'°""'°"''"'~,., .... ''"'* ... Mifd ..., IOl!Mld MlroCIM t< ""-.,....
llM 11¥ tt.. Ollt1,_wt,10 USA •"4 1111111~ cr-•wrtft" fOCflM'tn C.111 '""' OOIC Oolr ......,, ... f).N..,.,..,.,..,.. __
" '"' a.... 0..1 ~ m c.--e 0nw 0.. ..._ l ~I rtllS W Wflt .............
"'" Oii lllt D••OHI II lPf(tloff ptedvflfl) ..,,
lllllt< Wll "'It'°"' IM tcll/POl'I ••bllllltft lot,....,.
'"" 1ocl >11<~ tOllllO"I 01,t1 ltt 10011.utfd ltftlll oH
t.OllQCjll Pf''""""'°"
10 (U~ f0 Mf It ,,,,, &.oup<>n
COVd on1 t tot ~•"'"u hottn
Appw ~""• On•t cro• -WPfll'\ r• :-;;~.":'< =~~~1':1 :?~ :-:: tow""'' f'k,,t tt4n,ttt•b • fO C9itOfl N A-...u• .. ••t ...-:upt
th.\ <a-JP'V' ur I"-'-" •.aY ~ !tH•«t• ,,,,,.,. Ap"tp '"' • ~"«4 #tll ftc)Hm 1"1'\ f Wp..ill
lof I ~ phi\ 1C h.t"°l•nt: ttt t.litrl :~~ ~::-.;,,'Q~ ~::ff,
...... , ~ •• , lfJ'll', lflWf'l f "'"""'
1nc fN<~ ... <.1 ''"" 04!',,. •••• ''° ............. ~, f"f""hled ~ ,~,,_,,,"'""br~un ·~vnt 'llrod ·~• "'1' t. l@d
'''" J VI fA_Mt•1V H ·If f.,J
f "'' ""'«' "u-.• """'' w "' ff• l.OlAJ ""'" ,,,.,,.,,,. .... "' ~flut-I /(Jth ut " •H Ut ... ••Pot.._ 1 H "'I,
"•'J ll\) ---------------.
SAVE 20( ON CHUN ICING~
EGG ROLLS.. ENTREES ~ DINNE~-
1 •. 11. ................. ., .......... ,It" ... , ... •th~lllil-1 .. •Hlt~tlilffltw ..... 1,."''""
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24000 6000 72 ---------------SAVE 20C on Mrs. Smith'snl 20C
Frozen
Entrees
2oc •Crepe• •Quiche •Menlcottl I Cennellonl
STORE
COUPON
c?7700 l.0 190 3
---------------
Tht-"'°'1.,.-t •ttd ......... t'M"O dlhr•'Ot'td "'no-t"M"Cl•rtl-.t tt,f'\• lhoffnwt h1n1o1o111hort1#'d tM ~ 'n6mdC...,..
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OltD!lt roltM
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PENDANT
Plqt.w rnlN "" otdr• •• ''"""" ' pructa.nu1t1. fill• itiar ... h
Stupptuc • ""''tdt1n1 • "I 7•,
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STORE
COUPON
GROCER Send this coupon lo OM·to.t. rooos INC COUPON AEOEMPTION PA().
GRAM PO eox l6IO ELM CITY N c 27"1
for I-value ~pl!.-7• nan. dlN'Q ll'NOlcH P'OllinO pun:tlMe Of IU9· oenc *>Oil of e>r.·ld• Home Styte•
Pocetoet to C011ercoupon1~be1t10W11
upon r~ Fllilvt9 lo do IO d \IOld ..
coupqnt Coupons nor11ren1fereble
Sel" IH mu11 be pekl by the consumer ..,. C.tll velue 11100-REOEEMA8l.E ONlYOH "1
OAE·IOA HOME STY\.E* POT~l0£S Arry "1
OCl'9f UM consti1u1e1 If llUd OF l'f.R EX CJ PIRES ~ JO 1113 UMIT ONE COUPOH l"'I
PEA PUAOiAS£ YolCI wtlefe protltboled, O
l&Jled or reguteted by lew
C.DUFOll'I _..,..,..,..-,,..,,."'11 n..-w =:=----·------"'""'••tu ..... •--......,. •-•ncflo SI n,.. "'" S-
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, .. Otanr ()out DAILY ftlLOT/Wtdneed•y, OCtobet 13, 1982
I
chool lunches can be a learnin'g experience
'Y DOROTHY WENCK J:fl1: ..__....,.,ca••• ................... Do you have chUdren
Ill to IK'hOOI thll year?
&hey uke their lunch « do they uie the &hool
Lunch program?
Sch ool lunches ar~
autrltloua and are still
laUvely low-priced. If
w ithin a w etlk or two.
You can alto 1httd IOl1Mt
of the ch .... It detlred.
Tl~htly wrap the
port o n1 o f c h eeae In
moi.ture0 vapor·rt'!l11 tant
material. Suitable
wrappers Include clear
plalUc (freezer we:/ht),
f!.!:atlc ·coat e o r lnated freer.er paper,
freezer foll . plaatlc
freeier ba11. or heat-
Storti \he wrapped to .. t.
chHau In th• fre•1tr • • •
unUI you nffd It, . . . Q. A l&rtt-, 6 lb.
When you're ready to can of honey t at I've
uae the froien cheese, h ad 1lncr· laat winter
th. w I t slowly , now hat a bulaed rover
prcferabl( 1i>vurnl1ht tn Doe1 thl• mea n It '•
th e re r l aerator . ~fo &o Ht?
Freellna wlU chanae the . . . A . No. Hon y la
t e xture som e what, too hlah In auaar to be
makln~ the chee1e more 1ubject to tho arowth of
c rum l y, but w i ll organl1m1 that cause
prevent mold a r owth food po1tonlna1 lt could
durln~ the 1ummor and cry•i•la. A cool ator•i'' .. A. The praie It aupply of c11nned llah
thu cal c.·tuud thci placu I• vr~t rrud for not a "ood ttoraae place would be tho cooleat honoy to uxp•nd ind atorlng hone•b t o tor ,hnn d food of any room ln your howle, few
caWM'I the lid to bulJ . muln tu l n l ht• •It k ind, ln<'ludln1 fl1h . example, a cl<*t on an
You may •lao fin that quality Why? Bt,~u. l\t.•"' too ln1ld e wall or on the
yo u r h o net ha a • • • hot durlns the y. All north aide or th4t houae1 cryataUlx.ed and t ii, too, canrn..od foods deteriorate If 11ora1e 1pece 11 at a
could have created it ... Q My huabund rap dly In catJn1 quality prem ium, consider
butacd lid. U the honer. we.int o n a fl1hlna flavor. wxture, CX>lor d evl1ln~ome under· la cry1talllwd. you wl I oxpt.'dltlon and caught 1 •• w u ll 11 lo1e the-bed aa•. pc:m!bly ne<od to heat It at a low lot of ll11h which he had nutrleni. when 1t.ored at by uain1 a latae, flat boJC temperature, poHlbly canned. Would It be oka~ warm temperaturet. aa a tray ttlat can be adding a 1maJI amount of to •tore the cunnt.'CI fls Th e boat 1 torage 5 echool hu a federal
ch pro1ram, your r-----__;,..;..;....;;.....::..:::....:....:..:..~__;,;.:.;.::....:..:..:.:.:.::....;;;.;,;;_;;,:,,:.:.~-==.:..:.......;:.;:....:;;.:::.;.~~..:.;_;..:...::_ ____ __; ________ -:-------~----;;.._-=.. __________ _:..!...:....;.;.~.....:.--=:..:...::.:.......:.::.:..~-=:.:.:..~_:..:...::.:.::..::::.::...:.=::::.:::~ ldren may be eUitble
tor free or reduced-price
lunch es If your family
qualified a.a low-Income.
pulled out ao that you
sealed freezer pouches. and keep the chee.e Nfe be that the honey MOt hot water. to dl11olve the In the garage? lop 1tlon for your large can get at the cana easily.
Check with the
principal for the 'pOllcy at
your children's school
re lat i ve t o fre e or
reduced-price lunches. A
new federal requirement
la that Social Security.
numbers of (am1ly wage
earners must be provided
alon1 with fam ily
Income lofonnation.
If your chlldre.n e"t
hoot lunchet provided
er the federal lunch
9'il'IOl'lun. you can be sure
ey will ,et at least
e-thlrd o their daily
ulrementa of essential
trlenta.
Thia is what a
ndard lunch wlU give
child:
2 oz. of protein food -
eat, poultry, fish ,
eese, beans, peanut
tter:
2 servi ng s of
getablei1 or a vegetable
a fruit;
iii! 1 serving of whole
aJn or enriched bread,
rtilla, rice, spaghetti,
aronl, or noodles;
8 oz. ( ~ pint) of milk
whole, low fat, nonfat
Im). or buttermilk.
If you are packing
n c h ea for school
ildttn. lnste&d of hav-
lhem buy lunch, you
ght want to follow_ this
pattern In order to
sure that the lunch
ey 'carry does provide
nutrition.
Or, if your c hildren
e not a tte nding a
hool where the federal
h program is offered,
instead must choose
from an a la carte
nu. you should teach
em how to select a
liar variety of foods
ther than spending
t elr lunch money on
cookies, candy, ice cream,
'Or soft drlnlu.
If your c hild i s
o verw e ight . it 's
especially important that
he or she learn to ch<ue
foods wisely. Here, too,
t h e school lun c h is
advantageous since it i.a
moderate in calories and
provides foods high in
nutrients in proportion to
calories.
A.a a parent you need
to be a n utri t ion
educator! Your children
need your help in
learning to make smart
food choices whether
they're eating at home or
at school. Thi.a la just aa
important to them as
le4lming how to cnm the
street safely.
Part of your home
nutrition education
proaram might be to
Invite your children to
participate In planning
and preparing their own
lunches, In the process
you can teach them to
consider not only good
nutritional value , but
alao to compare prtcea,
a nd to practice
cleanlinem and safe food
handl1J\I methods.
Tailor t he learning
exper ience to the age
and ability of the child. Belin with simple tasJu
for the youngest children
-h e lp l n1 spread
sandwich fillings on
bread, for example -
and work up to complete
lunc h planning a nd
preparation for older
elementary or junior
hiah-ale younpten. 1n addJtJon to being a
leamlna experience, the
child-plans-and -pre-·
pares-lunch process la
likely to enlUte that the
child etita the lunch he or
ahe prepares, 1'8ther than throwtna I\ away.
QUUTIONI WE ARE
ABED:
•.. Q . Our family
reclllwd • a lb. block ot
proce .. d eh .... from
the 1ovemment. It has
101n9 mold on OM ~·
!)ta thla make It umafe?
1f not, how lhould I ltore
&he c.,_ -lt'• Pft8 to
'8lut montha for w to eat
lt all.
. . . A. n. mold will
no& make the NI& "' the c ........ ...., •. Remove
the .. by cuUlnl off
.... ~ ~ Inell billow
U aad dltoard lhl1
POrtlaa. Cut \he block lnte.-u.rc11uaa• .U-wt can be mid ,
j •
~ 8-WIUBelpT
Make It lt•Han!
LB.
er
~
8 1..79La
BUF80NEUSS .r.=
•1.A-1 La
" 1ACK"f
CAUF<>f'NIA QAOWN ~
99° ..
I
'~=:=" Cascade
Deter111t
, ........... .... , 14 ... .. MA.a..._ .... .........__
~·· •1..1.9
-···1..89
Pl•••• ... Loll9ter = ...... --...
r ) -.,r
ar.e.iTi• ..
SZ.1.9 La
HOT~SMET
jt•ll8D ..? •. s1..99
LA
ft\..~
lict'I Saft
Bal Tiu.
LIOHT N LIVELY ·IVORY
Kraft SlnsJes.e .. 12-0z•s."
MAZOLA CORN OIL, QUARTEAI
Marprlne ..............•... 1e-0z 81•
MIHUTE MAID, MOUL.AA OR PINK, CRYSTALS
Leatonade ..........•. 30.7.0Z •2. 79
Pl~ HUHOln' JACK INITANT MMHED
Potatoe• ..........•...... a .1.oz •s.83 .
OOATON CHOPPED OR MINCED Claaa• .......... : .........•.......... e.~z 89•
LAUNOfn' OITEAOIHT, KING SIZI ~
Cold Po uver .......... M-OZ•2.95
• t
Dish Liquid .......... 32-0Z •s.ss
DISHWASHER DETERGENT, GIANT SIZE
Ca•eade .......... : ......•... 35-oz •s.59
ZEE NICE'N SOFT, ASSORTED
Faelal Tlaue ..... . ..200a 70•
PAMl'EAI EXTRA A880A8ENT W/ELASTIC 90-CT
OR TOODLl.A, WIELASTIC 4CT
Diapers .................. .
LAUNDAY DETEAOINT, GIANT SIZE
.... Pt<o •B.49
Tide ...................... . , •••... 49-0Z •z.03
LAUNDAY LIQUID
_. ....................... M·OZ •3.S.4
~ ;;=:... .... e.-••
It's Our Meat That Made Us Famousl
I···
..... .. w ..... .....
• =---\
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wednffday, Ootob4)r 13, 1982
20 million kids can't be wrong
Nearly 20 mllllon
children carry thttr
lunch to ach ool every
day. And 1tudl" 1how
that th... chlkJren are
the on e'1 who d ecide
what wUI 10 Into thetr
lunchboJC or t>u.
Somo of their favorlw
food• t o tote Include
applet, bananal, ralllna,
cooklea and a peanut
butter and jelly
.. ndwlch. Not only II the
peanut butter und jelly
undwtch an Amerlcan
trMdlUon, It provldt!I part ot the dally proteln
requlremenl.
Other lnlJ't!dlenta can
be added to a peanut
buttur and J e lly
aandwlch to ln~reaae
varl •tv and taate appeal.
Chopped null, illcet or 1 1Lrawberry jam
a p p I e 0 r b a n • n a , ln mixer bowl, c:nttun
1unfloY(er lffdi, Swlll butter at ht1h 1peod.
or American cheeee, Seat In iuaar 1radually
c rumbled bacon and untll llsh\ and fluffy.
chopped pitted dawa •N Stir In e1a. vanilla,
a few of tho poulbllltlet. o•tmeal, walnut• and
U1lna different bread• wheat Jlerm. Sift flour aan allo add ln~t 81 with blkina aoda, bakJn1
demonllrated by the powder and salt. Stir
Supreme Banana Nut Into batter until well
Sandwich. 1ug1uted blended. here Drop by teupoonfull
Ex0tra food value can onto llghtly 1rttated
be added to lunch with cookie 1hee~. Make hole
t.aaty cookJes made with In center of each cookJe
I n 8 r e d l e n t 1 .t h a t ualng black of unaU wet ~
contribute to goo d 1poon. Drop about ~ a
nutrition Uke Grape or teupoon jam Into center
Strawberry Oatmeal of each cooklt. Bake at
Cookies. M ade w ith 3~0 degreea F . until
oatmeal , chopped d elicately browned,
walnuts, w h eat germ about 8 to 10 mlnutel.
and jam they have the Remove from cook ie
1reat fl~vor kids love sheet while still warm
and the good nutrition and cool on racks.
Peanut Butter and Jelly Plus sandwich orfen
variety in lunchbox menm that appeal to both
kid1 and adults. Send Apple-Walnut Salad along
for another new idea in brown bagging.
parents approve.. APPLE-WALNUT
SUPREME BANANA · SALAD
Traditional peanut butter and jelly sandwiches
get new appeal when other ingredients are
added and different breads are used. Try slice d
bananas on banana-nut bread as shown here.
Tangy, red and · exotic
Pomegranatea, the
tangy, red, autumn fruit
uvored by the patient
and nlmble-fingered, la
juat u nutrttioua u it i.a
attractive, accordina to
the CalifomJa Dietetic
Amociat.ion (CDA).
11le exotic, Aaian fnllt.
whose name literally
means "apple with many
aee<h," is an excellent
source of potassium, a
trace element euential
for healthy mUBCle tisaue
and function.
Containing an average
of about 97 calories, the
pomegranate can be used
in a variety of ways. The
jewel-like, pulpy seeds
can be eat.en right from
the fruit or be sprinkled
into aalads. PomelJ'aJ)ate
juice ii the basis for
grenadine syrup and is
delicious in fruit drinks.
NUT SANDWICH
(Make. I .Uclwlcbe1)
12 1lices banana nut
bread • ~ cup peanut butter
Vi cup grape jelly or
jam
1 tablespoon lemon
juice
1 tablespoon water
2 medium banana1,
slked
EvenJy apread 12 slices
banana nut or oth er
bread with peanut
butter. Spread 6 of the
slices with grape r.lly or
jam. In a bow , mix
water and lemon juice.
Add bananas and toss
until well coated. Spoon
drained banana slices
over jelly. Top with
remaining bread, peanut
butter side down.
GRAPE
(OR STRAWBERRY)
OATMEAL COOKIES
(Make. aboat 5 do1ea)
Vi c up (1 1ti c k)
butter or m argarine,
softened
¥. cup wh.lte sugar
1 egg, s l i ghtly
beat.en
· 1 teaspoon vanilla
extract
1 cup oatmeal
'h c up chopp ed
walnuts
aoda
1h cup wheat germ
1 cup wuifted flour
~ teaspoon baking
~teaspoon~
powder
Vi ie.spoon salt
1h cup 1rape or
Here's to a winning 40e savings
on rich Folger·s.crystals '~
and a_ sporty NFL mug offer!
..
YQU 'll get two mugs With vour faVortte NFL team logo, tor only $4.99 and proofS·Of·purchase from two any size Jars Of Instant Folger's. Just
look tor detalls ana reqUlred certificate at participating stores. tf
certtflcates are UJllVallable, write to: INSTANT FOLC~R'S NFL MUO
OFFER; P.O. Box 432; c1nc1nnat1, OH 45299. certificate requests must
be postmarked bV November 30, 1982. Allow fOur weeks tor certlflcate
dellverv. Offer expires December 31, 1982, Offer good only In the
United states, llmlt two sets Of two mugs fOr each NFl team .
•
2 cupa dic e d
µnpared apple (about 2
cupe)
1 cup thi~ly sliced
celery
1h cup coarsely
c ho ppe d walnuts or
pecans
'14 cup raisins
'A cup mayonnaise
'14 cup grape jam
1 teaspoon lemon
juice .,..__...II"*" lfl atra ..... AIMt, llMy lncltlde 1 bowl of soup or cr1ap lflll..., wtlt ce.llct of ..... cllo6ce of petltO (bltled ,.._ 1trwd' p.m. Lettuce leave1
Curled lemon peel .......... ).,rice,...,, ...... , ,.. -...,...,,
Combine apple, celery,
walnuts a nd raisin s .
Blend mayonnaise and
grape jam; add lemon
juice. Stir into apple
mixture until well
bl e nded . T o serve,
mound into l ~tt uce
leaves and garnish with
lemon peel. Makes 4 to 6
servings.
THURSDAY 1310 io p.m.)
-~
PEANUT BUTTER
AND JELLY PLUS
(Make. 4 aaeclwlclte1)
~ cup peanut butter
1A c up c hopped
pitted dates
'14 cup pecans
2 tablespoon s soft
butter or margarine
1h cup grape jelly
8 slices bread
In a bowl mix peanut
butter. dates, pecans and
soft butter. Stir until
well blended. Spread
mixture on 8 slices bread.
Spread • altces with
grape jelly. Top w lth
remaining 4 allces bread
with peanut butter lide
down.
. ~-.SAVE
· r?': UP TO $l2.50 FROM
" .· DELMONWMEXICANFOODS.
.: Wr'11 tend you the COit ol a Oilld'1 or JW\lor'•
admbeion to Fe.tMal MexJco at
Disneyland
PWS $2.00 IN COUPONS.
Come celebrate the fun of Pelrival
Mexico at Disneyland October 23 and 24
and be 1Ure to ha111 on to the PUIP()rt
ticket for your Child, •e J to II, or Junior,
..e 12 kl 17. Beca1.11r after the kltival,
you're in fo r uvinp of up to $12.SO. llliltJJI' }Ult mail in'thil certificate with
the Chlldi or Juniori Pa.port
riclcd &om either kttival day and
any 10 labels from DEL MONTE
Mexican Food products. We'll
send you a cash refund for
your C09t of the Childi or
Juniori admiaion up to $10. 50
and four ~ coupons toward
DEL MONTE Salsa, Sauces, Rdricd
&am and Chiles.
And, if you can't ancnd the
Festival, 1end us the lalxlt and
we111end you the four
~coupons.
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
lbu CM 't cook It •t
homefofleu.
DI
llJ
q
'( , .,
II
• l
"1 . "
.. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, October 13, 1982
ea"der advised to r.epo:rt .stolen ·refund money:
ly Mania Slone
Dear Martin: Today l rec:e&ved a
refund enveloP' ln the mall end
when 1 allt the envelope at the top,
1 found there waa allo a alit aJona
the aide. All 1 found lnllde w .. a
blank piece of paper that aald:
"Thank you for u1in1 Alberto·
Culver producta."
It looka Uke llOl'lle thief hu 1tolen
my refund money!
I really feel mad about thl1.
What ahould I do? -Sign me 1"Mad In Michiaan!"
a theft. Jl'trtt, 1 would ao to your
po1tmaater and 1how him tho
envelope and content.a and havo
him report thla.
Next, I would wrlw w Alberto·
Culwr (tend a copy of the let!A.lr to
the fulfillment howie that handled
the refund -that'• the addre. to
which you aent your refund
request) and detlcribe the condition
ln which you received the refund
envelope.
11,11111111 •IPPll
Deur Murtln: I want to ,tve a bl&
chror to rny two paper boy•, Jimmy
a nd Kenny. They alway• make
1ure that the color coupon lnaena
are In my S und¥y paper, and on
food day ( I tlwaya find an extra
paper at my door. I think they set a
kick out of seeing me bouncing
~k from my mall box with my
relund checks.
b4' kind and thoughtful to their
paper c.rrier1. -Gloria, Biiierica,
M ...
nice way to •1 "thank y~ ... IMAAT IHOPPl:R AWARD
The Smart 8hoooer Award 1ot1
to Marie Borlhi Of Milford, Mall.
Her aupermar~t h8d the 64-ounce
boni. of Hawalian Punch, UIU&lly
fl.33, on tale for tl.H . Marte had
ooupona that totaled fl.2& which
the atore doubled, and 1he paid
only t-4.40 for llx bot\Jee. Wheri lhe
iot home the found two different
Hawalian Punch refund often. A •I
fl.00 refund alked for two quality
teall and a U.60 refund nqWreC:I
Dear "Mad":"YJ'he evidence .eema
clear that your mall haa been
tampered with and t!!_ere hu been
It la very Important that theae
theft• be reported , If we don't
report them, there won't be any
in veatlgalion , and the refund
thieves will be free to keep on
steallna frorq ua.
They earn the tips I give them
and I'll be sure to remember them
at Chrlatmas. They're a great help
to me and 80 I urge your readers to
Dear Gloria: Paper carrlor1 rank
hlsh on my Hat of couponlna and
r e fund Ina "friend•." Smart
1hopper1 let their carr6ers know
that they are coupon cllp~r1 and
they appreciate any extra food day
papers that may be left over at the
end of the daf. It'a alao nice to get
the addrea o your carrier 80 that
you can occaaionally 11end for a f!_ft
offer in your carrier'• name -It 1 a
aix UnJvft'Ul Product Codes. .
"'That pve me llx blc bottles for 1
Tuna is
tops on
hot days
By TOM HODGE ., .... ~ , __ Wrttef
Durlna hot day1, a
refrelh.lnl lunch can be
built around tuna, the
ta1ty f11h which
Americana consume at
the rate of 1.5 billion
cana a year.
Thia salt-water same
fiah, which la a member
of the mackerel 'family,
can be found In almoat
all the aea1 of the
temperate and warm
zones of A»a, Africa and
America. There are a number of varie ties,
including bluefl n ,
sldpjack, yellowfin and
the internationallr, aouaht "white meat I
tuna, known aa albecore.
Tuna ii mentioned ln
ancient writings from
many parta of the world.
The Greeka hunted the
fiah aa a 1port, the Incaa
flahed for them from
reed boata off the oout
o f Peru . And the
Japanete have long uaed
them for that raw fish
!,!~i.ze r known aa
Today. tuna, ii the No.
1 aeafood ln the United
Statea, with moat of it
going into the canning
industry.
Canned tuna la an
imP,<>rtant chapter ln the
growth 1tory of
American food
procelSing. In 1903, the
fint 700 ca.. of the tiah
were packed com -
mercially at San P~.
It WU alt.core, whJch
abounded ln the rep.a.
A decade later, nine tuna
cannerie. In the relion
pecked 115,000 CMe9.
World War I pointed
up the need for an economical. tasty I reedlly
available protein food
In a time of food shortage,
and aooli 38 plant• In
90Uthem California were
rollinl out half a mlllicn
cueis annually.
Comwnption of tuna
took another lea•
forward ln Wodd War JI
when domeetlc protein
food lhOrtqH .,..u}14d
!:,Oif~s~
creating an ursent need
for nouriahlne low-cost
food at home.
Todat', Americam eat
an averap 3.1 pow.Mia of
tuna a year, at a ~ of
more than ft bUUon.
Canned iu.na ii
delidoua In a wide nnp
of dishes from 80Up to
main coww. But for me,
aa1ad la far and away the
bmt way to prepare thia
Yer.tile flab, -ln thla recipe for Tunilf.an tun·
egplant lllilad.
1 medium egplant
"' c up chopped
..u1om
1 lar1• tomato chopped (about 1 cup)
1A cup cho-pped
penley
\4 cup pne nub
"'cup...wm 2 table1poon1
waetable all W ...,.pool\ Nit (or
to tM&e)
2 lllbl II p IXllll Mmorl
juiie l can (8 ~ or 7
oun&m) tuna. draAnld
IAllUCe leawe
Bak• •11plant In 'a
prehealecl IGO·d•1r ..
own 1 hour or Ull vwy
dt. Cul egphnt In half
and 1COOP out pal.P Into
a bowl. Add ecallkml. to••:, ,r::-l•'1· pine
null, ·--1.moa Jul!le. Ilia well. °'"" -abdl ....... houn. ..... ~. ............... ..w
I• hwl Unecl with
.... Jlawl, "'"' 4. CJ* with chilled dey ..........
M
Put Lucky
to the test.
Your Hat: 1 Make out your normal week·s
shopping list end bring 11 to
Lucky
Your comparison:
Shop for these Items Then. ·2 take this same hst 10 the
supermarket ol your choice
end note their prices on the
same Of comparable items.
Your savings:
3 Add up the tollls for each
supermarket The proof of
savings is in your own
comparison•
FHESH FISH ITfMS
FILI.ET OF
BUTTERFtSH ,....,, ~-99
PAOFIC 99 RED SNAPPER
A'W1 Ritt Lii •
C ANNfD & PACKAGED
pt TREE TOP 299 6 APPLE CIDE~ an
Maria Kelly
Saved -SS.07
Mana'a own we.tc·s shopping totaled
$51 12 at Lucky The same or
comparable items al the
supermarket of her choice tolaled
$57 19 Thars a savings of $6 07
11 Lucky! Te11 ~ken Oc:1o~r 1 1982
Juanita Rodriguez
Saved s12.24
Juanita's own week·s shopping
totaled $73 98 at Lucky The same o•
comparable llems 81 the
supermarket ot her choice 1ot8led
$86 22 Ttlars a savings ol $1 2 24
8t Lucky• letl laken Ocle>M• 1 199;>
. .II& ....
Arlene Bartolotto
Saved S9.93
Arlene's own week's shopping
totaled $63 84 8t Lucky The same or
comparable ttems at the
supermarket of her choice 101aled
$73 77 Thars a savings of $9 93
at Lucky' Test taken Octooer I 1982
Wholesale lamb prices are down.
Ne~ lower lamb prjces!
LEG 169 OF LA MB
LAM B 22a RIG RACK
LAMB 139 SHOUL C:EP ROA') T
SMALL LOIN 2 58
LAMB CHOP<)
LAMB 238 RI B CHOPS
LAMB -169
SHOULDER CHOPS I
r LADY LEE 119 TUNA -
A11>1<0tt SOllCI P1Ctr 1 oz can
rCRISCO
OIL
PILLSBURY 89 R.OUR 5 1.11 ....
LADY LEI!
SUCAR
r~v.!.~~,or -.85
P VLAStC PIOCLES 9
'CIU-l'Clltrl 1 4 011-.t110 ............ •01 ... •
r~~,~~•~• ror -.99 I
r~~~~~ . ••·OICM•63
I!!c~~J~. ·•·Ol(M.63
r~~~~ •Mt<M•24
r~~. ~~~ .1.01
r~~". M1x .... °'.,,1.2s
r~~~~~~ .. ,2.15
I~TE.~~~ .. ltOf.2.19
1 1, • , 11 •• :. 1rJ1
r•llAMIOU80N 1149 ..... .. . . . "' "' '" . r~.~.~t~1s.99 ruac YB.VIT · .... ~ ...... """"' 11.49
FRYING 49
CHICKE:N •
BONEL ESS 179
ROUNr> S ~E.AV
Plant E
4" ASSORTED 98 PLANTS ucn •
6" ASSORTED 398 PLANTS
~Ltaf OT«-.._ lKll Cleft~~• lllfPflfllvtis '°'notorJttn
POTTING 0 SOIL
Pl.ANTER ROCK
Pl.ANT FOOO
PIRllTE
i"! '
'""" 159
JeT 1.89
•01 2.49
... 1.19
FRE SH 99 GROL)NO Hf H •
BLADE CUT 88
CHUCK ROAST •
OSCAR MAYER BACON
etQAAI tl.a •n. WJOI <*"MIM'l• 2 77 'OIW\llUWICI~ 1101 ~ • .., ••• (a()f •
Pot~ MllfOll °""'1 or tutttrfly
PEAT MOSS
PlANTER BARK
PlANTER SANO
101 1.19
.• ,.99
Jo•1.69
i
'
BONELEc.c; 179
RUMP ROAST
TOr C.IRI r~1N 209
STEAi\
I!.~~~1.69
I~!~~ ... ordui .99
r~o~ .•ar-1.19
@I~~~~s~or ... 1.59
@I~~s~ . ..e 8.99
l~!~.~~~ .. 101 ,_, .85
l~~:~~! IOl-.G 1.19
I~!~~~·-c· OOfNC 2.39
£~1:1ACHEESE oo,, ... 1.99
See Re~der, Page E3
Shirlene Martin
Saved SS.00
Shirlene's own week's shopping
totaled $75 t• at Lucky The same or
comparable items at the
supermarket of her choice totaled
$81 1• Thars a savings of S6.00
at Lucky' THI taken Oclobe• • 198:>
DAIRY & FRO ZEN
r SWANSON 269 CHICKEN
A'ted 52 01 toa
r HARVEST DAY 79 ~~~-
r BIRDS·EYE 79 COOL WHIP
TOCJPl"ll. ~ 8 Ot TUI> e
Ot Dlir'Y 11«• r DOWNYR.AKE 99 WAfR.E~or Plrg •
~~ZE~~Kc...•n 1.91
~~F~ ! ~tt.K CM "' 1.86
r~.~s~ .. or -.55 .
r~~!. •60ICfW•59
~~ .. ~.~~ E~!, (1IO .85
r~~.~~~ ... ,..-3.39
r~~-~ ..
l~.~ ..
".-1.57
n .. -1.19
r~~ ..... P\or-1.29
£~~~nPIE~~ m-.69
r~~.~.~~Ol.,..97
r=~RS .. or-1.89
r~:~~~~~or -1.19
lmAO DOUCH 1 79
I i I 11 I'' f f l ( '' f ' '. I) f l
I~.!W.~ ..... et\ 3.09
r~~~.~ "·.-.77
..
. ·r
..
Update
dessert
repertoire
What la America'•
f avorit# ~? Amot'\I
peraona ea\ln1 ln
...taunnta apple pie has
held the number one
poaiUon fOf' a number of
yean. And th1a time of
year, If you elk people
who •t at home, Apple
Crlap, Brown Beuy,
Apple Kuchen or a Freah ~
Apple Cake will be cloee ,-the head of the U.t. · •
'nMre'• al.a a srowln1
'number of heallh -
conadoua conaumen who
like their ap pl ea
"stral1h t," crlap and
freah/ UnqueaUonably
a pple• have con -
alder able appeal, not
only for de.erts, but for
aalada, INICka and many
olher dl.ahee.
Coolua who' would Uke
to extend their repertolre
of appl~~rta will be
lntertllite d in the
accompan)'inl recipe for
Apple Spon1e. It
resemble• a cobbler In
that fresh apple• are
topped wilh a batter and
it all bakea to1eth er,
wllh the juk:e from the
a pplea lntermlnglin1
wllh lhe cake-like batter.
'The to pp i n1 la a
aponge-type cake, a thick
batter made of ea yolka,
~rown suaar and-nour ls
fold~ .into atitny beaten
,,.
Spongecake toppi~g poured over diced applea
bakes into a eoufne-like cobbler that takea the
cake r or apple deseerta.
eu whit.es. It la poured
over lhe diced apples ln
a s o uffl e dish o r
cauerole and baked for
40 m i nut e s a t 350
degrees F. It tastes best
served wann with heavy
cream or softened van illa
Ice cream.
APPLE SPONGE IA cup melted butter
~ cups apples,
peeled, cored and diced
~ cup freah lemon
juice
a tableapooru light Transfer to buttered
com 1yrup • cuaerole. Beat ea yoUa
1h cup sugar until thick . Add brown
3 eu yolka sugar and flour, beating
1h cup brown sugar well. Add vanilla, then
~ cup flour fold ln stiffly beaten ea
I teaapoor:i vanilla whit.ea. Cover the applea
3 egg whites, sUlfly with lhe batter and bake
beaten ln a moderate oven (350
Butter a I ~ quart degrees) for about 40
b a k i n g d I s h , a n d minutes or until It tesll
pour In ~ cup melted w ell d one. Serve with
butter. Combine Mpplea, heavy cream or eoftened
sugar, lemon juice and vanilla lee cream. Serves
corn syrup, mixing well. 6.
Golden
pinwheels
·hold shape.
The aroma of Golden
Apple Plnwh~la will flll
the houlMI and warm the
htiart lof\I beCort> detlert
reache1 the table. The
fra1rance of baklna
putry, laden with applet
and 1plcee evokee happy
memorlee tor almo1t
everyone .
A ril'h filling of
Golden DellcloUI apples,
brown 1ugar, null ,
cinnamon and nutmeg la
rolled up In a biscuit·
type pastry and baked
until golden brown to
make these lrrealstlblc
p inwheels . Served
warm, with a buttery
Vanilla Sauce, this
d euert la \perfect for
those coo l fall day11
ahead.
GOLDEN APPLE
PINWHEELS
2 cuJtl flour
2 teaapoona baking
powder
~ teaspoon salt
lh cup shortening
1.1.i cup milk
2 Golden Delicious
apples
t;, c up c hopped
walnuts
It\ c up pa c ked
brown sugar
1h te aspoon each
ground cinnamon and
nutmeg
..
Orano-OoHt O~ILV PfLOT/Wedn•ld•y. Octobtr 13. 1912
Golden Deliciou1 apples, nuts and spices are
rolled in biscuit dough for rich pinwheel d essert
served with buttery ~anilla sauce ..
I
Vanilla Sauce
Stfr together flour,
baking powder and salt.
Cut in shortening until
crumbly. Add milk all at
once and stir with fork
only enough to moisten.
Tum onto floured board.
Knead g e ntly 5 o r 6
tlmes. Roll out to a 12 x
18-inc:h rectangle. Core
and c hop appl e s to
m e asure 1 11\ c ups .
Combin e apples w ith
nuts, sugar, cinnamon
and nutmeg . Dlstrabutt:
apple mixture over
dough." .Beginmn~ long end,
roll up jelly roll-fashion
and aeal edge. Cut in
pieces about 2-inch cs
wide and place cut side
down In greased 8 or
9-lnch baking pan. Bake
at 425 degree s F . 10
minutes. P our half o f
Vanilla Sauc e over
pinwh e els. B a k e 10
minutes longe r. S e rve
w a rm . t o ppe<.l wi'th
rema ining sauce. Makes
9 servings.
Vanilla S auce. Mix
together ~ cup sugar, 2
tablt!Spoons flour and 1h
teaspoon salt. Stir in I
t up water . Cook until
m ixture thick en s and
boils. Remove from heat;
add 2 tablespoons butt.er
and 1 teaspoon vanilla.
S tir until b utte r ts
melt<.'<!. Makes 11/z cups
sauce.
.,.
Individual deep dish apple pies boast special cheese crust
Pleasing the family
with a varied menu is
eaeier than you think. AB
w e move Into the fall
season, con sid er the
many ways with fresh
applea. Naturally, apple
pie comes to mind along
with warm baked apples
and app l e crla p .
Individual d eep d l1 h
apple plea with a very
special crust o ffer a
delicious chanee.
Som e th::;J: just 10 topther, a pie and
cheese, for example .
'n*le individual Apple
Pies with Cheese Crust
have the cheddar chee.e
"built" Into the crust, ao
to s peak. It'a so easy,
especially when you
enjoy the convenience of
preparing packaged pie
crust mix and adding
grated cheddar cheese to
it.
Qulck-cookin1 tapioca
Is us ed to thicken a
mixture of apples that
Includes cinnamon and
n utmeg. Fresh apple
llavor comes through
beaaWJe tapioca lt8elf has
no flavor. Before baking
the pies, pla ce
"appUques" of pie crust
in the shapes of leaves or
petals on top of crusts for
dreas-up.
Mapley Apple Pie la
another favor ite that
makes the most of fresh
Call a pples. Agai n ,
quick•cooklng tapioca la
u sed to thicken the
filling mixture of thla
hearty maple-flavored
apple pie.
APPLE PIES WITH
CHEESE CRUST
~ cups thinly alJced
peeled apples
l 'h t a bl espoons
quick-cooking tapioca
~ cup augar
'h teaspoon cin -
namon
'A teaspoon nutmeg
1A teaapoon aalt
1 cup pie crust mJx
'h cup finely grated
cheddar cheese
Com b·I n e a p p I es .
tapioca, sugar. aplcea and
aalt In bowl. Let stand
about 15 mlnutea. Then
spoon into four 10-ounce
ovenproof slaaa ~klnl
di1hea. Meanwhile,
prepare pie c:ruat mlx as
directed o n package,
adding c h eese before
mlxJng. Roll out pastry
very thin (less than 111
Inch thick).
Cut 4 rounds. each l
inch larger than top of
baking dishes . Cut
several alita or design in
cent.er of each. Moist.en
edges of dish. Center
crust on fllllnp. Open
alJta to perm.lt e.cape of
ateam. Seal, formina a
standln& rim, and flute.
Cut stems, Jeavea, or
other deslans from
paatry trimmings and
arrange on top of crust, If
desir e d . Bake at 42 5
degree s for 25 to 30
minutes, or until crust is
golden . Mak es 4
servings.
MAPLEY APPLE PIE
~ cup pancake am.I
waffle syrup
lh cup sugar
2 tablesppoons
quick-cooking tapioca
1 tablespoon lemon
,Juice
1 teaspoon cinnamon
II\ teupoon nutmea
IA teupoon ult
6 cups sliced peeled
apples (about 6 apples)
Paslry for two-crust
9-lnch pie
2 tablespoons butt.er
or margarine
Combine syrup. sugar,
tapioca , le m on ju ice,
spices and sail in large
bowl. Stir in apples and
let stand 15 minutes. Roll
half of the pastry very
thin (less than IA inch
thick ). Line 9-inch pie
pan and trim pastry at
edge. Roll out remaining
paatry very thin. Cul
8everal 2-lnch allta near
outside edJ(e and make a
cros.'i cut or a design in
cenlt!r.
Arrange apple mixture
an bottom crust; dot with
butter. Moisten edge of
bottom crust. Place top
crust over filling. Open
cu ts to permit escape of
steam. T r im top crust,
letting it e xtend 111 Inch
over rim. Press top and
bottom crust and flute
edge. (Or, trim pastry at
edge and seal with tines
o f fork.) Bake a t 425
degrees for about 1 hour
or until filling bubblea
and pas try is golden.
oothe
miam Coffees
m
81 Orange OoHt DAILY PILOT /WednMday, Ootober 13, 1812
r1:l~:il~~~ ~~~~~~. l~U~~VOI~~ l~o ~~Ul~ri:~.W~-·
1rtee, ~ la ,.u1n1 1&rp akillet heat com oU t.ender-crt.p. Servo over w tcaapoon pepper Return ctuck n to dutch
n h u n Ir I er for over medJwn-hlah helt. rice. Mallet 4 Mrvlnp. ~ pound 1paahetU, oven; 1poon Nuce over Y·•~ food ldeu. Add pork. about ~ at a CHICKEN cooked, drained chicken.
to almailt any meal Um•. and cook until CACCIATORE 2 tableapoon1 corn Cover; 1hnmer 20 to ao
planner and the cry 11 browned on all 1ide1. IA cup com oil i t.arch mlxoo with 1A cup minutet or unW ct\Jcken
1ihe eame -for thrifty Return all pork to lklllet. 1 brol ler -fry e r water 11 t • nd e r . Re m o ve ~ dlahM. Cover and cook over &ow chicken, cut In parll In 6-quart dutch oven c hicke n to 1pa1hettt.
It'• time to dlj out put heat 15 minutes. Remove 1 cup chopped onion h e al corn o 1 l ove r UMd 1efVina dlah. ReeUr ~dpt \l'Wu, resurrect pork from aklllet. Add 1 l(reen pepper, cut m e dium h eat. Add cornetarch and w ater
\ho.e that haven't been onion and aarUc; 1Ur-fry In matc"'tlck piece1 c h l c k e n and coo k . mixture; 1Ur into tomato
Wied for yeua, but are over medlum heat 2 \.i p o u ll d turning u needed, unlU mix t u re. St Irr I ng
t u valid today. Allo mlnutea. Add 1quHh, mU1hrooma, aliced lightly browned on all conatanUy, bring to boil ~onalder theH: buy carroa. and celery; .Ur-1 clov e garl ic, ald u . Re mov e fro m over medium heat and 1~nderised chuck ateak fry 2 minutea. Return minced or preteed dutch oven. Add onion, boll 1 minute. Spoon
ln1tead of alrloin, pork to aklllet. Stir In 1 c an (2 9 o z .) gr ee n p e pp e r , som e of sauce over
,thoulder rather than loin 'bouJllon, 1ay• sauce and tomatoes mu1hroom1 and garlic. chicke n and apaghe tti
1lamb chope, chicken or pepper. Cover;. cook 10 \.\cup dry red wine S tlrrlna frequently, oook and 1 e r v e with
turkey cutlets rather thUl minutes. Add aplnach; l 1A teaspoons dried about 2' mlnuta. Stir In remlllnlng sauoo, Makes
veal. Buy whole chJckena oook 3 minutes longer or oregano leave. tomatoes, r ed win e, 6 aervlnp.
and c u t them up
yourself. T.he ••me la
'true with other cuta of
'meat; be your own
butcher. Save chicken
livers In • container in
the freezer until there
are enouah for a meal.
Decreue the meat and
Increase· the starch in
Caleerolee.
. Seek out e\hn.lc main
dlahe1 that require little,
or no meat, but include
'Inexpensive pro tein
extenders tuf:h aa pasta, rice or bean1. Compare
pricea of differe nt
varletiea of apples, bnn29 and potatoes for
lhe l>eat buya. Start a
collection of thifty main
dlah recipes.
In the three main dish
recipes given here the
.thickeuer la cornata.rch,
an ingredient that alao
1u1gesta many thrifty
alternatives. Use it to
thicken a cream aauce,
for vegetables -cheaper
than buying froze n
vegetables In cream
Nute. Swifl't Bto•n & Serve Sov109• 8-01
MAPLE LINKS . .. ....
Swih'1 Brown & S.rv• Sov1oge B·Ol .
HOT UNKS .. , .......... .
lleol McCoy
Reol McCoy Sl1od Voe Pock 12·01
BEEF BACON
EA. 1.09 lor M, Sliced Voe. Poe~ I ·lb
CORNHUSKER BACON
Fom1ly Pock 2·1b
ZIPPE BRAND BURRITOS
l·lb.
1.89 Sw1IH All White 1 lb
EA PREMIUM TURKEY ROAST
1.79 Swoft Whole & Dork 1 lb
EA PREMIUM TURKEY ROAST
1.89 Swift, Premium 2 lb
EA TURKEY HAM ROAST
Cornol>o" 8rond 6 o r
EA
EA
EA
AllO u1e corn starch
for le11-expe n s ive
homemade puddings and
for makinB your own
aravy without a mix.
Bud1et saving recipes
are on the package of
com atarch.
CORNED BEEF ROUNDS
EA. 1.09
l8 2.29 ZIPPE aRAND BURRITOS
8town & ~"•· All Flovort 8 or
EA .99
EA 1.09
COOKED & PEELED SHRIMP EA
SAUSAGE SOUP
Former John Center loM·ln Cry·O·Yoc
HAM SLICES . . .. .. ... . l l 2 .69 LI NK SAUSAGE
Certrlreth I ·lb
SOLE FILLETS EA
2.99
2.59
2.99
1.99
3.19
1 tablespoon com oil
2 medium apples,
peeled, chopped
'h c u p c oarsely
chopped onion
•A•MI• .IOHll
IMOKID HAM
FUllY C()()t(fO I 2 9
FISHERMAN'S BAY
BUTTER FISH 1 •. 39 L8.
l 'h cups b e ef
bouillon or broth
1 pound Polish
.. u .. ge, cut In I -inch
alices and quartered
1 'h cu pa s l iced
carrot1
W teupoon aa.lt
1/i teupoon ~pper
3 cupa ahredded
cabbage
1 tablespoon corn-
1 tarc b mixed with 2
t.ab.lelpoona water
CltY-O·VAC
aun ~TION Ill. e Pon lteody Whole N•wl Frorefl .Alr1Con "· 18 1>9r lb ,., ... 1a1n• DD• 11a n11Ga
LAKI WlllTUISH ... la. 2.•9 •OCll LHITlll TAILILe 9 • 98
S'' lllDOOll HCMISDl.AllTI
f'OOliS flf' r~ fJ~£tvr '" ou• Ht~ NOOUCI °'"
FRllHNAPPA 18 .25
_,,. .. s.. ,, ......... fo1v4w-u let "• RICE VINEGAR .79 DRIED FISH
C etlof1e.h Boller 17 or 2.29 FRIED COD FILLETS E~
Hormel Country Brond or
18 2.•9 MIDGET LINK SAUSAGE
lovo' Roe~ / 1.69 HEN TURKEY BREAST 18
lov•' Rich
TURKEY DRUMS lB .59
BONILlll
RUMP ROAIT
.79
• llHINlSUllU • OOIO CliAl!IS e llolflAIO Ctf0lt5
1.5 LITIR
COLONY
WHmWlllU
239
In 3-quart aaucepan
beat corn oil over
ptedlum heat. Add
-.pples ar.d onion; atirring ~requently, cook 5
tpalnutea or until very
Mnder. Stir In broth, •u.aee. carrots, aa.lt and
Depper: Bring to boil;
&Ver. Reduce heat and
1immtt 30 minutes. Stir th cabbqe. Simmer 10 ~lnutea. Re1Ur corn
~tarcb and water
lb.lxture; 1Ur Into soup. ~tlrrlng con1tantly,
.,rin1 to b o ll over
~um heat and boil 1
~ft~e . M.akes 4
SOFT & ;,. 30-INCH 9 '" •9 (A'""'°" Al"""'" ID•• lom.
SWEET COOKING SAKE 1.69 °'""'OU)' 11 0t (0111
1.39
.69
.75
~ , I, .. , '°' ""P ''0"' Geo"'°"y 7 ~ ,..,
ift.fifiAL PORK. AND
VEGETAB'LES
1 egg, u,htly beaten
2 tablespoons water
1 pound boneless th! 1houlder, cut in
I 'h cup (about) com
llarch l '.i cup com otl 1 tarp onion, lliced
clove prllc, minced tpcuud
2 cupe yellow and/or
cchlni lqUHh cut in
tchsUdt .r= l cup ca.m>(a
1 I 1 cup aliced celery
I 'h ~~lcken
~
IA cup soy aauce
IA \eMpOOn pepper
W pound fresh
lnach, rlnaed and
2 cupe hot cooked
edium bowl 1tir ea and water.
rk; toll '° coat p pork into com
BECK'S' 3 99 BLACK TOWER 3 8 9
BEER • LIEBFRAUMILCH •
LYCHEE NUTS
W.t '°' Hoiw ICohlA I 1) 61 lo• _..._ ,..,, l'\o
SHAVED &ONITA 1.JS S~EET RICE
CUDDLY
IA.
GlllHA
---
Mi>i!QfiiOJ .
6.5-0Z.
IN
WATER
LIMIT ..
.............. __ "":" i 6-Plt., A~ VOfi.tiet Clnft.flloltln 1.29 1~-~ -· 89 ........ 1 89 INTERNATIONAL BAGELS... • MILDEW REMOVER..................... •
lOO-or. Boa 4 •s J2-01 Oto1t99. lemofl·U-79 CLOROX 2 DRY BLEACH .. .. ..... ••• GATORADE........ .. ... .... .. ...... •
7-oa. c, .. ,,..... . 6·Plt. llueberryor lroft I 31
ELBOW MACARONI ........................ 33 VAN OE KAMP MUFFINS ........... • .. u cmsco
KITCHUP ~sJHORTllllNG
~~~ 1.28 ~ ~!~ 2.09
•
.69
3·01 Noodt.1
RAMEN PRIDE ..
6-or Pototo, 10.01. C Offl
LAURA SCUOOERS CHIPS
5 F0t I
.79
<1().o1, ao..u1 Pod, 8·01. frH
UNCLE BENS RICE ............... 1.75
2 l1te1 P-.," 011tt L>Qht Frff
PEPSI COLA
8 0 1 lnttonl
FOLGERS COFFEE
• •• 9
3.39
20·01
CHEERIOS CEREAL . 1.19
MAIOLA .__.... CALGOllm·
-~~~&~79 ~ ~~~~~2:29
~1111!!!11-----.. ICATllllll nlATI -ma!"!"'"-.-"""'!"'!"'-,
··lb.Meet..... I 49 BALLllARK aa•ll-...... • _ u ... ci...u.. _,,,...... I M 1.69 SAltGENTO SHlt!OOEO CHEESE • 17•• AGAlt HAM l'ATTllS
11 .. , .-... Yet-69 ,, ... ~ o...., I " l'llLHUltY 1164' llSCUITS • • KOSHER F~ANKS ~ KNOCKS •
m0.'I RIA CllDlll D•lllH. .. ...... """ .... 1.39
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1. . '· , ;.
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Trio makes apple .a day advice easy to follow 1
-II
1 Orangt Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wec:lnHday, October 13, 1882 B l
An apple a day may or 1 (6,ourw) PIClkAll • ovunly over butte r . In 11 x 7-lnch alau (htah> H to 9 mlnutea. W cup Re.Lemon conde nred mllk, aour
may not k.Mp tht doctor buuer1cotch-flavorcd Spread applH ovunly baking dl1h, microwave Cool thoro uahly c hill Reconatllutcd L"mon oream, ReaLemon and
away -but It'• c:ert.ainly mo111elt over crumbt. ln wp of butter on Cull power beto"" tt:rvlna. Top with Jul~ apploa; spread evenly
thetlUIMt..everadviceto l (1 4-ouncu) can double b oi ler. m e lt (hlah) 1 mlnu~ or unuJ whi pped c ream I f 2 medium apples, over C'rumbll. Bake 26 to
follow! 1weetened conder\led mortolt with 1weetenoo melted. SprlnkJccrumba dealred. Retrlaerate cored , pa rod and 30 mlnuw. or unUl .et.
And why atop at jult milk (NOT evaporated) condenaed milk. Pour evenly over butter. teftovera. chopoed Cook 30 m inutes. In
one a day when lUICloua. 1 (3 IA -ounce) can bu\te racotch mixture Spre11d apph:1 evenly APPLE SOUR CREAM l/C cup chopped small bowl, mhc together
juicy applet are available flaked coconut evenly over ap1Jlet. Top over crumba. In amaall DESSERT walnut.I nut1 and ci nnamo n ;
In 1\ach abundance rtaht l c up cho pp ed with coconut and nuta. 1la11 bowl, microwave (Make. 12 aervlnga) ~ teaapoon ground sprinkle over cr eamy
now? To add to your walnuts Preu downgently.Bake monell with sweetened 'A cup b utter or cinnamon layer. C hill befort>
apple dee.ert repertoire, Whipped cream or 25 to 30 mlnotea or until condensed milk on ~ margarine Preheat oven to 31SO serving. Refrigerate
herearethreewonderful whipping topping . llihtly browned. Cool power-(medlum high) 2 · l ~ cupa graham degreet. In 11 x 7-lnch leftovers.
reclpee, with dlrectlona optional thoroughly; chill before to 3 minutea. Mix well. cracker crumbe bakJng dish, melt butter Microwave Directiona:
tor bak1nl not only by P reheat oven to 350 servi ng . T o p w i th Pour butterscotch 1 (14-ounce) can In oven. Add crumba; In 11 x 7-lnc h glaaa ~venUonal... means. but degrees (326 degrees for w h Ip p e d c r e am I f mixture over apples. Top sweetened con denied m ix w e 11. Pre 11 o n baking dlsh.'*'1Jcrowave
ln microwave ovena, u gluadiah).ln 13x9-inch desired. Re fr igerate with coconut and nuta. milk (NOT evaporated) b o ttom o f dlah . In butter on tull powe r
well. baking dish, melt butter leftovers. P reaa dow n ge n ti y . 1 cup (8 ounces) sour m e d I um bow I , m Ix (high) 1 minute or until
weLJ. Prete on bottom of ''
dl1h. Jn medium bowl, '" mix tot•lher IWM~ 1'\'
conde naed mllk, 1our let
cream, ReaLemon and th
applet; 1pread evenJy r
over crumb.. Microwave on ~ power (medium 1t4
high) 8 to 10 minut.ee or 11
until set (live dl1h 1 u
quarter turn after 4 11i
m l nute1). Cool 30 ,"
minutes. ln 1mall bowl '•
mix together nuts and
cinnamon ; sprinkle rYVer •1
creamy layer. C hill
before 1e rv l n1 .
Refrigerate leftoven. Whe ther or not you in oven. Sprinkle crumbs Microwave Directfons: Microwave on full power cream t ogethe r 11 wee t c n e d melted. Add crumbs; mix have th~ newest lime-.~~~__;__;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;=----~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
saver (and microwave
ovens do miraculou1ly
cut baking and cooking
timel), you're interested
In faat a nd easy food
preparation. These
deuerta are eminently
quallfle'd·, for each
featur~s pre· ble nded.
pre-cooked 1weetened
conde nsed milk -a
Ume-saver everyone can
have on hand.
If you thought an
unadorned baked apple
couldn't be improved
upon, just try Ba ked
Apples with Southe rn
P ecan Sauce. If the re
were ever a r ea1on to
gild the lily -or the
~ple -this is it! BAKED APPLES WITH
SOUTHE RN PECAN
SAUCE
(Makes 8 servings)
W cup butter or
margarine
1 (14 ounce) ca n
aweetened conde nsed
milk (NOT evaporated)
1 t e aspoon rum
extract
Dash salt
~ c up c h o ppe d
pecans . 8 medium apples
Melt ed butte r or
margarine
Ground cinnamon
To make sauce, melt
''A cup butter in small
sau ce pan ; stir in
1weetened condensed
milk, extract, salt and
nuta. C.ook over medium
heat, stirring oonatan tty,
10 to 12 minutes. Cool.
(Sauce thickens H it
cools.) Preheat oven lo
specials .J4R!ii!~
back to basics holiday baking specials!
raw
walnuts halves & pieces
2.59
'
II
I
It , ,,.
'<
ti
•/
,t
'CJ
rl ..
·'
r<
. ,,
350 dearee-. Core a5· place in •hallow ba raw, shelled mammoth ..
dish. S poon m e lte
butter into cen ters and
sprinkle lightly with
cinnamon. Bake 45 to 50
minutes or until tender.
Serve with Southern Pecan Sauce. Refrigerate
leftovers.
Microwave Directions:
In 4--cup glass measuring
cup, melt ~ cup butter
at full power (high) 50 to
60 seconds. o r until
m e lt ed . Stir i n
1weete ned condensed
milk, extract, salt and
nuta. Cook at ~ power
(medium-high) 3 to 3 ~
minutes. Let stand while
preparing apples. (Sauce
ihkbna u it ooola.) C.ore
apple• and place In
ahallow .._ 13 x 9-inch
beklng dl.h. Cook at full
power (hllh) 10 lo 12
Jninutes or until tender.
Serve with Southe rn
Pecan Sauce. Refrigerate
left.oven.
GERMAN APPLE
PANCAKES
~cup flour
2 te•poona •usar ~ teaspoon salt
4 eU11
IA cu milk
3 G~den Delicious
~es, cored and thinly
~ cup butter or
margarine, divided
Su1ar and ground
cinnamon
Stir dry in1redlent1
toptber. Beat eggs until
frothy; beat ln milk. Add
dry inp'edlentl and beat
until 1mooth. Saute
apple 1llce;1 In IA cup
buner until tender.
Sprinkle with supr and
• c:lnnamon.
Melt 2 tableapoon1
butt.er ln lO·lnch aklllet.
Pour In batter In thin
layer to cover bottom of
lk1llet. When aet. place
~ of the apple allctl9 on
top a n d cover whh
another thin layer of
blltter. Brown pancake
•lowly on both 1idea.
Turn out and roll Iomely.
Sprinkle with
1ddhlonal . su1ar and
dnmmOn· Repeat untll
ell batter ii \lli!d, ..tcllnc
2 tabWtpoont bu& .... IO ~ for .. ta panca1'e.
l'.-p ..... -.... "' 9vea-heated to 280
!•1reea r . Make1 4
.. p :
' tust1n · newpor
boneless
pork r111t
,... .. J.69 ••
1tuffed
pork ohopt
farmer style .,.,, rln
. ,... ~ 2.69
ground
Hlf pttff 11 5 lb. box
not to exceed 30%
fat content
L deli
.. S.49 ••
fres
peoan1
(bulk only) .. 2.98
raw shelled
elrnoncl1
(bulk only) •· 1.59
large aa ranch fresh
. • no dealer sales
• llmlt rights reserved
health vallev
country fresh eggs-
lhtl taste lhe way
It's natlonal apple month! 11
1pple 1Jeke1
6 oz. box 1.49 1.29
topaz
lclaho troat
,... .. 2.91 •• 1.98 wll4 h1ney
5 lb .. can S.99 blue point
IJftlfl (In the shell)
,... ... 40 ...
health val ey
Marts o'bran-apples & cinnamon.
htt oer11I
fresh local
lo~ltlr fl rat ot ~he season 11 __.....
alacer super gram 2
vftl•fn 0 1000 mg
90 tabs .... 10.9S 7 • 95
amerlcan health . , ,.,.,. .•.
I
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,,
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,.
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-Ot•noe Oout DAILY PILOT/Wed~ly, October 13, ioe2
Hurry-up hamsteak serves singles or several
I Y 8 A R B A R A lower heat to llmmenna. HAM 6 CHICKEN thll ptlate-pleuln8 puta muahroonw, undrained nonatlck 1klllet wlth
OlllONI Cover and 1lmmer 1 Iii KEBABS llll llllllJ dlah that t.utel r&Ch and & tablnpoon1 pl•ln cookln1 1pr1y. Brow'n Rt~c:.>:·to-heat-and-h ouri. • t I r r I n I ~ pound rat -fattenlnc ... l:Nt .Uthe lowfat yoeurt the ham cube• llJht
.. t, ,.., .. teak la • 1uper occHlonally · ( Letover1 Lr1mmed hamateak lnaredlents are lean and 2 ta b le 1 po o n • with no fat added. SUr
convenlence food tor may be frozen ln ain,le-~ pound chicken low In caloriee: m Ince d c h Iv ea (or the wine and undra
cooks ln a hurry. Detpite aervlna portlona, If cutlets (lklnle., bonelett skewert1. Combine wine juke-packed pineapple, LINGUINI WITH HAM acalllona) mu1hroom1; hut o
pork'• J>UdaY image, lean dealred.) Makea elaht breut) ,, and aalad dreaatna: brush cubet and reeerve juice. 'CHEESE SAUCS Pinch o f around bollln1. Stir In the h t
h amateak 11 not aervlnga, 2~~ calorlea 3 table1poon1 dry on 1kewer1. Broll, Alternate pineapple 3 c upa t end er-·nutmeg drained paata, yo1u ,
hltentna: only 48 eACh. white wine (or fruit turning once, 3 Inches chunka with chicken and cooked high -protein 1 teaapoon grated c hlvea, nutmea a
calories an ounce. Hamateak can aJJJO be juice) from heat 10urce, about 8 ham . Sub a t l tu t e llngulnl lemon peel lemon peel. Remo~ Beef rlbateak, by oomblnedwllhleanlow-2 tal>le1poon11 to 10 minutes. Makea pineapple juice for the ~ pound tat -6tabletpoonagral.ed from heat and aprink
comparhon, II 114 calorie chicken cutlets on "light" (low-calorie) four aervlnga, 170 wlneln thebute. Makes trimmed ham.ateadk, In Parmeaan chee.e with Parmeaan an
caloriee an ounce. So you skewers, thereby cuttlng Italian aalad dreaing calories each. four a er v Ing a, 2 O 5 1-lnch cubet 2 t a b I e 1 po o n 1 parsley. Serve hot fr~
can tee that ham'• bad the overall saltlne88 of Cut ham and chicken HAM, CHICKEN &r calories each. 1A cup dry while minced f1'8h parsley the sklltet. Makes to~r
preet la unwarranted, at hamateak by itse lf, Into 1 ~-inch c ubes PINEAPPLE KEBABS One of my favorite wine While llngulnl la meal-alze aervlnga, 2~
least where calorlea are Here's how: and a lt e rnate on -Drain 8-o unce can UNI for hamateak la in 4-ounce can sliced cooking, apray a large calories each. I concerned. However, r-----------------------------------------__;.,;.....:......:....:.:..:.;_;_:_,;,.;____;~~.;;,;;,,..~:..;.;;;.~;.;...;;~;.;_----...::...........:...:.......:;.,:;.;,._:_:..:...:...:..=_........:. __ _.:::.:.._;__...::... ____ ::__..:.:...:........_:...::...:..::..:..:.:.:. ______ ~
hamateak la high In
aodlurri, and should be
avoided by those on
low-ult diets.
For the real of us,
however, hamateak
makea a gt'ftt hurry-up
meal, particularly for
90}0 dining.
A. hamateak can be cut
Into alngle-1erving
portions and atored in
the refrigerator for quick
one-peraon meals aa
needed.
Because hamsteak is a
"cured" food it will
remain fresh longer
under refrigeration than
other kinda of meat. )
Here's a very simple
single-serving main
COUJ'9e:
SINGLE-SERVING HAMS TEAK
1..4 of a l'Mdy-t.o-eAat
hamateak, trinimed of fat
(about 4 ounces)
1 pineapple ring (packed in juice)
2 tab l espoons
pineapple juice (from
canned pineaprte> Pinch o ground
cinnamon, allspice or
clove
Spray a sl'nall skillet
with cooking apray .
Brown the hamsteak
quickly on both sides and
transfer to a plate. Heat
the pineapple {Ing ln the
skillet wilh the juice and
spice. Arrange on top of
the hamsteak. Makes one
serving, 235 calories.
Hamsteak can a1lo be
u9ed u an ingredient ln
other aUm main OOW"lles.
For example, you may
love 1plit . pea aoup but
never have the required
hambone (leftover from
a big rout) to make It.
Do it this way:
MEAi.SiZE SPLIT PEA SOUP
1 pound dry split
peas
Water
~ pound fat -
trlmmed hamateak, diced
1 large (or 2 ama.11)
ribs celery, chopped
1 cup chopped
oniona
Rinae dried peas in
cold water; drain well.
Meanwhile, heat 2
quarts of water to
boiling. Stir In all
ingredients.
When water boils,
Candied
lime peel
BJ CECILY BROWNSTONE ·-·;nr."f:::t:-r:: ..
are abundant and
re.cimble in price, you
mlaht like to make a
tancy IWed -candied
lime peel -for family
and friend• to enjoy
munchlnc·
CANDIED LIME PEEL
4 medium or Iara• unblemllhed freab limet
Water
~CUpfUPI'
25-cent 1tae 1ltce
fr.h~IOOt Hafve -and .,ueeze
Julee from 1 me1,
re1ervln1 1belh;
refrl1erate or freeze Ju.ice f« motbel' \om,
Tum lime lhen. llllide
out; 1tartta1 at tbe
cmw, puQ off dMdina
membnlM9 from white
portioa next to rlnd;
Clllcard a.nbnnel. Cut
each balf-abell in half
:r.fbc~w~
!!.:~~or 20
Covw ... with cold
waw; W" lllldY f« IO mtnuwe laipr; drain. Cut ...... ,. into Jani
thln911tpL
Brina• io a boll ~ .............. IUPl'i
acid lime 1irlp1 and
11a1er. llmmer ....., ........ Gt-. .. .a P9!ll ...... .....
' of die •Jnap -•••• ... ,..."':.':='"'1 S:.9i:s:S~
dirt· ..... •&1-..... a II I' g , ' . ..
This Week Double Y:our Savings with
Spectacular Color Maller! ·
Tnat's right. .. yoµ can double your savings with (3) DQUBLB COUPONS in this newspaper ad plus
(3) DOUllLB COUPONS in Ralphs big mailer. That's SIZ DOUllLB COUPONS! If you don't have a
mailer. stop by your local Ralphs ... pick one up and join in the celebration with money-S(IVing
coupons and ~orewide specials. (While supply lasts.) Q!ltJ4' .
Double Coupon
Present this coupon along w11h anv one Manufac·
turers' "cents off' coupon and get double the savln~s when you purchase the Item Nol 10 include "retailer ·.
"free" or "grocery purchase' coupon& or exceed the
value of the item Eicctudes hQuor tobacco and dairy
products
limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon
and Limit 3 Newspaper Double Coupons
Per Customer. Coupon Effective Oct. 14
thru Oct. 20, 1982
Double Coupon
Present this coo~n along with any one Martufac· turers' "cents off' coupon and get double the aavln~s
when you purchase the Item. Not to Include "retaller ', "frff" or "grocery purch ... " coupona or exceed the
value of the Item. Excludes liquor. tobacco and dairy
products.
Limit One Item Per MMuf11eturera' Coupon
and Limit 3 Newap..,er Double Coupon•
Per Cuatomer. ~ Eftectlwe OCt. 14
thru .20, 1112
Double Coupon
Present this cou~n alon,o with any one Manufac· turers' "cents oft' coupon and get double the savings
when you purchase the Item. Not to Include "retailer". "free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed the
value of the Item. Excludes liquor, tobacco and dairy
products:
Limit One Item Per Manuf.cturers' Coupon
and limit 3 Newa~per Double Coupona
Per Cuatomer. Coupon Effective OCt. 14 . ttwu Oct. 20, 1112
'
...... KGlr~oceDCe:~Y.._ ...... ....... ~odaceYaluee ......
SOilCiWich Manwich·~ .VI
B881'~tew 40.: 2.37
·Spw Mate Towels '°.: .79
... _..., °'..!!'...... ' L"" Tab or \,,;OCa Cola ..-TY
RaiPhi°'LiieocFiuit ».: .53
Apple Cider -:: 3.19
Tideoetergent '"..: 7.19.
YaberOe&gamca".: Il9
CSne-:1~ .. -i3.49
i!ndiifada '';.; .69 ·
"11 L69
II• 79 -.
lara'd Tomatoes
tr'..nAUihrooms .-oraiige Frost rcmana Frost
~on.a-Pineapple Frost
·--.. ·-... ·--.........................
llt'Chelob Beer
~"'!art
II
,.
'
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, October 13, 1982 Bl
· Reader advised to report~ stolen ·refund money
(From Pa1e DI)
,,
( I
" l I
only ~ c:enta," uya Marte, 11How'1
that for taklni • 'punch' at rilllna food prtcee!"
" yov we111 to o-i • mon~ -"19 '*Ml ewt on CNlatmM lhOClolnll IOf IM c:t\lldfen on your
gltt lilt. her• .,. t0il'9 lftt.,..tlnf tlft and refund
olfert:
l•I'• ,,.,, wlttl offltt by ~ PfoOuct ManUlecaur-for glfta thee .,. ~ 1loolllng
t11.1"9ra. Thlee __. '*ll*t a rtl\Md form:
CAP'N CMIMCM W ACI --T•...-r , Oller. 8tnd lllt taqulrtd rtfu11d form and
IOI.If Cap1n Crundl T 4 1\irt Ctrlltlcatea Of two T •
8hlrt Ctrlllloatea •nd Sa for ttoh T·thlrt
Otdtftd. The 11111rt8 oomt In cHl*efl't ..._ only
Tiier• la no llnllt on the numoer of 'T ·llllrt• you
can Mncl IOf. LOOk IOf the form on the 1j>41Cilally
metked pacltage of Cap'n Crunch e«••I. E1tplrM
... .,ch 31, 19Q °' wlllle ~ latt,
MOC9W8 CMOICI flMMT aNACtC. '**v. peteonallzed IC:llool ltema; five pent. 10 penclle,
Baking
easy
11nd fast
•~d·Ot llllt boOll oove1t l end 1111 rtQulrtd
r9flllld '°'"' Ind 1111, 12 or 11 Ol'ocet'• CflOlot '!VII lnaoer WrllPC*I lwlCI II• for one l'9fft. 12
IOf two lltl'M, Of 11 lot lhr• lltmt fhtft It t limit Of tht" lltml 11\tt oan b8 rtcltlvtd Ott Ihle
Otf8f lndtoal• YOIH G/loloa of Item ol II.mt on Illa
lorm. IJClllt'te Oto • .!...!1..!.~ · llCfTTUI, IT--.T LACH. ~ •
1oece r 1>111 dHIQn or a r•lnbow C1t1l9n on
40·1nch long tho• lact1. l•nCI the required
relllnd fOfM tl'CI 8llV combln•tlon of iw. empty
pec:ktgel of 8111tlltt or l 18f!Miflt IOf tlKh Mt
Plut 50 c:en11 pOtltOt anCI hanClllng l!xplrM
MltOll 31, 1"3
II pay• 10 tllop fftly '°' IOyt, tllld Wlllle you're
Yllitlng • tew ol the loy 11ore1 In yollr •r•• to
OOl'flPtll'• prlQM, 8* IOf ihe r91111\d tor"" lot lhtM
two t ltoelltnt r9lulld Olftfl Oii «111allty toye.
CHILD GUIDANCI Rat>ttt 0 11" Receive
St 50. 12 or II 60 rtlundl up 10 a lolal ol
S 12 60 Sano lh• required rtlunCI l0tm, Ille Item
name and the wOfdl "A Child Quldance pltd1141
10 p8ftr1t1" GUI out lrom Illa t>ael<. panel ol Iha
pec:ltage, plu1 Illa regllltr lapt wllh Ille purcll ...
0110• clrcltd and • 1tll·acUr•114KI, t llt!IPt<l tnveloc>t In llddjllon, ttnd Iha PfOOI of putcf\ ...
frof\'I one Chlld OulClt nct luey '°"· Oltnt)' llOC>j>lll' ft•, MtQntllc Alpf\ab91 Challeboerd or
flllOO·ArOUnd Top IOf • 11 00 ltf\Hld, ,,,. P''°' ol putOhtH from one Ohlld OUldance . Oltney
Mueleal 811-V loll Of S..-ltrett RtlllC*I IOf
1 U rtlund, Iha ptOOI ol purChUt lfom one
Mk:key'e Mulleal mobile IOf • U .60 refund All refund Olfttt are a11allablt on 111'1 llldlvldual bul1 on Nl>lrllt f0tm1 on 11141 packtgtt. l•l>lrH J1111
31. 108'
GA8 1UIL llAMILY Reb•I• Olltr Reaelve
I 1 00, U. or 15 It\ refund• up 10 ato1.iofI10.eo
Sano the rtQulftd refund IOfm. Iha lltM numb«
CUI OUI from th' 9ldt panel of Iha ptckagt, Iha rag~lar ,..,. with lflt putCllaM prlct circled, •
Mii addrMNd. •t•motd envelope, along wtth
Ill• proof ol purCllHt llom Oa brlt l toye H
lollow1. from Po11 .. cr111 IOI • 1 1 50 refund, lrom
Prelly C1.1rl I Qrow lor 1 12 refund , from Olhallo
tor 1 12 refund. from Erae1or 600 tor a 16 refunCI
All 1efund1 .,. av1111aoi. on 111 lndlVldual bHlt
on MC>ar•I• lorm1 on Ille paeltJIQ" hplr .. Jan
3t, tN3
.,..,. •r• two toy oller1 11111 don't raq1.1lr•
refund IOtm• JIA84 ~ IN rtqW.cf proof1-of·
purchaM lo the addrNMd llhowT1 In Iha *41ng1
PMI DAUL• A.NO Hlf' llMNDI 'MlllOn Oft9r, Oaot 0, P.O. lo• 3HI. City ol ln®elry.
Caltl. t tf44 Send the ragl11er !ape or lll>at
lndlcallnQ Iha dalM ol pur~ lllld Iha Ou.Lit
and Her P11tnd1 PfOOI ol purch ... Mii "'' from
thrM Daul• •nd Her ,,,ltnCI• doll PllClt•gH,
11ono wllh your n•m• and 10drt11 on •
3-by·l-lnch pfllifl piece OI p11ptr Pureh-muet
bt made by Noll 1, 101:1 bplrM Nov 16, 19'2.
P•ll 1118Hl"•llfll1CI 8 Aa Y'8 lllltlT
I LOCtcl . 8011 4022, Younci Amarlaa. Minn. 653ff 8tnd Iha PtOOI ol purch ... IOy nllmbtr1
lrorn •t '41111 IWO Flthw-Prlce Crib & Pl•Ys>en
IOyl IOl•llng $16 or mor-t , Ille rtgllltr lapt, 711
a.rill POllllQI a110 hlllldllng •nd your n•m• 1nd
•Od<ttl on • 3·by·6 card Eltplrt1 Dec. 31, 11182
Mlllal and P1mpe11 tteva • Joint refund ollar
that can uve you " much •• 150 II you expect
10 be llliylng toy., then Mndlng I poelc.td IOI
lllit v~ refwW form la otrl911\fy I OOOd ION lend IN card tO' Mlllal-ftM'll*t "*It Ofttt,
ft 0. lo• H9-M2, 11 ftMO, T•M. 7N 77 It 9'1ft
tllat yo1.1r req1.1t11 lor tlll• refund form I•
poatlNlflltd no Iller than Jen 11. 1m
llnOt childrtrt -10 De iutl .. "11trMl9d In
computer•• adult•. 11119 1 100 rebate offer "'9Y
make II a NllJe tMlaf IOf you to coneidtr 1UC11 I
gll1 Moel llOfM 111&1 ... Ille Teua lnalr\lfMl\11
computer ha,,,. the reQlllrtd rafllnd l0tm
Tl Hom COWUTCR IW M H Tl, lw\CI Iha
required refund form and lh• ye llow UHr
lnlOfmallon CMd '"" ooni. ,.c;kaoed Wllll Illa l)(odUCI, illc;fudlng llWI -lal number end Illa
tlOft ,_Ind addr-Wiier• Iha product ...
purchHtd, pl1.11 th• cut•CHll word• "Model
PHC-OO<IA OUC. ff.4A Oty. I" lllat ~ printed
on lht eorrugtated carton, a.Iona wttn Ille reglller
111pe oat.cf t>.1-...n a.c>1 1, 1t12 and Jan 31.
19'2 The refund •P911at only 10 Ille Tl "_.A
conlOlt. f!•Plr" Feb. 10, 109'.
Sine• refunding mekH gllt giving to muc:h
aatltr, ltl'1 not l0tge1 another Junior "*"'* of Ult lamlly
SAVE wn1 mnl'I LIW PllCEI ••• , ....... ,I
~------------··--------·--,-------------1·---~~------=1 Today's eighth grade
cooks may utilize their
microwave ovens t p
make these Fig Stuffed
Baked Apples in a hurry,
while grandmothers.
bac h e lor unc les, or
anyone else who loves a
sweet with nutritional
value too, may wish to
stick to a conventional
oven . Eith er way ,
appetites will be aroused
at mingle d baking
Golden Anniversary . ;-ll~;l~JI~:
I ·----::1--~z:::=-·i:ni::.-I 1 -:---..:;;:::t::':f'~~I 11 -=~~~~--~-...:::-:..T~-1 11 -~,;c:-;::u:-=.~ffi7.::r-1 =.;==.,.:r:~' ., :i:r.=:-= I I .. ~1T.~.·~~,.:• ~ff ... ._ • .... -.... -~-,.~~ ... =:-~ I ·-=:'"=~~·1£a· I I -=.o"t!<1::~;:~~: · I I ~~~:,~ I I -;,._--=~~=z:.-=:.OKJ· I
aromas .o~ chopped figs,
orange JWce, marmalade,
lasses and apples.
here's not a more
fying way to end the
mework study hour
n by serving these
lthrul fruit desserts.
ried figs are an
tremely high source of
ergy and nutrition,
th over 55 percent of
ir weight composed of
tural fruit sugar. They
' easily digested and
er a high content of
um, phospho}'US and
n, all important body-
u il de rs.
STUFFED
APPLES
1 ~ cups ch opped
ried figs
1 cup orange juice
~cup orange
rmalade
2 tablespo o ns tu.es
6 large baking
pies, (Rome Beauties
r Granny Smiths)
1 Additional orange
tru1MT1A}ade
Heavy cream
In a saucepan, combine
' · s, water and orange
1eannalade and stir over 1m e d i u m h e a t u n ti 1
t!!'iick. Stir in molasses.
!\.:ore and pare off the top ~ird of the akin of the
pples. Place apples side
y side in a shallow
a k ing pan. Use fig
xture to stuff center of
pin.
Cover apples a nd
ke in a preheate d
oderate o ven (350
greea) for 40 to 45
utes or until apples
e easily pierced .
(1',emove apples from
~en and spoon orange
malade over them.
place in oven and
bake for another 5
minutes. Serve hot with
cream poured over
apples. Makes 6 eervings.
MICROWAVE:
Bake 3 apples at a
time, •paced apart in a
111111, plastic or pyrex
• covered with plutic
ap. Place into oven
~ microwave on HIGH
er for 5-6 minutes
pendin g o n size of
plea. Remove. spoon
nae manna.lade over
.+lem. c over, cook
ditlon a l l minute.
move, l et set 3
Utes before 11ervtng.
f.inner
~rtwo
HOME-STYLE LDEN BEANS AND
USA GE SER VES
0 (MicroWave)
~A h earty diah of ~vorf ul baked' beana
~·U•flea a ppetites ")a~l'Y for homeatyle Cooldnl· Comb6ne 1 can
(8 or 9 ou.ncm) pork and
beam, ~ c:Up chopped Golden~ apple, 2
ful~oolsed ... " ..... t a ble epoon ·=lh•f.w "•"r, ..... = 1u11r . C over ancl
mlri'owave al JllOH i
••nu ua or until ~·1 heeled. I.At :::'4 .......... 2
) '
SMITH'l IELLI ONLY
USDA CHOICE IEEFI
I• ... 1.10 OCTOH • ,.,. .. ,.., I I W ••uo oc•-• ..... ,.., I I • uuo oc,O:. ,.,. .. ,.., I L... ·-oc•-, ..... ,,., I ~------------~-~----------·~------------J ---------~--' ... ----"'------:i r------------. r------------· ·r-----------, ·~ .~ .. ~ .. ~. ·~·~·.~·~· I -~-~-,-·--.--·-··---~--~-· -------·---·-· t; ____ !!!'!! _____ ,_, .,,, ... ~~··:...~ I I ..... .:n:: .,~.., .... _.=--I -:n:::-'f.:'---·~ .. ,,...,_ I -....... ...,...~ ... ...._. ......... ..... I --:. --~~....... ... ....... -.-,. -... :... .. ., ... ~"!P.9 I .. ~ .... ~;..___.t:!1.-:i:~ I -::....=.-~::·~~~:::-.... I
........ ;;;"r::;: ... _,,~. I I ---~·~ .. ·~r~· I ~"=-:·:::=1!'C:: .... '·-.:;:;;· I -----==:~-._·:: .. ..,· I ...... -==::a:c:._.· ...-......... "'=~ • I I _..... I • ••uo oc•-• ,. . .._ ,.., .J 1 • '"l'° ~oe•• ,. ... ,.., .I 1 W ••ua ~oea• ...... •M• I I ~ .~ .. oc•-..... , .. &.:------------------------------------~-----------~ MIC•• .,ncnn THUlt•OA Y, ocrou1t '"· f'HltU ·•-•OA Y, ocroe.11 llO • U•IT ltlGHn 1t•••1tno • ,.,, ••• , a •a'1°HO•, "°" #U1t••r •• ,,.,,.. L~ "°"
GROUND BEEF
'"llH • s.4.8. IJKQ. 09' M09'1 ,.r #OrUNSO,_..
8~
HILLSHIRE FARM LEAN GROUND BEEF
IMOKID IAUIAQI • IJOLIKA KllLIAIA 'AT CONTINT DOH NOT IXCllD ~ .• \ 21! ., 1·~
PORK SPARERIBS ... 1" ~!.~.!!~~~.~EEF l• 111
IEEF LIVER 1.11 89' ~~~~!~!~N COD FILLETS ... 211
QORTON'I F18H8TICK8 MoOl_eoa .. , 311 ~o2~~!~~l~ SHRIMP Le 311
CRUNCHY Fl8HITICK8
--U.OLHI,--111 !:?!~!~ST ... 111
LONDON BROIL
UIDA CHOICI II"• THICK CUT ROUND
19!
HO~YDEYI MELONS GREEN CABBAGE
( I WUT AND JUIC1Y I c e.-~ :·· .. IOLID HllA0111c
~·· ·-~
LB. . ·''1 LB.
131 ~~~.:.ELERY u 49c SUN GIANT AAl81N8
0 •1/11.t.l.-.M .. 1-..oz.eo•
3:11 CRISP CARROTS 4:11
'°"°"
FRUIT SNACKS
MOC~'" CMOICL I.OZ. PCO
121 • GARDEN MUMS 121
._,e:tCOL-.....C:ll MD OOf
HOUSE PLANTS
At.a.TIO, "°'WiltlC:M IUa (lllOl
2•• ~~!'!':!4 .. <?!!ACf, .. lotCM .. hOOT.. 3" POTHO'I OR MARBLE QUEEN
..... CM ltft H Goa•t•O "'OT WflM ••uc••
CORNED BEEF
IRllKIT •THI RIAL McCOY• .-OINT CUT .,. -
1'!
BROWN
ONIONS
IWllT AND MILD
·~··~1.~
MUSHROOMS RED DELICIOUS -.••. BE TOMATOES
DOLi • "'ll H • I-OZ. flKQ, C9'ACKUN' CIUllJ All'PLll ~ De~ •.
GOLD MEDAL
. ~~-II.DUR
LIACH90 • a.La. IAQ ....... ,.,. .....
lie
(~~.~n~.tt.~\) ·-./
41~.
IMPERIAL
MARGARINE
BANQUET DINNERS FACIAL TISSUE i~···ac Eiiitl
FRISKIES BUFFET
AHORTIO CAT '000 • ft.OZ. CAM
MEAT WIENERS cono SALAMI
090Alll llAYllll • 1"'-'· PICe. 080AR llAYlll •..OZ. Na m--1---0..·-1'' ii' .: J .... --Ow·-111 ............ ' ............ ,..
~
lllCKLI I lliMINTO feAP 111 ~~!!'!.,~!_~-:~°';°"."°: ..... 111
~~=~1-=.-=-•1• ~D.!!~1~c:!~-----1''
~r1 ... ~ !"' · .
-· "· -. ' ... I \'
.'Tr r' •' '
.-............... t ft&-.... .. .,....-··· --.......... . --........ 1 -..-....... . _.,, ............................... I.JI ...... -~--................... -·
..
....
Orang• OOllt DAILY PILOT/WednMday, October 1~. 1982
.
DO ~vou HAVE ·A
' .
FAVORITE RECIPE?
If you like to cook and have a . "fa~ori~ .
recipe, it could be worth a trip for
two to a city of your .. choice anywhere
in the Western ·Hemisphere (via Western
Airlines.) Or you could win one of five S200
gift certificates. It can arr happen in th·e
1982 Dally Piiot Favorite Recipe Contest,
and it could happen to youl
Even if you don't w in a top
prize; your recipe could be
published in our "Orange
Coast Cook Book" in the
Daily Pilot on Wednesday,
December 8, 1 982 .
Daily Pilot Special sections editor
Janine Fiddelke will supervise a
panel of food judges who will
name the best recipe on the
Orange Coast. W inning recipes
will be judged on originality,
ease of preparation, adherence
to theme, and of course, taste.
So get cooking. Read the rules
carefully and send us your
recipes as soon as possible.
Entries must be postmakred no
later than November 1 2 .
D•lly Piiot
F•vorlte Recipe Contest,
P.O. Boll 1560
Costa Meg, CA 92626
I • Appetizers favorite rec ipe for
Meat spreads, zesty the mainstay of the
dips or munchies. meal.
Take your pick.
4. Veget•bles
and S•l•ds
z. Gr•lns Including vegetarian
•nd Bre•ds dishes. And don't
forget the What is your out-of-season f avorlte way to start treasure~ In cans and off a holiday meal. In the frozen food
section.
s. Desserts
J. M•ln Let's see what you
Dishes can do with
Whether It be chocolates, gelatin,
hamburgers or coq butter, flour,
au vln, the best whipped cream and
chicken salad or other f avorlte
roast duckling, goodies. Set those
everyone has a calories aside .
1 .
2.
3.
4.
5 .
6.
7.
• 8.
List aft ingredients in order of use, followed by clear,
concise directions and the number of servings.
Remember, originality counts. Submit your entry on
3x5" index card and type. ,
Put category in upper left hand corner. Only one
entry per person per category will be accepted. If
more than one entry Is received for any single
category, all entries for that category wilt be
disquallfled. Judges reserve the right to properly
categorize entries.
Recipes must f?e complete, and may not be changed
after submission. Incomplete recipes will be
d isquallfled.
In the event identical recipes are submitted by two
or more contestants, the first received will be the
one considered for judging.
A black. and white photo of the person entering the
contest must be submitted with the entry.
The contest Is open to art residents of the Orange
Coast, except employees and their immediate families
of Orange Coast Publishing Company.
Indicate on each recipe! In the top left-hand corner.
your name, address, telephone, and category
entered using separate sheets for each recipe. Mall
to "Dally Piiot Favorite Holiday Recipe Contest,"
P.O . Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626, or bring It
to 330 Bay St., Costa Mesa. ALL ENTRIES MUST BE
POSTMARKED NO LATER THAN MIDNIGHT,
November 12, 1982 or received at the Piiot office
no later than 5 p.m. November 12, 1982 .
Entry of a recipe constitutes agreement that it
becomes the property of the Dally Piiot, and may be
published with Kknowtedgemenu (no street
addresses or phone number wlll be published) in the
Dally Piiot and Mirror newspapers.
Entries wlll be disqualified If they fall to comply with
the contest rules. All judges' decl~ons are flnal. All
prizes wtll be awarded. CONTEST ENDS NOVEMBER
12.
·----~--------------i------------------1~--------------.......li ... --....... --------------------~----------------------------""""I,_. __________________________ __ Pm& ma MUC NOTICI ~ MmCl
"!?m'ilAW "::mo=.=r ~-=H 1 ,,. ........ pefMft ,, dolnt fM ......... ,.,_.,. ....... ~~.. ~ .. Ool!'I ~-~-; ---""""Y COHIT fllUCTIOH 08" 'AITINI" ANO IUPPLY, IUNIHINI 'OOO COM,AHY,
OOM,AHY, IH Oeder ltrMt, 11Q.H '-OOlln A~ Coeta ...... 1111, MIOArll111r lhtd , lrvlnt , ......,, leldl, ~ tHll Clllfof!M IMH Cllffornlt
l!Mel YtMt '•"•· Jr., Ht l<ttl JOflanHn lrukt, 1160 flllell Yuno·T•I Cllln Ho tO Oeder It~ Newport IHcll, Oolurnblt Drive, Cou1 Mtu . Tht.1ndtr "un, No It,. lrv0ln• 1 ~ Callftrnle IHH Clllfornla ' ' Tiiie lluelrllM .. oon .... ~an Dtnlal LHlt• ll•fU, t tH Alloe CNnoe. No, 10 Thunder ~. Hor Ill WUI llrH I. HO Q.J, ""'·No, ,.,, 1'1flne. Ctlllomle Hell ,"'Y Anellllm, Clllfomlt NI01 Han Ohan Chenot Ho. to Tiiie .....,_, -Ned wlttl IN Tiiie llutlnett It GOnOUClt<I Dy a Thunder Run, No toil 1rvlna ~ C'8rtl Of Orange Countr Oii ..,..,., pettMflhlc>. Ctlllornla ' '
Ootot11w t t, tlU. Karl J lwkt '!'1111 bu1lnH1 la oonduotad by
P-te Thlt Ital-I Wtl llltd Wllh tilt ~nclMdual1.
Publlthed Ora119e Cotti Dtll)' COunty Cletll of Ortnot County Of1 "lck YunQ-Tll Chin Piiot, Oat. ti, IO, 1'1, Noll. I , tlQ Se!>ternbet 17, 1982. Ttllt llat911'1911t _.. llled wttll the ________ ..;44!6=!!== Pttno7 Oounty Clerk of Or•noe County on
1111_,..,,. 1111n,._ P11bllthad Otangt Cout Delly September 20, IOH.
,._ ""'"''~ Pilot, Oct. 8, 13, 20, 27, tN2 Pttn'll
-----...... -,-11-1----4318-H Publlthtd OrtnQe Ooatl Oall~
MCmCI OP TillUITll'8 IAUI -----------Piiot, Sec>t aa. "· Oct •• 13, 11112 .... ..,.. "8..IC NOTICE 42 IM2
Mt.IC NOTICE On Octobat 27, IHI at 10:00 Lm. U.S. TRUST DUD IERV1CE8 INC., I Celllomle eotporatlon wtlON addt9ll le 2tt8 J Slf,.., .,.._No. Tlla lollo_wlng p1r1on I• doing 'ICTITIOUl IU9INIU
t, Sacramento, Callfornli t8t18 ~ •· NAMI l'fATl•NT wt\OM ttltpnont number ~ ~~eow '°'· 1252 Wateon, The 1o11ow1119 l*eont ara dotng ... .....,, u 1i.oen1 '°' fllU ~-' w..,,... "*en. 1ifl~ • 1>u11neaa .. CO., .._ lldcfioeet It 1400 "'-..., .. lll)'M Albn, 1"'~ • .t190t!, ON TIME TRA.VEl. 170 I Scott P9'll DrM. Secranitnto Cellfornlt Cotta..._, Calllornla 82t28 Drive , Suitt 0 , Newport BH ch.
1Mt6 .._~·number le Thie~ It conducttd by 11'1 Calllornla 92880
lttl) t 24-3000, tt T"*99, of the! lndMdual&,.. W Alic Joyce V Mc Elroy. 20051
. oar'8ln Deed °' Ttuat •-*f by • tn Coto•ta Clfclt. H11nllng1on a..cn, 'Jl!AN M. fllUDICHUK, a 1lngl• Tllla sta.-1 WIS llltd With Iha Calilorn1a 821148
women. October 10. ttl t .. Counly Cltrlt ol Orange County on Nancy A Hagan 3007 Hatbor lnetrumtnt No. 241011 In booll September 20, l982. View Drive, Corona dtl Mar,
UH1. P•8• IHI of Olllclal '1tma Ctllfornlt 82825 "•cord• of,.Oranga County, Publlthed Orange Co11t Daily Thi• butlneu 11 conducttd by•
Cellfornla, and purauant to that Piiot, Sept. 22. 29, Oct. 8. t3, IN2 ueMf•I penne<lhlp
certain Notice of Default and 4133-112 N1ncy A H~an
Election 10 Sell ttw~ recordad Joyce V. MGElroy ~ t4, IH2 u lnltrument no. "8..IC NOTIC( Tllll 1111-1 wu l"-d with the
12·200tl0 of Official Aecorde of .............. -...... County Clerk of 0••"99 C«inty Of1 1ald County, wlll under and r'::'!!!.-1TA•:....,,:-bet 4, 1882 purauant lo Mid Oetd of Truet Mii - , __ ,., '111771
at p11bllo t11ctlon for cHh or Tiit lollowlng part0n 11 doing Publiehed Orange Co11t Oally
CttNer't Checlc, drawn Ot1 a1tata ~GR.-::HICS ONE 171 .,~ Pilot. Oct. 8. 13, 20, 27. 1882 or netlonll blnll, a 11ate or ledefal .. • .. ... 4387-112 credit unlofl. or a etata or i.deral Nawhope. Sulla 103, Fountain
•.•vino• and loan Htoclttlon Vallty, Cellforflle 92708 Ptlll.IC NOTICE domldled 1n Iha State of California· Flob•rt Bernard Oalltma, 1-----------------1
.. lhe North fronl tnltanot to t!W. 28245 Buaoador, MIUlon Viejo, flCTITIOUI •UllNlll
County CourtllouH, TOO Civic Callfornla 82092 HAMI ITATIMl!NT Canter Drive Wt1t, Santa Ana. Thie buelMtt 11 conducted by an Tha followlng pareon1 are do4ng lndMOual buaJna11 H . Callfotnla, all that r'IOht, tltlt and ft-~~ B De' ·-AQUA TECH POOL ·No sp• lnt-1 con~ to Ind now held .,.,.,... ' · ...,..,, "" "' by It uncler Mid Oetd ol Trual in Iha Ttw. 1tatement wn flltd whh Iha SERVICE, 23772 Via l a Corona,
property lltutted In H id County County Clerk of Oranoe County on Mletlon Vtajo. Calllornla 821191
anc1 Stalt detctlbed u : CITY OF October 5, 18112. ,.-... Emily Donnelly laM1rra, 23772
NEWPORT IEACH, County of p bll II d 0 C 1'01i• Via La Corona, Ml11lon Vltjo,
=.'::.:tat• of Calllornl1 , Pllo~ ~.'e. t3'.·~~~7. ~::2 • )' C1111~;:~e~~8:r~11 laMaue. 23772
IN THE EVENT OF A TRUSTEE 4312·112 Via la Corona. '41Ulon Viejo,
SALE PROVIDED FOR HEREIN Ca.Ulornla 92881 A l l p A R c e l s 0 F R E A l PdlllC NOTIN Thlt buaJnesa •• conducled by .,, -------...;~;..,_ ___ H\dMdual =~TrR:~~:t~,: s1Jl~g PtCTmOUI .,..... Emily D L1M1ua
I N ON E SA l E AH D N 0 T NAMI ITATIMIJfT This 111ttment wN hied with the SEPARATELY. Tiie lollowlng patton 11 doing County Clark ol Orange County on
PARCEL 1· Lot 21 of Tract No ~ u : • Sftpltmbar 21, 1882 57M In the Ctty of Newport leech. S 0 UT H l A G U N A ,,.,_ tt p9, Map ,_dad In Booll 212• CHIROPRACTIC CENTER, 3te.3 Put>ll1ht<J Orenga Coalt Dally
Paou 32 1o 31 lnclutlva 0j South Cot11 Highway. South Pilot, Oct II. 13. 20. 27. 1982
Miace11anaou11otapt In the Of11ct of Laguna. California 82677 4398-82
tha County Recorder of H id Timothy H. Handlin DC. 31881 .,_IC NOYll'C Coun~ Wiidwood. South Laguna. Clllllornla '----'"-~---'~----I ~~~0:\,~;!n~~~c~= 0~ ~;,conducted b) .,, F~:.~•
tllrougllout Loi f05 of Mid Tract 1~1motll H Hand'~ DC The following P8ftonl .,, doing 5791, logtttler with_,,. kw y . .... bullneN ... 9'IPPOft and M111emat11 wtlert Mid Thie etat-t wu llltd with the IMAQF ELECTRONICS, 1C>Oe1
lot 62 adjoint lot 105, loget'* County Cletic ol Orenot County on Tllt>erl·AV.,_, Suitt 201, Fountain with uurnente for eave1 or Septamber 20, l882. Valle)', Ca/llOfnla 82701
ovwhanga, '1WT17 0.nna Jordan Lavack, 1514 • wh t r a 1 u ch • 1" a 1 1 r a Publlahad Orane• CoHt Dally Oover Drive, Newport Beach, conltructad In accordance with PllOt. Sept. 22, 21. Oct. II. 13. 18112 Calllornla 82ee<I
appllcablt rn11nlclpal ordlnanca1: 42ou-.e2 John Qllbart ltvtok, 1514
and a non-uoluahte right to uM tha •-ir NO~E Dover Orlvt, Newport Beach,
lacilltlet ioc.ttd on Mid Lor 105, .-~ '"" Calllornla 82UO
eubjec:t to Ill• provl1lon1 H Ht '1CTIT'IOUI IU ... ll Thie bu1lnt 11 le condu<:tad by
fortfl In Attlt:M Hof the Aealdantltll ~ ITATIMINT l'lulband and wlle.
L.ot lNM recc>fdad November 3, T I I I I Qonna J. l-'t 1tlt5, In Book 7727, Pao-238. ~:!!"" ng person 1 dong Thi• 1taternen1 wN liltd with the
ottlcial Aecofdl. (A) u s A. WETSUITS· (B) County Ctarlt or Oranoe County on ~ ~O::.::::'..: ~INBOW0 WETSUITS. 221 Main s.ptamber 21· 18112 ,1,.,..u
proptrty: 2245 I/Itta Huerta, ~1• Hunllngton BHc:h. CA Publlelled Orange COHI O•lh
N•wport .. ach, California . No LOts JEANETTE BROWN 30I Piiot, a.pt. 22, 2t, Oct. •• ta. tW.
werran1y le given •• to It• Rot>ln Hooo Cotta Mu• CA 4117..a
CCWY'9Ctl-or COIC,111•-Ntlft9 92927 ' ' 1111-II' ~
and eddr..a Of fie bet~y 81 ......... : ..... _........__ ..._ ""'"'·~ wtlo .. requeet Ille .... It b91no ••-.__II conducttd by an 1--ii(:ifnoueaiiiiiiiii"--1
conducted: O"ANITl HOME lndMdual. lolaJ Brown I Ptennoue MJll ...
LOANS. LTD., 1400 Rhtet Park Thie __._,1 ·-llltd With ttw The l~Ts!,"!::':. _._ OfM, a.a-1!0, CA 11115. Countw Clerk ol Orange County or ................ :-:-~.., ~..,
Olrtctlone to IN ~ prooeny " ---tt. may be obtalMd by requ .. tlng Oc1ober l 1, 1812. DA.TA ARTS. 2800 Madl1on
-lri Mtt1ftg .. °"'IN be1""'°'91y '111MZ A..-, Fllller1on, Callfomla 92631 within 10 daye lorn the flrat Publlelled Otange Cout Daily Carol Sut 0 H terlln, 2800 publcatlon °' ~ nouc., Piiot. Oct. 13, 20, 27, No<t. 3. 1082 Madlton A11anua , Fullerton,
Seid "" w111 bt rn.o. without ... 2-12 c.Bfornlt 12631 ~t or ~ty ~ or John C..terlln, 2900 Madlaon
Implied, tt 10 C-. 11c111111011 or P\ll.IC NOTIC( A¥enUe, Fulltt10tl, Cellfornla ttH:l 1
anc:umbf-10 Mt1afy 1f1e wnpeld Thie bu*-la conducted by I
lllllaflOt "'-on the note or ncMea ~ Off TMMTU'S IA.LI limlttd Pttlnenhtp. -..s by Mid Dead o1 Ttutt. to TlwlM'• .... ma . John C..tertln wtt· 131 lta 5 t pll'9 the lolk>wtng On Nov9mbet 3, 1912 at 10:00 Thia 11J1ternent w .. flied wilt\ 1t1t
fftlrnateo COtlt, .. penHI ,nd l .m. sr-wnJAtnetlcen Eapr-County Cltrtl Of Orange County. ~ tt the time ol the tnltlll &crow ~ f°"'*'Y known ,,.... pul:lllcellon ol Ihle Notice ol 1411e: •• Southe r n Cllltl £1crow Publlelltd Orange Co111 Dally
'Of'a..:loture F-and bpen..i Company tt Trute•. or 84-.or Pilot, Sept 2t, Oct. II. 13, 20, tM2
. . d. Ii. t07.t11t : Any Adi vancH l.::'~ =:i:r~r:i.:;,: 428042 ~ ::,:.-.:: o1w!!i~~at by STUART J. SWWIEY and JANE Nil.IC N0TIC(
NOllCI TO MQNRrY..... L. SWEENEY, and record9d June '1CTITIOU9 .,_ ..
YOU AM .. DIPAUlT __,.A 2t, tMt tt lnetl'\HMIYI No. 41871, .. ,.._ ITAftmNT
DllD OP TltU IT DA Tl D In book 141111, page 1054 Offldal OCToemt M. 91,-.... YOU Raciord1 of Ort,ngt County, bu~o!:::wlng P•rton 11 doln'
TAKI ACTIO• TO ""OTICT Cellfornla, and pur1uent to that TARANTINO LAHOSCAPING,
YOUll PltO~=~· IT MAY al certain Notice of Oalault and 237 B lllth ~.Cotta Meat, CA. -.0 Af A MU.. • YOU EJec1lon lo Sall theteunclar ,_dad 82927 ... All ID'LMA'nC* OP ntm """' 24. 1912 .. ln11rument Ho. s c T I •ATUM °' THI "'OCl•l*tO 12·218174 of Official Record• or tac>han . 1ran1 no. 237 I
AOAIMIT YOU, YOU IHOULD u ld County, wlll under a nd lllth Pt-. Cott• Mau, CA. 82127 COWTACT A LAW\'IR. ~ to Mid Dead of TNll 1111 Thie bu.W-19 conducted by an
o.o· 1ep1 ..... 21 tN2 at publlc: euc1ton '°' c.lh. lawfUI lndMduars,_ Taranttno •mccMe co .. • ._.,T......, money of Iha United StetH of Thlt ._1.,,..,,1 wtt l'llecl wltll ltlt a,i u.a. ~ DmlU lllW'ICaa America. at Iha North lronl County Ctartc of......_ r-...... on -... rl:.": ' entrance to the couriiy ~. ~-.................. ,
at• I ......... 1 =. ~~ ::.~:;;.~ Sept, 27. 1N2. ,,._
.... • • CA..,. and In .... ~ to and now Publl•had Ortng• CoHI Delly 9'I L.1111119 y=-held b)' 11 unc1at Mid Dead of T""" Not. lept. 2t and Oc1 e. 13, 20, ~ -, In Ille Pf°'*1Y Slt&Aatecl In Mid t.M2
Pu&flfalled orenoe co..t lfa1rv ~1-: ~= :=a:::.~ ttlt
4255-~
Pllol. ca. 1. ts. 20. tM2 U46-t2 City o1c:o.t......_iie111ow11 on• IUlJC NOTlC(
-----------map -ded In book t2t, pegea '1CTTTIOU8 ....... .....C m11C( a7 to •4. boll'I lnclua lva of NAm STA,_...,
--"iiCiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiii--Mltc:ellen-• Mape, record• of Tiit fotlowtng pereona .,, doing rcmioue ., 11 •• ar... c-i.y, CeMCor"'8. ~ ... ..... ITA~ Tiie etrfft addran or olller 3ffl STREET PRESS, P.O. lox
The totlowtllf penon la dolfl9 oornlfton dHltn•tlon of nld 2092. 402 3tttl St .. Newport 8-:tl,
11u11t.-• property. 3201 '-8.,..., ~ CA 824113. THI! Dl!LL CO., 33t l ........ ~nut. NANCY LYNN BECt<, 402 3tth
111fl ..,_, Coece ..._, Caltomla Harne a nd eddreu of tlla at.,~ leecl'I. CA t2tt3. t1t27 beMltclety at ..__ rtQUMt Iha 8MAAOH LO'lf FAN.EV, 410 ~ D. Moaet~t HI• ta•belno cionducted: City 31th at.,~ Beac:ll. CA. t2M3.
wtnd. IMM.~ 1271 '•deral Saving• a nd loan OEOAQtA MAHONEY. 11• £. n.11u111.-.. by afl AteoclMlofl by: "-9on/Arnertcen ~ooeen From, lllboa, CA 82tlt. lndMduel. lxpraM Mort(I.,. Corpotatlon, Thia ~ It conducttd' by a
~ D. Moe19 1201 hat~ '4V~. San general pan1*9hlp, TNI el--4 WM tied ...... Wle ..,_dlrlo, ~ t2A04. ,,_. ~ Cllrlt of Or.,.. couney Ofl Dlotctlol• to the ~ property Publl•lltd O.ranci• Coa1t DallY OGlobilr I, tNI. m•y be obtained bY requtatlno Piiot. Oct. 13, 20, 21. Hoot. 3. ttlf ..,..., ..,,. In wntlng from .... btNllcltry ........ u
"'bllalled ~ CoMt Dell) wltllln tO day• ftorn the fir et 1111_,. ~ llllnTIM' Plot, C)ot. t , ti, I0": 17, tt11 puHcallOJI If Wt Mdoe. ..._ ""''._ ,..,...., .., .... • • meo. -''"°"' mm'IOUI .,_11 -----------1oownen1 of Wltrenty, ..,._or -..C mTIC( .......... • to ..... po:lllllllll'l or Tiie ~~ ......._
--"iiiiiimciUiiiiiiiiiii----·-'°~-lll.,.icl ·--· ........ --~ ... "°'"'°"'r=r ........ on .. nottttCMldb)' ~1"6otATID C ON · .... .,. .... Deed of Truet lo wtt: ut.-TAACTOflll, 21511 P•MO .... Tiie ......... ,.... .. a-. I00.00, 111111 .. llllowlllo .......................... ·-~-,.,_ -1· -----..... .....,_ lftd ed¥wlclt .. --• .-...-• ..._ ........... " WOOOWIMD MA,.IHI, 101A ..... ~tie W Plllllollllon of Robert l lpMy, 2U 1 t ,._
Coft9'1 ·= N.-,ott heclt, WI Not1oe Of Mee ~710eDttll, Ian .NM o.pjW-°""'* . ~ T ....... '--In tfle • .., De.td I~ leln, IOIA ...,,.Ollt,t21Mplllt..,_• TOftl ...,_, 3110t "-ltn
COH9'1 ·= ~fl lffotl, r.:: r'f ..,... °" tf1e .,,.... "°!!:_ ';!"~ CapilerMole d tat71 a.... INIMnoe from ,. .... .. ,,.. -000 ~ ICl9d by • ,,. ...._la -II 11u 0y 1n ·~ • anr eo11anou the ..,. .. per"M!!!:! ... .... . ·-'Tent ......... s Dewld D ..._ Mlle t _, ::.. eu1flOnltd or Thia llulll'9ll 9'all1M19' .,.. tied
,,. .,.,.-_ ....... ,1:~::.-:.s::. -tcorVld ........ °=~..,_of Or ..... COUn1t Qerll of CJr...-CeuMt.. YOUMm• ... MILT-A County on It, tMt.
0...11, .... ~-~M"9~,.:; ~ ,._ -.-'IOU T&lla Publlthed Or•nee Cout Delft ~ 0r....-c.-~ --· ~ AOCd&n 111o1, Oct. t3, ao.1'1. No¥. 1. , ... 1'1111.~. ll.IO.r7,No¥.I . ,_ '9Ai•MWAT A"*'° ........
... ., .. ~·...!··''YOU •llD •• .,._.,. ------------------"°" • nlS llATUM 1 __ -...-...-~~-~·-----PmJC IGla • .,.. ........ w .... 'f!t.!!U WO OOWYM:T A 'if:O-A Ta&.1'allll' 11" n.. ......... "'"" .. '°'"' .,....:-~ ~=-'"' ,.,..,. .. dol"9 ~ ""INTINO. 1111 llCf'OW ~l'ANY s~8:~·~~= ~ nA. .... ..._. ._., ..,_,,""°~ Kol Oolle .... CA ... ?. GA..... IOUTMIM ... ·-GW'4N> MAimN MOMIHI\', ......... Ooftki:.:tl l9C..ow ~,AtlV, 14t ~ally om., H•I, Cotti ~ ,..,.111• CA. MT..-...._CA lttl1.
,.. ...._ - ' ••• ., St ..,,.. A. 9'1CWN, Tlllll ................. ., ..
••. , .. _o.Mt ~:::::= .............. . -~·---.... I ....... ...,..... lfWlrf Mtflllt = 11~0-.• ........ io.OAtl<IO' ..,. ........... _ .......
lt .-. (1U) IH·7Ut or OoYMr°""°'~a..., ..
0.."119 I =--~ ......... •• ,.., ~-°="Oil .... ~ " ....... ar... 0... Dellr ·-"'*'9Md °'_.. c.:-·a· ill' -i NII. o.. ,., •• "· ,. ...... ....... 0.: .. ti, .... ~.. ..... . .,
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ..
1• ,.
1111 .... 1• ... IW ... , .. , .. , ... ... 1• 1• I., 1• ... lfll = ,. 1• 11•
...................
AM rtel ettllt ad,,.,,IMd
In thlt newapeptr II
IUbjKI to the Fedartl
Fair Houelng Act of toee
wfllch mall• It NleQel to
adYet11M "any preferen.· ce. Nmltatlon or diectlml·
nation baHd on rece ,
color, r•llolon, Mx or
natlonal origin, or any
Intention to mtk• any
~h pretetence, llmllt · 1• tlon or dlacrlmlnetlon."
Prime Lido ~o'1 J."t0n'l'1'9rm, IS~ ba~.
Lp L.R., 2 bOllt elJpe .. 1,600,000.
~modeled 3 bdnn, 2 bath -+ t&rae rec. nn.
bNm cet.llnp, tumiahed, petJoe. $420,000.
.NlllllU .. E _
Ocean & jetty vieWI. ~. 4 bcl.iin, 3
bath, 3700 8Q.tt. •1.3815,000. Oce.nfront.
u111 111.1 um11t Laaoon vtew from 6 bdrm, IS bath, playroom,
dark rm, den. Boat alip. Now •1.000,000.
UYllll PUOI
1111 •••Tllmt .........
........ Lt• ,, ... ,
"N9w" 6 ~tcloue Ott·
den Vlllu wltloor to <*•
llng lltlPltcita NE.AA•---------
BEACH. 1, 2 & 3 Bdrm• TllTU • .._. 1
from U4.500 Below ..... •
market lnl tatt allow1 111&11111
lor plm" u low H Pl111 3. 4 bOrma. 2'At be.
I T 8 J m o ( E a 1 y I Trlplt garage. Na well
Oualllylng) Poot. tennla kept pr°'*1Y· CIOM Id
& aecurlt)' oa1ec1 prl11ecy. perk end pool. 1221.eoo •
TAKE AOVANTAOE OF
THIS ONCE IN A LIFE·
TIME OPPORTUNITY
CENTURY 21
...... ltllty
114-3311
SpectllCUl.ar bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br, 113g,900 • 5 yr old, 3Br
2 ba an. 2 boat ..,.ce.. Reduced-$1500000. 2'A bt home wllam rm • • • lrplc Ht,000 loan; a .. := Thia new~ will not HllUlll UIGI 1umt at 8',.%. S 107 .000
avellabl• 11 13%.
&.42-1C>e0 :: knowln~ly accept any New 4 br, 4 ~ be, cu.siom-French Nonnandy 1$ ~.~:·~'ic~o1,'~~ ~~:~,:; j F.atat.e 1.2 prime acre hilltop $1.260,000. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil f~l'-'~·~!l.~C.!!.!~
•• of tM law. IVILR Ill& YEllE VILLE H OlllU
!;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Fee a.lmple cottage on quiet Descanso St. (in 3113 MADIERA BEAUTIFUL _ 4 BDRM 2 BATH OLD WORLD = Hlllll Advert I-Flata). $145,000. Apptallled" $1401( TOWNHOMES
au-sers should check 011111a ... ••ya· Owner mue1 NII S t25K By Howtrd Mark eo. ..... VA A I Steve 21 927·8001 I 1158 000 : their ads dally and <:Zron.do Ial&nd cuat. liiYfl'OOt lot. 85'b0at 485-3~~T 7eo·G355
: report errors Im-dock. Plana avail. Now f370,000 w/t.emw. lllWNIT IUl&HI med lately . The -•~rt lf•d IHI
11• DAILY PILOT as-ITlllllll llYLlllTll •••• ·.·~.·,,······,·••••••
: sumes liability for IUllU OllUllll 51 = the first Incorrect 1111,00ll -S1N h .I •• u sl T11s7,I001L L TH i s ~ Modern, dataclled hm. ... E -Insertion only. -'iiiillllliiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiil unlqualy dnlgntd by WEEK. 2 Br. d9ll hOme In = ---------1• •~ Tiie MHt•fl of indoor/ bacilbay. Auume 1120. = .,.,., lft Wt UU. YllW · t _..,,._T outdoor environment 000 Rat Rodgara, -•••••••••••••••••••••• Lal Walk to t>eecll from de-light and a iry Interior
1
831·t2M
•--' •-eorator'e big 2 Br & den. /1 k 11 111 3 d = _, •l•lt 8-Jtlful decof • earene, · 3 Ba. Sellar financing. w 1 y g a. gar tn o• •••••••••••••••••••••• ta1telul, 4 Bdrme, 2 ~ Olva away price . Only atrluma, btamtd ctl· .~ ,,.,,,z 1111 ~!l~.°"ooo' ... land. Aaklng 1215,000. 751 "t"t lings, king Sized l>drme. .a. •••••••••••••••••••••• -·~ ..,. • family room w/btr & ~ ________ , u.,
100
_, Ll() ...... IS'C Walll of glUI lo patlOt -LOOK "" L • • 19WL:ll Enjoy 1un 111 day on = Aeeliora, 117s-eoo'O "Private Roof SunclflCk"
.-For our ntw regular li~======~~;;;;;;;;;;;;!;!!;I Only I 10.000 down & :: weekly teetura Ii -----====;;;_1 I 1385/mo pymta II you
-IOIT SIOW· •-"'1 •• • 1111 ~~~1~r'~a~~~<i~~
CASE PllPlln * APll FIE llY _ . .,.got 111
H fr, Fhl ... hl& Cl'larmlno 3 Br. home CENTURY 21
••Da.T• ., ... ....... ,, ..
38 BALBOA COVES. 3 '
bdrm • 2 bath. NOW
REDUCED TO S489,000I
UT •t&lil
IULTll/IWm
•11M111* -~~=
\ f >I I I ti/' If :::1 ---" -= --,-~-,.-, .. -..... ---·
tlM .... .... r:: ·-'"' ----=
11aumabl• 011 Ihle 4
bdml home with refur·
bltMd k"c:Nn and loW
mlll11181•1Ce ~· <>wn-., _. ...... WI flMllc:lnO
tool SM It eoon. Only 1
1 121.eoo. ca11179-1310.
\(.///1:/'1::
' = iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. -~ -3 bdrm, INll• ...... .,.. = -91U
·mf l't»
fllll ·= -·--
llOme on MbOe ~.
Owner .. ,. "'**· ,rtced to ... et MOO,
t t • ,
associated
"' ~ • • R I I . ... ... , .....
2 bf l\ouM & 1t11dlo i o-with loll of tx1fu. You ...... lalffy
ntd for art 1tudlo, gift own the land. GrHt fa· 141·1110 lhope, t ntlquet, etc ..... I mlly home. Reduced 1-----------1
Owner wlll carry llnan· 145,000. BHutllul lg. PrhlOJ llltrt
clng tor 25 year1. Only corner lot. Walk to the Upgrlded 3 Bdrm, pool
$135,000. Call 758-1501 bay, Balboa Ill. tnd Fa-homt nHr p ropottd
Of 752·7373. ahlon ltland. Owner mo-park. plueh carpet1,
~ Walker & lee
1lvatad • could be beet graanl'loutt wlndowa.
buy In COM. 1320.000. Try 112,000 down. A•·
Financing avallablt. king s 117 .500. Mak• of·
14t-4111 lat. Bkr 6411-0700
TAY 1.01: <'O
VIEW PROPERTY
CLOSING C08T8 II
LMM/optto.. or trede dowft °' 1NJ Oftlr ~ ooe• and J011 Cleft OWft tNa "tot Ylllue" propetfJ Wttft CIHI up VIEW of .......... ...-.... ftleht ........ ,._ ............ + ..... ~.,... ........ .. ............................. ........................ ,... .......
............. 1-1 ...
\\AHR~RO:\l H0'1l~~
Ill \I 11111"
.. ~ ............ Moo .............. , , ... ,..,.. -.. .
, ..... •....w ... , -..... -~
IS1·HOO
MllOENTIAl AUl fSTATE SEIMCES
•••ll•sl•• I .. ~ .......... !.~!!
• MWl-10'J. lit.
Beaut. cuatom home, 1111
of ocaan. walk to Mn<!. I
213 13 33·31146 or
902-12911
hriat 1144 .................•.•..
Tllnn.IUI ,,.....,, ..........
A apotlH I 4 Br Oltn-
M)'l't p1an 1n • or••• io. Clllon • on!)' a tl'IOtt Wiik
to pool and tennla. ~
ducecl ~ 120,000 for
tut ..... Elllsllng Ill 11
e11urnabla at 10.76%.
NOW ONl Y 12N.500.
144-1111
-lflf'PDI ........ ... ,. ........ .
.... ....
LE ASE OP TIO N thla
gorgeoue 3 Bdrm den
condo In CllFFHAVEN.
Attume 1 120,000. RAE
RODGERS, 113 H2M
ILlffl 1111111 You own the land. 2,000
eq ft. 38r, lam rm, 2"A<
Ba, wide OrMnbell. near
pOOI. Far below rMlttet
1235,000. Wiii ..... op-
tion. IM!r. &M-413'
IUITlllUY
IElllD u. YllW
STEAL THIS CAPE COO BEAUTY. Expanatve 4
Bdrm. POOL home.
PRICE REDUCED 1130.
0001 MUST SELL 1415,
000. RAE ROOOERS,
83t-t2ee
man-~ Bay ..... 3 Br. 2'n
Be. 2500 eq. ft. Security gttt. private community.
$385,000. 5% Down. Wiii
conalder lrtdM. 9lc •
Armitage AMl1y
7 1'·544-2484
..... rt/llJtrHt
3 Br. 2'h bath•, femlly rm, pool. Buy 17$,000
below marka1 et $225,
000. Private party, prtn-
clpalt only 1182· 1367,
113S-07S4 .......
1111•1111.-
111ttPU•
View to Pelot VarOH
with brMthtaklng mgtit
light panorama. Execv-
tlw 2 bdrm + formal di-ning. with comm. pool &
tennla. Slllltr wlll contkt-
er any otter. Call for
mot• detall&. 1146-"t t.
UULm 11UL Qwgeoue 3 8r home W/
PYI yard and many ax·
traa. Try 10% dwn or
trade. For dattlll call
Patrick Tenore ,
831·12M
11.11'1 uiiiii ms Wiii •n
IDllD S1111
..... -...........
over e.ooo aq ft., 11.2
AorH ol ptllfte tho·
,~ property ... ,. to.Jedc~a.. ...
nr. '•fll»rook. Ivery
,..,.. Mlenlty, CllMMo
.. errmu11n IMI ...
Kini Louis XIV would have
claimed this corner unit for hie
private chambers. 3 BR 4c
urwurpueed view of harbor, ooean
& mountains. Care-fre e condo llvtna at it's very bett!! Excellent
financing nail.able(
~ Mounlaln VleWt 6
Slape Awly Btllllant bk'9
pool mlngl• to makt
Country Style Uvlno
moet enjoyable In 1111•
llftmto. Garden VIiia.
Sp.clout S ldrm. Wind·
flower Mdl. boMtl moet
outreg«IUI mat• ~ wJown prlv. draHlng
.... open IUnllotlt kit·
cflen wfmett!W 6eolc get •oeet'-.,... . Ill tuf•
rounoM llY .... Of oi-& oontrHtln9 Coufllrr
wood ~. lllOtedlble
tow prloe ol I 105,000
with lt0,000 down,
ttOl7Jrno P9)'9 .. • Oont
ml11 thl• one, CALL
NOW •
8UIL0£A'S LOSS, drt·
m1llcally AEOUCEO to
H ll IMMEDIATELY.
BRAND NEW 3000 1.f.
cuatom. ll30.000. Cal
tor eppt. NOW .. "AE M>OGIM, Ut-1211
l ••••11
-.,.
91Q ., .. ., .. .,., ,,. ·-----""' ma ---ii
pfonafllp tennt• c°"''. tH0.000 tat1ftt. Atl
1J.ll11t-I03t
WALITI ..
~l1e0000bttlltl
adrift 2 iie llome •I ....... &.,..,~
'·"" IOen ..,, .... .. o.ty 2nd T.D. Won't
.... c.I "°" •1-1110.
1t,.\i·l 1H 1'. \I
•<'I ... I I
•
I·
I
1;
I
I [ " • l T I' I I I
• A D N Y I I I ~
IALPIC r I I I
llTllTIL:Um
LIW•LIWmm ...
llllmmetll'I pool. and OWMllnl 11118 IUfrounCI Ille 2 *'Y ........ pride
ol owner1111t Oerden VIia. ,,01111-'*'r, •
oot91ed "'"'"°"'· ~ my ,,....... ..... w/e!ltrl
l\fda•a•IW&r OIOHI
..._Mtou ... lt'°" tor lfdod bdrm .or
-uletet ''""'"'"'· Hit
''"'"''"''"' •••• to open atalroaao and .,.,.,,., ... , ...... '"'· ..... '° Ind • •.too
.. ... dfl """· ... .... -.JqllDft U .ft en. IM , .... HftflftO .... ... . -···" .. If"
--~----
.. Orono• CoHt DAILY PllOTIWedl'l•td•v. October 13, 1912
Real E1t1t1
P!!t~.!~P!~!!~.~ .. '!!~.'!.~!1!.'!.'f ... ".!. ~.~ ........ f~P!!'9.~ .. ~m!lr!P.1/IA~ .. ~r.!!!!P.!f .&.rr.lf~ ~=::." ~'1:::;,"
,,__, fHt 6 lfll 011 ,J ltllf f!ftr...~~{lf.ff •• l.'M •11tl•flH .. ....,, L..j /.lff l-'l•llf ._.,, l,1~f •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••u•••••• ............... r ••• r.... ,,. ,,. "" a...a J.14f :-r.-. .. .,, .0111 •••• ••• r. .....• r..-•• -. ..... 1 l!..t• .... u14 I!. • 111f ...... 1. flaHtlll ..... ~.7-........... agec1ou1 4 bd. 3 ba, '"' ...... ..:........... ... Tll ILIPPI • Lu•ury 111;c110, ,, .. HIO. rr: ••• snn ...... u:s. rH!f.nfH ........ ..
1aot Pl Taggart 12 B . 84 Ac1H zoned 111·4, 10 1f/~1" A~~:m:f~1111• 3 bd 3 b• Fml~ 1m 11111 3 Bdrm 2b• ipou phone. maid M rv, •P•• BAV TIMllR8 1 IR 1 la. encl ..... .,... IOO Pet1ect Monaoo. 8p1nl1h Home, guHl ·mo •1 • rm .':iciln rm. )eou'u l. l t2110/mo ' .... l1llO wk 4tt·3015 8p~lou1 1 Bt. trpla, pool patio, t 110 vi'Gi'ori'~'
113 PolnMttll 1295,000 hou1e, horu cottel, ~Ina. tffw. 11000/mo .,., ti IHfj JJff & lnOfe. 84e.t N 3 • a41o mo 53l-Ntl
IOICIOUI CdM due>le• border• town. penoremlo It HI I ti(71u1 rent. Jenn.. .. Bd 2b b If ••• m••••••••••••"••• -T---------1------He2 CrMtvlew 1310,000 vllwa. WICklflburg. Atl· ,... ., e1&·•H 1 ' • rm, a. ..ut ul OCl!AN,_.OHT Oht 2•4 Br own"°'*' 2 Ir. t'I• Be., leyehOrM dOHhOUM zon•. H60.000. 11 141 NM<lyll9W3bdrm,3ba. ld~t unlt.11200/rno ly weak 01 monit\ 1rplc,p001.•P•.1t1eched b11t1ci.C M 2bd, 11>1,
ALSO 337-2555. 2 flrepllCH . 2 011 GI'· Cl.OH TO BEACH: Brand 1..!!~8Hl0f811e1'! .. ~1'~... 513.1913 11•1•Q•· No pell. Avail Ill 0 0 . 0 0 . 18 3 0 0 I
New VlctOtlan on B1Jlboe 81lcon~. Oerdener, -• new 2 Ir. belCh houM. """ or_.., •• "' now. H :z&tmo. &3t·4914 Hl·t534 ____ _
1111nd. 15911,000 For IHl.11 bar, m crowave. I.HM all urn• paid , t kyllght, The Bluff•: 3 Bdrm condo, Wlnlet rlfltll• 2 BR 1 IA Old llOUM no Nice, quiet up1111re 2 IR,
O\Ofe lnlo cell 8111 M•r· •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 1:~J:3ift., 8 PM .un deek. Iota of WOOd. 2 b •. LI n d • P 1111 . now •v911•ble C•ll ~•• ~Id.OK All 11111'pe1 2 bl, apt . 1580, mo11 ~. 11,.,,. fa,.JiiH lrplO. bll·l111. 2 cer ,.. s 1 2 o o / mo . 1 • •. tl&NIS tUln ,. 15' Hamilton . 1575: ulll• lnol. 822 HemlltOll
Unique Homee •••••••••••••••••••••• llQI, orHI toe. at 11 700.1900, 873·7881• ,.., llAIUlllllT 841--0783 8t. 548-0477 17&.eOOO: t75-6e&e It-I •J•• ••Yflaan Wll HertlOfd, drive by & then I
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-afll o# .,. -_, cell Me-7979. 281. 281 Condo nr Hoeg, 111.f 111 t1n11T Ill E elde, n .. r 17th 8t. 2 •••••••••••••••••••••• 5 b•drm. 3~ beth wt . pool, dlhw1hr. no pell. Bdrm a pt. 1470/mo. NYU YILUI! H IALNA llWI terrlllc main b•y view. ON THE SANO H llO mo. 709.7033 l•T Tiii l!utllde '825-MllO/mo. 1300 1ee. Jovce Wall,,
-..
Ador1bl1 3 bdrm houM &p1clou1 tamlly nome Vl•w o t Ill• ooHn: 2 2 er. 1'~ 11. TownhouM. A /M 53 {295 & gue11 l'lou11. $850/mo. wl dock 14.000/MO . 8drma, 1'A ba, guarded DELUXE 3 BA 2-A be, 2 Furn. rental• bl. week °' 111 bulll·lna. lndry rm, • Ill · 1•
2 •tory, 2 bdrm1, 2'h BAYFRONT wllorevtr Ma rtha Ma cn ab . gate. pool. aeuna. gym, 1ty, IO• hone yard & monlh.Agte7 •8 t'TO. carport, yerdtbalcony, 2 bd. 1 b•, WHt·•lde
belhl. dining 11M. Ill•· vt...., 4 Br 11800/mo. 844-8200. MOO/mo. 2131333·3548 up111lre p1tlo Nt11 8210 0c .. n Fronl. 38r 1mlll pet OK. location 1600/rno, 1160 place, bar, doublt g•· BA y FR o NT 3 e 1 01 902·1298 t>eeeh. 111 I 1 .. 1. MC\I· low« dphc, lmmed ocou· TSL Mgml. 8-42·1003 ucurlly C a ll Beth
rage. large pool & club· 1 1500/mo .,8 C d 8 rlty. I t200 P•< mo. PlllCY tll June 16. 1760 Fliepli ce , poo . d llh· 531·5230 1f1er 4 pm
houM. Wiik 10 lhOf)t a w .. 11ty eavtront rent•I• "' ' on o. 1 'h '· cptat 113t-6881 mo 12131 698-1709 eve market. A1klng .S 139, from c7ootllp. drpa, clubhM. Jee, pool wllher, pvt patio. X Lg 2 br 1p1, clean. quiet, NE 900 · Walerlront Homei . In~ $550 mo. 788-7833 Large 4 Bdrm, clolld In Oerdlfl 2 Br. on l!/lldt Co1t1 MH1. Enc o•· -~ · ~ patio. S t1p1 10 b11cn. ~ SllllO. 667-2841. rage. U76 mo pell
C•1l1 #HI 3114 Etgln. tgenl. 11200/mo yrty. 873-2607 1 BA, new P•lnl, cpt1. 659·&183 '""· ' 11/ .. 1 /111•' 31H •••••••••••••••••••••• 531·9481 drapH , d/w, no pt11.
UYFIHT ..,_ 6 bllll to ocean. Eleganl 2 bllhl, pwder rm. Vary 5111·21711 Loe 1400 pkJ1 MC dee>
COUNTRY CLUB LIVING IN N!WPOAT B!ACH
A 10111 1nvlronmen1
epertment communlly on
lh• Upper Bey Prlv11e
OIUbhOUH and h .. llh
1p1, 8 tennl1 c;outll, 7
pooll, OloM 10 bualMH,
1l1po11. 1'11hlon 1111nd.
Convenie nt 1hop1 on •II• Unlurnl1hed blCM-1011. 1 lo 2 bdrm 1pt1 and
townhOu-
SIS&O • $1000
8everll beohelor1 and I
Bdrm unit• 1111u11 tine
d11lgner furniture and
acceHOflel Move In to-
day or llMl\lt IOI tu111ra
u.. Smartly lurnl1hed
modtte open dally
On Jamtior .. Ad 11
San Jo1quln Hiiie Ad.
144-1100
-
lll·llOO 3&.48AhouM,clean.Call l mmac. Ava il now. 6 '7 -4 111 d1y 1 :
•••••••••••••••••••••• *m lllll 1.... 3 Br. 2 1tory townhouM. Z ''GOOD IAOO/mo. 2285 Miner St 1 bd. 1 b•. no pets Nice Lido ea ty 3 l>d. 2 bl hou11, gtr • 2 BA houM lh1t'1 fen-BR, lam rm & den. S87S pvt • comm po o I . 648·9H0, btwn t.4pm
673-1300 trpl , 2 pit's, wntr. cld. lllQI 111'•· lcldll mo. Ptulh cptl, 2'i'I bl, 1900/mo, 873·885e LIFE'' 111, 211, Ill, -----'A Block to bHch 2Br
•960/ S 80 pet1 WllCC>me. cedar and 111111. Sun· Newly decor. Ou pd, 3 OR, I\'\ b•, O•t. fpo, bright & "'l 1870 mo' mo 67 •03 84111. 639-11100 COii dee'-. dbl Cir pvt o•r.. WllTll 11na11 d .. nalla new .. ~,., 1696 " -1nc1 gar. "''"' · pool, :;: •• ,:0., .... ::".,~78 yrty. 9811·82 3 _________ ,s 1ep1 10 Bay 3 br. 2 1>1 fully malnt'd yard. No 3 & 4 Br. Clo11 to water. Vl~OUMO ,UN, bbq. no ~11. 842·0073 .,.,., " .,. ,,..,,.v. Wnt./•1111 IHI dining rm. gar. 2 p1t101. I Ir, 2 la. pet1. lnq, 527 18th St tum & unlu1n, reuont· .Soolal Actlvltlu E'1lde 28 r I be. up111l1t Be1Ghlron1 wlnlet retltal.
•••••••••••••••••••••• $725 Winter. O.,EN 3211 Frplc, 1•nge, ~ard, O•·· 900-8331 ble, 111 emenUIM. Broker D 11 •c t or• F 1 •• ''"h ,palnl Nr IChll , no O ct·M•y 44o 9 St•·
BUSINESS LOSS FOR· Sapphire. 844-0954, raga, no Pltl. Private. Ba•ll•flf• 876-4912. Sund 1 y W£atfleld pet1 1450/mo 531-81611 ttlor• 2 Br i 7ootmo. 3
CES SALE. Nice 4 Bdrm 875-8573 $750/mo. 111 pl\Je MC. Brllnch•BBO'i• • Br $500 Utlla paid Can 2'A bathe. Only $110,000 ----only. 848 w. 1811'1. St. .,,,,.., 3141 Newpor1 CrHI, OCtln Partlet•Plu• Pa.LY ''" n,., ,,,., Jiii b. I u I n I. h . d .
With 122,000 down and 11/HI 499-11117 •••••••••••••••••••••• view ••1<: condo, 2 br, m11en more. Be1utllul garden I PI• r.-. ••• U•••••••O••• 7141544..0814
111um• Hll,000 long ,,.,.,.,, J/01 •2 II II" 1400' 3 Br. 2 B• home. Hunt· den. ollk:1, 2 bl , formal Q" I A T P•tlolldecka. No pell 2 llUI YllW term loan. S t 050/mo. •••••••••••••••••••••• 51 •* lnglon Harbour 1111. I din. wet·b•r • t1nnl1 , RI C " I AT I 0 N: children welcom. l'rom Dana POlnt'• MOii 2br, 2ba, b1y/oce1n view Better thin renting altar Wlnltlf Aant11. Lgr 2 bd. 1 Prvt dining room. deep 1760 rno. 848·8914 11ter po o I•. t I c . S 1200. T 1 n n 1 1 • F r 1 1 2 Bdrm IV. Bllh• 1840 .. clvded aoenlc bluff . condo. pool, t1cuzzl.
tu l>eneflll. A a H In-ba, lrpl. p1t10. W/O, Very pll• carpets, moll appllc 8pm. 873-3313 LlllOlll (pro & pro 2 Bdrm 2 Bathe 1585 Llk• newl Only 4 11n111. 2 MOOrlly bldg $926/mo
vee1men11 752·2197 cla•n · 19501 mo 500 w/ encl o•r Kida fine. 2 Br 2'J\be townhouH . N-port Shorff, 2 br, 1v. 1 hop)• 2 H 1111 h 395 W. Wiiton Br widen Xtra 111 prlvlle ~::.;:"33ny. 846'
2016 or Weal OCMn Front. C1ll 8"1, open 7 dlyt. Coll. C 831 5683 Of 842 4006 F I .... ,,, I I. 635-5088 or 997.3970 •538-0191• CIOH to H11bour & bl, ':!'k ~3be7 ech. "°° lub1•S1un•• • • cP•l11'08.,r~m 26/mo YALY ocetn view 2 BA 1 wn•ll '' aillllf ocean. U SO. 831-1288 mo .,.,1.vu • .,.. Hydromaauge• Large 2 e r. new paint, • u ·v44 I or M-F •••••••••••••••••••••• D••• 1il•I 31•• 2 BA 1 Ba duple•, pvt Gary 8 1 SwlmmlfM!•Oolf carpet. 1s251mo. Stu 9·5, M 3·0212 · 81. 2 c1r 1pace1 1700 AftH•llflllll JZOO ••••••••••••••••••••':? p.ilo, new paint. $546 1 11 view 0 hubor, Or1vlng Range mo . 8 44 -6780 or •••••'•••••••••••••••• Exec. 2 br. 2 01 condo, mo 833-8182 /m•t 1144 ocean & llghti, Lrg he>uM •I Au T 1 f u L 497"2338 0' 54o-3eee. 2 Bi den. 2 bl. trplo, new _5_4_8-_3_1_8_9 _____ ~ GOVEANMENT LANO ocean view pool tennli •••• •• •••••••••••••••• on 1 ICl'I + lot on Cllll A I' A _.TM INT I : B 1 au t It u I 2 8 r . 2 8 a crpl. lrg view dlCkl, Im·
Sold for as low u $7 50 Compl lu;n, 7S0·948S * 0 I I Y I I • t ' -1 WlllU Or. 3BA. 3 lull bathe. can S I n O 11 • .. 1 & 2 townhouH. trplc, patio, med occupancy, Aglnt
a n ecre For In t o (6·51.240.3201(aft.81 SUI* 3normdetlchedhomM ~::,::.rr!.'~1~ ~~~ 9edroom1•Furnllhed lndry rm, good loc: !~~4mo Agent
2 Br 2 9•. ltom S525. No
pe11. AOtOU from N-·
port Beech GOii CourM
S45 .. 855 3121888-4347 Ext JL·19 , j PrlCM grMt 1or lemlty on In dtltllent ,, ... Avella· kitchen•. t llllng r,;"4 & Unfurnl1htd•No $560/mo. TSL Mgmt. Allllal•I• Ba•l1•1t•• budget. h11 111 mOdern b I• Imm• d 11t11 y . frplc. Fncd pvt hm In P1t1•~odtl1 Open 642-8221 tA2· 1003 OCEAN VIEW, 2 l>d, 2 b•
L..-•-• J lf.ej 3140 convenience Here c unll $800/mo on 1 year leaM. midst 01 "Irk Unique dally 9 to 6. WTltH duplex lrpl. new carpet• Step• To Th41 B•ldl. 2 Br.
lflllf ~• I H •••••••••••••••••••••• I a~ 5.3n °•1"" ,..:_ Five olhera to chOOH " • 0 L .a & d tlP•• No Pell. 2 81. 3 tennla court• •••••••••••••••••••••• DELUXE CONDO Near 1 ..... t. •·v .., """' . lltxlbl1 hm 3000 111. laWllw 2 Br. 1 B• pool 11de apt, 11125/mo 875· 154 1 or acrou lht 1tr1t1 Very UIT 0.1. llPLEI beach. 29r 1 ~ be, J•c. 4 Br. 2 B• M ... def Mai. from. We re the onll to S2600tmo. A & H In· ..... lndry rm, bit-Ina. No (2 13) 318·3145 c111n. New Cerpet. 1760
lfgyrds.only$142,000 no k ld1 , no Piii $800 mo . Ownr ~l\ldbrld9c Beaul.48reuc.hmon .~ .. l ... lft/h , 1.4354450 29r,garige,neerocHn, 875·0124Mon-Frl.Jo
...... 4t• .•••• 1,,...lll······~
Pine Knoi Mot .. Oii Cc>Mt
Hwy. NI •••P• to-. oce1n Wkly rat11
tA0-~40
1m a PU111
Rt11onebl• rat•• Kit· etieneltM. pt\OMI, maid
Hrvlce , Z ch111nel mo-
vie• 8ANDPIPER MO·
TEL, tH7 Newpofl Blvd.
CM 8'&-t137
UUUllAH .. , ...
Wkly te ntlll 115 up.
Color TV. free cottee.
helled pool & 11epe 10 -n Kitch'• I Vl ll •
085 N. Coeet Hwy, ~una Buoh. 494·&294
V1t1tl1• ln11J141$0 ...........•.•••.•••••
For rent over Cflflllll'IM &
N ... Y .. 1·1, 3 br, 4 bl &
loll Victorian home In
A•pan. ColOlldO. Dally
maid Hrvlce. Xlnt IOC Vi ew of A1p1n moun.
llln• CIOM to town Alto
h11 baby grand pl1no
$460/nlgnt PleaM cell,
780· 1340 Of 700-9488.
l t•l•I• 11 1'u1 4JIO .••.•.................
FEELING CAAMPE O?
Xtrt l1r~ 1 Br. 11ep1 to
~an w/d, Piiio, rec 1m.
$37S 876-3231 . .,~, .....
Luxury condo. AtTy. 1111 .•
Wiii thlfl, $550
da 752 -9442 , tv
840-2434
l ... IUTI WUTlll
M1le 25·36. llrllghl .
non· tmoktr. to s hift
Ille• MW 2 Bdrm. 2 b•.
San Ju1n C1plat1eno
condo Flrepl•C•. pool.
1acur.11. only mlnutff to
be1ch & Oan1 POlnt Hbt
1200/mo. plu1 'J\ ulill1le1
Gerl11td (7141 1131·2040
Of 498-9768
Shr lg lux hme w/prol
person. $285. 111. lut.
dtp 986-8479
MIF 19·30 ahr 3bd 2ba
Steps to beacn. (N 9 )
341h SI $275 675·3317
22•bcl,11Mvyltllkerool, pool,tannlt,veryprlvell. clelnhOme,quletllreet. i1 ..... ve11men11752·2197 ptll. Call tor 1ppt. mo. Yrly rent. C1ll Kate
I.I. flHOLllllE $800/mo Ca ll Gayle 759-aOOe. r. landtcepld lot 1 8.,. TSL Mgmt 842-1803 ocHn view. balcony 973.3599 Sa1-Sun.
835 90 11 or 1 v11 Re.iltl inwon -t catm pnoo"'it 880 Irvine $480/mo. 2131402-2857.1-----------1 1 yr old, 2 2·bcl units.'"'. •92.1.110 . ·-...... , -•••n -·· ..... s 2 • NWPT HOTS-29r. 2B•. 2 Br Apt to 1h1r1 . blk to oce1n No down " Chll=l~t• OK Fncd 551 ·:lllOll • p •. M r 0 r • • n (at 16th) Uk ~H~ '"'b ~ 1 c~~:~. ~v82 Apl A 1pacloui. lmmed occ. 1200/mo ·~ ullla C111
po11lble. We can deal. L••••• ,.,,j Jl41 ward, pvt g"';rana . .;,.95. C 1t:t "~rrann I'll"', lnlnr 1144-9804. II 10 5 pm, (714) * 1104 • nu, ~ r ap 1· $750/mo. 845-7400 George 11 642-8381 alt :&Jheryl 1140.1814 or ••'••••••••••••••••••• ~t Bui op-;'; t°d lllTILI Mon·frl. ...,.,. ..... ,... ~~:ro ~~b:~:.4~~~~ Studio 1pt, relrlg. wit bar. 7PM & 8AM.
981 1~1~9:1pe~Stz00~. 2~~ Cost ' •Y• 2 10 4 bdrm•. •titting at 4 BA. 3 Ba Nwpt Or ell 1700 16th St. so•. No peta. 2850 Harle. 1276 "'t 1•1391 L=~~I~ 3 .~ :.r~~-p~t1y M/F nonamkr wanted to ~l!!t!!!f .• !.~!! 4911-5304, 499-4127 •SS0-8190* '860 10 11395 condo. lmmac. Agl Car· (Dover at 18th) 649·2447 ol parking. 1 l>IOck from •hr new 5 t>r SJC home
Old«Ouplex ll4llt 45tht1 L MJ, J :JlfZ OCll 6n.lghtV1ew.48r.11m . lene,67&-l77l (714)842-5113 28A28ailudlo,$575.M••ll.,I•• 1>each,yt1rlyr1 ntal :::P•.1275·496-7840 \
NB. 3 bf. 2 bl. UPllllll .~1.-.~~ ... r. .. ! ....•... rl mOOO. 2'"'8•. AV .,... LIDO ISLE; 4 Br. 3 81 & CPI•. dips, encl 1111. no ... ,. 3140 $500/mo 900-8480
2 bf, 1'A b• down11ilr1. 2Br 281 on golf courM, 1 mo. 831·1153 den. 11400 "'> pell. 675-e&Oe ...................... 2 Br 1 ea. upllllra. en-3 br. 2'"' b• condo, $335
Wiii NII 11 la tor $700, $695 mo •Eutilde 2 bf, 1 be, 222 Via Palermo 1485. 2 Bdrm. retrlg. pt· Oelu•• poolalde xtr1 ltrge cl1d balcony, 1 block incl utll + $100 dtp ,
000 Of wm bulld to ault Tl~re Del SOI Alty Kida ok, peti, 1 1595. 875-7l68. oo. no pell, ldulti pref, 2bt, 2 ba, bltn1, dewnr. from b..,ch. xlnt perking 553-8388. 631·5814 •
!Of $875,000 & up. (plans 497.1744 Utllt pd. 631-4320 Agt. P1nln. Point 1' br, 2 b•. OCEANFRONT BALBOA 724·A Jam11. 873-7787 1'1\> mllet l>eacn. No pell. •vall. year-round '"'"' A11p fem, furn rm prlv be.
: ,·~~rto;:•: 0:':~n,i•,d~ Mt •Ntl lf.ej J/11 2 Br. 1 81. patio. enclld ~!~111 1~,o~•:,~· *!0g~ ;rfd~ !':n~e~.'·n~11p~1~: PINE BLUFF APTS $500tmo. S
39
•
15392
l&OO/mo. 960"
8460
' pool, lac. F V *240 mo
714-544-2484. ••••"••••••••••••••••• 11111ge 191'\0ed cerpet1 1900 873-61140. 2 8r 2 a.. Clllld Ok. P•· WNIWI .. •PenthOuM' 2 i>t. apec-Incl utll 964·2380 eve LIDO ISLE · 3 bdrm, l•m & dre~. No .,911 SS25 7511-9182 °' 973..0950 tlo ~ frplc end g11 Spec 1 & 2 br, lovely t1cul11 oct1n & b1y Congenl1I, nut MIF 10
Duplex on the nnd 30th rm, 4 81, 11700 mo. plu1 ..curlty. 548-5442 Newport Cr1113 br, 2'hba. OCEANFRONT Winter gu 110~•. di1hw11he~: plnH a 11ream1. H C. v I• w · S 120 0 I mo 1hr lge 31>1 121>1 apt.
et. NB. Newly remOdeled or 770..5429 •S"' l'a-L..'--pool, tennl1. No pet1. ienlll to t-1/83, 3 bet, 2 ape. lndry rm. M 26/mo. g1te1. •ntry by phone . 848-1397 CdM. $300, 111 & IHI
In and out. 3 t>t .. 2 ba. OCEANFRONT 2 l>drm. ,;,........,llEllllO't'~ $960 mo. 842·3490. cer gar. pet1 Prefer I•· SPMC 831-8107 lg• rec art1 Incl. oym. Bob 760-0135 d~::~!~:ir!. b~in.1 1~~ ~n?n~y~ ~l~r~ 8';:,& ,:1111 '·!:.~IWlllW•ll1 2 BA 2 Bl. cpt1. drpe, encl With 40' dock lor power mlly. 535-<>343
· E/Slde C.M. cul• baonetor pool 6 IP•· 9411-5591 N:~t.H~~1:1 r:;,~,~~!c!o;t,~ IAVINE 5 bd, 3 be. frpl,
down OWC b. elance at Cinnt ry VIiiage Mol>llt 9'UUI gar, 1 750. No Pltl. bolt. 3 8r 2'A Bl oonclO VerHlllH mini 1 Br. on apt, $400/mo. + $300 2 & 3 Bdrm apt1. Avall. $700 Incl utll. 875-8202, pool, 1annl1. Jogging
13.9% fOf 5 y11. or .. t tor Hom• Pirk 2 ... 2 t>a 2 9drm1. 2'J\ bath• In 875-e«MI In W. Newport. S 1 t50 couit, n .. r beach, rec MOUrlty. No ~·· JO';Ce lmmedletely. $525-$1150. 83l·8000 111111 Shara ut111 NO
t I .735 · '"" • oa d Ilk I"' wto dock 11350 with lac · aec . S545t mo Wal\ze 631-t2M .... , Frplc, d /w, g1r1-. No * * * 2 BA, nr Hoag. male•. k' .. •. nats. 1mkrs tumm1r r1n a• • pool No Pll• cio.. 10 r en • commun ,, WOOOIAIOOE $1100 n.' 2131887·329 2 d1y1, · -.. · •-"" .--000. Armitage A .. lly. •hop1 & r11taurant1 •velllt>le now. Oecotator Spec 4 bf, 2-A ba, nlc:ely doek. e 1100 2131357·5900. STUNNING large 1 & 2 8r P 111. w 11., P •Id 1495. 3 petlot, no pell Pref fllght 1111nd1nt
714-544-2484. $7
5
00
2
5-tmo yrly. 873·3885: ~·,r~·S~ 1U~l~tle~ ~f j l1nd1c aped, lam. rm. New ~Iron! tiome. 3 •-.• C.''tat .. lf JT•f g111 den ept. 710 W. 18th.
545·2000 AQenl, nor.. 831·3888, 846-5822 :::.~3~; 552
•
9
048 & -~''t11n/ 1· 1648 1-772-1801 7 2 lrplc. petio.. Lake. pool Br 4 Ba. f\Jrn S2260/mo, -I ,, s 3Br. 2'AB•. lrplc dbl g11, Lrg 2 Br 2 8•. -~· n••, ,,. "' --· · 8 5· 311 • tennla. •~o -1327 , unfurn. $2000. C111 Bob •••••••••••••••••••••• WIO ......... ••50 ...... ·-H •
I ' • / I .. v., Oc I I lk '""""·11p . .., mo. $525. 0"1 831 -347", ou11m111 wanted •• 200 •II'"•• I I 00 3 BA 3 Ba or 2 SA 2 81. 559.•1••, olc 720-7373. Koop 11 759·1221. Hnvew. urn we 10 lbr or 2br upatalt1, refs. 984 4•"3 1 52"' "oo• ' " e E •••••••••••••••••••••• ocaanlronl. wk ly/mo. 3 Br 2 Ba. 1736/mo. No v "'° bel c h 2 Br 1 'J\ 81. r•qulr1d. no p111, 352 • "" • • ..,.... " 845,..300 •1Mt• mo Non-imkr · 1 '· llPIJI TU UILTIR 752-9468 or 873--0&a1 P•ll. 808 J o inn St. For L111e. Woodbridge Bluffs 3 br, 2'A b1, green· $500/mo. 225 La Po-Vlctorl1, 84S-8181. L•rge & private 2 Br 2 Ba. 1 BA-pool-block to ~~~~:3~eaa. C•ll •tt &PM ,. tmlTHm NPT CREST Condo 844•1638 , Condo, 2 bd, 2 b•. nr 1>111, n .. r pool. 1 1200 loma 637-7918 VLLA EO AA unlt. encl1d garage. 2 ooetn-tlngle '350
Sen Clemente pride 01 Beiu tllul 3 Br vu· NptHg1seree.3 8r2~8• a d ult pool & lake mo. 8kr 844-0134. ~·aid!" fa!u .. =:o:P~:a. block• trom Iha water 942.5002 Spect1cu11r view. pool • condo laml"' rm lrplc 1700/mo Call t v•• ,._ ~~I I A,,,,.,.,, . , . 1525/mo 9e0-8460 •P•. 1ennl1, Sec o••• OWMl'lhlp, modern spa.; $1000/mo Agt 645-0295 • ., • • 714-278-8322 -··~· llU OIW, garage. WtrlgH ·-C'' 311'~ $2 ,. n11n 1ty11 4 unit •Pt ------'~----! 11 u n d r Y 'm • g 1 ' · "--'-"H •~11 U•l•t•lliH pd. SS25t mo & 1300 Nr 8Ncti. 3 bd. 1v. 1>1. ~! ••• •!!!!!!.' •••••••• ? 4olmo + lite Htkp'g
hol.IM with oceen/hllls & OCN FAONT·28r. no pell, S82Slmo. Joyce Weitze, Be1ut. decor. Turtlerock •• !.~!~~•••••••~•• •••••••••••••••••••••• dep 2324 Elden, Mgr crptt, drpa, bltn1, frpl, 3 br. 2 be. patio, 011 a _7_5_9_·1_4_2_8 ____ _
golf oourM vi-. CIOH non-amkra. water, h .. t •gt 631·1288 view home, 2 multr l,,_IT IUOI .. I ... lll••I Ull Apl 1, 548-4147 enc 1111 . USO . C e ll watet, seo<>tmo. + 0!4•· Mii 25+ Lib grad. 1tu·
to everything, only 3 pd 1111 June 1. M26 mo.,3 B1 2'i'I 81. 1800/mo. 1u1te1 lie $1260 Agt 15"'"• • •••••••••••••••••••••• S36-0921 & d t .. ,. old & h Ilk 642-3837 . 848-50M Sa 1 2282 lvx rm apt, prof. deo'd, 2 Br. IPI garage. No pell. Ne11 18th/Pomona, t 81, nlng dip 53 1 ·3565 ,:' tuc:'n ~~ ==~~
iew1 New a::~.~ WESTCLIFF • 3Br. 381.' ~ ~ ~2.!s~ ;,~~2·i11' 0 t. WOODBA,IOG~ ARBOR ~~,:~dl~nggrot:,:'d :~~;;;~35 ~~7'A Coral. ~~ d. ~w,:;:1pd1lr.•1· ~~d· 1 '1tbp~· :~~n~.~.rp~~d d;rp.' ,_ev._S_C--0------l from aand. $290 & 'II utll occupy 3 Bdrm .. 2 l>ath dtn, fully/ ptly turn LAKE p 1 id ....... ""'"' " "'' lo • Nr · · •neral Ho1p. 845-0340 city & OQHll view ap1. 11 SHOO mo. 6<48-'"3$ · N111 new 3 Br 2'A 81 • 'vete M<lUrlty QI', ry rm, wtk to"""''· E·BI fro 1 Lltll 1 1 ok, no pell. $426. Agent. P•t . "" yd. 1415 Call 38r. frplc. 2Ba. 1tove, ---------ippllcabla & ranl Iha twnhM, fenc:. yrd, 2188 Oiied community, forrnet 1700. 89'C·8821 ...., y 3 r ' 281 •$11
800•· no f .. H2--0217. 538-0921. q>ll, Avell NO¥ 1. $535 Non Smkr MIF 25·35 yr1 • Cl 1 31•1 Mt~ $700 8•" ""10 model. prole111onall" ........ llOf'f • mo 111~1 891 1••• 11t 1111 ~ d-Call other 3 apartments for ••• •••• I ,, ·~ · ...,, . ..., ,.-~at'""' ... _t locatlon' C••'Ml•I••• mo. 876-3087 3 bd. gar. frpl, p1t10. Av all now 1 Br 1 Ba · .. • ""''" · ~. -.-Income. Seller will llelp •••••••••••••••••••••• E11t1ld• condo. 3 t>r 2 ........, .., .... N H I h I I t d h 754-o4 51 ••I 53 or finance a S AVE buyer Beach. tennis. guarded b ,._ I""' 2 • oq the llk•I 2BA, 2'n9A, ll.I•t•l•AH ,41$ Charming. pvt. 2br w/ s:-:oport..:01111~·· ar••· U~I. fl ~p '11 IWI r. A,utrlnl• ,., ... " 831-1746 -·Lynn
thou11nd1 of dolla 111 ghate.,n....,2 'emodeltl townPh. ,.!..':":~2;~~· Q•· lg patio & meny JClre• •••••••••••••••••••••• aundeolc. Ip, itove, ,.. . to . 9-5001. pr vat• pt o. ngle O•• fl l/al11• Jllf AEOUCEO Hlllng price om . r. P• o, ..,,.... -" Incl. • prtv llnel I i.cuz. EXl!C. RETREAT In New-trig. 1700 innual/mo Large 3 Br. 2 Be. Town· r111;· Nol ~•ti. Wiier •••••••••••••••••••••• Wanted Pref M. 26·3S.
of SUS.000.00 le way 493.4947 3 bd, 2 be. dlw. huge r l. No peta. 11250 mo. por1 Boh. 1 8r pertthou· Avell. Nov. 111, 308~ houN In quiet comple•. ~t~ 0 0 I mo IUWlll INf• 3 l>d. 2 bL 33rd St. BELOW current replace-yard. w11her & dryer. 651-t417 Of 833-8201 M . Securl'l, pool, apa, Coral Ave. Appl only lar~ POOi. gardlfl Mt· ·Agent, no,.. NB 8••crt, patio, b ...
ment COlllll Prlnclp•I• .... ,, U•lmnldH l850. 548-7044. Wdbrg twnha: 28r. 2b•, X4.~ie1• 2 • 8 8 e 8 . (213) 217·2120 tlnl: $875. 1145-338 1, ....... wau YIUJIE m ~n:-1::~'":.".~~·;
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Ylll Call owner at C,";;;;r•••••••••;;;,~ 28r. 38• lovely twnhM, 30 lrlatwOOd. 1700. f77 000 On Grand c1nal: Spa -e7 5t 49. Lrg 2 BA townl'louae ~.!'t~ 1~~! :.:;,r; 11~~ 9M-.5ee5, daye •••••••••••••••••'!.~~ pool, ape. gar&. ctp. no The Sprlnga: Condo 2nd • cloua upper 1Pt. 2 br, 1 E'1ld1 1er 1 be . pool, apll. encl 011. trplc:. ,,._, -.. t 1725 875 7183 fir 18r. 3' Stf'MtnWOOd. FHA 1uum1ble 111. be. Yt1y 1760. 873-8457 l i u ndry No pets. Hunt. Hrbr. from 1646. from 1540. 2 bdtm troml Shr lux hme wit, non
642-0138 IEITALI Pl 1· mo. • $526. Agt 641·6032 n.v.1n1er111. 848-6188 ll/L--13116/mo. 833•7 890. Chlldr111 OK. 840-8807 1595, Townhou1e from tmkr, mature, '300. 11t.
Y .. rty.Waekly·Wlnter, 2, 3 BR. Santa Ana Hgta. 1 LEASE/OPTION S -846-l9'C7 2 1885 + POOll . llnnla, IHt. dep. Aefl. 840_.999
3 4 8d 81 tncd ..,. .. ~d •750 PAAKC AEST PETERS . · pecta· I ,_ •ff Bl I 81. pa11o. gar. no w111rl1ll1, pond1I G111
• 'AOl'mn•· IULn I ~-~131 ,-• • HOME. 3 Br 2-A e.. ttvt cullt view. Security ge-•••• ~:':!~!~ ••••• '!~ •• ! ,.._, 1 er. wtgarage, No p•t•. 8Hch, Warner, 10, cooking 6 h .. tln9 Fem, rmmat• wanted to !!f!!'!f.!!!r.!!r.!!J!f • tam rm, Dtn'g rm, 2 cer tld Harbor Rid~. Ten· 2 bdrm, 2 bl,_ dpl• ~· $410tmo 1450/mo. 847·8948, paid. Fiom San Diego w tPac 3 BA. 2'1o ba
M trade dbl wide mobile PllP I llW U11 UY oar wt o~ner. eppl'•. nit. Pool. Spe. 11995/mo yrty. Mtture non--amlira, 846-5577 848-940 Frwy d rive North on Full facll condo SC
home &/or 38 t houH, ••UIElm 4 bdrm, 3 1>ett1 condo. comm pool. Jee. 1976. •t 14891<.. 700-9307 no pete. 1700 x 3 9Nch to McF1dden to Plaza "" 1276 mo Tuetln for partlal dwn In· lllA pool tennl• etc $776 552 51M7 2 3 7"" ... E·SIOE. tunny 2 Bt. II•· S • 1 w I n d v 111 1 &45-'35e . . . . m. ... '' A1.a1l•••I• •• ,.1-"-~ 1 I ···•195· -7•9792 rage. deck. S450tmo. g. ---------com• property. (7 14) 17M171 Call 876-4277 8N 1,L • ,.. ...-.-.-·•••••••!~ ••• ~~ ~ (714) 873-3988 100 211t St. 54&-01e&. (714)893-5198. ROOMMATE WANTED 561·t390 _________ _,, • • T I Ml ltralghl. no-tmoke, HOUM with pool, dbl O• euuuuuouou u ,,, ... /IJW ,,,, 1.425 Ulll l)d. 1Br [)pix. 4 17 .... 4IOI
C.M. Huge quality duplex l1rfr ... /F•r1 j rage, tncd yard, 6 Ame. ~A=·~EAH F~ •••••••••••••••••••••• E. Bay Ave .. Bllt>oe No L:~:,e~r .1 ~-~~;!': •••••••••••••••••••••• :::.~4:5.':v:~;:~~· 3 ftplc • .3 gar. copper Avall now, lge dock. 38r opllbuy. 1615. 8Ht. hm on . F\lrn 3 bdrm, 2 b•, mo-peta. 547-1165 $495/mo. Avell. 11·3. • Stclll1ly Oates HO & up with kitchen, plmb'ng. $125K. usu· wllam rm. outatandlng l 539-8190, Coat. Many 180 deg. vu Of hlrbOr. dern Soeni.n apt. Slape weetlly. <>o.anlront Mo-Quiel, meti.n F 22·30 lhr mable loen at 12% Int. toe. $3000/mo. oth«a evallebfe. t urf. mtna, 3br, 3b1, to No Bey Wlntet S800. Yt11ly 1 Br. carpet•. 845-8825 •'(IOI ' "IC Aoom , .. 815-8740 3 bf, 2 bl apt on l>MCl'I,
S 175Klolr Agen t O..•et•-..Ht ! Hcurlty, u una. 1p1. 873..0571 d r 1 p11 . no pate. LllftY Ollltl • l l :lllflPalo0Ap1s N 8 Frplc 25' plllo
842·"8e. Av111 furn '7!'~nfurn. ~!M.?~! •••••• 1.¥.f SIOOO/mo. 498-7ooo. ,.,._. l405tmo. 976-8808 2 er. 2 81. 1ncludlll9 2 : ~~:!':,L~~:'a°:. UHi& NAii S285, ht. '1111 & H C
,__,,,,, F1nt11tlc locallon wt .,.., ltw ..... EMERALD 8AY. 3 br, 2 I _1_ 1 •111 Studio ~t. '350/rno, ulll. car garage wtop1n1r, • J09 to 8ucfl i Snoot •Tll 111 Brian 873-1519
• llH v11w1. 28r. H C. bldg, Dena POlnt w.-..... d• bl. 1000 aq. ft, ffpl, bflck •••• !~!~:~ ••••• !.... Incl. 111 • tut. Alt 6 wood bUmlng trplo, moat Wkly tent1l1 HS up. Pref M 25.35 .,,, 3 br. 2 .;J;!~!!~........... pool S995tmo. tenet to .e-i ;~ 4 pttlo, with tP•· 11800. 4 bdrm ~· lncludet a. wtcdyt 1183-82211 u1111 paid , view of Color TV, lrH coffee. be on 35th St, N.8. ~
-LUe hie/...... bdrm1. 1960 io 1 1350 2l31878-22H. nen, dithM.' cir TV, utl!P ~ lw llM Jiii ltr .. ma & waterl1ll1. =~ =··'•~~ to dee. p1110 S225/ut111.
lllTA AU
100% IMMd With enr~ tNe .... tlnanclng. Nlo-
ely ml lnlllned tlll up ~Ina only 4 ye•ra old. I qu11l1y len1n11 $1,
CM0.000.
NITA Ill&
20.000 aq, ft tllt 119 bull-dlrlO centrllly k>c:atld on
tfte W•t arde. Divided
Into " apeoea 5,000 1q. fl .... tM0,000 ..... •tinonoe.
Fant11tlc loo. 2 8', fir• per mo. M1-3100 2 8r 1 la cottage, Clltt tlM. 873-458& •••• •~••••••••••••••• ~2°1~1 5 0 0 C a I I MS N. Coeet H~. d~~t!]!_-,,1,.4}59. ~ Aalner
place, new kitchen. lor-H ,.. __ .. M01k>rt, Oii ,.,., II"· 3 a 2 8 I I ITIPI Tl ..... . 2 Ir. w/petlo. 1et & ,.., & L~• Beecti. 494-S294 ,_ ..............
mal dlnl~ bright and OUM • ..._...o • Apt. All dener refrla Avlll 10/8 1 • '· comp et• Y 2 a I 2 0 0 u cur. I 4 5 O. --=---------l ·•iv. 111 t'mo. av 111 1bI1 now . W 111· I e a"'a' 1 S 8 7 ,. · t11rn. Slepe to beeoh, Many 1menlt1 .. lnclu· t . 1'i'I 81. No pet1, Kit -., Chrletlln Home, Shr lovely 38' 38a CdM •-, 1 5 6 o s 9 6 o "· tr p 1 c; 115 o 1 m 0 ding view• from deck. $460/mo for 2 peraone. 213/893-7040, 53e-6018 ,.... nom• w/mot"-r a eon,
Wat1rfr... ..... 1141493:C,.e1 · 494-0164. On bul llne. 213/50t·8774 ' ffplc. eto. 7 6 5 W . 181 h 8 1. 1 bd, 4 bike 1rom bch. AH ~27~t~;~~:~.~='4, Sch. new cpl & paint In l>drm,
II 1· 1411 • d I L .. H or , .... Option. OCEANFAONT ·21r fur· ..-Large 2 81. 2 Ba. '8211. 84e-9507 utll1 pd. 207 Chicago. rrageJ3&,lf<**. WIO,
../,,,, __ L ·' I ,.,._ •• •f N New euc home. 38r. nl_ ... __. _._t_ •• 7• mo v 1.1rge 3 Br · 3 81. SPACIOUS 2 Bd. 1 Ba, apt 4, 1400 plui dep. El Toro. •II llOuM prM-rplc + 14 utJI. Ho--•••• -~i 3141 view. 12000/mo. Agent. .. ..... '"'' .... •<> ., • 11200 e..rn ce111ng1 llf'V bel' 985-4954. ieo-. W/D, member Sun neal, rellable. 544-4H5
••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 497•1781 575-6102 Call An thony d1y1 Wood cab • no pet•' &. Sall ctub. poot lennll
4noBr . .:,,e,'s· Den1050'1Dlnmo •• 11"27' *""'I II* 4 Br 2 Ba, ICtOll from 8-42·6787, -& wtcndt 1475 225'8 MMC31e ' t-. .. JM«j 'Hf $210. 1et I !Mt, utll. lnel. Stlng.o ::n~w:n1 yrMOld. l boy ,...... 221 "' ... " -"'I ___ .. ............... ,...._...Of 831..etlO. "~"'7.; •• -t7" .. "'•-=:::.•::::.;•• .. • Ht 4038 ·-Cl 200 Cor.i. 2131396-351 1. ~ "' beth•. """' lemlly i-01 ,,.HI 1111 -"'· .,_,Lw .._. · .,_. ...... ..... .,.. _ ... .., i---------1 mo. & 1hr utll. lmmed
OK. Frplo lnelde. ~001 e:r ...... :r........... OCMn $840. e-oi..o .... , lwJll...,.._ 2 Ir 1 81 2248 c 10 mlnut• '° Of, -·na Aoom w/kl1cn. prlVlleQM, occupy .... 1041
e .. ut. lo• home. 4 BA too. Belt, 539·19'0 Cott •CH tennla POOi grd'd ,. ____ 1 ~-J .. __ 1.•H TN ShofM 1 bellutlful 0 · •1 enyon Ol'I Dene Poi'nt'a-moat 1250. 1et & lltlt, utll fncl, Fem. rm mat• needed, 2 ~3b•;:mfs~11';"0~11A~ Sllarp 2 IA COl'\dO, 1 aty, Qtte, 3 bd.'2 bli lmmeci. ~ •• ".'!.:::: •• l.r. CdM hU 1. 2 bdrm Mao~::.•9:e,,,~0J:!,t •ecluded acenlc bluff. NB. tA2-tt11 bdrm apt, Balboa Pan. ~ ,. '""""' · ..,.r all bltna. pool, 1680 mo. 831·1293. Ocean view. be1utlf11Uy tPt• tor rent. Cell ...._.. 841•1124. 11 .. 1 ...... 2 1, 1 .. __ E'· ... -C ......... _ & '326 mo, utlt Avail Nov
1 op. " .,..._ Call 1140· '1118, Nk 10' vecent Slit 2Bll fem rm t11,n. towntlovM . lrptc, Qlbaon, t44·2t11. .,",. ;;. pnvitew •: ~ ~ ;,~;~~~ 111 8711--5328
.. ,... DeYe elrlum, lg yd'. fP. n; ~~lo. 110tllmo. on AVOOldo, cory , ~~ HouM ...... '1Ulmo. Call utll. 112 Cecll Pl (Cl, WOOOIAIOOI! rm w/P'/1
l1•l•11l1 .1111 JUl1 IOOll •t tNI tlner3 BA a c h ool. 1 13 O mo . • t '"· 1ow1y pet1o,'fJ:. w I! 21• it.'111:=D 11·1441 or M·F. t ·I '315, t73-1544 be. ahr ""· pool, IP•.
...................... ttet. '625 monttlly. Kid• 875-2600 . C..11... nM t76-teCMI: 642-3103 14M10Sll41 ·-~101 ldrrn wl pvl •ntrence, tennl9, wril/6ry. l'T'lf F, 2 blk• to 81ech. 2 bd, J .,. OK Good _,. .. •••••••••••••••••••••• Can reduce rent w t bl, w/refrlg, 1tove, g,ar, et e.t' ~1to ,.!_. l~~ $9f,. l ,lide, aunnylfg t 9f, uttl. 11180. 2 br, 1 be, blln-., LMge ... 1 le1.-I ,._ ....... , #fl OIOH In. Ma le pref. haeolng ti H .00 fir,
M 50 mo. \'rly lnctudtl ' • _,, ...... _, ,.., ooml'llllrlltY. C~d~eno. yrd, 1460. pool, no Pl'•· aecure. t9'tl0 a ''°"· r.1'.Til'•r.a.'i••u..... 145twk. Laouna l ch '225 lnCI ufll, 551·1&82 • 11 u ti 11 N 0 p ... HOMll "°" MNT pool/Jae. I ml 10 beh. 1 Agent t1M1to 1410 7to-831t On Golf C:ourH . WHI ,_4_14-_5380 ______ __
836-5446 . • ~Bdrm, 1700 to l 'fH. SIOOll'I0.4"·1101 furn 1 bdrm~ IMO '"·no~ no Qlnlll, ~I bd, 114 Ila. •I =-~~~~·· NIT& Ill& '\::,'r;;::, ~t~n:
KT:':":.':, ~::"°"cw· .... irw. 1111 •ttd ~~=~'''"· t OTI 11'\0, Avall Nov 7. frJll, pooll NII mo. 1M I drye r. Lower unit w/ Ou6tt, flf ~. IHO. bdtm hollle. 417·1'30 4
54a.200o. Aflnl "°'~· ···9Hot.:iv~·Ai;:r·· 2no CM 144.1eoe ..... uoo ..,_ •· ,.110. tedeco rated. ......._ c.ii before 10
. ' • 3 8drm .. 1121. 'et!Otd t4l-.f 2 bd. 1 be, f\'pl, /:ad, no "2·17'1. 1111/mo. 1141770-1NO AM °' ~ Wect. R~ ~~l~t.:'~.'::i t~ ~~~4 =: :..:C::~:.'::J. •"!,,,,,,.. ffM s=..= now. 1 mo. i: :0.:. ~.:-.. -;: '1.'lfflt.~ ... 11.ff 4 8r 2 81 11 ... ~10. kit. ,:;;, :·::,
1
• 80• from . ~-~------1 fem clWll, .-... Afenl, no ,.., •• .!t!ff ........ .rhll f'ft.tJ! lffff IMf ..._ w~ · NO ,.,, Apt. a Condo .. o. 12111"10 NO def>. •---h. 12 .. 111 ...... 1,1 •
.,......._, 3 bet letll rm tlMt rent• end ot'*9 • "' stwa •• m ,......, Wit "9nt• u• -... 7. -.. ..... .. -" • • PtVt ._,,._.,to coee • ...., .... I JM9 --• ... -. • •t M ~· ..,._..,. .,_.,, l•t, 1100 depoatt, c .. community. 9tep1 10 •••"il'ii•••H•• ..... ";;t e....M & pert!._ wlltl 14tl ~ i-. --...a. ....,,. fl J9/lf. Ml .. 137
pool. Spa I Tennie. lttlr dpl•, oceen ylew. H--L _ ...__ 4 ",. tatfeced.....,. we•···· A P11ce nt1a no ttet1. l111ht•ll ..._ Nmll. m7131 • ...-r.m .......
OCCl 1~ m81o6•271T,.m•d. MSO. 111 Hun11natOn It. i.'T-"'!"9~ ....... ,. .. *""""-~ - ----'41-Mt4. ' ' Ott·M-r. H 1• Ooeen· MMW llTB. '"•• ... ,,_tU•
... -1 • • ..... ._.,....., 111.1112 po0,t;;..~--.eo..d;;"" NIU 11· "'°"'·a•·..._,..,.. MiW rem• now 1¥911 lf'lntte ·:.,m;~~ .. :.
Brand IPlnklnO ,__ .-.. •••I ~1'l I HOotmo. 14* or oo... *!$ ~ .._,llfwlfy tor.cteollPOd , .., =:., 111 c..11. r::'~1'1l~~· 11ot I up. Color T\I: ooata M•••· ltoreoe. c·· 3 bdmt. 21,t be. Ind f9ft'll9y rm db4 Koo A9t "I/MA" • Atoe .:= .... ,... & .,.. •Pt I , 111:.,... ... -· 1 ,. fahonoa '" '""'· 117'4 Ill/mo •n ·Otl1 I .!~~....).~~~~! m:.1:1 r,:~·~~.!=. ,.,· 1!.'!!'C...oo,,.. 1 ... 1i11 • :=. .. c:=w ...,.,---·:,::11 '400. · • · •.,:::.~ ~~=· """".:14.crw --A-N-T'""a-0-,-.-,-.-1.-0-,
7T1·2m. 17~ Z!; • open 1 ~= VllW ~ ' blll to H11111l1tt to11 llto VMllUO'd W... lldl. SMl'KUNG ;,11·w..... • lrtduetrlll .., .... 191ln ·:~~fl';: •UM1•• ,,... "'"'· ~.':. ~ =:r, _ • ...,, ......... I MO··.!~ ~ ==-.~ ......... EA c H ARE A =-~ ";.:. ~~
1Dr 111e 001mo: COTTACH In Trl·PIH , ~,:!!...':fO,!.."!'~-...,... .. 19011.: .. ,0 oarpete. dr..,.., dWI• WP&Fml ... ,..... ~11~4 :!°'!.:11~----1 !If 1 .. l!'O QUlel, .. MOO mo. + ......,, -.... ._,. t ldrM '""'!!!~ 1470 .... ,.,... Ho ..... , I ~ N. 11t .,_ ... n CIUIOOi. et0t~9"·
2 br 2 l>e Ill~-HOO .: Now ,~, ~M. _. View Httte I lclrlfl ...,.,.of,.1 Mt L tltfl 141.-e t•ll. I U·OIU or .... Rlft .. ttot.-.."9ol town, ... , ..... 130 :.:.~· .,.:r. ~·~.::. =.u~N~:,~ 1~~1.11,1Mlt rr·::.•,•\t·i~~m: :·:.IN ..... I HllOllr, 1rtat IH . a:.::&=-..:.-:::; ii::::
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• ·····~······ .. ,,............... ••• • ••.••••••• llllllfl. ••••••.••.•.• MAIN'T. I DlltON -~•ulll\' & yd olHn-up. Or .. on 19"· oontteotOf IH1/IXT PAIHTIHO Ober'lln L.lnd1nipe lefv, Tr.. ''"""'""·~•wee• wltr llOUMlll .• pelntL & & WALLPAPl"INO w...._.., .... ,.on ~. lob'llo-lfft II"·...-. . ...._1M1 cu.tom wor11. ,,.. ....
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JAYtl "IPIAl<IMY" Clllldoere wkdy1, ored. Uc • .._.. 1..ut·&l4t ,1111 ..,._ 0."'*'9 H lir g y> ... JUI IO YM IX,,~ Quellty WOftl. ,, .. eet. 't'k~e;tr.1f:'!:5': ~.3.'~r''' O..VWALL TAPING zeo .......... 2 ~OOI --•...... ·~cc;;;:ll· (fell lft. 8'Wft, 173-5188 ... ,111111,11 •• 1,, .. ,, flH ,,,.,, ..
-All Te1t""9/Aoou11Uo owder\lna , ......_........, ._. ,,_ 4 ••• ONe •'1• --.. !1r..:e:r1•··m•··· •••••••••••••••••••••• I!.._,_ lnfent/Pr•·•cllool, lo. ,-,.. • ~ 171-IOll rd rNll' _ ___..,,., Te.'dtfmfdr. ... _,_ ••H rttl'm•1............. COMt ...... .,... de)'9 I . Y*'cl••ioe. OIMrl " .::.~·· rve·e LANOICAPfNO' ZS )ff...,. UC. "°3141. """IC· ... -••ts FlnWI & -.-:C'"'· wtinde. C .. H0-171'. ~ upe. ne tttrn & ~. "°8W'8 c1.........,,,_ _.., ,....., a o.-~• eonded. lrw ....... COi« _, -• fm --
• ......,. • 1 • ••••••••••••• ,,.. ....,,_...., lneuNd, 8erVkle • • thot=m O_,.,., ....., ,,_ng, ew...-, ...,. .. "'"'11 ......., "·-oeblnetl, rm eddl tonl. 1 ....... ~·-..__ '7 oomm & rMld • ...._75A ........ • ._...... --..-HOM( llCPA111$ A£MOOClS '1Tr .. Wonc Witt! •.....,... l4a.tlll Looking or •Int olllld· ELECT"ICIAN-Prlced • -·-otMr\ ·--· HOLIDAY PAINT TtMEt ..-m II MIMCC , ectenoe". Trimming I ~o!....,...,..~~: =7:·~2~1: e~~¥~ ::.s=o: 1~~=1 ~~. BC~i1_:,.;.._>"_~_~.....,.-0dd.,.,•,,.,1,.,,r,...,.(),..t_1e_'I :.:::~.:.:m:~~nlry =::~c:~:s'~
tlo. Stew 752·Mll de "1··-. LIO'O ILICTNCtAN . ,_., ·-· -·· PAINTER Nll!OI edoofl emold•nc• litlblnf\4 • ...2· 11G2 "'•P•r cerpent•r do•• H ............... -""lid ................... ,..___ r... ........... Tl"ED Of' H~? ll•nd Iron. M•tlOUIOUI. WOMI 30 )ff ••P. Intl .,lltMna f111<1h lo ,.,.,. ---------~ eppy, .... YW.. .... -....... -. ......................... o··-111·~ otMnlna .. lfwA Renee 9'2 1787 • ..._ __ lo....... '·-w • LOW R TES • eddltlon1, remodel•. care. Nulrltlou• meal•, ,,.. •· U1-ICl72 Cwpentty . MMonty _,A.ls. flO."'I ........ • •• .. -t ,_,,nge .....,, lloof $0flnll 811 °' srull we A
~lflttlfl........... 1!1! ••••••••••••••••••
J,0, Horn~ Tll.l INSTALLIO
Anllquu, kit. ceblnel•. AH Kind•. GUatlllt-.d
fine palMlng, 84&.(188.4 Rife JOlln 8404217
'URNITUAE.·KIT CAN CUSTOM CEAAMtC Cetm flnltllel, repalre, TILE WORK-Fr .. •I. dOor•. Joe 873-14et Ctluctl 87S.-5100 ~
decile. Skyllgllll I re-enecke. n tPT. SU O!tv. Roofing . P1um111nQ ller'9I ·tie). 411 .__ 3M7IO. Fr .. •t. do ii all rest tlflC•tftl W'll<e Tr" trlm/r.,,,ov. clean .t•-'-.__... pelre. ,r .. Ht. Oen, Agee s up. Ja.mborM , ILICTNCIAH ~. ltuooo . n. HOUafCl.IAHING e;;e;;u•••••••••••••• Oevte "lll"tlno ... 1.51ee 70 '" no upe.. mowing 554-7017 ~-;:nw.m:r.: •••• _ee_2_-oe_15 __ __.__ PCH, N.I . 876-0711. 2~=,'~.,~~-~ Aernodel J.1 ....... "'° HoneM a 1>ep1ndM11e ~~~~· 1.w1-Lte~se ,83msi ''''"-
80'6. ~ FlMT MONTH Addlt._.., cet,_.:&· ma-,.._, C tor o1111-ar.nde tea·2tl0 ._........ .. ...,_.. -. ••7.";'•";a••••••••••••• •••• ;:.-l'o••••••••••••• ~ lltordabtl ..,.,. ,......... 'emlly ...,, ere RISIOICOMM'UINO. ~~b .''*' :._~ ... ...-... ....____._-.,. I~. fW9. 876-3115 ASA PAPERHANGING 951·60'7 Moel Mlbts".11, K·14 ' ' eonry, dellgtl dref· dren. up to 5 yre, Mon-20 Do-. -_... ..-_,-. °'-· _ ... ,. ..._, ._.....,.,. 7 wr1 local up. Guar. ---------O-l eve 5 & 110/llr. euentlel. An•-•rlnl ting, BBO'• etc. D•v• Fri 7:30 5PM Llc'd Y'9· ... , ,,_., ....... Eectnc.I ne We IUrnllll WOIUft & "-'-• ., H rvloe , .. cr•t•rlal 494-1003, •I 724 15;4 Ai,111" Ln. W•tellff: UC. 279041. Al .....,121 ""'9. Don eie.ot4t _,...... Kitty 141_..70 ;;;;~••••••••••••••• worll. Prlc•• 111rt •I _________ 1 Mr. MOfgen 645-5178 ~MM MrVtcee, mall -------NB •~•eo28 ••1 -· II/roll. A'9c 751-7027 l'~u• ,. ~-,. __ 'I!!. •--1~ · --!lee. aerw. 1 Conetruo-J"'CK ~ ALL T....... eue~r.-..... .. _.,_ -·· 1• Wlun 111Htda• ...,.. rental, wcwd prooe. -~ tlon Lo r•ta .,,.. eetl-" ..,,.. .,,..,_... --.. T~ ~ eel• Jol!r. Crlcketere Prol. ••••••'•••••••••••w••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •Ing. T•l••"•c•lmlle, ••••••••••••••••••••• , C..11~-· .... ., --t•' Lie •••211 0111 Jeck enytlrne, a . Maid.... In ....... AfWA w .... ~, ..... 6 lltlppl"". Huber Roollng·ell ln>ff. "Let the Sunlhlne In" on:ter-. --e tnn Shampoo I etwn cltMln ...... e;;;e.a ............ _ · · -· ....... Of......,. 875-301 Prof.· • lrw'O . • ,.. ..... ..._.... ... .,. New .._It
-••7• ........-C 1 b IQlll--1 wllt • 1 "x'"•• I... 557·1138 147-471' _, "'W'" ,....,. y•T••a Competitive Aatea Meny relerence1. P•ul. ·t'IC<>ver·..-t C .. I Sunahlne Window
t>uy,delkepece'9f'ltel, oor r4 ....... • --·---···-· """' '"5-No0¥tr1Mne 730-1383 857-0118 Uo.#411802. 648-9734 C._,.ng,Ltd. 648-8853 AHaWEA HE'TWOAK crpt1 • 1 min. blMctl. UC. 3Clllll. Remodel. 1~-of HwpC lloll. ll0-1200 . •---•nm• 20% Monthly Dilcount 831·t13t (Mk tor A.V.) H .. , llv/dln. rme lt5: ~ Add'ns, Ceb1nete. •;;";'•";a•••••••••••••• AEPA ... • PLUMltNO ·A8C MOVING· E•pert wellcoverlnq In· ......-... ~_, -room 17.50; coucn St : ....,..5161145-4&44 All< FENCE: wood I Cttpentty, llec, tit. f Quldc, Car.tut aerw.. •tall•tlon. Aeu.· prtoee. Don't r•rool, reJ>•lr •t Int/ext. AHld/~ornm'I, ~ chr $5. GIJal', ellm. pet ---------• ot'9ln llnlil. AM/lndloorn. •t. AeM. 145-2111 Low ralM. 552..()410 Coneultsnt AUlgnment. 1 r •c t Ion of coat . FrH H t. 20•1t monthly • Ait.~-,:;:,j,•;;;; .. ~·gr.':";.,~~~ M~~..:.'le.f:: 541-6413 640-n51 21 YM EXP. DUHHAM STARVING COt.UOf 581-8580 _•_5_7_·2_8_90 ___ .......,,_ dltcOUnt. e.4-4798
~ .... I Uqu•ct• Reta. 531-0101 mod. UC'd. 646-0791 wooo FE.NCE8/CIATE8 HOME IMPAOVIMEHT 8TVOfNT8 MOVING ,.,,, C...n ROOFING REPAIRS cRA,10 CLEANING co
Mlcihelt H9ln MS-0711 OUST .. '"'• lnatlllecl I Repaired ~ ....... tsnc:lng CO. UC. T124'-tH •••o•••••••••••••o•• S~•ll Jobe OK. Free AH d/comm'I. Int/Ht EXCEL CARPET CARE STANBUA IN "'"'9 FrM •t. Gery 4"-1724 electrtcal..plum tneured. 141-8427 CUSTOM wood patio co-Htlm tM. Cell Tom or SCreen1. mlrrora. Ladder ......_,, Jact< Buffington Gen'I contr. Property carpentty 831 WATCH US GROWi "9ta, deck• I lencee by c . 542-8392. work. Owner op er ~··············· Owner/operetor lmprov. 197-1111 ( .. 5) ... ~ RANDY 641-c>e22 ---------1 646-3089 ~·:.=::=.::. ~UJ)ftOAW~-~rug C ..... W-..W-........ nm•••••••••••• ~/Jt!!!••••• HE~~~.•: r.~.'lfl. ... u•••••••• •1--... 1•,. .. 1, f!!!1!'! ............... --------
S&S AapNt 831 ... lttllc -Fr .. -E""•'t ... ": .. ", 11' ........................... HAAOWOOO FLOOM b~--·in~ .. ··-!ffl::~~,....-........ MOBILE SERVICE ... .,.. Kit. rernod, ceolnetl, YI· Topped/removed. Clean IMutlf\illy deaned • lloneet, t .... .,,...t, -•-EO'B PLASTERING ReecrMnt/~ ICl'Mnl f Id I t' Den H .. t>erg Griding KURT'S KARPET KARE deo entertainment unlt9. up, lawn renov. 75t-3479 and welled. 832-481 metlculoul. "-"*·I em by Alcll•rd Sinor. Lie. Neat ,..tdlel, Int/ext. NB/CM only ••2-9552 Of' n nC IOf1 I Pevtno <Co "'-1~• F t •~2 A•• 1 t h e b a I I . P II O n e 280e44. 13 yre o4 ~ ,... '" UC St7.0. . f'2':1ii0 ~t~= , ..... -.......... -... ... 873-7012 after 8 PM local cuetomers. AMtuccoe. 645-8258 I tltdl•n Cal a
.... fl-~1.....-vub lneteM !!'!!'!f••••••••••••• ~NA ct_. Satut· Thank~. 831-4410 Pl.ASTER PATCHING ·'••••••••••••••••••••
...... ,,,,.. Cerpet lnatslatlon I A9-•••••••....,•••••••••••• Tr.., trtm/remov., DUMP JOe8 de'f and lklndey. QUALITY WORK • nMt, Reetucco•. Int/Ht. 30 SERVICE & REPAIR Daiy Pilot ~~~·.;;.·~~= palre. 30 yre Ellper. Car· RESIDENTIAL-INT DE· Lewn Malntl"<>totllllng I Small Moving Jobi FOR A SUPER CLEAN Y'9· Neat. PMll 645-2977 Vsn ()pc)en1 Service Co fi;ii~tme. C.M. A;~;: pets Wortt• 111·8205 !':n~~~J~:n,;~~.:::~ Fr .. eetlmete 541-eol5 Clll MIKE 846-1391 HOUSE. CALL CHRl8I ~1or~ ~io'/:· 538-4Me ID.VISOR
548 M5S c.~ 95$-20ee Of 752.()322 ~ Gwdenlng PROF. SERVICE 831..()193 Good refl. CUSTOM PAINTING ·r/~!!~l. ............ i---E-·Z-LA-Y''""N___ "
-CHl--LD_CA_AE:_· -my-tiome--. .. •• CHAMH~ ....... .,,,, ~::; ,.:'. IUll ~ ~.~:. It you went your houM lntl•t. Aleld/comm. H~!:fn!. P=:~: In G~:~n~':' La~=7 642-5678
lundl/enaclc1 lndUded. Fine C.tertng In Ille old ...................... Fr• •t l4e 94184 1 973-0141 REALLY CLEAN, Ca ll Fr• eet. UC. 944-4718 r-epalrl. l4S-l98I ---------i ·--------Laf99 )Wd. 14t-7t3t world tredhlon. 645-98111 HSKPAS & MAIOI . Linde eet.Q.311, Oood 8ELL Idle ltem1 wltll a. -'--------frllde your Old etun for L--====== UVE4H HRlYIWt<LY Matcll to your phone to CLEAN-UPS, GARAGES. Reta. .o.ity Piiot Clelllfled Ad. H llr 0 (;'/ Ul-1121 new goodlu with 1 W•nt Ad Help? Hew sornetlllng to .... ., .. llOme. tt'I eeey Vi.to 8ervtoM AoertcY pleoe a l•«*no a.. ANYTHIHOI CALL 8 ._..78 • 40 p wetert!Mter 1225 Clelalfled ed .... 2•5678 642·5675 awmtd edl do It .... c:t...itled 142-M71 UC'd/t>onded t7~IOOo lifted ed. 142-tl?I RANDY 142-7147 CIM1lflecl Ade 142·587 142-· ---------
tor your out1rown blk• DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS
for MerchendlH under •1,000.
Sell your no-longer needed Item• for CMh. If It doeen't
Mii. we'll run It another 3 daya FREE. One Item
per ad, muat be priced. Sorry. no rMJ eetate or
commerc:&al tade. Call today for full detail•. , ........... , ............. .., 3 3DAYS
INES
CLASSIFIED8642-5678
OLLA RS
U. Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/W.ctneldey, October 13, 1982
lllRITY
111111
"4·'4:1/tv. Late °' ~lunlt.... Clll 13~449, JOBS TODAY, 2707 N.
ttrtetol, S.A. emell tee -
L
COMHHL
CHEVROLE T . :· .
( ...
SU-I 200
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12111
'll •••••• 11154en ....
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"'' .... (11t70t) .,..
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TlllHM _,_
20eO Hltbor IMS.
COITA MESA
••1·1111 ...aan
'71 FOAO ~-Good
cond. 3 -... ecol\. i "'°· 4'4-SI 11
MITltlll ....
Ford F•lrl1111, Olllfl ~. rune lllM. n ~ ~,Mpty. •
'14 Ford Ou11om IOG.
MOO Of '*' on.. c.11 ..,......,.,
'16 ...... ldr.llfo.fl
w/bll09 roof. 12,IOO ml.. ltor.d fot • W'9. ,....
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2 -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, October 13, 1982
DINER'S CHOICE -Guests at TC Peppercorn Restauranl have a
choice of dining in any one of five separate dining rooms -a
selection that enables guests to choose their own ambience. TC
P~percom. at 805 Stark (near the comer of Beach Boulevard) in
Huntington Beach, specializ.es in prime rib, steak and lobater and
fresh lish dishes. Dinner prices run from $6.95 to $15.95.
Entertainment is featured six ni•hta a week, with dancing.
Le Biarritz celebrates atrj anniversary ,,
Le Biarrit.z French Restaurant ii
cel e brating ita eight-year
anniversary with a a~ Early
Bird Dinner.
Chef Stephen White, who
recently returned from Paria
collectfng new recipes, promises
exciting meals for early diners. Chef
White outlined a few of the entreea
that will be featured.
'Ibey include: fresh fiah prepered
with tiny veaetabJes in Cham ....
sauce, chicken Cordan Bleu, broOed sirloin ateak In creamy sauce, stuffed
fNlh filet of lole poached In lobster
sauce, &op llrloln pepper 1teek in Ucht cop.ac laUCle, veal liver aauteed
in parsley but•, YOW\I ducldina
roMted and ..... with frah fruit
sauce -plua deliciooa spectala ~
day.
Enjoy Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
and Cocktails in the warrn nautical
atmosphere of your nearby
111111 ......
22873 Lake Forest Drive
(Of 1-5 at Lake Forest Dr.>
(714) 758-4999
c ........
2300 Harbor Boulevard
(Harbor ShoppinQ,t::enter)
(714) 540·8535
.......
1727 East Dyer Road
(Newport Freeway at East Dyer Rd.)
(714) 546-4400
Cafe Primo serves gourmet foods
Finding a real gounnet restaurant
i n aide a huge natur~l fooda
supermarket la not surprising when
you think about it.
The vaat array of fresh and fancy
produce, t he fine meata and the
enormous .election of natural foods
which are attracting crowds to the
new Primo supermarke t in
Huntington B each k eep the
restaurant's pantry stocked with the
finest and freshest ingredients on
· the market.
And, as in any fine restaurant,
fine ingred ients are onl y the
beginning. It takes the fine hand of a
master chef to transform wholesome
food into delicious gourmet dishes.
Cafe Primo is proud to have Don
Viggiano, whose career includes
some of the fine r reatauranta in
Newport Beach.
Equipped with its own baked-
from-scratch bakery, a complete
take-home section and a wine and
juice bar, Cafe Primo offers festive
lunches and elegant dinners.
The menu features fresh, natural
and d elicious foods which are
completely free of artificial or
questionable ingredients such as
white refined sugar and flour and
h~drogenated oils.
Cafe Primo is located inside the
Primo Natural Food Supermarket in
Huntington Beach at the oorner of
Beach a nd Main in Five Poin ts
Shopping Center.
Two Guys From Italy serves ltallan fare
Two Guys From Italy may not
sound like an Italian restaurant, but
don't let this fool you. It ia every bit
a restaurant, and more.
The atmosphere ia caaual -very
much a family restaurant, according
to owner Arnie Herrera. Trestles
woven with grape vines cover the
oelllng. Grapes and old wine bottles
dangling from the trestles instill
that real Italian charm, aa if one
were actually dinina In "Venezia" or
"R«na.''
Two Guys specializes in preparing
pbza and a variety of Italian cuisine.
Herrera, who baa owned the
"ristorante" for eight years, ia
personally involved in both the
ldrchen and dining room. making
sure that famiJy-style feeling is
there.
A few of the favorite entrees
in clude lasagna, c hicken a la
c.acciatore, scampi florentine and
shrimp ltallana, eerved with 90Up or
aaJ.d, a side of pasta, garlic bread,
mid deelert.
A hot buffet and salad bar,
incluc:linc fruit and cold cuts is al8o
available.
Two Guys is open Mo nday
throuRh Thunday from 11:30 until
10 p.m. and Fridays until 11 p.m .
Dinner only is aerved on Saturday
from 4 until 11 p.m. and Sunday
until 10 p.m.
Re.ervations for large groups are
recommended.
--
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 13, 1982 -3
collect16n
ine restaurants in one
GOOD EARTH RESTAURANT place setlil1!£TON ELLO RISTORANTE
"Unequivocally the finest in natural Classic Northern ltaltan cuisine. a superb
cu1s1ne:· Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner. wine llst with a very capable staff· to assure
8A.M.·10 P.M. Sunday· Thursday: your dining a real experience Rest:rvat1ons
SA.M.-11 P.M. Friday and Saturday. and 1ackets suggested 17 14) 751·7153
557-8433 MEYERHOF'S RESTAURANT
Meyerhof's Restaurant on the Green 1n
BELGIAN WAFFLE
A scrumptious s&lecllon of waflles Plain.
powdered. fruited, or fudged: all are equally
delightlul ! Hamburgers. homemade
muffins. soups, sandwiches. and omelets.
Pario dining Weekdays and Saturdays.
8 A.M.·8 P.M. Sundays· 8 'A M ·5 P.M.
(714) 557·5186
RESTAURANT HORIKAWA
Operated by Horikawa of Tokyo, offers
gourmet Japanese cuisine in a serene set·
ting. Try our combination luncheons in the
Teppa1t Room. cooked right before your
eyes by showmen chefs. All ma1or credit
cards. Open 7 days a week. (71 4) 557-2531
PINOCCHIO'S P1ZZEAIA
Authentic Neopotiten pizza, homemade pasta.
and ltalial' Ice cream are amonu ttte reaons why
Pinocchio '1 la a unique. fun ptac:e for lunch or
dinner. We offer a large selection of Italian ind
French wines for your e'*>yment. Food 1nd Wine
to go. Come to Plnocchio'al (714) 556-3757
South Coast Plaza Village since 1976
Dine 1n our turn-of-the-century country
kitchen and en1oy superb sandwiches.
thick soups, fresh salads. wine. beer. softer
beverages. desserts. and delectable ice
cream creations. (714) 540-8044
South Coast Plaza
Village
· Located at Sunflower & Bear Streets
Santa Ana, CA 92704 • (714) 751 -6595
HUNGRY TIGER RESTAURANT
Famous for hve Mame lobster and fresh
fish daily. The oyster bar has its own menu
of special seafood dishes Lunch and
dinner. Entertainment and dancing
(714) 979-1181
VEROUGO'S-
AESTAUAANTE Y CANTINA
Fantastico• Tantalizin~ trad1t1onats
and exquisite especiahdades. Strolling
mariachis and champaane brunch to
spice up your SundaysT Monday·Saturday.
Lunch 11 A.M.·3 PM .. Dinner 3 P.M.·11 PM ..
Sunday Brunch. 9:30 A.M ·2:30 P.M.
(714) 556-7990
UPSTART CROW ANO COMPANY
A complete boottstor• and full service restaurant
ere Joined tooether if1 this unique concept.
Browte for a book. entOY fine pastries and gour·
met coff .... or dine on a menu that Includes
10 hamburgers, Puta Pesta Salad and Chicken
Dijon. Dally from 10:00 AM to 10·00 PM. w..tcend brunches. (714) 682-0727
. ..
I
' i
~ 11
t \ ;
·'
..
\
4 -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, October h . 1982
In celebration of
Antonello Ristorante's
third anniversary, a five
course Prix Fixe Menu for 11995.
per person for 2 or more
will be featured
Monday & Tuesday
night beginning in Octobe~
Dress Code
Antonello Riatorante
offers the Firenze Room
a private Dining Room
offering superb Northern Italian Cuisine
for Business Luncheons or Dinner Parties
Accommodates 10 -35
Consultation & Reservatiom
Antonio Cagnolo
Lunch. Monday -Friday
Dinner. Monday -Saturday
Closed Sunday
Reservations please.
Wine Cellar
3 time Gold Medal Winner
Outstanding Wine Cellar
Wines from '9-'20,000
/t~.-...... .....
)'OU W nie1 bttn tO ltal;y,
)'OU will ft.tl right at hmM al
Ant0nello's, and if )'OU ha'1nl'r
,_...,., been co Italy, you will ful like
)'OU haw betn ihce, whnl )'OM
3800 So.ala Piasa Dri•e
Soulia Cou1 Piasa VW.,e ia Coeaa Meu
(714) 751-7153
leaw Antonella's.
PRESENTING ITALIAN FOOD -Antonio Cagnolo, le ft,
owner of Antonello's, chef Re nato Necci and sous chef Daniel
Johns bring Northern Italian fare .to <>range <;oast diners .. In
celebration of Antonello Ristorante s third anniversary. a fi ve
course Prix Fixe menu will be featured Monday and Tuesday
nights during October. Antonello Ristorante is at 3800 South
Coast Plai.a Drive, Santa Ana.
'111\IJ.1) tlt111 f 'Hlll U ·
'· ,,, ; /'\/ "")
.Jfllordtaux .
lt&tauront Jrancais
• fine frem.h c:uisine
• distinquished wmes
LUNCHEON DINNER ,..,,,,, ....... ,
~ ..
300 F1. Wnt of ln\tol
111 1flt ftttMy lrilfttlt
IC,8 S~·•'I CIJ11, Cusr.i M~'~
540-3141
Ill DUR
22nd YEAR!
MUSICAL NOTABLE -The new addition to McC.onnick's Landin@
ls a beautiful new grand piano for evening entertainment with an
exciting runway view of the alrport. Dinner is available nightly and
so ls live entertainment and dancing in the lounge. The next two
weeks are " '60s weeks" in the lounge with music by the Surf Tones
and Rave Up. And November sees the return of Shakee Jake and the
S kylar Brothers. Call for information, reservations or directions at
546-9880. McCormick's Landing is at 3180 Airway Ave., Costa Mesa.
Dinner from 5 to 10 p.m. Oyster bar from 11 to 1:30 a.m.
L'Hirondelle is a little difficult
to find but well worth the see}rch
L 'Hirondelle may be a little
difficult to find, but its well worth
looking for, according to owners
Walter and Raymonde.
The charming restaurant has been
described as warm, cozy and very
cute by adoring patrons.
Some of the d ishes prepared
include: three kinds of duck, rabbit,
veal dishes, lamb shank and flaming
pepper steak.
A s p ecia l appe t izer a t
L'HirondeUe is the escargot with
mushrooms and red wine. Crepes
Surprise is a dessert favorite.
The restaurant is cloeed Monday,
but on other days opens at 4:30 p.m.
to accommodate elderly customers
who prefer an early dinner.
To find the San Juan Capistrano
restaurant. look for the Amtrak
station. Its parking lot ls adjacent to
the restaurant's. The address la
31631 Camino Capistrano. Phone Is
661-0425.
--.......
OPEN DAILY
lnloy Dellcloua Lunch -,d Dlntter
.... tovdl ••
Port ....
or our special
SUNDAY
"CHAMPAGNI
llUNCW'
"HAPPY HOUI"
M-F 4:00 -1:00
-with -
'fl PllCI APPUIZllS
•.. ARTICtltOKE HEARTS ..
. . . CLAMS CASINO
... SAUTEED SCAMPI
... AND MANY MORE
SEAFOOD SPECIAL TIES
ORANG~ COAST OAl~Y PllOT/Wedneeday, OctOO,r 13, 19~ -5
Wedding Reception Facilities
Available Free
_ x_: ~i()LE.D Ftrf S'ft
·§ ~:1 ~~
·'2 ~ '0 ~ :<~ ....:::·
t., ('
w z µ-
~ v a:u.;..-~'
Fresh Fish Daily
~
• LUNCH • DINNER
• CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BR UNCH
• QANCING & ENTERTAINMENT
SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK
"'Where People In The Know-Go"
3180 AIRWAY AVE.
At the Corner of Redhill & McCormick
.. adJlcharl l'ollcgt•
r::=======communit y services======::a
prr'if'nl\
•
CONSTANCE TOWERS
llow I Got From Whitdish. Montana
To The Mexicun Emba sy
Curren1 .. 1ar or wop.
"Capitol ..
l.<'.itlin~ l.idy or .
Orou!lway·s mu'i1C' theatrl'
hrokc record with Yul
Br nnt>r in .. King and I"
Movie Star.
upJWarcrl wilh Jnhn
~ oynP, William Holden.
01111 Clrn F6nl:
llear ;,on~., from her hits:
''Suund or Mullic·"
"Mam<>."' "I l>o! I Do!,"
"Sho~hou1:· "Kin~ and I"
SADDLEBACK
COMMU ITY CO LLEGE
"cluth C111np11•
h nr \rb flw-111 rr
3 p.m. SaturJay. Octoht-r 30 .• 1982
CAI.I. 831 ·4656 t'OR R t:~t'.HV ATION~
'
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11
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6 -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 13, 1982
Harlequln Dl~ner Playhouse features Levin's
'Deathtrap' thr.o~gh mid-November at dinner
The Harlequin Dinner PlayhOlUle,
presents "Deathtrap," lra I;.evin 's
hilarious but ierrlfyina play, now
through November 14.
"U you care to asaasainate younelf
with laughter try "Deathtra~"! A
brimming tumbler of arsenic a nd
schweppes, boob.ytrapped with
scarifying surprises"' says T .E.
K.alem of Time magazine about this
brilliant.comedy thriller.
This is the type of mystery for
which ~s author, Ira Levin is
famous. The play revolves around
Sidn ey Bruhl, a o nce g r eat
playwright of murder mysteries. His life haa been reduced to living
on put la urels and giving guett
.eminan at the local colleges while
b-eing supported by his wife's
lnheri t.ance. It seetm to f ocua on the
10\fi.ng relationship the couple have.
It seems t o be about h o w
understanding and loving a wife can
be.
Then, a young playwright enters
the picture. S uddenly the story
seems to shift focus. Thia young
playwright bu written, in Sidney's
estimation , a surefir:e hit play.
Suddenly lt ~ that the couple Ui
now plottJnt to steal the play from
the YOWll playwri1ht and publlah It
~ Sidney's name.
"It seems ... " these are the
words that sweep you away Into a
world of intrigue, suspense and
comedy unsurpuled by any play of
our~. This is an experience that
has had theatre (>'.lltronll clinging lo
their teat.a and rolling in the aisles.
The price of the ticket includes
dinner, sales tax and show. For
J reservations and information call
979-5511.
Historic ranch building becomes rustic dinner experience
• The Barn Restaurant and Saloon
ih Tustin is freeway close and worth
the trip.
More than three years in
construction, this huge restaurant
evolved from what was once a lemon
packing house on the Irvine Ranch,
circa 1914. The original structure
was carefully dismantled board by
board and nail by nail and placed at
its pn!9e!\t site in Tustin.
Hundreds o( interesting artifacts
are displayed throughout, from the
venerable settees and easy chairs,
antique mementos, farm re lics,
valuable saddles and rate 1930s
autos.
4. formidable· but Criendly 40-foot
ooclctail bar, built in the early 1900s,
la located upstairs ln the ori81JW
hayloft. area. The bar and dance
· fioor are separated from the rest of
the e1tabll1hment by a dramatic
open stairwell.
Great 1teaka, pasta, ribs, chicken,
seafood, omelettes, quiche, toatada,
enchiladas and Texas style chili are
available at lunch and dinnertime.
A variety of special sa,n4wiches,
burgers, soups and salads are also
offered throughout the day.
Aged, extra-thick, choice steaks
are selected from East.em grain fed
beef
A trip to the bountiful Chuck
Wagon· Salad Baria a must. Hearty,
serve yourself soups a r e ke pt
Winner of Bronze "Restaurant Writers Aaaoc."
Award .-Year After Year
TOaTIUA FLATS ............ ,,_ a little "L•8 M 0.nm"
.. o••• •• Pacific c .. et HI••••• to a --••lflc••t •••lea•
Co ... lal llaclelMla. Ilaria ~r ....... H .. I .. tlte fn•I•
•••• ,. ..... .e.c. ., ................... ltw ............. . ...........
Yem ...... 4'AVlml 909A ... AllAlllDO MJICllD D., ......
... •• .... tl!.e aw .......... ea...... _ .... frem .......
"~Deel&" ....... , •••• -I 5 I••-............
0.-..... llsM A.M •• It p;M • • c ...... 0.-'Ill I A.JI. ..... 9!i•c• ll'A. .. ·I P.M.
HAPPY llOUll t .. P.M. WDDAY8
CO~AllY llO'l'AllM .......
• , ..... c ......... l .. J • •••ell
simme ring on an old fashioned
cookstove.
Original pasta recipes include
linguini, calimarl, lasagne and
spaghetti, Choices in barbecued ribs
and chkken, or puta are bound to
pleue the little buck.erooa in your
party.
The barn restaurant and saloon i.s
located at 14982 Red Hill, at &:linger,
In Tustin. Open 5 to 10 p.m. daily for
dinner, 11 :15 a.m . to 2:30 p.m .
Monday lo Friday for lunch, 10 a.m.
to 2:30 p.m. Sunday for brunch.
The r e is no lunc h -served o n
Saturday.
LJresa is casual and there is a full
bar,. live bands and dancing for your
ente rtainment.
Pl•z••ncltMn
wld• 9Pf1Clrum of
eating nook•
Within the t.wo level "encl~
elegance" of South Goelt Plaza;lhe
varie ty of fine places to eat I•
endlesa.
Twenty-six eateries, offering a
combination of sidewalk dining,
gourmet cuia1ne and speciality food
beckon the puserby.
The intercontinental temptations
of Caffe Puquini are an exampfe of
what it means to eat on the plaz:z.aa
of Italy. Sample such specialties as
homemade lasagne, garden-fresh
salads, sandwiches and pizzettaa -
all enjoyed with espresso, cappucino
or perhaps a sampling off the french
pastry table.
Ama to 's Espresso Cafe, with
cappucino, coffees and espresso, is
the perfect place lo lunch on any of
the large aelectlon of overly-stuffed
sandwiches while overlooking a
caacadlng fountain.
Magic Pan's carefully-prepared
crepes, d elicious soups and salads
and special m oderately -priced
three-course dinner s combine to
m:ike lun c h or dinn er an
unforgettable experience.
The aroma of fresh pastries and
croissants aler ts passersby of the
light bistro fare at Vie de France, a
very po putar mall combination
bake r y/cafe featuring d elicious
s andwic h es, freshly-pre pa r e d
entrees and a variety of fresh-Crom·
the-oven pastries and croissants.
(See SOUTH, Pase It)
··~8!~~.
• _.__
BAY VIEW -A spectacular view from the Spindrif ter }\estaurant,
at 3333 West Coast Highway in Newport Beach, adds elegance to
dining. Guests can enjoy a waterfront lunch and dinner, plus happy
hour from 4 to 7 p.m. with complimentary hors d' oeuvres and a
waterfront sunset.
Village presents
many eateries
At South Coast Plaza Village casual
and fine dining blend perfectly with
the charm and romance of the
cobblestone "streets. "
Located on Sunflower Street, just
acr<* from South Coast Plaza mall,
the Villqe lends itself to outdoor
sid e walk cafe dinini, amidst
cobblestone streets and woodsy
interiors.
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, Ocfober 13, 1982 -7
Hogue Barmicheal's combines good food,
fine entertainment and unusual decor
Few ban have an atmosphere u
electric as the one presented by
Hogu e Barmlc hael's at 1976
Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
Its mo tto . "a saloon for a ll
reason s," speaks well f o r t he
establishment whose interior design
combines several distinct motifs and
ca ters to a variety o f Individual
tastes.
Its spacious interior ls bordered on
all sides by a series of specially
designed, vignette-like rooms such
as thf> country kitchen. the Ubrary,
the dart room. Different levels aUow
patrons to get above It all and enjoy
watching others dance or do the
bunny-ho£ -a spontaneoua feature
of Hogue s -on a sawdust dance
floor.
Hogue's serves a variety of food
from its grill, including hot dogs,
hamburgers, halibut, roast beef.
soups, salads and New York steaks.
Hogue's also has nightly specials
such as taco night. Tuesday and
Wednesday nights you can get three
tacos for $1. And a recent special is
the pound and a half of lobster with
fries and salad for $9.95. Stop by on
Thursday night for that special.
The Belgian Watne is a natural
breakfast and lunch favorite, with
powdered and fruited waffles.
hambur1era, homemade muffins,
90Ups, sandwiches and omelettes.
A Family Shopping/Dining
& Entertainment Center
The Good Earth, which serves
fine natural cuisine, Is near the
Vlllage fountain. Everything on the
menu ther e -from hug e
sandwiches to cashew chicken -is
made with only natural, whole.ome
lngredienta.
b istinctlve interiors are the
trappings o f Upstart Crow. a
combination booutore/restaurant/
coffee hou8e. Patrons are welcomed
by an espre990 count.er and adjacent
book.store. where they can· browse
through a book over a cup of one of
the many varieties of coffee, or
sample fare from the California-
style menu that includes delicious
hamburgen and sandwiches.
·Meyerhoff'• overlooking the
Village green serves m y riad
.sandwiches named after famous
people, bowbful of salads and lee
cream creations..
At Antonello's, owner Antonio
Cagnolo has recreated an artistic
miniature of a street i n h is
birthplace of B istanga. Italy .
Antonello'• features veal. meat, and
fish dishes cooked in specially-
prepared saucet and herbs grown m
their own Pl'den.
From Italy to the Far East, a mere
st.roll aa'08I a cobblestone path will
take you to Reslaurant Horikawa.
Part of the enjoyment of thls
Japanne delight is watching your
food prepared before your eyes by
m111ter showmen cheb. Horikawa
presents the finest in JapaneM
culainet such H temp1,.1ra 1 steak
teriya1tl and five liorl kawa
apec:ialtiea.
1be lntemaUonal divenity of the vw.a. i. refJ9cted in the &uth-of-
the-l>oder ta1te 1enaation1 of
Verdu10'1 -complete with
1mr'1mtt-. maNchil and authentic Mabra decor.
Another faYOriie ia the H~ '!'lfll', whim~ wlcb J11lnl ,,._. AJrmrao 0-,.ny .UO.. it to
........ -.-.i ····-ol -food -ao ..... than • da)' from mtch to ......
Bilbo Bag91ns. 545-1718 • Coco·s. 540-9651 • Hamburger Hamlet, 54€)·7392 •
M1ones. 979·6735 • Reuben's. 540·9672 • Swensen's. 556·6937
2701 Hlllbor Blvd. • (Hlrbor I Adlma) Coetl Meu, CA
,
.... i8llldi ..
8 -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 13, 1982
Rusty Pellcan brings
selection to lrvlne
Ten years ago in 1972, the Rusty
P e lican opened its first seafood
restaurant overlooking New~rt
Bay. During those te n years they
have become a Newport tradition
with a loyal c lie ntele a nd a
re putation as on e of the leading
' seafood restaurants In the county.
The Rus ty Pelican r ecently
brought its award-winning selection
of fresh fish to Irvine in order to
serve the Inland O range Coun ty
ar eas.
L ocated just acr oss the 405
(reeway from the John Wayne
airport, th is ne west Rusty Pelican is
architecturally one o f the most
stunning restaurants in Southern·
California.
. ll is a corrfbination of river rock
walls, cascading waters, g~ roofs ·
and outdoor patios. The d ining
room is divided into various floor
and ceiling levels and each area has
a distinct charm. It is comprised of a
colorful use of rustic materials built
with a very contemporary flair.
Tei years of handUng fresh fish
has made the Rusty P elican seafood
experts and each nigh t you may
expect an offering of 15 to 20 fresh
varieties.
Most selections are char-broiled
(very healthy) or sauteed-almondine
style . Entrees a re ser ved with
homenmde clam chowder or chilled
salad as well as fresh vegetables and
pilaf. In Irvine, reser vations a re
accepted for d inne r by calllng
545 -4 774. Valet parking Is a lso
available. •
There 1S a complete Seafood Bar
i n the lo unge offering no -wait
lunches and appetizers. The Seafood
Bar Is always open and has become a
Ca.vorlte spot for a late-nJght snack
a nd cocktail after the concert or
theatre.
The Irvine restaurant is located at
1830 Main St. at MacArthur. Lunch
is served Monday through Friday
from 11 a.m. and dinner is served
from 5 p.m .
The Newport Bead) restaurant is
located at 2735 W. Coast Highway.
Lunch ia served .Monday through
Saturday Crom 11:30 a.m. and dinner
is served Monday through Friday
from 5 p .m . and Saturday and
Sunday at 4:30 p.m.
·Raymonde and Walter's.
"Intimate Dining in
Picturesque Capistrano''
E'renf'IJ Cuisine '661-0426
RHer vatloa• Sugge•ted
Dhuler from 4:80 pm -Clo•ed Monday•
• Nl6btly Early Swallow Dlm:aer Special••
Group Lwicbeons B y Special Reque•t
31631 Camino Capistrano Mission Hacienda Plaza
San Juan Ca istrano (Adjacent to the Depot)
.
STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS?
............. .... .............. ~···
Aocarcllng to Cellfomla .........
end ftrofeHIDnl Codi (lee. 1119 IO
17110) 8'1 pefMftl dolftl ~II
....., • t a•1ue nw ....... • ................. c...., a... ...
9'eft II ....... ehed four -. IR e
..... p .................... .....
................ locelH.
n.. DAILY '9LOT pntMll ......
"""' ... pullllcetlon ...... • • .. .., ............. ..., .... ..
n1elftte1n • ...., ..,,,._ IO ... Or-..
Couflty Courllt•••· ......... -.... .. .. .................... ...
LIQAL DIP~ MMllt • ..._ . .. _. ............... .......
Te.""""''"' le,,__. 'r ... •nd ......... ,, ........... ,.., ........ -......... .... ,..., .................... ..... ........ .• . ,,.
, ..... , ..
PATIO DINING -Afternoons on the patio are special at Gauguin's,
at 696 S . Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Enjoy hors d' oeuvres and
fine wine from 3 to 6 p.m. dally at the quaint restaurant's patio.
Nightly dining is offered from 5:30 p.m. Sunday brunch from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. features fresh croissants, fruit and champagne with your
entree choice. Pianist and vocalist Carole Cole entertains nightly in
the lounge. For reservations call either 494-0162 or 833-8310.
The cuisine
of central and
northern Italy DINING ON
NIWPORT BAY
• 76
CourtelY ac.t... Vmt Plrtdng
BUNS to all Ram• Home Games
3131 W. Coast Highway
· N~. Be1all ·.-.·.·n .... ,.,.414118tr········' ..
. '
LUNCH 11:30 to 2:30 Mon-Fri
DINNER 5:30to10:ao Mon-Sat.
Cloeed Sunday
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 13, 1982 -9
French dining at finest . . (
Tbe room la quiet and COi)' with a larle brick firepUce in the cm._.
The table ia ele1antly Mt with
crystal and white linen. 'ftM! food 19
taate temptin1 and the wine la
flowtna . . . lhere'• no place like
holw. Jtlcbt? Wreac. Al ......... ..,_,.,.. ...
warm lntfmate eettinc of a .,,_. at.
bmne It ofhn you much more than
your kitchen ever could. And
without all the fua
· The reataurant hu won aeveral
award• for excellence and one
aampllnc of one of the 20 itema on
the menu will tell you why.
Some of the trench dellcadell that
the Bordeaux often ia three
different kinda of chicken, duck,
aalmon, a.by beef livw, two typea of
veal, p,epper ateak, rabbit and ao
much more.
Mmu pricea ,.... from $9.~ to
fl8.75 and lnclude9 ad"'*-of 80UP
'or .. lad, rice and two typea of \.,;:blee. meela are .. ....,... by chef
JmeDh Dube, who hM ._ at the Bordeaux .. Cow' ,..,...
The menu· ii oan1rlen•nlled by a
wine U.t with ewer 1~ different
varietiea which are primd at retail
plua $3.
Tbe Bordeaux abo offen an early
dinner apecial everl' week night
from 6 to 7 p.m .. for '6-"· Tbere are ax it.ema on the early dinner menu
to aelect from.
Tbe Bordeaux la located at 758 SL
Clair in Coeta 11 .... (one block
aouth of Bak« and ~ ~ west of
Briatol MU' the Broblde winery )
Barn doesn'·t need specials, just steaks
Today'• re1taurant-1oer 11
comtantly = by ............ , adwrti*C ~ apedal orden,
tw0-fof-the-prtee..ai4Ae -i.. and
limn8d time only offers. . All too often, the apedal "deal" la
the only good thins about the ..-..rant.
At 1'M9 Barn Steak Houae in eo.ta
.M.m, you won't find apeda1 dealt,
only •pedal food. -#or 22 yeara The Barn haa
111 u 'M'wd tn W'Yin& w o1 th!e .... lllRilll ........... Pr"-..,. chmp. but ,.. the I •• ., ......... ...,. .......... .
•.l ...................... _ ---··-: ...... ...
SEAfOOD, ~lllMt 11• a GIOG
The largest selecdon of fresh Hafood
In the county, expertly prepared.
The healthy alternative
In quaHty dining.
Irvine
1830 Main St.
at MacArthur
54~4774
Nn,.ort Buch
2735 W. COMt Hwy.
On the Bey
642-3431
(
-10 -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT /Wedneltday, October 13, 1982
AWARD WlllllillG
iJillillO •••
Luncheon, Dinners
Saturday & Sunday Brunch
Carole Cole On Piano -~ocals
For Reeenatiol\8 Call 494-0162
IN le. C.Ut 1.,. Located In Hotel San Murten Ullll IUCI Pukinq on Prem.i.Ma
•POLYNESIAN ROOM: DINNER & COCKTAILS. FLOOR SHOW
•TEAHOUSE: TEPPAN·YAKI . SUKIYAKI
• lUSHI IAA
•COCKTAIL LOUNGE: ENTERTAINMENT
• IMIOUETS
221 SOUTH HARIOR IOULEYAAO
SANTA ANA, CALIFOINIA 12704
(714) 11s-n21
Riviera, located near May Co., aervH
over 40 dishes with European flare ,. .
Orange Cout awidenta are ooly
minutes away from dlnina on the
Riviera or, rather, at the Rivtera.
Riviera Restaurant, located on the
eec:ond level near May Company in
South Coast Plaza, preaenta a
romantic .etting for dinen to enjoy
awnptuooa European meals.
Some or the cuisine served at
Riviera Include: veal picatta,
eoeched aalmon with bollanda~.
COq au Vin and duck with orange
sauce.
Riviera hu been ~~!au for 15 years and haa eeta · la.elf aa
one of the finer reatauranta in Coeta
Meaa. More than 40 dlabea are
available for lunch, with about 30
for dinner.
For banquet.a, the Riviera 'haa
special rooms that can accommodate
up to 70 people.
Riviera Is open Monday to
Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
for lunch and from 5 p.m. for dinner.
Retervationa are recommended.
Club-like atmosphere
creates loyal patronage
Not too many people would driye
to Palm Springs from Newport
Beach to eat dinner. Conver.ely, it seems few people ln Palm Springs
would make the trip here for a mere
meal. Or does it?
Int.ct, Newport Beach po1unea a
reataurant that attract• weekly
viliton from Palm S~ and even
San Bernardino. Reu~ a, at 251 E.
c.o.t Highway, Ja the oriC:fnal ln the
Reuben'• chain and u auch has
developed a clJenleJe both 8'1!111d.lut
and far-reechinc.
With a dinlnc rocm and cocktail
lounge overlookln1 picturesque
Linda Isle Bey, Reuben'• ~ta a
cordial club-like atmosphere with
fine food and entertainment Friday
and Saturday nights.
For Sunday brunchers, Reuben's
offers a weekly champagne alfair
where the average price runs around
$5. It's sit-down and full service
from 10 a .m.
Reuben's al.lo hu announced a
forthcomina menu change. Within
the next month and a hal!, the
restaurant will upgrade the quality
of the meat served aa well aa lncteMlnc portion mes -without a
price lncreate.
So in the coming months, the
restaurent where gracious
atmosphere and reaonable prices
have brouf)tt petrom bllck apin and
again, will become even more
irreslatable.
For mor e information, call
673-1505.
Eat Oilt Early
Tunigllt . in France I !YOW Sl!RVllYG THI! 8tlt AIYIYIVUSARY 11£AllLY BIRD"
~·~ celebr•tlng our eighth annlverury with•
new l!llrly lUrd Dinner from 4 pm to 7 pm dalty except
S.turday. A complete, delicious hench Dinner, lncllUllng
•choice (tom Chef White's award-winning dessert cart.
I
Here are some examples:
r'resh rtsh prepared with tiny
vegetables In champagne
sauce• Chicken Cordon Bleu •
Broiled Slrloln Steak In creamy
sauce • Stuffed l'resh ruet of
Sole poached In lobster sauce •
Top Slrloln Pepper Steak In light
cognac sauce• Veal Liver sau·
teed In parsley butter• Young
Duckling roasted and glued
wtth fresh fruit aauce-plus
dellcloua apeclala every day. .
(lnduda soup or salad. freah
vegetable, potato or rice. and
hotbeverage.) $ S
All thla few only~
t • • •
Verde Center to pleaae many taatea
Mesa Verde C-enter, on the corner Reuben'• entrees.
of Adams Street and Harbor Hamburger Hamlet la a fresh,
Boulevard in Costa Meu. bouta a creative statement of Informal
variety of fine •Una est.abu.h.menta. dinina at ita best. One can explore
Whether you prefer pizza or the extensive menu that includes
hamburgers, the center'• eateries .oUps. aa1ada, dinnen, oockta.Ua and,
will do the trick. Adventures in fine of course, counueu varieties of
dining include : Reuben' 1, hamburgen, all to be enjoyed in~
Hamburger Hamlet, Mione'• and luah greenhou.e room or the main
Coco's. dining room.
Reuben's is acceaaible at the Mione'• distinctive entryway
Adami Street entrance, and is paves the way for a wonderful
widely heralded for 1teak1 and Italian din.ina experience of p(ua,
.eafood, with "no holds barred" on pu1a and other Italian diahes.
aervioe. ~ A Mesa Verde v111t a110 can
A peek inside reveals the variety include Coco's -famous for
and extent of the green-prden salad hambur1era, aandwichell and all
bar, aa a complement to the famous varieUes of breakfasts and dinners.
TREATS OF THE DEEP -The oyster bar at Blackbeard's
Restaurant boMtl a delidoul array of choice New F.n«)and clams and
oysters. Blackbeard's ii at 4250 Martingale Way, Newport Beach.
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, October 13, 1982 -11
~ w
The Chef
Makes
The Difference!
One of life's greatest pleasures
is a perfect dinner, perfectly served
in luxurious surroundings. ·
Enjoy Continental cuisine prepared
to perfection by Chef Maurice Staehle.
SERVING HOURS
LUNCH 11:30 am-2:00 pm (Monday-Friday)
DINNER 6:00 pm-10:30 pm (Monday-Thursday)
6:00 pm-11:00 pm (Friday-Saturday)
BRUNOf 10:30 am-2:00 pm (Sunday)
P/ea&e call for reseroatioru
REST~
IN 1liE REGISTRY HOTU 18800 MACAR1lilJR BOULEVARD
~. CALIFORNIA 92715 114.752.s1n
1UCkB81JlD'S
FABULOUS OYSTER BAR
Featuring our Devils Triangle Speclalitles:
Fresh East Coast Clams & Oysters
Momemade Sty.le New England
Clam Chowder
Oysters Rockefeller & Scampi
LUNCH Monday thru Saturday 11 to 3:00
DINNER Seven Nights A Week
SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 AM to 3 PM
Fresh Fish Dally
HAPPY HOUR 4 to 7 pm MOn. thru Fri.
1
........
..
L
,
12 -. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, October 13, 1982
CHINESE DELICACIES -Pictured above from the Mandarin
Gourmet la an array of foods specially prepared by Michael
Chang, Some of his 1pecialtiea are Peldnc Duck, dwnplinp.
whole fish and spare riba. Many more 1Umptuoua items are
ottered on the menu. The Mandarin Gounnet, at 1~ Adarm
Ave., C... Meaa.
Join UI for tJaat Special
with a Romantic Ocean Settin1
67S-2S66 Valet Pukinl
1106 ... a.. Pronl,
Nrwport, lrlcJa. Ca.
cm dlle ._ ICIOll from thl ...... , ........
ltallan feast at La Strada
La Strada, located at 3620 E. Cout
Hi1hway in Corona Del Mar, i1
exqulaitely Italian, in the fineet --· ReeembUn1 a Florentine art
pllery In the late Renaa-nce style, the cllllinl roams ,.,_, ID Olnllean
and tena «*a. Dnawdc 0.,.-·to-CllOlnc wall mlrron, ~ tM6r
dimembw.
Os..tceJ bUlta. silk drapes and oll
palnU,.. contribute to the I~
decor and elegant tables are
enhanced by white linen napkins
flne cryetaJ, romanUc candlee and
Oower arranpments.
It 1tand1 to reason that La
Strada'• chef be an Italian native, no
leu. Faueto Grimaldl cooked for
yeen ln trattorias of hAI native land
befare ~ to the Unhmd Staa
in the late 60'1.
Proprietor Carmelo Manto now
offere fix-:d-price dinnere built
around the epecialtiee of a dilleNOt
ltaliml province .eh Q)Olltb. This
month, diners will enjoy the
exqui1ite cuisiae from t)ae ,...._,,,,.,.....of My, TCS9M.
It ii a lllMnWcent ..,..~ feMt
for $22.5'1
In addition, La Strada hu added
to its outetandinc f la carte eelections
that lnclude eilht different past.M. a
wide variety of seafood and veal
entrees, and unique specialties of the
houae, all mapltlcently prepared.
Pricel range ti-om $8.50 to t18.95.
Jackets are required for
aen\lemen and reservation• are
recommended. -8'7~1tn.
Friendly atmosphere awaits diner ...
Have~ eYel' enwed a,._. ad
felt. "rw been hen belare!" n.
warmth and Flldom att ~ Bob awn. a.taunnt In w..I will aarround ,... wttb ... , ......
Whitewr yU mood. then •• room In which &o ex,.._ it and •Joy quality diNnl and nmllent'
eervice. .
'n!e Tartan Rocm. with its rich
woods Md oil &*nlinll. eavelop9
JOU in • werlcl oC tnditloa and
' 1 I " Tbe Tbtetl• ioo•, with U1
beaatlful 1talned ..... celllna,
providel an open teeline wbJcb Is C"'"'-,_ wedclin1 nc••ll••· ... or bi MIN -SI•• Y41'a
can a1ao relax With a cup oC a.-
durbw the Atwnoan T-Nl'Yail
&om 1:30 to .. p.a. . ......,~
S.twdaJ. A slorioua Cb•m ....... Bnmch • mrWli bulb 8ewnlay and
&mday from 11 '° • ,.....
• . When maod ...... ,.. and
entertal:'.:'eatb!:;, Bo• Buns Launce. witb •• Hour,.... ..
to 7 p.m. and o.atetandba1 bon
d'oeuvres, i8 die perf-=t ....... n ID •
eondude a br•-cla1 or bllllD • eYmlnc.
.... AppeariniJ
CWI CNKO A Co.
w.1. a Thun. 1:30pm·ltCDlm Pri. a S.t. 9:00pm·1:30ull
Lunch, DblDer and SuadaJ Brunch
'' 333.1 Wiii PKific Coat tfiahwa,-~~iiiiiiiiii~i-ii"iadonliiiim: ~.l.·229Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
.. r • .. •
ORANGE.COAST DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 13, 1982 -13
OLD NEWPORT REVISITED -The historic
McFadden Building now houses E. Gads
Saloon and Restaurant. Directly across
from Newport Pier, E. Gads offers an ocean view
plus a casual ambience in which to partake of
delicious food and cocktails at reasonable prices.
The interior is tastefully decorated with brass
rails, historic photos and ceiling fans for a look at,
Old Newport, circa 1920. Open daily from 11 a.m.
to 2 a.m .
Enjoying elegant dining requires careful pre-evaluations
Although you never know what
goes on m the kitchen when you eat
at a restaurant, you can gel a good
indication or conditions by observing
what is in front of you.
Ir you do have a com plaint, you
s h o uld r e p o rt il lo th e
establishment's owner or manager
immediately. If tha t doesn't bring
satisfaction, call the local health
department and file a complaint.
Here's a list of guidelines for
evaluating a restaurant:
General Appearance -Check for
signs or insects, particularly roaches
and flies. The floor should be Cree or
debris, counters wiped often with
c lean towels and t able c loths
c hanged after each dinner.
Restroom• -They should be
well kept and supplied with 908p,
hot water and clean towels. Lack of
supplies and water pooled o n the
floor are signs of ne glec t a nd disre .
Tahl"tAcce11orles -Napkins,
salt and pepper shakers and me nus
AnDARln ceurmet
" ... _
•cu~--........
•PEKING
• SHANGHAI , £ -
·~CHWAN.
•llMAN .._
CllSINES · .le
CICITAIS
1-.S rll
11111£1 FAWTIS JO .
SPECIAl·BUSINES·s LUNCHEONS
OPEN7.DAYS
should be Cree of grease, fangerpnnts ,
and spilled food. Check dishes for
residue ~d spots. ·
WaJten aad Waitre11es -The
peraon serving you should be clean
and well groomed. This includes
clean hands and fi n gernails, an
unsoiled uniform and hair safely tied
back.
Food Handling -Food on the
counter, such as cakes, rolls and pies
should be kep.,covered. Food and ice
should be served with utensils and
not hands.
P remier ::binin Since 1973
•
..
•
14 -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, October 13, 1982 .
LUNCH • DllD • AFTERNOON TEAS
Saturday & Sunday
Champagne Brunch
Banquet facilities
37 FASHION ISLAND • 64"6-2030
Reservations Accepted
Airporter Inn Hotel
(ta~talnO
(tdble
Open 24 Hours
BreakfasVLunctv'Dinner
, cfJJ edit etnlneari
CJloom
Superb Continental Cuisine
m Hlittg anJ
Ban9u,d facililieJ
To Suit Your Every Need
10 to 600
Entertainment
Nightly
Happy Hour
Mon.·fri .
SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
m the Mediterranean Room
10 - 2
ur ., Irvine, 9'l715
(At 'John Wayne Airport)
18700
WINNING PAIR -Chef Charles Kalagian, left, and manager
John McBeth team up to make dinin~ at The Warehouse
Restaurant a meal to remember. Nestled at the water's edge at
3450 Via Oporto in Lido Marina Village, Newport Beach, the
rambling tin-roofed Warehouse offers relaxing ambience.
The Rex captures true flavor
of exotic seafood delicacies
"Perfume of the sea."
The realm of seafood abounds in
unique tastes and sensory pleasures.
However, transferring that natural
flavor from the ocean to the plate -
retaining the "perfume of the sea"
-can be a difficult task.
But that's exactly the chore taken
on by restaurateur Rex Chandler.
owner of The Rex, one of Newport
Beach's newest and most exciting
restaurant&.
"To the real caviar lover, caviar
should smell as sweet as a bouquet of
toees," Chandler says. "At The Rex
we try to capture in our cooking the
exact flavor of the food -what the
fish actually tastes like."
That involves avoidance o f
heavy-handed cooking methods,·
where an overabundance of uuces.
spices and other condimenta coven
up the true taste of the food.
Chandler's appreciation for the
true taste of seafood comes from an
intimate knowledge of his craft. His
career began as an apprentice chef in
1968 at Alley West, a defunct
establishment that occupied the
same building at 2106 Ocean Front
that The Rex now occupies.
In 1970 Chandle r moved to
Hawaii to work for Nick 's Fish
Market. a leading fine seafood
restaurant in the islands. He later
bought his ·own r estaurant in
HonoluJu and worked there until returning to has .. alma mater" in
Newport Beach.
In the meantime, Alley West was
superceded by The Ritz, which
gained fame as a fine establishment.
When the Rex opened three months
.ago, it had a big act to follow.
Undaunted, Chandler has created
a gounnet seafood house that seeks
out exotic, hard-to-find seafood like
mahi mahi, ono, ahi tuna. opakapaka
and sashimi.
The Rex remains one of the few
restaurants around with an ocean
view. Guests relax in a dining room
decorated with tum-of-the-century
antiques. From The Rex's vantage
point above the boardwalk near the
Newport Pier, diners view the
SUNet over the Pacific.
Freshneaa la a must at The Rex. It
carries through the entire menu,
from the pink abalone to the live
Maine lobster, from aoftshell crab to
local swordfish, from salmon and
halibut of Alaskan waters to oysters
and clams.
Prime meata served at The Rex
include veal, lamb and beef.
For more information, call ..
675-2~.
ELEGANT DINING -Firelit cfi!µng awai~ guesta at the:
Airport.er Inn Restaurant, at 18700 MacArthur Blvd, Irvine.
New food and beverage manager at the Alrporter ii Jerry
Berberich, who brinp his expertise·to the establishment after a
six-year career with Lakeside Restaurant in Newport Beach.
Continental dining at a medium price range ii available for
lunch, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.;· dinner, nightly from 5:30 p.m.; and
Sunday brunch, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
ORAN"GE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, October 13, 1982 -15
.. RIVIERA
RE&TAURANT
Continental Cuisine
Pri •'41 tC' l'c.1r tit·s
Banquet Facilities 15 to 70 People
Call For Reservations
Closed Sundays & Holidays
South Coast Pl'-'Za Costa Mesu
540-3840
IWIE
LOISTD
DINNER --
,.. ... ,_,.,, . ...,
U&•ll•IMIT --· c.111·.-s5~ ..........
o...c~d.-..,.,," s.,. ..... 4001>., .. only
BIGl5rYiCES PRIME Ill
AF 1 and ~~ ~ 1/a STUFFED _
PIDZ MAllE
A lotta cl1a1 a ao ceat1!
The only
1 day a w .. k
happy hour
in So. Calif.
4:30 to 1 p.m.
A •&food
eztravaqa.nza
FrM oysters
and clam1
Comblnecl with •
unique offering
of appetiun
"L08STEI
Ca"4H Salad,
&ked Clams,
()yiteT
Rockeleller
2 ''"h V99eta.ble1
ALL S895 FOi
OU.J Good Su. tbna fri. u,time s.1 ' 1o e pm Olll1
. .
.
16 -ORANGE COAST DAil. v PILOT /Wedneedey, Octo• 1a. 1f:82
MEXICO MANIA -A variety of Mexican dishes are available at
Tortilla Flats, 1740 S. Coaat Highway ln Laguna Beach. The
restaurant's specialties include La Fiesta, a marinated steak that is
charbroiled and topped with salsa and guacamole. Othen include
green corn tamales, and chile relleMS. Wine and imported beers are
offered. Tortilla Flata is open from 11:30 a.m. daily. For reeervations
call 494·6588. Pictured above are office manager Bonnie Barnes and
restaurant manager Javier Sola. ,
J
Reuben"'s
•
Newport Beach
"Beautiful
Waterfront
Dining"
Serving Lunch & Dinner
Sunday Brunch
Happy Hour 4 to B pm
-Mon. thru Fri.
Fabulous Oyster Bar
Prices R.,. From SOt
live Entertainment
;251 E. Ca.st Hwy. 67~-1505 Newport lellCh
Gorda Liz preaenta fine food In the
exotic setting of Portugueae . vllla .
The Gorda Liz located at 900
Bayside Drive In Newport Beach,
offers a "touch of Portugal" and
class to the dining experience.
Enhanced with fountains, a
variety of plants, bricktile flooring,
, and straw brick walls, made O{ dried
straw and mud, the Gorda Liz is a
charming semblance of a Portuguese
villa.
The dishes are a variety of
contine ntal cuisin e, in cluding
dinner entrees such as Steak Naz.are,
Filet Mignon, Pork. back ribs and
Zanueta, compoeed of a tomato base
soup decorated with clams, fish,
lobster, muaaels and spices .
For fish love rs. the Gorda Liz
offers a selection of six or seven
seafoods.. Including a "catch of the
day".
Lunch specials include omelettes,
an a5sortment of salads and a variety
of sandwiches, all freshly prepared.
Highly recommen<ted Is the stuffed
artichoke, filled with tender baby
shrimp.
A traditional champagne brunch is
served every Sunday, featuring a
variety of egg dishes.
The Gorda Liz features a happy
hour every weekday Crom 4 to 7
p.m .• offering a ppetiurs at half
price. Artichoke hearts, jumbo
shrimp cocktail, clams casino and
sauteed scampi a re a few of the
favorites.
To enhance the European charm,
the GordA Liz offers five rooma for
dining, all their own in decorative
appeal. T he Fountain room, the
Salon, the Garden room, the Balcony
and the Library complete with
fireplace, all add to the Portuguese
flavor.
According to the manager, Peter
Kwong, the Gorda Uz'a motto i. to
"feature good food In a good
atmosphere."
"Our waiters and waitresses have
very warm and welcoming
penionalitJes.·They will do anything
they can to please the customers,"
Kwong adds.
In the next week, a s pecial
attraction is arriving at the Gorda
Liz. A piano bar. featuring live
entertainment will provide a variety
of soft, romantic music during
dinner hours.
This is a unique event, according
to Kwong. since entertainment has
never before been featured. "We
think people will really enjoy the
soft piano as a background to their
meal," he adds.
And after a delicious cuisine, how
about a game of darts? Or
backgammon? Or even Defenders?
Yes, the Gorda Liz has its very own
game room in the downstairs wine
cellar.
The w i ne room . with its
Portuguese enchantment, houses an
array of imported, domestic and
California wines including the house
wine, Almaden. Prices range Crom $8 !:'., to $34.75.
Lunch is ser ved Mond ay -
Saturday, 11:30 -3 p.m. and dinner
hours are from 5 -9:30 p.m. on
weekdays; 10:30 p.m. on weekend.a.
The Sunday Champagne brunch i.
served between 10:30 and 2:30 p.m.
Serving Lunch & Dinner
Banquet F,acilities • Entertainment
•
''Attitude Adjustment Hour"
S.ning Douhl• Mon.-F'ri.
From ~ning Till 7 P .M .
I 112.5535 I.
OLD WORLD TRADmON -Dining at 'The Tale of the Whale is
like stepping back in ti.me -to a time of leisurely dining in an old
world atmosphere. With a menu of hearty seafood combinations as
well as tradit ional favorites, it offers freshness, q uality and a
sweeping view of the harbor.
TLr B' ~1 •rzan 1111:. ml'I •• 7
..
Serving Lancb I Dinner
• Early Bird Dinners
Sto 8 p .m .
• Happy Hour
Mon.-Fri. 4:30 to 6:30
• Sunday Champagne
Buffet Brunch
1000 tO 2:30
• Live Entertainment
8 Night. a W'•k
• Banquet & Private Party
Faciliti88 available
14912 ... Mil
al UI .. ,, ·
EB !~ Ta1lia
730-0119
ORANGE COAST DAILY Ptt:OT/Wednesday, October 13, 1~82 -17
Puffin• combine• fine food and thrift
Pufflm, at 3050 Coast Highway in
Corona del Mar. is preparing to
enter a new phue in Its history.
In the upcoming months the
restaurant thal is a cross between a
dinner house and a coffee shop wiU
unde rgo a complete remodeling of its
interior.
''What•l've always wanted to do
here." says owner Bruce Warden, "is
create a restaurant that combim.'S the
best features of the coffee shop and
dinner house -taking the fine food
of the dinner house and the lower
prices of the c.'Offee shop."
The remodeling may cause a closin1
in November for about a week to 10
days . H owever, the rebo rn
restaurant will sport a clean, crisp
look with lots of plants to reflect the
natural presentation of food.
Warden took over operations of
the restaurant about three years ago.
He estimates that between 120,000 to
150,000 patrons come through his
establishment In one year.
Such patronage bespeaks the care
with which food preparation and
presentation is given at what has
come to be known as a breakfast
house.
Traditional mahogany furniture
w as refinis hed by hand by
restaurant workers. inc luding
Warden himself. And all dishes are
made from scratch right on the
premises.
A natural foods accent IS kept in
mind at all umes. While Warden
doesn't claim to run <i hC'alth food
restaurant. he does take pains to
make sure that no refined sugar or
sail is used in food preparation. And
many of their tasty desserts cire
prepared wilh honey.
Puffins is open seven days a w<'Ck
from 8 a .m . to m1dn1ght Call
640-1573.
La Cave Puts menu on display for patrons
If you ask to see the menu at La
Cave restaurant in Colt.a Mesa. don't
expect to be handed a folded sheet of
paper.
La Cave, at 16951A Irvine Ave.,
utilize& display menus. Befor e
ordering, guests are shown dinner
samples on a bed oC ice from which
to choo.e their 1election.
The method works well for La
Cave, atnce their selecliv1 menu
features Steak and Lobster, crab,
shrimp and comblnat.ionl thereof. ,,.
Din ers can enjoy s uch elegant
meals with their favorite salad and
choice of baked or ltUffed potato.
La Cave la a landmark on lta C.O.ta
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY ANO SUNDAY
AFTERNOON
LA TE SEAFOOD BAR
SUNDAY BRUNCH
CRUISES
M esa corner, where it has
maintained hig_h standards of
excellence for more than 20 years.
An elevator ride takes guests below
street-level to the dimly-lit, cozy
atmosphere.
"Everyone raves about our garlic
bread," says Car o l BoyeT,
spokeswoman for La Cave. The
Italian delight has kept patrons
t'Oming beck again and again.
La Cave is open Monday to
Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. for lunch. Monday to Thursday
from 5:30 to 10:30 p.m. for dinner
and Friday and Saturday to 11:30
p.rn.
FEATURING:
LOCAL
RESERVATIONS
675-5777
BOAT .CHARTERS
PRIVATE PARTIES, WEOOtHOS
COMPlETE CATERING OR
BARE BOAT
FOR INGMQUALS ANO FAMILIES ENJOY
CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH OUAIHG
2 HA. HARBOR CRutSE.
RESERVATIONS 975-577'
' ..
18 -ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 13, 1982
Pallias Is Remodeling!
Same commitment to fre1h qua.lity'whole
food1 without 1alt or 1u9ar in a new
atmoephere.
Join u. in the new adnntw-.
140-1573
~
3080 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
OpJ>09it• Alberteon1
Di""'' Pl11ylto1nt
preMnu
A Comedy -Thrilfer
, ly In Lnla
DWHtetlt.y
Jfm dePrleat
Now Playing
Performances Tues. thru Sun & Sun. Brunch
BEAtmP'tJL HONOR -Mill America, Debra Sue Moffett, was on
hand recently to congratulate Anthony's Pier 2 Restaurant owner
Charles Rlvezzo on the succesa of his busineas. Anthony's Pier 2 is
famoua for unique food offerings and recently kicked off an
unpret'edent.ed teVen day a week happy hour where a delidous
spread of appetizers are only to be outdone by free osyters and clams.
Catering is available both on and off premises. Overlooking beautiful
Upper Newport Bay, Anthony's is at 103 N. Bayside Drive, Newport
Beach.
Kono Hawaii auccessfully combines
Japanese and Polyneslan food
If the South Pacific ialanda hold a
certain intrigue for ;1ou. you may
want to experience ttie Kono Hawaii
-Polynesian dlnJng in aU its tropic
splendor.
The Kono Hawall ls actually two
restaurants under one roof. The
Polyneaian r oo m , with Its
Hawaiian decor, lncludlng hanging
canoes and tolem poles. transforms
Into a showroom a fter dinner is
served.
A variety of local Hawaiian shows
and Las Vegas hued productions,
each running for two to three weeks.
make the Kono Hawaii a unique
nightspot.
Next door, to the Polynesian room
one 1t.ep into an oriental Tea Houae,
and dine in a strictly Japa.ne11e 1tyle.
A email s tream tricklin&. ct_own
the center of the "houae", hanging
lanterns and oriental fans, enhance
the Oavor of the customary foods of
Japan -te mpura, s uk iyaki,
leriyaki chicken a nd steak a nd
others. A Tea House special ls the
"boat dinner ". consisting oJ a
combination of meal, chicken. and
seafood.
The Tea HOU9e offers a sushi bar
and the exciting "T e pan-ya kl"
style of cooking. Experienced chefs
prepare the food at the table on a
''Tepan" (a steak grill) adding a flare
with knives.
The Coasten, a Las Vegas· bued
show group w i!l app~ar in the
Polynesian room, t>eg1nn1ng Oct. 14:
The Kono Hawaii is located at 226
South Harbor Blvd. in Santa Ana.
Specializing fn Fresh Seafood
Romantic Water Front Dining
Serving Lunch & Dinner 7 Days A Week
Saturday & Sunday Brunch 10 to 4:00
2318 W. Newport Blvd. 6 7 5-04 7 4 Newport Beach
•
BAYSIDE RESTAURANT-Pictured above i8 The Cannery Cn1i1e
Boat, "Isla Mujeres." leavine the restaurant dock. The Cannery off era
a two-hour Sunday Brunch Cru.i8e ~ Sunday, one in the morning
and one in the afternoon. The boat i8 ai.o available for weddings,
receptions and partie9. For more information, call 67~-~777.
South Coast Plaza has a lot to offer
from pqe I
You don't have to be an athlete to
appreciate the s.ck S.y Rowtnc and
Running Club. Their superb
sandwiches, luscious omelettet,
quiche and aa1ada will keep you and
the "crew" cominc bM:k often.
Just next door, Salmaaundi la
another of thoee reatauranta that
offers a deliFtful vantaee point to
the people activity that •au. place
in the mall. But the r.l attnct.lon UI
the cuatom«dered --. temptinc
quiche and fruit and dlee9e traya. ~ BendeYow Cafe UI a perfect
place for all types of u.ndwiches,
popcorn, anacka, yo1urt and lee
cream.
You can step directly into the
mid-town Manhattan environment
of Pronto Trattoria, where a choice
of 11 authentic North-Italian pU.:u.
are made ~ore your eya.
Anet Pronto Rlatorante, with
dlatincdve Italian cumne, offers a
menu that include. Italian fish and
1eafood, chicken and veal diahea
cooked in deli1htful aaucee and
homeipedaltM9aach • .,.=ne, acampi-clella-coua, and cbken
caacikllft.
All the convenience, taste and
affordable prica ot fa.t food can be
had and enjoyed at South Cout
Piasa. A camfor1eble ...... 19 the h• ..,... clbq roam ol Carl'•
Jr., where famous -hamburgers are
enjoyed . And nearby ia
McnaMald'a, with their famow Be
Macs, Chicken McNu11eu,
tn.kf-. and the ....
Kaplan'• bakery la the IOW'ce
of manr. marvelous baked a_oocla
emanat n1 from the plau. ---rhia
authentic full d ell also serves
hundreds of IMdwicha
But if home la wtwe the hMr1 la,
then foe all tbme romandc.'s, board
the 20th Century Ltd. The
authentically re-created railroad
dtnlng car a. Min to a venture into :::" ..,..=. r;!b and ..tood are
Phl8b Nd Interior, mftly filtef'ed
H1hta and continental cuisine
reuauunend the fiw-atar n!lllautmt
Riviera.
T••IJ view of bay
Woody's Wharf, at 2318 Newport
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seafood and omllnental cuillne with
a~bayview.
Spedaffdel at tbe 19taUnnt that
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THE SOUTH ·COAST PLAZA
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SOUTH CQ\ST PLAZA
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. Ownen· visit some of 100 horses quartered at El Modena High
Sehool after they were saved from Saturday's fire.
11m1m11111:11t111111111W1
OHANC~t LOIJN I Y < Al ll OHNlA /'1 C~ NT ',
NRC will probe
constr.uction of
plant ·at On of re
Charges of faulty construction
at the San Onofre nuclear power
plant have prompted a Nuclear
R e gulatory Comm i ssio n
Investigation of the controversial
facility.
A group of NRC Inspectors will
be conducting tests of the newly
constructed units 2 and 3 of the
nuclear plant later this week,
NRC spokesman Jim Hanchett
said today.
faulty construction and design at
virtually every power plant in
the country . He said on ce
investigators study the San
Onofre and Michigan plants, a
report .will be macJe public In a
few weeks. · ·
"W e d o n 't see anything
s 1gnif1cant ·in his (Kent's)
allegations," he said. "This is
typical o f the con s truction
deficiencies you would get In a
large construction site."
Bel·hte l 'spo k esman Jim
Mackin said Kent was fired last
February after he failed two job
certification tests.
Power line hlanied in canyon blaze
The allegations were made by
Elmo Earl Kent of Cypress, a
former quality l'Ontrol inspector
for Bechtel Power Inc., the
plant's mal.n contractor. Kent, 56,
was fired last February after he
failed two job certification tests.
He had been assigned lo San
Onofre in October 1980.
Kent has charged that faulty
welds in critical safety systems
were approved at San Onofre as
well as at a nuclear power plant
in Midland, Mich ., where he was
transferred following his Orange
County assignment. The NRC
aJso is investigating the Midland
plant.
Kent has said he brought his
allegations t-0 the attention of
Bechtel o!Ciclals and then the
NRC. Receiving little satisfaction,
he approached members of the
Orange County chapter of the
anti-nucle ar Alliance for
Survival. according to Alliance
spokesman Tam Carpenter. By DAVID KlJTZMANN ...............
Fire offid.ala have determined
tltat a destructive, 16,800-acre
firestorm in eastern Orange
County waa sparked by a fallen
Jj_o'l(er.llne support at a
i,cnonneu Douglas test facility
in Gypsum Canyon.
• Orange County Fire Chief
&wrence Holms announced the
Ondinga of his department's
investigation Tuesday aa the
~emnants of a ma ssive
fJrefighting force continued
;~-up operation• In rugged
country east of Irvine Lake.
~Holma, who gave the Countv
" ~
Board of Supervisors a fire
update earlier in the day, told
reporters that his investigators
felt certain the cause of the fast-
moving blaze could be attributed
to a fallen power line cross bar
owned by McDonnell Douglas.
Southern California &Hson Co.
lines were not involved, he said .
"We feel confident that that is
the absolute cause (of the fire) at
this time," the county fire chief
said. .
Holms said it appears almost
certain that powerful Santa Ana
wind conditions caused the cr088
bar on a pole at the McDonnell
Douglas facility to fall to the
~ewport bed tax
hike hid defeated ~ .
9Y STEVE MARBLE "I've been in favor of the fr .. DliltJ,.... lncreue all along but l believe ~ effort to hike the Newport this would be a breach of faith to
h dty hotel and mot.el bed " id M a move voters defeated approve it now, sa ayor Jackie Heather who was joined
at the polls -has been by council colleagues Paul
r:. beck for a third time. Hummel, Evelyn Hart and ii The city council, anned with a Ruthelyn Plummer in striking ~urt ruling that would have down the tax request.
~ed it to bypa11 the voters, The council had been nearly
(ltme up a vote short ·Tuesday unanimous in its support of the
~ening of increasing the tax measure when it was placed on fiom 6 to 8 percent. · (See BED TAX, Page A!) if esa developnient
~=
f,l.ecision postponed
=· .. . :
{:A decision on a much-debated
~Ila Mesa development
ai.'opoal has been postponed iliitil next June at the request of 1'i'oJlct t.cken.
: ~The delay w• approved this
ieek by the city Planning
~mmiuion in response to a
~ from Amel Development
•· 'n.e firm la .eeking approval w buOd 210 condominlums and a
0-acre commercial center on ~ near South CoMt Plaza.
i-'The plan -which local
~,.. have criUcized aa 1too derwe'' -w• ICheduled to
"'considered by the city council -:.; -~
Nov. l, the eve of this year's
council election.
Under the revised planning
commiaaion schedule, the
proposal will not f~ council
action until next July.
The t:::f:rty la bounded by
South Drive, Bear Street,
San Diego Freeway and San
Leandro Real.
Robert Mickelson, an Arnel
planning consultant, said the
firm's request for an extension
waa baaed solely on financial
conaideratlona, Indicating the
company 11 aatlafled with the
plan submitted I.Mt June.
(See DECISION, Pase AZ )
ground, emitting sparks which
ignited nearby brush. He said
there is no evidence of negligence
on McDonnell Douglas' part.
The blare was first spotted by
a patrolling sheriff's deputy just
before 9 a.m. Saturday. Though
rire officials were quickly
notafled , the flames s pread
within minutes into Inaccessible
terrain, Holms said. ·
The blaze proved costly.
Counted destroyed were 11
luxury homes in the exclusive
Crest de Ville community in
Orange, two homes In Anaheim
Hilla and another large home in
unincorporated area near
Santiago Canyon.
Damage estimates were placed
at $11 million. down from an
earlier appraisal of $16 million.
More than 140 people suffered
minor injuries and two horses
were killed during Saturday's
chaotic evacuation.
Also harmed were 3,000 acres
of habitat for rare Tee.ate cypress
trees.
McDonnell Douglas Corp.
officials in Huntington Beach
said Tuesday their company is
stud yi ng the county Fire
(See FIRE, Pase A!)
"As we do in all cases where
we r eceive allegation s o f
construction deficiencies we send
inspector s to look into the
matter." said Hanchett, adding
that he regards the situation as
"not terribly serious at the
moment."
''They are not major problems
at least at the surface but we
really don't know until we take a
look at them."
Hanchett said the NR C
routlrely receives allegations of
"We feel that this is merely the
tip of the iceberg as Car as the
problems at San Onofre,"
Carpenter said. "The questions
Earl has raised underscore the
need for a truly independent
audit of the operauon at all three
units of San Onofre."
"We wonder why the NRC sat
on these complaints for six
months. We believe they warrant
investigation."
The C'Omplaints in September
involved four supposedly faulty
welds on hangers for pipes in
San Onofre's Unit 2 .
Dena Farrow recalls • ... the more they operated,
the more injuries they found.'
Brush lVith death
still haunts teen
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. Dtlr ..... la.ft
The terrible events of Friday,
Aug. 13, still replay themselves
In !~-year-old Dena Farrow's
nightmares: the rifle shot, the
burning and bleeding in her back
and abdomen, the difficult
breathing, the sight of her best
friend slumped over in front of
her, the ambulance ride to
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital ....
Her aunt, Jo Ann Gudmunson,
remembers waiting at the
hospital that night as Dena
underwent aix hours of surgery.
"The doctors didn't give us
much l"N80rl to hope." her aunt
recalled, "becawie the more they
operated, the more injuries they
found. Every time a doctor
walked out, her mother and I
neuly died becawie we knew it w• &dnl to be bad news."
Dena Iott a kidney, her spleen
and parts of her pancreas, liver,
stomach and intestines.
But she 1urvived that night
and several more nights on the
critical li1t, attached to life-
aupport equipment. She endured
additional 1urpry and 11everal
life-threatening infections.
Dena uys much of the credit
for her recovery must IO to her
loving family, some devoted
fri ends on the Marina High
School girls volleyball team and
to her Idol, Rams quarterback
Vince Ferragamo, who raised her
spir its with two autographed
pictures and a telephone call.
Today, the pretty blonde
Huntington Beach girl is well on
her way back to a normal teen-
age life.
Though her brush with death
and the most difficult days of
recovery are behind her, Dena
Farrow still has nightmares that
remind her she was the luckier of
two s h ooting victims on that
fateful Friday the 13th.
Dena met Rise Lou Tucker,
daughter of R-0sie Micle tte, a
popular parking enforcement
officer in Lagun.I Beach, when
the two were ln the eighth grade
at Harbour View School In
Huntington Beach.
The two became fast friends,
and spent many summer days
shopping together or going to the
beach.
On the evening of Aug. 13, the
two girls went to a party, then
visited a Huntington Harbour
physician's home where an
acquaintance, Richard Berge, 18.
waa ataylng.
The girls were preparing to
(See IDOL, Pase A4 )
Craig Hosmer dies llDEI
Are American•
1etting their
money'• worth for
the 1287 billion
they would •pend
e•eh year on
health eare? Why
•re metlieal eeetl
10 hlah T An1wen
•ppeal In a apeel•I
paebp of 1toriee
on Pap ClO.
I
He was re-elected
10 times
Enaenada, Mexico, but turned
around to take Holmer'• body'°
San Pedro, about~ mLles south
of Loe Aneela,
Hosmer waa the 1en ior
Republican on the Joint
Committee on Atomic lneray
and the Hou1e Interior
CommlttN, pm&ticn \hat made
him 1n Influence on water ,..,urc.-and nucleer power.
Aft« Mirtftl from eon,r.i.
Ho1naer became an entrAY
con1ultant ln WMhlq&on. e
aJlo --• ~t of the Amerlean NuclHr •••r1y Couaen, a non;,croflt trail• ...... *" that .,.... for .... --..-o1 ....... .,.,.... ........ ..._.__"~
I • 0 • of tlllt. Ullll9lllf,.9'\ • 'I.
California at Berkeley. did
po1t1raduate work at the
University of Michl~ and then
attended the U.S . Naval
AcMemy at AnnapoU.. He w• a
reU.red ,...,. admJral in the Navy
Relerve.
He obtained hla law deiP'ft at
the University of Southern
California and precUoed law ln Lone 8Nch from 1948 to 1949,
after MrVlnC In World War D • 1
naval ofnc.i'.
____ _, __ ..,.."' """'· .. ... ... ,.._ . ..............,,. ·~
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C'e·'7 AT
D-8
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A.'I
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Campaign residenCy probe halted
I
-..
IRE CAUSE SET . • • • parunen\'a flndlngia regardJna
blue.
Spokesmen for the firm iuaJd
Gypaum Canyon letll fuclllty
N not ln we the weekend the
e broke out. They said the
9-acre test site only had bL-en
aporadkally during the pas\
yeant.
'h e <'ompan y 1 ald u
ntenance crew had cleared
area of graaa, weeds and
two months ago and that a
taker stays on the premises
r round.
]'he Gypsum Canyon facility is
uSed Cor experiments involving
~
h igh n o t1e lt.•vel11 a nd f o 1•
equipment too bulky for ute at
other McDonnell Dou(llH test
I tt"I
An C'qulpme nl traller and a
tool shed ut the I.cit (.~·nt.cr were>
dt>!itroycd by flames Saturday.
Of tht• 1 •l homL'ti IO!tt und 1hc
'damaged , county fire officials
said, tht•rl' were two common
factors -they pad <.'Ombusllble
roofs and they were perched on
s t eep h1lls 1des ov<'rloo klng
canyons covered by an cxploaive
carpel of tinder dry brushland.
Holms said the homes would
h ave f ar e d better witho'ut
combustible roofs.
DECISION DELAYED . • • •
-·It's Uke everything else these
days. Nothing's happening. I
think it's timing m o re than
anything else," Mickclsdn said.
"Most likely w e'll slick with the
plan we have."
North C os t a M es a
h omeowners , who w on an
i n i tiative that bloc k e d tvelopment of more than 650
mes and apartme nts on the
operly in 1978, have opposed
e latest plan, as weU.
1 "The board ha s b een il}~ppointed with the density,"
jp}d Jon Paradis, vice president
rl>'f the North C osta Mes a
~meowners Association . "The
I. ly. thing that pacified us m·
ker's remark to me tha t he
ught it wouldn't pass."
arry Rinker, a partner in ~~el Development with George
;jt.'f,yros, denied having made
such a statement. He said he is
a nxious to m ee t with ~eowners before the Plaruting
t'l.rtmml-lon hearing in June. r..or·-·-
"Tha l is not correct," said
Rinke r , o f Pava dls' rema rk.
"We're not playing a game of
starting with 10 nnd hoping to
get five ." ·
In a ddi tion t o th e
condominium developme nt, the
plan calls ror 12 acres of two-
story garden offices and 31 acres
or tow and mid-rise offices along
lhe freeway.
A l so in th e pl a n l s a
realignment or South Coast
Drive to <.'Onnecl with a S(.'Ction of
the street already completed near
Sa n L ea ndr o . N ea rb y
homeowners had requested the
street be moved away from their
property.
Last December the 4th District
Co urt o f Appea l in S an
Bernardino declared the initiatlve
invalid. thus clear ing the way for
the developer to proceed w ith
1ts original plan to build 537
a partments and 127 homes.
Arnel , however , revised the
proposal to its curre nt form.
!BED TAX VOTE. • •
r. l the ballot, spending $25,000 on
);tLO elections within one year. .utn both elections, a majority of '.Uf ~ voters went along with the ;i5w increase but failed t.O provide
the 1wo-th1rds margm needed. A
r ecent stale S upreme Court
ruling, though, cleared the way
for the council lo u p the tax
without even going lo the voters.
BY JEFP ADLER
«tMOeltylllletl ....
A 1pt-clol Inquiry by o 1tatt•
&now pant'I lnu:ondl-<l to m•olvl'
" n •11ld"ncy fwp lnvulvlnu 3ind
1tat.e Se na te 01-trict candldotl"'
J<"'runk Borboro a nd £dwurcJ
ll o y c (' h as b oon cu n <: t• I I.' d
Ind •tlnltely.
In a terfk•ly wordc-d 111atcmcn1
r ead by ald t'I, St.•n . P n u l
Carpenter. 0 -Cyprclll, 1uld the
a peclo l two-mun committee
hcarlng hl• unnoun.<.'Cd during 1.1
news ronfere nt•e lust wt>ek htld
tx>cn canceled. /
The h e ar i ng h a d bee n
SC'hPrlt1le rl to lR kC' U fl lh c
r~ Jd•nrY nwttor thl1 mornJna "' ~o nta An n'• C i t y C cH&J\Oll
t'hurnhera. J t wtta l() louk Into
11 llt·a 1HloM luvl"d b y bo th
candldatLlli t~ut tht1 other did not
It-Holl y 1H1tl afy re1ldcnc y
rt'l\ulr1•rnm1111 bc•forl' llllnti tor ott <"t·
In unnou n<"ing t hl• hNtrlng cun<.~llallon , c;urpc•nl..r 11uggestt.-d
lhnl &rbum and Roycl' forwnrd
tm y 1•vhk11c:f' supporlinij th1>lr
c:ontt•nll<>n thut their uppunent
was not u ll•gal rciudt>nt of tho
distr ict to the lt'gisla tive counscl'11
offlc: in S uc:ramcnlo.
S h o rtly u f tf'r Corpcnlcr
'Affordable' homes
flayed in Newport
Plans for the first affordable
housing project In Newport
Beach, which has been met with
a wa ve of protest, h ave been
pulled back for a sec..'Ond look.
Ci ty council members had been
scheduled Tuesday to vote on the
con troversial plan to build so-
calJed afforda ble units near the
fa s hi o nabl e E as t b luf r
community.
Residents of East bluCf have
blasted the building project as
being too dense and suggl>i>tcd it
would bring in too many people
and 100 m~ny cars. S evera l
pC'o ple s uggested the project
would bring in people who don't
fit the Newport Beach lifestyle.
The co unci l , wllh little
<."Omment, agreed to ship the plan
bac k l o th e ci t y Planning
Commill&~on for public hearings,
Likely to be held in December
Although the building project
was proposed by the city, it
· w o uld be constructed by the
Irvine Company on 35 acres or
la nd b etw een Ma c Arthur
poulevard ond Jamboree Road,
north of Camelback Drive.
T h e plan w o ul d p e rm it
construction of 750 housing unJls
instead of the 120 now per mitted
al the silC'.
T ht• "affordable" units would
be 1n th e $85,UOO lo $1 26,000
range ond would be offered to
fam ilies with annual incomes
from $21.UOO w $43,000.
Some rc.-s1dents who neighbor
the project site c la ime d the
housinJl wouJd nol r11 an 'With an area whe r e h omes go from
$250,000 to more than $1 million.
The city is £ac.:1ng a lawsuit
rilc..'Ci by a coalition of legal aid
a nd fair housing groups that
al lege Ne wport Beach h as
d1scr1mmatory housing practices
that exclude low and moderate
wage earners
Supervisors nix
El Toro airport
Orange C.Ounty Supervisors. in
a split vote, have voiced thei r
opposition t-O the USC or the EJ
Toro Martne Corps Air Station as
a commer cial airport, but not
without vocal dissent from the
minority that opposed the action:
study of possible airport sites.
"I JUSt don't believe that this
board has enough information al
hand to m a k e the k ind o f
decision this resolution calls for,"
said Clark.
announced tho hearln&• would
bl> acMdw.d, Senate President
Pro Tempore O.vid RoberU, I).""
Lo• Ansele., ••Id ho had not
authorir.ed .uch hearlnp becau.e
he wat waiting to receive a
torn1ol r{'(1ue1t.
Once the requcst wu received
by Roberll'a offk e, members of
the flvu-member Senate Rules
Comml~u-e. which would have to
uuthurlu: the probe, were to be
called und polled on the malt.er.
However , the canccllollon
unnoun,•cment did not eicpl•ln
why il had been put ort.
Followtna C.rpenter'1 lnltl1I
announc.~t of the probo, •ldft
to Royet' po nLed out that both
Cat::J\ter •nd Ro~rtl W4'rtt two
of our OeraatraUc le1f1l1t.ora
w o 1l1ned a Sep«!moor leti.:r
1e Ina flnandal 1upport tor
Democrat Barb1ro'1 campaign.
Th~y noted that 1uch hearlnp
mfRht be poUtlcally motivated.
8arbaro and hl 1 00.P
opponrnt Royct! ar running for
the 32nd dlalrlct 1Ht that
Inch.Kin porUon1 of Huntltucton
Sl'ech and FountaJn Valley and
much of northweet Oranao
County. ...
j Valley· J ayc~es
plan art shoJV
The F o untai n Valle y
Juycees will conduct a fund-
raising art show and auction
Friday at the Fountain Valley
Community Cente r behind
Caty HalJ. 10200 Slater Ave.
The exhibition will be held
from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. The
ll U('tio n b e i;t in 11 8 p .m .
•A seminar about sex and
growing up will be offer~ to
fifth and sixth graders and
their parents th18 weeke nd al
the Community Un i te d
•A ceramic workshop on
beginning potter's wheel will
b e o({er ed Saturdays at
G o lde n West Co lle g e in
Huntington Beach. begmnmg
Saturday.
Open to adults and children
13 or older , the nine-week
workshop wiU be held from
1:30 to 4:30 p.m . in Fine Arts
Room 129. Studen ts will be
Admlaslon la $2 per peraon.
Hora d'oeuvres and no-hatt
cocktails will be provided.
Checks and charge cards
will be acce pted. Proceed s
will be used by the Jayc.-ees
for local community service
pro.JCCIB.
Methodist Church, 6662 Heil
Ave .. Huntington Beach.
For more infonnallon. call
the Rev. Katbleen Ross at
R42•4461. •
introduced lo the potter's
wh ee l and will m a k e
cylinde rs, mugs and bowls.
Comple ted w orks will be
f i r e d t o s t o n e w a r e
temperatures.
Regis tration fee lS $26, plus
a $4 materials fee. Sign -up
information c.an be obtained
by calling 891-3991. :Damage weighed at UCI
after explosion, fire S upervisors Ralph Clark and
Roger Stanton opposed board
C hairman Bruce Nestande 's
resolution Tuesday. Both said El
T oro has not been adequately
studied and therefore does not
m erit rejection as a possible
airport site.
Arts Center • given
electr icity and o the r utility
services for the campus. Power
was out from' 30 to 45 mi nut.es in
some buildings and as long as 90
minutes m others.
u'c Irvine offic ia ls w e r e
assessing possible damage to
cirtnpua research expe riments
today following an explosion and
aomll fire Tuesday that knocked
o'u t p o w e r t o t h e e n t i r e
µ,niversity. ~~o Injuries were reported in
' 11 :36 a.m. blas t at UCI's l tral plant, which provides
The fire. w hich caused a n
estJ matc.'<i $1,750 in damage to a
sma ll section or the plant, ~as
under control be fore Orange
County firemen arrived.
Clark accused board members
suppo r ting the resolutio n o(
doing so even though they had
not yet seen a four-year, $500,000
to 26 mph Tnuraelay High• In •
l\Ol'tn.tn o_,. may rang411rom The F0tec:11t F0t 8 p.m. EDT Rein.
78 10 86 wilh iows from aa 10 50. Thursday, Oclober 1 4
Sou1hern d ... r1 high• ware to •H h Tem 1atures ~I r-----------range from 18 10 95 with Iowa In _...._...,.. ....... ..._.....,.....,..___.., _ _,.. ___ ._, tile !SOI.
l1oastal to':::.=:Wo::r~i:= Uca • ., and aunny today with llglll varlabf• wind• lhrough tranQlnolrom lllemld·70r. al T h ur I 0 a y . b a com I n g ~to mld>IOa 1n1ane1 tout"-1ar1y a1 8 10 11 knota In
air IOfliglll and Thu<lelay excopt U>a eftemoon with a i.to-2·1001
for lnCl'-ino cna.-of tat• ntgnt, aoutllwftt swell
f'nd awly mc>fnlng log along 'Ille ----------'¢0Ut. Overnlglll Iowa In lh• IT alur.es-•509. COOier on Tllurleley wtlh e mpe r
In !he 70. 10 low ao. .
laewh•r•. from Po int MATION ncepllon 10 tne Mulcan HI C.. ~
l>ofdef anCI out 80 ml... Llghl Alb9ny 8 1 32 varlabf• wind• lol)lght and-Albuquerque 65 42
rlday motnlno. bvl ... , to AllC:hof8Q9 32 30 , ,,,,,..., "'"•'""' c;..~. ,.
"-! wlr'°8 f to ta luWMa In Atlanla 68 81 .01 •.oo J s Oeo• ,•Com<"'•" , .,...,_,Wind.,..._ 2 to 3 AllantlC City 69 54 ~~...:.,;:....::::.:..:.....:....:.::.;.;;....;._..;.......;~~-----..-----...
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ey 11Vough Thurld1y •XC41Pt 81fm1"gham 78 82
or 1ome log In ouler watare SO.ton 54 40 PrO\llcNnce 68 311 . 1nereM1nQ and epteaellng BYflalo 86 54 .oe FWio es 30 outnwarel 1onlghl ind urly eaapar 61 35 Salt Lalla 55 37
lllndey. Ctiat1Mton.s c 12 ea oe San Antonio 87 54 37 .. ________ ..__ et1ar1aaton.w.v 74 51 San oi.go 85 82
' Chaflotte, N C 81 5& San Francllco 88 5 1 .S. aummary ~ ~ !! t-tZ.. : ::
Overnight lhunel1r1torm1 CW!dnnall 7
50
0
48 SI P..._.Tampa 88 74 .OI d ~ 63 Spok-83 311 produce haavy. rain• ovar Columb<d 72 52 SyrecUM 53 48 .10 :ti~:::,~ !~d ~~':~cfff.1t:r'i::: Oel!U-FI Worth 72 se TGP811a 84 35 oontlnuaO "°"'!he~ CoMt 10 Dayton 83 51 Tucaon 75 45
ttla l4IC* Otllo Vt/WI/. Denver 5 I 30 Waalllnglon 8 t 58
Clovde al'ICI drlule llngerad g:r~ ~ ~ Wlchltl CAUFC>ftHIA ee 43
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dotted the country fr-th• ~City 81 41 Fraano :~ :~·
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partly cloudy -aoroM Illa ~ ro :: 10 =:.,.; :: ::
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San Frane!IQO
San Joee
Santa Ana • Sanla a.tbata
81n1a Cna
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81*1on
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Torrence Yuma
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Tides
By KAREN E . KLEIN
Of tlM Deity No4 atmft
The L os A~g e l es-b ase d
Security Pacil ic National Bank
has d o nated $3~0.000 lo the
Orange County Perfomung Arts
Cente r . se tti ng a s tr o ng
precedent for regional support
for the center.
The girt is the largest the'
Security Pacific FoundaUon , a
charitable organization. has made
to date. according to Carol E.
Taufe r. foundation president.
The arts center, acheduled to
open late In 1985, is expected to
cost over $60 million. All the
funds will come from private
donations.
Security's chie f executive 1,000-seat theater for smaller
oUiccr, Richard J . FlamS<m, said performances, "will add a lot of
the donation was made lo the c lass" 10 Orange Count y.
center partly because Security Flamsc>n said.
Pacific has a large client base in
O ra nge County and partly "We need to fulfill all the
bt.>ca use of his own feeling for the requirements of the residents of
county. He has resided in Corona Orange County," he added.
del Mar for 15 years. A l t h 0 u 8 h m o s t co u n t y
Security Pacific will not be "a dwellers think they're living In
one-hiller" in its involvem ent paradise, he said, there as a lack
with the center, Fla.mson said. fle of cultural exposure m Orange
said h e ho pes Sec urity will County.
become part of the center's team
of planners and patrons. ' The cent.er, which is scheduled
The center, which will feature for gro undbreaking an early
a 3.000-seat theater designed for 1983, will be located on five acres
opera . sympho n y , musical in the South Coast Plaza Town
theater a nd balle t , and a Center area. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
DANSK
DAiii
MUSUllll
sn
•
'9''
DAISI
CIFE UITEll
•15••
•• ,. $19.95
DAISI
11uoun v1s1
111111
DlllEIWllE
253
OFP
s14••
.... $18.95
(Not Shown)
.... $12.H
11111 CUISIC
WllE llllFE
(
Orang• CoHt OAILV PILOT/Wedn•lday, October 13, 1812 H/F "!
NATION
. Interest rates failing
but recovery cloudy
Pair· given Nohel Peace Prize.:
By Tbe Aas~lated Preu
Interest rates have fallen lO
thei r lowest level slm·e
September 1980 with some
bankers saying they'll go still
lower, but a presidentia l
adviser cautioned there are no
1lgn1 the economy will
improve immediately.
Four major banks cut their
prime lending rate to 12
J>t'r<'••fll on Tut'sday, and the
govt>rnmt•nl said It wa11
lowering the inte rest-rat(•
celling on certain fcdNully-
• backed home loans to 12.5
percent.
Meanwhile, the averagt<
rate paid on new she -month
Treasury bllls auctioned lo
the public plungc.>d nearly 1 .,,,
percentage points. to 7.734.
Budget cuts hurt needy
WASHINGTON -A
aurvey o( 55 cities showed
l)\at more than half of the,
P,!!Ople wh o needed
, emergency services In the
put fiacal year did not get
them because o f fe deral
budget cuts, according to a
report released today.
The re port by the U.S .
Conference of Mayors -on
programs relating ·to ·health,
unemployment a hd other
human services -said things
are likely to get worse this
year.
Chrysler talks resuming
DETROIT -The Uni tcd
Auto Workers and Chryslor
Corp ., fa ced wi th
"overwhelming" rank-a nd-
file rejection of a tent.ativt>
contract for the first time m
the history of the Big Three
automakers, are heading back
to the bargaining table.
"This contrac t does not
meet the expectations of the
Chrysle r W(\.rkers," UAW
WORLD
President Douglas A. Fraser•
said Tuesday. "The principal
problem was they expected to
get a wage increase, up front.
immediately.'
V oti ng o n th e p ac t
continues through Thursday,
but Fraser admitted it was
being soundly defeated. "It's
resounding, it's convincing.
it's overwhelming.'' he said.
Poland rioting continues
WARSAW. Poland -Riot
po lice ringed the n ewl y
·militarized Gdansk shipyard
today after two days of
strikes and bloody protests.
and officials warned workers
they face five-year prison
t erms if they stage more
d e monstraticns over the
outlawing of Solidarity ..
Workers claimed some of
their colleagues planned to
ignore the warnings. but it
was not immediately known
if the yard was struck again.
Unconfirmed reports said two
people were killed and many
injured battling riot police in
Gdansk during the night.
OSLO. N o rway (APA
8wcd111h pcllcu Mctlvlat lvu
Myrdol ond former Mexican
For<'lan Minl!lt<'r Alfonao Oarcla
Roblet1 wcrl' jointly awarded the
I 082 Nobe.ti Peact' Prize loduy Cor
th~lr work In l ntcrnatlo n1.1l
dl'1.lnnOmt>nl ncaotlatloru.
In announcina today's award,
the chairman of the Norwegian
Nobel Commi ~tce, Egli Aarvlk,
m1id thl' two winners "Cor many
years had played a c.'t'nlral role in
the United Nations' disarmament
negotiations."
They were among a ret.'Ord 79
candidates -60 lndlvlduala and
19 organ izations -nominated
for the prize, which carries a
stipend of 1.15 million Swedish
kronor, equivalent to $157,000. ·
Other candidates Included
detained Polish labor leader Lech
Walesa. U.S . Mideaat mediator
Philip C. Habib, black South
African bishop Desmond Tutu
and jaill'd Sovillt human rlatht.11
a<'llvfat Yuri Orlov.
Lattt year'• prlw wu awarded
to the o ffice of the United
Nation» High Commluloner for
. ~fugeet (or Ill work with th~
world's millions of homclHM.
ln the previous five years, thr
award went l6 Argenllne human.
rights advocate Adolfo Pe rez
Esquive l: Moth-e1 Teresa, of
Calcutta, India: the law Egyp\lan
President Anwar Sadat and
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Begin; the human-rights
o rganization Amn ea ty
International, and Northern
Ir_eland peace activists Malread
Corrigan and Betty Williams.
Of the Individual winners over
the Nobel Peace Prize's 81 -year
history, Americans have won 16
times, more than any other
nalionality. The last American
winner was Henry Kissinger Jn
1973.
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
..... C/)
< (.) z
(.)
< C/) ~
0 m
EDll~GER AV
ELLIS AV
Alvo Myrdal
City hall has word ".
on flood insurance
By ROBERT BARKER
Of 1ri. Delly f'llot l tetl
Huntington B eac h
homeowners can find out at city
hall H they are exempt from
paying $1 60 in annual flood
insurance payments. officials said
today.
A list of the exempl residential
lots is available at the city's
public information ofCice, located
on the second floor at Civic
Center, 2000 Main St.
Off1c1als are asking residents
first to find out their tract and lot
numbe rs, which they say are
locat.t.>d on t.ax bills.
Another list of exempt homes
is available at ihe Central
Library, 7!11 Talbert Ave.
The city government in 1980
• Most homeowners in
sh aded area won
appeals from paying
S 160 in annua l flood
insurance.
appealed requirements by the
Federal Emergency Managemtiht
Agency for flood insurance 9n
more than 7 .000 lots. '
Information was received
recently from Washington, D.C .•
that payments were waived on
4.982 lots.
But a total of 2,194
homeowners in the appeals area.
bounded by Edinger and Ellis
avenues on the north and IOU\:h
and Gothard and Bolsa Chica
streets on the east and west, w\U
have to continue making the
payfnents.
The F e d e ral Em~rge'lCY
Management Agency requires all
homeowners in the Santa Ana
River flood plain to pay flood
insurance unless 'the elevatloD-of
their buildings is one foot above
the ant1cipat~ flood level of a
so·ailled 100-year flood.
City Planner Hall Simmons
said the city tracked down
grading plans and engineers ln
many cases to show that homes
were locate d above the flood
haz.anis.
Soviet slave labor probed
LONDON -Several West
European governments are
investigating charges by two
human rights groups that the
Soviet Un ion is u si ng
thousa nds of po litical
prisoners as slave laborers to
build t he Siberian gas
pipeline.
confirmed the charges.
Re'agan speech rattles Democrats
But the governme nts .
which have a large stake in
the pipeline and oppose
Presitient Reagan's sanctions
against it. say they have not
The United Stat.cs opposes
the project for commercial
and political reasons and has
tried to delay or hall it by
preventing European firms
from using U.S. technology in
fulfilling pipeline contracts.
Britai n , Fra nce. W est
German y and Italy have
condemned the U .S embargo
and th eir firm s a r e
pr~ing with dehvenes.
WA S HINGTON (AP) -
Whil e Democrats fume .
President Reagan is taking a
break from his in -person
ca mpaigning to sign a job
traini ng bill a nd d e liver a
nationally televised progress
report on the economy that he
promises will be ''non-partisan."
Reagan's request for free time
tonight from the major networks
followed an unsuccessful effort
by the Republican National
Committee to purchase a similar
block of time for him to deliver a
campaign speech (Related story
Page A3).
But the president appeared to
be winning a battle with the
televialon networks, two of
which first balked at carrying
such a broadcast less than three
weeks be fore the N ov . 2
elections. CBS and NBC say they
Salvador fighting heavy
SAN SALVADOR. El
Salvador -Troops backed by
U.S .-made warplanes and
artillery battled leftis t rebels
holding a northe rn town
today in fighting that has
kJlled at least 40 people, cut
telephone service In the east
and snarled highway traffic.
Military spokesmen saJd 1,-
300 soldiers were pushing to
retake Las Vueltas, a town of
5.000 people 50 miles north of
here. which 700 guerrillas
seized Sunday night after
overrunning a 200-man ~rmy
post.
I
New flareups rage
in ravaged Lebanon
STATE
Meteor lights up coast
SAN JOSE -A brilliant
ball of green light -half as
bright as the moon -that
dazzled airplane pilo\S and
earth-bound watchers of the
night sky. was most likely a
apectacu tar meteor, an
astronomer's helper said
today.
Keith Baker, a technician
at Lick Observator y on a
mountain east of San Jose,
was 'ch ecking the weather
outalde the giant telescope's
dome about 8 p.m. Tuesday
when he noticed the trees
suddenly were illuminated.
"I turned around and saw
... a fairly brilliant green
ball . . . which produced half
aa much µght as a full moon,"
Baker said ... It was quite
apectac'U)ar ... much, much
brighter than Venus."
BEIRUT. Leba non (AP) -
Christians and Moslems in the
central mountains fought
nightlong battles which
intensified today and threatened
a fresh wave o f sectar ian
hostility in this war-scarred
nation.
Lebanese radio stations sajd
the fighting between rightist
Lebanese Christian militiamen
and leftist Drure, a breakaway
Islamic sect, erupted Tuesday
afternoon In Baaouerta and
Dakoun, two villages 15 miles
southeast of here in the Druze.
po pulated mou ntai n range
known as the Shouf. It later
spread to the nearby villages of
Kfarmatta and Abbey. .
Tuesday's sectarian outbreak
came after Israeli and Syrian
forces in eastern Lebanon'•
Bekaa Valley traded artillery
barrages. There were no report.a •. ,.
Listening •••
Whal do you like about lhe Daily Pilot? What don't you Ul{e?
Call &he number al left and your ~• will be recorded,
tr...sibed arid delivered to the appropriate editor.
Na«J88
'De same 24-hour answerin1 service may be used to record let-
ters t. IM editor on any loplc. Mailbox conlributora muat lnch1de
their name and lelephone number for verillcallon. No clrculaUon
u lla. pleue.
Tell ua what's on your mind.
iiiylill
,f T.,..,._P,....,
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of casualties In that exchange.
Lebanon's dominant Christian
Falangist Party militia and the
le ftist Progressive Socialist
Party, wlth a large Druze
following, blamed each other for
starting the sectarian fighting.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUllrHltlES
Cerflfkd CH~c. AOS
THI DIAllOND
MAllCU
... ·.,,,or tlow.t
Like all valuable comrnodltln,
diamond• are •bpct to a value
ty.tftn ..cablJahed ~ the IU\e of t~ world~· In.....,. wordl,
I diamond ii whit IQIMOM la
wtlllnc to pey W IC. Yet, throuCb
most of momm hlaiory. we hav.
teen diamond valu .. C!OnUnue to
climb -even feater than the
1•neral 1rowth of th• world ~y.Now,weare.__ ...
re9dlnt 101M rumon 'that w..11
h9YI U1 beUew that the cla ....
nwlurt II In .,.. klnd of alump
Thal eimpl)' '-'' &rue. a-areh
ahowl that ........... of Amartc9n nwrted wan.n Fl a MW .... 0(
diamond jlwwlr)' In ..... That'• 11'
percent line tban In IMO, and more..._ ......... •:Wol
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top:•,.~· ........ laaa .... .. ~--............... . Y ... I D-a.w... dlll W• wGfth .... ··-In l"l = ~ ..... ...... ,,... ..... ,. ..... ......
plan to carry the Oval OCfice
cpeech scheduled for 4:30 p.m.
PDT. ABC told the White House
il would not.
Even before the speech,
Reagan was keeping his focus on
the economy as Election Day
~oaches, selling aside time
y to sign a job training bill
that his spokesmen argue the
admlnl1tration has supported
since last January'. Democrats
claim lhe measure was their idea.
The president has been
pointing to the legislation for
more than a week as evidence of
his administration's efforts to
help counter the nation's~
unemployment rate. Aa
by Congress. it represented a
combination of 'proposals from
both Democrats and Republicans.
House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill Jr .. D-Mass., complained
last week that n o Democrats
were being invited to the qning
ceremon'V.
Depuiy White House preu
secretary Larry Speakes said
I
Reagan had no new procram «
announcements to offer in hb
economic address. although one
administration official promimid
"there will be some news In iL"
And the president him9elf had
trouble keeping a straight face
when he told report.era Monday
evening -as he returned to
Washington after a Tex.a•
campaign appearance -that the
speech would not be political.,
smiling and then chucklJng when
he said "the broadcast will be
non-partisan."
Reagan is to r esume his
political travel next week. ln
Illinois and Nebraaka.
On Tuesday , Reag;n
responded to a question about the
partiaanahlp issue by aaki~;
"Doesn't everyone want tll~
economy to get better?"
Mark Goode, R eagaO:s
television coordinator, said tbe
president will make the speech
"a diacusaion of the facts. rather
than a campailn pitch."
•
1111111111
llEl'T
lilte peas
Olamond Value
la determined
by careful analyala
of each of the
factor• that
govema value.
•CUTTING •COLOUR
•CLARITY
•CARAT WllQHT . c .. 11.tn•
EIPLA•
Orang• COHt DAIL y PILOT /W9dnMdey. Oetober 10, 1882 HB C:7
NY ~E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTION
QllOf~flOIO '"'""01 , ..... O• ........ •o••· ...... "· ,,.,1,,IC. ,, ......... ••HOIT, ... ClltCl•ATt noo· l•CM•••U &If&> lll~TIC> l 'f Tiii •aH a11011111n11t1•
"°'"' Nol ,., ,. , ..... , ...
New tax 1neasure
'rip-off of year' ' . BOl~E. Idaho (AP) -A now federal u.x ww
r"-quirlna financial lnatJtuUons to withhold 10 perc-ent
ot lrH1..•rc1l puld on aavlng1 ac:c:o unt1 and other
lnve11trncn ta lit "the coruumer rtp-otf of the y~ar." a
repretK.'ntatlve of th_, Amerlcan BankJna ANoc11aUoo
twyll.
~liuibcth Kuchinakl, vice p~dent of the Bank of
Calltomln In S;acram~nto and a bankina advi.ler for
lhe ABA, .aid the leal•latlon, algned into l•w In
September by President Re•aan, eapeclaUy affe<:\I
older people who may live on lnt.ereet and dlvldend8
from retirement accounll.
"I think "'vlnga are a very
~pie's Jlve1," the banker said
elderly."
aacrONnct ptrt of "
"Particularly the
L enders back Harvester·
CHICAGO (AP) -lntcmaUorual Harvester Co.,
staggering under the weight ot a $4.2 billion debt,
today announced It haa won le nders' approval of a
plan to r~'<>rganize and avoid fiUng for bankruptcy.
The troubled, heavy-equJpment manufacturer
said the plan would reduce interest paymenta on ill
debt by <lbout $200 million over an 18-month period,
assmumlng a prime lntercst rate of 13 percent.
"ApprovaJ or 100 percent of our lenders was a
m.'<.'essary step If the (..'Ompany Is to move ahead with
its operating plan to con!!iOlldate operations around lta
core business," said chairman Louis W. Menk.
Group raps bumping
WASHINGTON (AP) -An aviation consumer
group says the Civil Aeronautics Board's modification
of an anti-bumping rule will result in hordes of
passengers being left stranded al the nation's aJrports.
Matthe w H. Finucane, director of the Aviation
Consumer Action Project, made the prediction after
the CAB said tha t starting In December airlines would
nol have to automatlc.ally oompensate people bumped
from f1i h ts.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
,.Ew YORI( IAPJ s. ..... p m P<IU
•nd nel t""'-OI V.. llll"n MOll <Kl•ve N•w Yot• SloO e....... ,,_,
lr•<11119 nal-lly •I ,,,.,... llWn $1 En 0<> l ,ut.100 JO\. • ,...
Amer TloT 1,ll.&,000 •I I~ Soft 1 Cot 0 I,.,., 100 I H" lo IBM t.!00 . .000 t H • ~ C..n Moloo 1,1n,.oo SJ "'
JOhn;.Jn 1,no,000 •1n 1
S<hl""'°'Q 1, IU,'00 4)\lo , J MoDll «n.100 u •. • i. VS s1 .. 1 .,•,/Oil II , h
K m ar I IH, 100 7'Y1 • II\ Citicorp ~.IOO lJ~ "1
Hallblirll> 12•.900 11'• 1 '"' Eu t KOO.lo. ll04,000 ...... lh
SHHRoe«> 187 400 U V> "° GTE Corp 190,'00 J1"'9 11>\
AMERICAN LEADERS
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
UPS AND DOWNS
I 0 ) VP •A VP tA
Up '1
U p •• U p t6
VP t•
DOW JONES AVERAGES
..:e1=.(~I ~;NI 0-JonH -
ITOCllS
JD'"" 20 ''" IS VII •~ Stl<
lr>CIUI ,, . .,
Vllh .S SOI
a.. " .... ~ c .... a. 1611.51 108 tt "2 00 1003 .. _. 11 7'7 :i. CQ.41 Jtl If ,., u . Ul2
12l ll 12J .. 120 ... 111.71 10. 1'0 '4 ,...'4 •1 " a6 67-I.fl ll,'27.JOI J.'7UOO J,ISl,tCIO Jl.o57,JOO
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IAPI 0<1 ,,
Today m 715 11' )02)
•U l
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng will not
appear In the Dally Pilot.
METALS
NEW YOAIC IAP) -Spol nonlerre1111
tMt81 ptloee lodey
~::,r9~70·72 cenu • pouno. V.$
U.. 23-2' _,., • pound
ZIM 40-42 dW!ct • pound, ._eel n. U H M Meitele W_.. ~lb
Ahllll"'-78 1*'19 • pound, N Y . ...._, $370 00 '* .._ ,. ... .,_ 1217 00-1303 00 troy ounce,
NV
SILVER
Hlltldy • HW1Nfl. $9 47 I* troy -
GOLD QUOTATIONS
SYMBOLS
• •
..
WI !INI ·,(ll\ 't < H I !llll H 1 I 1'111.' OH ANCa COUNlr < AllfOH NIA :I'> C fNTS
Owners visit some of l 00 horses quartered at El Modena High
School after rhey were saved from Saturday's fire. ..
Power line blamed in canyon blaze
By DAVID ltVTZMANN or .. hllr,......,.
Fi.re officiala have determined
that a destructive, 16,800-acre
firestorm in eastern Orange
County was sparked by a Callen
power line support at a
McDonnell Douglas test facility
in Gypewn Canyon.
Orange County Fire Chief
Lawrence Holms announced the
findings of his department's
investigation Tuesday as the
r emnants of a massive
firefighting force continued
mop-up operations in rugged
back country east of Irvine Lake.
Holms, who gave the Countv
Board of Supervisors a fire
update earlie r in the day, told
reporters that his investigators
felt certain the cause of the fast-
moving blaze could be attributed
to a fallen power line cross bar
owned by McDonnell Douglas.
Southern California F.c:iison Co.
lines were not involved, he said.
"We feel confident that that is
the absolute cause (of the fire) at
this time," the county fire chief
said.
Holms said it appears almost
certain that powerful Santa Ana
wind conditions caused the cross
bar on a pole at the McDonnell
Douglas facility to fall to the
Newport bed tax
hik~ hid defeated
By STEVE MARBLE or .. hllr,... ....
An effort to hike the Newport
Beach city hotel and motel bed
tax -a move voters defeated
twice at the polls -has been
turned back for a third time.
The city council, armed with a
court ruling that would have
allowed it to bypass the voters,
came up a vote short ·Tuesday
evening of increasing the tax-
from 6 to 8 percent.
"I've been in favor of the
increase all along but I believe
this would be a breach of faith to
approve it now." said Mayor
Jackie Heather who was joined
by council colleagues Paul
Hummel. Evelyn Hart and
Ruthelyn Plummer in striking
down the tax request.
The council had been nearly
unanimous In its support of the
measure when it was placed on
(See BED TAX, Page A%)
Mesa development
decision postponed
A dedsion on a much-debated
Costa Mesa development
proposal baa been postponed
until next June at the request of
-pn>ject becken.
The delay WM approved this
week by the city Planning
Commiuion in response to a
NqUe9l from Amel Development
Co. The firm is 1eeking approval
· to build 210 condominiums and a
41-acre commercial center on
land near South Coast Plaza.
The plan -which local
homeowners have criticized u
.. too denle" -WU scheduled to
be conaidel'ed by the city council
Nov. I. the eve of this year's
council election.
Under the revised planning
commiu'ion schedule, the
proposal will not face council
action until next July.
The g:;:erty ia boupded by
South t Drive. Bear Street,
San Diego Freeway and San
Leandro Real.
Robert Mickelson , an Amel
planning consultant, said the
flnn 's request for an extension
was based solely on financial
considerations, indicating the
company is satisfied with the
plan submitted laat June .
(See DECISION, Pase A%)
ground, e mitting sparks which
Ignited nearby brush. He said
there is no evidence of negligence
on McDonnell Douglas' part.
The blaze was first spotted by
a patrolling sheriff's de puty just
before 9 a.m. Saturday. Though
fire officials were quickly
notified . the Clames s pread
within minutes into inaccessible
terrain. Holms said.
The blaze proved costly .
Counted destroyed were 11
luxury homes in the exclusive
Crest de Ville community in
Orange, two homes in Anaheim
HIUs and another large home in
uninco rporated area n ear
Santiago Canyon.
Damage estimates were placed
at $11 million, down from an
earlier appraisal of $16 million.
More than 140 people suffered
minor injuries and two horses
were killed during Saturday's
chaotic evacuation.
Also harmed were 3,000 acres
of habitat for rare Tecate cypress
trees.
McDonnell Douglas Corp.
officials In Huntington Beach
said Tuesday their company Is
studying the co unty Fire
(See FIRE, Pase il)
Ex-congressman Craig Hosmer dies
He was re-elected
10 times
En.aenada, Mexico, but turned
around to take Hamner'a body to
San Pedro, about 25 miles IOUlh
of Loe Anples.
Hosmer was the aenlor
Republican on the Joint
Commlttee on A&omlc J:ner1y
and the Houae lnterlor
c.omm&ttee, PQllUonl that ......
hlm an lnlluence on water reeourcee and nuclear power.
AfW reUrinC from c.on.r-.
Ho1mer became an eneray
con1ult1nt In Wuhlftl'On. He
aJ1o lerwci '• pr 111 dent Of the Amerloan Nuclear &ner11
Council, a non·irofll &rade
_,.._ shat kHb6ecl -the ••pnlltid of nudw' ,.........
A natift of~=,;• ........ ., .. ,,, -(
California al Berkeley. did
postgraduate work at the
Univereily of Mlchl1an and then
attended the U .S . Naval
Academy at Annapolis. He wu a
retired rear admiral in the Navy
Rnerve.
He obtained hia law degree at
the University of Southern
California and pracUced law ln Loni Be11eh from UM6 to 1949,
after lel'Viftl ln World War U u a
naval officer.
Ho1mer wa1 one of the
erincipal archltectl of the
Colorado River 8a1ln Pro~
Dl•aaure that allooated c.Jilornia'• than of rlwr .. _..
but"=~':':.~ w~ .c.,whare"i:= ... IMid ..... ... reUnd a..-. lurvtYcn ..... Illa wife, Marlaa, who wa1 not ---r
NRC will probe
construction of
plant at On of re
• • • ' • I . ~ .. •
Charges of Caulty construction
at the San Ono/re nuclear power
plant have prompted a ~uc~ear
Regulatory Comm1ss1on
lnvestigatioh of the controversial
facility.
A group of ~RO Inspectors wall
be conducting tests of the newly
constructed units 2 and 3 of the
nuclear plant later this week,
NRC spokesman Jim Hanchett
said today.
Th~ allegations were made by
Elmo Earl Kent of Cypress, a
former quality control inspector
for Bechtel Powe r Inc., the
plant's main contractor. Kent, 56,
was fired last February after he
failed two job certification tests.
He had been assigned to San
Onofre In October 1980 .
Kent has charged that faulty
welds in critical safety systems
were approved at San Onofre as
well as at a nuclear power plant
in Midland. Mich ., where he was
transferred following his Orange
County assignment. The NRC
also ls investigating the Midland
plant.
"As we do in all cases where
we receive allegations o f
construction deficiencies we send
inspectors to look into the
matter," said Hanchett, adding
that he regards the situation as
"not terribly serious at the
moment."
"They are not major problems
at least at the surface but we
really don't know until we take a
look at them."
Hanch e tt said the NRC
routinely receives alJegations of
.
faulty conslruction and design aC.:
virtually every power plant in;
the country. He said once'
investigators study the San,,
Onofre and Michigan plants. a!
report will be made public in a;
Cew weeks. :
"We don't see anything:
s 1gn1f1cant in hts (Kent's):
allegations," he said . "This I•
typical of the construction:
deficiencies you would get in a:
large construction site.'' :
Bec h t c 1 s po k es ma n J i m~
Mackin said Kent was fired las~
Fcbru<.iry after he Called two job:
certification tests. •
Kent has said he brought his
alJegations to the attention of
Bechtel orficials and then the
NRC. Receiving little satisfaction,
he approached members of the
Orange County chapter of. the
a nti-nucl ear Alliance for
Survival. according to Alliance
spokesman Tim Carpenter.
"We feel that this is merely the
tip of the iceberg as far as the
problems a t San Onofre."
Carpenter said. "The questions
Earl has raised underscore the
need for a truly independent
audit of the operation at all three
units of San Onofre."
"We wonder why the NRC sat
on these complaints for six
months. We believe they warrant
investigation."
The COA'fplamts an September
involved four supposedly faulty
welds on hangers for pipes i~
San Onofre's Unit 2 . •
Dena Farrow recalls ~ ... the more they operated~~
t~e more injuries they found.' ~
~ Brush lVith death i l:
still haunts teen
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or ... OllllJ ,... ...,.
The terrible events of Friday,
Aua. 13, still replay themselves
In 15-year-old Dena Farrow 's
nightmares: the rifle shot, the
burning and bleeding in her back
and abdomen, the difficult
breathing, the sight of her best
friend slumped over in front of
her, the ambulance ride to
Fountain Valley Community
Hoepltal....
Her aunt, Jo Ann Gudmunson,
r emembers waiting at the
hospital that night as Dena
underwent six hours of surgery.
"The doctors d idn 't give us
much reuon to hope." her aunt
recalJed, ''because the more they
operated, the more injuries they
found . Every time a doctor
walked out, her mother and I
nearly died becau.e we knew It
was going to be bad news."
Dena 108t a kidney, her spleen
and parts of her pancreas, liver.
•tomach and Intestines.
But she survived that night
and eeveral more nights on the
critical list, attached to llfe-
support equipment. She endured
additional surgery and aeveral
life-threatening infections.
Dena says much of the credit
for her recovery must go to her
lllDEI
Are Americana
1etti111 their
money'• worth for
the 1287 billion
they would 1pend
each year on
health care? Why
are medical coata
10 hlsh? Anawen
appeal in a 1peeial
package of 1toriea
on Pap ClO.
A8
C6-7
A7
lt5·8 87
Cl
M
Bl
Dl-8,&l-4 A'I
A'I
loving family, some devote4
friends on the Ma rina Higij
School girls voUeybaJJ team and
to her idol. Rams quarterback
Vince Ferragamo, who raised her'
s pirits with two autographecf
pictures and a telephone call. ;
Today. the pretty blonde,
Huntington Beach girl is well or(
her way back to a normal teent
age life. "
Though her brush with dea~
and the most difficult days o
recovery are behind her, De
Farrow still has nightmares tha
remind her she was the luckier of
two shooting victims on tha"'
fateCul Friday the 13th.
Dena met Rise Lou Tucker,.,
daughter of Rosie Miclette, a.
popular parking e nforcemen{
officer in Laguna Beach. whetf
the two were In the eighth grade.
at Harbour View School h(
Huntington Beach.
The two became fast frie~
and spent many summer days;
shopping together or going to ~
beach. ·
On the evening of Aug. 13, thf.,
two girls went to a party, then-
visl ted a Huntington Harbou
physician'• home where a~
acquaintance, Richard Berge, ie;
was staying. •
The girls were preparing to!
(See IDOL, Pase A4) I'..
Le isure World action escalates
Department'• flndlnp reaardlna
h blew:.
Spokl-smen for the flnn tald
the Gyps um Canyon test facility
w rui not in use tho weekend the
f lrc broke out. They .. td the
479-ucre test slt.e ooly had been
use..'<! spcm1dlcally during the put
0 years.
'1' h c c o m p a n y 1 a I d a
alntenancc crew had cleared
e area of grass, weeds and
h two months ago and that a
ctakcr stays on the premlsee
car round.
By STEVE TRIPOLI or .. ~,....._
The M1Calatlna <.'Onflict pitting
' the l'Midcnll of Le lsur<i World in
UflUnu um. agaln•t lrvlno, lhl'
Roe.11moo1' Development Co. und
the Koll Co. haa optmod on a new • • •
hl&h nolu level• and for
equipment too bulky tor wie at
other McDonnull Douala• te1t
lltN
An equipment trailer and a
tool shed at the tell cent.er were
d(.'tlroyed by flamc.1 Sat\,lrd'4y.
Of the 14 homes IOClt and 11lx
damaaed, county Clre offlclal1
said, there were two common
factors --they had combuaUbJe
roofs and they were perched on
steep hillsides overlooking
canyons covered by an explosive
carpet of tinder dry bruahland.
Holms said the homes would
have fa red be tter without
combustible roofs.
front . Onange County aupervl1or11
un•nimoualy appr ovC'd n
resolution Tuesday sending
L cl1urn Wurld 'il requt>lll t o
b(>c'Omu the county'• 27'lh city t.o
the Local Agency Formullt>n
Cpmmluion, which ·has final say
over such mall.en.
The action came lea than 24
houra after .another group uked
the commisaion to take 46~ acres
out of the heart of Uiaure World
and attach It to Irvine.
The timing makea n o
dlfterence -both proposals will
be heard by the commission.
The l•u• 1urroundlna lht two
requftts la develoP"'ont, more
•J)(!Ctf k!Ally whether part of the
48&-acre parcel will be developed
Into an offlc.'tl park.
The Koll Co. has an option
tc> develop a 189-acre park on
part of the Roo1moor-owncd
land. Koumoor apparontly fet'll
thcrt1 will be a betWr chance of
thr Ul'vclopmcnt. bclni pennitt.ed
u pArt of Irvine than as part of
on lncorporat4.'<i Leisure World.
lrvlne. whic h wu stil l
studying the proposal ,
apparently Is intcreatcd In the
Increased tax revenues --
estimated at $2M,OOO In the first
year -from t uch a
development.
Leisure World residents view
the Rossmoor request to be joined
to Irvine as a threat to their
autonomy, however.
John •t.uhrlna(, chairman of
LAllure World'• Commit~ on
Incorporation, ha1 1ald lau
month that the community la
"not really looklna to It (new
dev lopmtnt) tot revenue." He
•dded that any auch declalon ln
an Incorporated Lelaure World
wouid ba up to the newly elected
city <.'Ounclf, however.
An LAFC official aald
ftossmoor'a reque1t ahow1 that
the company does not want lll
parcel to be part of an
Incorporated Leisure World:
Count y aupervl1or1, in
approvlnai Leisure World,'1
Incorporation petition to the
LAFC, took a dim view of the
Rossmoor-Koll-1.rvine effort.
The rival request "would
effectively split an eatabll1hed
community" aald Superviaor
Thomas Riley. The incorporauon
of l..dtute World woWd "prot«t
the envlronmef't of L l1ur11
World and the Lellur World
arta," he llAld.
Board Chairman Bruce
Neatandt C411l~ the RONmoor
propotal "forum 1hopplnfJ," a
t u rm h e ha 1 coin d for
development aroups who "1hop"
for the govomrnt'nt agenc.:y that
wlll grant them moet of their
development goala for a par<.'CI.
••They (Lehure World
retidenll) have no choice but to
JO ahead and t.ry to Incorporate
to Hve their community,"
Nettande uld.
Supervllor ftoler Stanton 18ld
the board'• action doe1 not
con1tltute an endoraement of
Lel1ure Wo rld'• cliy h ood
upiratlon1. however. ~he LJ\.FC is expected to
consider the t.wo requetll early
next year. The Gypsum Canyon facility ls
used for experimenll Involving ,..,
DECISION DELAYED . • • •
r-" It's 1.ike everything elae these
'4ays. Nothing's happening. I
think it's timing more than
anything else," Mickelson said.
"Most likely we'll stick with the
"That is not correct,'.' said
Rinker, of Pavadls' remark.
"We're not playing a game of
starting with 10 and hoping to
get five."
Supervisors !JiX
El Toro airport
plan we have."
(.North Cos ta M esa
tl omeowners, who won an
initiative that bl ocked
111l11development of more than <;50
f''''th omes and apartments on the
1 10 '7'roperty in 1978, have opposed
the latest plan, as well.
'i· •'J V 1 "The board ha a b..e en · i.cJisappoint.ed with the density,"
11• aud Jon Paradis, vice president I of the North Cos ta Mesa
t! Hotnpowners Association. "The
I •n only thing that pacified us in
• !ll:;J\lnker's remark to me that he
t:unhought it wouldn't pass."
.. •,11f Harry Rinker, a partner in
'•l1J.1Arncl Development with George
·1rl 1 Argyros. denied having made
...such a statement. He said he is
• _,,~ n xi o us to meet w ith
1 1 r, i!homcowners before the Planning i 111\Comm~ion hearing in June.
I llJlll J
In addition to the
condominium development, the
plan calls for 12 acres of two-
story garden offices and 31 acres
of low and mid-rise offices along
the freeway.
Alao I n the plan is a
realignment of South Coast
Drive to connect with a section of
the street already completed near
San Leandro . N earby
h omeowners had requested the
street be moved away Crom their
property. Last December the 4th District
Court of Appea l In San
Bernardino declared the initiative
invalid, thus clearing the way for
the developer to proceed with
Its original plan to build 537
apartments and 127 homes.
Arne), however. revised the
proposal to its current form
·~.'BED TAX VOTE. • •
the ballot. spending $25,000 on
l •'>two ck ctions within one year.
t n 11 In both elections. a majority of
1t1 <the voters went along with the
;".nit.ox increase but failed to provide ",ol
the two-thirds margin needed. A
recent state Supreme Court
ruling. though, cleared the way
for the council to up the tax
without even going to the voters.
--Dainage weighed at UCI
after explosion, fire
1 t ,, UC Irvi n e officials were
1
1rl a'.ssessing possible damage to ,. • h .
11 campus researc experiments 1~· ~'(;><Jay following an explosion and ~ 1~mal1 Hre Tuesday that knoc~ed
I out power to the e nttre
•11orfunlvcrsity.
•n u\ No injuries were reported in
nbd\e 11 :36 a.m. blast at UCI's ••I !central plant, which provides ... )(.
e l ect ricity and other utility
services for the camp~. Power
was out from 30 to 45 minutes in
some buildings and as long as 90
minutes in others.
The rire, which caused an
estimated $1.750 In damage to a
small section of the plant. was
under control before Orange
County firemen arrived.
Orange County supervisors, in
a split vote, have voiced their
oppoeilion to the use of the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station as
a commercial airport. but not
without vocal dissent from the
minority that opposed the action.
Supervisors Ralph Clark and
Roger Stanton opposed board
C hairman Bruce Nestande's
resolution Tuesday. Both said El
Toro has not been adequately
studied and therefore 40es not
merit rejection as a possible
airport alte.
Clark accused board members
supporting the resolution of
doing so even though they had
Cyclist fires
at CUP cop;
woman seize d
P olice are searching for a
mo torcyclis t wh o fired a
handgun at an officer from the
California Highway Patrol
Westminster office during a
routine traffic stop early today.
A CHP spokesman said Officer
Mike Hamlin wu not lnjllred in
the incident, which occurred at
1 :05 a.m. on the Long Beach
Freeway just north of the San
Diego Freeway. The gunman
fled on foot acrosa the freeway,
leaving behind his motorcycle,
which waa determined to be
stolen, the CHP sald.
A woman acquaintance
traveling behind the motorcyclist
in a car was arrested on auapicion
of possessing cocaJne. the CHP
said. She was identified as Adella
Rubio, 21, of South Gate.
Beach . fog due
lo 25 mph Tnuraeley. High• In Th F t F a m EOT northern ci-1• mey renge from• • OfKll Of p. •
78 to ee wtltl iow. rrom 3110 50. Thursday, October 1 4
Soulhefn d•Mfl high• were 10 e h Tem ratures Showttl reoge lrom II 10 H Wllh iow. In ,...-~~~~~.,_.-'T"'"_T"'"" ___ .,.
----------lhe 509.
Coast"/ 10'::':!1=ti':.O:,=
c1 .. r end sunny tolley wllh llghl verlebl• wlnlla lhrough
high• ranging ltom lhe ~70. et T h u r I d e y • b • c o m I n g
the t>eaehes 10 mld-10• lnltnO. toUt'-t«ly •t s to 11 knota In
Fair lonlght enO Thuradey e1tcopt lhe eflemoon with e M0-2·f~
lor lncreutng c:fl~ of let• night eoul~ twell; •
ll'ld NflY rooming fog elong the ~-·io.~=g~ ~:;~~·Temperatures Nol\• In the 70t to IOw SO.. __ _
t11ewhere , lrom Point liiiiOii
Conception 10 th• M••lcen • HI C. f'cp
border end out eo m .... : 1..1gt11 Albeny • 1 32 verlebl• wind• tonight anct ~que 65 42
Thund1y morning, IKll weet to Mc:f\Orege 32 30
eoutnwe.1 wlndl 8 to 18 kl'Ot• 1n Atlllnte es 81
Ille llftetnoone. Wind w-2 to 3 A11Mtle City 59 S4
'Hf«'.¥ WHI .... Sf,.,,,. .Ot ,..0,.,. v~ 0.01 o' CO"'n'I" ••
!Ht Ihle elternoon. Southwell A..-1111 87 ~ IW8lf ol 1 10 2 lee\. Moetty llllr 8eltlmor• 51 -todey lhrough ThUfadey e11oept 81tmlngflem 7S 82
for aome log In oul•r wetera Boelon 54 40
today, 1ncr...ino end ~ 8Ytt.io 86 54 .oe eoulhwerd 1onlghl end Hrlr Ceeper 51 35
Thufadey CherWton.s.c 72 ee .oe · Chet1Mton.w v 74 51
' CMt10tte. N.C S 1 5e U.S. summary ~ :! ~ &':tr 60 49 overnlghl thunderllorme Cle¥llllnd 70 53
produced heevy rein• over Columbul 72 52 Alebem• end MIHIHl9pl wtlll• ~t W0tth 72 59
•llowera end 1hunder1torm• oeyton 93 81
conllnued from IN GUii COMt to· oenvw 51 30
IM ""'* ONo VelfY. Del Mo1r189 51 40 Cloud• and drlule llnterecl o.trolt 54 .. °"" upper Mlchltlen 1nd lh• El P8IO 77 41 l'"'8' Mii lJ•l"'4 'i'*'t. OoYdy F---• 31 27 1111•• covered the 11orther11 ,......,, 53 43 ~. ~ Aook.... HonoMu .. 77 eouthern New lntl•nd and ~ ee N ...
eoulMM High ,..-,. IM e ... ~ H 4t ~ wete OYtf ti. ~tral Jlllbon,MIM. 74 IO ,02
.21 Fronts ·Cold ....., Warm WW
,.01
Hlah Ptllnl. ,...,.,.. 78 .. .31 lhOWet'• 111\d ttt11ndeo1orrM ~ 41 44 1.tt CAU'ORNIA
dollH 111• country fro"' the ~ Cffy •1 4' ~ = 75 IOUlher11 Atle ntlc COHI to .... v.... 74 IO ..... H .-..m r--.""" r•.,... flt L.lttlll ,..._ 12 H 1er11ow 11 °"'° v-, eno "' mlddle • Loi.,..... 83 u e.umont• 1• nortMrn A...,_ CGllll ....... n ~ 64 47 Ilg 9-70
w11 pertly etovdy eoroH th• ...,. 70 ee .to :~~City 8611 Florid• penlMtill el"9 cMvOy MIMll .,. IO _, ....
-091 IN vppet Gt.-Ultee end ........ .. .. .01 ..
: ~.,.!.i:_ ""::: =1:.i~ ~ :: :t == .t :t Mrtn.n Aooli ... to ti. PIOlflo ,._ YOftt 64 61 t.00 ~ 71
CoeM. wltl'I Jot "* Wllltllftgton OkllfMllN city 70 61 .oe Lone ....,,.. 11
eou..... Clllomll'• ..,.... ,., Tilut9dlir -..._ ..... =----::.:-.-==~·=:
lllf llPIRT
"'or11lnt •lfl•....., OOHtll hlllf'9 · :::-A_!9Nlll =:::••vr••· tll• N1t1on11 Leelllllt A~ , ,...,, ..,... ..,.. --,.., ... Dl111l11l1lllftf w1n•1 •1111 ... M9 ""'Jetty t.f 9* ~'" ........... ....,,. 4111 It . ......,, •·* -...... """-· .............. .., .... LOI Attt•lfl lllt lN were ..... ... 14 lllr ........................... ~ 0 .... ........... _ .. , =...... I ,_, :.:-r.-e=.'l:n -~:::i:, I "=
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'
81 82 t2 ... ..... es at· M M 73 56' .,. u
S7 90
tlO 51
.. 57
97 43 .. 47
11 55
90 52• S2 ... ,. 47
12 lit tlO IO
16 lit
71 St
12 41
ft ~ ea N
7& 44
79 '2 17 47 .. . 12 It . ..
S7 IO
not yet seen a four-year, $500,000
study of possible airport sites.
"I Just don't believe that this
board has enough information at
hand to make the kind 0£
decision this resoluuon calls for,"
said Clark. "We don't have the
facts, we haven't had any public
testimony and we haven't heard
from...our cities or the business
community."
C lark recom mended a
substitute proposal that would
have called for county aides to
report on the county's aviation
future. That idea failed with only
Stanton's support, however.
Neatande. in Introducing the
resolution, continued his attack
on the new site as one that
would "destroy years of land use
planning and co mmunity
building In that area." The site is
in Nestande's supervlsorlal
district.
The resolution stated that
there is no other feasible site in
the county for a regional
t·ommercial airport. Nestande
said any of the four neighboring
·counties -all of which are
subetantiaUy lar~er than Orange
County --contain better sites.
Coluillnist slates
talk at library
Los Angeles Tim es
columnist J ack Smith Is the
featured speaker at the Dana
Niguel Library Oct. 22
beginning with a reception at
7 p.m.
The evening is sponsored
by the Friends of the Dana
•A Laguna Beach chapter
o f W omen's Agl ow
Fellowship is being formed.
and a dessert meetin~ will be
held tonight at 7 o clock at
1675 Tahiti Ave.
Betty Wakeling, who has
•Laguna Beach senior
citizens will take a day-trip to
the Norton Slmon Museum in
Pasadena Oct. 28.
The cost ls $14 and includes
Niguel Library and ticketa for
members are $2. The price is
$3 for non-members.
Smith will autograph his
books, and selections will be
on sale prior to his talk. For
information. call the li,brary
at 496-3784.
worked for Teen Challenge
and the Melodyland Hotline
Center. will ~ "Resting,
Waiting or Procrastinating."
For r eservatio ns, call
494-5557.
transportation. a box lunch
and admission to the museum.
F or i nformation call the
Laguna Beach Senior Citizens
Club at 497-2441.
$350,000 Arts Center • given
By KAREN E . KLEIN
Ofttlehltr .........
The Loa Angeles-baaed
Security Pacific National Bank
has donated $350.000 to the
Orange County Performing Arts
Center , setting a strong
precedent for regional support
for the cent.er.
The gift is the largest the
Security Pacific Foundation. a
charitable organization, ha.a made
to date, accordlng to Carol E.
Taufer. foundation president.
The arts center, .cheduJed to
open late in 1985, ii expected to
coat over $60 million. All the
funds wlll come from private
donationa.
Security's ch ief executive
officer. Richard J. Flamson, said
the donation was made to the
center partly because Security
Pactfk has a large client base in
Orange County and partly
because o( his own feeling for the
county. He has resided In Corona
del Mar for 15 years.
Security Pacific will not be "a
one-hitter" in its Involvement
with the center. Flamson said. He
said he hopes Security will
become part of the center's team
of planners and patrons.
The center, which will feature
a 3.000-aeat theater designed for
opera, symphony. musical
theater and ballet, and a
l ,000-seat theater for smaller
performances. "will add a lot of
class" to Orange County.
Flamscm said.
"We need to fuH11l all the
rt!quirements of the residents of
Orange County," he added.
Although most county
dwellers think they're living in
paradise. he said. there is a lack
of cultural exposure in Orange
County
The cent.er, wruch •• 9Ch~uied
Cor groundbreaking in early
1983, wiU be located on five acres
in the South Coast Plaz.a Town
Cent.er area.
DANSll
IUSlllll
SET
'9''
11111
llFE UITEll
.... $19 .95
11111
llUtlO VISE
·1~~·
..... $11.95
(Net Shewn)
.... $12.95
11111 IUSllC
WllE IAIAFE
H\ Uter
•1411
Prlcee Oood1hru 10/11182. Subject To Supply on Hand
w I (,NI •. (>II I ' 'I ( ' •II I IC I I I' Ill.' < >I~ A N < , t l < > l J t ~ I Y < A l 11 < J I < N I A l '1 C E:_ N T ~,
Owners visit some of 100 horses quartered at El Modena High
School after they were saved from Saturday's fire.
Power line blamed in canyon blaze
By DAVID KVTZMANN or .. ..,,......,.
Fire offkiala have determined
that a destructive, 16,800-acre
flreatorm In eastern Orange
County wu sparked by a fallen
power line a µpp o rt a t a
McDonnell Douglas test facility
in Gypsum Canyon.
Orange County Fire Chie f
Lawrence Holms announced the
findings of his department's
lnveallcallon Tuesday as the
remnants of a massi ve
firefighting force continued
mop-up operations in rugged
beck country east of Irvine Lake.
Holms, who gave the County
Board of Supe rvisors a fire
update earlier ln the day, told
reporters that his Investigators
felt certain the cause of the fa.st-
movlng blaze could be attributed
to a fallen power line croea bar
owned by McDonnell Douglas.
Southern California Edison Co.
lines were not lnvolved, he said.
"We feel confident that that is
the absolute cause (of the fire) at
this Ume," the county fire chief
said.
Holms said it appears almost
certain that powerful Sant.a Ana
wind conditions caused the Cl"Ol'll
bar on a pole at the McDonnell
Douglas facility to fall to the
Newport bed tax
hike hid defeated
By STEVE MARBLE or .. .., .........
An effort to hike the Newport
BMch dty hotel and motel bed
tax -a move voters defeated
twice at the poU. -haa been
turned h.ck for a third time.
The city council, armed with a
court rullng that would have
allowed It to bypa11 the voters,
came up a vote short ·Tuesday
evening of increasing the tax
from 6 to 8 percent.
"I've been in favor of the
lncreue all along but I believe
thla would be a breach of faith to
approve It now ," said Mayor
Jackie Heather who wu joined
by council colleagues Paul
Hummel, Evelyn Hart and
Ruthelyn Plummer In striking
down the tax request.
The council had been nearly
unanimoua in ita support of the
measure when it wu placed on
(See BED TAX, Pase A!)
Mesa development
decision postponed
A decision on a much-debated
Costa Me1a develo pme nt
propoul h·aa been postponed
until next June at the requeet of
'P"OJect backen.
The delay WM approved thla
week by the city Planning
Commlaalon in reaponae to a ~ from Amel Development
Co. The firm la aeeldng approval
to build 210 oondomlniurm and a
41-acre commercial center on
lad near South Cout Plaza.
The plan -which local
homeownen have criUciud u
"°too denN" -WU acheduled to
be conaldered by the city coundl
Nov. l , the eve o f this year's
council election.
Under the revised plannlna
commluion sc hedule, the
proposal will not face council
action until next July.
The arty ia bounded by
South Drive, Bear Street,
San Dle10 Freeway and San
Leandro Real.
Robert Mickelson, an Arnel
planning consultant, said the
firm's ~ueet for an extension
wu baaed solely on financial
conaldera\1001, indlcatln1 the
company 11 aatilfied with the
plan aubmitted lMt June.
(See DECISION, Pase A!)
f(round, emitting s parks which
ignited nearby brush. He said
there is no evidence of negligence
on McDonnell Douglas' part.
T he blaze was first spotted by
a patrolling sheriff's deputy just
before 9 a.m. Saturday. Though
fire officials we r e q uickly
noLifled, the fla m es spread
within minutes Into inaccessible
terrain, Holms said.
T h e blaze proved costly .
Counted destroyed were 11
luxury homes m the exclusive
Crest de Ville commlUlity in
Orange, two homes in Anaheim
Hilla and another large home in
un incorpora t e d a r ea n ea r
Santiago Canyon.
Damage esti~tes were placed
at $11 million, down from an
earlier appraisal of $16 million.
More than 140 people suffered
minor injuries a nd two horses
were killed during Saturday's
chaotic evacuation.
Aho hanned were 3,000 acres
of habitat for rare Tecate cypress
trees.
McDonne ll Douglas Corp.
officials in Huntington Beach
said Tuesday their company is
s tudying the county F i re
(See FIRE, Pa1e A!~
Leisure World action escalates
8Y ITBVE TRIPOLI ..............
The ...... conflic\ J;littine
&he readen• of Uriaare World in ~ Hm. .... lrvine, the
Ralil1110CW Dwelopment Co. and
the Koll Co. hM opened on a new
frGnt. Orani• County 1upervlaora
uaanlmou1ly approved a
rnoluUon Tuesday aendlnt
Lel1ure World'• requeat to •u n111 the county'• 21th dty to
... Loqal Apncy Pormatlon
Qarur'M'm. which hM final •Y ,,,,_IUcbnwu.n. ,,. .aan ..... a-than a.
~ afllr anodw IS'OUP .ad
ermardlllan to tab •aa ..._
of t.ht bMr1 of Leisure World
auadl it to lrYIM.
Th• 11111~ makea no
.,, the Cl o:r.::. wtll
.............. tllll\WO
·ma=:.:·~" more .. ........ .........
Residents view joining Irvine as
threat to their a~tonomy.
455-acre parcel will be developed
Into an office puk.
The Koll Co. haa an option
to develop a 189-acre puk on
part of the Roo1moor-owned
land. Romnoor apperently feels
there will be a better chance of
the development ...... permitted • \:!..of 1Mne than • .-n of anpant.ed 1Atlun World.
Irvine , which WH Ulll
1tudyln1 tb• propoaal,
appaNnlly II ln......S ln the
lnoreH•d tax revenUH -
..Urnated at '200.000 Int.ht ftnt
year -from 1u~h a
dft91opn .. t.
IMluN World .......... view
die ac.r.ooc NqU9& IO be~ to ll'vtne ... lhNat to their
~.ho••~· lolm 1.u1u1 ... allilrmu Of
Lel1ure World'i Committee on
Incorporation, haa said laat
month that the community 11
"not really looklna to It (new
developme11t) for revenue.'' He
added that any such dedaion ln
an incorporated Lel1ure World
wouJd be up to the newly elected
dty coundl, however .
An LAJC official uld
~ooor'1 requeet lbow1 that
t.ht company doe no& ""'' ltl ~·n•I to be par& of an t11inlCllilll'll'IJtal~ai.d LMlure World. ·
County 1uper~leon. in
1pprovln1 Lel1\&te Worldlt
l'*!l'JNtratlon ..Utlon '° the ~ .......... oldie ._, ... ~.nan.
T... rival requ..i ••woul• ..,.= fl!' ..... w .......
.... w ..... ~····
Thomae Rlley. The lncoiporaUon
of Leil\lre World would "pro\eet
the environment of Leisure
World and the Lei.lure World
area,'' he aald.
-Board Chairman Bruce
Neatande called the Rournoor
prope>Ml "forum 1hoppln1," a
term he ha1 coined for
dewlopment poups who "lhop"
for t.ht pemment ..-ncy that
wlll lf•nt them molt of thelr
development aoela for • percel.
''They (Lel1ure World
'-:::/ haw no c:twlce but to ., and try to tncorporat.e
to eave their community,"
Nt9fande-6d. suc;Ylw ._... Stanuin ea6d
th• erd'1 action doH not
ooutltu .. an endonelMnt of
Lel1un World'• cltyl\ood .....................
r 'T"• LAl'C ta ••~ted to
• ·--..., ......... y ::--. .... ,
NRC will probe
construe.lion of
plant at Onofre .. Chargea of faulty construction
at the San Onofre nuclear power
plant have prompted a Nuclear
R egu l ato r y C o mm laa l o n
Investigation of the controversial
. facility.
A ..croup of NRC inapectol"I will
be conducting tests of the newly
conatrUcted units 2 and 3 of the
nuclear . plant later this week ,
NRC spokesman Jim Hanch ett
said today.
The allegat1ons were made by
Elmo Earl Kent of Cypreaa, a
former quality control Inspector
for Bechtel P ow e r Inc., the
plant's main contractor. Kent, 56,
was fired last February after he
fa iled two job certification tests.
He had been assigned to San
Onofre in October 1980.
Kent has charged that fa ulty
welds in critical safety systems
were approved at San Onofre as
well as at a nuclear power plant
In Midland, Mich., where he was
transferred following his Orange
County assignment. The NRC
also is investigating the Midland
"lant.
"As we do in all cases where
we r eceive a llegations of
c.-onstruction deficiencies we send
ins pecto rs to look into the
matter," said Hanchett, adding
that he regards the situation as
"not terribly serious a t the
moment.''
"They are not major problems
at least at the surface but we
really don't know until we take a
look at them."
H a nc h ett said the NRC
routinely receives allegations or
faulty conatructlon and design a(
virtually every power plant Ir(
the country . He uid o n cet
lnveatlgatora s tudy the San;
Qnofre and Michigan planta, at
report will be made public ln 8i
few weeks. •
"We d on't see a n y thlnat
significant In hla (Ke nt's):
allegations," he said. "Thia 1.:
t y pical of the construction!
deCidencies you would get in •
large construction site." :
Bec htel s pokesman Jim!
Mackin said Kent was fired last!
February after he failed two job:
certification test.s. :
Kent has said he brought hii
allegations to the attention of
Bechtel officia ls and then the
NRC. Receiving little aatisfaction,
he approached members of the
Orange County chapter of the
anti -nuc lear Alliance fo r
Survival, according to Alliance
spokesman Tim Carpenter.
"We feel that this is merely the
Up of the ~berg as far aa the
problems at San O no fre:•
Carfjnter said. "The questions
Ear has raised underscore the
need for a truly indepe nde n-t
audit of the operation at aU three
units of San Onofre."
"We wonder why the NRC sat
on these complaints for six
months. We believe they warrant
investigation."
Bech t el s p okes man Jim
Mackin said the company has
investigated Kent's charges and
found no basis for the allegatiollf
at the Midland, Mich., nucleaf:
(See SAN ONOFRE, Page A!) • •
,.,,
Dena Farrow recalls ~ ... the more they operated,~
ti!e more injuries ~hey found.'
Brush w-ith death
still haunts teen
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or ... .., .... ,..,.
The terrible eve.nta of Friday,
Aug. 13, still replay themselves
in 15-year-old Dena F arrow's
nightmares: the-rifle ahot , the
bu.mlna and bleeding ln her back
and aodomen, the difficult
breathing, the sight of her best
friend slumped over In front of
her, the ambulance ride to
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital....
Her aunt, Jo Ann GudmUJllOn,
reme mbers waiting a t the
hospital that night as Dena
underwent aix hours of surgery.
"The doctors d idn't give us
much ~ to hope," her aunt
recalled, "becauae the more they
o~rated, the more injuries they
found. Every time a d octor
walked out, her mother and I
nearly died becauae we knew it
WM Solns to be bad newa."
Dena lon a kidney, her spleen
and parta of her pancttaa, liver,
stomach and lnt.eatines.
But she survived that nicht
and aevenl more nlchta on the
critical llat, attached to llfe-
aupport equipment. She endured
add1Uonal aur,ery and aeveral
llfe-thlftteruna lnfecUons.
Dena •ya much of the credit
for her recovery must go to her
llDEI
Are Americana
1etting their
money'• worth lor
the 1287 billion
they would 1pend
each year on
health care? Why
are medical coetl
90 hlsh? An1wen
appear ln a apeelal .
...... e. or 1torie1
•PapCIO.
A8 ce.1
A'7 a-1 .,
Cl ~
Dl-l.Sl-4 A'I
AT
loving family, ,some devote«
friends on the Marina Hiab'
School girls volleyball team
to her idol, Rams quarterbac
Vince Ferragamo, who railed ht!£1 spirits with two autographe•
pictures and a telephone call.
T oday. the pre tty blo ndt.
Huntington Beach girl is well Off
her way back to a nonnal tee~
age life. ~
Though her brush with dea~
and the most difficult days ~
recovery are behind her, De~
Farrow aUll haa night.marel thaf
remind her she waa the luckier ot
two shooting victims on that
fateful Friday the 13th.
Dena met Rt.e Lou Tucker,
daughter of Rosie Miclette, a
popular parking e nforcement,
ofaoer in Laguna Beach, when
the two were In the eighth grade<
at Harbour View S chool ill
Huntington Beach.
The two became fast friends.•
and spent many summer day•'
shopping together or Soing to the
beach. •
On the evening of Aug. 13, the'
two girls went to 1 party, then~
visited a Huntington Karbour
phy1ician'1 home where aa
acquaintance, Richard Berge. l&i
was staying.
The ltrfa were preparing to·
(See IDOL, Pa1e A4 )
Walkway no substitute for signal
-----~partment'• flndlnaa re11ardlna e blaze.
Spoke.men for th firm uld
the Gyptum Canyon le.l facUlty
wia1 not In wie the w~kond th •
tire brolit out. They aald tho
479-~re teat alw only had been
uted sporadically during the put
O_yeara. .
'l'ht• company 11ald a
alntenance crew had cleared
e are• of 8taSI, Weeda and
h two months ago and that a
taker 1tays on the preml.sel
ar round.
• • •
hljlh noltc luvel• and for
equJpment too bulkj' for W1C1 at
other McDonnell Douglaa teat
1ltn
An tiqulpmenl tr111ler and a
tool 1hed at the \etll center were
deatroycd by flames Saturday.
Of the 14 homca JOit and ah<
damased, county flro otth:lal~
said, there were two commorr
factora -they htld combW.tlble'
roofs and they were perched on
s teep hillsides ovorlooklng
c:anyona covered by an exploelve
carpet of tinder dry bruahland.
I>' OLl!!NN 8COTT or ... ....,,.......,
A new walkway ord •rcd
Tu •d•Y by the, Jrvlnti City
Couf1(:11 to Improve truW<· .aft-ty
In Culvt•rdale haim'l ••tl1flcd
ou ttipuken rv1ldent• who 1tlll
want 11 troffk 1ll(nal pla<'«.'Ci at th<!
entrance to the village,,.
Council mt-mbcr1 Au thorized
u11t1 of $40.000 In elty contlng ·ncy
fund• to COJ\flruct on clght-foot-
wlde walkwoy for pedeatrlon•
and blcydi1t.1 on the wt.11t aide of
Culver Orlvt• from Old Main, to
Main lll'N!UI.
The walkway, rccommendtid
by an ad ho1: cltlzc·n-11ta ff
c:ommlu.ce. Is intended to allow
1ehool children to crou Culver at
a signal at Main Street rather
"
than rru.lni th• ahc-lan. 1tnet
ultow~re. · Part of th• $40,000 alto will bl
uled In a MOOnd project to widen
th eul tld of Culvc.>r r.~ar th•
nurthbound San Dleao Freeway
ortrump 11U public trarult buaet
c1.1n 11top cl01Wr w tht• olfr11mp,
wherll unothur .ianal offcrt Nfer
(.•rOQllllJ
Sevorul Culvl"rdolt• re11dcnl#
t.ohJ <."O uncil member• Tut.'lday.
h ow t' v er , t h u t t h c I n t c r1 m
mcluturca •t.Jll don't roplace thti
nt't"d for u 1lgnul Ul Culvtir and
Fcl'TIJI Avenul'.
They clalm<.'Ci an llL'C1dent last
wc.'tlk Involving a young boy wM
wut s truck by • cur while
croe.slng ut Ferrl• II an example
of the safoly prublem.
JHn O'L.auahUn, preeident of
the Culverdale Homeoown•r•'
A.-oc:latJon, .. id 1he ~lved 37
callM from upeet ,..Udt>nt.1 after
the lll'Cldtnt.
"You can't lmqlne thct trauma
of the pt,'Oplc who have to ao In
und out o f Culvvrd11lc every
duy," 1he told the council.
Council mt·mbera, however,
havl! rcllt'CI on technical advk.-e
fr o m 1taf f und advlaory
committee mcmooni. who NY the
lntcracctlon. and the other
entrunc • at Main and Thiel
Avvnuc, don't merit 11anal1,
Thl'y cla.lm ·signal• would make
the lntcr1ectlon1 even more
dongcr<>'u1 a nd would coat the
cl ty more than U00,000 ln
lninallaUon ('CJ9tl.
Coundl membOr~ vott-d lall
month to add a c:rOMlns suard at
Culver and the northbound
1..-way onramp aher rfllldent.1
oomplalrwd \hat .. hool chlldren
crouln1 the rr .. eway overpa11
were tmdunKtircd by a~cdlna cars.
But Pollet• Chief Leo P art
Mid Tuetday th crCJUln8 au.rd
will be removed bt-cau1e only
It-Ven children per day were
palllna at the ramp.
Councilman Blll Vardoull1,
council llal1on to the ad hoc
committee, Hid the city will
contJnue to monitor the traffic
lltu.tlon and consider the need-
for •lanai..
The Gypsum Canyon facility is
,._.~led for experlmenta Lnvolvlng
Holms said the homea would
have fared better witho ut
combustible roofs
DECISION DELAYED . • •
Su11ervisors
El Toro airport
• nix
I .. ,,. \he ballot, spending $25,000 on
1 :\wo elections within one year.
I ; In both elettiOOS, a majority Of i,·:~1\}le voters went along with the
' ,f.px increase but failed to provide
Harry Rinker. a partner in
Amel Development with George
Argyros, denied having made ·
such a statement. He said he ls
anxious to meet ~ith
homeowners before the Planning
Commission hearing iJl June.
In addition to the
condominium development, the
plan calls for 12 acres of two-
story garden offices and 31 acres
of low and mid-rise officet along
the freeway.
Also in the plan la a
realignment of South Coast
Drive to connect with a section of
the street already complet.ed near
San Leandro . Nearby
.hgmeowners had requested the
street be moved away from their
propertv.
• •
the two-thirds margin needed. A
recent state Supreme Court
nding, though. cleared the way
for the council to up the tax
without even going to the voters. , ,, ' ; ..
,:'·1~~AN ONOFRE PROBE . • •
•111 power plant. A subsequent I~ w~~vestlgation of San Onofre also
" "'5ult.ed In no discovery of design
.... ,~ults; he said.
•' .. L Kent has made additional
chargea about San Onofre which
a re und er curren t NRC
-investigation, he added.
"We don't know what the
specific: allegatJons are unUl the
NRC completes it.s investigation,"
Mackin saJd. "Bechtel anticipates
that everything will be tine and
satisfactory (at San Onofre)."
In the wake of Kent's initial
complaint. Mackin sajd Bechtel
invesllgat.ed welda at au of it.s
nuclear power plant.a throughout
the country and found no design
or construction fault.a.
Orange County supervisors, In
a split vole, have voiced their
opposltion to the use of the EJ
Toro Marine Corps Air Station as
a commercial airport, but not
without vocat dissent from the
minority that opposed the action.
Supervisors Ralph Clark and
Roger Stanton opposed board
Chairman Bruce Nestande's
resolution Tuesday. Both said El
Toro has not. been adequate1y
studied and therefore does not
merit re jection as a pos.sible
airport site.
Clark accused board members
s upporting the resolution of
doing so even though they had
not yet seen a four-year, $500,000
study of ~ible airport sites.
"l just don't believe that this
board has enough infonnatlon at
hand to make the kind of
decision this resoiuuon calls for,"
said Clark. "We don't have the
facts, w e haven't had any public
testimony and we haven't heard
from our cities or the business
community."
CI a f'k r eco mmended a
substitute proposal that would
have called for county aides to
repqr't on the county'al aviation
future. That idea failed with only
Stant.on'• support, however.
\ · LEISURE WORLD ANNEX MOVE ...
.,0 , , At a separate mee\ing Tue9day on annexing the Rossmoor !anti Inhibit the lncorporatlon.
i" ~ight , Irvine City Council until council members meet.again The feasibility study was
;',members said they are inclined to in two weeks with staff reports begun earlier this year at the 11 '~rop their interest in the to guide a final decision. request of the Koll Co. Council 'r•,' b d h h • ossmoor property now that mem era r easone t en l at
' eisure World organizers have Cit Y M an ager W 1111 am. annexing the Roumoor property
• ·•sought the same land for their Woollett, Jr. raised the l11ue might offer the cily more tax
J••!propoeed city. Tuesday. noting that outsiders revenue and enable it lO better
,,.l,,11 Members told city planners to mJght easily infer from the city's control development that could
'' iforgo a current feasibility study study that Irvine Is trying to affect Irvine's circulat ion system.
Beach fog due
10 25 mph Thuraoay. High• In Th F t F a· EDT • ·~m:J.·.· nonhetn 6-1• "'9y range ll'om • orec•• °' p.m. Rain --
78 10 ea WIUI IOwa from 38 10 60. Thursday, October 14
Southern o ... r1 high• • .,. to e Tem ralUl'es ~I """* r1ng9 trom 8810 95wtltltows1n _;.:..:;&.;,..o,.;;.;.;.c;..=.;~;.;.;,;:;.__..._ ..... ___ --T
I ,,,r----------Ille liOa.
I ~· I Boetera trom Point Conception •rl ~0 U IJ ta 10 Ille Mexlcen border can eKpec1 ii CIHr Ind 1unny today wllh ll9hl varllble wlnd1 through irl Ngtw renglng from IN mk1·70. II T h u r I d I y • be co m I n g
the bMChei 10 mkl·IOt Inland. aouthwMlwty at I 10 11 ""°"In Felr lonlgM Ind Thurad.y excopt the ehernoon with I 1·I0-2•fool I ~ 1 ~lncrfftlng chance of leie night aouthwMI swell. Nrty rnomlng fog along the ________ _.
.i~ a~Jo..0c=g~ ~~~ ~~ ·Te mperatures ~.In the 70. lo low 80e __ _ __
"' i'l'11ewhere. from Point NATION
Conception 10 th• Mexican .. C. ~ ~-and out 60 ml ... • Ught Albeny 9 I 32
vulabl• wind• tonight and AlbuQUerque 85 42
h<Klday morning, but _, 10 Anchorage 32 30 " 11,.,..;o1 ,....,,,,,, s.•. , ,.
,-..... ·~~11we11 wtndl a to 11knot•1n Allan11 ea 91 .01 ,,0 .u. us Oeo• ,. '"''"""' •. Ille etlefnoona. Wind..._ 2 IO 3 Allanllc Olty 5t 54 \..:.:~....::..:....:=~=-....;.....;.~-=""""""'.'"~---:".'""~--""1
fMI 1hl1 atletnOOI\ South-1 Auetln f7 5e .21 Fronts .COl<l .,.
...... ol 1 to 2 feat. Moetly lair S.lllmO<• 151 64 0 I
to<ley ll'lrOUOh Thuradey except Blnnlngtlem 71 82
for 1ome fog In outer watere SO.ton 54 40 Om•ha
Orlendo
Phlladelptlle
Ptloenl•
PrtltbutQh Portlan<f,Me
Port lend, Ol'e
PrOllldenol
Reno
59 31 Loe Anoe491 87 71 .04 Monrovl1
M
92
68 68
IA
73
71
17
to ..
17 IA fl eo
12
74
12
90
15 77
12
90 79 ..
75 79
17 65
t2 ..
17
1o<1ey, lncrNllng end eprNdlng BuftelO 65 54 .oe
aoufhward tonight 1nd eerly Cuper 61 35 94 15 Monterey
Thurldey cn.ra..ton.s.c. 12 ee .oe · Ctwleelon.w.v 74 51
82 51 Ml. Wleon
75 51 Ne9da.
, CNtlotte. N,C 91 5e Us ~ 4737 ~ !~ ~9eactl •• summary Chlcego 54 4•
Cincinnati 50 48
51 38 OnllM'lo
65 30 Palm Sprtnga Overnight thunder11orm1
producied heevy r ein• over
Alab•m• end Mla1lallppl white 1hower1 end lhundert1orm1
continued from the Gull CO..f to
I the upper onto Valley,
Cloud• end Orlu l• lingered
I oVet upper Mlct1191n and th• llPll9' Ml•1111ppj v-,. ClouclV
1kle1 covered Ill• northern .-11u11ct1e1-. northern fllolklel.
101111Mrn New l1111elld 111d
IOUINrn t4lffl Pllllnl ... • ... ltlowert ...,. °"' tM Clnfrel Hlf.i=: end thunder1torma
dotted n1e 0011ntry frem Ill• 1outl'ler11 Alle11J10 Coeet to .....,., 1.,.., Wltll rain -IN °"'° v..., Ind .... llllddle _,
llOtU!ern AlllMic CoNI ....... It
w11 partlr c1011dy ecrot1 Ill• Florlcl• penlntule and CIOlldy -=ar.~-s = v...,, hMy "°'" IOr09I ... "°""9m ~-IO ltll Plldnc
COM!, """ fog -WMfllnglon
... .
Cleveland 70 53 Sall Lall• 55 37 PllMdenl
ColumOue 72 52 San Antonio
Sen D1eOo Sanf'r~
S..nle
St.Louis
67 54 .37 PMO Aob ...
Qellee.FI Worth 72 61 15 92 RIWfalde
Deyton 83 51 88 5 I lAed 8IUfl
Den...., II 30 ee 49 Redwood Clly
Dee Moin. 51 40 61 48 S.Cremenlo
Oelrolt ... 49 81 Pet•Tampe
Spolctne Syrec:uee
TDC19111 Tue.on WMtllnglon
Wichita
88 74 .01 Slllna1
£1 PllO 11 41 63 3t Sen hfnerdlno
,..,... 31 27 53 49 . 10 Sen Q1brte1
-53 43 ~ aa 11
&4 35 San Diego
75 45 San Franettoo
HOulMOfl M 61 H 91 ~ Sen JoN
~· 511 41 68 •3 Senta An1
.MclllOn,Mi... 74 80 .02 ~ l: :: 1:U CA&M'OMIA ~City et 41 ~~ 76 35 l.M..,.... 74 50 .. ., ... ...., 112 69
Uttle ~ 72 M 8#11ow It 50
LoeLoe ,.._. 13 83 IMumonl 71 4t OU--. ... 47 ~ h•r 10 30 ~ 70 55 • 10 • Bllhop 75 35 Mlenll 14 eo 1ty111e u M
.-U• 51 41 .01 Cutwt Coy II M ,....a ."""' Eureka 75 41 .......... .,, 61 46 .... ...., Oft1etw ~ ee .03 F"reeno 17 113
New Yori! 64 N t.00 L~er f7 37
011111101M City 10 53 .oa Lono hecft " 53
..
lllf IEPllT
Senti Berbara
Senti Cnu
Senti Merta Santi Monie.
SIOc:klon
T lhoe VIMtrf
Ttlefmal Torrence
Yum1
.Smog
Wiier• 10 oell (toll frMI for I ieeeee~tlOn; •• Or .(IOOt ........
Lo:f11telff Ca111itr: CIOOI ,.,.... .....................
I ........ CIOOI .., ... 7'0 •
AGMO ~ o.iMr: (IOO) ... ~
Tides
TODA' ........ , ... ,. ....
...... ~': "·"'· u
""" ... t:tt a.m. o.• = •..ate.111 .... ._ Ullll·"' o.t 11111' ... , ........
""' .... ....,., tn •"'·· ,..~ ..... ,...... .
Moon r1111 9°'11r et t :H 11 "!•· ... ,...., ... : ........
•
Nestande, in lntr~uclng the
resolution, continued his attack
on the new site a s on e that
would "destroy yeara of land use
planning and c ommunity
building In that area." The site la
In Nestande's supervisorial
district.
The resolution stated that
there is no other feasible sjte in
the c ountr for a regional
commercial airport. Nestande
said any of t.he four neighboring
counties -all of which are
substantially larger than Orange
County -contain better sites.
Bandit hits
Irvine store
A lone gunman took $2,300 an
cash and jewelry from an Irvine
store and a customer who was
shopping there with her child,
police said today.
The robbery occurred at 3:45
p.m. Tuesday al the Children's
Unhm1led s tore in Heritage
Plaza, near Walnut Avenue and
Culver Drive, police said. No
injuries occurred an the incident.
The gunman was described 11.8
a Caucasian male. age 25-35,
about 6 feet tall, with light·
colored hair.
An annuaJ health fair and
flu immunization clinic for
Irvine residents 55 or older
will be held Saturday at the
city's Senior Ciliz:.ens Cent.er.
The fair will run Crom 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. at the cent.er. at
3 Sandburg Way. adjacent to
I.he Rancho San Joaquin Golf
Course.
A variet y of health
• seniors
-------.A one-day workshop In
carving the Great Pumpkin
will be offered from 9 a.m. to
noon Saturday, Oct. 23, at the
Irvine Fine Arts Center.
The workshop Is fo r
children aged 6 through 12. A
S3 pe r child f ee wi II be
•Three lectures on health
Issues will be offered at UC
Irvine on Thursday eve nings
beginning on Oct. 28 in the
University Center's Heritage
P • .x>m.
Dr. Arthur Resnikoff, UCI
counseling psychologist, will
began the series w1 th a
discussion on "Well Being and
Being Well."
charged. The oenter is locatt"'<i
at 4601 Walnut Ave .. al YC1le.
in Heritage Park.
Then on Saturday. Oct. 30.
a second workshop w ill bt·
presented to help children
make their own masks for
Halloween.
On Nov. 4, author William
Wicke tt J r. will talk on
"Herpes: Cause and Control "
Finally, Grant G"·loup.
UCI endocrinology professor.
will s p eak o n "Die t s,
Vitamins and Minerals: Fat
and Fantasy."
AJI of the lectures are free
and open to the public and
will bellin at 7:30 p.m.
Arts Center $350,000 • given
By KAREN E. K LEIN 0(1M0.-,"941U1t
The Loa Angele1-baaed
Security Pacific National Bank
has donated $350,000 to the
Orange County PerformJng Art.a
Cent er, setting a strong
precedent for regional support
for the center.
The gift is the largest the
Security Pacific Foundation. a
chariu.ble organization. has made
to date, accord1ng to Carol E.
Tauter, foundation president
The aru cent.er, scheduled to
open late in 1985, is expected to
coat over $60 million. All the
funch will come from private
donations.
Security's c hief executive
officer, Richard J. Flamson, said
the donation was made to the
center partly because Security
Pacific has a large client base m
Orange County a nd partly
because of his own feeling for the
county. He has resided in Corona
del Mar for 15 years.
Security Pacific will not be "a
one-hitter" in its involvement
with the center. Flamson said. He
said he hopes Sec urity will
become part of the center's team
of planners and patrons.
The center, which will feature
a 3.000-seat theater designed for
opera. symphony. muslcaJ
theater and ballet. (pd a
1.000-seat theater for smaller
performances. "will add a lot of
class" to Orange County,
Flamson said.
"We need to fulfill all the
r~uirements of the residenta of
Orange County," he added
Altho ugh most county
dwellers think they're living in
paradise. he said, there i!: a lack
of cullural exposure in Ora nge
County
The cent.er, which 1s scheduled
for groundbreaking in early
1983, will be localed on five acres
ln the South Coast Plaza Town
Center area.
DANSll
lllSI
MUSUllll
SET
·11111
CAFE UITEll
.... $19.95
DAISI
llUQID VISE
•14••
191. $18.9S
(Net Shown)
.... $12.95
11111 CUSSIO
Wiii CIUFE
1 ~ Uter
•14••
.•
--Emll
Y.I l>Nl '.llAY Ill f IJlll II I 1 I'll\.' < J H AN< .t < <> lJ N I Y < Al IJ UH NI A I 'i LI N 1 S
Owners visit some of I 00 hones quarJered at El Modena High
School after they were saved fro~ Saturday's fire.
Power line blamed in canyon blaze
By DAVID KUTZMANN or .. D1111r NM 1W1
Fire offidala have determined
that a destructive, 16,800-acre
firestorm in eastern Orange
County was sparked by a fallen
power l ine support at a
McDonnell Douglas test facility
ln Gypsum Canyon.
Orange County Flre Chief
lAwrence Holma announced the
findings of his department's
investigation Tuesday as the
remnants of a massive
firefi1ht1ng force continued
mop-up operatlopa in rugged
back country east of Irvine Lake.
Holms, who pve the Cou.ntv
Board of Supervisors a fire
update earlier ln the day, told
reporters that his Investigators
felt certain the cause of the fast-
moving blaz.e could be attributed
to a fallen power line cnm bar
owned by McDonnell Douglas.
Southern California F.dison Co.
lines were not lnvolved, he said.
"We feel confident that that is
the absolute cause (of the fire) at
thls time," the oounty fire chief
said.
Holms said it appean almoet
certain that powerful Santa Ana
wind oonditions caWled the mm
bar on a pole at the McDoru\lill
Douglas facility to fall to the
N e-wport bed tax
hike hid defeated
By STEVE MARBLE or .. o.-r .........
An effort to hike the Newport
Beach city hot.el and mot.el bed
tax -a move voters def,ated
twice at the poU. -has been
turned back for a third Ume.
The city oouncil, armed with a
court ruling that would have
allowed it to bypua the voters,
came up a vote short ·Tuesday
evening of increasing the tax
from 6 to 8 percent.
"I've been in favor of the
increue all along but I believe
this would be a breach of faith to
approve it now," said Mayor
Jackie Heather who wu joined
by council colleagues Paul
Hummel, Evelyn Hart and
Ruthelyn Plummer in striking
down the tax request.
The council had been nearly
unanimowl ln its support of the
measure when it was placed on
(See BED TAX , Page Al)
Mesa development
decision postponed
A Cledslon on a much-debated
Coat a Me a a development
proposal haa been postponed
until next June at the request of
'P"C>Jtct t.cken.
The delay WM approved this
week by the city Planning
Commluion Ln reaponae to a
request from Amel Development
Co. The ftnn la teek:ina approval
to build 210 condominlwna and a
43-acre commercial center on
land near South eo.t Plaza.
The plan -which local
homeowners have crtticlr.ed u
''too den8e'' -waa echeduled to
be conaidered by the city Council
Nov. l, the eve of this year's
oound.l election.
Under the revised planning
commlulon schedule, the
proposal will not face council
action until next July.
The g::rty ii bounded by
South Drive, Bear Street,
San Die10 Freeway and San
Leandro Real.
Robert Mickelson, an Arnel
plannin1 conaultant, said the
firm'• request for an eX1enaion
wu baaed 10lely on financial
conaideratlona, indicating the
company ta aatlafled with the
plan submitted last June.
(See DECISION, Pase Al)
f(round, emitting sparks which
ignited nearby brush. He said
there is no evidence of negligence
on McDonnell Douglas' part.
The blaz.e was fint spotted by
a patrolliJ18 sheriff's deputy just
before 9 a.m. Saturday. Though
fire officials were quickly
notified, the flames spr ead
within minutes lnto lnaccesaible
terrain, Holms said. .
The blaze proved costly.
Counted destroyed were 11
luxury homes in the exclusive
Crest de Ville community in
Orange, two homes ln Anaheim
Hilla and another large home ln
One way to reduce tralf ic would be to eeal ofr the Balboa
Peniuala and charge non-residentl a 110 to SIS fee to enter.
unincorporated area nea r
Santiago Canyon.
Damage estimates were placed
at $11 million, down from an
earlier appraiaa.l of $16 million.
More than 140 people suffered
minor injuries and two horses
were killed during Saturday's
chaotic evacuation.
Also harmed were 3,000 acres
of habitat for rare Tecate cypress
trees.
McDonnell Douglas Corp.
officials in Huntington Beach
said Tuesday their company is
s\udying the county Fire
(See FIRE, Pase Al>.
Newport c.andidates heat up race
reduce traffic would be to IMl
off the Balboa Peninsula and charae non-residents a $10 to $15
f• to enter.
He conceded there miaht be
leal ODDOmldon to .um a move. 'Mon Candidates endoned u.e
notion of creatlnftw'atelllt• = ~ around dty and • .. uttle_.,... nmralftl
&he len,ih of &lie. thl'ff·mU• ~. C. &dward Wolfe, a land appr I r and reel ..... ......
allo ~ Hart'• .... llld' • ehutUt .,..... ..... ~ idea"
but predk:lecl I& would never wn.
Auorney David Oran&,
ehallen1lni Ma1or Jaekl• ......... iolcl"tbe MllDH .. ., .......... ,....,
......... to '"iliDw .. .....
lnto 80llle0De em'• backyard."
Grant 1u11eated the clty
ahould atart talking and atop
auln1 Oran1e County aowmment. the airport ownel'.
He aaid a lollcal apot for a MW
airport woufd be nMr the San
DI-., C-ounty line.
NRC will ' probe
construction of
plant at Onofre
i :
t
• • •
Charges of faulty const.ructlon
at the San Onofre nuclear power
plant have prompted a Nuclear
Re1ul atory Commission
lnvestigauon of the controversial
facility. I
A group of NRC inspectors will
be conducting tests of the newly
constructed units 2 and 3 of the
nuclear plant later this week,
NRC spokesman Jim Hanch~tl
saJd today.
The allegations were made by
Elmo Earl Kent of Cypress, a
former quality control inspector
for Bechtel Power -"1c., the
plant's main contractoi:. Kent, 56,
was fired !Jtst February after he
failed two JOb certification tests.
He had been assigned to San
Onofre in October 1980.
Kent has charged that faulty
welds in critical safety systems
were approved at San Onofre as
well as at a nuclear power plant
in Midland, Mich., where he was
tran.sferred following his Orange
County assignment. The NRC
also is investigating the Midland
plant.
. "As we do ln all cases where
we receive allegations of
construction deficiencies we send
inspectors to look into the
matter," said Hanchett. adding
that he regards the situation as
"not terribly serious at the
moment."
"They are not major problems
at least at the surface but we
really don't know until we take a
look at them."
Hanch ett said the N RC
routinely receives allegations oC
faulty construct.ion and design at.
virtually every power plant in..
the ·country . He uid once
investigators study the San.
Onofre and Michigan plants, a•
report will be made public In a•
few weeks. ~
"We don't aee anything,
significant in his (Kent's)
allegations," he aald. "This is
typical of the construction'
deficiencies you would get ln a •
large oonat.ructlon site." !
Bechtel sp o k esman Jim
Mackin said Kent was fired last:
February after he failed two job;
certification tests.
Kent ha.a said he brought hia
allegations to the attention of
Bechtel official• and then the
NRC. Receiving little satisfaction,
he approaehed members of the
Orange County chapter of the
anti-nucl ear Alliance for
Survival, ac:oording to Alliance
spokesman Tim Carpenter.
"We feel that this is merely the
tip of the iceberg as far u the
problems at San Onofre,"
Carpenter said. ''The questions
Earl has raised underacore the
need for a truly independent
audit of the operation at all three
units of San Onofre."
"We wonder why the NRC sat
on these complaints for six
months. We believe they warrant
investigation."
Bec htel spokesman J im
Mackin said the company has
investigated Kent's charges and
found no basla for the allegationt
at the Midland, Mich ., nuclea!(
(See SAN ONOFRE, Page A%) '
• Dena Farrow recalls 4 ••• the more they operated,.
the more fnj'1rie8 they found.'
&ash with death
still haunts teen
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or .. °"",... ....,
TIM! terrible events of. Friday,
Aug. 13, still replay themaelves
in 15-year-old Dena Farrow's
nightmares: the rifle shot, the
burn1na and bleeding in her back
and abdomen, the difficult
bttathlng, the sight of her best
friend slumped over ln front of
her, the ambulance ride to
Fountain Valley Community
Hoapital ....
Her aunt, Jo Ann GudmUN10n,
remembers waiting at the
hospital that night as Dena
underwent lli.x houn of surgery.
"The doctors didn't give us
much ree.ll'l to hope," her aunt
recalled, ''becaua the more they
operated. the more lnjuries they
found. Every time a d octor
walked out, her mother and I
nearly died becau.e we knew It
was aoi.nB to be bad news."
Dena loat a kidney, her spleen
and par18 of her panc:reu, liver.
at.orn8ch and inteaUnea.
But ahe awvived that night
and lleWral more nights on the
critical list, attached to llfe-
aupport equipment. She endured
additional surgery and .everal
Ufe-threatentnc lnfec:Uona.
Dena •ya muc:h of the credit
for her recovery muat go to her
111111
Are Americana
9etting their
money'• worth for
the 1287 billion
they would apend
eaeh year OD
health care? Why
are medleal eoeta
ao hishf Amwen
appear 6a a apeelal
,.ebp of 1torie1
OD Pqe CIO •
A8
Cl-7
A'I . .. ..,
Cl M • Dl.a.&l-4 ,.,, ,.,,
loving family, some devote+
friends on the Marina Higil:
School girls volleyt.11 team a.nc£
to her idol, Rams quarterbac&!
Vince Ferragamo, who raiaed hei
spirits with two autographecl!
pictures and a telephone call. ·,
Today, the pretty blond•
Huntington Beach girl ii well °'
her way back to a nonnal ~
,age life. 1
Though her brush with dea
and the mo'at difficult days
recovery are behind her, ~
Farrow still has night.mates tha
remind her she was the luck:iel' o«
two shooting victims on that
fateful Friday the 13th.
Dena met Rise Lou Tucker,
dau1hter of Rosie M iclette. a.
popular parking enforcement
officer ln Laguna Beach, when
the two were in the e(ahth grade
at Harbour V iew School iD
Huntington Beach.
Thetwobecamefut frienda.
and spent many summer dayt
shopping together or aoi.nB to the• beach. -
On the eve.ning of Aug. 13, U...
two girls went to a party, thel:a
visited a Hunt1n1ton Harbou '
physician '• home where all
acquaintance, Richard Berge, 18,
waa lla}'ina.
The glrfa were preparing to'
(See IDOL, Pase Af) :
,
a u ... . . -"" . . . .
Six doctors to buy Mesa hospital
IRE CAUSE SET . • • •
Spokettnen for the firm uld
Oyptum C..nyon tett facility
not ln wie the weekend the
Ire broke out. They eald the 78~.cre test lite only had been
1poradlcally during the puf _years.
'1' h e c o m p a n y a a i d a
tenance crew had cleared
area of 1raa1, weeds and
two montha ago and that a
Laker at.aya on the premiael
round.
The Oypeum Canyon facility i.
~ for experamen\I 1nvolv1.na
h iah nolae levels and f or
eq_u!pment too bulky for u.te at
other teat sltet.
An equipment trailer and · a
1001 shed at the test center were
destroyed by flames Saturday.
Of the 14 homes lost and alx
damaged, count.y fire official•
1ald, there were two common
fact.ors -they had combWJllb1e
roofs and they were perched on
steep h illsid es overlook ing
canyons covered by an exploalve
carpet of Under dry brushland ...
DECISION DELAY ED . • • •
0 It'a like eve~thlng elae these,
. _d•Y•· Nothln1 1 happening. l j
--nifnk It's tlmlng mo.r'e than1
aoythlftl else," Mickebon aaid.1
"Most likely we'll stick with the
plan we have."
North Costa M esa
homeowners, who wo n an
lj\itiatlve that block ed
development of more than 650
homea and apartments on the
,;property in 1978, have opposed
1:1,~ latett plan, u well.
':u " T h e b o a r d h a s b e e n
disappointed with the density,"
I• >.aid Jon Paradis, vice president
:>of the North Costa Me sa
'" f
Homeowners Association. "The
onl}' thing that pacified us ls
Rlnker's remark to me that he
thought it wouldn't pasa."
Harry Rinker, a partne r In
Amel Development with George
Argyros, denied having made
such a statement. He sa!d he la
anxious t o m eet wit h
homeowners before the Planning
Commitaion hearing in June.
In ad dit io n to the
condominium development, the
plan calls for 12 acres of two-
st.ory garden offices and 31 acres
of low and mid-rise offices along
the freeway.
r'~S AN ONOFRE PROBE. • •
~~l,ower plant. A subsequent
'; ujvestigaUon of San Onofre abo
,:w-ulted ln no discovery of design ,.pulta, he said.
~J Kent has made additional
· · char1es about San Onofre which
I are und e r c urre nt NRC
1• "We don't know what the l•~ ~fie allegations are until the
'.J
NRC completes its investigauon,"
Mackin said. "Bechtel anticipates
that everything will be fine and
~tisfact.ory (at San Onofre)."
In the wake of Kent's Initial
complaint. Mackin said Bechtel
investigated welds at all of its
nuclear power plants throughout
the country and found no design
or construction faults.
[
'.;ltwe1tlgation, he added.
~~)JED TAX VOTE ...
the ballot, spending $25,000 on
c•r.-Wo eJecUona within one year.
o w, In both electiona, a majority of
,.,, the VOten went along with the
•.tax lncreue but failed to provide
~···ihe two-thirds margin needed. A
recent 1tate Supreme Court
_ rulin8, though. cleared the way
t or tne council to up the tax
without even going to the voters.
' A. motel owner and several
businessmen told the council
Monday that approval of the tax
hike would be aga!nat the wishes
• ol the Voterl.
trl "I honestly can't even figure
•fl•O u t w h y y o u ' d con s i d e r
,,.,.overrid!na the people of your
· . .eity," said Dan Rafferty.
VictOr Rumbellow, owner of a
"Pa~Ulc Cout Hi1hway motel.
•. sald he was h a ving enough.
1 l~rouble h andlins the poor
economy without a tax increase
on t.op of that.
He said hts occupancy rate has
slipped from 80 to 62 percent, the
lowest It's been since 1974, and
that his profits have dropped.
"l have trouble believing these
reports of economic hard times,"
ret.orted Councilman John Cox,
"when everyone wants to build
new hotels or expand the
existing ones."
Cox and Councilmen Don
Strauss and Phil M aurer
aupported raising the· tax but
proposed waiting until next
aprl.ng to do so on the theory the
economy would improve.
The city currently makes Sl.5
million a year from the bed tax.
The tax h ike would have
increased the city's profits by at
least $500.000. ~~1~'· 10 211 mpl'I Tl'lu1ae11y. Hlgl'l1 II)
BY JODI CADENHEAD or .... ~,.._.,..,.
Thrnatcncd with a trunafer of
bfd• from Co.ta Ml ... t.o lrvlne,
11>< phy1lclan1 h41v •srctid to
purchuo the 99·bed Coilta Mcu
Memorial Hoapltal for a N'portt.'d.
$12 million, officials sald.
Negotiations for the sale began
lut year when the put owner.
Hoepltal Affillate& International,
became th tlrat health care
corporatio n to file a notice of
lntent to b uild a ho11plt.al In
lrvlne.
The transfer, If successful,
probably would have resulted In
the closure of the Cotta Mesa
hospital and le ft physician~
Craig Ho me r
F ormer
congressman
Hos m er dies
LONG BEACH (AP)
Former Congr essman C raig
•H o s m e r , a n 1 I • t e r m
representative from Long Beach,
has died aboard a cruise ship
bound for Mexico after a long
bout with heart trouble.
Hosmer, 67, was a passenger
on the Azure Seas when he !ell
ill Monday. Los Angeles police
say H osmer was pronounced
dead at 11 p.m. while the ship
was 30 miles west-northwest of
San Diego.
H e was first elected t o
Congress In 1952 and re-elected
10 t.lmes by as much aa 70 percent
of the votes cast.
H os mer w as the senior
Re publ ican o n t h e Joint
Committee on Atoml.c Energy
and th e House In terior
Committee, positJona that made
him an Influen ce on water
reeour:ces and nuclear power.
The Azure Seu wu bound for
Enaenada. Mexico, but turned
around to take Hosmer'• body to
San Pedro, about 25 miles IOUth
of Los eles.
.,J ,r'~ ~'
non,_.n OeNt1• m.., ,.,. trom
111 71 to ee wt1n towa from 31 to 50. Thursday, October 14
i i Sovll•n deM<1 hlgl'I• -• 10 • Tem atures ......, ___________ rllnQll from 91 IO IS wltl'I Iowa In .~.;;&.;.w;;.;.;.i;.;.;,;;;.;.;:,;..;p;.-._-...-----
1"9 &Oa.
C l Boelera lfom Polnl ConcepllOn 0 01 t a 10 ttie Melllcan bofder can expect
I c..., •nd 9Unn)' lod•Y wllh llghl u1l•bl• wind• tl'lrou9l'I ~ rW1111n9 "°"' IN fllld..10a 11t T l'I u r a d • 'I , b e o o m I n I tie ......,._. 10 mkt40e 1n1en4. ~ 11t I lo 11 knot• In
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hlaM In .. 10. IO low... --
# "llaewhere. f rom Polnl "iiiliOii , ~oncepllon lo tl'I• Mulc.n ti C. .,.
_..., llflCI out 60 mllee: Ugl'll All'Hlny 81 32
11erlebl• wind• 1onlght •net NbuqUefque e5 42 -TilufMeY m«nlna. IMlt ... , to Andlor919 32 30 ...JJ!Ollll.._.•..,. f 10 11 kMl• lfl An.nu ea 81
.,._,IOOI .. Wind WMOW 2 IO 3 AlMnllC City 59 54 .. •
._. "* ettwnoon. ~t AuMtn 11 M .21 Fronts Cold ..,...
... o1 1 10 2 ...._ Mody tlllf llelllmore M 64 .01 ------------------~~~· ... 1fwoug11 Tlllnd9y ~ 11n1*1gNm 71 12
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........... lflct ......... ... 16 64 .ot
lllwerd lonl ghl •nd Htly C...-61 35 ,,.....,, ~.a.c 12 ee .oe -~.w.v. 74 61
' CMttotte, NC. 81 M V.S. 1ummary ~ :! ll
Clndnnlltl 50 ... 011ernlgllt lllunderatorr'11• ~ 70 53
•rodu••d ll••11y r •lna o.,., Ccllumblla 72 52
_..,_ llflCI MIHlnippl wlll.. ~f1 WOflh 72 M
111ower1 •net tllunctoratorm1 ~ 13 51 ....... "°"' .... CMt COM! to• OenYOI 5, 30
.. ......,ONev~. o.~ 51 40 Oloufl end d1lule llngered DeWolt • 64 411 ... ....,., ~le.Mtien .net tlle El ~_, 11 41 ........ ,. 'J~. ~ ,...... at 27
oct Ill• norlhern ,...._ 53 43
................ ~ 1177 ... .., =IW l119le11d Met ......_ M 58 .99
........ ....................... 6'4' ..., .. ....,., "8lllelft,Mla 74 10 .02
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W91 '"'" llOUdJ Mlftl 1111 ........... 70 II f'llrtf;a _, cloudy ...,.. 84 10 ... .. Llllel.... --.... ... 41 .01 = ~. llllWlr .............. 61 45 .CM ........ .... Ollllr19 IS at .oa
..................... ,__ NewY-14 N1.00
_. f9t ....... ...,. 011 t '" Cfl't ro N .oe
St ,.
87 71 .CM
64 55
82 N 75 61
H 81 73 ...
SI 31 85 ao
55 a'7
87 M .37
85 82
.. St ee 48
59 ... .. 74 01
83 31 63 41 ,10
64 H
76 45 11 58
" 43
75 15
112 5e 81 50
11 41 10 30 78 35
16 51 .. lie
75 41
f7 53 11 if 11 N
i.oe"r MOnf • 12 41
Monletey .. 41
Mt. WlleOfl .. 51' ...... ... 56 =9-:1'1 11 56
0 7t 53
Ol'llwto 17 eo
Palt'n~ to II
PMedenll .. 67
PMO Aoblw 17 43
A~ 84 47
1Aed 8IUft 11 56 I
AectlwoOd City eo 52
s.ct.menlo 12 41'
s.ain. 74 47
1ene.11erdlno 12 5 1
..... o.bl ... to 50 s.n Diego 15 6t
SMFrMCltcO n 51
SM JON 12 411
SMI• ANI to SS
&Mt• llarbet• 71 47 Seti•• CNI .. 83
s.m. M1tlli 75 44
•1111·~ 78 12
SloctltOI\ • 17 47
T9floeV*'! 85 30
Tl'lerm.a t2 51
Tomi~ .. 64
YlllM 17 IO
.s m"B
• Wll9te te •eH (tell tr .. I fOf ...... "':=; ... ' . ONNI . _...._I
LM ~ ....... Oeu1tt,l (IOO)
lllf llPlll ........ ..................... _..,.., .. ,'°
NlllO .... 0.-: (IOO) ......
111 .. • ....... . ,...,.. ....
Neuonet ....-~ "=-,.,. •. ,., =r:= Jf/lty. ;~ ..
IU~!li.11•..,.....,,. «1111 "· ,_,.,. t.a .., • • -................ 0-1 ,... ~~!e ··.:.:. •• ,. ..... ..... ,.. .. .:: .,,.: ::. ~ : = !I ......... I ,_ Ii .......... ...., ... .. .,
.......... (T .... , 14 .. ., 11!'.I..-!.-= T-.-: H11ft ,._ U1 Lift., &... N9: NI: ......... -~ ............ .
pl'actlcln11 ~t a naarby med1c:a1
office' wfl~ no hoepluil otarby,
uccordlnl to the lnoomlns
admlnt.tnator. Tom Richards. UC Irvine Collea of MCldi<.in
hus bf-en Involved In a lcn&thy
battle with • number of private
Interest iruupa and hotpllal
managl•1ocnt. Clnn1 that arc a110
lnWretJtcd In building a hotplwl
ln Irvine.
Since Costa McH Memorll l .
opened In 1968 It has been owned
by four hospital managemen t
corporaliona. Its first owners
were physidans whose contract
allowed them first ortlon to
pul'Qhasc the hoepltal I It were
sold or lts license traruferred,
officials said.
But before HOlpltal Afflllawa
lnte rnatlona l could pun ue the
lrvlne venture, the corporaUon
waa purcha1ed by Naahvlll•·
bued Hoepltal Corporation of
America.
0 range County H ea hh
Plannln& Council apokeaman
Thomaa Hinton said Hospital
Corporation let the lrvln e
h08pltul application bid expire, ln
part becaiae the phy8lclana had
th<! opt.Ion to purch ne the
hospltul.
"When the doctol'lf said they
wanted t.o purchase tho hoe~Lal
it kh.:ked the Hoepltal Afflllatet
p~ject In the st.omach ," Hinton
&aid. •
The phy1lcion1 foll that thu
"beds were 1tlll In JeoJ,.rdy" •nd
dttldod to ao ahead with the
purchase following the takeover
by Hospital CorponHlon of
America ln Ausuu. 198 1,
Richardt aakJ.
The pure halo t. x JX!Clt-d to t>.:
flnallu.-d Friday and the name of
the holplt.al wlll be changt.-d to
Costa Men Medical Center
Hotplt.al.
The new owners arc doctors
Benjamin Kraut, Johnnie Betson,
Georse Haddad, Atllla Martlnei.
Shedrick Moore and Morrlt Fler.
Currently eight of the county'•
38 hoapit.ala are phyaiclan.ownod.
Alf ordable housing tabled
Plana for the first affordable
housing project In Newport
Beach, whlch has been met with
a wave of· protest,· have been
pulled back for a second look.
City council members had been
scheduled Tuesday to vote on the
controversial plan to build so·
called affordable units near the
fash io nable Eastb lu ff
community.
Residents of Eastbluff have
blasted the building project as
being too dense and suggested it
would bring in too many people
a nd too many cars. Several
people suggested the project
would bring In people who don't.
Cit the Newport Beach' lifestyle.
The council, with lit tl e
commen\, agreed t.o ship the plan
back to the city Pla nning
Commmion for public hearlnp,
Ukely t.o be held ln December.
Although th11 building project
was proposed by the cj_ty, it
would be constructed by the
Irvine Company on 35 acres of
land bet ween M acArthur
Boulevard and Jamboree Road,
north of Camelback Drive.
The plan would pe rmi t
construction of 7~0 housing units
instead of the 120 now permitted
at the site.
The "affordable" unlts would
be In the $85,000 to $ 126,000
range and ·would be offered to
families. with annual incomes
from $21,000 to $43,000.
Some residents who neighbor
the project s ite claimed the
housi~ would not fl t ln with an
.area where ho mes go from
.S250,000 to more than $1 million.
The city is facing a lawsuit
filed by a coaUtion of legal aid
and fair housing groups that
a llege Ne wport Beach hlis
disqiminat.ory housing practices
tha( exclude low and moderate
wage earners.
El Toro airport shift nixed·
Orange County supervisors, in
a split vote, have voiced their
opposition to the use of the El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station as
a commercial airport, but not
without vocal dissent from the
minority that opposed the action.
Supervisors Ra1ph Clark and
Roger Stanton opposed board
Chairman Bruce Nestande's
resolution Tuesday. Both said El
Toro has not been adequately
studied and therefore does not
merit rejection as a possible
airport site.
Clark accused board members
supporting the resolution of
doing so even though they had
not .vet seen a four-year, $500,000
study of possible airport si\es.
"I just don't '?elieve that this
boa.rd has enough information at
hand to make the kind of
decision thas resolution calla for,"
Raid Clark. "We don't have the
facts, we haven't had an~ public
testimony and we haven t heard
Elizabeth Williams
succu m bs a t 59
No fun eral service& a r e
planned for longtime Costa Mesa
resident Elizabeth WiUiams, who
died Friday. She was 59.
Survivors include her husband
of 28 yeani Benton Williams and
daughter, Shari Kritzberg, of
Anaheim . The family requests
that donations be made to the
American Cancer Society.
from our cities or the business
community."
C l ark r ecommended a
substitute proposal that wou ld
have called for county aides t.o
report on the county's aviation
future. That idea failed with only
Stant.on's support, however.
Nestande, in introducing the
resolution. continued htS attack
on the new site as one that
wou1d "destroy years of land use
planning a nd community
build.mg in that area." The site is
in Nestande's supervisorial
district.
The resolution stated that
there Is no other feasible site in
the county for a regional
commercial airport.
Arts Center
By KAREN E. KLEIN Of .. .,.., .........
The Loa Ange les-b ased
Security Pacific National Bank
has donated $350,000 to the
Orange County Performing Arts
Ce nter, setting a s trong
precedent for. reaional support
for the center.
The gift ls the largest. the
Security Pacific Foundation, a
charitable organization, has made
to date, according to Carol E.
Tauter, foundation president.
The arU center, 1eheduled to
open late ln 1985, ls expected to
cpat over $60 million. All the
funds wiU come from private
donatiom.
MUSlllll
SET
·111s1
CAFE UITEll
•15••
.... $19.95
Security's chief executive
officer , Richard J . Flamaon, said
the donaUon was made to the
center partly because Security
Pacific has a large client ba&e in
Orange County and partly
because of his own feeling for the
county. He has resided in Corona
del Mar for 15 years.
Security Pacific will not be "a
one-hitter" in its involvement
with the center, Flamson sald. He
said he hopes Securitl will
become part of the cen ter s team
of planners and patrons .
The center, which will feature
a 3,000-aeat theater designed for
opera , symphony, music al
t h eate r and balle t , and a
l ,000-seat theater for smaller
performances, "will add a lot of
class" to Orange Cou nty,
Flamson said.
"We need to fulfill all t he
r.,,.quirement.s of the residents of
Orange County," he added.
Alth ough m os t co unty
dwellers think they're living an
paradise, he said, there is a lack
of cultural exposure an Orange
County.
The center, which 1s scheduled
for groundbreaking in early
1983, wiJJ be located on five acres
in the South Coast Plaza Town
Center area.
DllSI
llUQIET VISE
'
llSTll .
llllDWllE
253
OFF
s14••
.... $11.95
(Net Shown)
.... $12.95
11111 GUSSIC
WllE IUIFE
1li u....
•14••
=··· ... -.... ~ ... ........... ..........
..
.. ..
-~
NI llNI •,[JI\ Y • •< I 11111 11 1 1 411, OH ANC.I < CJIJNlY C AI HOHNIA /',Cf NJ ~.
Owners visit some of 100 hones quartered at El Modena ·High
School after they were saved from Saturday's fire.
'·
Power line blamed in canyon blaze
By DAVID KUTZMANN or .. ..,,.......,
Fire officlala have determined
that a destructive, 16,800-acre
firestorm ln eastern Orange
County was aparked by a fallen
power line aupport at a
McDonnell Douglas test facility
ln GYJmUn Canyon.
Orange County Fire Chief
Lawrence Holms announced the
flndlnga of his departme nt's
inve1tigation Tuesday as the
remnanu o f a massive
fireflshtlng force continued
mop-up operations ln rugged
beck country east of Irvine Lake.
Holrnl, who gave the County
\
Board of Supervi1ors a fire
update earlier in the day, told
reporters 0that his Investigators
felt certain the cau.e of the faat-
moving blaze oould be attributed
to a fallen power line croa bar
owned by McDonnell Douglu.
Southern California Edi.Ion Co.
lines were not involved, he said.
"We feel confident that that i.s
the absolute cauae (of the fire) at
this time," the county fire chief
said.
Holms said it appears almost
certain that powerful Santa Ana
wind conditions caUled the croM
bar on a pole at the McDonnell
Douglu facilit y to tall to the
·Newport bed tax
hike hid defeated
By STEVE MARBLE or .. ..,,.......,
An effort to hike the Newport
Beach dty hotel and motel bed
tax -a move voten defeated
twice at the polls -hu been
turned beck for a third time.
'The dty council, armed with a
court ruling that would have
allowed lt to bypaaa the voten,
came up a vote short ·Tuesday
evening of increulng the tax
from 6 to 8 percent.
''I've been ln favor .of the
lncreue all along but 1 believe
thil would be a breach of faith to
approve it now," aaid Mayor
JackJe Heather who was joined
by council colleagues Paul
Hummel, Eve lyn Hart a nd
Ruthelyn Plummer in atriking
down the tax reque1t.
The council had been nearly
unanimous ln ita 1Upport of the
meuure when it was placed on
(See BED TAX, Pase AZ)
Mesa development
decision ' postponed
A dedllon on a much-debated
Co1ta Mela developme nt
propo1al ha• been postponed
until next Jw.e at the reque1t of
tproject becken.
nw delay w• approved thll
week by the city Planning
Commlulon in reaponae to a
~ tn.n Amel Development
Co. nw firm 11 lleking approval
to build 210 condominiuma and a
41-acre commercial center on
:lad near South CoMt ~.
The IJlan -which l ocal
homeownen have criticized u
''too «Sen." -WM acheduled to
be corwldered by the dty coundl
Nov. 1, the eve of tht. year'•
coundl election.
Under the revised planning
commiuion 1chedule , the
propoul will not face council
action until next July.
The property a bounded by
South CoMt Drive, Bear Street,
San Die10 Freeway and San
Leandro Real.
Robert Mlckelaon, an Arnel
plannins consultant, 1aid the
firm'• requett for an extenlion
was baHCI tolely on financial
comideratlon1, indicating the
company ii 1atilfled with the
plan submitted IMt ,June.
(See DECISION, Pqe Al)
ground, emitting sparks which
Ign ited nearby br41h . He said
there ia no evidence of negligence
on McDonnell Douglas' part.
The blaze was first spot\ed by
a patrolling sheriff's deputy just
before. 9 a.m. Saturday. Though
fi r e officials wer e quick ly
notified , the flames spread
within minutes Into inaccessible
terrain, Holm& sid. \
The blaze proved costly .
Counted destroyed we re 11
luxury hQmes in the exclu1ive
Cre1t de Ville_ communlt)' In
Oranae. two homes in Anaheim
Hilll and another larp home 1n
un incorporated area n ear
Santiago Canyon.
Damage e1t1mates were placed
at $11 million , down from an
earlier appraisal of $16 million.
More than 140 people suftered
minor injuries and two horses
were kllfed during Saturday's
chaotic evacuation.
A.180 harmed were 3,000 acres
of habitat for rare Tecate cypress
lreel.
McDonne ll Douglas Corp.
officlall In Huntington Beach
wd Tuelday their company ii
1tudyi~ the county Fire
(lee ll'UlE, Pqe Al)
One way to red1ice traffic would be to teal olf the Balboa ·
Penin1ala and ehal'le aon-reeidentl a 110 to 115 fee to enter.
Newport candidates beat . up race
into IDnlleOfte elae'1 beck yard."
Grant 1u11e1ted the city
1hould 1&art talkin1 and atop
1uln1 Oran1• County ~t. the airport oww. -'daloOallpotforanew ~ woulCI be ...... the ... D6lp eo.,nay .....
NRC will probe
construction · of
plant at On of re
Charges of faulty construction
at the San Onofre nuclear power
plant have prompted a Nuclear
Regulatory Commlaalon
lnveetigation of the oontrovenutl
facility.
A group of NRC inspect.on will
be conducting testa of the newly
constructed units 2 and 3 of the
nuclear plant later this week,
NRC spokesman Jim Hanchett
said today. '
The allegations were made by
Elmo Earl Kent of Cypreu, a
former quality control inspector
for Bechte l Power Inc., th e
plant's main contractor~ Kent, 56,
was flred last February after he
failed two job certification tests.
He had been asa\lned to San
Onofre In October ... 1980.
Kent has charged that Caulty
welds In critical safety systems
were approved at San Onofre as
well aa at a nuclear power plant
In Midland, Mich., where he was
transferred following his Orange
County assignment. The NRC
al.so ls investigating the Midland
plant.
"Aa we do in all cases where
we r eceive a llegations of
construct.Ion deficiencies we send
inspectors to look into the
matter," said Hanchett, adding
that he regards the situation as
"not terribly seriou s at t he
rnornenl.''
"They are not major problems
at least at the surface but w e
really don't know until we take a
look at them."
Hanche tt aald the N RC
routinely receives allegations of
faulty conatruction and design at
virtually every power plant ln
the country . He said on ce
lnveatigaton study the San
Onofre. and Mlchlsan plan ti, a
report will be made public ln a
few weeks.
"We don't aee anything
significant in hla (Kent'•)
allegat ions," he uld. "Thia la
typical of the construction
deficiencies you wo4ld get In a
large const.nJctlon alte.''
B echtel 1poke1man Jim
Mackin said Kent was fired lut
February after he failed two job
certification testa.
Kent has said he brought hil
allegations to the attention of
Bechtel officials and then the
NRC. Receiving little satilCaction,
he approached members of the
Orange County chapter of the
anti-nuclear Alliance for
Survival, according to Alliance
spokesman Tim Carpenter.
"We feel that thia i.s merely the
tip of the iceberg as far as the
p r.oble ms at San O n ofre,"
Carpenter said. "The questions
Earl has raised undencore the
need for a truly independent
audit of the operation at all three
units of San Onofre."
"We wonder why the NRC sat
on these complaints for six
months. We believe they warrant
investi~ation."
Bechs-el spok esm an Jim
Mackin said the company hu
lnvestiga\ed Kent's charges and
founa no basis for the allega tion1
at the Midland, Mich.. nuclear ·
(See SAN ONOFRE, Paae A!)
Dena Farrow recalls ~ ... the more they operated, *
the more injuries they found.'
Brush -with death
still haunts teen
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or ... ..,,.......,
The terrible even ta of Friday,
Aug. 13, still replay themselves
In 15-year-old Dena Farrow's
nlshtmares: the rifle shot, the
burnina and bleeding in her back
and al>domen, the diffic ult
breathing, the sight of her belt
friend I.lumped over In front of
her, the ambulance ride to
Fountain Valley Community
Hoepital .•..
Her aunt. Jo Ann Gud.mu.naon,
reme mbers wailing a t the
ho1pltal that n ight aa Dena
underwent six hours of aurpry.
"The doctors didn't give us
much rMaOrt to hope." her aunt
recalled, "becau.e the more they
operated, the more injuries they
found. Every time a doctor
walked out, her mother and 1
nearly died because we knew it
WM Colna to be bad news."
Dena lost a kidney, her spleen
and par1I of her pancreu. liver,
stomach and intestines.
But 1he 1urvived that night
and eeven.l more nighll on the
critical ll1t, attached to llfe-
.upport equipment. She endured
additional aurpry and .everal
llfe-ttu.t.entna lnfecd.onl.
Dena •ya much of the credit
for her ret'IOWl'y mutt IO to her
lllEI
Af#; Americau
1ettin1 their
money'• worth for
the 1287 billion
they woulcl 1pead
eaeh year on
health eare? Why
are medleal C09ta
to lalPf hlwen . ........... .. . ...... ., ...... .
OD .... CIO. .
loving family, s~me devoted
friends on the Marina High
School girls volleyball team and
to her idol, Ram1 quarterback '
Vince Ferragamo. who nu.ed her
s pirits with two autographed
pictures and a telephone call.
Today, the pretty blonde
Huntington Beach girl ls well on
her way back to a normal teen· •
age life.
Though her brush with death .
and the most difficult day• of
recovery are behind her, Dena
Farrow still has nightmare1 that
remind her ahe was the luckier of
tw9 ahootlr)g victim• on that
fateful Friday the 13th.
Dena met Rise Lou Tucker.
daughter of Ro11ie Miclette, a
po~ula.r parking en forcement
officer in Laguna Beach, when
the two were in the eighth arede
at Harbour View School in
Hunt.ington Beach. .
The two became faet frienda,
and spent many summer days
lhoppi.ng totether or png to the ,
beach.
On the evening of Aua. 13, the :
two gtrll went to a party, then .
visited a Huntington Karbour '.
physician's home whe re an •
acquaintance, Richard Berse, 18,
WU ltaying.
The ltrli were preparins to
(See IDOL, Pqe A•>
Orange Coet• DAILY PILOTIWtdnelday, OOtob« 13, 1N2 NI C7
NYSE COMPOSITE T RANSA TIONS
OVOUTIOlll IMC&.llOC ,. .... Olli, ..................... fl Acme .................... , ••• ~··c•••••• nee•
lllCIUlllO .. ~·· ••NUIO I Y fltt •u ea•o tllU t•I T
UP 11.40 .
CLOllNQ 1,018.0I
New tax 1neasure .
'rip-off of year'
BOISE, Idaho (AP) -A new Cederal tax law
r~ulring fil1anclal lnalltuUons to withhold 10 pereent
of interest paid on savings account• and other
Investments iB "the consumer rip-off of the year," a
representative of the American Banking AaaoclaUon
says.
Elizabeth Kuchinski. vice president of the Bank of
Callfomia In Sacramento and a banking adviler for
the ABA, said the legislation, 1igned Into law In
SeptA;mber by President Reagan, especially affect.a
older people who may live on interest and dividend.I
Crom retirement accounts.
"I think savings are a very sacrosanct part of
people's lives," the banker said. "Particularly the
elderly."
Lenders back Harvester
CHICAGO (AP) -International Harvester Co.,
staggering under the weight of a $4.2 billion debt,
today announced it has won lenders' approval of a
plan to reorganize and avoid filing for bankruptcy.
The troubled, heavy-equipment manufacturer
said the plan would reduce interest payments on ita
debt by about $200 million over an 18-month period,
assmumlng a prime interest rate of 13 percent.
"Approval of 100 percent of our lenders was a
necessary step if the company is to move ahead with
ats operating plan to consolidate operations around Its
core business," said chairman Louis W. Menk.
-.--
UPS AND DOWNS
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GOLD COINS
Oue to late tranamlaslon
today'• llatlng wlll not
appear In ~he Dally Piiot.
AMERICAN LEADERS
MElALS
HEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonle"oue ........ ~~.
C••~· 70·72 cenu • po11nd. U 9. o.ttnolloN. ~ 23-2!1 -• pound. n... 40-42 oont• • peiund, ~od.
Tiii M.HN Motlll Wolle CClfftCIOOll• ID ........_ 11_,..1 peiund, H.Y
......, 131000 per .....
,........, Ut7 00·~3.00 troy OUftOI,
H.Y
SILVER
Hencl)I I Marmlln, .. 47 per ltoy -
GOLD QUOTATIONS
OotO Ouolt11om Jo
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Loftdorl tnOfflllO "'Ulcl 142' 50. Off • 11 )$ ~ ... •lletnoon f111ng S•21 7$. ott
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St2 50 ~ ...... d (only doily qllOfO) leb<IColOO
1450. 19, Off $1) 12
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