HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-05-17 - Orange Coast PilotDelly Pllol Pholo by RlcNtd Koehl«
. J . Brennan Cassidy heads up the
mergicenter Walk-in Medical Group in
sta Mesa.
Cathy Kuntzman, center, hugs neighbor girl,
"Meghan, and daughter Laura.
.. ¥ s ... •
Quick fix 'Doc in the Box'
thriving in Costa Mesa ·
By JODI CADENHEAD of Ille Delly PMot It.II
Lo ca ted next to Der
Wienenchnit.zel in Costa Mesa,
many people might easily
mi.stake the sleek, white building
for some new fa.st-food place -
until they spot the Red Cross
sign.
That's the first Indication that
something else iB going on at the
THI DRllGI CDAIT
Emergicenter Walk-In Medical
Group, opened 10 months ago by
Dr. J. Brennan ea..tdy, fonner
director of Emergency aervioe at
Hoag Memorial Hoepital.
Emergency oenten, nicknamed
"Doc in the Boxea" and
"7-Eleven Medicine," are fut
becoming a growing trend In
emergency medical care. There
are now aeven in Orange County.
Unlike trauma centen for the
critically Injured, emergency
centen offer quick treatment for
minor Infections, cuta, 1pralna
and physicala at a lower ooet than
h<lllpltal emergency rooma.
In March, the California
Medical A11oclatlon pa11ed a
reaolution calling for a atudy to
adopt standarda for walk-In
(See EMERGENCY, Page A!)
caum IDITIDI
TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1983 OH ANGE COUNTY C A LIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Deity ........... "'"'409
Tanyo Campo, HB flood vic tim, casts wary
eye a t county's flood control plan.
Assembly
grounds air
• • noise suits
By STEVE MARBLE or tt1e Dllllr "°' ,...,
Nearly 250 Orange Coast
residents who have filed small
claims lawsuits over noiae from
John Wayne Airport may be
forced to abandon their court
suits.
The state Assembly, on a 50-19
vote, approved a bill Monday
that would ban small claims
action over airport noise.
The bill , autho r ed by
Asseri'lblyman Richard Robinson,
D-Santa Ana, was prepared at
the request of Orange CQunty
government, which controls John
Wayne.
to fight the Robi,nson bill.
Ken Delino , a city
administrator, said the bill not
only will deny "the little guy"
the ability to go to small claims
court but will have sweeping
changes on proving damages
from airport noise.
Flood victims fight control plan
The legislation, which still
must be approved by the state
Senate, would force residents
claiming damage from jet noiae to
take their fight to Superior Court
irutead of \he cheaper, quicker
small clalma route.
Airport operators maintain
residents have filed small claima
action as a way of harassing the
county. Rpbi.n80n called the suits
an abuse of small claims court.
By ROBERT BARKER
Ofthe~NotaUff
Cathy Kuntzman and
Tanyo Campo aren't exactly
going overboard on an
Orange County engineering
proposal to stave off a repeat
of last Marc h 's flooding
disaster in Huntington Beach.
Kuntzman -whose
21h -year -old daughter and
another little girl had to be
carried from her flooded
home by firemen -sti.ms up
,Computers
(or kids
i tressed
KAREN E. KLEIN
h~Nottlllft
The day is fast approaching
when It will be more important
or children to own computers
cars. In fact, that day may
eady be here, according to
ohn P . Imlay Jr., a computer
ftware executive who spoke
M onday at the National
Computer Conference i n
Anaheim.
I mlay said parents should
inaiat that computers be taught in
chool and should begin
educating the mselves in
computers and "computerese" so
they can communk.a~ with their
children.
"The 'haves' and 'have-nots' of
the future may be children that
know ~_puting and thoee who
8ff COMPl11'ERS, Page AZ)
HB petitio~ drive mounted
the concept in two words:
"Absolutely ridiculous."
The next-door neighbors
say the feasibility study -
which proposes turning off
storm drain pumps to prevent
flooding over county-
mai ntain~d flood channel
banks -gives them a
foreboding sense of deja vu.
They say county engineers
shut off the huge gasoline
pumps near their homes in
the March 1 storm, when the
c hann el downstream
nverflowed. 1 Foot-high water quickly
covered the first floors of
their expensive homes along
Weems Lane and Kinpdale
Drive, they said, ruining
furnitute, appliances and
Michael the Robot entertains
conventioneers at the National Computer
Conference in Anaheim.
carpets not covered by
insurance.
They both had to have
rotting walls replaced and
automobile engines re~.
County officials say their
proposal to shut off the
pumps would cause curb-
fevel "ponding'' in dty streets
while dlssiptating major
threats downstream.
Huntington Beach Public
Works Director Paul Cook
(See FLOOD, Pase A!)
But residents claim the bill ia
special Inter est legislation
designed tD give airports a shield
of protection from noiae-weU'y
citizens. Most of the Orange
County small claims actions were
filed by rnldents in Newport
Be11eh and Santa Ana Heights.
Newport B each, which is
under the airport takeoff pattern,
has hired a Sacramento lobbyist
Irvine wants details on costs
involved in bullet train plan
By GLENN SCOTf { Of the Delly Not ,...,
Irvine city leaders wh set up
tonight's meeting with the
president of the American High
Speed Rail Corp. are hopeful
Two Irvine
kids top
spellers
~ ~~~~,2fCKER
When it comes to tpelling,
Irvine has lta share of champ1.
Winston Chang, 8, won eecond
place in the sta t ewide
(See IRVINE, Pa1e A!)
they'll get more detailed plans
for the bullet train than ever
before.
So are about 400 Irvine
residents expected to show up for
the Irvine City Council study
..
Winston Chang
seaslon at 7:30 p.m. at Deerfield
Elementary School, 2 Deerfield.
At issue is whether the private
firm proposing to construct an
electric rail line between Los
Angeles and San Diego will
agree to pay for an
elght-to-10-foot-deep channel for
the tracks to muffle noise and
Improve the scenery through
residential parts of Irvine.
So far, Lawrence Gilson,
president of the corporation,
hasn't commltted to the public
works project. However,
representatives from the firm
have suggested in paat gatherlngll
that such projects are pamible.
It waan't clear earlier today
how specific Gillon intends to be
tonight, but Jim Rom, a project
supervisor In the city's Public
Works Department, said "the
impression we're get~' is that
(See BULLET. Pa1e .
--INSIDE------------------------,
Dynam,ite theater
While Torpor'• drama "Nuta"
raises some eritieal quettion1
aboua ahe judieiaJ 119&em, those
iMuet would be moot ii the
play were not a dynamite piece
of theater. Page 83. ·
Jack Andenon
complaint that
Conpeu la alway•
outraged when
eomeoae withhold.I
information from
the membera, but
lea CongreH
1upprn1
inlormation and
nary a peep is
heard. P.,.e A6.
j
\
In the tee0nd part of the Daily
Pilo1'1 1peeial four-part seriet
on rape, 1taff writer Jodi
Cadenhead lntenlewt a woman
proseeutor to find out how
&hete sen1ltln caaa are
handled la eovt and aive• -tome &lpt to women who ml1ha
be confronted by • potentlal
rapt1t. Page Bl.
Wha1'1 the ftumietl
thin1 you e.-er iaw?
Well, if you're not
1w-e, turn to Page
A4 and take a look
at a weight-Hf ting
(rot• It'• got to
eome cl01e.
The1'-.e tlowecl clown, Ml their
eompedllYe cleelne are ju& u
•lronl· That•• the tiuaatlon In
&JM Oranae Coaa&y Sealor
Cltbeat IOltball league.
P .. e Cl.
·,
-~
U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. May 17. 1983 -~,--
•• Continued stories
EMERGENCY CENTERS • • •
centers and delete the word
emergency from the name.
Dr. Morton Goldstein, acting
c hairman o f ·a committee
studying emergency clinics, said
there is concern that patients will
become confused and go to them
to seek help for life -threatening
injuries.
Otherw~·se, he said , most
physicians ·ew them as adjuncts
to medical e, an alternative to
free them from the hassle of
having to treat nosebleeds and
cuts after hours.
The rule of thumb is that if a
patient requires an ambuJance,
he or she should seek help at a
regular hospital emergency room,
said Costa Mesa's Cassidy.
In his l~ears a t H oag,
however , C idy said he saw
more people imply using the
emergency_, oom as a doctors'
office when a nagging cough or
stomach pain kept them awake at
night.
"It's not that I'm opposed to
tradi tional prac tice," said
Cassidy. "All of us who work in
emergency medicine have come
to see a number of patients uae
ttte emergency room as a primary
facility for epilodic illness."
Unlike most physicians' offices,
no appointments are necessary.
In fact, they're not e ven
accepted. Most patie'nts are seen,
treated and out of the center
within a half hour.
,A spokeswoman for nearby
H oag H osp i tal said the
e mergency clinic has had no
e ffect o n emergency room
business at the hospital.
But Marshall Kandell, a
spokesman for Humana Hospital
Huntington Beach (formerly
Huntington lntercommunity
Hos pl tal) said the so-called
emergic enters have fo§'ced
several Humana h ospitals in
Orange County to lower their
emergency room charges.
"They are generally serving a
need by offering lower costs for
services," said Kandell. "The
danger comes when they claim
they can do ever y thing f or
everyone.
''If the cost w as negl igble
where would you rather be?" he
asked.
FLOOD CONTROL. • •
said Monday he believes the
1&unty plan may just shift the
flooding from one place to
another.
Orange County supervLSOrs
are slated. to act on the study
Tuesday.
Meanwhile , Campo said
s h e 's go in~ t o mount a
p et1 tton dr ive 1n the
neighborhood near Adams
Avenue and Beach
Boulevard, nestled at the foot
of historic Newland Houae.
"We're going to let them
know how we feel,'' she said.
"We d on't like the plan. W e
don 't want to be flooded
a~ain."
COMPUTERS PUSHEQj. • •
do not," lm.lay said.
U there are still skeptics who
don't believe the computer
revolution has come of age, a few
hours at th~mammoth Anaheim
convention should make them
true believers.
Billed as the largest conference
e v e r held at the Anaheim
Convention Center, the computer
conference i.s -expected to draw
about 125,000 attendees over its
four-day run.
The computer executives,
computer junkies and the just
plain curious -about 20,000 of
them -crowded into the 18
football fields worth of exhibit
space at the convention center to
interface with disk d9ves, edit
menus and software.
Huntington Beach
A purM robbery wu reponed Monday
nigl'll II !he Ralhtlllellet In Old World c.ntw.
'The 1011 Included $3t5 CH h end 1 sso
purM The robbet fled In • tmall ~ towwd Oolderl W•t College,
Bul>t*I 1"lndoW9 -· pried ovt ol theif mountlnq 10 enter 1 red t941 VOlk1W1199"
8'/lo perlted on the 9900 bloctl ol Frederlel(
Circle The IOM lnclUOed !WO rw lmOl<ed
bubble -v9!iled It $110 end I Clf etereo worth S2t5
Toole valued 11 $2.100 were repo<led
etolen from • gerege on the 16QOO bloclil of
MlnON Lene. Entry w• _..,tly mede
wtth bolt cutten
The huge, plexiglass exhibit
booths filling the exhibit floors.
read like a Who's Who of the
computer industry: IBM, Apple,
Printronix, Xerox , Texas
lnstruments. Commodo~. . .
The logistics of the convention
are astounding. International
attendance ·at the conference is
expected to be about 12,000,
according to Ann-Marie Bartels,
with the American Federation of
lnfonnation ProceMing Societies,
Inc .. the group which has put on
the conference since 1973.
A one-day admission, just to
the exhibits, i s $2 5 . The
.,.onfere n ce runs through
Thursday.
Fountain Valley
TlflevH pried open • wind wing• ol •
window In I Voll<--oen wNle It WM perked
In Ille 10000 block ol Telb«I A-and
11oi. 1thlellc clothlnO end Item• v•led 111
$.413.
Costa Mesa
AA oil peln!lng .,_ el • 100 -Ilk.., trom • ~ In !he 400 bloc:a ol llollth
Cont Hlgl'lwey yHterdey by ullkll-11
euepect•
CHP: Car lost control • Ill crash
~..!'~,N,!!. ~
InveeUgators aay a fat.al multl-
car crash last Thunday on the
San Diego Freeway at Jamboree
Boulevard was caused when a
woman entering the freeway lost
control of her car .
The driver, T erri Jean
Blodgett, 25, of Huntington
Beach, died !rom head injuries
suffered ln the 1:20 p.m. accident.
Another man, Daniel McGuire,
33, of Corona, was listed Monday ' .
Gentle touch
In it.able condition In Weetem
Medical ~nt.er'1 intenalve care
unit.
Five cars were involved In the
colli1ion in the northbound
freeway lanes, and a few other
can 1pun to avoid the pile-up.
Patrick Thompeon, 25, of San
Diego, wu treated for moderate
injuries. Drivers of two other can
In the accident, 'Richard Lee
Forster, 39, of Garden Grove,
and Eric Lee, 23, of the El Toro
Air Station weren't hurt.
Aclress Brooke Shield& cuddles-a koala
bear at the San Diego Zoo where she's
working as a parl-time intern for her class
project.
InvetURatorl for thf CalitomJa
Highway Patrol aatd after the
acldent they flanned a careful
examlnatlon o ita dn:wnatanoM
becauae of how the accident
beg._an. ~ They uld Blodgett wu
enterlna the (n,eway from the
on-ramp from Jamboree when
her car suddenly turned and shot
straight aero. the traffic lanes,
colliding with ML'Ouire'1 car in
the fut lane.
Patrolman Rick SteveM said
lnvntJ1atora believe 1he muat
have diverted her an.nt.ion from
the road, allowtn1 her car t()
jump • curb and ve~r out of
control Kr'09 I.he freeway.
That would explaln why
wltneaHI uld 1he made no
attempt to avoid the accident,
St.evens aid. The aocident cau.ed two of the
northbound lanes t o remain
bJocked for more than an hour,
forcing traffic to back up for
miles.
HB voters to decide
again on council terms
Huntington Beach voters will
get a chance next June to decide
whether they really meant what
they said in 1978.
ln June of that year, voters
overwhelmingly s upported .a
two-term limit for City Council
members. By about the same
3 'h -1 margin, they voted to keep
the offices of city clerk and city
treasurer: elective, not appointive.
But V\e City Council, at the
urging of councilman John
Thomas, agreed Monday to put
the three issues back before the
voters on the June 1984 prlmary
elect.ion ballot.
Thomas said veteran city
council members have much to
offer and ahouldn't be kept off
the ballot merely beca\.ise they
served two tenns.
But coll~e Ruth Bailey said
the city h.aan t given the system a
r.hance to work.
She said ahe feels that veteran
office holders ~times tend to
loee thelr enthusiasm and rapport
with the public and should retire
at the end of the two four-year
terms.
Efforts to make the city clerk
and city treaaurer appointive
position• have failed on five
previous oocaaiona.
Valley budget
eyed tonight
The Fountain Valley City
Council will hold a public
hearing tontsht to further study
a proposed $11.4 million city
budget for the 1983-84 fisc.-1
year, which begins July 1.
Re1ldentl who wi1h to
comment on the flnancial plan
may do 110 durina the hearing,
which beg1DI at A p.m. in Qty
Hall, 10200 Slater Ave.
More than half of the propoeed
budget, about $6 million, Is
allocated for publ)c safety
services, Including polke and fire
protection.
.RECALL FORUM TONIGHT IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY .. •
From Page A1
trustees targeted for recall,
Cheryl 'Norton, Roger Belgen
and Suzanne Moore, are not
expected to participate.
Tom Maloney, manager 01
the Greenbrook aasociation,
said the group was unable to
confirm a date with the
trustees. A spokesman for the
schoot dis trict said the
trustees could not attend
today's foru m because of
schedule conflicts.
But the three men running
to assume the board seats
if the trustees are recalled
will p a r ticipate in t he
G r eenbrook forum. These
candidates are Kurt Hansen,
Sidney Landon and Devon
Dahl.
ClllH n whOH Yeh~ hid ,_,., -
lowed
Al Smith. wno tlYM on Victory w ... -
t HHt•d on 1u1ptclon of u11ult with •
cs.ao1y weapon wt*1 he llllegedly ati.dl.ed •
Mlghbor ~·•day with • ""*· The ~Im
wH 1e11an to Saddleback Commulllty
Holpltel Smtih, 47, -bell>Q,.... With belt
Ml It 110,000
Irvine
A golfer at Rancho San Joaqul11 Ooll
CourN WM ecdOenhllty ltrudi Dy I golf CW1
drlv9n by a playlng pert ner Moncf.y end eutte<ed 1 bOtlten ._ 1e9. P1temecltca
10011 him to S1ddleb1cll Community
Hoepll ..
Three th•ll• from auto"'obllH ••••
rwpor1ed Mondey A --lllled from I car on e.ittemut Lene In ~ Pw11, -t• .nc1 1 ~·_.liken from•
c., Ofl Auetln In El CamlllO R... and • ~•• pieyer w• lfted from • c« perked et e ellOppfno oentw e4 t4400 ~ Ott"9
Newport Beach
"asoo -•• ·-l>leYer ... 1tC1Mn from an "'10 1>11ked on U.. 2900 blocll ol Pefll N9wpcwl
Four addition'al voter
information nights have been
sch·eduled by the district's
Superintendent Parent
Council (SPC).
Jane Heffelman, head of
the committee o rganizing
these forums, said the three
trustees have agreed to
participate in the SPC
information nights.
Candidate Dahl said today
that he, Hansen and Landon
also will participate in the
four SPC infonnation rughts.
He said the SPC has agreed to
format changes that will
permit recall supporters to
asalat in screening questions
at the forums.
The llChedUle for the SPC
forums la May 24 at Nieblas
School, May 2~ at Fountain
Valley Elementary School,
May 26 at Masuda School and
May 31 at Talbert Middle
School. All forums begin at
7:30 p.m.
Dahl said the fo rum s
should not be iradltional
candidates nighta, clalmtng
the central question is not
who I.he best candidates are,
but whether the three
trustees ahould be recalled.
The Canmittee Advocating
Responsible Educ atio n .
CARE, has charge d the•
trustees and their
administrators with fiscal
misco nduct and mis ·
management in the district's
business al fairs. The trustees
have denied these allegations, ,
BULLET TRAIN DETAILS ASKED .. •
From Page A1
the private firm will . formally
submit Its plans tonight.
The meeting will begin with
remark.a by Mayor Larry Agran
and then Gilson will make a
presentation, according to the
agenda. Following city council
comments, members of the
audience will get their chance to
speak.
The lowering pr?ject ~ould
have a double benetlt tn Lrvme
because it allo would eaae noise
and un~ghtly view1 from the
Santa Fe Railway track.a. The
bullet train tracks would pa.rail.el
extating tracka.
City officials have long sought
funds to lower the railroad
track.a. Lately, residenta living
alongside the tracks have
questioned the serfousneaa of dty
proposals.
The bullet train lowering
wouid get the job done for Cree.
HoweveT, a growing number
of residents are oppo1ing the
bullet trainl -raiaed or sunken
-ruahlng past their homes. At
meetings Monday nl~~
earlier today, residents
an alternative technology for
mgh-1peed trains using magnetic
force rather than electricity.
IRVINE SPELLERS RANK HIGH. • •
From Page A1
elementary spelling bee and
Valerie Laurel. 14, came in third
in the high dlool state spelling
cone.est. ''I feel gcqt and happy about
it. It wa1 ao scary becauae
somedmea they pre9ented word.a
I didn't knoWr like engender and
remonstrate," said Chang, a
fourth grader at East1hore
Elementary ln Irvine.
place. He was awarded $250 and
a trophy.
Chang Uvea at 55 Shearwater,
Irvine, with parenta Ivy and
Gabriel. an ensfneer for Huahes.
Valerie Laurel. a eophomore at
Irvtne Ht.eh School still llOUnded
exdt.ed. about her win -at the
May 7 con.teat ln Santa Rosa.
"I wu really happy to wln
anythina at all. Actually, It was
ICal'Y every time I had to So up
there and spell a word I lplew
She missed on the word
hebet.ate, which meana to make
blunt or dull
"I'd never heard of the word,
ao I wu kind of glad it was that
word instead of one I'd studied,"
she said.
She al.so -couldn't remember
her winning word.
Sunny and w-arnJ
,.. ..... Im
"Remon.atrate" ia the word
that downed Charla ln the final
round. The worda flew by 110 fut Chana aid he couldn't remember
which word won him second
. I'd juat dle If I miued," said
Laurel. who live. at 25 Bull Run,
Irvine.
She won 100 silver doll.an.
Her parents are Lolita, a
bilingual aide at Lakeside and
Stone Creek Schoola in Irvine
and Lee, a scientist and real
estate investor.
Coastal
Summery tamP«•tur .. ate In
etore for the COHfal region•
Wectnwdey, dMplte eome Ollc:tly low doudt alOng the COUI dUtlng
..iy morning hou<L High• up to 86 In the oo.t&I .,_ and up to
115 In the d-t• 1r1 lor-t
followlflg 0¥ernight iow. csown to 52
E!Mwhefe. Point Conception to
~ bonier and °"' eo m11ee· 0¥9r outer w1ter1 ~ Point
Conc;eptlon end San NIOOIH
IM1d nortrtw.t 12 to 22 with O
to 8 loot HH W1dne1d1y. llHwhere light and varllble
wind• night end MOmlng llour9
~--·0~10 to ts knoll during •fternoone.
Two to S foot wlftd ••v••.
W-.rly ..... 2 lO 3 '-'· Fw
W~ IM liOfnll IOw cbld9
,,.,,.., -IOUlheNI ..........
l'llgllt IMlugfl "*'*" ~
•
dCJ" 4'1
Ila llU 58 28
81 38
58 46
84 31 « 40
'3 39 eo 12
54 47
711 65 51 37
83 35 83 45
52 42
.... $8
81 43
78 50 58 40
58 39
70 40
81 30 48 27 ee 42 .... 43 57 24
&a 3t 83 31 ~ &4 ... 40 14 ..
Tt ... 15 • Tl ..
IO • 14 ...
Of 40 " .. .. " 71 .. 04 ... ....
ee
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41 to ..
•1 UI
=h n 81 City 48 38
~ 60 3t
Rlctlmond 71 52
8t. Louie ee 41
81 . .,....Tempe ... 72
&lilt I.like 61 38
Sen AMonlO 7t It
8M DleoO TO " 1#1 "'tllCltoo 12 St ,, ... MMe 48 24 ..." .. to ... ~ 74 81 tf u
lpollefte " 42
Syftc\.IM ... 42
Tuceon .. ..
Tllfel 70 ...
w~ .. 80
Wlofllt• 17 38
Tit} es
fOOAY
8eooncl lllgfl 1;43 p,m. U
hoond IOW 1:a4 R.m. U ... llHOA'Y
Flr9I high 1:17 Lift. 6.0
,,,.. low ..... ..... ~-· l«lofld high 4:14 p.m. u
l«lofld IOW t'.ll JI.fl'. t .I
The Min .... •I 7;41 IOClay, ,.... ..... un. ,.,,..,.., _,
.... f'.IO """ tile moon .... IOf'l\OfrOW It
12114 1.m, 1no rln• 101111 ~It 11:14 ""'·
BUY WHEQI THE JfW[LLIQ~ BUY!
No need to travel to the
Los Angeles Jewelry Marti
Our regular prices are up to 75%
lower than other jewelry storesl
-SHOP AND COMPAREI
• ....... OHAN•• .... , ......
llAll
• • •
t
s --------ill ..... ...
Or..-.ge Coatt DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, Mey 17, 1983 ....
Israel~ Lebanon sign pullout ·pact
Ruckelshaus confirmation ·
expected today in Senate
Syria refuses, threatens retaliation Antcme hual of Lebanon anc
David Klmcbe ot r.rae1, and then
by U.S. special envoy MorriJI
Draper a1 a wltne11. The ceaemony took place at a INllde
hotel where tlle withdrawal neaodadolw bepn Dec. 28, and
Israeli and Lebanese troops rtnaed tile build1n8 to provide
-..urity.
By 'ne A11oclated Pre11
WASHINGTON -The Senate was expected today to
overwhelmi.naly confirm William 0 . Ruckelahaua to become
head of the ~vironmental Prot«Uon Agency with a charge to
restore public confidence in the shattered agency... A
midaftemoon vote wu echeduled on the nomination . The
coruirm.tion aeem.ed uaured after speeches Monday in which
1enator after senator praised Ruckelshaus as the man who could
do the job.
Philadelphia mayoral primary today
· PHILADELPlllA -Black sharecropper'• son W. Wilson
Goode and ex-Mayor Frank L. Riz.zo, a white law-and-order
advocate, both predicted victory in today's balloting to pick the
Democratic mayoral nominee. Although a majority of the city's
eligible voters are white, Goode was considered the solid
favorite in his quest to become the first black chief executive of
the nation's fourth-largest city.
House withholding vote due today
WASHINGTON -.Less than a year after Congress
approved the biggest revenue-raising bill in history, the House
i1 about to vote to kill one of its major provisions; the
withholding of taxes from interest and dividends. The vote,
likely this afternoon, was promp\ed by a record 22 million
let,ters to Congress demanding repeal. But it comes over
objections of President Reagan and the Democratic l~adership of
the Houae, who want withholding to go into effect as scheduled
July 1.
Airline mechanics blame dark
MIAMI "'--Two Eastern Airlines mechanics said it was too
dark to see whether tiny rubber oil seals were in place when
they serviced a jumbo jet before it nearly d.i.tched in the Atlantic
Ocean when all three engines stalled. The seals, known as
''0-ri.ngs," were mlasing on the Eastern L.-1011 dwi.Jlg a flight'
May 5 when oil leaked out and the e,ngines quit. The plane
dropped to within 4,000 feet of the tXean but made it back to
Miami after pilot Richard E. Boddy and co-pilot Steven C.
Thompson managed to restart the tail engine.
Bradley to light LA iax ruling
LOS ANGELES -Starting Wednesday, the county will
start withholding all property-tax revenues due the city of Los
Angeles following a legal opinion that the city owes the county
$298 million in property tax overpaymenta. Mayor Tom Bradley
promiaed to go to court and to the Legialature to fight the
county's claim, made in a legal opinion written by Deputy
County c.owue1 Dewitt Clinton. "I am calling upon the•City
Council to join with me in directing the city attorney to file legal
action to stop that raid on the money of the taxpayers of the city
of Los Angeles," Bradley said.
Per-pupil spending dips in state
By Tiie A11oclatecl Pres~
Israel and Lebanon 1igned
their U .S .-mediated troop
withdrawal agreement today in a
two-at.age ceremony spanning
their border, but Syria
threatened to block the accord
and punish Lebanese officials
who supported it.
"Those who cooferated or
surrendered to srael by
accepting the agreement will pay
for what they have done," said
the government dailY. Al-Thawr'
'Loophole'
plan clears
~ssemhly
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
George Deukmejian's plan to
repeal $466 million in tax breaks
is halfway through the
Legislature, thanka to suppart
from Assembly Democrats and
six Assembly Republicans who
broke wt th their party leaders.
It took an all-day floor session
Monday and heavy lobbying by
the Republican governor's staff
to persuade six Qf the 32
Assembly Republicana to join a
unanimous bloc of 48 Democrats
and send the bill to the Senate.
The final vote, which came
after 10 p.m., was 54-3, a bare
two-thirds majority in the
80-member Assembly.
The other 23 Republicans,
. including all the top party
leaders, abstained in protest of
both the t.ax proposal and its
1wift mavement through the
Assembly , without any
committee hearings.
Assembly Speaker Willie
Brown, 0 -San Francisco, took
advantage of Deukmejlan's
dramatic tax proposal to
maneuver Asaembly Republicans
into an awkward choice -
supporting Deukmejian or
maintaining their realstance to
any tax increase, even one the
governor: described as closing
"unfair Ut.x loopholes."
in Damascus, where Syrian
leaders adamantly oppose the
pact and VOW to keer. their troops
in Lebanon until rael makes
further conoeasiona.
The Israelis say they will not
withdraw their 25,000 troops
from Lebanon unle11 40,000
Syrians and 8,000 to 12,000
Palestinian guerrillas alao leave.
The French and Arable texta of
the 37-page withdrawal
agreement were ligned in
Khalde, Lebanon by negot.ia~
Looking sharp
Map details area of
Mideast accord
What appears to be a giant razor blade is
a pair of funny sunglasses designed in
platinum at the not so funny price of
$410,000 at a West Berlin fashion show.
Kimche .. td the agreement
uahered ln a ''new chapter in our
history" but warned that "many
obstacJa atill ltand ·in OW' path
and ~ are JDanY that wiah to
render the aareement that we
are signing mean.lnllem·"
.Fleming
happy at
reversal
SANT A MONICA (AP)
Erin Fleming says she's "very
relieved" by a judge's ruling
praising her a1 a loving
companion to the late Groucho
Marx and burlna his estate from
collecting t2~.000 ln punitive
damages without a new trial.
The executor of Marx's estate,
the Bank of America, bad
accused Flemine of being "a
clusic gold digaer'' who bullied
and abwed an ailing Marx into
giving her $400,000 in caah and
. gifta before his death.
But Superior Court Judge
Jacqueline Weill said in a ruling
Monday that a jury was wrong
when it decided March 30 to
aase11 $250,000 in punitive
damaaes ap.lmt Fleming after a
bltterfy contested 10-week trial.
"rm very relieved that 80l'ne
pcmible good bu come from this
today," Ji'leming aaid after the
rull.ng, even thoU(h the judge
described· her a1 having a
''bizarre'' penonallty.
'The estate must either forteii.
the award oc bee a new trial, the
judge aald, giving the bank 15
da;vs to decide. Although the
judge upheld the jury's award of
$221 ,000 in compensatory
damages, she said a retrial could
end in a new verdict on those
claims as well.
SACRAMENTO -Per-pupil school spending rose less
than half as fast last year as the previous fiBcal year, says state
Controller Ken Cory. Monday's report for fiBcal 1981-82 ahowed
that the average C08t of aending one child from kindergarten
through high school in a unified diatrict roae from $2,632 to
$2,729, or 3-:T percent compared to snore than 9 percent a year
earlier.
'Grandma Malia' figure sentenced
Ex-teacher kills himself ·after
holding 18 st~dents hostage
School
Shooting
N.Y.
CONN.
MASS.
LOS ANGELES -A federal judge has sentenced one of
the key figures in the so-called "Grandma Mafia" narcotics
smuggling and money laundering caae to 18 months in federal
prilon. Joy Adelman, a 58-year-old grandmother from Los
Angeles, had pleaded guilty to several drug-related cha(ges and
aerved aa a main government witness against Barbara Mouzin,
the ringleader of the operation that laundPred $25 million in
drug money and dealt millions more in cocaint>.
BRENTWOOD, N.Y. (AP) ---
European economic summit delayed
PARIS -The c.ommon Market summit acheduled for.June
6-7 will be postponed until June 17-19 becauae of the British
elections, West Gennan Chanoellor Helmut Kohl announced
today. "rhe decision to postpone the summit, echedWed for
Stuttgart, West Germany, was made after a c.all by Kohl to
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. The British electiona
are ecbeduled for June 9.
Iran linked to embassy bombing
WASHINGTON -Diplomatic cables connecting Iran to
lut month's bombing of the American F.mbaaay in Beirut were
intercepted by U.S . intelligence, according to a televiaion
network report.. CBS News quoted administration 80W'a!S as
aaying a series of dJplornatic cables -one approving $25,000 for
a aeirut terrorist attack -were leJ\t from the Iranian foreign
miniltry in Tehran to Iran's embassy in Damaacus, Syria,
several days before the April 18 bombing that killed 17
Americans.
Pessimistic start to arms talks
GENEVA, Switr.erland -The United States opened a new
round of arms tal.ka with the Soviet Union toda}'_, but its latelt
offer to aet equal llmita on Jl\,IClear warheada in Europe alreadl
had met with Soviet criticilln. American analysts say they don t
expect any breakthrough in the 18-rnonth-old negotiations until
the Sovie1.I are confronted more directly with the echeduled
December deployment of a doz.en U.S. ground-laW1Ched crtl.iae
rn1aailes in Britain and Weat Germany.
A mentally ill man who shot and
wounded a student and principal,
then held 18 studenta hostage in
a aocial studies cia.room before
killing himself, was a loser
seeking revenge for his dismiasal
two weeks ago, officials said.
Robert 0 . Wickes, whose
troubled llfe ended .a few
minutes before midnight ?donday
after a siege that terril1ed
studenta and their parents, had
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Dilly Piiat ~::::'~ =:-:"'
MAIN Ol'PICI
))II w• lfy It . Coet• ...... CA M ... ~ lloo IMO, CQei. '!'--CA 1292'
~lV"' Ith Of.not OOMt ~eon_.., No ~·-· l tO•IH , "'~•O•llo~. tOllo•l•I "''"'' or ....,,..,._,ll._'4n ~be~wftllOUI ~
~OI ~-
~::re!~:..~ to tN Pub!Wler .....,..,,0....
'="
VOL 1'. NO. 117
Ambulance attendants remove Robert
Wickes, who died after shooting himself in
cliniax of New York hostage drama.
WE
'
alao been watched by the Secret
Service for making threats
a1aln1t the Reagan
administration. his lawyer laid.
nre..ed ln Army fatigues and
~rrying a .22-callber rifle,
Wickes held police in this Long
Island community at bay for
about nine houn. Many of his
student~ became sick or
faked Ulnem to gain permission
to leave.
Others were released one at a
time in return for a local radio
station aereeing to play song
requests -including the Beatles'
"Penny Lane" -and hia own
"ep6stle to the world."
MEAN BUSINESS
WHEN I' COMES TO
CUSTOM COVEIJ·UPS
FOR .
COMMERCIAL WINDOWS
Or1ptriH, llntd or unllned. Mlnl·blinda. Vertical b41ndt. Woven wood1.
We do custom window coveting• to any aiie, to enhance offk:n, apan·
ment buildlngt, ho1Pltal1. tchooll, '"ttutantt or 1tore1.
Price• quoted .,e on •n lndlvldual balla end •P~ ohly to commerclel
enterpriHa,or rnttltutlont. For a no-.obllattJon ettrm1te on YoUf prem ....
e1ll David after 10:001.m . at (1141644-1212. ext. 294.
Cu1tom Drap•riel end A9'1phot•t•rv. 82 .
"tHE BROADWAY
I
•
I
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I
A4 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuesd~, May 17, 1983
' .
Croaker College
getting the jump
on big frog derby
. I
EMERYVILLE (AP) -"Profesaor" Hill Steed always
champlona the underfrog. That's why he started Croaker College
more than 10 years ago. ·
Steed, who dubbed himself a prof while running a leam-
while-you-aleep business, took on the task of training frogs to jump
when he took his sleep learning gear along to Calaveras County for
the annual jumping frog contest, a throwback to Mark Twain's tale,
"The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County."
"I could motivate people. Why not motivate frogs, too?" the
65-year-old frog trainer asked.
A six-week course at Croaker Colleg, located in Ernerville, will
set you back $150. But for that princely awn, Steed says, your
greenish charge gets a room, all the flies it can eat, ·plus caliathenics,
massage, swimming and 240 hours of psychological training, much
of it using the sleep le~g technique.
The college, which issues a diploma and a WJ-will jump-
degree. has trained such amphibious athleters as Dolly Do,
belonging to Dolly Parton; Sue, Johnny Cash's frog; Tonight, who
belonged to Johnny Carson; and Jelly Bean, President Reagan's
frog.
"Professor" Bill
Steed trains frogs in
weight lifting
..
Students surround "Professor" Bill Steed,
who helps them get a leg up on the competition.
. -
Graduates of Croaker College include (from left) Dolly Parton's A jumping student at the Emeryville school lifts weights as he
Dolly Do, President Reagan's Jelly Bean and Jerry Reed's Snowman.
HOUSING
. '
,,, ...........
President Reagan addresses National Association· of
Home B~ilders Monday.
mo
trains for competition under hypnosis.
10,earn · h
market futerest
check\Vith •
I •
I Reagan warns _ of holocaust,
!urge~ MX missile approval
WASHINGTON (AP)
-President Reagan says
a nuclear holocaust that
would mean "the end of
the line for all of us" will
inevitably engulf the
world unless the two
superpowers reduce the
number of warheads
pointed at each other.
Reagan coupled his
ataU!ment on the need
for arms control Monday
with a plea for
congressional approval of
the huge MX missile,
weighing 192 ,000
pounds, carrying 10
nuclear warheads and
with a range of 8,000
miles.
"I know it IOWlds silly
-to build a rnisaile in
order 'to get rid of
mblUea," said . Reagan.
"But we're very
dangerously cloee to not
havina the deterrent
th.at we need to keep the
other fellow from using
his, or at least using
them for blackmail."
President Reagan will
bold his 17th news
conference since taking
office wbeo be meets
wUb reportet"I tonight in
the Eaat Room of the
White House. All three major
commercial television
networks -ABC, CBS and NBC -we·re
plaDDJn1 live coverage
of tbe newt conference,
scheduled to be1ln at 5
p.m. PDT. · ...
· Tbe newt coaference
will be tbe pretldent'•
flrtt since Feb. U,
altboa1b be baa bad sborter, Informal
meettn11 wltb repertert
on 1everal oceatloat. _
Speaking to an
audience of busineaa
leaders, Reagan
expressed frustration
that some critics have
questioned whether he is
as committed to arms
control as he is to the
MX. .
Reagan spoke on the
eve of today's meeting
by the House
Approprlatio,ns
Committee, which was
slated to vote on whether
to releue money already
approved -but frozen
last year r for the
Pentagon to Cievelbp and
test the MX.
Last w~k the Senate
Appropriations
Committee and the
House Appropriations
defense subcommittee
voted by lar1e mar,m.
to pennit the money to be
spent.
Sinok~ers asked to help keep
young people froHJ starting
LOS ANGELES (AP) -If you
can find 10,000 dprette butta by
Monday, the Tobacco Education
C.ouncil of Ventura ays lt Wil:\ pay
·you •100 • part of • lt\&nl to lobby
for a halt.omt dpretfe tax. The per·J)aCk tale• tax would
flDanCI anU-tmoldna cornmerc:WI. "Im'*-' can n9lly come out of
tbia wearlna wblt• hatl." Gerry Mandell, council treuurer, said
Monday. . He Mid the campat1.n will be
directed at smokers who 11re1ret takina up the habit" and who do not
warit to aee youn1 people 'laet
bOoked.11
The 1roup will _present •100
checks to the Ju.t IS people who
brin1 10,000 butts to the Loe
Anaelee Preti Club parklna lot next
Monday, he aald.
That should weigh only about l1x
poun.d1 and can flt ln a box
meuurln8 10 by 13 by 12 lftchet,
Maadell Mid.
Now you know why your neighbor
banks at ,;
fll HUNTINGTON
li:JSA~Sm>oc.~
t.W,n. 1.-ch t/167 W~ Met\~, Comer ol Cold.en Witt, Huntin,ton a..c_h
8oae ID Ntw'-4C..1.-di
"""' 19'19619Mcf\ ~. Huntington hid\ ........ wa., ....
17431 8rocikhi.lnt. Pountab\ Valley
I
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Funds over $2,000 (backed by Government securities) earn
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Maintain an aveflge balana! of $2,500 or more, and every
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5\4"9 rate ~the ,.rtod. thlt your A«Ount lt bttow $2.900. ~
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Coast students honored for • science
Two dozen Orange Coast
students won awards or I honorable mentions in \he recent
Orange County Science and
I Engineering Fair.
The event, held earlier this
month at California Sttte
University, Fullerton, waa lor
students in junior and senior
high school divisions. I l'ollowing are local students
who won awards:
Junior Sweepstakes: Kennedy
Muche, Circle View Junior HJ.ah,
Hun~.
Junior Behavioral and Social
3ciences: Maura Mc.Donald, Fitz
Junior High, Garden Grove,
honorable mention.
Junior Biochem1stry: Jennifer
Utick, Circle View, third place.
Junior Botany : Ejnar
Christensen , Marine View,
Huntington Beach, first place;
Kimberly Novkov, Marine View.
honorable mention.
Junior. Chemistry: Jason
Marcus, Circle View, third place;
Greg Zmak, Marine View,
honorable mention.
Junior Earth and Space
Sciences: Glenn Plank, Marine
View, second place; Joel Metz,
Fitz, honorable mention.
Junior Engineering: Tracey
Miller, Fitz, second place.
Senior Engineering: Robert
Vandervolt, Newport Harbor,
Newport Beach, third place.
Junior Medicine and Health:
Mihir Parikh, Circle View,
second place; Marc Winger,
Harbor View, third place.
Junior Microbiology: Philip
Woll, Circle View, third place.
Junior Physics : James
Hollinger , Circle View,
honorable mention.
Junior Zoology: Kelli Hunt,
Marine View, ~nd place.
Search for HJale birth control
~pill goes on despite pessimism
SHREWSBURY, Mass. (AP)
-The lab that discovered the
birth control pill is hard at work
on the nation's biggest research
effort to understand the other
half of the sexual equation -
how men reproduce.
Through the miscroscopes at
the Worcester Foundation for
'Experimental Biology, seven
scientists and their assistants are
unraveling the sexual workings
of sea urchins, rats, sheep and a nlini-zoo of other creatures.
They sleuth out such esoterica
as the makeup of the proteins in
a ram's sperm. When all goes
well, their research turns up
clues about the intricacies of
human reproduction. And, the
scientists believe,. it could be the
basis for solving a puzzle as tough
as the birth control pill: an oral
contraceptive for.men.
Even though two possible male
pills an: being tested elsewhere,
they have drawbacks. And
experts concede that the quest
for sexual equality in
contraceptives is complicated.
The prospects are not terribly
Dright," says Dr. Sheldon J .
Segal, director of the population
division of the Rockefefler
Foundation.
Dr . Mahlon Hoagland ,
president of the Worcester
reproduction works.
If they can figure out the
complex life cycle of a sperm -
even a aea urchin's sperm -they
believe it should be possible to
find a safe and effective way to
inter.t"Upt the process.
"W·-e have to make
fundamental new discoveries
about male and female
reproduction if we are going to
get anywhere," says Hoagland.
Foundation, says he knows why. This, along with neurobiology
"The biggest obstacle is and cancer, is the major goal of
ignorance. We just don't know his foundation, a private research
enough about the points at which institute where 40 acientists and
we might attack the problem." 150 support staffers work on a
This is why the work of 100-acre campus outside
researchers at places like the Worcester. The foundation is
W or c ester Found a ti on is supported principally by federal
important. They are not looking grants.
for a magic pill; they are simply · "In my knowledge," he says,
trying to u-nderstand how "It~ definitely the largest group
work.Ing anywhere on problems
related to the male."
Each time a couple has
intercourse, millions of sperm are
discharged. Each sperm is
propelled on its journey to the
female's egg by a halr-like whip
of a tail. Scientist George B.
Witman is trying to find out how
the tail works.
"Ultimately, we hope that by
understanding \lli.s, we will have
a rational basis for developing
drugs that will interfere with
th.is mobility and therefore
interrupt fertilization," he says.
Like other scientists at the
foundation, Witman does not
experiment with human sperm,
because it is available in
relatively s mall quantities.
Instead , he works with
Chl.amydomonas, a one~lf alga
with two sperm-like tails.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, May 17, 1983 ~I
Woodworking students from throughout the Ocean View
School District will display their creations ln a special
industrial arts fair May 26-29 at Huntington ~nter Mall.
Students in the Huntington Beach di.strict'• 10 schools will
participate. The event is under the joint direction of Circle
View School industrial arts teacher John Loyd and Park View
School industrial arts teacher Douglas Bjorkman.
This is the third year that woodworking students will
have displayed their handiwork at tl'le Huntington C.enter.
French ambassador speaks in Irvine
The French ambassador to the United States, Bernard
Vernler-Palllei, will address the World Affairs Council of
Orange County at a dinner meeting Wednesday in Irvine.
Vernier-Palliez was president of Renault Motors until he
was named Jan. 9, 1982 to the U.S. ambassadorsh1p. He will
speak on foreign policy issues facing France.
The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the Registry Ho
More information on the council is available by contacting Loa·
Farley, executive secretary, at 835-2564.
Valley Girl Scouts plan banquet
The Silver/Gold Banquet. an honorary awards ceremony
and dinner to honor Senior and Cadette scouts for outstanding
leadership and service projects, will be conducted by the
Fountain Valley Gi'rl Scouts at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Casa
Maria restaurant in Huntington Beach.
The Gold Award, the highest achievement in Girl
Scouting, will be given to Cbrlatlne Scanlan and Kellle FlillD
of Fountain Valley Senior Troop No. 102. The Silver Award
will be given to Sbanaoo Brandon, Maureen Lockwood and
Anne Chavez of Fountain Valley Cadette Troop No. 1934.
' Whips and chail)s
big business for
kinky sex addicts
Cr>) Pactt\c ,..phone
CC>NSUN\ER YEL\...OW PAGES
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dressed in knee-high,
red-laced boots and a black spandex jump suit,
Jeanette Zinkan stood with authority In her
boutique filled with whips, shackles, handcuffs and
other kinky sexual apparel.
"We sell thousands of items a year," said
Zinkan, 44, displaying what she called a $119
bondage "starter kit.·· I · "f brought this business out into the open
because I'm in the open .... I feel no need to hide."
The Bersatile Boutique, owned by Zinkan and
husband, caters to what police and psychologists
ribe as a rapidly emerging subculture of middle
d upper-class S o uthern California
lsadomachochists.
They are people whov sex lives include
hippings, spankings. physical restraint and
!dominance-submission games. Participants said• lauch activity culminates in sexual gratification and
that physical injury is rare.
"People think of it as bizarre, satanic and
painful, but it's pleasure rather than pain," said Reb
Stout, who edits Reflections magazine, an
S&M-oriented bimonthly published by the ~., ..
The couple have taken their personal fll1ltasies
to the marketplace. They are not alone. Their
boutique is one of two in Orange County. More than
20 so-called bondage parlors advertise ln Los
I.Angeles County. I The owners of thoee places are making a lot of
!money," said Los Angeles police Detective Fred
Clapp. "In the future we're looking at a vast
proliferation. Thoee places are just going to go on
and on."
In Sacramento, a high school football coach, hi.a
wife -a junior high assistant principal -and a
teacher of handicapped children recently pleaded
no contest to charges of operating a brothel
featuring sadistic acts and advertised as a "sex
dungeon."
The Bondage Buyers Guide in Los Angeles'
Van Nuys area lista 15 local suppliers of S&M
quipment. One Garden Grove firm named
turiaN advertises a $300 latex dress and a $65
body binder.
By the time Los Angeles' first bondage pallor.
the House of Dom.inanoe, burned in a 1977 fire -
our years after it opened -others have popped up
over Hollywood. Most accept charge cards.
The largest, six-,ear-old Chateau Church,
· a membership o 4,500 people. James Hillier,
9, who a1ao operates a San Francisco branch, said
considers his services a form of therapy.
His West Hollywood parlor is staffed by 16
'counselors" who work in four dungeons equipped
"th mirrors, whipping posts, pillories and wooden
alifornian wins
onducting prize
BUDAPEST, HlUllary (AP) -Criag T. Zerbe,
23-year-old native "Californian. won Hungarian
elevlslon'a fourth International Young
uctora' Competition, the Budapest evenin8
per FAti Hi.rlap repor1ed Monday.
Zerbe. a student at the 'Unlvenity of Indiana at
lllk~~too. WM awarded first prize and 100,000
Orinta ($2,'°°) Sunday night by an ln1ernational
beaded by eminent Hunprtan conductor Janot
... _rw..lk
Jury memben Included well-known West
nnan conductor Chrlatoph von Dobnanyi and
talian mae9trol Alberto Erede and Roberto &Mi.
Second wu Andreu Wella of Heidelberg,
est Germany, who won 80,000 Forints (t2,000)
d third w.. RotMrt Houlihan, an Irlah-born
oung conduct.or lJvinl ln France, whoee prise ey totaled eo,ooo Fortnta <tt,600).
Zerbl conducted murk by Mozart in the final
ol the com~don t.nd Tchaikovaky at ~
t*equent pl• at Budapest'• Prett1ciout !'ram
Ill Aaidtmy of Murk.
· 1be Amerbri. &sd Hir11p commented, ''hu
the au.don o( m41Hcw to hAa m~tl
.• a careS' hM opeMd up before h1.m wt&b more
a"CllDll• ~ n
A total ol 81 enta'Mll fl'Cllll 19 countries took pert theoompeddon held April 25-May l!J here and at
BIOl!Dbe.tbely 1n Wcwt.em lluncarY.
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Ol"'ange County Nol"'tt'i
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1he best mad book has. bene'
Pacificlelephone is d"IYicrmg lhe·Om County
ConsumerYellaw Pagis into lwD new lom~illdories.
We're dividing the Orange County Consumer Yellow
Pages into two local directories because your best
prospects told us they want.ed it that way.
They want a book that's closer to home,
and easier to use .
Were dividing the Yellow Pages to
make each local book a better advertising
medium for you. Take Orange County
North, for example. The people who live
there do 8$3 of their shopping there. •••milillt And~ peopl,e who µvein Orange County ·
C-entral do 833 of their sho_pping in that area~ So now
you can target your Yellow Pages advertising to your best
I
ti
prospects: the people' who live, shop and spend money
in your particular area.
Your ad, in our new Yellow Pages, will
command more attention. It will be seen
more and used more. And it11 bring you
even better results.
' Get in. Cash in. Pick up the phone and
call your Pacific Telephone Ye low Pages
representative. 714 972-551
•••• •1992 "Qranae County Shoppina Habltt Study."
Business to business advertisers please note: Because you do
your buyina and selling in both areas, we are not. changing, or
dlvldqig the Onmge County Business to Business Yellow ~es.
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A• Orange Coall DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, May 17, 1983
r
0
Hope for curing a
• • VICIOUS social ill
There are hundreds of reported rapes in Orange County
each year. There are thousat;lds of reported rapes across the
country each year. The number of unreported sex crimes raise
those figures by ten times, or more, the experts estimate.
This week we are presenting a series of full-page articles
examining the crime, its victims, the perpetrators and the police
and counselling agencies which deal with this major social
problem.
Reoorter Jodi Cadenhead spent weeks talking with rape
victims (or "survivors" as crisis center counselors prefer to call
them), lawyers who prosecute or defend accused rapists, police
and medical personnel, psychologists, "hot line" volunteers, and
rapists, themselves.
Cadenhead's findings are not pleasant reading.
Rape survivors find it difficult to talk about their
experiences, or the rage that smoulders when no one is willing to
listen.
Rapists tell of the sad life situations that lead them to
frustration, anger and brutal attacks on women.
People within the criminal justice system point out the
problems and prejudices that work 1against bringing a rapist to
trial and conviction. Social scientists and therapists refer again and again to the
1 lingering scars, the emotional traumas experienced by victims.
And yet, somewhere in this huge, unpleasant chain is a link
of hope.
There are rape "survivors". Women who have found ne w
r
strength from facing and conquering the haunting shadows of
rape.
Police agencies have become more sensitive tD the horror
and confusion most victims feeJ. They've set up special units to
take women through the required police and medical
procedures. . •
Conviction rates for rape are up considerably over 10 years
ago. They still hover at about 40 percent of those charged. But
that's staggering increase.
Such courtroom victories have served as impetus for more
women to file charges in rape cases. By doing so, they not only
bring criminals to justice, but help themselves by facing the
details of their ordeal and beginning to sort through and resolve
the complex issues involved.
As counselors and therapists acquire more experience in
helping victims, they can shorten the recovery time and assist in
putting the pieces of shattered lives together.
The more we, as a society, debunk the myths surrounding
rape and deal with its realities and aftermath, the sooner we
will be able to control and perhaps eliminate this vicious and
violent crime.
Op1n1ons e 11,pre,,ed 1n lhl' 'Pilt t• <1bo11t' M l' lhO't' ol lhe Oc111v P1101 01ner 111ew s t!•
pressed on lh1~ pilQ<' are lhO'>t· ot tne ir t41Jlhor' .;nd .Ht1sls ~ec1der t ommenl •S '""''
ed AOdrt!'' Th<' 0 d1ly P1to1 P 0 Bo• ISOO Coslil Mes.J C A '12b71> Phone I/ IJ1
bO 4371
MAILBOX
Sensible trade plan
To the F.ditor:
It is too bad your writers
Waters and Blackbum are aa ill
informed as Assemblyman
Maxine Waters. The Kawasaki
police motorcycle was designed
in the United States and is
manufactured in Lincoln ,
Nebraska.
The use of tax dollars should
not be to buy American but for
the mo~t reliable effective
purchase.
There are millions of American
taxpayers involved in
transportation, marketing and
servicing foreign made goods.
Can America afford to loee these
jot. and tax dollars?
DALE McCART
Rooney shows his cards
To the Editor:
Mr. Andy Rooney's seething
hostility and ac id sarcasm
directed at President Reagan in
his column of May 6, reached the
height of insensitivity and
offensiveness, telling the reader
more about Rooney than about
Re~gan -namely that he Is
definitely not a mature thinker,
but merely a childish, petulant
and emotional one.
He has absolutely no sense of
responsibility for the many very
much aware and thoughtful
readers out here in Southern
California.
His kind of writing simply
wishes to promote more of hia
own brand of unawarene'9 and
frustration, instead of ..n.dom,
hannony and peace.
MARY ANN MOON
Newport Beach
l. I. BDJd /Top t~n
Q . Where does Megan rank
now on that list of the most
popular names for girls?
A. It's No. 10. Behind: No. 1.
Jennifer. No. 2. Ann. No. 3,
Jessica. No. 4. Karen. No. 5,
Michelle. No. 6, Katherine. No. 7.
Rebecca. No. 8, Deborah. And
No. 9, Robin.
Q . As a college woman
interested in science, I'd like to
know how much h eat an
ordinary human body, such u
my own, radiates . . . ?"
A. The science boys aay: If
your body pull out about the
t.ame amount of heat ae a
100-watt light bulb, YOW18 lady,
J'OU're average. U more. tend a
mas-hot.
Q . Who wrote that classic
ltawaiian song "Aloha Oe"
~known as "Farewell to
"n>ee'--r
A. Queen Lydia K.amaltaeha
LWuok.alan.i, queen of Hawaii
from 1891 to 1893.
The typical female newspaper
reporter probably wu not the
hlah echool poet, contrary to
Wldeepread lmprealon. More
lbl.y, ahe W84 one of \he better
t1tbJetea in her c1Ma. Or IO aa.y \he
job reaearcher•. They repor1
OAAHG& COAST
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what most seasoned editors
know: A tough competitive spirit
get.I more results in the news
game than a flair for delicate
phrasing. Still, most male
newspaper reporters, even
though strongly willed to ~ were Jtbt goot athletes ln hi
school. Word men, they, from e
outaet, with a special drive.
U parents could ch~ the aex
of thelr expected child, there'd
be a surplus of at least 300,000
baby boys a year, eetimaton say.
A preponderan ce of the
lervicemen who undergo courta
martial are tattooed, studies have
shown.
Kansas City, Mo., la said to be a
bachelor's paradise. Single
women 18 to 2~ outnumber
unattached Youn& men there by at leut U,000, aocordJng to the
omaua taken. In two other p1acm
nationwide do the 111.n&le women
predominate -Nn1 "I ork Oty'1 tut Side and Wuhingt.on, D.C.
That rt.ate wherein are told the
most padded bru la Calltomla.
C\J.rrent theory is that jealou.y
II an lnhmWd ~t.
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',tXJ MEAN WE AMERKANS AAVE
10 kEEP BULDING ~AND MalE
MISSILES? MT WE AMERICANS
MUST LNE ™IS WAI rd?E.VER7
Who's minding the store?
WASHINGTON -Let some
obstru c tio nist w i thhold
infonnation from C.Ongress and
there will be a great bellyaching
from outraged.members. But all
ls quiet on Capitol Hill when
information la suppressed by
C.Ongress's own functionaries.
The House Intelligence
Committee, for example, recently
raised a huge hullabaloo over
alleged Soviet influence in the
U.S. peace movement. But the
documents the committee
released leh out some key
passages.
The deleted portions
mentioned 13 House Democrats
who were involved. one way or
another, in conferences the FBI
thought were manipulated Crom
afar by the Kremlin.
NO ONE WOULD seriously
suggest that they would
willingly do the Soviets' dirty
work. The rea90n for suppressing
the material obviously was to
spare the House members
possible embarrassment.
The withheld material should
have appeared wt Decen'lber. in
the committee's report, "Soviet
Active Measures." The report has
been used repeatedly aa evidence
of President Reagan's claim that
the Russians have been
Q
J-A-l:l-A-11-11-11-1 -~
marupulatmg the nuclear freei.e
movement.
The censored documents fall
short of making the president's
c.ase. One of them, prepared by
the Wo rld Peace Council,
reviewed a "Dialogue on
Disarmament and Detent.e" that
it held in Washington. The
council is described by the FBI as
"the largest and most active
Soviet front organization . . .
one of the major Soviet
instruments for political action in
the peace movement.''
The committee excised 14 of
the document''3 47 pages.
The other material was a
report, prepared hy a coalition of
groups that sporu:ored an anti-
a part he id conference at
IUverside Church in New York
City. The G -men cited t he
c.'Ollference as another ex.ample of
Soviet machinations.
The Intelligence Committee
lopped 60 pages out of that report
before making it public.
IN BOTH cases, the deleted
material contained references to
the participation or sponsorship
in the events by one or more of
the 13 House members.
My associated Tony Capaocio
and Jack Mitchell obtained copfeti of the two complete docwnents.
The controversial material was
brought to their attention by
John Ban-en, a senior editor of
Reader's Digest. who is working
on a new book about the Soviet
KGB.
For the record, here are the
baker's doz.en: Reps .. Ronald
Dellums, Calli.; Ted WelS8, N.Y.;
John Conyers, Mich.: Don
Edw~. Calif.: Charles Rangel,
N.Y.: George Crockett, Mich.;
Parren Mitchell, Md.; Gus
Savage, Ill.: Mervyn Dymally,
Calif.; Walter Fauntroy, D.C.;
and ex-Reps. John Burton, Calif.;
Shirley Chisholm, N.Y .; a nd
Harold Washington, Ill. (now
mayor of Chicago).
A member of the Intelligence
Committee said the decision to
withhold the material was made
by the chairman, Rep. Edward
Boland, 0-Mass., but added that
"no one on the c.'Ommittee was
very upset about not naming
membent,J'
Footnote: Those of the 13 who
returned our calls said they
hadn't known about the deletion
of their names. Edwards
speculated ..l!tat Intelligence
Committee members "were
afraid to call me becauae I would
have said they had been acting
like the old Ho0.9e Un-American
Activities Committee."
BETTER LATE : The
Securities and Exchange
Commission is no Sleepiqg
Beauty, but my April 14 report
on energy stock fraud aeema to
have awakened the agency from
an 18-month slumber.
The gist of my report waa that
unwary investors had lost
thousands of dollars in oil
company stocks, not becauae of
the ups and downs of the mark.et
but becauae of fraudulent claims
by company officials that
artificially inflated the prices of
stocks. I documented the
suspicious manipulations of one
company in particular -New
Frontier Petroleum. fonned two
years ago by the merger of four
Canadian-based petroleum
development companiea. Insiders
made a bundle, while ordinary
investors lost their shirts.
Since the column ap~red:
my sources tell me. $EC
investigat ors have been
reviewing the evidence I
presented. The SEC. which had
known about the controversial
transactions for 18 montha. had
no official comment on the
sudden interest in the cue.
Booklet demystifies freeze
In ~ verbal landslide that has
~ed the street cry for a
"nuclear freeze," there has been
little to enlighten the average
American who merely ·wants to
know what is involved and what
are eome reuonable answers.
They're shooting over his
head.
Now comes a compact, 64-page
booklet titled "The Intelligent
Uyper90n'a Guide to Nuclear
F..reeze and Peace Debate"
authored, in queation-and-
answer form, by the National
Strategy Information Qnter.
It I.I. they say, a non-partisan.
tax-exempt center that espou9eS
DO part:k:ular political C8U8e8 and
lll memb.<1 ra range from
CONervative to liberal. For $2.95,
and an open mind, you can get
their 20 questions and answers.
In the 1982 midterm elections.
nearly 25 percent of American
voters -ln nine states and 27
localities -were given the
chance to express their opinion
on the bare and somewhat
Birds of
'Thoughta •t I.Arp: --l'or all pncUcal pu.rJ>C*!8. the principal dltterence betwem
the feeder-of a png and the head
of • c:ountry I.I the lhe of h.le
conetituency, for when
penuuton break.I down. both
Will ..-rt to violenoe.
-It 18 ~ that the men who
lack ambition may "1et
nowhere," but It II equally true
t})at the mm who ~ it in
abundanct too oft.en Pt the n.t
of ue jUlt where they want ua.
-U an ot.erwr' from another
planet could tune Into our b~ wa~ he would
loelcallY deduct ihat we a.re a
1peclee \bat .. ~y and
cbro1Ucal1y •filleted wlth
notblnl but colcb, beadachea,
.an~. !wmofrho6dl, acne. anaplt
odot'. bed m-th, ttan-poor = vitemln defideftcy, IDCDD
bledden. IOW' ~. snelly
feet. atalned Meth Ind....., of
n-.rly ineredtir.:ebae fD\hlnw.
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undefined subject of nuclear
freeze. All but one approved.
But did they )qlow what they
were voting for, or against?
Typical waa New Jersey's
resolution ~ for a "mutual. verifiable freeze ' on the testing,
production and deployment of all
n~ear weapons.
Now, even editon who have
made a tingle trip to the Soviet
Union know that the Ruai&ns
will not allow on-site verification
of anything .. Newspaper group&
have asked for it, as our
government fonnally haa a.iked,
and got nothing more than
another vodka t.>aat.
In the preface to the booklet,
Gerald L . Steibel, director of
nation.al security services for the
center, and in a chiefly "con"
stance. makes the point that it
will be necessary to negotiate -
not jus t proclaim -which
weapons would be subject to
verification. f'he myth of an
"instant solution" with the USSR
would be shattered at the outset.
"But even if some miraculous
potion should work," he writ.es,
"leading to the instant creation of
a nuclear !reeze, what in reality
would be !rozen? Surely, not the
danger. Not a single weapon now
in place would be spiked or
dismantled. The engines of terror
would no more be leashed and no
less menacing the day after a
freeze than the day before. Only
projected additions .,..ould be
stopped."
Mr. Steibel argues that the
really serious aspect of the !reeze
agitation Is its impact on the
ability of the U.S. to provide for
lta own aecurity.
Free~e advocat es seem to
believe ~nditions will change,
once the U .S. takes the initiative.
Free7.e will be followed, they say,
by arms rMuctions fueled by
pugnacious f ea th er
s~me sad way .
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... -I lma1lne that many a
doctor IU~ he hu '1curedn a
patient w~ lt II simply that the
1lie o( the bUl haa aent the
patient llClurryin1 to another
hN.ler.
-A joumallat le that peculiar
..-t of writ.et who beclna to write
falt.erlnaly • eoon • he 18 llwn
•ufUclent tlm• to write
thouahtfully.
-~ rnbenbl• poor drink to tcraet what they are not.; and the
miMrable rtch drtnk to forpt
whatt.Myare.
-Ar1ument.atlon •Imply
turn• partial truth• 11)to
hardened dotma11 ., ..oon • llJlntthlna we ·belitlw to be true
le clJspuwd, WW bemn to da1m
much more tor ft than we
\ -
otherwile might.
-Every king Wied to keep a
fool at court; now every
president aeema to keep one in
his cabinet.
-Mah author• who
geJferallse about women 1n a
patronbina and crital tcne are
ueuaUy tliOM who have been
unaucceeaful In their penona1
relatiCJN with WCll'Dl!D.. aDd t:urft •
temperamental flaw lnto •
phlio.ophkial paeltlon. ~ IO
profou.nd a talent M Nietmlhe'1
WH not exempt f r om thll
u.nconecloua per verllon).
-SpHklnl .of the HXH,
HCJ"et loven five themMlYH
away• much bY ~•by
m..,..nent; tn ~'· ... ''A woman with .,_ ont= Ql:ite ~ Cl' with .,.
awrt.d from bll. arta•
...... lm.p1111lan."
-IA d\lt nudeu' .... tMr'9 ..
only ... ,.. ~' nObody -wtn-md that .. m. .........
lessened Sovtet apprehensions
about American military power.
"If eo, this outcome will be a
'first'," cont.ends Steibel. "Aft.er
the end of World War II,
American armed strength was
virtually withdrawn from
Europe. In the 19609, U.S. missile
production was froren to allow
the USSR to catch up. In 1972,
the U.S . signed the Salt I
agl'eement, which allowed and
even cemented Soviet
advantages in m.iaaile nwnben,
explosivenees and throwweigbt."
And how did our Russian
friends react to all these
American l.niti.atives?
"In the first instance, the
Kremlin took over Eastern
Europe," Steibel says. "ln the
aecond, a military buildup was
launched, designed to outproduce
the U.S. in misailes ana other
weapons. In the poet-1972 period,
the Soviets have inc:reaaed their
nuclear edge by improving
tee h nol ogical soph istlca lion .
What Incentives wlll a new
freeze give new Soviet leader
Yuri Andr opov to do
differently?"
Steibel cooeludes that what is
at work here a. an old W~
deceit -the belief that most
other people ln the world, if
treated aa ~h they were like
ua, in lW'n would behave like UI.
I\ never h.u, and it will not,
come off like that.
War and pace, free .odeties
recoanlsed lons -.go, are too
important to be left to the
~ Ne\her, howwer, can
they be left to the atreet
demonttraton or the cbUtth
blahop1 or any othes: eelf·
appomted prd1ana of ow fate.
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TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1983
JHICllAllllDTHECIUIRY
ANN LANDERS
ENTERTAINMENT
STOCKS
82
83
84
Comedies and "A-Team''
malce up a major part of
NBC's strategy for its fall
programming schedule.
YPage B3.
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Rape prOSeCUtOr ... How she handles case
Patricia Manoukian, 32, has
6ttn with the Orange County
bl.trict Attorney's Office for five
years. Since her graduation from
Loyal Law School in 197,, she
b• prosecutM numerous rape
Cllel. Q: WHAT ADVICE DO YOU
GIVE A RAPE VICTIM PRIOR
TO BER TESTIFYING?
A: I try to calm her down.
$ome may feel that they are on
trial. They think they will be
asked about prior sexual activity.
They won't. I tell them that I
will ask q~estlona that seem
apparent. Why did you submit?
Were you afraid?
Q: BOW DO MOST VICl'IMS
REACT TO COURT
PROCEEDINGS?
A. Some of them get up
there and they retell the eveni.
u if they'tt there again. You
have to get extremely detalled.
You have to show penetration. I
don't think that there's anyone
who wants to diacuaa those
details.
Q : TYPICALLYLWHAT
UNDS OF QUESTIONS WILL
BE ASKED?
A: Basically I go through the
.c.enario. Detailed step-by-step
account of what happened. The
type of clothing; was he dresaed
or undre.ed.
Q: WILL THE DEFENSE
STILL ATTEMPT TO BRING
UP A WOMAN'S PAST SEXUAL
RELATIONS?
A: Sometimes they do. Any of
her sexual conduct with anyone
other than the defendant they're
llot going to let you brlna in.
Where con.ent la the defenae
t h e y w i 11 a s k a-b o u t t h e
relationship of defendant.
Q: WHAT CHARACTER
ASPECTS DO YOU ATl'EMPT
TO REVEAL ABOUT TBE
VIC'l'IM?
A: If you have 90meODe who la
an upstanding" member of the
community "you always try to
bring that up. If you have an
18-year-old hitchhiker who la
unemployed you want them to
get to know her as a penon. And
you want them to like her.
Q: HOW SIGNIFICANT IS
THE RAPE KIT AS EVIDENCE
THAT THE WOMAN WAS
RAPED?
A: It's very helpful. It can
corroborate the victim's
testimony. I always get saliva
from the defendant. Then he can
be included as a P<*ible donor.
Q: WHAT MAltES A RAPE
CASE TOUGH TO
PROSECUTE?
A: In rape cues It'• always a
one on one. Unlike a burglary
where property ii taken and you
may have fingerprints, there's
not a lot of physical evidence.
Q : HOW Wlt:L THE
DEFENSE ATTEMPT TO
PROVE CONSENT AND HOW
DO YOU COUNTER THAT?
A: If they knew-each other It
will be argued that they were
still on good terms. If It's
reported later It will be a
problem. In the case of a
hitthhiker, they're 80lna to aay
corwent. Why dJd she coment to
get in the car?
It'• euier for a Jury to believe
eomeone who wu home in bed or
abducted than someone who wu
................
Patricia Manoukian tries to help the victim.
O\lt hitchh.ikina or at a bar. Q: WHAT MilES A RAPE
Q. WHAT "WEIGHS MOST VICTIM CREDIBLE OR NOT
HEAVILY IN TBS JURORS' CREDIBLE?
MlNDS IN REACHING A A: When they report d\e rape. GUU.TY VERDICT1 • The fac~ and circumstances
4: They ..._. credibility and aurroundinl the rape. Her
loo'\ for motives to lie. Why demeanor on the wttnem ltand..
would ahe make up a story like Incentive or lack of incentive to
th1.a lf It dld.n't happen? lie.
• •
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Myths and silence
hamper recovery
(SecoDd lD a Serles)
By JODI CADENHEAD Of'IM Deir ...... ..,,
She wanted to talk about It, but no one would listen, becau.e
rape is a dirty word and does not go down euily.
Rape la not garden party chit-<:hat. It'• hanh. cold, and violent.
It's a vicious act that's always forced on the victim by gun-point,
threat of Qeath .or disfiguring injury. .
But no matter the motivation behind the act. rape always leaves
lta victims mcarred -mentally and often physically. • • •
. Sheryl Lawrence wu riding her bicycle home from the
supermarket when a man leaped out of the ahadowa and knocked
her to the p-ound. He drove her to a nearby field where ahe was
repeatedly raped at knife-point and threatened with a pair of bolt
cutters.
"I wouldn't be caught dead on a bicycle," she Mid two years
later. "I swear to God I wouldn't let that happen again. I would die
firtt.''.
" In the months following the attack, Lawrence watched a shaky
marriage disintegrate, her 6-year-old daughter develop problems at
school and her own confidence erode.
Her family's refusal to di8cuaa the rape left her frustrated,
enhancing the trawnatic feelingJ of shock and shame that haunted
her for months. ·
"My aiater said 'you want us to undentand, but how can we
understand. It's something we don't want to talk about.'
.)
Althoufh Lawrence has slo.;ly put her life back together, there
were a lot o times of uncertainty. A llOcia.l drinker before the attack.
she began turning to alcohol as a refuge from frequent bouts of
depreasion.
The conviction of her attack.er and the realization that her
daughter still needed a mother helped Lawnnce put the painful
memories behind her. 1 •
She found a job and moved to a new houee in another city. But
the sight of anyone who resembles the rapist still leaves her
frightened and ~-•
"I never think I 11 be that perwon again." Lawrence says today.
''I think I was too trusting. But I think rm better now. rm atroifl8er.
And rm lnore independent ... • • •
The shock, pain, anger and depremion Lawrence suffered are
agonies every rape victim goes through. It's what ooumelon and
psychiatrists call the rape trauma syndrome.
Rape la a word that women hate. Cloaked in careful language,
news accounts and aornetimes romantid.zed ln movies, the brutal
reality of the act la seldom revealed.
In the lint days following an attack, a woman la Jett with
feellnp of shock. disbelief and nwnbnem, according to Huntington
Beach psychologist Debra Pincar.
The aeconcf at.age is charactert7.ed by a fal8e calm, whett the
woman may completely deny what happened. Many rape victi.ma
never get put thia at.age and end up leeldng OOUNeling only when
aomethlng triggers a memory of the attack.
Depression ia the third plateau, followed by the woman'•
attempt to begin dealing with the attack and reawnlng her life.
. "People say that rape ia a trawna. But the real trauma ia ~
1<>meone about it, whether it's your mother, husband or boyfriend, said Pinc:ar. ,,
Marrlai and relationships often end up falling vicUm to the
preaaurea and trauma following a rape. Several counselors,
includina Pl.near, eetimate that 70 pet'Cellt of all relationships end
within a few months of the attack.
''The husband or boyfriend has no place to put hi.a ~."
explained marrtage and family cou.me1or 1!ndlyn Mulvey. 1'Tbey
feel guilty, like they ahould have done IOl'Deth.tnc. They keep
aayir\8, 4Can't you see that rm not the rapist.'"
· 8ut the problem lies not only In learnlna to trust men apin. but
ln overcoming the ap-old m~ aurroundJna rape.
The three most harmful mytha, believed by many mt!n and
sometimes by the victim henelf, are: ( 1. rape la eexual in nature; (2.
women secretly want to be raped and (3. they asked for It.
As a, result of the myths, rn8!1Y women end up havtna intenae
feellnga of IUilt. according to Jaclde Sherman. ooordlnator of the rape prevention program at UCI.
"Many people still believe that she asked for it," Mid Shennan.
"Oft.en the victim ii still uked If ahe enjoyed It.
"It's the one crime where the victim has to prove there waa a
crime," she added. : · • • •
.
1
I
IJ l
•
b Orenge Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, May 17, 1983
Women have long way to g~
DEAR READERS: I reed tomethinc recently
that really bl~w me out of the water. In aphe of all
the b1Ck-bn!akin8 work of the women'• movement
and frontllne heroinM in the vanguard of bl t!drww
and industry, the prejudice .,alnlt femalea I.a still
very lttong.
In the February .... ot Redhook, Dr. Alice
Baumprtner and her cxillequea at the Institute for
Equality in Education at the -Unlven!ty of c.olondo
IW'Vey~ 2,000 children th.roughout the 1\ate. '11ley
uk~ one queetion: "U you woke t,tp tomorrow and
dialovered you were a boy (ot a girl), how would
your life be differentr'
The ret~ were 1tartling. There was a ~ lack of ftspeci for females. In fact, they
were held in contempt by both •xee. Many stria
aaid if they Wel'e boys, their liw. would be better
economically and statua-wi8e and they would enjoy
more freedom and have a better time with le.
responsiblllty. One girl aaid, "U I were a boy, my
father might have loved me more."
Boys felt that if they had to be girls they must
be beautiful and know how to put on makeup and
dress well. "No one would be interested in my
brain," said one respondent.
When boys considered the possibility that
females could marry and work outside the home,
the job& they l.ls1ed most oft.en were aecretaries,
nuraes, cocktail waitremes, aoclal workers, models,
airline stewarde88es and prostitutes. "Boys still see
:POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIAl'lr
MODERN
T RAVBL.
WOUL.D alt
TOTALLY
D~L.lcSMTFUL.,
I fl'
I COULD
ONLV
LS ARN
TO ENJOV
NI.IC fl)TIC[
women in roie. u eervtng othe.rs," Dr. Baumgartner
aid.
'l1le girla envilioned a variety of exciting career
pomibllltiee for themaelves if they were boys. Moet
often mentioned were profeMionaJ athletes. auto
mecharUcl, construction workers, pilots, engineers,
forest ranaen, atuntmen, coal miners, aport8Calters
and fannen.
Many glrla reallied that one disadvantage of
maleneel I.a ltoidmn: "U I were a boy, I would have
to atay calm and cool when ever something
happened. I would not be allowed to express my
true feelinga." Girla often felt that as boya ~ey
would have to be rowdy, macho and amart-alecky
and show off more.
The bottom line seemed to be that boya knew
they were valued by their parent.I, but girla were
not sure. They felt their brot~ers were the
favorites.
Redhook asked, "What's a mO'ii?er to do?"
Their answers were thoughtful and constructive.
(I've added 10me of my own.)
Start by find.in8 out what your children think
of the opposite aex. U they have peculiar notions,
aet them straight -not in a critical manner but an
instructive one.
Don't divide chores by~ender. Support your
child's interest and talent.I, whatever they are.
Value . your children equally and let them know
that you do.
. Encourage your daughter's athletic interesta u
,well as your son's. Remember the power of
example. Educate your sons and daughters about
stereotypes. Let them know boya and (d.rla can do
many of the same th.inp equally well. Have aome
s~taculllr examples that they can relate to: ph~ lawyers, bankers, polltidana, and don't
forget the Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day
O'C.Cmnor.
There la a big difference between cold and cool.
Ann Landers shows you hOw to play it cool without
freezing people out in her booklet, 'Teen-. Sex
-Ten Ways to Cool It" Send 50 oenta and a Jong,
self-addressed, stamped envelope to Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, DJ. 6()611.
The Dally Pilot wants your wedd1ng and
enj/agetMnt IMJWS.
To help you •ubmlr the required
information, forms are avail.able at the Dally
Pilot of!Jce, 330 W. &y St., O.t.t MeA.
For weddings, only a black and whlt.e photo
of the bride la aocepc.,ble. Snapshota, Polarojd
and color phoio. CAn 't be uaed.
The photo mwt be submitted no .later than
three weeJca after the wedding, otherwiae It w1ll
not be publ.Uhed.
Engagement information is to be submitted
at lea.at ~ven weelcs before the wedding.
Forms and photos can be dropped.oil at the
office or mailed to the E.ditorial ~pa.rtment,
Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Carta Mea, Ca.lit.
92626.
EngagenJ.ents
Kahl-McCormish
A June 2:i wedding in Carrington, N .u .• is
being plann~ by Evie Kahl and Rob McC.ormiah. .
Their pa.rents are Mr. and Mra. Wesley Kahl of
Carrington and Mr. and Mrs. Robert McConniah of
Costa '1esa.
The bride-elect ia a graduate of Carrington
High School and Concordia College!. Moorehead,
Minn. Her fiance graduated from ~rvite High
School. Anaheim, and holds an M.A degree from
Harvard Unlvenity.
Jones-Blandford
Jeri Lee Jones. and Jamee T. Blandford ill,
. both of c.o.ta Meu, are plann.ing to marry Aug. 6 ln
the Golden Citcle Chapel, Santa Ana.
The bride-to-be, a graduate of Orange ~t
College in Coeta Mesa, ia the ·daughter of Mrs.
Teddy Jones of Irvine. Her fi.ance'a parenta are Mr.
and Mrs. James T. Blandford Jr. of Irvine. He la a
graduate of Corona del Mar HJgh School.
To plKe your~
before the
reeding public,
phone
Diiiy Piiot
Clalellled. ~2-5878
RUFFELL 'S
UPHOlSTH Y, INC. .....................
1922 HAHOlt llVO.
COSTA MESA -,.._I 1S6
llMA IOMllCI
AT WIT'S END
-Bety0u never fiauied me for a "quilter," dJd
you?
My bnaae brings to mind such l>hruel • ..
"oonnect--a-dot," "Patnt--by-number'r and "Drop f ...
pouch in botlJng water ... _ F
Well, you're wrong.
I have alway1 been in awe of anything that •
2-year-old cannot diamantle ln 10 minuie.. '
Right now, there La a battle raaina between
the "purl.at" quilters and the atyle-inaken 81 to
whether antique quilta should be di..:ced and •
made aa wearing apparel or left in thetr ortglnal
atate on beds and wal1a. rm with the purists. ..
U anyone approached one of my quilta with a
pair of .O.On and a i:-Uem for a vest, I would •
penonally charge them with a.Maull with. deedly.
weapon. Would Betsy Roa let you make :-
underwear out of her flag? •
Only people who have done handicraft really
know what goes Into it. When I wu expectina ~t
third chlld, r decided to croes-atitch quifc. for twu\
bed.a. For nine months, I did nothing but grow
and 1ew. Dlahes sat in the sink. Bedia became
nests. LauncJry apllled out of the hampen. Food
waa eaten atraight from the wrapper. The grus
grew. Newapepen collected. Snow came and •
melted. The l.naide of the oven corroded and grew,
amaller. Children tried desperately (without
auccem) to make.contact with "Mommy." •
, When the nune said, "Would you like to eee
your new aon?" abe patiently held the baby while
I fini.ahed up the tree on the laat 9qUare.
A finished quilt repre&enta my pel"IOt\8.l
marathon -my Mila America victory -my
Nobel Prk.e. It'• an achievement that rank.a right ·
up there wtth writing your name legibly on the
Christmaa carda all the way to the names
beginning with w. : ..
I read where Bonnie Lehman, editor of the ;
QUJ.lter'• Newsletter magazine, wu enraged when;;;.
a leadln8 designer cut up antiQ\.le quilts lor akirta !-'
and jlcketa for hla oollec1ion. ''°t' esta. pWowa · '·
indeed!'' ahe aaid. ''Qullta are made to be Wied on '•
bed.a where primal events in life took place . . . •
oonceetion, birth, illneM. death."
Im finlah1n8 up a celebrity quilt where each
aqua.re carries a ak.et.ch/drawing/bit of
wiadom/~ture of morneone whom I admire. An"
, Buchwald a 91:1uare says lt all: "Whoever aJeer,s
under this quilt better have a a good ~ • : •
That'• what uilta are all about. ~: .
... . .
. .
BEDWEllER :
LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED ,.,...,...... .... ,.._ ........................ . ......................................... :.: llMIWI .......................... _ _ .....
~ ...................................... ..
-.,. ......... Wiier! "°' _... .., ...... --:S • .. ...._ CMllM..,._,...,....,_.._._..._, T IL
• -Whatll't All Moul .... How Tor... It"',• ..... ~ ...
_....~............ .
·---=~!'!.!!!~ !4!'.~~---~--
....... "~anc IMTINM~ LTD. 1 U5 •rct-._ ... I -. WI s.u67 1..;""
Celebrate Success
.
t ..
f
: .. • • • .. . • .. :
.J -~ ~ ..
i
E
I
~-~~ ,.~~-0:-· 11'"1)
· ... ' v_.. :rim· Jane AIUlnder.
S• -~Pattoll~~ 2) (1970) 4..'-~ 9S-.. Soott&.~MllOWI
' . ·~IMVI ! ''8rucl Md OrlOOfl flit"' (No 0.)Bnalt. .,Jlw.GAZH
e~~~~~3)M
A
M'llTBIY
MOVIE **~ "lndilc:ttt.ion OI NI ~ Wiii"' ( 1954) Jentlller Jonet. Mont. FIMALOWE: PfWATE
(l)MOYIE t • ~ "'Smokey And The Bandit"
~=Reynolds, Sally Aeld.
*** "'Oeld Men Don't Wew Plaid"' (1982) SleYe MllftWI. Rlctlel Wild.
(%)MOYIE
• • "Leap 1n10 The Void" INo Date)
-8:30-• ~ :s~' ti LIE DETECTOA
-t.00-
18 RE...aTOH STEELE (II THAEFS COMPANY
M'A'S'H
AMERICAN FUYMOUSE COSU08
HOT NECESSAAll. Y ntE NEWS
MOYIE
• • • "Richard Pryo< Live From The Sunset Strip" ( 1982) Rlcllard Pryor.
-t:30-l ~T05
H 'h '"Three Violent P.ople" p956)
Clllrtton Helton. Anne But•
l lrA'l'H T'HEYR)NAH
MOYE
t t * 'h "Whose Ufe Is II Arryway'I"
(1981) Richlrd Oreyfuu, John c ..
sawtes.
-10:00-
1 U. B.8tWHERE ••MEWS HART TO HART TO CRISIS WrTH
IANIARA JOADo\H
(C)MOYIE
• • "Death Hunt" ( 1981) Charles
&onson. Lee Mervin.
Cl) PAPER CHASE: ntE SEeot1>
YEAR g MOYE
t t "Night School"' {1981) Leonlld
Minn. Rlctlel Wiid
(%)MOYIE
t * 'h "vr.tort M11ch"' (No Dlte)
-10';30-L INDEPENDEHT NETWOAI<
• Cl11ZEN ARTIST
(D) NEW DAY IN EDEM
-11:00-llrUUNEWS
(C)MOVE
Uttlno¥. MIOQll Smltll. ~ tl!f:'sw ,..., .. 119341 John
Wwyne, V•na Hiiie.
,.~Of Ehrlcll'• ... Bul-
ltl" (1940) Edwlld Q, Aoblnton.
Ruth Gordon.
(JI ENTERTAIMHT TOHIOHT
-1:t0-(C)MOYIE
U * "Who la KlllnQ The Grt1t
Chlll OI Europe?"' ( f 978) Geotge
Segll. Jlcquellrle 8laet
-1:ao-
l l.~~ P.~ By Northwltt"' (1959)
Cery Grant. Eve M111e Salflt.
(%)MOYIE * *'h "YOUI Cheatln' Heir!"' 11964)
George Hamllton, Susan Ohlr.
-1:46-
<H>MOYIE
•• "'Pllftners" (1982) Ryan O'Neel,
JohnHurt.
-2:00-
• • "Seniors" (1tm) Dennis OIJald.
G11ytmh01f.
1 =HEWS NIOHTWATCH
* * "Ptnltenti11Y II" (1982) Leon Isaac Kennedy. Emit Hudlon -12'00-1 :::rAINMOO TONIGHl * * 'h "Gitt" ( 1965) Jo Clllpl11n,
HMthtr North.
Cl) PAPER CHASE: ntE SE<X>HO
Y£AA
-2:30-
l~sNAVY (f) IHOEPENDEHT NETWORK
NEWS !~AMERICAN STYLE
• * • 'h "The Elephant M811" ( 1980)
John Hurt. Anthony Hopkins.
(%)MOYIE
P. ~ie'a Big Moment" (1947)
Ptnny Single1on, Arthur Like.
-3.«1-fE~SmETQi ** "SI Helens" ( 1981) Ari Carney,
David Huttman * ..... "The Boogenl" ( 1981) ReOecca
Baldlng. Fred McCerren. -12:15-
(UJMOYIE
U "Sitting Ducks" (11180) Mlchee4 Em". Zach Norman.
-S:10-
(C) SUMMER SOl8TlCE
-3:20-
-12:30-<H> MOVE
D 8LATENIGHTWITHOAVIO * "Vlsltlng Hours" (19821 Mlchael
LETI~ lrOOlide, Lee GrWtt.
I ~ -s:ao-9 ONE OH ONE e MOYIE
TOM COTT\.E: UP ClOSE • H "Wike ltlancl" (1942) Br1Wl L<M,~8'TY1.E ~~ Preaton
8 (I) MCUllLAH & WIFE (R) (%) ""'n'' -1:00-••• ,, "Victory Milch" (No Dale)
8 MOYIE -4:00-* **"The Stoiy Of Dr. W&SMll" (f)~THEMOAHltO
(.11144) Glty Cooper, Lllline Dey • ...,.'"' WOVE • • "Blondie's Holiday" ( 1947) P«I-**•Yi "'Hol Mllions" (1968) Pet• ny Singleton. Arthur Like. s .. complete lletlng In TV Log
~HAlfEL_ llSJINGS
8 KNXT tCBSI
I D KNBC !NBC>
'9 KTLA (Ind J
8 KABC IABCJ
Ci) K FMB tCBSI
0 KHJ TV (Ind I
Cl!) KCST (ABCI
ID KTTV llnd I
Cl) KCOP·TV (Ind.I
fli) KCET (PBS>
GKOCE <PBSI
(Ml l\OOC (Ind I
'0 On TV
l Z·TV
11 HBO
C tC1nem.n 1
ti !WORl NY , N Y
~7l tWT BSI
If (ESPNI
'$1 (Sf>owh~l
• Se>otloghl
• IC•ble News Networlll
NBC keeping quality ·
' programs on schedule . .
Bt F RED ROTHENBERG W."T......-. ........
: NEW YORK -NBC is keeping quality
programs on its .chedule. But the third-place
~ork al9o aeem11 to be updating ABC's primer f~ prime-time success, using laughter and w~cal action-adventure to bounce back from
raSinp oblivion and attempt to overtake No. 2 ABC.
: The formula that worked ao well for ABC in
the 1970. combined heavy doees of broad situation ooine<IY and some offbeat dramatic programa -all
ta(geted to young-adult audiences in urban areas.
: "It'• the most balanced schedule ever for
~." l&id Brandon TartikoH, president of NBC
Edtertainment.
: When ABC jumped from third co second in 1~6 and to first in 1977, it was carried there by
top-rated comedies "Happy Daya," "Laverne &
Shirley" and ''Three'• Company," plus the eecapist
fare of "Charlie'• Angela" and "'the Six Million
Odllar Man.''
: NBC'• new IC.bedule baa 10 comedies, a record
fo( the network. In 1977, when NBC was pushed
d•ply into third place, it had just two aitcoma,
. • • • '
while ABC had 10 half-hour comedies.
NBC currently has high-brow humor in
''Cheerv" and "Family Ties," but its other returning
comedies are leas cerebral: "Mama's Family,"
"Different Strokes," "Silver Spoons," "Facts of
Life," and "Gimme A Break."
But the great.est aimUarities with ABC comedy
are in NBC's three new programs, moat notably
"We Got It Made." Thia ia basically "Three's
Company," plus two. The menage-a-trot.a in the
same apartment involves two bachelon and 1heir
voluptuous housekeeper, who ia played by blond
bombshell Teri Copley. The two <>Ubddera are the
bachelors' girlfrienda.
In one sexual pratfall, the men and the
housekeeper, who la wearing just a towel, lock
themaelves in the bathroom just aa the girlfriends
arrive.
"We think .it's a hot commercial ahow," said
Tartlkoff. The parallels with "Three'• Company"
don't atop there, either. Fred Silverman, execuUve
producer of "We Got It Made," brought "'Three'•
Company" to ABC when he waa that network'•
programming whiz.
____.. ....... Mr'----------~
REilJRN~).B?! ..
TICKET MASTER OUTtE'TS Mu~/t~~
LUXU,Y THEATRES
"•1' StlleMltr Ill IJI llm 10 .... 1111, ...... m
U 1JO 1100 l 1H l 1t O 10110 , 1100 , ''l 'M''" 1.10
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueed1y, May 17, 1983
Production of 'Nuts'
succeeds as theater,
social commentary
.. ,
• e.i&; I
By TOM TITlJS
Of't"9DallJNotl._.,
The lsaue on trial in Tom
Torpor'• "Nuts" ia not whether
an accused murderen la
competent to answer the charges
against her. Rather, it'• the
adequacy of the competency
system itself.
That system takes a merciless
beating in Torpor's riveting
drama at the Newport Harbor
Actors Theater, thanks to some
electrifying performances that
are at once illuminating and
unsettling. Under the intensive
direction of Deborah LaVine,
"Nuts" succeeds both as theater
and SQ<:ial commentary.
Based on a true incident, the
play details a sanity hearing for a
prostitute accused of killing one
of her clients. The deck appears
to be atack.ed -both the law and
her parents want her put away
-but she insists on standing
trial, whic~ts the stage for som~ ug and brutal
conf~ti ns.
While "Nuts" raises some
critical questions about the
judicial system, those issues
would be moot if the play were
not a dynamite piece of theater.
LaVine'a cast is superbly chosen
and attacks the show in waves of
realistic fervor.
The central role of the accused
murderess is double cast. with
Laura Com tackling the opening
_ ni~ht assignment. Iler Claudia is
Gene Knight
djaartn1na device in an eq~ ·~
excellent performance. t. ,
Outstanding amon1 t.! 1 splendid cast, however, a ~
Karlene Bradley and Ge
Knight aa the defendant••
mother and atepfather. BndJeJ ·'
ia immenaely effective ....
repreaaed , pitiable wom• ·•
devastated by eventa, w
Knight excela as a bomb
bualneuman reduced to ashes
the revelation of his p
capitulation to unnatural dl'llttn._
Richard Dorn plays t
officious court-appoint
psychiatriat with a good 8eNe
defensive discomfiture. Jo
Greenslade lends an imp · · !
note of authority .. the jud :• !
while Theresa Carroll an · '
Mau ri,ce Choice as courf
employees add fine flavor. tf · ·
a hard, bitter, cynical woman
with a passionate repulsion for
her mother and stepfather which
is only partly explained in the
play, She is methodical and
analytical, and in her: climactic
scene she is devastating in her
matter·of-fact approach to her
ch0&en profession.
Victoria Bryan'• drab 1'
authentic eet (sketched from
real thing in New Yor "' Bellevue Hospital) is col
impersonal. Its central
stationed witness stand alao
dramatic movement on stage. (.
"Nuta" ia a must for devo
of serious, ialue-oriented thea •
It continues (wit h Cyntb
Walker alternating with C«n
the key role) Thursdays UU'UUIW
Saturdays at 8 p.m. and 8W11~r11
at 2:30 until J u ne ~ at t
Newport Harbor Acton Thea
390 Monte Vista St., Costa
The opposing attorneys
present a sharp contrast. Ralph
Richmond is strong and tightly
wound as the older,
establishment figure oJ the
prosecutor, while Craig Berenson
as Com's advocate skillfully uaes
his youthful c harm as a Call 631-5100 for ticket
infonnation. ~
*BARGAIN MATIN-*
MINNlq tlH'll .. .....,
All P9'1orrMncff befON 5."00 PM (&llft .,... h llll I II ... ....._.,.,
8tf!I• l•M;:oo-J ........... -~~":l-1
"9&.W M•IAGAr--------
lAl<fWOOO C fNH~
SOUTH .... , "
w ~,... .• _._ ...... -..... .....J: :!!.!*·-
~ '· . ...
ANAHEIM IH.llVI IN
~-"'"' W'J I I ..
Clm·ll-
'" ..
Bill NA f'Al<I\ ''" '' '"
'· '
LINCOLN """" t •N
~-""" w· I I ...
C.·11 .....
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~""----o_ranoe...;;.._cou __ t_oA_1L_v_P1_Lo_r~_uee<S __ •_Y._M_~_1_1._1e_e3 ____________________ 811111 Cllmlmlfll------------------------
The hole affair was grand ..
Grand opening ceremonies were conducted recently at a new
Winchell Donut House at 15333 Culver Drive, Irvine.
Participating were, from left, Vincent A. Lambiase, president of
Winchell's Donut House division; Wayne Leonard, store manager;
and William M. Harper, regional viee pr~sident. With the new
outlet, Winchell's has 837 stores located m 16 western states.
Department store earnings up
Carter Hawley Hale Stores,
Inc., reported first-quarter net
income of $6.2 million or 18 centa
a share Monday, a sharp jump
from $2.6 million or 8 cents a
share posted in the same period
last year.
first quarter a year ago to J 7 centa
a sh.are.
Hawley.
Carter Hawley Hale operates
124 department at.ores, including
th e Broadway, Emporium
Capwell, Thalhelmera, J ohn
Wanamaker ~ Weinat.ock's, in
addition to the high-fashion
Bergdorf Goodman, Holt· · Carter Hawley noted that
earnings for the 1982 period
included a gain from early debt
retirement of $2. 7 million which
bro ht total earnin for the
Sales for the first quarter of
1983 wei-e $723.2 million, the
company said, up 13 percent
from the $639.4 million reported
in the first quarter of 1982.
"Th.is is the second consecutive
quart.er in which earnings have
shown substantial growth," said
the com y's pn!Sident, Philip
' Renfrew and Neiman-Marcus
stores. The company al.so has
junior apparel stores and owna
the Waldenbooka chain.
NOTICI °' ~· MU Cont.ct Trwt .. T,,.._ .... ~ Aciv.nc-rnede by~
On Mey 18, 1113 • 10~ un. Cont.ct T,,_..
UPLAND MORTGAGE SE~E Dated: Aprl 7, 1983 co. INC. u Tr<.t.., or :1<94...iioc*eor~'°' Uptend MonGllQe TNllle or sw.tltuted T~ of SeMoe Co. Inc.
1N1 c:.t.in Deed of Trwt 9MC111ed 391 N. Centr91 Ave,
by Roy E. BM...,. and June 8 . Upielld Ca.. 917IMI
8M¥Ws, husband and wife. and Tel.: (714) 981-1078
rec;orded Oc;tober e. 1980 u Medellne Seyre
ln1trument no. 12264. In book Fortlelo9ure 8ecr9IMy 13779 . page 1939. or Olllc;lal Publlehed Orange CoHt Dall
Record• or Orange County. Piiot, May 3, 10, 17, 1983 CallfOfnla, and pursu1nt to U"t 1 _________ 1M2 __
certain Nolle• or Default and rtll.IC Mn11C( a.ctlon to a..~ r9CIOrded
1
______ nu _____
1 May 27, 1N2 .. Instrument no. NOTICE Of' f'Ua.tC ~
82-182928, In Offldel Recordl of THE ORANGE COUNTY BOARD
uld County, wlll under and OF SUPERVISORS ON JUNE 1, ~I to Mid Deed of TIWI ~ 1983 Will HOLD A HEARING
It public IUC11on tor c;Mh, CMhllw 1 REGARDING THE ADOPTION OF
TO START A FORECLOSURE
24 hr. Service
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL
WES PAC R ECONVEYANCE
"! ,. c.11-Corporation
(714) 955-0696
checll, or cuh 9qulvalent (wtllcll THE IMPLEMENTING ACTIONS TIM~~ by theTMMI 5 ~-------------------___, deys J>(IOf to .... , It The rronl PROGRAM (LCP PHASE Ill) FOR
8l9PI to C11y Hell, '1 CMe Cent.r DANA POINT SEGMENT LOCAL
Qrde. 8tM, Ca. al 1t1et r1gM t1tt1 COAST Al PROGRAM.
and int.-~ to Wtd. now Tll1 h11rlng wlll commen<1e at
llllkl by II under Mid Oe9d of T""' •.30 Lm.. or .. _, lheraher ..
In the property situated In Mid poaalble. and will be held In the Cowt(y and St.aw deM:rtbed • Board of Supervl1ors Hearing
Lot 21. Tract 3115. 1n ttie City Room. Orange Count( Hall of
of eo.1 ....._ County oe Or-., Admlnl1tratlon, tO CIYIC Center
State of Calllornla. u per map~ tr"Ptel~~~ 1 TH ~ 1n 8'* tot Pee-4 t to 48 ,,...__ m.pa In the off1o9 CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL
of the County Recorder ol Mid' QUALITY ACT. ~ Or-.. Loc;al Coutal Program• are
Tiie '11ree1 addreH or other 11a1u1orlly 1Hmpt from CEOA
Gommon de1lgnat1on of ••Id requlfwnent9 pur9Uallt lo Section ~~43 Labf'9dor Dr .• eo.a :!:O:o.. ~ 12, of tile Pubic
N•m• and addreSI or th• Metetlel that you w1111 to. be
beneftclery at wt1oM request tile brought 10 the Boetd of Supervl9oo .... a. bltrlg ~ o.te ft atwntlon at 111e '-""Cl •-' be
Riordan clo Upland Mortgage !led with the Clerk of IN Boetd 24 ~ Co. lno •• 3tt N. Centre! houri or more prior lo lhe
Ave., UPiand. C&. t17M. ac:heduled "-1ng; lix C09iM -DhcttOnl '° .. ..,_ property required. may be obtelned by req1191tlng ~or more lnlormallon. contact _,_,.ti~"°'" 1M beneftd•y EMA·Plannlng at 12 Civic Center
wltllln 10 dey• from tlle first Plaza, Room 288. Senta An•. putll: 'h• of w. noUoe. Calllornl• or telepl'lone (714)
8ald .... .. be ..... without 134-6378.
CO¥lftMt w wvrenty ~ or Oe1ect Mey 1e, tte3. imp1ect,. M &o 11111 ~' 1 1 I •1 or BY THE ORDER OF THE BOARD ~ '° ..ia.fy tt11 ll'ipald OF SUPERVISORS OF ORANGE ~due on .. note Ot noeae COOHTY. CALIFORNIA
_,,.., by Mid Deed of TNlll, &o (SEAL) J\.-AMxandet
wit: tl1.000.00, ptl'9 the 1o1owtr10 • CW1t of Ille Board
.. 11111ated coet1, .. ~ and of SupeM8ors of ~ .... ..,,. Of .. lnlllll of Orange County,
publcdoft °' tNil NOCIGa of a.-Celltomla ...,.,... .... ,._, ~ 20. ~ °'~ eo.t .O.Uy
1912 -Conlect T""'91 Plot, Mey 17, 1983
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~ Baak of O~Couty, with ~ pre9ident and leCl"etary, lo c:m.r.. of investor
offioee ln Fountain V . hu announceid the reladooa and new ecqullldona. R*t1 W. Rauer
appdnbllitllt ot..QakW. • £'8e¥efl')«-• Yioe --hM--beeftc-~ to ten.IOF vice,. ddmi in ........ _ __.~
prealdellt and rnanaaer of ita Loa An1ele1 cbarae of lntemal ~dona. Nuey CerM)' baa
Branch. Etcheverry, with 2~ year. ln the been promoted to vice pruldent of
bAnldDM ~ wu previoualy with Valley development, BtepllH R. MoarH hu been
State 1'mk alkt City National Banlt. named vtce preeident of accounting ..-vice and
· Jolla AC9rl0 hu -urned the post of treuurer. • • •
AJr lrvlDe, hie., the Southern California
commuter alrlinelr.~~~tina out of John Wayne-
Orange County l\.U}KJrt, Ji.aa inaugurated new
~r 1ervtce between Orange County and
San Diego. The new service, which began Monday, features two round trlpa dally,
departing John Wayne at 7:40 a.m. and 4:16 p.m.
The return fllahta leave San Diego at 8:~ a.m.
and 5:15 p.m. All aeata are priced at $41, but the
price drope to $35 with seven-day-advance seat
reservationa. • • •
USA'8', Inc., of Santa Ana, a sraphic arts
and aalea promotion corporation, haa been
awarded an official United States Olympic
Committee marketing lice nse for the
development and distribution of USOC-themed
posters, a commemorative historical brochure,
Olympic book and 23 "Olympic Experience"
descriptive sporta foW..
• • •
J.C. Hamptarles Jewelers has been
accredited by the American Gem Society,
making the firm one of ~30 accredited gem labs
throughout the United States and Canada. The
c.ertified Gemologt.t title la the top honor given
after passing detailed examinations and courses
of study in gem evaluation and detection. • • •
Robert Clay, pree.ident of Clay Pabllcom,
Inc., the Irvine marketing cornmunlcatlona firm, will aoon appear ln hia fifth different "Who'•
Who," this time "Who's Who ln Real F..tate."
Clay, already listed in "Who'• Who in
Cali1om18," ''Who's 'Who ln the West," "Who's
Who in American Busl.nesa ~d Industry" and
''Who'• Who in Public Relations." la a resident of
San Clemente. • • •
Comprellea1lve Care Corp. of Newport
Beach }\Al announced five promotions. William
¥.mes Ntc.I baa been named senior vice·
OVER THE COUNTER
• • •
Maralla J. Aacleraea, director of A•bana
West Semlnara ln Fountaln Valley, hu been
honored with the Walter H. Jarecke Award,
given by the Department of Rehabilltatlon and
Special F.ducatlon at Auburn Unlveralty for
excellence and contribution• to the field of
rehabilitation. • • • • W.R. Grace le Co., parent company of New
Amerlcu Ret&auut Corp. of a.ta Mela. El
Torlto-La Flet&a Ratauuta, lac. and Far West
Service•. both of Irvine, baa announced lta tint
quarter operating reallta. The company reporied
net income of $32.9 million on aales of $1.4
billion, compared to net of $144.2 miq.ion in the
same periocl of 1982. The company expre•ed
optimian for a continuing economic recovery,
saying that it believes the first quart.er repraents
the low point foe year-to-year oompari9ons and
that results will gradually improve .. the year
progresaes. • • •
Sale of the Bay Plaza Apartments In
Torrance haa been announced by Newport-
Beach-baaed investment real estate broken
Marcu 6 Mlllic'8p, hie. Selling price for the
130-unit complex wu lilted at $6.05 million.
• • •
SETAC, lac., of Irvine, has been awarded a
$3 million contract to provide systems
engineering and ranee and \eat-evaluation
aervioes for the Range Development Department
of the Pacific Mlalile T.i Center at Point Mugu. •••
IJoa Conti')' Safari, lac., of Laguna~
hM reported for the tint time ln mott than five
years the company had a profit for the full
operating yeer> in 1982. Revenues were $2,758,
195 with earnlnp of $427,380, compared to 1981
revenue. of $2,9'12,290 and a io. of $466,711.
~ ... =~ b1 = =' 11.0
w. = 11 iu
1 -I ~ wt , m =s-Yt -Yt 1J -114 .. 1, = JYI 11.1
I 111 2 IS-" -s 11
1{ -I
11.
II> =So~ lH = ~ I'·' • -E 1.1
1S-=I U:J
.I
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,II §JI
-
OrAn09 Coast OAILV PILOT/Tuelday, May 17, 1883
I ...
Wendy's to jofu in
ham~urger a'«f wars
.. -·
DUBLIN, Ohio -Wendy'• ll launoh.lnl a new
aaJVO in the mult1mil11on-dollar ad~ WU for
America'• tut-food dollar, one dep6c:tlna ~ •
victlml bf bad llel'Vi.ce and pc19r qualJty at ·~ twnburpr placet... Unlike the aggreMive Burpr
King ada that began late lut year, however, tne
Wendy's ada will not name the oppofiUon. "We don't
want to mention them by name and give them free
advertlaing," aaya Willlam M. Welter, eenJor vic5e
president for markeUng at Wendy'• Intemad.onal Inc.,
the nation'• third largest fut food chain. "People
know we're talking about Burge r King and
McI>onald'a.'' .
Strike settled at Bekins
SAN DIEGO -A month-long strike that had
1harply reduced operations at Bekina Moving &
Storage Co. ended Monday as more than 500
Teamsten throughout Southern California returned to
their jobe. 'n\e union, which lncludee more than 50
merpbers of Teamsten Local 542 in San Diego, had
walked out April 18, a day alter the old contract
e>eplred.
Guilty plea in solar lraud
SAN DIEGO -R~>nald Farnsworth, former
prealdent of now-bankrupt Major Dynamics Inc.,
pleaded guilty Monday to charges tied to a ma9lve
80lar eMrgy tax lhelter fraud caae. ~a hearing
in U.S. District Court, Farnsworth, 45, entered guilty
pleas to conspiracy to de1raud the government., and to
aiding and abetting the preparation and filing of a
falae income tax return. Proeecutora said the caae
involved $8.3 million in losses to people who had
invested in Major Dynamics.
Soviets to get new grain deal
WASHINGTON -The S oviet Union has
accepted a U.S . offer to negotiate a long-term grain
sales agreement, a Reagan administration official said
today. The old five-year agreement, which has been
extended twice for a year at a time, will expire on Setn.!°. It WU negotiated in 1975 in an effort to
1ta · the erratic buying runs on U.S. granaries. The
piact went into effect 0n Oct. 1. 1976.
Oakland gets a new hotel
PAKLAND -Downtown Oakland's first major
new hotel since 1927 h.M opened to crowds of curioua
visitors and about 100 first-night guests while
workmen continue construction on the upper levels.
The 20-story Hyatt Regency-Oakland, part of the
city's new downtown conv~~ center complex, is
the first hotel built in the area since the Hotel
Leamington was finiabed 56 years ago.
Oil-price drop worries Regan
WASHINGTON -Treasury Secretary Donald
Regan says a aecond round of world financial problems
could oecur if oil prices drop 1harply or if the
lndua\rialized economies are slow to recover.
Meanwhile, a Tre.uu.ry officW,'who would only·~
on condition he not be named, noted that oil prices
have declined aornewbat in recent days a:nd uid the
eaaing could lead to another major drop in thme prices.
'i\Jnlesa we aee a better increue in the demand
for oll. we're going to .ee a aoftening of prias. which
could exacerbate the crtm," the official said.
~ deacribed the financial situation .... still
precarious" and said, ''We are not out of the woods at
all."
WHAT NYSE DI>
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tuelday, M•y 17, 1983
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Daily Pilat
TU!:SDAY, MAY 17, 1983
COMICS C4 ClASSlfllD
Irvine's P hillip Collins ( feft ),
swings away, Newpor t pitcher Bob
Hicks (above) delivers and the
bearded Sam White and Collins.
(below) combine to force a
runner at second base.
o.u, "°' l'ttotoe br L .. p.,,,.
cs
Spl-ints:
Crews
sizzle
SACRAMENTO -UC lnrine
and Orange Coaat College ended
their crew seasons on a very
success ful n ote Sunday,
capturing the varsity eight and
junior varsity eight races on
Lake Natoma near here.
UCI's varsity shell won with a
time of 6: 10.4 w ith Stanford
finishing second in 6:17.0, nearly
three quarters of open water
behind.
OCC's JV eight had a clocking
of 6:03.4 to easily defeat second
pface UCI (6: 14.9) and four
others.
W est Coast p o wer s
Washington, Cal and UCLA did
not compe te because of this
w eek end ' s P l\C i f i c -1 0
championships.
The UCI victory in the varsity
eight was its third Western
Sprints title, the laat coming two
""years ago. Colnpetition the key
J Seniors play softball in county Ie11gue·
Orange Coast has won five JV
eight titles in ·a row at the
Wes tern Sprints. Coast's
freshman eight placed second,
the first time in seven years the
Pirate frosh has not won the
Western Sprints crown.
"Just because you're 70 years old doesn't
mean you 're dead."
By JOHN SEV ANO I
Of llM Delly Pllol &left
It is a common misconception that once a
person reaches the Golden Age of 50, he or
she suddenJy becomes limited, especially in
terms of activity.
And the beauty of it all is that they're not
alone, as evidenced by the existence of the
Orange County Municipal Association Senior
Softball Lea_gue, where more than 190 senior
citizens over the age of 55 compete on a
weekly basis.
Members of the UCI varsity
shell included Pat Dibb (bow),
Steve Esslinger, George Basile,
Jeff Johnston, Greg Stringer,
R ay Voss, Dave Kelly, J ohn
Sessions (stroke) and coxswain
Mick Currie.
I It's like a thoroughbred who is no longer
racing and is put out to stud to enjoy the final
years of his life. Senior citizens, as we usually
,refer to them, are often depicted as thOISe "old
folks" who play cards, sit and reminisce about
"I feel very young. I feel like a kid," says
Similuk of his participation with the Newport
Beach entry, which 1s managed by Saint.
"There's enjoyment an play ing. The
competition is there.
"We play like youngsters. We want to
win."
"It's entertainment and recreation for
older people," adds Saint "I'm sure a lot of
guys feel they can't do 1t any more because
they're old , but just because you're 70 doesn't
mean you're dead."
The OCC JV eight included
Scott Smith (bow), Ruu Forbes,
Fred Adam, Eric Moe, John
Markle, Matt Hainline, Sheldon
Kirkpatrick. Rob Marsh (stroke)
and coxswain Rich Cami.
the good old days and, for activity, maybe
participate in a checkers match or two.
There are some old timers, however, that
don't adhere to such thinking, aod as a result I go out of their way to show life doesn't
necessarily end at the mythical 50 plateau.
So, while the league stresses having a
good lime and emphasizes Its physical value,
there's also a certain degree of pressure to
win.
Verally 9ighl -1 UC Irvine. 6 10 4, 2
Stenlord, e: 17 .03; 3 Sen Diego SI • 8: 19 4, 4
UC Sen Diego, 8:22 e. 5 Long 8"<:11 SI •
8:27 .4, e. SI. Mery'•• 1:34 2
JI/ eight -1. Ou1nge Cout, 11:03.4; 2 UC
1rvtne, e: 14.9: 3. s111111ord. 8: 18.9; 4. use.
8:22.0: 5. San Diego St . 11:23.7: 8. Long
8Motl St .. 6:27.2. Pete Similuk, age 67, and John Saint, age I 59. are two such individuals. ln fact, if you
didn't know any better you w ould swear these I two just made their high school varsity
baseball teams by the way they talk.
"This is excellent exercise," says S1miluk,
a part-time actor. :'And t he medicinal value?
You can't get any better.
Froen elah1tt -1 St.,l0td. &:05.2; 2 occ. o u1 4, 3 !sen Diego lit e 152: 4. u. of Sen OieOO. II 17 4, 5. loY(Q-~I. &.41 4. II
Sent• Clere, 6:48.3
Novice eight -1.Stenl0td, &:05.9; 2. long
8HCh SI., 11:011.5: 3. UC Irvine, II: 11. 2; 4
0reng9 COU1, 8: 15.7 5. Sen Diego SI., 11:22 e.
,.
That's because Similuk and Saint both
play softball -and they play it for keeps:
their competitive fires as strong as ever.
"This also gives the old timers who
played years ago a chance to go back to the
(See SOFTBALL, Page C2)
e. UC oevts. 8:211. 7.
ller .. ty tours -1. St. Mety'" S.41.2: 2 0renoe eout. e:42.t .
Mears looking to reverse 1982 Indy finish
lNDlANAPOLIS (AP) -One of the
very few people on hand who didn't feel
the excitement in the closing laps of last
year's lndianapo~ 500 was Rick Mears,
who was too intent on catching Gordon
Johncock to realize he was part of the
closest finish in Indy history.
delayed qualifications for the May 29
lndy renewal.
200.311. Mears, who is at team owner
Roger Penske's Michig&l:) International
Speedway today tb MB'l a ~00-mile test,
had a top lap of 201.342 and Rahal was
clocked at 202.429.
collapsed left lung, a puncture wound in
his lower left leg and two bruised heels.
But Johncock agaln stole the spotlight,
this time from Mears and Bobby Rahal,
both of whom were actually faster
during the day's practice session.
Mears, the 1979 winner and the
record-setting pole-position starter m
1982, steadily cut into Johncock's lead
down the stretch, pulled virtually even
going into the final lap and then lost the
world's richest drag race to the Cini.Sh
line by just .16 8eCOnd.
Johncock, a two-time Indy winner,
had been struggling, along with
teammate Johnny Rutherford, a three--
time winner, to get into the running for
the pole position. Now, with five more
days to come up with speed because of
the weekend rainout of the first two
days o f time trials. Johncock has
apparently found some answers, turning
two laps over 200 late in the day.
Rutherford, however, continued to
struggle, getting his virtually identical
Patrick Wildcat IX up only to 189.354.
In all, 38 cars made it onto th e
2 1h -mile Indian polis Motor Speedway
oval, and 16 of them got above 190,
including the one drive by Pete Halsmer,
who hit a 197.498 fast lap, then slammed
into the first-turn wall the next time
around. Halsmer, 39, a two-time starter
at lndianapolls, was taken to Methodist
Hospital, where he was reported In
satisfactory condition with a partially
Halsmer became· the third driver to
wind up in the hospital since practice
opened here May 7. Bob Harkey remains
in fair condition with multiple injuries,
while John Paul Jr. is recovering &om a
fractW'ed ankle.
Rookie Jim Buick's car also hit the
wall Monday. but he escaped injury. His
car suffered severe damage to the right
side and rear after making cont.act with
the fourth-tum wall.
Ric k Mears
"It feels good being part of it, but it
didn't feel so good because I was the
wrong part," said Mears, who Monday
continued to string together laps over
200 mph as he prepared for the rain-
He came up with a 200.222, making
him the 15th driver this month to top the
magic number, then followed that with a
Roughhouse tactics anticipated
Moore says Duran will use his head, elbows from the start
NEW YORK (AP) -Davey Moore says he
knows how to fight "roughhouse" and expects he'll
have to when he defends his World Boxing
Auociation junior middleweight title against
Roberto Duran June 16 at Madison Square Garden.
It is onJy the 13th pro fight for the 23-yed'.r-old
Moore -who has won all 12. nine by knockout,
and has successfully defended his crown three
times -compared to the -75-4 record of Duran. the
formf"r llghtweljht and welterweight champion
who turns 32 the day of the fight.
Among the other fast drivers Monday
was 1969 Indy winner Maho Andretti,
who managed to get his new Lola up to
198.982.
Cougars'
Dodd tops
South Coast
·Barons club way
to CIF golf finals
Moore sald Monday he expected Dutan to "try
and gain control early in the fight with dirty tactics.
You know, he'll use his head. his elbows. He's a
street fighter. Well, I can fight roughhouse if he
wan ta."
But Duran said he's never been a dirty fighter
but that "as aoon as a fighter comes against me, he Magic sa ys Lakers
Ca~ Valley High pitcher
Bill f>Odd: a junior with • 7-1
won-loss record and a 1.25 ERA
in addition to a .432 batting
average for the champion
Cougars, haa been named the
South Coast~·· PlayM of
the Year by the dn:uit'1 bueball
coaches.
POMONA-Fountain Valley H.igh'a golf team
caplW'ed a CIF RCt1onal title and qualified for the ca fin.ala a week hence after roWns to a two-
stroke victory at Pomona National Golf Co~
Monday.
The Barona, led by Rlchard Takahaahl'a 76 and
Brian Orgill'• 77, averaged 80.8 for their top five
finishers to edae Dana Hilla and Loe Alamitos, who
tied for ~at 405 on the par 72 ooune.
A1lo contributing to the vtdory were Oreg
Jordan and John Porrello (each wtth 828), and Paul
MU1Cente, who oarded an 87.
"It wa. one of Rkhard'i better rounda of the
yur," aald Fountain Valley Co.ch Dave Brown.
"He wu the Sun.wt i.ea,ue lndMdual champion
lu\ year M a freahman. but didn't make the ffnala
th1a year. So, it waa a nice ~ for bim."
The Banxw. Swwet J....eacue cb.amp6ont with a
10-0 record, dkl it With a totally unden:W. unit.
Jordan and M..__,te are a18o eophornonl. C>rsSJ.1 t.
a junior and Porrello la a fntehman.
'tile CJF finala are next Monday at Camarillo
Sprtnca Goll C.OW..
...,.,..,. ~ .. ~mes .
Moore said he ii looking beyond the Duran
boui to a shot at unifying the junior middleweight
title. "My objective t. to beat Thomas Hearns," he
said of the World Boxina Council champion. "When
I beat Hearns -without a doubt he's bonailde -
then ru get my ~·"
Daplte Duran a fonner prowea, Moore aaya
he'a in a no-win attuation agalnat Duran, perhaps
beet known for hi.a exclaiming "No Mas" no more
and quitting In the eighth round of h it
welterweight title bout Nov. 25, 1980, ln New
Orleana agalnat Sugar Ray Leonard. "If I ~at
him," Moore Aid of Duran. "they'll aay he'a over
the hill."
Duran has fought six timeti alnce the lam to
Leonard, winning four. ,
Volleyball finals at Marina
Marina High School ln Hunt11\8totl Seach Ml
t>.en aelected a1 the alte of Friday'• CJF 4-A champl~p v~ball ahowdoWn between two-Ume defwndlnC champlon ~ Beech and
Sea View Leque champjon ~tanda. It atarta at 1
p.m.
will win it Wednesday Speed and power ia reflected
l.n the fiiat team 1electioaa.
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Guard
F.arvin "Magic" JohNOn of the
Los Angeles Laken predicts that
the San Antonio Spurs will
disappear In 'fhe Natio nal
Basketball A.18ociation'a Weetem
c.oruerence final playoff 1erles.
The Laken lead the 1erles 3-1
and need only one more victory
t o clinch the beet-of-seven ma~l')up. Game ~ la Wectne.day
nl.f,ht ·in The Forum.
'We are the deftlndina leap
dwnpk>na and we a>me to play
every night," aaid Johoaon,
whcm 81 polnta, 17 ~-and
elaht reboundl •t San Antclnlo
129-121 in Game 4 Sunday.
''They're aotna to be ~h."
Johneon adcfed. "'but ..-.·u ~· them w~. We're a ~t
team. We keep PrCM.na tha&.'
"I know w. Can· tM. them1''
aald Lakera center Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar, who scored 26
points Sunday. "They'll come
ready, but we'll try to win It
quick."
San Clemente'• JeU Carr (11)
and Allan Rom..n of La1una
Hilla (9) combined for 20 atoles\
baaes, wb lle C_aj>_o'a Gary
Thomuon had 12 RBL
Loa Angeles Coach Pat Riley
wu more prqmatic. "It'• at.111 not "'9T ftAll
over," he aaicf' "but w~'re ln the :---::i-:c.:.'~ v.-"· '1.1.~ poaitlon to cloae It out P -LeeflWMl.....-~Jr ... ,. 1.4t
Wednetlday " c -AMII-._ Jf •• Ma . lnf-"°4>....... ...., ......
"We've won out thei., (at Loa w-o.....,.., ._ !!• :1:
A.nteles) before and we 'tan win ~==" c.pe. ;: "°°
out there !ljaln," couni.n San ~ a.~ Jtt, .111
Antonio Coach Stan Al beck. ~=l:rC: !a= = t ; :1: ''The worat thine we dld wu ' .,.
come heme. We Uiould ha~ jlA8t ""'•-Te&:~·~. 1tayed there and played four ...... '"~ ~ •· ~ • .,1
pme1." • • . fltn ..... --ro "::: b etc--. 0.,1 .,,., VlllW1 ,.:. Albeck wa• a nary • out ••" Of•"'•"' . r:'Jollft ... , •••••.
Sunday'• offlclailn1, which w:::::•:. ,.._, ........ ~ 111 NIUli.d ln i.o. A.nplel ahooUnl ... l.lplefl UilMM .... Ir. 1wt.011. 44 fl"M \brawl to ti. Spun' lt: 0.,1 ••• -... . •
. -.~,. .
....
C2 Orange Coaat DAILY Pll.OT/Tueaday,_May !_7, 1983
Car dina ls, Vikings
to play in L o ndon
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. -The a
Minnesota Vikings and St. Loul1
Cardinals will play the first American
professional football game in..ecirope
when they meet in a pre-season game at historic
Wembley S tadium in London on Aug. 6, the
Vikings announced Monday.
"We already had reached agreement in most
areas," saicf Vikings General Manager Mike
Lynn, "and what we were
waiting for was a letter
confirming the fact that space
h~d been booked for us in an
acc eptable hot e l. Jeff
Diamond (Vikings director of
ope rations) brought that
letter back from London, so
now we're set.
"We're definitely going
to play the game, and we've
GRANT put a plan into the works
where by Viking fans can fly over and watch.
The Cardinals sent letters to their season ticket
holders, outlining a tour package to the game,
and they got about l,500 responses. So we're
going to do the same."
.Quo te of the day
Jay Jolm1tone, of the Chicago Cubs, on
former Los Angeles Dodgers teammate
Steve Garvey, now with San Diego: "Steve
is the kind of guy who, for laughs, does
impersonations of Tom Landrv."
Los Al j ock ey dies ...
Jockey Val Tonks died Monday ~
of injuries suffered during a quarter
horse race last week at Los Alamitos
Race Course, a track spokesman said.
Tonks was 19.
He had undergone brain surgery at Los
Alamitos General Hospital following the accident
last Thursday, when his mount, Alota Dream, rut
the inside rail and threw the jockey into the
infield.
Tonks was nearing 100 riding victories at
Los Alamitos and his mounts had earned $1
million.
Funeral services are pending.
It was the first fatal accident in the 33-year
history of the race track.
,,---~--~~----------------------~------------------------
T oronto still hot
Barry Boaae ll 1cored the a
winning rtn from third bue when
Milwaukee catcher Ted Sim mon•
dropped a throw at the plate ln the
11th inning Monday night 88 1treaking Toronto
won, 2-1, giving the Blue Jaya their eighth win
in the laat 10 games and moving them into a tie
with Boston for second place In the American
l-"'0 '"1• Ea.st. Dave Sdeb (~2) became the first
seven-game winner In the
majors, scattering nine hits
through 10 innings ... Bob
Kearney hit a three-r un
homer, Wayne Groll added a
solo shot and Oa,kland
withstood four homera and
six runs in the ninth inning to
beat Minnesota, 7-6 . . . Ron
G uidry pitched a three-
hitter for his 22nd career
OAOU shutout and Kea Gr iffey
collected three hits and scored three times to lead
the New York Yankees to a 7-0 victory over
Detroit . . . Larry Parrl1la hit a tie-breaking
two-run homer off Len Barker in the sixth
inning and R ick Honeycutt handcuffed
Cleveland on five hits as Tex.as won, 3-1 .
1,9 70 see Bucs lose
Jose Oquendo and Hubie Brookl a
drove in three runs apiece and Darryl
Strawbe r ry blasted his first major
league }>ome run 88 the' New York
Mets ~uted Pittsburgh's Pirates, 11-4, in the
only National League game Mon<ia,y. The crowd
of 1,970 for the makeup of Sunday's rainout was
the smallest in the 13-year history of Three
Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh.
Indy driver crashes
INDI ANAPOLIS -Pete
}ja l smer, a veteran of two
• I'.ndianapolis 500 races, was reported
in satisfactory condition with a • partially collap!9ed left lung, a puncture wound to
his left leg and bruised heeb Monday after
crashing into the first-turn ,wall during practice
at the fudianapolll Motor Speedway.
The 38-year-old<"driver, from Anaheim,
lost control of his Cosworth -powered
Penske PC-10 while speeding out of the first
turn on the 2'A-rnile oval. He skidded almost
head-on into the concrete wall and spun off,
finally stopping nearly 1,000 feet down the track.
Boston str ikes Gold • Marc11 Marek NICed 86 yard.I for ml
a touchdown mid way through the 4 • •
flnt quarter, and Tony Davl1 acon!d on
a 1-yard bW'lt late ln the game u
Boeton beat the Denver Gold, 17-9, Monday
night In a United Statee Football Leagu. e game
played in a heavy Beeton rain . . . Mlchlgan'i
Jolin Wllllam1 1cored three 1econd-nalf
touchdowna, the lut with 3:43 left to lift the
Panthera to a 31-24 victory over New Jeney. It
wu Mkhi1an'1 sixth ltratght vtctory. Hersclael
Walker of New Jeney gained 87 yard.I on 24
carries, giving him 1,138 yards for the aeuon to
move him Into the top spot tn the 1eason
siandinp. He acored on a 65-yard pa.u play from
quarterback Bobby Scott ... F r ed BeHna
threw four touchdown paaaes, one more than the
Wuhlngton Feder'1a' MJke Hoben1ee, leading
Oakland to a 34-21 victory. Waahington's la.at·
rninu.t.e attempt to acore died at the Oakland l
with 1:22 left.
Baseb a ll today
1906 -Philadelphia's Rube WaddeU was
deprived of a no-hitter by Ty Cobb's bunt
single as the A'• defeated the Tigers 5-0.
1963 -Don Nottebart pitched the first
no-hitter in Houston baseball history as the
Colt .45s defeated the visiting Philadelphia
Phillies, 4 -1.
1970 -Hank Aaron scratched out an
infield single against Cincinnati's Wayne
Simpson for his 3,000th career hit and
became the fourth man in history to
accomplish the feat.
1979 -Dave Kingman of the Chicago
Cubs hit th ree home runs and Mike
Schmidt of Philadelphia belted two as the
Phillies outlasted the Cubs, 23-22 in 10
innings at Wrigley Field. The slufgest
included 11 home runs, f>O' hits and 109 at bats. ..
Today's birthdays: San Diego coach Ozzie
Virgil Sr., is 50. Hall of Farner "Cool Papa"
Bell is 80.
NFL d enied a gain
A federa l judge denied the • National Football League's request to
overturn the verdict declaring that
the league would have to pay nearly
$49 million to the Los Angeles Raiders and the.
Los Angeles Coliseum Monday ... 11 -time·
Minneaota state golf champion Joe Corla died of
cancer Sunday. He was 71 ... Los Angeles Kings
radio and television "voice" Bob Miiie r has
signed a new three-year contract with the club
... Nick Nlcklon, the-analyst on the Kings' radio
and television, also signed a new three-year pact.
T elevision, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Dodgers at Montreal,
.4:35 p.m., KABC (790): Angels at Seattle, 7:30
p.m., KM.PC (710).
SOFTBALL • • •
From Page C 1
good old daya. Do we have f°Un? We look like a
bunch of kld1 when we're playing ball. I
cenalnly don't think I'm old when rm out
there.
"The enjoyment we get out of thi1 ta
tremendous. We get a kick out of playing, tt'1
competJtive and lt'1 a chance to go back to our
youth."
Of coune, that doesn't necesaarily mean
you'll play like you dld as a Y()\lth. Bu( then
some things do change.
"I remember the last game 'We played I
hit a hot one down the third baae line and I
started out like a bat out of hell thinking I wu O 18 again," jokes Similuk. "Well, I went five Ol'
10 feet and fell falt on my face, but I never
gave up and I got up and kept on running."
Don't gel the wrong idea. The league lB
no joke to thoee who participate.
"Any sport that's worth a damn ia
competitive," notes Saint. "Even a ping pong
game la competitive. This particular thing
we're in is a good-natured competition."
"It's not worthwhile if you don't win,"
chimes ln Simlluk. "'The competition is good.
It's not fierce like the younger people, but we
play hard to win."
As a result, Saint, Newport Beach 's
manager, is constantly looking for prospects.
"We have a problem with getting guys
our age to come out," admits Saint. "Why? I
have no Idea."
Age w ould seem to be the logical reaaon,
but Saint and Similuk scoff at such a
suggerstlon.
"A Jot of guys are afraid to get hurt at
that age," concedes Saint.
"Yeah, but you can get hurt more likely
walking down the street than you can playing baseball.,,
Well, if thia story has rekindled ;my fires,
and you believe in the slogan "You're never
too old," you can_J»lf'957-2515 and -,ou may
become young ags?n ... i( oniy in heart.
" . Franchise awarded
SAN DIF.GO (AP) -Owners or the United
States Football League's newest franchise say the
lack of a homefield is only a temporary problem.
In awarding San Diego the league's 14th
franchise, Chet Simmons, USFL commissioner, said
the Southern California city was a key addition
because of its "sports tradition, good weather and
beautiful stadium."
As expected, the franchise was awarded to
major partners Bill Tatham Sr., a Fre1no
businesmnan,.and Ken Rieu, a San Diego political
consultant and advertising executive. Tatham's 900
Bill Jr., has been handling negotiations for his
father.
The city's Stadium Authority has balked at
granting a lease agh!ement over concern for the
stadium's heavily-used grass playing field.
Riviera · right on schedule for PGA
Jay Flood Mo nte Nitzko wski
Negatives held
• • to a rn1n1Illulll
by poloists
MALIBU (AP) -Too much candy and too
many beautiful women were the major complaint&
over the site of the world water polo champlonahipe
this past weekend in the first test of a venue to be
used for the 1984 Olympic Games.
The Soviets took their third consecutive world
championship, winning the gold medal with a 6-5
victory Saturday over the Germans in them FINA
Cup Y(orld Water Polo Championship.
Germany, which had been undefeated In the
tournament until the final game. took the allver,
and Italy won the bronze in the seven-day, round-
robin event.
'The United States placed fourth and round.Ing
out the teams in order with Spain, Holland, Cuba
and Hungary.
"It is very nice," GemlAn c.oach Nicolai Firolu
said of the seaside Pepperdine University, where
the swim 1tadiwn ii aet in the lush Malibu hillside
overlooking the Pariic Ocean.
"It's really more than very nice ... It waa
very difficult for me to keep control of the pla?'era
beca~ there are ao many beautiful women,' he ·
said.
Soviet Coech Boria Popov had no oomplainm
when asked hia opinion of the fadllty. "Thll Lt a
beautiful place," was his only answer to the query.
Wat.er Polo Comrni-'oner Jay Flood aaid the
Loe Angeles Olympic Organh:lng Commltt.ee plana
few ch.anga for the 1984 Games.
"We have 1poken t.o the t.echn.lcal c:omrn1lllon
for the1r sua-tfam and the chef commiallon for
thett1, • • FlociCJ' aaid. •"The technical people llllked for
hlaher benches and the cheu aid there WM too
mUiCh candy. 'That'• the kind of~ we IQ1."
Still the roajor wony ment.loned by \he c:o.chea
ls the c.canaportat!on from ihe Olympic Village
about 3~ mtlel fJ"CIQ P~. Un!Wd &aia ac..ch "M.on.te Nltwnnld .aid.he
waa hoplna for b.Uoo$>t.en to take playen back and
forth.
"SeriolW.y." be said. ''The Uttle ~ 6eJd
near the uAlwnity wO\Od make a .,_, Jandlnc
ttrip."
The J'INA ~ wm the aternelt '-\ lot-the
Uniied Stat. waw polo ~ between now and
the Olyms*w and Nltllanrlld mid hew at.t.fied with hit ...,., •• performancL
"I alid befon Ii» tou.r'nal1M'nt 11 we wen ln the
llnal tour I would t.1 we wire on ICbeck&le. l am
not ecs\ltlc." ,he aald ot hl1 teem'• ftn.a.h.
I,
It 's the first major tourney in S outhland in 35 years
'f.hey're right on schedule for the PGA
Championahip at Riviera Country 'Club.
The rough is high and thick along the
fairways, the putting surfaces are like a billiard
table and the trees stand as sentries to errant golf
shots. HOWARD L.
HANDY
summer tour has 1 l dates, every Monday from June
6 through Aug. 22.
For more information phone Ives at (213)
430-0353 or Margison at (714) 892-2029.
• ••
The PGA Championship will be at.aged at
Riviera Aug. 4-7 and it is the first major golf event
to hit Southern California since 1948 -a 1pan of 35
years.
Ben Hogan won the 1948 U.S . Open at Riviera
and collected $2,000 for his efforta out of a purse of
$10,000. By compariaon , the PGA ChamP,ionship
will be cont.eated for $600,000 with the winner
taking home $100,000.
money winner on the Golden State Professional
golf tour for the spring session. In four events,
Carruco plcked up $1,526.
~PCOMING TOURNAMENT DATES: The
Childhelp USA tournament at Irvine Coast Country
Club will be staged Monday with a 1 o'clock
shotgun start. Many preeent and former Rama will
be involved In this one with Phil Olien hOlting the
event. Late entries may be made by cal.Ung bale
San Filippo at 770-6845 or <Annie Olien at 962-4806
... ·The fifth annual Orange Optimlat ch arity
tournament will be held Monday, June 13 at Yorba
Linda Country Club. A noon shotgun start get.a the
event under way with the $100 en~ fee incluc:tin&
green fee, electric cart. refreshment.a, trophiea,
prizes and dinner along with a jacket. For more
infonnation, phone Frank Sciarra at 771-3710 oc
Bob Mc.Donald at 537-2090. Proceeds go to the
Rehabilitation Institute of Orange County.
Al Geiberger, a past winner of tpe PGA title,
says he's looking forward to the event.
Thia La a mini-tour event that gives young
hopefula for the PGA tour as well as older players
a chance to play in competition and is conducted by
Doug Ives and Fountain Valley's Larry Margison.
'rhe summer tour will come to Fountain Valley
Mile Square June 6, switch to Mission Viejo
Country Club July 11 with another tourney at Mesa
Verde Country Club In Costa Mesa Aug. 8. The
"Riviera lends it.elf to a good round of golf
when you are playing well.'' he aaya. "The wind
can have an effect on the out.come. In the morning
it is usually very quiet but it blows pretty 1trong in
the afternoon. This can make a lot of difference
becauae the course is m uch tougher when lt'a
drier."
Incidentally, Hogan and Bob Hope will both be
honored at the tournament and the annual long
drive'COntelt will be conducted Rrior to the event. A
past champions clinJc will be staged on Tue8day,
Aug. 2 at 4 with the driving contest flnala at 5.
MiaDJi gains NCAA b~seball berth
One pro once described Riviera aa a Rembrandt
of golf counes.
. MISSION , Kan . (AP) -
Defending champion Mi.am.I, Fla.,
and 1982 runner-up Wichita
State were among six at-large
teams selected Monday for the
NCAA Dlvilion I Baseball
Ownplonahlp.
Riviera is ready and for the amateun it ii more
than a challenge. Recently I shot a acore of 101 and
felt lucky to get away with that type of round. 'The
wind. thoee aand trape and the ttte9, to aay nothµig
of the rough that ii already about u lone as it Will
be in Au~t. are very humbling ree.lltie. at Riviera.
Mi.am.I will take a ~-17 record
into the 37th aruaual tournament,
while Wichita State ii 53-13. • • •
RAY CARRASCO OF IRVINE wu the leadina
Al90 aelect.ed at-large by the
NCAA Dtvl1ion I Baseball
Supreme Court seen
as final arbitrator
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) -The
U.S. S u preme Court probably will
have the final word in the battle over
football televiaion controla, the
pretld ent of the College Football
A.modadon predicted Monday.
Dr. Joab 1bomu, president of the
Untvenity of Ai.bama. a18o uJd that
colle1e pre1ldenta were 1oln• to
become more active u athltUc1
airu11le1 throu1h a decade of
upheeVal and chaJ\Ce.
"I ihlnk there will be more mea.ninlful pnmdmual Involvement
in the next thrft or .four yearw Lhin et
any otner trm• U\ 'th • h11U>ty of
lnterc:Ollepte athledc9," ThomM lold
'!be AleOdated Prem from b.la oWce
ln Tu.8c.aloo-., A.la. "f'or one thlnl.
'Ml'Vt allowtd tM ll'.W4emic prop..-
to de~oraw and c:na .. embarnlllnl
lltuaUonl acrcm the COW'ltry." ,,_ l'.nOlt.,...... Oldlr ot ~
for c:on.p atbi.tk:a ia the redution
of the btittJe over footbell ~
rlthie. An appeel to the 8upNl'M
C.OUrt ta OM Of •vtrtl Ol>dorw the
I.
NCAA la CONldertng ln the wake of a
rullna lut week by the 10\h U.S.
Clrcuft c.ourt of Appeal.a.
By a 2-1 vote, the appellate court
upheld • lower court NUna whlch
declared the NCAA In vlol.ttion of
j anlltnot law1 In forclna member
.:hoot.I to partidpete In the NCAA
football TV plan.
New Raider
ALAMEDA (AP) -The Lot
An~let llaJden picked up • free aemt ~J.tore \ha.Na Tootball coUeae draft w ith
the arrival of A Jtxander Trent
t.oea.kt.
Al LcJCemJe the teunlt ncuuve
aul•tant, and ht. wlfe, Jananne,
rti11Hd an "All..fkar TUlnt ~"
on their MeODd IOI\. ••A blue-c~
PIOll*t all the ~." U. ntpJrt ol d\e l•foot. 7 ~ 1 I-pound, .lt-owa
wide ncetver~k bom 1:21
a.m.L.. ~· A,pril H. '1A bonw pick for
th• .rwaerr.
Committee were Pill\ American,
57-15; South Caronna, 33-11;
Tulane, 44-15: and Arizona State,
39-21.
The committee also named
four regional hoet.s: Florida State,
5 4 -16-1 and the Metro
Conference champion, In the
So1,1th: North Carolina, 41-8 and
th& Atlantic Coast winner, in the
East; Stanford, 37-15 and the
Pacific 10 South winner, in the
West I: and Arizona State in the
West ll.
Maine will host the Northeast
regional if It wins the ~C No.
l automatic berth. Eut Cout
champion Delaware, 33-13, will
be the host if Maine does not
win.
Michigan will host the MJdeMt
regional if it cllnchea the Bia 10
Utle next weekend.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, May 17, 1983 c.;a
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------·
Adoption Guild doubles tennis tourney . nears
TENNIS In keeping with the Umea. the Adoption Guild
of Southern Crance County'• 22nd UU\Wll doubles
tournament la turnlni to computers to help aeed the
contestants. ter t oee ee aya of elimlnatloM, the
And, aaaumlng the compu~n know their
businea, defendina champiON Rk:ky Leacli and
Tim Pawsat fiaure '° be •t the top of the lilt when
the tournament begina May 28.
1wvivon will compete at Newport Beach Tennis
Club June 4-&.
Adm1181on prices are $2 for the semjflnala, $3
for the fianla and $1 tor juniors.
The flnt day's agenda will Include an
exhibition match at the John Wayne Club with Jim
Nel&on and Bob Duesler against Mike Briggs and
Leach.
Elimlnatlon1 matchea on the Memorial
·weekend will takd place at Balboa Bay Club, John
Wayne Tennis Club, Meu Verde, Pal.taades and
Irvine Racquet clube.
~ . . ' . "
MA.K>fl LEAGUE aTANDtNGa
Amenc:.n L ... ue
WHTDMM*
• l l'ct. 09 19 15 .545
Beltlmore
eo.ton
Toronto ......__
111 15 .545
111. 19 .621
14 115 .493
13 17 .433
15 20 .421 12 24 .ass
IAaT DM91C*' 11 13 .594
19 13 .511 19 13 .511
111 16 .518
17 11 515
11 17 .465
'Ao
2 , ...
4 , ...
~
NewYOr1<
o.troll 14 17 452 4'-' .......,.. .....
New y Ot1l 7. Oeltotl 0 Te••3.~1
Oelllet>d 7, Mrnn..oca II
Toronto 2, Mllw-• 1 (11 lnNngl)
ClllceQO •1 Beltlmot•. jlC)d • rllln
Only e-edledlAed T..,._0--~ (Kleon-.._ f) M s-nte ("9ny 2...t). n
..., Y-(Howtl C>-1) ., DMrOll (Morrie
3-5). n
Chlcego (Hoy1 2-5 end ~3-2) et 8*11more (~ 6-0 _, ., o-4). ,..,
K..-Chy (Our• 4~) 81 8oMon (Tudor
1-2). n
Toronto (Clency 3-1) et Mllweuk••
ICedwell 2...t). n c1 .. elend (Sutcllll• 5· 1) et Teau (Metttacl! 2-1 ), n Oekland (Codlroll 3-2) et MlnnHOI•
(WllH ..... 2...t). n
Nettonlll u..-
WHT DM9'0M
Dodeet9 Allente
San F renciec:o
Sen 01eQo Houeton
Clneltnneti
WlPGL Ga
24 • .727
22 11 817 2
17 ti 515 T 15 111 .441 ....
11 21 432 10
15 20 421 10 I.UT DIV1efON
17 12 .&M
17 12 ISM H5 15 500 12 17 414 11 20 355
11 20 355 ......,. .. ._..
2'.4
5
7
7
~ York 11, PttUOWgh 4
San Frencieco el ~. ppd . rein
Only o-ICh8d<Aed T..,-10-.. Dodeet9 (V-...-4-2) at MonlrMI IL• 2·1). n
Atlenle (Pereiz 5-0) al~ (Aain9y ~)
Se n Olego (loller 1·2) et Mew York (S..-2·2~ n
Sen Frencl1co (McOelllgan 2-3) •I ~(Denny ;.2~ n
Ctnclnnett (Soto 4-2) 11 P l11e1>urgh 4c.nci.i.rta S-3~ n
Houeton (Mlallro 1~) '" St. LOUle (fondl
2-31 n
Aft9111• ........ • ~"111 90 W"-IM ear-113 20 50 2 20 ... ~
Fol 110 14 ~ I 14 319 o.cw.. 129 23 31 Ml 24 .310 ~ • 15 27 1 7 .303
Sconler'I 54 12 18 4 IS .2" Ro.-***>n ,. 4 11 1 5 .2etl
Orlctl 90 11 24 4 14 .2t7
Clark 73 4 11 1 I .:zeo ~ 104 • 27 2 11 .267
Lynn M 12 :t4 7 22 .260
Downing t1 20 20 2 7 .220
1'9..JecUor't M 17 21 t Ill .218 Velenllne 22 3 4 2 2 • 182
Wiifong 14 1 2 0 3 .143
Ademe ze 4 2 o 1 .on
~ 13 2 0 0 1 .000 T04ale ,1. 156 178 321 42 181 .278
• ~MW"-IRA 8encha 32 ,. 13 17 4-1 1.41
ZMwl 52'A 13 12 30 3-2 3.27
Kleon ~ 44 " 17 4-1 4.14 Fondl a... 43 10 t7 3-2 4,42
Win 30 21 " Ml ,.... 4.50 Cuna ,,.. 3 2 3 ().4 4.11
.._.., 1°" 13 0 I C>-1 SOI
Jolln 42" 41 • 10 2-2 6. 10 CortMln 7 12 0 • 1-0 6..14
T,,_.. 6 7 1 1 o-4 5.AO
OOltZ 3~ 43 21 15 C>-1 6.08 TOUM ~ 314 .. IN t•15 4.20
--3, a.IClhm 2 . ......, 1
A"""1cen ~
T....,_7,,,._.I
-York 101 001 004-7 0 0 Deltott 000 000 000-0 3 I
'"dllnt (I DecllklM)
442
421
381
358
355
347
34~
34• 343
33P
Aenegan, pelllmore, 11-4; Mollttt, Toronto.
3-0; Slaton, -~llw8Uk•. 4-0; RlahelU. New Vort<, S.1; S11tc:lln1, Clellelllld, !-t; Kleoft,
,........ .. 1; 9ellolln, ......._ 4-1; Sulton,
Mlh .. ukM, 4-1; Wllll9"0UM, Mlnn11011.
4-1. NAT'IOfCAL LIA~
Q .. " " Pct. A8nnery, S8n Diego 22 66 10 20 .364
0.-.. MontrMI 30 121 15 43 .365 Hendrick, SI. Loull 27 811 15 35 .364
EMier, Ptttaburgll 20 55 I 10 .345
llel'dl. Clnc*INltJ 33 128 17 43 .333
0-wr, ClnclnnaU 34 130 11 43 .331
I(, Hmndl, SI. Louie 21 1111 18 38 .321
:, T Kennedy, S.,, OleQo 34 125 11 4-1 .321
£..-, 8*' Fr16ncieco 21 104 27 34 .327
Cruz. HOUiton 37 138 18 45 3211 ....,.."_
Mutpfty, Atlanta. 11; ca.nwo, .,........,
10; Ev•n•. S•n Fre11cl1co, O, •r•o•, ~ 7; HendttC:k, St. L"CXllS, 7, Hor,..,,
Allllnta. 7; Schmld1. PnlledelpN-. 7 ........... .,.
Mwphy, Allenle. 32; K-.dy, San Diego,
28; Benell, Cln4:lnnell. 28; Hendrie-. St
lOIM. 2&; Oew8orl, MontrMI. 25: E-San
Francleco. 24; O•rner. Houaton. 23; G11•rr•r•, Dolli:,'!.: za; Schmidt. ~ 23; T. Phlloclelptlla, 23
"'°""11(10.CW..)
Monge. ~ 3-0; Perez, AtlMt•.
S-0; ......,, Detete. .. Dr•-*~.=: OleQ<>. 8-1; Mc:MutVy, Altanta, 5-1,
~ .. 1; Roow•. Monlreel. 5-1.
ltehnOpen , .. .__, .,,,....,.,. ........
Eddie Oll>l>I (U.S.) cMI. Olennl Odeppq
(Italy). 6-4. 4.e, 6-4; ~ Mwphy 4U.S I
de!. lkl•I• Molt< em (E1191and). 7 ·•. 1·2;
Mike leach (U.S.) del. M911n111 Tldemen IS....-.). 8-7, 6-2, 8-4: Jim Brown (US.)
Oaf Olveldo Setl>OM (Stall~ 6-1, 6-1, Meril
Otc:hon (U S.I def Eduardo Mezu (ltely).
8-1. 8-4. Mldliel $ch14>At9 (TM .._lhertlllcll)
def Cet1oe Klm\ayr (Btall). 8-3. 8-4
Grand Prt• Tovmement ( ......... , ....................
Pet OuP'• (0.S.) def. And,HI Meufef
(W•t 0.-manyl. M , 7.e, Clwle ~ (New
ZMlond) def Alt>enO Tout (SC*n). 7-5, 6-7, 11-4. Jlllro ValucO (Colornblal def Freddie s-(South Alr!U. 8-2, 8-1; OllfllloPM
Rog«·V-tn (Fr-) def. Trey Waltk• (US). 6-2. 7-6. ,
WonMn'• ~Open , ..... , ...... ,.,.. ..... w.... ~ (BulgWle) def MyfWn
8dwq,p (WMl Germany). 8-3, 6-1; Jo Ovrla (Brlteln)o.r. Kim SteinmeU(U.S.). 1-2. 8-3; E"1I
Pfell (WMt Germany) def. l..ude AOfMnO'I
(Aomanle). M .1-3. 6-3. Women'1 ..... Open , .. LllaMe)
Canceled du• to rain. p,111 mon•r
(1100,000) dMdocl ~ QU1111erllnali8tl IMnlnA 14.inge, Evonne OOOlegong. Kathr
Alnllcll, BonnleOoduMI<, M8"l811e ....... er, Ive
lludAroYa, Pwn C..... end ~ round ~Yvonne Vermuk 8nd PA1 Medtedo
MAKAR ......
'°9IT STANl*Oe
1 8ol>l>y AMeon
2. Herry Gant
3 Joe liluttman
4 .. IEllolt
5. Alcfl•d Pelty
..... Bonnell
7 Darr• W8Mp
8 Ok* StOOk•
• Ricky Rudd
lO Jimmy~ eTAMMNGI
1 ovr .. Wlltr1p
2 8ol>l>y Allleon
3. Cele YwborOU(lh 4. Harty 0M1
5. Rlc:Nrd P9cty • Bit Elllolt
7 Joe Rullman
1.5~ '·''° 1.432 1,413
1,381
1,331 1,313 1,2114
1,225
1.211
$200.280 St7'.820
$172.,320
1155.16&
1148.120
1132.266
Guidry end Cerone, l'wtty, ......., (I), Ujdur
(I) end Pentlfl W-Quidry. 4-3. l -.... ry. .,
tl-2. A-11,017.
e. OM EMnNrdt ...... 8onMlt
10,0.....M.U.
1121,116
111.221
116,016
M3.746 ................. , ~ 000 100 000-1 5 1
TP• 010 002 00•-3 10 o Berker end Bendo, Hone~cull •nd ~
Sundt>ero w-~. s.2 l-..,,.•.
4-2. HR-T-. PwrWI (I). A-tt,411
A'• 7. TWflM.
O•lend 030 021 001-7 1 I 1
M...._.. 000 000 CM»-1 10 ' ltl~·=t:=~tr:: lJiudN, w-4-3 1.-"-. 3o...t s-euroi-fl~ ......_o...111nc1, KewMy
(4). 0r.,_ Ct) MlnMeolA, 1&1g1e (2). ~
(1). 0*11 (4). H.w:1W '2). A-7/*. .... ,,..,.,_,.,
T~o 000 100 000 01-t t 0
......... 000 '°° 000 00-1 10 3 .... Mclflllt (111 _, ~ McOa• .. ~ w--... 74. l-McCM•. , .. , l-Moflllt (4~ A_.,.
'
Phlll<lelplll•
BOiton
Mew.JerMy
WuNnglon
UIPL
l'Mlflo w I. 5 I
5 •
4 7
4 7
Atlenlle
10 I
8 s
3 8
I 1C.
Centre!
l'ot. "" "" ~5 183 223
455 207 1ea
364 182 261
364 150 lllO
009 2211 110
545 243 213
273 1ea 271 001 150 219
Tempe Bey 8 3 727 214 202
Chicago 7 4 138 276 113 MICNOA" 7 4 .1131 232 210
BlnnlnghM'I a 5 545 200 144 111141fM1Ar'• ._.. Bo9ton 17, 0enVet 9
Mtchlgan 31. Mew= 24
Olkllllcl 34.:::;."f. ~
Oakland et=.-:•~
Bolton at WMl!lngton
Chk:eQO •I Mew Jereey LOI Angeltol 91 Oen.,,.,
PllHfde!Pflle 11 Alllon•. n ...... , .• o-.
Blrmlngllem 11 Mlehlgan, n
Mlchlaan 31, New Jeney 24 ..__. by Quertor8
New Jerwt 10 7 0 7-24 Mtchlgon 0 3 21 7-31
NJ-FOJICOCA44
NJ-Welk• 2 run (Jocol>9 klek)
Mlcfl-FG 8ojovlc 23 MJ-Sulltvan 4 run (Jecol>I kick) MICh-WllllM'll 10 run (lluJOylc kletl)
,Mleh-locy 2 run (&jOYlc klclll
MICll-WUllM'll 3 ron (llujovle ltlCk) NJ-Wllket 115 pua from Scou (Jacobs
klell) MICll-WlMIM\I 1 run (llujCWIC kick)
A-32U 112
IM>fVIDUAL STATllTICa
RUSHING-Mew Je<My. WelU r 24-17,
Certllon 3-12. Sulllven 5-20. Scott 2·2.
Knepple 1-e Mlchlg•n. Lacy 22-158,
Wiit!.,,,• \6-70. Miiier ~ 1 PASSING-Mew J ettey , S cott
13-:Z0..2511-2 Mlchlgll\, H_, 14· 111-231..0
RECEIVING-Mew Jeraey, ~ 1-133,
Weltcer 3-105. Mc:Conneughey 1· 15. Cerll!On
1·8 Mlcl'llgan Car1er 5-102, Echot• 4-13,
Col>I> 3-42, HOiiower 2·24
MISSED FIELD OOALS-Michlgen,
llujovlc 43
ao.ton 1t, Denver t
lloofebyG--.
o.n-0 0 3 ·-9 Boeton 7 3 O 7-17
Boa-Mertlt 15 lumble re111rn (Muzeul
klc:kl 8ol-FG Muzettl 31
Oen-f'O 8pwlman 40
Oen-Sydney I run (kick l•lled)
Bo1-Davl1 1 run (Muzetu klckl
A-4.173
IMDIVIOUAL aTATieTICI
RUSHING -Denver, C•n•d• 15·11 Syoney 17-68. lK ~ 4-211. Mltt"-
9-23. Chool• 1·.22. Mori-2· --5 Bolton. StH I• 7-31. Crump 9·21. D
JoMeon 4.19, Oe"'8 1-1. loel<ett 1-5
PASSING -De nve r. K Johnson
9·23-1-68, Mor11«1M<1 t-3· 1· 17 Botton .
Wellon 1·22-0· 101
RECEIVING -Denver. J e mH 2·30 M1~iolek 2· 15. Canaoa 2·2, Sydney 1.12. Ford 1-1 A Johnaon 1-e. M11111ew 1-3
llollon. L-•tt •· 73. C Smf111 2· 12. St-2· 10. frlll\I 1· 13
MISSED FIELD GOALS -Bo11on. Mazzetti 40
Oeldend M. WMNngton r1 ..... .,~
WuNnQton 7 10 10 0-21 Oel<l.wld 7 20 7 o--34
Oak -~ 7 PIM from 8eMrlA
(SllM kldc) w..,, -HolmM I p-from ~ (Vm.llO kldc)
Ooll -Aldridge 1 run (l<ldl failed)
WMll -FO Vltlello 37
Oak -Aldridg8 6 pue from Beeane(SllM
kletc) vi..,, -HolmM eo .,... from HohenMe
(Vltlello kkllc)
O• -Hendet8on 11 pue from a...... (Si-kldc)
Ollk -i:s-1 18 p-from 8euno (Bllw
kle*) . Yi_,, -f0 Vl11911o 32 w..n -Ho!mee 21 p-fl'om ~ Mtlello klclll
A -26.100 ~· .......... RUSHING -WMl!lng1on. -'-13-68.
hytor 14-52, HOflenHe 8-27 Oakl•nd, Jec:k-10...t4. Whittington 14-39, ....,_
2·21, HolmM 3-13.
PASSINO -W11hlngton, Hohen1H
12-30-1-231. Oolllllnd, a...n. 22.,, 1-~·27.
RECEIVING -WMl!lngton. J-6-4t. ~4-131, Wall«l 2~. o.lderld, 8enka
6·114, Whllt11191on 6-111, ChH1•• 4·40. ,..,..__ 3-33, ,,.._, a-11
FIEU> OOAL8 MISSU> -Nono
eo.noe
Toronto
MontrMI
ChlceOO
NAIL IAlnM ometOM Wl~o.AIP ....
• 2 11 10 13 37
3 1 • 5
3 2 10 11 0 0 0 0 ~DMel<*
• 7 0
28
12 a
Twnpe Bey 2 4 10 14
TulM 1 4 7 14
8 18
7 13
TNm ArMf~ 2 1 2 I 1 11
Fl. Lauderdele 1 4 I 10 naBM OMlfOfe
15 11
VartCOVVW 5 0 0 2 • u
llwttle 1 • 3 7 a ' GolOln Bey 0 0 0 0
S4WI OllOO 0 0 0 0
0 • c
0 c =c---No Ofll'* T...-. o.-
Mo OAfW~ .......,. __ ...... .,.. ........
Chloego Ill T°"""'°' 11. ..._ 11 T..,,, A1Nrio1. n NA&.....,. ._..
0 " ... 10 0 20
a • " 4 a " I 4 Ml
1 1 •
""°" ..... 3 1 0.12
• t 040 15 • 1.11
4 • 1.u 6 • 1M
Strike-breaker rehired by minor leagues
Briggs is ranked No. 1 naUonaUy In doubles for
14-and-under and held No. 1 for lingles nationally
for 12-and-under.
won tour natfonaJ titles without I09ing a aet in
indoor, cay ... and hardcour!.
Leach la seventh In the world In junior
rankings. while Van Linge and Leonard are both
world class players.
Also expected to be on hand when the
tournament wlnda down to the flnallat.s will be
Jerry Van Llnge and Tom Leonard.
Van Llnae and Leonard held the title for five·
straight years before the youth movement of Leach
and Pawsat stopped the streak.
The tournament benefit. the lioly Family
Services of Orange Couniy.
L'each, a Laguna Beach High senior, and
Pawsat of USC, where he la a freshman, fonn the
No. l 18-and-under doubles combination. They've
Sara Regan la presiding president of the
Adoption Guild and organizing and directi.ng the
tourney are Nancy Short and Wyn Wllaon.
Loe Alemlt09 MONDAT'e MIUUI
(1Jtll ol '2-n19'11 ~ -Ing) flltaT MCI. 400 yercb
SOCIO< Smert (BetO) I 40 3 40 2 40
Fell And CllNY (Vel<le~) 7 60 4 20
C<><n1 On Oto Blue 41'eullnel 3 80
,.110 reced 01 Hok•. Apeche Deck, Dupllcete Stell SwMI Polley, Victorian
Copy, Vekllyeu
Time 20 37
12 UCACTA 19·8) pllld $73 20
HCOMD llACI. 350 ylM'OI
All WOfld (PK~enll 5 00 3 40 " •u
Summer Wlnd1 (Frydey) 10.00 I 20
8ua• Bers (OelomD•I 3.80 fMlltD llACI. 400 y11d1
Julllns Ea1y SI• (Hert) 8 00 4 00 3 40
Bux An Ace1 (Treuuret 3 60 3 00
T .. Jeya Plan (Frey) 5 80
Also raced Mr Diel Meyre, Fence Flgll1er.
Top Mohegen, Venture Fotk1, Another
Excuse, Joey CM.
Time. 20.23
fOUllTH llACI. 350 yardl Ledye Ramble (Oelom•I 11,00 6 20 5.00
Our Flying Setnt 1MylH) 8.00 5.20
Smooth LOUIN (TrHIU•el 13.60
AllO r-0: My Ml• Fir•. Mill Huard . Have A Dendr. Linda Cherm, lll l10y LO.,.,
.Hol SnuH.
Time: 1805. 12 IXACTA (8-4) peld U2.00.
flnH llACE. 400 ye<d1
Midland Natl .... (T•HIU••)17 80 7 40 4 40
Go On Holme (Creeger) 0 80 4 80
Se A.uored (Hert) 3 00
Also reced RelM Your Ouk•. Oo Mel.
Vlva El Seta Time. 20 15
llXTI4 fllACI. 870 y11d1
Mt BB ROCl<•I (Llcitet) II eo 3 eo 2 60
ZMS Miio (PauMne) 3 60 2 60
Master F-IC<MQI<) 4 80 Also rltQICI Bettle Line. Mr Llberly Kid
C•tcn luck. Oeruuo, Baron 0111•
Time• 48 40
t:2 OACT A (4.el Olld S21 80
HYaNTM ltACI. 360 y11d1
Ptey Tuff (Catdoul 4 80 3 40 2 40
H11vy 0ooa (Fl'Ayl 3 eo 2 eo
Heia Ko!All (C•MQl<I 2 60
At•o r•c•d Ima Gun Runner. Rel>•I•
Selnt. Mr Quiel<,_., C•ll SllOt, Solllary Jet,
Running Ole! T lme: 17 7 2
12 IV.CT A (7 • tO) paid S30 00
llGtfTH llACl. 350 yerd1
Sound ol Sumrne<" 34 60 11 60 a 60
MIU CUii Credit (Hart) 5 60 3.40
Go Win SIA (lackey) e.oo
Also raced· Ptelly Relletle. 1\11111 Hope, e. .. y Uka .i.t. Poo llMt Miu, Erina luck,
Second HHven. Lillie Beldle
Tlme· 17.92
12 lV.CTA (6-3) paid S 147.20
12 l'ICK atX (3·1-3...t-7-5) peld '33.8117
with one wlnnet (ell horaotl. 12 Pleil SI•
eonllOlellon paid UOll 40 With 14 w1nner1
(live horses> *WTH fllACI. 400 yer01
o.ck• c11emp10n ffr8'fl 5 eo 3 eo 3 20 JelamOker (Werd) 10 20 • 20
Country B•lllet fMltcnelf) 7 20
A'*> tllCed Mighty M•rcu1. Tiie Ct...OIO
Kid HorM Wor1h Knowino. o.wev. 8<1g111 Moon Bofttllgtley CNnce Flit.,.. f:leo B•r
Mw B Fast
Time 20 •2 a oacu 11o-a1 PAid sas eo All8f'dlll'l()8 -8,771
Thia .......... .
TOMOHT Al A11Mllc Chy, M.J., 8obb)< Blend,
Toron10. VL Ben Serrano. Wermlnlater.
P• . 10, rnlddleweighl•. Jett Lampkin,
YOUft9110wn, Ohio. VI. Wiiii• TorrH,
P!\lladelphlA. 10, llQlll "-~·· At Mor1Mclge, (Cal-Stale Nor1Mdge
Cempu1). M~Hle<e, Okl•hom•
Cttr.,,. AaNm ~. Ken-Cltr.
lO. llw,.1~0..IOAY
Al Lu Vegaa. ~. llAoy Hiiiey, Lu Vegu, VL en-Curry, For1 Wor111,
Tex .. 12. tor H•l•y'1 World aoxlno
Counc;o ...,., 'T.,~ mi.
At Lu Vegas. Larry Hoim., Euton,
Pe , ve Tltn -WltlleApoon, Phlledelphll ,
12. lor HotmM' Wond Bolllng Councit
lleavyweigllt tll'-; MlchMI Ookea. Akron Ohio, va. Mike Weev•r. 0 1tHvlll1,
Te .. a. 15, tor DokH' World Boalng
AMocle1ion hw~I title IUNDAT At A tllt1tle Cl1y. M J • Jeff Cl\ll\dler.
Plllladelphle, ve Hector Cort••· lo•
Angele9, 10. "'Pf l>entamwelghll
STA~~ALI
Edmonton ve. -Yot11 I~ (NH VOl'll ,_,...,.. 3-0) T-.,· • ._
E.omonton et MY ...,_., n
~··~ MY l.lland«s 11 Edmonton. n (II -.a!YI ... ....-.a-
Edmonton ., NY 1911ndere, n (II -.aty) MerMO-
NY lllendeA II tdmon1on. n (II -UtY)
Jet cars featured
at OCIR Saturday
Six of the nation's top flame-
throwing jet cars will converge
on Orange County International
Raceway for the last Jet and
Rocket Nationals Saturday.
The high decible jets will find
the six drivers competing in a
round robin competition with the
two fastest cars and drivers
surviving to compete in the
finals.
B.akersfield 's Bill Carter is
considered the favorite, but he'll
be challenged by Doug Rose of
the San Fernando Valley,
Portland's Ni c k BarmQn ,
Denver's Don Knight, Charlie
Hand of Texas and Seattle's Bill
Hollivas.
Brad Anderson, the curren't
NHRA alcohol funny car record
holder, and San Diego's Chuck
Beal will stage a best of three
match race in their top BB/
Funny Cars, while Fred Geske
and Ed Jones will stage
exhibitions in their rocket and
wheelstander vehicles.
Gates open at noon with
eliminations beginning at 7 p.m.
There will also be a full
afternoon of qualifying runs for
the pro gas and bracket racing
semipro cars with final
eliminations in the eveing.
"We feel that this is the best
field of jet cars we have ever had
here at OCIR," says promoter
Charlie Allen.
"The fans really enjoy
watching these cars and the
flames that shoot out of the back
as they roar down the quarter
mile draf_'.Jtrip."
Carter s car is the Hot Streak.
which was recently purchased
from Hayden Profitt.
Rose counters with his Green
Mamba Jet.
Eagles' Christman --Sea View MVP
Estancia High 's Sally
Christman has been selected the
Sea View League most valuable
player In softball. Christman is a
senior pitcher.
AU.-HA VIEW LaAQUE
Flrel THm
Poe. Playet, kflool
P -M1r1he Fu. Unlve..ity
P -Oawn Rober110n. El Toro
C -Su•HI V•tcnor, Eatencle
IF-T8f11• &own, Unlv8fatty
11•-C•ren Cllrt10ft, El T0to
IF-Mine• Lux, Coat• Me ..
IF"-Wendr Merlin, Irvin•
OF-Joenn• Blelr, Collte M ...
OF-C11hl Cox, Irvine
OF -Kr19tln lomphlet, Unlverelly
Utll-Corl Cate, Unlverelty
y,.
Jr
Fr
Sr
Sr.
Jr
Jr
Jr
8'. 8'
Sr
Jr
leOOftdT-
p -I.IN Mortin, ltWM
C -Chri8Ue z.tlet. Slddlobecll
IF-Marlenne Bouffofd. IMM
IF-Sue Con-y. Eslencie
IF-Laura Hetnllndel, Slddi.o-
tF-MlfY'Trllt, El Toro
IF-ll .. Wayne. Newpof'1 HarbOI
OF-Shelll Coa, I~
OF-Cindy Alklnaon. Newpor1 Harb<><
OF-Keren S troup, El T0to
Ullt-T ... rl Focht, El T0to
~ .... ....,"°"
Jr
Jr
Sr Sr
Sr
Sr
Jr
So.
Sr
Sr
Sr.
K•rl Boothroyd (lrvln•). Fr . p; Peogr
C1llah•n (El Toro). Jr • p, Judy CracttM
(Newport HatbOt). Sr., p , Monlc;a Contrera
(Un1Y'Or811y). Sr .. If: Kwen Aotlert8on (El Toro).
Fr.. If: UM Scllumat<et Ceo.&• ..._). Jt .. If: Uaa Temlfto (El Toro). Sopfl_ If: ~ Oonwey ~t"1Ct•). Jr, 01: l...IYll Tu<nl>Ow (9 T oroJ, F< ..
of. 'Angle Oodd• (Cofone del Mar). SI' • utM
MVP -Salty CM1ttnan (E111aneie)
Intense sails to win
in Bolsa Chica Series
Forty-three boats in five
cliwel turned out Sunday for the
first race of Huntington Harbour
Yacht Cub's Bolla Chica Series
for Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet and one-design
~. Class A winner in PHRF was
Intenae, skippered by Allan
Rose~berg. Alamitos Bay Yacht
Club; Class B winner was
Warlock, Bill Kelly, Cabrillo
Beach Yacht Club.
Trophy winners in all classes:
PHRF-A -1. Intense, Allan
Rosenberg, Alamitos Bay YC: 2.
Tufter. Woody Sanders, Little
Ships F1eet; 3. Ms. Stress. Peter
Ganu, Huntington Harbour YC.
PHRF-B -1. Warlock, Bill
Kelly, Cabrillo Beach YC; 2.
Solar Wind, Steve Lawson, Navy
YC; 3. Top Banana, George
Moo~. Huntington Harbour YC .
NON SPINNAKER -1. Red
CBYC boats
finish fast
Brisk wlnds Saturday sent the
yachts In the second race of
Capistrano Bay Yacht Club's
Ocean Racing Series scurrying
over the course ln record time.
Trophy winnen;
PHRF-A -1. Roller, Steve
Franta, D•na Point YC; 2.
Rawhide, Kenny Kuhn, Capo
BYC; 3. Gandalf, Doug and
Suzanne Jonet, DPYC.
PHRF·B -1. Mackin.c, Wn
Thomp1on, DPYc;:; 2. Mood/.
Blu& Mike Hinton, Capo BYC. .
Gold Rush, Don Becker, Capo
BYC.
CLASS C -1. Holo KUd, R.ldc
Ralf-Mute Reardon. Capo BYC.
2. Xanadu, John Wold, Capo
BYCi 3. Blue Eaale, Ron Cu.rib,
Capo BYC.
Baron. Bill Mange, Huntington
Harbour YC; 2. ltotc.h & Water.
Tony Kotch, Westward Cnllaing
Club; 3. Wm. F, Tom Cooney,
Little SHips F1eet.
CAL-30 -1 . Investor,
Harriaon/Glick, Seal Beach YC;
2. Ole Mias, Ramling/Presley,
Seal Beach YC; 3. Callisto, Hugh
Hartman, Little Ships Fleet.
CAL-20 -1. Toad Stool,
Isabelle Loundaberry, Alamitos
Bay YC; 2. Nix, Nick Condor.
Alamitos Bay YC; 3. Alaris,
Robert Thompson, Alamitos Bay
YC.
lEASE ·A
1·913
(011Alll,
FOR
PER MONtH*
Leulng lan'I right for
everyone, but may be the
anawer to your new cair
Meda. L .... a brand
neW 1983 Mercury
Cougar for e19'.28 per
month on a doted end
INN. ,. -eom.1n.-.... .,.., ,_,.. ...... ...
Couo• of ,.., ott: ... ..
-.
C4 Ortnge Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, May 17, 1983
t;.\Rt'lt:l .lt
YOUR 6P.OTMER. POG.
HAS COME 8ACK TO
WORK ON THE J:'ARM.
ME'5 MERE NOW
THE
Fi\~llL \'
CIRClS
"Can I change my shirt, Mommy?
Everybody'~ r~qQ t~is.qne."
'9.\R'9.\DlKE by Brad Anderson
.,,, --· ~~
"It could be worse ... what if he didn't
llke us?"
'900:\ Bl'LLl~S
IN A RUT... ~W CAN
WH,AT l BE WORKING?
ARE YolJ I 1M TALKJNG
WORKIN<5 iO ~OU!!
ON, t>OODLE?
PUNl'TS
M ex.' AA881f MOOND
IS IN ACTIOH, HUH?
BIG GEORGE
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
JON 6<N! MOM BOV/ POc. BOV! HOW ARE VOU?
"Oh, come on. let me SH. My first effort• wtrt
lousy too."
DE:\:\IS THE '91:::\.\CE by Hank Ketcham
..
by Charles M. Schulz
WMO DO Y'OO TMIMK "
IS O{ASIN6 ME.? i I
I
,t;,) -.. ,_,,
by Tom. K. Ryan .
f' ~
I ~ I . .,.
·~\, GOlll 011 lllDGI
• BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF •
Neither vulnerable. .SOuth
de ala.
NOITB •• l:i'CUU
0 At
•A&JltU
Wf.8T EAST
+4! •QUU
·""'g9754 ""'v.w
OU OQ107UJ
•QTU •U SOUTH
+AJ1U7
""'AJlU
0 J(J4 •• The bidding:
S..Ui W 9M Nri Eut
1 • , .. 3. , ...
3 ""' , ... '""' , ... • ""' ow. , ... , ... , ...
SHOE
Optninr Jeadi Th,.. of •. b)e. The play b.canie a inat·
ter of routJne.
Tommy won the flnl trick
in d11aua1 ud lmmectilt.elr
ruffed a dub. He eroued to
tbe ll:IJ1C of 1pade1 and rurted
another dub. Tllere followed
the ace-king of diamond• and
the ace of V>tdet;""on which
dummy'• •fourth club •WU
diJcarded. Weil wu now
down to five trump• and lbe
queen of dubt.
Declarer led a 1pade, ind
Weat slurled hi• club, still
confident that he waa going
to score two trump tricks. He
IOOn found out differently.
Tommy ruffed a 1pade in
dummy and ruffed a club
with the ace of hearts as
West underruffed helplessly
'(l<!OJ, ~-·I LO~ GUIEfSU~~. 51Tn~~~ ... ~
NfJ PEACERJL... --
~
ORA BB LE
I'M UAL.\.'{ ~RIEO
A8oO't OUR
"~ot'f EAAM t'M No1
t.le.'f.'f \iU\( \ li>oi~IE.9
kt ~u..
t'M COO\., CA\..M A~O
COU.el1E.0~ t K~ 1'~~
6'>&lE.Cf JM11f.R Wf.\.\..~
bO A~f.AO ... ASI< Me. A.· ~~'flON '{OU 1"1~K
ft\\(;,"1 &£. ~ 'f"e. E'AAM ~
and Jed anoG.., .,..S.. .
Welt rtallseci ttlat be
could not attcird to Nff k.lill.
10 be trumped W'lfta lM ftH,
J'.>wllmy OYtmafW Will iiat
1lx. Tbeluldubwuled,aDCI
dedarer Mtecl W'ltll ~ jack.
W ett overruffecl wltlt tt11e
ldni. but be WU trapped. Hit
last two cards were the t-7 of
trumpt, while dummr ut
over him witll tile Q.8. No
matter whJeb trump lie eboM
to return, tlle remaininf
lricka were woa.oo tlle table,
and the 1lam wu home.
Some playe,. at tbe bridp
club never learn. No matter
how many tlllles Trump Coup
Tommy brinp home 1eem·
ingly lmpoaible eontrac:U
when trump• break badly.
they in1i1t on doubling him
w 01SU>!61'~ Ax.t1'1CM.
~~!>Of~E.
tfil~~' C.011\l'PCM\~.·
--·
""' U.. itae1 a.o.cl a &ru.mp Rid. n., cao't fathom
wlly. at momenta of ptat
adnnitr. Tommy beeolMla
.... ......... T1tJa WU
itatla&Mnaaple.
F• OllClt, TOIDJll1'• WddJAr
wu lileartUy eodorMd bJ
eYWJGee wito WU kiWtaLq.
Ti.o.t wi.o eould ,.. the
WNt bud wineed DOtJceabJr
•Ilea &Mt worth1 eleetfd to
double Oii tile ltnJlllll of lilt
five tnampe to~ kin1. Tbey
fell tut a eooeeuion of u.e
eoatnet wouJd llave been
better advi.Nd.
Tommr needed no clut
other tllae tbe double to find
tbe wiaaiDf U... When dum ·
mr eame down. be decided
that West had to have all five
miuinf trumpe for hil dou·
by Jett MacNelly
WArr ... oowr 1Ell.. ME. ~
· 't:DGE P J\RKER
•
-------
J
Orange Coast DAILY PILO"f/Tuesday, May 17, 1983 Cl ·-
Mob warfare lltOTmOUe lllAmlTA,_., TN fOlowlne ,...,. .,. dOlrlt ·----.:.• 642-5678
DUtON CMOUP .... Park Av={ &..tufta. IHOh,
NcMrd Alli\ DaM ... .,..,.1-~~~ ~~~~-:-~~~~~~~--:-~~~~~~--::._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
:=:'· ~ .... c.ltorNa CLASSIFIED. IHI •1•1t .,_a..... , ...... "'1a1e ij.._. a. 1a1e
Do1C11M Lam"'°"" u Glenn. • 1;;;;;;;;=:=iiiiiiiiiii11Mtl 191
0
....,.. aen ""'" •• .
LA County? • ID
Ron Adams
Adams top
fire chief
TORRANCE (AP) -
Mob warfare may erupt
ln Loe AJ\aeles County
becauae of a ateady
mi41ration of New York
ana Chicaao organi~ed
crime famille1, the
diatrict attorney'• office
aays in a confidential
re~~ real poealbllity of
gang warfare ex.i1ta If
the current trend of
migration to this area la
continued by ~ve
and highly motivated
Laguna Beach Fire crtrrµnala," according to
Chief Ron Adams has the report, which was
been named president of obtain ed by the Daily
the California Fire Bree%.e.
Chlefs' Association for The Torrance-based
1983-84. n e w s p a p e r s a i d
Adams , 49 , w as traditional Maf ia
formerly first vice families are not the only
p r e s i d e n t o f t h e organized crime moving
864-member statewide into the area . The
professional organ-19 -page district
iz.ation. attorney's report also "i' he 2 7 -ye a r fi re warns of an increase in
service veteran has been -J a p a n e s e a n d
chief of Laguna's fire Vietnamese c rime
department since April, families. particularly the
1981. Before that, Adams Japanese Yakuza and
was fire chief in the dty t h e V i e t n a m e • e
of Seal Beach. • • F r·o gm en'' and
OBITUARIES
Frank W. Sondeen
Me9l0rial serviees will be held Wednesday for
Frank William Sandeen, a 30-year resident of Costa
Mesa, who died Sunday at the age of 87.
Mr. Sondeen ia survived by his nephews,
Robert E. Sandeen of Redlands, Frank R. Sandeen
of Freemont, Mich., and P . Phillip Sandeen of Ann
Arbor, Mich., and his nieces, Muriel Majneri of
Columbus. Ohio; Florence Wern of St. Petersburg,
Fla., and Dorothy J . BerJamo of Phoenix.
Also sur viving are half brothers James
Sondeen of Spring Lake, M ich., and Walter
Son<l.een of Cleveland, and a half sister, Lillian
Ceton of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Services are 1eheduled for 2 p .m . at Pierce
Brothers Bell Broad~ay Mortuary in C.OSta Mesa.
Peter Vlahakis
Services are scheduled Wednesday for Peter
Joeeph Vlahakis, a resident of Costa Mesa for the
put 12 years, who died Saturday.
.. Th d Ti .. h IMne, Caltornla ta714 ...... .. ---un er s•rs. t e Tlla ..,... .. 0001tlodecl ~. INDEX -~
paper uid today. oenar• ""'*"""· For TuHd-.y ll'lrough L-a llU .. --.... L-·t•d In Tur11arocll T h t ~ OMtl T Pb y Ad Cal Saturday publlo1t1on1: ._ tr ... • -
..... ~ r • ptho r w • 9 Tlla .... , '"""' ... ...., wftt'i tt1e 1 0
64c2• •567.8 8:30 P·"'· the Pt'.vtoue !'lneat La1oon vtew from cu~flcent 4 Al~ ~1e2J ... M·..!!!!" .. • •• pre,_.'""" at e ~uest eowity c..t of~~ on • day. For Sunday and ~-4 "--th --t .. __ •t 4&0 bulf" ~ ... ,..,.,_ of county Supervi1or Alwl t. tMS. Monday publloatlone: ....,,.., ~ .,._ ·-.... • • • .c~. hteMtw me Ken~eth Hahn lut Publl9'1ed oranoe eo..~ 12:00 noon Saturday. llY .. PUii llff1111' ~~== =
February followtns news Piiot. Aftf. H . uay s. 10, 11. 1MI REAL ESTATE IJLU -Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba \U): 2 br enc1 ~t oenyon Yl9W
report• of lncrea1ed 1942-aSlc. , -..-2 ba dn. 2 boat apecea. Reduced-fl,400,000. l'llghrlght thl• love~
underworld activity. rtalC NOTICE ".:"~m 11111> \~ KHl1 ==~'Tc: may Pllllla.A -llUlflllT holne. Fllll {O!'i: 121 •
The. "~!'1all, loosely NOnc• °" INTINDa> T'IWttnR :::;: :::'::!...i.. ::: be made until 5:30 p.m. Ocean & jetty vtewa. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3
organized Los Angeles NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN that f."'''"'•.: ~-h :~ ~~llont~ rorllt !_~!'...·.~~ beth, 3700 aq.fl. $1,386,000. Oceanfront. crime famlly has 6een JOE BRANO, who11 bu11na11 c""""'M " icn• -...,...., , .,..., "rather cooperative," 1ddreu 11 100 Aleppo Street, ~ ... :; ttllt Monday publlc1tlon1, Ull llU
Newpol1 BNch, Ce11fomi.. lntande. D Tm• ion 12:00 noon Saturday. Remodeled 3 bdnn. 2 bath+ Jar-rec nn. tpward the move west by to tranafef to ED FRANCIS AlGANI ..... nt..in v.11.v 1034 Pie••• ••k for 1 "klll •-· the more sophisticated and JOHN COOK. wllOae ~ 11un11nt11 .. , a. ... n 1~ numbef" when cancel-beam cellinp, fumlahed, petioe. $420,000.
. 1ddr1u 11 70 McGuire Drive, """' ""'"""' too llng )'OUf ad p••lll•I •a-llUTIP and _effective mob W1lnut Creak, Calllornla, th•t'''"'"' 11M1 · .,-. ......,.
families, the report saya. following property ndw located 11 t;::::::: ~.;-r_n :g: ~ New 4 ht, 4~ ba, custom FNnch Normandy
One draw f o r the llOOAllpp<>Str•t,NtowpoOBaactl, i....tu,..N,icu.i '~' Chac:k)'®l'ad"• .... and Eltat.el.2primeac;:rehfil&op•l,250,000.
rime famlli . C1lllornl1. All of Iha equipment, L.k, '"'""' 10U ,._, ....... aan um--eastern c es la goodwlll. and trade pr-tty uMd M"'"""' v ... ,, 111111 r9'>C)rt arrore lmmadlat• --1 the glamorous movie by JOE BRANO In the~ roll ~·"P'''' a..11 1U11V ly. Tha DAILY PILOT U · Coron.ado 7 _, __ _. ,..,.t. L.-..#-t lot. a•• boat
I d d • Ind ooll lttWghlenlng and localed S..nlk~•llh IU70 IUmaa llablllfy fO( lhe ........ ~-..-,, .. .,,, '1 n ustry, accor ing to at 800 4'1eppo StrHt, Newport ~·"Ju ... < ·1•"""'"' ::~ first Incorrect lneartlon dock. Plana avail. Now '370,000 w/term1.
the report. Beac:h, CallfornlL The tran1far of ;t':'i"~A:·~ 1o1111 1~only~·~~~~~~~I ••I 11 e gal u 8 e 0 { th• propeny I• 1ubtec1 to ~ ... n 1_....... 11...,1~ PlllUNOHN
b d , Com"'41f'Clll Code Sao1lorl 8106. "Ullv I II."' h 1110 .. ·--la1 contra an narcottca w1t111nUW•llMf•lutput,ao1ar T....... 1t>11t1 .... -•
p e r v a d e s t h e 11 known 10 the underalgnad "'~'""'"" • w1111 In al · ind " lr1n1i..., JOE BRANO 11U uMd ~"'"~ "'""' t "'" II entertainment ustry, the following additional bu11n ... "'"·~· 1"~
3 br, 2 ba, frplc:, hnmaculate condo. On 1112 greenbelt. Comm. pool. $125,000.
the report says, adding n•mH 1nd addrenH: c. o. ~·~·~~7:;_"' ::~ Piii
that this d~u business BRANO. at eoo Aleppo s1raat, e.... ... -..,...,,. 1.llJ4 If PllFl...._1
h bee · ted Newpol18aach, CallfornlL l'•n•·h" 1.... IJl' WI ...
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
j l ~' f .j • ~ ) I 1 • • • '1 f I 1 (, I f) 1
as n 1 tra by The Intended trenarer wlll ba l'umni1 ""'f•"'' "" Newport condo. E1pa-
organized crime. OC>nlUmlnllad on (or after) May 25, <"""~""''"'u""' 1m clall)I lhatp 2 Bdrm. 2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mich l Pian ne f 11183 II the ottloe of and ctalme for iiupi. '" Un•u. 11JM1',_. bath •Ingle 1tory with •--------I . ae . co 0 det>ta of the 1r1n1,.,0r may 1>a fllad H ........ "'t.· "''"'"'1 1pa off muter 1ulla. 11f1Y Fii
Encinitas, identified as a with, KORTE. CRAIN & HEISLER, :;:;.:::n!:".t.~,: :~~ Greenbelt view of wood-TarlnrlflclUllfamll~homa TIE Tll...,. member of the New Attom.ye .Cl Law, 235 Montgomery 1,. ... •·~ s..1. 1 i.• ad 111111 and rofllng Ir.mi. 1 1r 11 York Gambino family in Streat, Suite 1823, San Franc:19c:o, Mut..1.· "'""' v.,..., 1•~ Seeing 11 belleYfngl Thia drHtlcally reduced for
Celffomla H104. The IMt date lor Mouni.•n °'""'" 14><! won't tut 11 $123,500. qulcit Nia by tran1farrad a report two months ago flllnS c111m1 for debt• of the 0no,,... ~-.. t:KtU e • t 1 • r ca I I n 0 w. owner. AblOlutll)I lmma-
to a congressional '''"' ar~ " May 24, 1983. ~: ::: ~::~'> :~ 646-7171 eulate. Short nerow. 4 committee was indicted Dated. Maye. 1a83. 114,..;,,,. ,..,,... 1m bdrm1., 2 (that'• right • EdWard Francia Regen, "-' "'-'Y IMO two) large famlly rrn1 .• a in 1981 for allegedly Tran...,_ 'l\rM 8hAnnc 1811 badminton court, dog
A read)' to move Into 3
Bdrm 1 ~ bath home on a IMge lot. Freeh paint,
,_carpet and dal1Qtlt1ul
kitchen mate•• 1hr1 a1-1r~1ve home very 1$>-
paallng II under S 110, 000. 'l'hl1 11 a mult to
TR \Dl'J 1()\ \I
~I .\I I 'l
• ......
WESTCLIFF, 1harp 3 Bdrm, bHutlful brick patio. new carpatl,
baam1, large yard, 2 lple'1. $239,500. a r r a n g i n g h e r o i n ~ 0,::.. ~ ~ l:: run, 3 ear garage-lot• of
hi ._ fro I•-• to room to watcl\ your s pmen... m ._y Publl1hed Orange Cout Dally RENTALS Wiii trade Lake Arro-family grow. " you haw
New Jersey, the report Piiot, Mey 17· 1983 "°""' . "' 21ou WhMd home or lot In the been ahopplnn around,
... , cait 646-7171 -lJllllllOOI: 00.-tl:S
saya. 229243 H.....;: ti::,~~ 110C community of Hamlltalr you wlll recognize. th• Reeltor'a, 875-eOOO
,()
. ,,
' ·! .: ., : ~ .. .. ·i
One large limousine P18.JC NOTICE ll·r;;,::~~::::::"" .... for Newport s .. ch value In th• 1875,000
service in the county is NOTICI llMT1NO ..,, c .... 11 .. tUm ~:, -"°""--· _7_14_1_75_2_·_789_1 __ 1 price Including Iha landl ...... W... t• :
being used as a front for NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that l .. ,...,.. Uni ~:~ ·-------lllTI Ill& llLlll ..
THE ~EAL
ESTATERS
d istributing n· 'arcotics, the Board of Trull-of the Coaat ~:::~:=: ~~7' 1m f A Ouelnt ,_ duPB. aoe Community College Otetrlc;t of o..pi. ..,, Furn u30 or d •ction Near new lrlpla x. One Sapphira opeii tt.--.o the document says. Orange County, C1llfornl1. wlll Oup+. ""UM 1m ft 3-badroom 2 bath unit. 3 bdrm,' 3 bath j;k,";'2
r-ive Maled bid• up to but no """"">cn" rurni.h..cl 2t>OO C I Two 2-badroom 1-~ bdrm unit. All brick, -----------lelw than May 25, t983, at 11:00 "-'-""Uni ' 2700 a a bath unlla. Situated on wood & ehaka. Near
_____ ML __ JC_fl>_TICE ____ ~tia~~ ·~~,";::'~: E:~a...7~ Uni = D i Piot ::;: :i'i1:~S:o ·;;:.: ~Bay .... '581 ... 00I).;_
NOTICI OI' P\aJC HEAMtQ 1370 Adami A...,_, eo.ta Meaa. lluwh Muwt. 2904 a y , onwn radavalopmant -u ... Notice " hereby giv.n l)U(IUanl CalllMnla. 11 whlcll 11ma Miki bide c ...... H""'" ~ AD ~l\D .,..._ Groea Income s20. ll._... lo Cellfornla HHlth end S1fety wttl be publlety ~ and read~: s.;,,,.,..' ~.... 190t • 11""9\ ooo. $235,000. --------Code Sac:tlon 5473.1 ol 1 publk: PAINT & BIND FALL 1~ Y~,;:,:i: !'s::-1;. m1 111191 -• •at..._., ...... hearlno to be ttald br. County Cl.ASS SCHEDULE, ORANGE •fVn'"'" w.,......i = 642-5678 11...... ......... ....-..1 p.lenJI 1117
Sanltatlorl Diltrtct No. eon June 9, COAST C0ll£GE c;.,._ !or llrf\I 1912 v EW of UY ....
19&3, et 7:30 p.m. 11 C081 A MESA All bide -to ba In accordence O!r." 11.-nlAlt. 191• I bay and llgh.. ft_._ a -
ClTY HALL. COUNCIL CHAMBERS. with ,,,. Bid ~ wNdl -au.. ... -"-"'•••· :it1e l~~~~~~~~~ from th•• decorator tvr-IULn 1•1 l•--· • ••-• 77 FAIR DRIVE COSTA MESA now In ftfol and may ba eacurad In l"umml H.-ntat. 19111· nl1hed 2 bdrm & den. • • ... •'WIMT -
CALIFORNIA. Slid '-Ing 11 to t>9 the olflc;e of the Director of '!"1""' f(,on1a1> :~ir---------1 Owner 11 rHllatlc and •Br Incl meet eutte, 4 Ba.
held '°' the e>urPOM o1 racalvlng a Puret\ull\g of Mid college dlatflct. ~;:·11;. ... .a Nu onar1 thl1 lllnt home with 1111 tmpr.-V. rnartlla 91'ttry, written report pert1lnlng to tha &di bidder muet eubm1t with hll boat lllP avallable. In • g1gant1e fam rm. c:uetom providing of .._. Nrvlee for 111 bid a caahl•r'e. c;heck, certified ANNOUftCEMENTS ,,. central loeetlort at 1 fair Tl llAll wood ~ Cll. frp6e & :=:',wt~':;~":.,":::~~~~ ,t>,::~~ ~o~ = ,. .. ,. .. ,.,~....,..,... Jl'N~ \•CC• ·.\\\-\ ~~~~ ~~~:x;>42~= A great 1t1tr11f home. 3 wet bar. Main ltv arH
be collected on the property tax Community Colega 0!91ric:t Board ;,,,., t.. ••"'"" ~ ~a\• Call for datalll. Euy to Bdrm1. 1t< bathl. New upper iev.i. Lri llv rm
•Olla l0t the neKt fllCll )'Mt. ot Tru•t-In an amoynt not late ~: ;::-;:·:;..,""'' :iot• \\' \ C ... and .now. 1192 Bay-palnl, earp9ll & drapaa. :~"':: ~ bflltc to;;:_
BY ORO£A OF THE than flw percent (5%) of the tum :;. "'"" ~ I"""'""'" JOI~ llde Cova Waat. Drldl-~~.o~~. Sp~ ,._ BOARD OF DIRECTORS bid " • guar11111 .. that the llilddar T•••• t lllll ·--._.., ·-looltlng ocean. Goum.l OF COUNTY SANITATION wlll enllr Into the propoHd N•IU Plllf only S t 13,500. Call kit wflOld WOOd ~
DISTRICT NO. e Conlrect II Ille -" ~ to BUSlfESS .. &er"' ., .. '"' 54&.2313 tty, parquet ftoorl. '*1-0F ORANGE COUNTY, him. In the _, of fallura lo Wit• flNANCIAl Owner traneferred .and llghte & roof 1«1ndeck. CALIFORNIA Into tlUCh c:or\lfect, Ille ptocaadl of "I told ii NII I d b Plue aooomrnod.uon tor t0344 Ettie A"8nUll Iha c;hec:* tMll ba lorlelt«I, or In the °""'"'_ .. 1·~ ""'" 11111 rlt~lt lltr ~th 1 a ora la maid~ & ..,.,, an
" ~H~=r..~927oe =-~~=eo~~.:;:"c'!:~ ~~~£::_ E:: Dail1 Pilot." ~rompaftl~m:= :r'~C:i ~~o~:f;
Sac:tetaty Olttrlc:1. Inv•~ ....... , w.,,....i •O:n llrabla ltraat. Charming -• -88Q. Attadl ger wf-.Jto
Mr. Vlahakia was sales manager for Park
Recreational Vehicle Sales and a member of the
Presbyterian Church of the Covenant in Costa
Mesa. He also was a Navy veteran of World War Il.
Surviving are his wife, Carolyn, and children
Bernard, Peter and William Vlahakis and Kim
B4:a!11. Also surviving are two grandchildren,
William and Daconso; a brother, Bemade, sisters
Georgia Weller and Mary Hooper. and stepmother' Tasia Vlahakis. I
Publlahad O<an~ Coul Delly No bidder ...,.Y wlll'ldr-hie bid •1-1o_.."' L.non •011 I •rrrhrd meoy calh 3 bdrm, 2 ba Cape Cod _,_,_ ins 000 Ind Piiot Mey 17, 26, 19113 lo< • parlOO '°' lorty-llYe (•5) deJI •• ,._... w ... ..., •cnt 1hr Ont day and •old with S248,000 of _,m. Take adllW!taga of own.-~.OOO for 28 yrwrnc: 1 2228-&3 attar the Oete Ml '°' the opening ,,....,_.. T" • .wu ii •hr ~ood dey for financing. Now o nly .,., dllllmme on Ulla one! UV.% f ~
Graveside aervices will be held at 2 p.m . at
Harbor Lawn Memorial Park with the Rev. Bruce
Kurrie of the Pn!sl>yterian Church of the Covenant
. officiating.
lhweol £ .... OY ... NT h S3•9 500 H•'• tr-•"--.-.1 -MUST • p UI • -----------The Board of Trutta. ,....._ ""'L -. l e prirr I wanlrd. I • · SEW F';,-.'k; locaUon ...... 305=A1-55IO ___ Pml.IC ___ NO_TICE ____ the p<Mlega ot <ejec11ng eny and Ill 11.1., w.n~·· \11'0 !l.d .. •d la lhr WATt:.RFRONt I r' MOnC9 0# ~or to waive any ltragullrttlal or • ''*"' w.,,.,.., ~·~ Rql•trr b111 1110.1 of HOMl:.S •-· ,_So. COMt Plaza. Hll -... 11 I IM.I ,
TMM'Tl9'9 SAL.a lnlormalltlea In any blO M In ti.. my rail• remr Cton> REAL !STATE lou, your gain fill ~ ,..._ioe on
1..a811-. -.USTO«.. t>IOdlnQ. AJ911Al.$ ·~ thr Datly PiJo1 931·1400 Kint Wlg6a etory Tc:M;i.1-...e.::n:;in11111 Pt, 4 9dr I
T.&..... ..... NORMAN E. WATSON ·~ ·-Homa delight. Call °"'· 3 Ba. Jult .... tq
W9T com" Sacr.c.ty, -~: Dal• AetlerM• MIU I UY 75 ... 1601 « 752-7373. ocean ' bey. Pl'IQad lo
DICKSON ENTEAPAl8ES, .. duly Board of Truat-I'-"-""° c-. M-.... ~ WALKER ALEE .... By Owlw. 175-7038
appointed Trull•• under th• Coat!~~ Peto "" --------"""' f
lolowtna dW:r1bad "-'of 1Nal. ~~ ~k·lt~ Realiltatlt '' •u -Will 8lLL AT PU8UC AUCTIOH Pu1>111 range Cout Delly M(JCHAICMSE .,....,_, _ ... ·-..,,.. -~• TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR PflOt May 10, 17, 1083 t "" and rnot9. beluelve .,_,,__ Drop everything and
CASH ANO/OA THE CMHl£A8 OA _________ 2_•1_1_-83_~1 ;~;"11•,:;" community with private r=n: rnova right tn. Lovely 3
CElmFIEO CH!a<S 8"£Ctf'lE.O IN n-·-bMc:tl and tennll. Prloed ~. 8dml 3 belti home wfttl CIVIL CODE SECTION 2t24h rtalC fl>TICE 8"111 M~........ exceptlonally. A1k for'~~~~~~~~~ eparkllng new kitchen
(pey9bla at Iha time of .... In i.wful -----------1 i·.,,,..,." Uiu•""""'' O 1 v Id HI r 1ch1 • r I· and ed)olnlng famlly
money of Iha Unttad Stat") alt lt-t5HJ ~:'"::':'V... &44-7020 '--altllT u~ room. Lowly tormail din-I 86NDEEN TN lollowlng l*1IOM -doing right. title and In.,_ oomeyad to NOTICE OP DEA TB OF f'u'"""" ..... lllll 'Utlll 1 -Ing, w11m flrec>lee• In ~ -and now held by" lllldal' Mid Dead LD..LA B. GLENN AND OF t< .... .,.. s.k.. .,.__ tatga IMl'O l'OCllft. Toc.iy * FRANK WILL I AM -AAHI co., IM2 ~t of Truet In Iha P«11*1Y '*"'..,_ p E T I T I 0 N T O ,...__.;..:a. :-=:::p;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;iii::-:;sJ Private ''!fr for large redone and ypllftad.
SONDEEN, pwed aw;L: Dr .• ~Ol'l&will,C..t2t41 ~~STORS: HAROLD R. ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. ~i=~~~-ry ~~~l~ '448.500.CaUo-..
May lS, l983 in Costa Ind (4) ~ ~"= 8TOl<O and MANA STQIWI A-111158. M••11""'""" Mlttlle b9tt1e. lmpottad i41.f211
Ca., He WU a 30 year OowlCI• Or., Hllntlngton W, BENEFICIARIES: llHANG-To all neln, benefidaries, ~=-.:~.. mantala. A genaroue ~ ~ resident of Coata Meaa. Ca. t2e4e P:ONG CHANG encl FAITH Ll-f<EN c reditors and contingent ,,.,., l'umuun &r of hardwood• thro11g
Uncle of Robert E. Sondeen Hom a A II • h y ar I. t I e 2 Ct1ANG c:ttdit.on of Ulla H. Glenn '""'"""""' hout. Shown by appt. of Redlands, Frank R . ~~~~Or.,HYnangeon9aach, ...... ~Md"'-11·1te2•1n1Cr. "'"'-•&r O.S..,,. c .. ,,,_ Ll1tad at 11.500,000.
S ..-. ·-...... --200tae of Offldll Aaooroe In and persona who may be s'"'"'"" 1;...,.. --. .,.. ondeen o f Freemont, Tllll ~ 11 oonducMd~1 t"9ofbofthaAecordarofOrlnge otherwllle lnterest.ed ln the TV K.<t•• s ..... .., I Ma.UOM Don daThoma hU ld-
PETE BARRETI
. REALTY
M i chlgan, p . Ph Ill Ip ..,_.. pw;i..... Cowlty;Mld "-'of trutt daaMbia will and/ DOI.LAM d It lo n al d etall 1 .
Sondeen of Ann Arbor, AIH MlrOtlanrnt Iha folowlng: or esta~ BOATS '9t0Nlnlle 751M100. I~~~~~~~~
Michlpn, Muriel~ of ~~=.flladwlththa Lot4t:C,T~ac:t~.~68~ bt~~~ ~c~t~e: ~,,:.;:1 rt..•• ~~\~ I Columbu., Ohio, Florence Apfl1o 1taof c-tyon ~"-rlndullveOf,,._..,_ Vlralnla Na1el in the !:.;" 7011
Wern of St. Petereburg, ' · nM1S1 mape, In the oflloa of the oounty Superior Court of Orange i;"''"" si.. ~::
Florida, Dorothy John10n Publlahad °':?' Cout Otilty raocwdar of lllld oounty. County requeetln~ tbat M•""" &q ... p 1011 Ber1amo of Phoenix Plot •. 29, Ml!y • 10, 17,,.. YOU ARE IH DEFAULT UHOEA A Wal•-r ... _ .. _tte •-:F.: ~ .. :·:~.~ 702' Arizona, \.i brother of J~ 1937-N OEUNEDL.,,,.~YTr.U8T DAT£0 5121112. "" ~IC ,.. "' ~ " ~~ 1022 ....... OU TAKE ACTION TO Na1el be appolnte a1 ~~.......... 7024 Sandeen of Sprlnl, Lake, rtaJC Mme( PROTECT YOU .. PRO~TY, IT penonal repreMntatJvee '°:::it~""'""'-~~
Mfi'chllgan,1 Waldt.ero ndeen fllCllhOUI ._. ~A:C: ~ ~iA =~~ admin1ater the estate of Lilla 0 eve an • hlo and llAl9STA,._, OF THIE NATURE OF THI! H . Glenn o f Co.ta Mesa. TRANSPORTATIOft
Lillian Ceton of Grand The foffowfng penon la doing PAOCEEOIHO AGAIHSTYOU. YOU Californi a (under the A•tn•tt !!0111 Rap't'· Mic~ 1:~ ~-=UOOLI, 741-llaker 8~~~ ~~Yft?-independent Adminlalration ~~ .... i.:.. ::! •erv cea WI • o n Streat, Coeta M"•· Callfornla ~.,.... ~ or _.. of Eatatea Act). 11\e petition M·•"• °'""' flllh,
Wedneaday, May 18, 1983 at 92929 la t f h """ ln De t ._......,. s..-. '°'' 2:00PM at Pierce Brothen ,.andolph•Baker lno .. a _..__ notion of propatty W eho.11 ae or ea ·-. P · M•••or 11........ .mo --. wwranty II~ .. to lta No. 3 at 700 Civic: Center H\"• liO'Jl Bell Broadway Mortuary. CelbM oo=:: 741 ... .,. aooiiMmrw:..,..._tialil., __ orooi1act1-)."The Drive West, Santa Ana. Ca. T•••"..,. T••"'' 1101•
PI er c e Brothers Be 11 ec: :-_ 11 _.: by a b-flol1ry l'"Nr aald Deed of 92702 on June l , l983 at 9:30 T•••" .... 011~1• I02'l ~~--~ w .. ~2~91M50o. rt u a r y ~111011. !.,....thef9b)lru11, b.:. ='°"~r=:,: A.M. AUT<*OTM
uu.;..,.., '" Aalldolllfl 1" * inc. llar9tolore uaclltad Ind IF YOU OBJECT to the Av•" ~.... tlOtO Tad flL 8o1ta d ... 1 PNlidlN ., varad to the undanlgned a lfanlln& of the petition, )'OU Auto S...-.~_.p_,,. IOI)
TNt ec•11iant -ll9d with tfle wnt'9n DlcellatlOn of DliflUll llld ahouJd eitMr a-It the "'"'• w""""" llO:IO Oemeftd fllr ..... Ind""""' nob ,,,,,__ ........ ""'" Ro·•· ••./) ~ =3~..: °"*"' C°""')' on of tw..:h and ol eMotlcxl to --hearing and atate your•-·• n. .. " 1t1:iu
,..,.1 th• under•IQntd to ••II H id objecllon1 or file wrltten r.:."' =
MaCObMCI( MOITUAl•i
Laquna Baacn
41M-s.15 ' LeQuna Hills
7M-0933
San Juan C.p111rano
49S-1776
Publllllad Ofanoa c-t 09'1)' ~to.._""' cit>lgatla II. objection• with the court """'•"'·<•-· 1100
Not, Aftf, 2$, May 1. 10, 11. 1NI ~":!:~h~ =·=~ before the hearing. Your AUTOS ll'Otl£1) , ______ _....,_111t.....,.a..-. llaCt6on to be reootdad .-..y 111 ap~may be In penon At••"'-" ~Ill) "9lJC ll)T1C( 1~ .. in.tr. No. N-0»811 °' or by your attorney. A...ii ,11,~
OfllOlll "8Clofdl Ill Iha OIWoe of "'°' I F Y 0 U A R I! A " ... "" ""'
"::."'#A'rt 1 •.r ~.:,~bc;o::d•, but CREl>m>R or a aindftCent ~~~~·.,, :::!
The folloWg petaon le dolnt wltho11t ciovanant or warrenty, ~&or of Uw deu•ed, yoU :~""'" •11r
-.....--.,,,.... Ot lmPllM.-~ .. mu.t file your claim wtth the •. ::.":."" m~ PACIP'IC Pi.oouoTI, 14111 ~1111111110, Of~ to court or preMnt It lO th•.... •liJ ~.Mo. 4-27t, .,.._ Cllfar'flla ~~tfle ,_... prtnapal """of pe2!10 1 repretentatlve 11·....i.. Vt1' ta'714 u,. _,,. ~ ll6d DMd of lwl\I 9121 T-..-....,.. ...,,, 2'8• T"*• .....,_ • 1n..., ._.. ap ted by the court J"'""' m •
1 . eat boa P1aa1. Ana11e1r11, ~. lldvWIOaa. If "'Y1 unclar Wi four montha irom the t:;;::,,...,,,.. ttit
Cllbnll lll02 the ..,,.. °' Mid DMd or Truet, date of flrat 111uanc• of '"""'"' ·:::: Tllll ....... OOll f M41d ~ M ..... dW'fl9 end ...... of .. Jett.en .. provided ln 8ec.1ksi .... ~... t l2T
WIMIML ~ofci;:.:~~tiy 700 of the Probe .. C.ode ol ~.,, :::;
n111 .~r."'::. 'C" _. .. 1110 HI• win b• h•I• on: C.JUornla. The time for ~~"""' t u&
ODuney °"" of Or-. OOUney W' : ~$· '"'· .... ""'-fflinl dahna wW not exp... ~~ :::: ...,_ ae. -.. ,,_., tfll OMo A_......,.,_'° prior to four motlthe bun u,d ,,.,
,.,...._, Otlftll C.-.,_, ~ -._, ~-lllt &be date Of the hHrlDI ~....:.:: m:
Not, Aftf, 11, -1, 101 t7, 1-At Illa tlma 0 U1a fllltlel notbd ~ ~ tttt ________ ,._1 .... _ ~of=-~-'°.:: YOU MA V l:XAMIN& ::""~.. ::r.
-.JC .. =-:......, w ... Mow the m. kept by the court. u "-"" "'fil-rDU:!.~l!iEI ~-·~~ ~:=.:: :~:.~~reen:!~ ::,_, :::;
-•14 ""U r --MtmlJ, I W1th the C!OUf't to ~ft TU)'oM t1• ...:-.:::•11111 ,_....II ...... ..::.::. llud••Hdl-.. "'.1peclal notlct of the ~...... m~
CAl"fAIN '°""'9 IOI CIMAM It ......,"!: :: =::, ':: Invent.Gey of •&a .. we1a """"' '"' =~O..DrM.l!Wle. oalll"l ln•> N1-ottt U1• fl'f andoftbepet.ldollll.~ •• m t
.. tit J4 ... I .. .... .......... and r.poJ'tl clffe11bed ln &UYOS. -snc .. , •r • ••" ... 1 ' Dilled ~!!J...1!!!:...-1u 8KUon 1200.1 of Uae ..,'!'I' -,._ ,..... ~ H#l1 .... 1 ..... ;:r;f, ..... ..,... ..... _ c.llamla ..... Cede. -.;o:; o.r::-...: •• , air.. ~ T.o."*'\10100., !;1th• 6 Wal"U· ~~~ •. c _ '*••·
Alf/w ii.°""'* ...... ,......,. Bl -Z&. A1t19 ...,.... • Nil ,_ ._ ... _._ .,~,,............ D. Wa.tt••.., ~ 11111
•
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OEORQE ELKINS CO
COLOWeu
BANl\e.R l1
...... ,... 1!11,'JM
t.arse family home with a small
price in Newport Beach. Thia
lovely 4 BR home often superb
value for the area & excellent
financing. 2K down & owner will
carry 2nd, usume lat.. $150,000 at
12W~ fixed.
IN NEWPOATCENTEA
644-9060
OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 1230 8AHO KEY Oft.
• I
HAAIOA VIEW HILLS
apedOla ....... flam • rm, .,._utltul lg yet on •
llC>PfOX ~ acte, llgflted Badminton court, I
patoe wit•• fire pit. ·: Owner S tl,000. •1 ·. ..,.. 1*M1'3 .;
._ .. Ill.I
Prio9d '*°" ..... lor qutctl ..... S •. I .. \-~
hGuM. Fee ..... -.m. fin SSS7,800. AoMrt9'
..... &eMe 4>0IOI °' .,, .... Mc tor~-
---Ill.I s 8dnft on •t,. 1erge ..... ., ..........
lltr . .-.11
._,,,,. ., '"" ... ·-~ ~-.
~a.ti II Or'lllll a..,°" == =-=-· C4ialef ,.~':'..: I ' •.-1 ~ =~ _.. .. -. Orwwt.OA--Ca. • aw ~·=-~~~ ~-, .. -~~~~~~~m~~~~~!!~i~!ii;e~~~~~i ~ ,......... a... i)Mat ~ Or-.. c..e D1U1 _... --
i... , a ,,,j ,..., • • JI. '.l...rt llllll a,..&. ti. t?,-teM ,.. 1117 '"II, IT,•• -________ ,., ,.. .... lJTMll
. -
C8 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, May 17, 1983
'"'"I• l< ...... ltr Wt _ ...... hn1!W In• Ve!•rahM Aprtlt!tt, !!!· Alu!l!!lt, Vt!. AMJ!!fl!t, Vaf.
c.te .... ltlt lt••1 .... HU lylt ftt llH ltwert ... _ bit Cme ft! ltr ltU Cttlt Im ,l11t lf!P!t ...... 1'111
,.1% Lill! lllMIT ~ ~l':-l:-O~· S,1111• • W.. ... INlllL IN!alillllll w;:111 ., ... 2 br, 1 .,., 3 dr!TI, prime Co1t1 e.utlfuly <*Ofat~ 1 110 0 . 13 ·f 0 t: f~!:-ne~~~J~':I~ LM ~~i~PLC 11Wl•I• peta. =.~1~ HOIOSCOPI
BY SIDNEY OM ARA M111 locatlOft. lot• of ..,,., unit 2 br 2 be wl1t\ MO IMO. POOL ·Petloa owrtiano -11764412
cozl cherm for only twga t.Nac., ¥t.w, bOel nloely t•nd1o•pecJ: 1'11 e.n ........ lw .... •-1-Br-~--O-.,-w-11-.....,.-.-v-..,,..,--'
'13 ,500.0ell t~7o ~ evd, PoCJI, W.ni to ...... lahnJ.... S1326. U0-1327, l Bdtm t'Ale M50 cute. 3&th siPenfn~
Udo Vlllege. "400,000. 8::.::•' uae 56Mt98, Ott. 726-M87 M4-ltl1 2 Bdrm 2"' Ba S750 SSH/mo wtty. 966--0090 w-...i d ~ .._ IUl.n !!!!!!!!.. !!!! C.. 2 Bdrm 2 s. +o.n •150 , .,..net 1ay, May 18 . \ ( '.-/ /. / 1l /" /(1
' llt-l• 4 Br 2 S. CdM 1900 vrtf .....,. TtrnM ll.... UM Frptc, v•ulted oetttng•. v.,...ttl•• 8tngle apt.~ ARIES (March 21 -April J9); Accent on theme. ~-;;;;;;;;;~-;a:;;;:;;;;;;.a;-.-t~~~~~~~~I 3 Br 2 B4l, s1000 Yff)' · sl>IO .. §Br. 2°" Be. c1een Flrept-. pool, dlehwaeh-dbl o:epool· .,,.. 'rlO ' eto~. Wiit lumlen 1tyle, charisma. You'll complete ie.t. You will be II -/HIHLI SP• ct• I •um m'• r TWnhff, PS>Of, ~og, eto. er, J:vl patio, xtre lrg &45:-2739w. 11t.~'.:..IM>5 ~~-~~ ... Alt •m•nltlH. free to experiment and challenge. Focua on
II ..... -·-.__ .... _ 1111 renlll•·1 Br condo on SIOO. Agt, 544-~ gar en. 2 Br. a&H.00., _________ , _________ 1
• . I
• -1,;!P~· ;-;;;;;;;;;;;iij bay, 4 Br rem'*"t hollM PANORAMIC M7·284t 1425-1528/mo. 1 Br. 1 e.. ATTN: LANDLORDS romance, creaUvtty and courage enough to~ go ot
Locetld on q\AM oul-de-1• on Bel 111. OCEAN VIEW UITllll 2 Br. 2 B• Ap1. Frptc, ~ laat etldtt repo<t1. eecurity blank.et. Libra and another Aries figure ::R,~'A~r!~:;: W l Wt IUl.n Htghty upgred•d 4 er, 2 81 l'A ea. T bllleonytyerd, LI A, ger-Ce Crec11t1>ue prominently. U.. ---••••1PWPW 21A s.. lr/dr. PV1 .,,.tied · ownhoull, IOI. oloee to 11or•. 714164~ TAUR US (April 20-May 20).· New app ...... ""h healed pool llnd epa ef· r.... ---·--• o om m . I 2 1 8 o / mo . '595/mo, oetp0(1, 11nalt 110 c.nter • ....... ford• a convenient,~ 3 BR, lerge eoltd Oek llM111 844-tUO pet ok, teundry rm. TSL Mgmt. 642-1003 Vll'Hl!IN 2 br, 2 ba, pool, brings desired resulta, especially where bargaln1ng
lty ttte •lyle at • 1981 llnllly room with a· IOlld 2648 Otenoe ctubhou11. lrptc, 1700. session ls concerned. Focus on ownership, etlCl'OW,
prlo•. Cell 979-5121 Oak ber' wetnecote, VtrMlllll: FUiiy ~. Nice 4 Br. Condo 2'A ea. TSL Mgmt 842-1503 UH/mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Sandy 042-0148 dividends, interest rates. Some rules will .__ st-Agt. herdwood lloo,., huge vtew, guatd gel•. com-pool $1175 836 Amlgo1 hou11, 2 cer oer1g1, u.: countrykltcMflwlthflf• munltyPQOl.11400 Wey #8 .700-11043 Large, clean, 1 Br, Apt. lrptc, 1malf yard, VerHfflH t Br, vt.iw of relaxed. You'll meet dynamic penon who aid.a in I~ l9TI ptec.. Ta1t1tutty deco-trvlne Terr . Lg 2BR 213/~t....ec>. ' pool, tndry tac, nHr wutler/dryer hk-upa, all ocHn. Poot, ctbh11. resol~emma. Leo ls ln pictW'e. rated. Enormoue tot. home, !font row w/peno. •hope. uttt1 pd From btt-lrw. le25. Sendy &42-0149 11~ .. /11a't...... Quiet cul de ..c. BMu1J. vtew1 PoOI avaM month Npn Helghta, 3 bd, 2'A b• $388/mo. 54~38. 1923 Pomona GE (May 21 -June 20): Follow &hrough on
Owner wltl Carty IUb-fully tandac1p1d with of AuOutt. °"'1 seooo 2 atory. 2 Cir ger. -... -I AH TSL Mgmt. 842-1003 ... Cltatalt 2771 hunch -elementa of timing, luck ride with you.
1tantlal 2nd on thll .,,.... fruit tr•H. 12 t5,000. Sumrnet Aentlll• 846-9096 or 842-41112 •-• .... •-.-...... t'tut ......... ... Se ...... of direction ill be to ed Re be malntelned ll~le 1tory 1 Shown by appt Call Still Avall Bach. t & 2 Br. Apta. 2 8r. blt-lne, vaulted cell-......, • two ,....., -.... ty. .._. w res r . mem r :~~J.::= par:;~~ Frank Vaulao, 759~1501 .~tTERFRONT~~~g, ~J~nB•R f ~16 'I':::: ~p:.~·1;'~car=:: ~Ui~~~k.3~~~·ge . =·0~~1~1":.~~c~r~ d~~~~~~f~':'°~~o~~\?ro:i:ctan~
4 car gerege. Attreotfvely . -'925 mo. S40-8748 ency. Gerege avllt. N Cond 2 bd 1 pet1, drapea, bullt-tn1, 2 Intelligent manner. ~i1f26•000• ~~ Cenaa ••l llat UU lrllH lew-1 .. , .... ~ 2 Br. i:~srMg~:54645 :;., tndry
0
hookup, m:.,ay ::1=11~~':u~~1i:1~~i CANCER (June 21-J uly 22): Accent on fte91~ BAYSIDE PLACE BAY-TWO STORY CONDO, 2 845--8122 e.t2·1603 xtraa, no i>el•· 1595tmo courae & tennl• court• finances, legal loopholes, basic costs, efforts put FRONT apae1ou1 2 br, 2 bdrm, 2'A Ba, 2 car gar. 031-0S12 after o4 pm. right behind property ... ba. 11100 mo. Biii Grun-SOSO/mo. No pet1. THE SEVILLE Luxury adult condo. Nr c1oae to everything! Ideal forth to attain goals. You'll spread influence -
dy, Rltr. 875-6101. 845-8095 642.,.862 Newly decoreted 2 Br so. c0111 Ptua. 28R lo r 2 or 3 adut 11 contacts could result in profitable transaction.
....... New pM-it, new carpel, 2 w/gw. ,_ crpt1, drpa, 2ba patio MCUr1ty pool S830/month. Avaffabte Gemini, Leo, Sagittarius pen;ons play paramount ~.
-I Ollll rnetr bdrm•. 21-\ bll, kid• bltln1. lncd yd w/pl1to, -·· ulli Pd. S5'T5/mo: June 15, C11t owner al roles. e .. 1. IHc~ lMt •Ml•..... 1100 Guarded community. & pet ok $750/mo No water~· 552-5833 lf1 4pm (714) 042-0138. LEO (July 23-Aag. 22): Recent contactS Ut!ar .u.... BACl( •BAY-3Br, rnea, :gr~.• 28~ ::n7~'~ 1•· Agt o'.63-3-488 . . 28~a11 t~;~~~~2~~20 E.utalde, bright,~. lge 3 BR 2ba, modern apt. 1
$411,1100. Comm poot. famlty room. $1,500 mo Big Cenyon TownhouM. , 2 BR 1'A be, tpte, porch. blk to bHch. OcHn fruit; obstacles to progress are removed -doors,
Eaaywalktobch,4 Br,3 apa, bch. Owner wllt 21315ge_1802 golf courM lrontege, 2 S4051mo. 2 Br. t V. Be. $575mo.840-o8117 view. $850/mo, ph previously closed, open wide. Focus on liming,
Ba, 1paclou1 tlvlng rm, con•tder tease option Br 2 Ba o R wee bar upper unit, balcony, L/R, 661-8142 intuition, charisma, chance to display talents in
lamtty rm, laundry rm, Bkr. 075-4010 . Near New. Nice 2 BR 2ba, trPic gar.,.. Pooi IP•' carl)Of1. E.alde luxury In• pl"41 fo-lu front of key people. Scorpio native plays important targebatcony.1188.000. r .. r unit. No peta. ten~t• ;25oi mo ' 527W.Wllaon r .. t.Lrg2Br,guullll)d. talaa -2710 536-17t8 •DllUf Piii S875/mo. 709'A Orchid. 540-a125 Of 497_6471 · TSL Mgmt 842-11103 BBQ, pvt yrd. $545/mo. Lg 2er. 28a nr So. Cat. role.
FREE equttw 38r Sba Beauutuf Lancer home 85t-9135 Of 844-4201 wtllUI• lftl 1 aa1t 031-0741 Ptua S500 mo VIRGO f!t.ug. 23-Sept. 22): Details fall into , 20X40 Flreplace 2 "R '1 Big Canyon, Dover, well ..... -.,....,..5 ' · la b · al bl inf · · usl twnhm nr downtne. Ba uQhtl teriorS Thi 1 4 BU<S TO OCEAN kept terge 2 Br. 2 B•. Bach, 1 & 2 Br. Apt•. aw Miii 546-5366 P ce -you o t.a1n V ua e ormauon prevto y
Pymta S2050mo. Sue the blll "tiuy tn' to!n~ 3 Br, 2 Ba, llp, ger, evall St800/mo. Witt ..._. t Avllll lmmld. pool, IP•. 3 BR 2'1\ be. attached 1 BR condo, MC gate. Ilk• kept hidden. You'll be in contact with lively,
891-5556 540-51137. 11g1. • ~.:s&.~~:~mo, 11t & mo. or more. Owner/ L.A. e&rpo<1. No pe11. ger. 073-4400 new. poof , B r tatot/ perceptive persons who do have your beat interest.a
lrYiat 1M4 BACK BAY 1 2 · Broker 76t-o7oe. Baoti 1415 w tllld 2 bd 2 b N W•rner erea. S45o mo. at heart. Gemini, Sagittarius and another Virgo
bdrm. $25,ootc:r!:m. Cnll Kua 2214 DOVER SHORES 3 bdrm, J :~: t4Jtt: S:.1. a'io c.nier 8~; .. ~ Bobby, 0-40-7434 figure in exciting scenario.
Pool, •P•. bch. Owner New 2 & 3 Bdrm town-poof, nuw cp11 pefnt. TSL Mgmt. 784-<>001 1450. 040-4382 ..... ltOO LIBRA (Sept. 23--0ct. 22): You could win a
wlM consider L-Op-t1orMS with double gw-Good aectlt ~· L-. test .. , _ _, lnc l LOCATIO" tlon. Bkr. 67S...010 agu. Quiet E'•tde. l t100/mo. 873-1734 ST~=tNGt tug• l Br. Dua Ptlat 1711 1 llAUll lllJIL con -popuuu1ty I reases, e ernenta of timing,
on perk nHr pool In Adult Perk. Muat Sell 4 $800/S1200 mo. Contect Lge exec. home on y, :,... 71~W =St rec Herbor CrMll 2 Br Be ~1kJ~ rrt•I• ~o~ a;~· luck ride with you. Domestic adjustment ranks high
PRllE
Cotumble Square. 2 bdrm, 1y, b•. on bay. •t 2134-A Orenge ecre. 4 BR 3be, n-ty · · pool, Huna.' 2 bike t6 Pho 1up. o or227.4 on agenda. Lifestyle could undergo transformation
bdrm, tY. bll p1ue powd-Npt Bch. s41a spec• Ave, 845-08117 ~ated, 1111 extr .. 1n:-1445/mo. 1Bt.1 Ba. Apt, b ch noo. 870-7740 Ne;:~r~ ~~~':;'. CM. -to your advantage. Member of opposite sex does er room.t Ctletham Mod· rent. $t4,500 673-2217 Sm 1 er. 11.,, tncd y11d. cl II pool, maintenance & lrJ>lc, tndry rm, carport, ~nd•. 54e-7445 care and will leave no doubt about it.
et. AIC a t39.500. S475t mo Drlv• bv 790 gardener. S2too1mo. PP nMI ate>r91. • SCORPIO (Oc 23 N 21) Defi
~fsor
.J(9alty
651-TI77
c...J. h•prf7 USO w . Wiison. 073.9330• &42.,.110 see Avocado lut .... ,~ 1741 4 Br, F.V. neer 405 twy & t. • ov. : ne terms,
CdM retett/olltc. bldg 042-9688 MOBILE· Lido Phk TSL Mgmt &42-8412 Deluxe poolltde xtre large ahopplnle.. Ktt prl v. realize superiors will back your position.
1ppro11. 10,000 aq u: CA.It• 2 BR 2y, ba twnhM 1du1t1. S450/mo. ceti CINn 2 Bt nr 110!' ... bua. 2 br , 2 bt. bll·ln•. S240/mo. -3844 Techniques will be streamlined, you'll have
seso.ooo. $250,000 dn. acrou Ir s A Cnt Ctb' 213/446-9473 111 epm. pool & ~. 2.214 Ma-dlWll!r. t'A mttea bMctl. Wrkng Fem 25-40, non-opportunity to be rid of superfluous material. You
Xlnt llnaocing,o8,...' po-S800 mo Avt. now. Agt. or 714/4113-7481 wltnda. pie. 1410. &42-teo3 or pr' No f:e"· S550t mo. 1mkr, llltch prlv. gar, may be asked to represent special interest group
1.,11111• o7M 7 '111· 042-3850; 55t_.562 · 'A btk beech, 3 B 2 e , 942-3153 536-2· w/d, prv beth. pool, •P•. and could appear before media. htluft/ 1Jalt1 UM EASTStOE 3 br _.,. nice lllyllte. wtpp< nu khchen. s~ TwnhM 2 8r, 1'-' DELAWARE PINES lannla, Nwpt Cr•t. N.B. SAGITfARJUS (Nov. '22-Dec. 21): You'll reach
- -1 d 45S B·"7 ger , com pool Be . ger . n r OCC. 2Br sec>otmo. 1350.e50-1706•ft8. 4 un111 ecroasplr0tn bMch l7&,imo'&4~~~7 way. '· 1 1 3 0 t m 0 • L 1 • $575/mo. Phone 111 Frptc. pool, II#. Lrg tum upstalre rm, bll, m~re people, plans will solidify regar ding _ __._,.DIWI on Balboa 1ntn1ut1, · 548-6622. 2:30. S46-72t4 privet• patfo. for qule1 empl non·arnkr philosophy, law, possible journey. Responsibility
...,.. apprel11d •I 1325,000 E/alde 4 Br. 2 ea, rem rm. No ~a. &42-8807 oWH 35. tdMt for travel-lncrea.ses, chances for reward multiply. You'll touch by lender. Priced to Nit din rm, trpte, lencd yd. Yrty, Lr~ 2 bd. 2 ba, trpl, 111221 Oela"'9fe St. Ing pereon. Oep & rel uni rsaJ th d Latut hac~ lMI NOW at 1299.950. Ae-saso 1 yr IM tet laat trge P•tlo, w/d, 2 cu -r • q I 2 7 5 I c M on ve eme an you can capitalize on it. --turnable at 13'A%. prue dep. A.;•tt 8116. cerport. Sm pet. S850, Urse hfwl I 14 wtllUll IPTI 545.3722 n · Capricorn plays key role.
e,y,.owtnn•edr. ,Lonveld Yl•w•oodd•d' 2131857-o.488 Ktd1 OK, no peu. 1et. tut Cklp. 540e Nap-1650 mo. Plue Hcurtty Llg 1 a 2 Bdrm.,.,.,,,....., CAPRICORN (Dec 22 J an 19) St d t A ••5 •2•• d-tt Clo·--' t -.. ~ .. Room -/bed, & 1011 of · -• : u Y .,.,.,....~ 2 bd 1 ... ......, 645-5089 une w .'" . ., ..., -....... . _, garage p n11 & atreem1. Sec -cft""'t•ft-' f al bl hin y gt111. Ocear1 View. Wllllc ......,_., • .... ...... tncl. 2t95 Miner To ... get .. poo1 gym & apa. blttn drwr•. cloae1. Pvt UCll6• ,_,us message or v ua e ta. ou'll have
10 town & beach. ~ ~· ~77.000. Drtw by 3 Bt, 2 Ba, lonnat din rm. 2:;:. \bll· yrty. le25/mo. call 845-9004. Ho p'111_ From soo. bath w/tge ahower tor rare opportunity to reach beyond current
lrptci. Xlnt llnenctng. 4 bholJM. Newport t n Gr •• n brook . pe 1
1· ~ .... 21..., 84&-0581 neat emply'd male. S205 expectations. You'll have acceaa to genuine S254,000. 494-11546 Bctl. Owner 494-«)03 $800/mo. 831-3513 ~•0 •" & dep. 'A btk to beach. bar ains •11 ben f ' f ..,, ___ _._, La I t ...... 3 UN llll L 2B 2b ..-. dee Huntington Creek l.pta, Lux mobtte hm tn beaut g , you e lt rom LUMU-.;uu arrangement IUI lilh 1 S Pnpr!! I SO 1111111• o r 1• ·-·, .. L.uxuty adult ttvlng. 1 & 2 perk. HB. uo-5au arrived al through renegotiation prooesa .
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.... ... If ---3 Bdrm 2 a.. patio, 2 car 38r, 2Ba. lrptc, 2 cu pool, ldUftl, no P•t•. Bdrm with geragee heal wlcnd a Aft AQUARIUS (J 20 F b 18) B--'-f ... _._ S300 gerege, •unny patio, I 4 2 0 . 0 .. 0 -7 3 1 g . & weier peld. 1..evtMd • •f1 ...,m. an. -e . : ·~ rom past
3BR, rnBA, AIC. lnfl ... 4-Pfea re~pr 1~0'.~~-7370: tennta. pvt b .. chH. 073-0834 MCUrlty. From IStO. Call Room In 1ge home. unlurn. ls imminent. Don't attempt lo hang onto patten\I
LGE ASSUM S127K XLNT FIN 759-1852 S4~S48 .,.,, s 1150 m 0 . ( 2 1 3' 2 .... 571 w . ·~-St ...... 848-1013 lrom 8-5. nr occ. $250/mo. + which are outmoded. Accent on contracts, ]0° lnl 77~737 8:).4-9101 . -. 983 7900 Frank C&r1 ... ....,."' ,.... $100 d •• I I c M. huge duplex, 2000 Clean 2 Br. 1 Be. enctld • or down. No p eta. ep. "' pre · w reta. efforts, special publicationa and marital •talus.
aq It. 1 •tory owner'• garege. new pefnt & Ult ISU 11111 1450/mo. Sierra Mgmt IU-545-6024 •fl. 5' Chance exists for you lo become more independent, l!!J!rt ltac.. 1M9 unit. every 1Ctre, huge llootlng. $500/mo 2029 Adorable 3Br 11150/mo. 841•1324 ft.Ull Btltll, ... tla 2904 to express ideas in unique marµler and to get to
L.w .. WI reer yerd. 11851<. Agt W1t1ace Hou11 "C". Udo Realty 073-7300 New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury 1 ••-• airaal heart of mat'""-. 042-M68 548-2778. llPI• In t4 pl-. 1 Bdrm ....._ --..... " Liquidation 3 Br model e-ata •-a 4 -• 19e8tiBJIU !tom $545, 2 Bdrm rrom llTH Ill P~ES (Feb. 19-March 20): Follow through perfect home. S20.000 8.1X llfOll, 8-2 BR unit•, t Br. tetlCed yerd, garege. -1111 ._. Se30. TownhouH from h h f'-· · Uk 1 below mar\•1 1389,500. E11t1lde Costa Me11. 1375/mo, 2 Br 2 81 condo nr So. IPllTm'rl sees + poote, tennli, Wkly re111a1a.. Low ratAll. on unc -1.ut tmpresstons are e y to prove
113,600 dwn. Cati Pa-S442,000. Cati Rendy 642-26311. Collt Plaza. u 50 No B••ulflutty l•nd1c1ped weterl•tta, pond•t Gii Cotor TV, free collee, correct.. Accent on employment, health, gaining
tric k Tenore , agt Chapman in Devin Real peti.Ella831-7370 giardenepta.Pool &apa. for cooking & hH tlng he•tld pool & •teps lo cooperation from those who share basic concerns.
760-8702 ,..__ IO<I Eltate 042-6398 D p i •••• P•tl01/deck1. No ....... Id F s DI oe.an. Kitch'• avall. U h . ........,.., ay. • au t at --.,.._ P• . rom •n •110 1186 N Cout Hwy, nique relations ip with older woman comes into
IM11trial PnitJll7S Houee for,_,, 3 bdnn, 2 Cede UaJ. 1411 ~~ ~ ~ ~~1~~:,0~ ~~ Lao~.ina Belch. 484-5294 sharp, clear focus. ·~~ ba.tlr1plac1,deok.3~2~t~w~11& 28d~1~~ $5H "~onM~~d~toit:••=•=u~la~~,=11~.~~~il·---~----------------------
tf you would tlke otc or ~:~·~r-z;~~,~~\S:~ u;,~-m:.~~~m:.! 131 E. 18th &4M8'10 :O:.s~~ Vlltege. (714) ON THE SAND lata11 It IWt 2tOI Offict leallla 2914 lduL latall 2tM
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Wlllhoute IP9Ce In tile Paint Call 525-6951 & wknda-~ $425 • SUMMER RENTAL Rmmtl nMded lo anr 3 Br 1617 Weatcttff. N.B. 27a 1200-2500 aq.11. WM1 tr-91ST 111.U laatty dlNppeartng WM 1 Bdrm. 1485 * 1300/mo up. Bach, t & 3 Br 2 Ba. unit W91 ber NB. to 3800 aq fl. 2•435 aq. vine .,... tndd1 oftlcee 3 BR, 2 BA, "Linde" around 1h1 etrport we DANA CREST -feeing 2 Bdrm. 1'/• Ba. $580 2 Br. unturn & furn, pool, l\lrntshld, wuh.r, dryW 646-6979 f1. Suttable lor mldlc&f or from s540 mo. Tom:
Model. etngte atory, In otter th• moat. LH8e OCHn will be •v•ll•ble Aprtatatl FanaJeef 2.250 Venguard apa. t8992 Florid.. lnctd. Summer. enclad dental. Agent 541-5032 851~28
the Btullt, Newport 091, tax free exchange, June 111. Lovely 38' w/ 11..... .... • ... I 640-8&26 842-2834 842-3172 gerage. . Fe to ahere turn Balboa -T ----------Beach. Excellent condl-unbelleveble progreealve dining and temlty ., .... "9111& -580 lite •Pl for 1ummer, __ ,.._ _..,_ tndu•. ~otfloe to ehf'
!Ion rent program. The mot1 Atrlum/aprlnkter1. RIQht Lrg 2 Br, n.wty patntld, ... ftl IDT TSL Mgm2t8ealtl. ..0:::1603 non-•mkr. $300/mo +'A :.ullfTt SeMcll~t4:. tn C.M. Euy •trwt ~
ONLY St85,000I n.xlble term• •valf. Thi• up lrom M arina. Nr crp/drpe. $4915/mo. Mllalon Viejo 3 Bdrm. 2 "'" uttte. C•tt 873-3847 -or -~·· -CNa-. 642-4870
Call AgenVOwner might bll your IHI ch-echoole. Enjoy br•te• F1nfMe4 IN.lier 832-1714 Be. $7504755. F~ Hou11 overlooktng CdM 720-0469 $575. Furn/unlum M l --it IS ~~;(~7~t4~)~8~4~4~838~1S2~~! enc• to get Into tht1 end view. No pell Gall $400 ptua MCUftty dep. $400 1 8' retnge. atOYe.. yard & garege. Kid• & State Bch, dectl In lront Lonely retired man . An YOU need tor one ...... lalab , , Pf91tlgloul 11r11 on IUCh MC)..684~1or detalla. Incl. c:leantng. Otl atf991 petio cte•n n~ P•t• P91• welcome. 546-2000. yd, •IMP• e. 212 Mar-•PHk• French. pl1y1 Monthly Feel Auditorium, 1Ht1 250. •ir.., • ..,,., ... lowtnt.&~terme.We par1cfng, Smell & qule1. 731.{;•W lath f73-77S7 Agent.no.... ouerl te. S500/wll br'ldge,Wllhelt.olhrept, &40-5470 Full A.V. WHtmln1ter
-•• wltt tt1t1n to •ny type Baal....... 2241 Call 64S.llG04 10 -· · · Wt/k. 10 baectt. NEW Stu-876--3130 Laguna Bch with rettr~ ---------• Mell. 1181-oc>:Ze 12-epm.
2 8r ,.,._ '129,000. Pro-trede for eny product. Huge 3 bd, lmty rm. 2 Spectou1 2 Br. Ownera dto, gu & .;11., P•ld. Yac•ti.a latah 2t07 woman 70 plul. Board & *111.1 .,m0 FR.,,EE RllllENT* P«1Y Matt 640-90111 c.11 Norman at 554-6222 Frpte dbl• gar ocHn unit, DR & FP, MOO/mo. $390/mo 536-4e37 todglng for comp•nton-...
Forecto1ure: Reduced Of Bob at 543-3887 ttt view'. 228 t 9'1h St. Short term. 2 br, 1 be. B. EttertH n Broker . Palm Sprtng1. $350/wk, ahlp end tit• h1kpg. t room to 4 room1. Adj. AaU•llftllntl ~r~~~~~ :::6~.B.z~ :iot~!ci~aye a WHk ~~~~~:~31i•lt •gt ~:.i·N~.u~~~.:,~~: 7~;':L~:~~~~ 2?:Tc!::.·~: ='~"'::'.3s~8:. ~lye~~ 1~::0~~~.~~ ~~~~~::No Awuwall 3111
873-1464 111111• 11LEJ 3 Br 1Y. bll twnh•, enc:ld or S 1500 for 3 mo. 2 llf. :2 a.. 1 Br Lott 2 I pet OK. 87~7829 Walk to Smoke Tr• & MIN, Ca 82648 Coot Dinner 4 U ~ Br. Ealtblufl, huge lot. Older owner UIS: 7100 petlo, comm. pool l M2-7686. a..k ~htbklfff lvlewl . Child ''"Mn WILi Rlllphe. e7S-7520 Oceenlronl N.B. F n/llT\kr s"'11rpo<11r .,..22-~!9°50· t .... H,}~ .._ $255,000. Le•M Hold. S/F, near new. Fire pt•yground. tmmec. o · .,a o , rp c. II•• 2 Br. Townhovee Apta. Oceentront -Emereld to lhr 4 b<, 3 ba, frplc, u 11 °"' .,_ • ___,.....,, .... ,.,. ..
$3 t0,500 fH. Agent IP~rlnkter. ~~h ;ttt~~· 1550. 831 -3088 dyi l!!J!!! ...... Mat =·~lanwuher, IP&. lrptc, dltlw, trg p9tlo, Bay, Laguna. Fully tum. aunrool, tndry. Yrty $275. St ~':5~7-rJ0 xtraa .,.ITllL 1111111
844-1742 « ~t044 Pl ng. en._.. 752-2197 •ft 5 pm. SPMC · 831~t07 erlded llrlQtl cer oweoe. Monthly, June-Sept. aso-4742 tn bu1tn111. marriage,
Ooc1 wilt San C Nowt C. Spllfar SBA o.n nc Hunt ~arbour. From 484-1064 eft 0 2 Br, 2 Ba uttl tnot Olk-*~ lernltY. etc ~ Cte~ent:~OOO l31-12te '*'. nr ~'.et~I:. &Spacloustwo .._~~OM Lg 3Br, 2Ba. I~. Ptillo, MOO/mo.~. Hewllt, t<one Kaltu•. 1 Br. wood Apll. Female. t MO FREE RENT 031-t478 . 931-1914
home for newer $700, pe11, new P•lnt. 11000 --..room lptl. encl yd, enot gereoe. "' Detuu 2 Br. 1 81. In Condo. fully lurnlahld, $360/mo. 548-7987 With 1hort term leaM, 1 _,.a 1 __ _.
0-00 price range. N--mo, tet1t11t 11c., no Senta""-Country Club, 4-plex carp«a d,._ aleepe 4• 'A block from Fe to lhr 2 Br, 2 Ba Condo lull Mrvtoe ault ... Keep -J --!ft!
port BHch r .. tdence. peta.714-973-7771 ~1= 15. l 700mo. blt-lnl:encled 0w.a&10'. be ach. &600/week. lnFV.l220/moptu1uttt. your overhead low &
Agent Ron Poulton 15 Br No p«a. ~ 951.,.503. Pool/Jae. 775-8148 evtit. prolelalonel lmlQI high. ~88-4800. 488-25 to a.... Ill lalt H• 502 '*· N Wiit. Mell, 2 8', 1576 mo S500 deP. New luXury aipta lor rent LUXURY condotnlnlum on Mt DoYlf Dr. Sult• H .
ewt ...... n -·-• -~., ,1~~~· 394-B 19th Pt. C.M . '526/mo. meny ~·-LAk• T•hoe'a bllauttlul M/F ehare 2 bd hOUll, N. w p 0 r t B •• ch . FOlll> ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
• -.. , ~13t ............ ~ ,......,..._ VII-Laa Bch, non-amke, nr 03t-3851. ~ S YllW Vflr/ deefroua, fM>uloul ....... · u.,.conoo ._tut., die-""""'" <><-•· "......... bell, deck, 1350 + 'A --------1
NWPT HGTS .... -......... ...__ rr-........................ lat._..., 2141 TownhouM 2 Br, 'A Ba, hwHher, micro. poof, lage, week of Jun• uttt1, Mike, 648-0239 111.111.,. llfTD --~ _,, .. _ --no-uro _.... ....... _......_.. ....... tennll ~ 18-26, •1.000 value for I• lend/owner 142~ rffld•ntlet lot In HAR-2 bf 2.,. ba waterfront r~ or ........ ,......., epa. .,. _ _. -• · l850. ee7-3839 aner 7 pm. 8'yftont b!Og. 700-1,007
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiial BOR RIDGE. H'x158'. twn'hH, dbl• ger, 24' U'4F\JRM1SHE0, ~erage. ~2aJ~ ~~M1_. .. ~~· Clllt Sally '4W725 tn•·• W ... --aq ft llYMI fr0tn S1.25. lmlWTIY .-Prtoed •t 1516,000. C ... boallllp, $1100/mo. Call All UT1lJ11ES ~pell . ..,.,,..., ..... 2 bd, 1-A bl, blt4M. new lntala te l•an !tO! ,... Ul:y em BASEMENT tt.00 aq n.
llms Ill.I 815-2 3 ' 1 d • Y • or -ot "Ult"' 846-1372. PAID HEALTH a.en 1 Bf. ur:llllnl 1375. cerp.,a, dr-::•· encl Fe NOn·emkr, 25-36, Pro!. mat. M ... 11r t. non ~ aq ft Call: Mon-Frt
Thia 3 Bdrm bay view '7W3H .....twttndl. ' ' CLUBS.TENNIS, 1981 M ap t Ave. No ='. ~21 p, '6t5 Twnhu, eut CM . amkr. nn. aound, Poo.i1ng1.-=~· _ _!64~2~-4~64~4~-j~~~~~~~~~
home mu11 be iotd Eatate Sale: Huntington 1144 SWIMMING, &*Is ~ •~t. ••t-13"• '--'--_ _._. S3071mo to •h•r• larger view LOST· Wfllt• mete cit NOWttt Priced $74 000 BMcn. 1 lot & lldjeG*tt much mortl Sony Slarr • ..,""' -,. ~ .,.., e.42~72 Of &42-4502 hOme or oondO wlte11nla, OHIOI apece lor ..... : 747 0r.,,C,...,.. Ind 11111 • under Mta2 eppreiHt hlllf lot located 21et. St. llllTILS ...k .. _ ... ..L. ' pool, jecuul, etc. with II, H95/ mo. utlt1 pd. 64M3M · For an :r,tment to Wu•~ PCH & Walnut. 1 to 3 bdrtna. ltarttng 11 no ~ -2 bd, 1 b•. S440/mo Nol1tlwood. 2 bdtm c~ Roommate CoordlnetOf'I prof. M /F non i mkr. AJC, ground ltt. 10$5 El
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1151
c.ii M0-2'411 1426 to 1150 «>pm dally 9 to 6. stow, R9f. no PICI. POOi. do. tmmed. poH. Alf All appllcant1 ecrMned Hunt. Harbouf to Laguna Gemlno Of., C:O.t• Meaa. Loll: 5/8 Fe Brittany ,_ O-'-wood 423 W11t Bay. 548-0518 am• n It I I e , I 8 1 0 . We do the lllfch for you Beech. Call Wolfg.ng tO 3 btkl E. of Fairview & Spen, "Gellll" Hert>or/
FILL ICIE ... , S400/mo. 1ge 1 br, new -..9312 • .'Z ortce077,wtt2}' .. ~,. a.m. to 5 p.m. et (714! Adema. Gleller, e.n. 54.,...717 G_..._ A orpt1 & pelnt refrto. ow .._.'ton .. '""' ne-5780 or ( 7 u 754-1040 Mr. Trecy REWAAO. llUJ .. wn1 pll1IMMI 717 JamH, 'Apt t (off l!!I!!! ..... l'ltl 142-0138 ewninOI· NB 11PPf 500 sq tt, 1 be, LOST: Small bl! dog w1
VIEW Nt wpott ladl So. Pomone). 040-4979 NO fll!I Apt. & Condo WE LOOI Famtly W/dog to rent 4 euoH•lut b91lnHa of-whit• chH t. No t•ga.
9Mcol1 8tiy. R-2 lot. 2 BR 1700 16th Strttt Extre terge 2 BR, new 1'9n~,,;. ~.~ala. fOI Yll! bdrm houH In Co.ta nc.. 873.-22, '475/mo. Anewer1 lo "Blackie"
2Be &28R tBe~ SURROUNDED BY mlf-pelntlcvrtalnl.KldlOk, _,,._ __ .,. Meu . Up to 1700. Cotta MIN 250 el. autte 751~800anyttme
JM beed'I oornrn. MOO, tton I homHt North ~Dowr) no pell, "/.'tatra. ..../IH•••• 031·6357 '200/mo. Utll lnold. 771 Loll: Lady'• Welthem ..:r>:.;t~~~~ii3-liowril,4i:;ii· Pmii:-~--·I ~~~u~e~_u1jn3~,~~~~k;..,.1:A=1d=•jr•itii1ei.I Mtwnrurtz:'~ w.... t=,o rt, '1/.rJt~ae '1 ~= eo. !u!I• I!! ... t l!l! w. 1tlh. s1. asi-et21 C~ C::."',:: f ,.. ,_... _.-. 2 Br t,t Be. D1W eatabllehed 12 ,._,., l!Mtlldt llnQle P O 8tot• '2110lue>. C#J*I. dfm'; Aerww'd 180-t240 -· TIT ... Dady UM 880 ll'Me AWM P•tio. 11•r~g •• nr so'. IN ~HACH Pflotoe. t.elllnlfW'• ctlkd IOI only. 112 Cecli c M •lo, , ... room•. 1730 • By owner, S450 ,000. lnwet« wan19d I« 1110 (It 16fl) Cout Plue, o.o. Col-t1n91d ' & 2 Bdrm e Mo. au.tntd a.rvtoe 873-75-44 • · ' IMofl IMYd. Hun11ng1on LOST: Sml bl-* flooc9e. Ofdet dUpleJC ptlc9d at Int In N.B. Fun zdned MS-UCM !age. F ~· a TownhOu-• °'""• • !Ye Wltneu IMofl. 14i..2184. hH crlpplecl front ~ ~~1· 640·7HO °' ~= <J82~5!8;~9:, a ..c. ~4~7,,..._ tl1 ~.,.. lllOMtlY ~~·~::.•"Magazine, "!!t'J.'LMH B~~~~~~~.~ft~lr~~: iJ1~·.:;;2:•'::1
Stat...,., N9vlda lt441 Fnim 1608 N9WPOf1 Ofo 132 ... 134 .. _ .... ,...__ u... ut1t1, prkng. 813-1~ _ on Jernbol'M Ad. et ... °"to 1111 ....................... ro .,.. , ____________ ,
Sen~...._ Ad wt1o.,.. '91ocetlno '"'a.Mot. •OdM cmc euttt11 AO, .... 1. · Tutttn Oto 832~134 ~~Co. empt pkg. from •329. MMt.22 2165 f , C e l Hwy. IU.mK Uwmf N/tn*r, a br oonc1o, ~t. °"'°'tot LMMI Aetall-Nr e1e-eeoo NWIKI\~
I/Oe n waterfront •Pt Bdl. SIOO/mo + 14 u1119. e.nnery 750 t---------1 HaloW • 9ocMlt
n ow •v111. IHutllut = =:·J:O dip, Hr ft. Cell IT i eq 11•• lt!lflt 811 ~ ~ == e;::; ~No".::: -. ,.... home d9M to Luxury omo., •Y vtew, Shop w/ofo •P.ce.. 800 A 0 1.1y built a l»•tter
11 000 & beeCfl. Ulll !not, ld1. Showat Kltctlln, tq.rt. RtHoneble. OM moulllt~ !"l"!:~:rr:~~---1 '"°' ....o.et47 eenn.y wi.. eoo 1q • r • • . z on• cS o a . tM \Wort .. l t "lb&.-~ nt ' . '11 tn.&IN e..1-7149 I tile '""-tor ..
c:•lt. Aull. now. =:"A.:.0:1~1 !: "'.:*~~':',:t SHAM. Oiii09 1P110e&• "*" 1o 111.,... ~~1,_0UT __ ot _____ _ 2::.1211r. a ... Apt. '" ... ....,.,.. INl/mo. ,..,,...,., ~·P~'':$u-::. l':t1~r.r:'Qtt.ai ~!,~~ YISd .. .,....,_ w P°" 1 llr oondO. • •11 mo .... f' a.+ llW I tit ,,,. tie C.M. ,,_ oe1 7 t1. 19leq_ ft. Cal. • fof cotter "' OCM11 ateL ilrnai pee ole. AwA ,Jt.ln9 url~~om91u. 0111 ...-. otlY tum. "230 + ~ Coeta .._.. full ..,.. aob, ""4109 Mon-M. .....nt ... mo.
18"" (l ftiao-nn "°'*d. u t t I 1 '. 1m11h·o1< . mo.. an t ~ 1 am . t Pf".
T8L ~ ~1tol ·.:a 2
1 .. tl:.*':Z"M : =~·:::::~1: ,_ l. .. IN.IOINOI .';~~· ---.-,--' .. o..;_ .. --.-....... ,=. ~---
YlLI.A VtaTA Af'fl, owt.Ni . .C:.l .... '1. ••Ill to botl. ISOO(mo 1411J=:~mw.t, ~--'!~~~--"°" ... !=-" I L~ N79/mo 1 ., 114 ea. MOO mo. 1111. i.t p1u1 .,._. ,.,OOclllP. • • 119 ""'' JIO -· ~ , , ....._. ... ~~.;....~~~.;..;.;. __ 1.,,_ ___ ...,...._..._......_1 Townhome ,;.."""-depoal t . Ho P•ta. a w1n .,_..,..-.~ 1.-00 •4 not,.,,,.& Y•I••• "•••rd.
;;:0oce:=:,,,?. .. = ... :=:.,:.::;;._=llllllllL..----lw•e.tron1, •"'·a .... •g::;::~~"!: "'·w.=:~.,,. .......,. ... .,. Yn'aottoetw•"·•tie =·~:.tr W:~:.Otlf',,.., 71'-=-1
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Cl111ten•• f2H.JUl••&flllllt11L-1 ;~.J::o..:'°"+ '""''· '"'"' ...... 2 m........ ...,. ~,~ u~-:..= .... "' . ......0.1' • .,,_, ~ .... ~IM~~,.._: l f'9"91' I =~c:.= -hit /ftf0."0 ~=--=t:Jt ~m.r =; ~:MC Plil4•1nee. =---tiw°"!"i 11-. ~ ~,....-.,.t.,... a.Mm ,._..,.. to ~I a·lllllllilll, f '* ~~a Ul;.&:41 •Hee :1:.~.:.~·.::~:~~; "·. :v~::'-= :.~ ~· 1 ... ~ iJ:r.::'i.:·;.'::: ~~~ ' llwtl. ~ :-, ~· m, .._~ .. = ~· ..... -. '!1',t:~ ..... ,.. _____ .....,, __ .... ..... .-..11• 7,...fll0-11U .......... ~-11W7'11 ... f.. ....___.._All. '-*~ ...
141-1111
· HERITAGE
Rf' Al TORS
SCRAM-LETS
,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tu.day, May 17, 1983 CT
l
c
$ !UnJttly C-.t/ Ceeatt! a.tnw ....... la!ll!t Llefl!tfiM IPalatiM hel •--1~ .._... 'rh""' $ 1.84 per day 8A8YStT"TtNG Concrete: •m•ll or lg• •E11ctrlclM: ,.,._,,.,,_, Amblttoul JeoentM _ DUMP J088 --_,,,. Pilllm ..... -.1'1 AM ......,,,.ldec9Pe f
Th•t'• ALL you pay ~~~t• MeN ~;~ Jobe. Remo~• old. re-All, ty~••· Low price•. dener, weedlnv. ~. & Small MOYlnO Job4I Let me"*'• your g•d-by Richard Sinor. L.to. Ellpertenc.ct l profM. ,...,.,,., lie 1202113. IOf 1 • pl60I w/r-. 6444512 Uc d. r• •t.1131-2345 mowing, lrimfnlnO. ep<ey. Call MIKE 146-1301 en grow & your 0,.11 280644. 14 yn cf h.tc>9Y elonel. V""'I r~ 846-#74, 142.eooT
30 dey 9d 11u.... Ctraale Tilt ELEOTRICIAN Cultivating. fenlllzlng. HAUL-M<>Vf..REMOVE gf9e0f I'm f\lllY lr)eured. local ~. ,.... tOt .. of )'OIK pool .. ,_
tn 1~ L-... 1 --• Gd rat•. Fr .. •t. Lio. "4-2087 Fumltur1, TrMh, Tr-8')elk Engllth end you Tlllllk you eea."411.. ~I. FOi npen .. r.1•!"'=-------
•H ---ltnt .... Tiit ... 416449 Wayne 831-7530 Jonnaon l Son: Do own 963-5415 NORM Wiii find my wort! •JtOel· ;i; • vice, -~ 0 p.m. TILE INSTALLED DAILY ~yt=mp:~i:c~~ "::i Fr .. t. Guet. $03.-3283 ELECTRICIAN work. 10 yra malnt. & HAUL.ING l«lt. Celt (rt .. ) 111-3n3; etAUYY ,..,.. lo t p.m. If no ...... All kinda. Guerenteed
occ11lon1. Lovely for C.iW Cart Lie. 233108. Sni•llllg• landeceptng. 75".t-lttU CIMnvpe, y1tdlt,.. ave. ~r~~~f'T-~1~~ ~~ r:~!1 =~~:~· PL.EASE kelp.~.. Aefl. John 893-<Me7
PILOT Brldetl 173-4419 Loving & Reaponalble Job•. repalrt. 548·5203 ISMAEL.'S GARDENING RANDY, 842-7647 L&ndacape MllntenlllCe (114) 41Mlll Cerlll'nlc Tiie 9t Coet
SERVICE Cdlatt •akt FrM WMI<. Fenced yd Cleln-upe. t,.. trim & ltut CIHalai & tn111ll1tlon et your I• a.her,......._ Jeck9on'• POOi Servtoe w/inet.11. Wortt ~· •• · c M 63 l 8825 wlldyl • .w..«~CTMI malnt. ~ ~2!02 -MNloe. L.lc. 4259~4 · i7~~5 20 Yl'9 exp. Eetly com· George .. IM-252 91191
~:~g~1b~~t:· l~~~~i~ Ch;ld °C1te In~ home. nr
1 ~ t::i~~E~~:~.~~~~~. =:!;~~~IV flU UT.aftl Ollllll lml*I =.· F~-~1411:W:. Cuero~ Mc!~L;~o tile DIECJ()RY count«t~ M2-'088l Pt1centl1 & VIC1orl1, · u.. •-trimming, •m•ll 'tend-clMn houle. 64()...()867 Sod, 8'>f'lnkler and lhn,tb & INTEFI. RHt. r1te1. Uo. 283e00. 645-1280 WOl'tl. Free eet. 97~1
DO IT NOWI ClblneU & C•-try weal C.M. IM6-3738 aceplng. JllCk 642."56 ExpertlM HouNk--i.... tn1t1ll1Uon. Our work Fr• eat. Sltw 547-4281 -=J:: _ &al •--.a -..-· ,._ "---r--1 lef ..,...."' only rook• expen11v1. -p•-~ TniM 1tnMt fer -r• Smell lobs & repair• .... tracten, -a1 u111IUt lal"'1a1 Gerdenlng wentect mow· Vee l ~ Included Chect< our prlcN bet«• -·•--·-Huber ~ typea. Tl!PinO/Wotd PfooeMI Your Dally Piiot Fr .. •llmatt 846-2003 Remodel/Repejra, comm. Antique Rettot/Repe.lf Ing, edging, raking, Kitty 1-4970 you buyl Uo. 2().4818. 28 y,.. Uc. 403MI. ln1, New-r.aovet-dedll · QulCk ~ ng
Servloe Directory •Ca.....,...,. & retld. Llc'd, t>ondld, Fr• eet. Plcilup & del. IWHplng. FrH H11-QUALITY CLEANING U~'I ..... ..._ bonded. Refs. Co40r ex· Uc 1 .. 11802 548-973"4 'MIY r 85 04
Rept'--.tatlve ~!!.! ln1. For Ht, 552-9142 845-8434; ev1 731-9173 mat• 145-754 t wtth • penonel touc:h .. , ...... 1111 ......., pert. tl3-091 l Richard · · AeMonable t-t 1
142-lll!, tit HI Ooo<~;!:::.=~neta l.J •........ I ... 1u.,. Deer ..,.., ..... n ..... BETH 850-0933 P•J!rlat ~ ~ ":J~~ ~-r:..·=· -+ Acteaatla Panel-petloe-lenou Uc. 306888. Remodel. SPRINGS-HINQES:"New Tree, landeclpe, aprlnkl-B1chelora. CIHnlng & .. N!IJ Ferthl Interior Onlgn • 640-1~ 875-«>98
• I Jerry 54&-4413 Add'n1 & Cabinet• OPENERS. Alt repalr1 . ., WV\ce, dMn up. 21 ~11e~~· ttK:r-' BRIC1<WORK: Small jOt>e. HA~NG/STRIPPING S.uWa!!!at WW:_~
Aoctg tor ltn bus. PR qlr· Repelr/1ml fobs. Fenoes, 846-8586 846-414, LO'#eet rat•I 18 yrs yn exp. &46--0555 ' '1 Newport, Cotta MeN, VIie-MC Scott &46-9325 BUDGET RATE-LO MIN !:!!!!. ~
Ilea, utu tu. FI S. 1helvea, pertltlons. Lo C lfi Wtt4 kia C.M. Uo. Tom 557-4480 111 ___ a. .,.1_ Ctua AC11on Cleanera trv\M. R41f9. 97s-3 t75 Blackwelder Paperhang· Rel/com/boat tr1'. Uc. WE WASH W'"OOW8
Complete Ml up & w -ratt1. Steve 731·8311 • .. .., I -• tunW exp. local home & apt BRICKWORK1 Small or Ing & Removal. Quet. Retlucco ~.141-7681 F.e -Plol llt>tlll
v 1 c e . Re as F r an Broderlcic'• Custom Garaoe Door Opcw1tor1. C 1 bit mlrr cleanlng. In•. 842·02&-C large Jobi & repalra. w()(lc only. 494•3816 Qulllty woni guwenteecl
540-5834 aflemoona. All Ph&lel Cetpentry Quality woodwOriltng 1prlng1, hardware. For ~~ob• doora~:ar& European HouMCteenlng Loc:el refs. 646-8512 ltcrtJfrial lentcet Free ..ttmat• M&-7391 •--U--I __ 1 & Repalr, etc. Outck ~-You name tt, -build & demonatatlon. Seecoatt thower encl. Gl11a re-& Hlhld, Malltance E.-... .. 1 .... In M•~ry Plutn/ l!tah 8«:tetarial etMoet: typ-''I.AC IN~ In'' ~ -..-ct trur vice Reu 20 yra. Lied. lnatall ttl Xlnt rels. 2448 Newport Blvd. C.M. pl_,,.,,f, 520-4201 .. ___ cvft d 87"' ·-•·" ... -· F Discount appliance re-Palombo 982·8314 S54.4254 839•7427 842-3400. ........ . ......., · ..-1430 Uc/bonded. Very reaa. Pl.ASTER PATCHING Ina. copy, etc. M1 MN. SUNSHINE WINDOW ·----L u •--1 Bob 873-5387/538-9908 AHtuccot. Int/ext. 30 8f6-445e 780-8359 CLEANING 642-1549 palrt everyday lna~nt AFFORDABLE carpentry, Drywall .. .... .....!!I!! ___.,_ .nnNI ltl:..J:: y,., Neat. Paul 545-2977 le'--
H<Vlee by bffper. la' plumb, elec . Ou1flty _ Springe hdwe ELEC ==i.;;;;=-----IRONING JOBS WANTED, ~ = ... ________ ii•--------
pltc:her 831-6300 wo<lt.I aervlce. 751-7716 DRYWALL TAPING GATES. Bob't 648-Je87 ***HOME REPAIR my home. Excellent ·ABC MOVING-v £D'$ Ml'f Wllll ..... Uw ...... ,._ t •---1-All Textures & Acoustic atc;-Plumb-Cerpentry woril Ref«enoea Qulcll C ef 1 ,, ___ ...._ MTOlll That 111 contractor1 whO An~tctual _,,. ftPKf Free est. Kevin 673-1503 Qaraaly Patio eov.r.Fencea queei. Phone 842o:s:;o • ., u ..... ........ lit.ii ...-. nm I ~ perfonn wont ~ $200
lattritrl Shampoo & steam clean. DRYWAL.l/ACOUSTICAL TIEU Remod. Keith 84M872 anytime. UC. Tt38046 552-0410 ""..'!'~.'.::: A quiet fact of Hf• II that lnctudlng tabor and
Color brlghlener1. wht All phaea & Repal,. PAPA CLIFF *l•1 •YIM* .....-...-y yOU< tnergy bllll mey 00 matertelt mu11 be 11·
TOTAL DESIGN SERV. crptl • 10 min. bleach. BUD 552-9582 Topped/remowd. Cleen Fenoe:lng, tlle, plumblng. leaM liltly Belt quality. 26 yr e11p. up 2 to 3 tlmea u hlgll U oeneed. Unllcenled con-
11t C<>nlUttatlon Free Htll, llv/qln. rm• $15; avg up,,_"-· 761-3478 odd Jobe. 146-6820 -COmpetltlve ,.,... Pl ml your preaent rat• In Ille trlCtort lhould eo lllte
Cu1tom remod. & new room $7 :so; couch $10; IJtctrical . Tll URI -• pa'INTING PLUMBING Houte titting detlred by Lie T-118,428 730-1363 a q "'xi HV41fll yeara. Are In theft lld\wtllllng. Con-conalr. by architect & chr SS. Gu1r. ellm. pet --"' • tlble 24 Ill D '\} 141-llH Yt>u going to tit •tlll fOf ltectOta and coneumer1. deeigner team. 640-8455 odor Crpt repair 15 yrs ELECTRICIAN. Pric ed 1 1.awn-tree-lhrub ln1tllt HAULING-ODO JOBS young, reaponl pro-STARVINO COL.LEGE WATER HEATER s-••• thl1? If not A If you would contact M.,.. Grondle at ei1p.° Do work in self. right, lree estlm•t• on I TrM trim/Removal REAS. Steve 146-2385 let1tonet or iummer STUDENTS MOVING .......-llh Information on tollf -~ Aa,uJt Rtft. 554-0123 Y 18108 or small fob1. L&wn m1lnt1RototlMlng • monthl beginning In CO. UC. Tl24-436 Poot heaters•Fum~ energy, Clll Don Inman ~~:.=:"~:.~
-UC. 396821. 673--0359 FrM .. umate 54~ Home Repal~try June. I wlll care for pell tnaured. 841-3427 Drllnt ciMred lrom $5. at s
Dflvew•y-Plftllng Lot Cta•t/ Ceacntt Cablnei.EJec.Plumblog and P•Y utllltlH. 0•11 WATCH us GROWi Mllnl from $15. Repalrl (114) .. , ... l c~~c Lioen.CenteBowdr Pte'z:2•8. Repalr..s..k:blllng RESIO/COMM'UINO. Mow, edge, clHn·up, Fencing. DON U66--0140 875-4478 elter 8 pm. gulr. Ev/Wknd aame S.
S&S Alphtt 831-419tl.lc I Cement-Muonry-Bloctl; 20 Yfl. Do my own work. tr im. Free HI. RHt. FAIR PRICESt P1lntlng -Paiadat M&M B I d Ill Room 800, Santa Ana.
Den Hlllt>4Wg Griding W......CU.t. work. Lio. uc.278041. At 8'&-8126 ratea. Jim 848-1958 roofing carpentry ar~ Pvt youi-ld1IW1lalng ~ AALPH'S PAINTING 851-980.t/842-9033 ,~ ';.C:1h.~l'=•-::C:A:t2::7:0~1·::::::::::
& Paving Co. Res/comm · 1381057 Rob 547•2883 Find what you went In s.. tNngt 1111 wtth o.uy dentno: crpt cteinfng. uoe wtier. the reeden QUALITY INT/EXT wllat ctHalfl•d I• 1111-
Uc. 397~ 142-1720 Sett ldlefitemt 642-5678 Diiiy Ptlo' Cl...inecta. PHot Want Ada. 9tc. StlrT 54S-4471 ..... 142·5878 LOW flt•. lie. 53e-98U8 Clutlfled Ad9 142-6878 about. 84.l·5e78 Went Adi Call 642-5e78
Leet I ,.... lOM Juiam •••• ...... s1oe· •••• ...... Slit .... ...... Slit •••• ...... .. .. Belt ...... Slit ~... ...... Slit .... ...... Slit le11 ...... Slit
F<Nnd: Mlle Dog, Wht & Onem•itin 4014 cutw to s5 an hr. EUEI lllE Laborer 11000 M/Serv llllllY ... RS ' Pllf n.. .. ..__ ua.u PUft1 11..ana -PIHll•
Tan. Blue Collar. Part/time bu1lne11 l ot 539-6243 Direct Agency In yOAJt home Need FfT 53M243 Dlfect Ao«ICY ~ .... ,.,, &II Yll ll'lftllll' (Lit'~ ltetl/ .... ) Spend 3 dep In the eun,
850-0189 ..... reu. 642-4670 (Ml 10248 Wettmlllllef Av. IMI In lltuetic;,, for gent-10248 Weetmlnater Ave =-:;r::,1c ~~~ -:,::a-::~ 2P4': ~~~ CLEAN APPEARANCE. Opponunlty for quellfled ~Meo Cerd It ope.
LOST. Handt-<:eip card, nrl mag If no an1.) Catering Service needt lem1n. Need• n1l1t-Loen Proc:.eor pany. Min. 1 yr retell Time•. l1gun1 BHch GOOD ATTITUDE. OE· P4lflOll to develop beck retor needed lrnm«t. 4
Cle1rbrook & Newport Marine Synthetic Lubrt-prepar1tlon worker $4 inc• 762-0234 or exper Loin Proceuort nufl«)' eJIP. FT. Stan-494-8498 SIRE TO SUCCEED. otnc. operation 11 well day WOftl wk. OOod ~
BNd .. C.M. 540-1471 I cents. retail/ wtlolelale, per hr. Full time, 5 AM to 968-7343 needed for buay ex· Ing 11tary ttOO-$ 1200 PL.EASE CALL ME FOR u worlltng with prot.-nefttl. ~ open. C.
OST C .. __ .__ lnq 527 7170 1:30 PM """""between E p . pending office. PleaMt mo Pd ..... Id .... & .~. MO .. E DETAILS. EDEE aton•I tr•d•rt. Call Trecy o.v...,. 56&-1114
L : Blonde ockeq ....,_ · • 10 AM and 7212 PM end 1erow eraonntl. FHI IUfroundlngt Xlnt ~ · '"" ,_ " .... ---aa ._ " ~~~· c~121Pllm & ..... la I-·-4-"' • • orowtng E•crow Co. ft Must .:. _ __.__.. tlOn. Hoepltll ln1Ur111Ce n•• -·"-_.,.. N 0 u v EL.LE c 0 . 714-72().0104 J ...... ~ SIM ...,...,.. .....,...., ~ .. -. .,_ 4 PM. Lori • Kitchen nHdl dynamic recep-ta, be __ ............ evall. tnt~ by appt Knowlldge ot P.l1nt1 & 714/875-5966 leave s-tng Mldllne Opert----------fcutt fol 1 15 000 3077 S. Harbor Blvd.. tlonllt and Eacrow Offtc.. In FHANA/Conventlorull oGJy TuH-Frt. Lloyd'• lnMCI 1.0. req d. Sten ~ 24 H,. 1 1 k 1 1 Live-In nurM, oompen. FOUND; MM lilv«/g~ ni. up 0 • • (Harbor et Carriage OJ.) ., S....-Y belled on exp-proce11tng. -Send Re· ~ 148-7441 $900·11100 mo. Inter-· ora, over oc 11 ng • ambulatory. Xlnt ref.
Shih Tzu fem golden/ &low or bad credit OK. S. A. • .,·Call tontat 848-1265 eume to: Uncteey & Co, vl•w by appt. only . S.,.. n.dle, I yell' min. lac-Dr1Wr (213) 919-3847
wht Afghan fem blk/ even II unemployed. UM .._ -··· 1,.: .....__......... 17871 lrvln• Blvd, S1e Nuratno LI 0 yd • 1 Nu,. er y tory ex per. Engtllh/ brown Germ.' Shep. fem funds for any purpoH, _.., .. _. ~ "" .... -. 20I, Tuatln, CA &2"0 c.mrect NurMAlcMI, 3 . 848-7441 WIND TURBINE SALES Sp1n l1h 1pe1klng. --------
Seil Point s11meH. 551·2«3 ., ..... ant & unique_,.,. :-= L Pr--• 11:30 PM and PIT. 11 Thia 11 the major tu 850-18!2 Aalaall ....._ oan .,._..ng PM 7 .. M COUNTRY thalter program of the ===::...----
Newport Beech Anlm•I ••rt1•1n T.D.'14021 lron.!,.,~0& ':-~r:!t:; ...... • ......., Prt1tlglou1 Bank In CLUB cONV PlelM cell lll-1100 m UY 80'1. Benk financing, the IPl IMD C.ts "" . Sheller, 125 MeH Or, ' r,:jlvld; wtlol8 t~r• located In Irvin• hu 1 Santa AnllColt• MeM between 10 AM and 4 Petition CtrC\llllora utlUtlet buy the power. If No 111.parlence necH-=-----·-...;;-~;,;.
CM 844-3658 I.I. l&TTUI tlon & ftllr wtlt lcld "Jult oollecllon poettlon evlll-ar .. It looklng IO< VA/ PM ONL. y. Mon-Fri. Pay twice wkly, work own your ..... cont1Ct1 are aary. N-etoni. Offtoe Mutt Secrlflce Beeulltul
Found: M. Sltm•M ml11, ........ h. '"· the right touch" 10 our able. Appllcint• muit FHA and Conv1nt1on1I 549-3091 h,., 1tllt lmmedl•t~. with bu1lnae PfOfettio-1k1111 pr• I• r r • d . HlmllayWI Cat w/paperL
vie. Hell & BHch. HB spedaililng In 111 & 2nd creative menu. Salary heve 2-3 year• expert-L.01n Proce11or1 with 831·8338 831-881 n111, -offw excellent, 142-SPAS. F • • 1 ~ Yr•· I I 5 0
5/tO. 973-lttU, ex1 293 TD'• tlnce 1949 commenaur•t• with ex-enc• with hHvy aklp-1-2 yr experience. Full ...... Profettlonel BrHkfHI extremely high return• 840-6454. Alto, 2 Fret
FOUND: Blonde Cocker Robt. Settler NH/CM pertence Send reaume & tracing ablllty. Bankcard Time Poaltlon. Xlnl Sa-20 yHr -old aub con-Cook wanttcl. Muat be W lllttte effort. Prefer , ........ Wert klttent. I W9lb..
Spenlel, M, Balboa Pavl-R.E. Brokel' Bd Relltota Nlary hlttory to Mr. RI-& CRT experience pr• l1ry and Bonu.. Imme-lflCtlng nrm. Know..gen-IHI paced & quality background In en.tter1. Wt 11M4 11.U unm
11on. 5113. DYi 873-52<45; 142•2171 5"4~11 chard B•blrackt, 308 lerred. Contect D. Rawl· dlll• ()p4pnlnga. Cell 1°' •el ledger prooedurt1; oriented. Xtnt working tnaurence. or related H ......... Celt 142..-520
eva, 87~5778 WIDOW HAS SIS tor PllClflc Coat Hwy Hunt lnOI. Mon-Fri, 8:30 AM -Appointment. AMER-eccurlte typing, P9Yfoll, environment In Balbotl. type HIH. Send brief
T 0 • 110 000 No Beech 92648 • . 4:~ PM. 714-Cle0-4143 ICAN TEMPORARY Invoicing. job colt IC-n..ou t ..... beet need --rnume for pen1ontl In-,., ... ,... L:: 1111
FOUND; Yortcte. Sun. AM, ,.;,_.It•·_ .. __.: no~-.... . . s ER v ~c Es . c:oun•-M1them•llCll-:'..'.''•7':'18""' ..... tervltw: P.O. Box #1751, !!!! ....... _ _, ..,._ __, .... ••-_.,_ Experl1nc•d W1l ter/ 114-037-3968 ~ • ..,. ,..,. " <r n COrona, CA 91720
vie Mem,..-& Altlbll'NI, Call Denta'on A11oc: -" "'-Wlltr-. cell Karen. ty eccurete. good on ~ Prw KC G D HB. 980-783& I 873-7311 Co-«!ucettonal reek!en-8«-95~ Locel per.on to do dMn-telephone. Setery com· Rell &tat• LandlCIC)er S4 tv. ...111 ... A r e1t ene pup-
FOUND Bl d p 1 ;j 1111 treatment progrem up & melnt~. per· meneur11e with 1b1tlly llUMllOl&L 1,1, 539-6243 Direct Agency ,., plea. Fewn end bMdle.
. ' · erro ' 2nd TO't from $5,000 to tor 1dol e1cen11. Catt &pertenced Rental Cer manent emptoym•nt. Pennenenl poeltlon. &· Two career oriented 11-10248 WettmlN1er Ave , .. er fwt .... 833-930&
Nenday. Colla M•H $50,000 high yteld H · 84&-3489 ptfaon need9d to write 1 225 wk. ttart. C•ll cetlent opponunlty for cen-needed to IMln ltllf .. .,.._54~7914 · curtcl by atngl• f1mlly w•••••· contractt. 7-11 Rent• •n•-.r Ad .t811 s .. right per1on. Call tllelklllaofbrokeregel ferl_, ... ...t: AKC Germen Shepllerd
Found: Of & wtlt M. Cat, homH In Sen Berner---~ Cw. 850-1180 M Rlctwd 142""'3oo 540-1454 bet--. tam management of com-S'WDlJST '83 · ~ pupnlea. Qua thy &
vie. Ad1m1/0eteware, dlno. Prln only. Call Temporary 'olltllle mother . r. · & 10:30 am. merclal R.E. Income ft WI• N11 quantity. ($300 to l350)
HB. $3&-i440 Denni• (714) 888-9828' Is 11 lloepltlf. Ftn lily my &per. woman needed for tef PDm --Office Potltlon CIP«l tull dUring trelntng. &cea.nt I• ... king flextble, In-Call Robyn 859-4'07 P.....U. 3I l Mon-Frt M . hOme. Uve In. ~-4202 ~·~~kk• :~~·~t;1~f~:~ for 7.1 t Rent A Car. cllarge bookk .. ptng & beneflla • 1111 & health nov1tlv• & per1on1ble TEL...--°' 155-1052 daya J Pvt p1rtlt1 wl1h to pur· CHIROPRACTIC 14M590 WWI & dellll cert. Onfy typing, atable, m1tur1. lnturac:.e plui dental r:ir:~~n~o :i:~~?t~o~hl~ USllfmllllf Ill 11111 al
SPIRITUAL READINGS chaM 111 & 2nd T0'1, ASSISTANT.PfT up. people eppty. Mlf atantng lndlvldu1t. plan. Reelonomlca, (l)T-Shlr t 8001 .. , Neectedttonoe.Expen. Advice In •ti mitten I h I I • , ••. e II r . 831-n91 •FASHION COUNSElOA 850-1180. Hr.. f,. ll I b I •. 87M700. .. enc• or wlll train. Full -.... 11D
lov. m.rrl.g. & bu.I /8 "7"'• ""' 8 $12/hr PIT l..Aldlet ... ~ (2)Ttc:ket1 & lnformlllOn time. " O'clock 'tit " Pr t-..._, .__....,
n.M. Alto counMllng~, 1 1.-.,.,...,.,1 .. perel Bu.in.:. .......-••111•1lt ,,.._ 714/548-9337. A8tf. at Receot.IOnltt Booth, (3fBffr & Wine Mon. th~ Fri. Call.,.., 1 o -· yoAK ·-·-·-,,
1815So.EICamlnoAMI, Exp1rlanced d inner 731-4347 7D-6251 Leedtng Nat't Co. tn,. T79W. lettl.St .. M. ExcittngOeelgnStudtoln Booth, (4)Securlty, PM.~161 home. A:f P1 only. San Clem 492 72" •-,__ t k pldty growing a.rt• In-Orwige COunty Compeny Cotti MHI require• (6)Ground1 M1tn1en· ~/ 9 e • o 8 8 or . . .. ll!Jl!ta coo • pl/time. Apply In ........ lftlet du.try Mella rnoUv1ted la ..-ing •..,. motlval-mature. energetic lndtvl· enc•. $8/hour. OutlH TEL...-228. No~~ Cl.cus .F ltll Wu... Siii ~~~~w~g~ full time, 40 hra. Ont enthutlHtlc men end ed lndtvldull to PfOlllde dual to handle front Include hiring. IChedut-Uf&lm ....;Pl_"_'OI_.,. ______ _
Sch ev1nlng per w"k and women willlno to follow• 1ecreter111 aupport to deek. Typing 1 muit. Ing. acoountlng. etc. DS 1 LhaN Al*" o..m cdor· .lss •• E AIDE to minor h•ndlclP-· Sal. required. credit ~ ..i. program top fNllll08l'l*lt. S•l•ry open. Call Jen. ANO 1 General Account-iin ed 5 yr olc3"*9. Mo¥tng pees tidy. Dnver'• tie. a COOK. 1tall1n cooking 111.per.'helpful. APPLY W/lt,200 mo. guet tn-Mf-1801 Ing Man11ger ($12/hr) to Ex.per. nee. Sun-Thur9. ITKllt Mii. S10. 151·2~
710 NO. HARBOR BLVD. ret1. H,. neg. Uve In or e11p. pteferr9d. ~In KIRK JEWELER S come and potent111 Requlr• minimum ol 5 Reoeptlonlet Trallwe, PIT overHe •II th• ebove ~-~~~ days. e&l-1078,..,..
FULLERTON out. 833--029t 9¥8 peraon Sat 10· . 107 (Harbor Center) 2300 I 3 . O O O I rn o . C 1 11 yHre experience In • to atilt. Good P~. Abll-plut handling peyrott, prolettlonal worklnl AKC Black L.eb Pupa, 8 111-1112 AIDE 10 minor hancllcap-. 2111 Pt, NB. Hll'b« 8/Vd. Coett M... 142-2009 MCretarlll cepeclty, typ-tty to IHrn M1111ge dally eocountlng, In~ wtc I Deel ed ..._,. I d _ .. _ .. 3 .. I"" at 90-70 wpm, dicta-t1chn~UH. Bob con-tory. account• pey1ble & condition•. Call lhet •. ma ea. •w · .... 11 ... ti iUll "'"" • Y n........... "" OIM -•• .... ... depotl M ....... bo d PM L.aaune Hiie omoe M other excel hunter.
l ••JS a WIR ev9l'Y morning. 548-5591 5 yHrt uperlence. F/T:::;ionlet/lrafflc '''lfDS... phone and •lementary "°"· ..0711 able. ta. Ult""" n • SoOtt. ~1·2m ' Fether Ftetd trained. -• N d d I di t 1 f to E--... 50 to • .....,. ,,_ bookkeeping. Per1on .. _ t ' S200M.. 71411~74-1768 ATTRACTIVE 'MT 1ee ee • mm• •• y. poeltlon O<rld rt•tlon. _,,.... ........ ... ~ mu1t potMl8N good or-,,..,.,.."' Become. lfatt of th• --···-" e Call 494-5194 C.t·LIVle Some typing euentlel • .-K you havoe a rta. genlzatlonel & communl· MEAT SLICER & POR· "S1wdu1t Family" & •~ _. German Shepllerd pup-T~~~~Y~U. Le9dlng Nat' Marketing Rettaurant. Good bentflt1. C .. t Et-WllQOll or van and enjoy cetlon eklHt. Word P<O-TION CONTROL PER-apend 1 fun eummer on 111111111 (IJllltlil, plea, $75 eec:f'I 080. Catt
Firm need a 1ntetllgen1 .... llott l.aDrvl 8«-2727 wortctna with teenegera. ceaatng expertenoe pref SON to operate Hobert the ground• of one ot the I 11II1 Iii) J t t~ t alter 5 pm, 141·5590. ••m IHI 1d1pt1bt• peopl• who EOE M/F Call Mr. RountrH •t Me1Ur• nono-.mkr. s~ Sllcer. ~. Prttd but moet unique crafta & lftl ..1-..a I -..11 I
L ARGEST & M O s T enjoy pub tic contect . Now hiring line Cooke, 548-7068 bhm 11AM & c:ommentuf'l1e wllh P · wltl ttlln. 9:30 AM to 8 fe1Uv111 In lh• South· Ht•---r Lib Pupplel, purebred,
RELIABLE Mu•t h•v• Cltlr tel•-llJU & P/ttme, Experleno-111.11 3PM week days. per1enoe Call..,._ ed PM, Mon-Tllura. 'AM to lend. (Deedllne '°' epplt-'" ,,. ........... AKC. chocolate or yel-
1000'• of mbrt 1tnce phone volot. 9 to 1 Mon 911 pref. Wegea negotl-Rlcllo llOCOUflt executive Marine Hardware, PIT, 1713 642-4300 24 hr 1 PM Suncley. Apply 10 cetlont Mey 23, 1883.) ~ 11t1 ... tow. 8 wk• old. '200.
1964 thru Fri. plua Sat. Op-•ble. The Grind« Ree-lllMklng hlohlY MOtlvated Fri, Sat, Sun. Sal•• Pleale l a1ve 0neme AM to 12 °' 2 PM to .. Sawduet, PO Box 1234, ... I 7141847..om alt 4PM.
072-1000. 24 hour1 portuntty IOf en e11celtent taurant. 1400 Weet PCH. lndtvtcJu11 to repreMnt Clerk. Oen• Point. phOne numw and beli PM. Lori'• Kitchen. 3077 L.1gune BHch 92152. ptn •, .... 11 'Chine" Shat Pet male
pert time Income For N.B. 842-U81 "-POt1 8ch redlo ata-4813--44841 time to rw:fl You· 8. Hirt>« Blvd., (HerbOf •lt•ntlon Barbara. No LU. puppy. r-. reQl9tered. HlmAL .,, Interview cell Jell II Counter help'°' tlon. Mull have ..... •t Camlge OJ.) phone Cllll, pie. --C8PCA seoo. 4'4-6317 •&llU!I 545-5ne dry c1een. HB ATM. 111.Plf. 0 111 Elltott L•· Mec:Nnk:IOUtbolrde. tm-~ Reetlurent --•--• 84&-4221 z:atue, ~2727 medi.'9 ~-Scott Pert time~ etiop. TIM Alg11er A .. 11urent leo«ltl'lu9 and orgsonlnd ---L&b ~· 8 wk•. lhOta. 2022 OU L. llllUL llAllW EOE M/F SC h O ck Bo It•. 3:30-8:30PM. Mon-Fri. now tlktng appllcatlona wtth tittpng. Oll'8 Ina. -Wor11 ~ In ,...._ 150. vH 142-0311.
NEWPORT BEACH •••• TB.Him ...... ULll Hop Sing'•"°* hltlnQ alt 7141113-2060. Food prep & CIHnup. fO< quallfled oootcL ~ fol' di wt!. Pd V9C, holl-port Beech. Utt ... _14_2_-8313 _____ _ 112-ll• Wll'41hoWe/PuttllMlno poeltlonl. Oelvwydriwr MEDICAL Soultl eo.t Alla .... epply In pet'IOf'I ~ d•Y•· Cotta Mell our top pereon Pl" In 24 CH. lln• AKC Coctter
IOAM-12AM ENTERTAINMENT Graham Btoe. AW Condi-preeeetl, fluft and lokS: TRAN8CNPTIONIST Call 141-&209. 3 • 5 pm. 11 FUhlon 548-3000 l'ICM'l llnd ~t hOme Spaniel pupplM, lllow ~
l llAY l Wiii ~~ =:. ttonlng. 648-1164 Apply In per1on •-10 Work et home,: 5 Y",+ PMTllm nu... llland. N.B. ---11y1·--..... t ,!; Call 751 222 tdter q~" ... ,~~ ... &for~ "·A ,...._ di c 1 "' 1 ·-- -AM. 1000 N. Colet Hwy,, curref\t eicper ence n -• -• ...... ..,._, ,_ ,...... vv•• ....,.. come •n•. • eur ty - -1 __ Beecl\ 494-4044 medto•l recOfd depll't-Wented ldultl over 22 Aelteurwrt For buey A! Develop· 2014
To Serw You tootclllk•. exotic dano-No 111.perl•nce necH· -v-·• · ment requited. Beck· wtio enjay wor111ng wtth Brkflt Cook, Apply In ment co. one peraon Ta..-mnT -AK-c"'~--.,-Spei"9t---.-2-yr-111'11 ..... ere. & belly d1ncera. wy Exciting<*'-op-HouMC:lelflere, PIT. ex-ground to tnalUde H&P'a. youth. Mutt be *•II pe,.on. Down Home ofo. non tmkr, mu9l hll¥9 W old lie fr .. to good
Badle60t/BecMt0tetll AV91'IOI comm S500 to portunlty. perleoced. Mutt l\"'9 <*' di• IUITWIWtee. contul· Ql'OOIT!ed, pereoneble. • Cale. 920 No El Camino iclnt typing ekllll & com-Outck S ..., Selllng .. _ .... 2 ..,.27
Office & Blrtttct.y PertleL S 1200 per wk. Send F .. fOt DlrectQfY. end phone. 980-1971 tltlon•. operative r•· poel1hw motlvefor. Start AMI. Sen Clement• mend of l:ngttth langu-No ~ "";eCfl*ed. """ ,.. -... llft e pm. • M WT photo & reaume to: Anl-1-312~1 Alk/Jeen po r 11. M • F, 10 • 4 , It 178 P« *"k. ~•11 RETAIL. SALE8-M1ture, ll09 l eblltty to OOtn90M Sllery. XLNT ~ I 8'1ndle 9ox.ert. 1 ttw'9I •
.... ~7~r:::~:~t~h. 88~ Ext. 0.1533 HOUNk"fH"' needed '°' 18&-1000 2-6f>m. M&-702t (lltl fOf ••per ..... pereon for bu1tne11 corrHpond· tty fO< ldVanoement. PIT .,.., olct en.red maAe. 1 lll 1111 111 Mii ,... .. ., --·-.. ,_ of 1 u.-...,... Shen'On). ••~'r-.ncl'ICountrv enc• lnd•P•ndenlly. 1 c 11 E 11 fl¥e y.., olct ---... • .......... -·--. bully pr n .... ,, • ...., .. Newport Beach leadlng ., Front oflloe eppeeranoe. even ng1. • m y. ,,_ LOlltnQ ~
•ANGELA SPIRITUAL• -........ Muet b• r••P w/own Jewel•fl lffktno part HIT Tm sw-~~ :~: Some bookkeeping, col· 882-6144 . • . :
AdYleot/Counetllng In • ...._....._ w--.o.....a PfT, FfT. XLNT Commit., trana. 5 hrt 1 If'/,5:r.1 time elfl~::...•YH well l'fll/WmlM I ' I ' ' . lege degrH pref' d. Telephone ulet. top Sherrte 1 Poodle~.• L..0¥9/Marrtage/~ _,.......... ..... Work In oc. Mult have wk. Am or pm, •• arI WlrMd In ..,.. & MP• extr• .. helping ......,... KnC>wtedge of M esev.-comm. 01 NI. to 111'1. r .. cup-toy..mlnleture, _
876-2495 °' 873-8784 Reeo. ldult1 Temp/Full flair IM color l be 1 NII open, refe. UO-IOI offtoe procedur'9 lnolu0-youth cerrletl promot1 For Marine Hardware topment i>f9f'd. Mual be Wort! from teedl. Greet _'2_50_&_up....;....._ ~----p......,.i CHARLOTTE SITTERS. at art er. Wiii treln. dyl. Ing lllurdly no even· their own Ht1bll1hed llOf•. Must llave uper. wllllng to learn how to Io c . 2 1h I It1 . ..._ n• lentcet 145-3741 840-6249 HouHkMper. weekend• Inge. Call 11~ routM. Mature, outoo-1n bottl ae111ng and m• operate WOfd proceeeor 714/980-7004 a;; --_________ .. H .... 1;.;;4 s.eutlclW\, 1mmect man• Dell counter trelnee lull only. Aellebte women to "-POt1 a..:n FICllll a.-Ing. attractive p1rwitlf rtne hlrctwere. Full time. l em•lt ofo computer. tll LllB _ Q h0t .. tYP9. r. 3
AT TENT 1 o N e u St -gement poeltlon evall. to Um• A 1 In iaon 11w 1n. care, and OOOk for ion requlf'et m""'9 -type pereon, plelM cell excetleflt Co. benefit•. Selary commeneurate ••-Yrt old, oenti•.1. Eng/
NESSMEN: Attrectlvt be1utlct1n w/cllent•I•. 495 e 1~~YSt ~ s.9 eldetty lldy, Aeft r.qutr-ll1tant PIT. 142 .... ttf 2-!IPM. M-F. M&-1021. ~1. EOE/M/F/H •l•Xpet. o.Jt 175--7171 P~ ..... °'*' W•. ~ oonf. •1.000.
young Ledy wlll Model. Full cfllrOe. telwy negot. DuW Heroid . . • d . '"". 2 '2 0 0 r for im.m.w. Sat. end Suh M~ f1tt '3t-711 .. ~ Cell IOf ln19'VWW Mon·Frl 833-21161 °' · t13-2t91 and Hnd. Don t m111 .._....., IDS on>t 83~ Dental Allllttent ~ ttllt onet 81 .. Weet 19th 1:;.m:-,1,;1,_ ___ ....,;i_w_~-
. BHuly Selon 811t1on Buey "-POt1 8e.cti Of· HouHk .. pert wanted. ND PRIZESf IEOmlllY St. M2..o&41 Lovtna Cere. ...._ ~·,. ....... a =·i,,:rg~~0•• lie• n .. d. RDA. ~so~~ KES-EARN GREAT TRPS I I Acllv• Morto•a• Oo * 11UI--* not lhe8. ~Hot Jatrlll!I!! J!lt · · 831-4238 gune e..dl ... ..._.117 ft need• lhetp Met.Caty/ ~ llH•ln. P•l·•ltter.,
Prtvat a BllllnO Qertl, full ttme. 10 Dentel reoept. ~ exper • ......_ _, PMbs· u1-40a Agee; ~~ k4fY by toucti, heevy ~ ~ dentlll omo. lllMk· Interior Oeelan 811ow In HL, AE on~. I• ... IJl•W. :::::::::::::::= =-~ yn Ing, f-5. By ~I. only. Ing front deek r909Ptlon-ROOfTI need Jr/T AMI• -~ crow Oo. or Tltl• Co. ..wL ... L...--_,,.,. HAroo C0tp .... 2·7491. lat, wltf'I plrMMnt l ... tint. Exp. "•Q, N, 8. ;, • !*fd. lnWf 1~ ~ TYPIST:.,.,. WSlfl'~lll• m •
EOE. wtlV'tpeiaonlltty. Soft'le 142·2258, 541-111.&e ,.._ Int•· Piton• MS.f402 oMoe l rwoept. 1....... •lt•
hel•t11 I Bllpr F/C-8eoy.1..!•Ptr, exper. pr9'. Celff0t In-I NTERIOR DlllON , ~ _._,._. . ....111-tlll ---· rtaydal =~ :::;.=. ~~;.. Ht-5111 or :~Imo p~ ~ tr.1£ ~f. ~ .:, v ~. a111111Y .,,,,..,:.._, ir.:: ~ I ••.
• d 11 .. mt. n . 6&2;atM Dental be orlllUV.. embttloW, la.._.~ II N41wport lue" Tu ::fl,~ft:'t•wport Y 1t. WM
°"1 al 8eo ... ~· ..... 1411 ~=':'· ~:::.=· ltwd. ...._ IUftOPINUUf=JM ; lueste'del !flt~:~~::: ~=·~-~ 1911S.1811. AE·11·14 "' , "-'tt::fltnnorOPA WAITWWNT""8 wNI Htf"ltOJ• w/altro,.,• ·~~t<t~ ~~y1J.:'lc:g pegt)olrd. c.11 ... 6-0792 ~c.'tt":o~.=. ........ 11 11. raw • TO ..,5.eo PEI .-nr' ·i f1f1ft ...,._. ,..,.,_ .,. '°' ..._., It~ ''tt~•'' •1•'"0 "·'
('Vt.LY QUAAANT!!D) 18 ·-56M111 or M0-194M Htip-dletrtbut• Cendy ~ !Im 1S ~· · -"' ":;-., r.·1!R1't:T·tV'1':\ ="..:'=~~IOIMI ~= • ~~~ p':'9rc· .. • --Dependable peraon to ltrlP9ef'I Candy. latn ....,,.. to**' 1~! t Tiie &::. eo.t .,..,,. !_!IO to auo Wlltw1 • .,.. .._ .. •
'' _ .... , op1r1t• perklno lot Itta ll'IOMY 4/M'I. Help tw. Not. Ou cnn *' ll 3:30 P.•· _, • -,__ pereonain, Mo of....._ tlOlll; .. cNc*a,,..... ~lo M1n ... r /ltl ... Exp.. ~1 let/fl.in AM. blll1'd UM Mt'°'* ~ •l .tir 1:30 ......... ,.. Oii Selwdly,"' .. -.... ...... tn-o141 .. '° tlltlM, ............ -you from Home Oftloe r1eneec111ne~ ..... ....,.2111 aee lloet)llll 11oiun'"' _.a 1w.,. 11on v..,..""' _ . 't tmc-, Mil-.__,. ...,.a...,.;1•
e¥9rY WedrtulS.,, IUW't ~·end tnll\l~r !!>.."!>tl•11.rthlp fund. :t.;* prim. --"""',_ .. ,. • !!~~tel ,.__...,• MINlll.--to ..... e•=·':':al ..........
"'-" ? ,,. Ho ...,.,,. fOf Ulgunl ... .......... ' -It """1-............ ... ... _....... -t I& ....... ._ -. ... "'°' ••n••Y· NMfoNI ,Hlllon 1111nd, '" MUlt lle¥e Ac1Uf ~-... • "° -°' -1..,. ,.,, ,J ""''°"• . ,,..... ""' ..... ,.,...'" MJ 1111 • ~ .... .,,. IN ~. 0o Y4UI' Wort! Plloe Vlrdde. ~ motorcwde. er.::'~ -1 ......,.._ II JCM1 ere illtefUd, pleeM Cll •• oMoe pOlltlon ,...._ llO!M~ a .... el A ,...._I
ttght·rn iN oomton and benefit eno OhlnCle fOr Ume. )ot lmm1df1te .. 1fM"lll c.t. I·, e..: ..... IOf•~. !i CdNT:·:a_ ,..._=.:--............. ~,. •ff11r1ty of your own • d v • n o • m • n t • wor11 Hto" eoflool _& jr. httrl· M • __..., • -
"°"'8. 0.... end..,._ 21S/7 .. ._tl41. AP tor Cell: 146 MM Part/lime. Oood P•1· !!! . (714) 54&-7051. 1
Olllort,,..... a.t '1'NI ...... Olll "'-M PM fOf 11110: I~ --·-. ,~ _ ~ .,.... .. , ....,._ ....... =... 1__ ~ '"9°1'52:.. Oel "
n81'M end lddr ... co: Mor-. ,.,,.... .. ~ t7N441, t10-ING ' 1f~--~ii-~;._~~ll'!l-Jl-\U "" ...... ,...... _ ...-. ,.__ -·• KIYSTOHI INDU· Y°" c1oni rlllld a gun to .,_--. .. ~ .. tii ' ·I ··· , ~· P9' ._. ~~~ ~ ¥ .,,... HIMfQ DIPT. ..,,.. faM " "'*'.JOU yHr. tt ,-OU " .... l'f•:.t:.'Md CHlf"• -r • . ,,.....__., ... l '1'°= ... Ollll&. '--...... ~ =-~~=-~ ... ~:.:~ .. It.,~~·. c;..:c, --~·~ea '" . ~ -, ' 1.J11~lh· --~· ...,.. .. .-·-..... .......... -. • ... ; . ,•j ' ' '-,.; ... -, '· •"'=··=-=··:!·11111 """• 1tt2t I ... _,.., M. In tOMll .. ',.., ·• . ·~ -' •
. .
ca Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, May 17, 1983
-.. --&......I .......... ....... •l!!!lll!PP• Hll hwtr fll! Trliltn, Utility ltM Aalel, a.pr!!! ml!!,_ --!1! ... !L.J!!l!!!!!!....--l-.!!!!!-.... ------
G.E. Rot111er1a uo 211· Beytlner Sent•. llb, c1011d 10ll7x71t 1rallar !!! !Ill..... f14l f!l!!I t1H ,,......,. tl7S ~7119 '19 v.a. 225, Vo, Votvo, wltll locklno door• , ,
rldio w/1 fatl'I bll1 aye. &42·2468 or '31·21529 ,.,4 BMW 2002 wtltl.,. 11 A9'1, 12,000 lnl, air, 78 ~ "'"" tr• · '7' YW Dal. "•bblt 17 2 CIJ n 8ew1 Ootdec>Ot blml '1 111 be ' hMCI / Mle, '*'*>. "800 OC>o. looll• OOocf. lt4IO Cullom tl!Y« paint & TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
I Half: pref
5 Dodger grea1
10 Float
14 Formal
15 Ms . Drew
16 S teel beam
17 lndellnlle
19 Composition
20 Time period
2 1 Cltfus fruit
23 Arete
26 Annam
measure
27 Bursts
30 Loses sap
34 Defeat
35 Music group
37 Skill
38 Ump's call
39 Oglers
41 Can ·US
canal
42 Sugar: sull
43 German city
44 Light fabric
45 Risks
47 Attacked
50 Born
51 Rips
52 Polillc
2 3
56 G1rls
60 Dote on
61 Equal (to)
6• Gland pref
65 Wandered
66 Small
amount
67 Orderly
68 Churchmen
69 Blue shade
DOWN
1 Tater
2 Ocean bird
3 Vaned abbr
4 Bestows
5 Ebb
6 High pries1
7 Fa11y
8 Hindu sec1
var
9 Hjnder
10 Oii-coior
1 t Father Arab
12 FDR's pet
13 Equine ga11
18 Redact
22 Fountain
drinks
24 Coarse
25 Forfeit· Scot.
6
UPfiG!.lt Frttur. 11215. ~ . n ' • 4 ' .,._,. "' toma llo tran1., new Cle.a. UO~J~.1 "°' 144-24%7 lntar.A/O, 4 llPd. 2.0I( rnl,
ton Chevy truck rHr :~e~'•n' "119 s:: Aat•ttift P1alnt, llr••· 1111au&punk11 15().]413 •80 ,....-., OP L8 ol• "' (H·l50 mpg), lunroot, w4ndow. 125. 540.20158. • 6 ' · -1 ereo CH" • on Y • -•hr ' 11 am/Im tape. 115200,
MONDAY•s
PUZZLE SOLVED
982-0847 498-3245 •fl ptll IMPORTANT NOT~ 32K m1i.1 On O·ll•uled ., __ ..... .... lltl ~~· ~'a:~ 752.cm.4 Of .... ,343 ---------119· Fantuy needa WO<k TO AEAD£R8ANO 1ng. JCLNTI Prl. pty. -· _..r · ·i---------•a1Jcal 12500 obO'. 873-14 15 ~ ADVERTISERS '5500 llfm .. muet Mill AMI •t>out 842-49'8 '12 vw Super e .. 11 •. laatnatatl 1214 988-9248 The prloe ol lt•m• •d· Call (714) 842-0138. lll ~WI '70 Corona, reblt cart> &. Clean, rblt •no. n••
27 S ailboal
28-ot
Commons
29 Flower
31 Stand
32 Non-worker
33 Was uprighl
36 Verb form
39 Brawl
40 Said "OK"
44 Supple A
46 Recess r
7 8 9
48 Side dishes
49 Sy11a. once
52 Scheme
53 Journeyed
54 Eye part
55 Weight
deduction
57 Tuxedo
58 Within: Pref.
59 8nt1sh gun
62 FDR's plan
63 Decade
11 12 13
vertleed by Yehlole OMl-LAROE SELECTION OF ••• ••-Y91 Irene, OOOd tit ... t11150. brake1ttlr•1. Muet NII V•maha CIUllcal Ouftar II' hJrtll lrabef ere In the vehlcle clue!· NEW & USED BMWSI --H 846-0680 12700/obo, 151·2222
11150, Carlo• Acoustic Lo•ded. Stable partner lled a<IYeftltlng oolumne & , 74 T""""I• Corolla we.-dy9, 54~28 e'i·
$200, both w/hatCS.hell wan~. Docked In New· doe1 nol Include tny ap.. s:o -. eutomatlG eo '72 Supe r 8u9, oood caM. Fendtt Pro ReYwt> PQ<t. 17000. 8!50·1&45 pllcable iuea, llcenH, • • _,;.. "' ......... 1 1· .. ..,.,· med! oond. ,_ rlldlll• Amp $&00. Cati 842-0192 • I _, -.,.,., Priced Mii btwn 10-3AM or Iv meg. 32' JellrlH read" for 1 trenifer IHI, ln•"0• LM llAll ID ~u. 631-7278 & ahoGU. 10 • , chareee. f"' lor air pol· llOLUME SAi.ES I 12!50. MICke 154M238 Multlvow e4ec: piano, airing aummer, llahlng & Cata· lutlon control device SERVICE & LEASINO '78 Cellca GT. HK, 1 after 7 pm
& br•11 en1, duo ionic llna. 19500. 845-3014 ce<tlllCatlona or dHler 3870 N. Chel'ry Ave. owner, l3000! 548-81574 •7e Rabbit, am/Im CUI,
aynthtl, 1mp & apkr lall 'lnlt documentary prepare-LONG BEACH Xlnt oond ,2500 cab1. 12400. Joyce _ v 11on ch•roe• unlu1 (No. Cherry exlt-405) 'II •ll 11111 IP! Tri :I. It'll 15S2-7778
754·1202 IEllOEI fll otherwtee 1pec;llled by llH) HI llll Sliver blue leather lo m1i.:.:::: .. ::::1!!::::...-~,..:.::.:.:.1--....J.------
'
1he ad*11 .. r. T aCS.-lnl W-;.c:ome eng.
0
A1klng 110,800. '73 Triumph Spitfire. l ll?S Oflln hnltart SALE IOWI r 8!50-9748 1500, tun tranlS)OrtatlOn. t " lt•le••I 12U 16 11. Hobie cat with • Aat• ltme"/ conveniently Located 1Hl 2001 1110010Bo . 497-435819·7""8•~-es-OL_W .. aoon--.-very-
R I Ill t It trailer ullbox Ille Jack 9019 & Competltlvaly Priced Ingrid •It 8. clMn. Auto. Air, Rack, oya o ce YP••r •r. • · • Pam . & Very clean. Rebuilt en· , 7 2
TR e M 1 8 11 T-• .,900 .,..,55•4 Hll correcting. take ete, trape:ie & oars. Now gin•. 1548•6730. eve ue • . ....... -·.,.,.... 0 $ 3 5 O, pa Id 17 5 O. only 12300 or bett otler. Jeep pickup roll bat 982-3716 MOYlngJ Sacrlllce. 12800 '75 \/olvo Wagon. 2450L, 548-8392 c 1fl (7 t4) 548-8533 or $100 or MAKE OFFERI I 496-3245 aft• 8 ptn 13 0 2 hlll ~ ood (2 13) 380-9680 & aale ror 842·1885 evenlnge. Sal~Leutng ,73 280 4 5 v le •tk, xlnt oond. 2 o
exec c ra, • ca-Don ~CARVER 2nd own~r •• T?.!rvr:.1·77 TR7. 5 IC>d. 111r, Red1.,_1_20-_1eee __ . ____ _ blneta. 8 dnlc ch re · Aa ... WutH H20 N....11 recorde.17800 !155-1036 tan Int, 1harp, 13500.
SSOO/OB0.675-3884 30' Coronlldo w/4-cyten-I0.1S~·B.\1W days; 851•6330. evea & 4118-6281.-&.wknde. 117?
Walnut exec dftJ\a. 1150 i~.;.';'!';'cond.$22•000· WE PAY ~::~:~· wllnd• 1=v=-e-=tmr=--.. -.. ------:;1~1:-:;'l;:;J~=:.;..1n~&-... -~Newport....;;.~
& 1175 Exec chalrt, $30 TIP Dow• .._,...., I -BMcfl'• n,_.,-.ctlon
cabinets. 135. 4 dr 150 S 1 5 o 6 4 4 . 5 4 3 3 , Fii 1111 CAii FM cue .. 1unrool, nu 13900. 675•8839 eve, ~ Poreche•. Atldll end & 76. 2 dr leather metal Hiii 11 n ·74 2002, xlnt cond, AMI ·~,~~~~'.""at~ ,r:; ~ of prevlouel~ owned
673-7077 67S.7584 tire a , mec han xln1 ... ,.. ..... 75 ~. ~ V"""-•· AUi ••• $5900/0BO 842-3433 .,...,..,., dye -~-..-· EXECUTIVE DESK 30' downwind Ragllme ' --••1-••t John '88 4-dr MB 280SE by ..... Swlv. chair, credenta. aloop, 12 bags, needs .. _,_ -1 91 100 l bllcaee.S&00.552·t28t coamallce $5500 2480HarbofBlvd. 702002.rablleng.12500. org. owner. . m.
COSTA MESA 494·6t87 I Imme c S 6 0 0 0 . 446 E. Coaet Hwy Want to buy IBM COf'rect-1 873·t350 eves I ••l 499-1446. Ans. Ad 757. Newpof1 Beech
Ing Selectric II. 545-0630 Hobl 16 Taq. sunrtae 141-Ull 14 ·1-DaltH !117 642-4300 24 hrs. ml lelma'I 873--0900
Ottvettl Editor 4C dalUJte 1r1pez $1475 845·9628 WI •• , '11110 W&MI Rare '67 MBZ 280SL. som ..... DNMltie
etectrtc typewriter. many c.i 20. 6hp. cover. tratl« OLW A••s ~· owner. nu ~•Int Erpn mdl. Lo ml. lmmec. • extra la1turea. Ju et 13500. 673-2935 VAR I 17,5 0 0 I O b 0 PP co1m laJc• cleenad & 1ervlcad.1--------Ill TIHll 12 · 54 •8109 645-5901
1275. 887-3939 Luer. new mui & boom, '78 280Z. lo ml. one ownr. -,7-2-3-0-0-S-E_L_•-.s-.-l-ee-t-he-r VILllWllU
1307
1950. SebOt race w/new Mull aell. 15700 obo. 1 al 128 000 1 •to - -• .. , PiHn a 0r .... HU .. 11. $450. 642·7225 75"8940 nt. '· . m ... . --., .. .,_
'79 Regal-Limited Ed.
All power,,_ tire., Im· mac. 164-00. 49!>-6313 _ .,.. soo. 910.12315 11 •111111.1" t-.-....+--+--+-~ Gllbrune«t cuatom spinet '82 Laser wltr•lle< uaed '81 DATSUN 280ZX MB 79 Turbo Olesel, 50 Volumes ..... Service o r g • n , 11 k e n • w , only 6 limes, exit cond. 5 d d bl 1750/obO. 650-3029 1ome racln8. equip . IP ·new con · ue, gal tank, elate gray, end l....alng
Buick '82 Estele Wgn,
while/ 1>1u vel, fully load· ed. 21M ml, u new,
11 2,000 OBO. 656 08 s10.ooo. 58Q--6058 leather. a peel al redlo. 18711 8Mct'I Slvd. I rtl. 1t~..1I t•"O 11500. 11 -H ...,.1 n~-. " 1..--'81 Oateun. 510, 25K 5 121,500. Oya 720--03«; unt .. 'V on,.._,,. u., & iraller. nu beat· WI llY ... 1 1 £Y1lwknd1 759 1296 (71..a)U• 21M Br1.1newlck Pool Table 4x8, Ing• & llghll. I 1200. ep.,,.,cau, • '· c .. n. ' • • ,. '82 Bulctt Convert. Red
3 piece elate. conv«t• 87S-70n useo CARS & TRUCKS Under blue book. l50e5 '75 MBZ 450 SEL Black, !iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii~ wlwtlt lop. Compact, 8 Into ping pong table, COME IN OR CALL FOR Wknd & avee 84t-1983, 111nrool. alloys, catMt1e, '72 VW BUG. Body and cyt, l t495, 847·82t8 Iv comea wltll all accH. GrNt Buy! 14 fl Catam.. n& AHIMsa&. 5'48--0414 extra nice. $12,750. Ph: ~In Kini cond. N.-mag
1650. 848-5708 after 'pan.1AMF AdlcoRrt 1wlbtrlr. Cormler·O.Ullo •79 280ZX, Aeklng $7500. _8_7_3--_7_7_1_1 _____ 1 MW llrM, AM/FM.t-------
1
-"--
8FW. s~. ·~o'.00: 84;.~~-laYllU1 Good cond. Cult. paint '72 MBZ 220, Ale, am/Im, SELL THIS WEE-~~!!!L---....!~-!!!· Marcy 3-etatlon cnroma 182t 1 !EACH BLVD. low mt. Hurry to Hll. new--1lrel 20olPg comp KENO. S177S.080 ... TIE UllEIT ..,_,-+--+---! Ma tr gym, Ilk• new. O'Oay 23 Sail Bo8t, 3 beg, HUNTl'i,(llON BEAC~ 714/700.1237 ....,. rcdi.. Blue Mi blue. 881-8237
$1100/0BO. 83W280 ~~ lhl~~:C~vr:; M'Mlll;Ml-HH '1'8'240?, ::•1'~· etc, -moo."SST-0529 r..~8 ~1 ~J=a~tt~•.~b~l~ue~.~M~K~m~l.t'o; ~.~: ...
-----Pool Tabl•.1. xlnt ·cond. channel r9dlo, held, gal-Highest call\ lmmed. tor or~~ cond n.e,: *llN '10 Ill '* fuel In). eno. front ... t •g• Cadlll•c• In Sou-Sacrifice a350 lnclda 1 e y , a 1 • e p 1 4 • YOIK venlete, dOlneltlc or ~orde avall 13500• Mint cond, reblt, nu Ml· eheepakln -t 00.,.,1, thetn c.titomlal s.. us ~Jl~sJs equipme nt $12,500/0BO. 860-3839 '°'elgn. 551-8285 754-4436 ch1lln1, brnltan.~/C. cheap 1o own & runl todey!
S T NA 3o· L d d i-..a-te ... • Backer 1tereo. 15900, Oermany·1 derllngl •••R9I StHI Tank wTJ v1lve A~ Axt u •54 ~ ~~ •-,...... Fiat 1123 firm PP Call Paul• or 17800/obo ~" 3000 Pll •90· Fl· .. 0 .. · m_., r . ~ . Ur9Ula Will Mii your car. Bob M/F 8-5 496-6500 77• ~"·2· "'""1535 111-•AA S x' • · ... .... lue tor S38,000 Call any make &i'Y model! '73 t24 Spt Cpe. rablt • ..,._ • Of....,_ ._......, =~dt )( ~8-~~5m 11 n 1 · 5'0-10n 24 hre. Automobll4t cdtlalgnment trane, am/Im cue. runt '88 Weatphella Pop Up 2800 Harbor Bllld.
Pf. 18' Hobie Cet, nr nu, an bf'o•uwege. 778-4012 Of' & looll1 r~. IOf' pert1 lliba.Wd.l 114'1 Camper, ne. l>fakea & COSTA MESA
7 lUlle-1110: 840-1555
TV /W!t/lttJtt H32 extru. el'CI carge boll & 533-1535 6" ft)H.1p, I . 873-573& Alk •bout our,_ low muffler. top cond .. -'1 141-1110
1---+--+---tl---+--+---t BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA traller $4200. 7$9-1387 hep HU luO 9125 l.ll U.1. =~•d. $2500.'.--------
Color TV 2 'Ir "''"'"·I 11' ltleet I Trtr. '78 Ch«Okee Chief Lo rnl '79 Accord LX, atlvw, au-Ananolng Avallable on '66 Sq Bk, 800 ml on r_.. .. 'lBI~ ....... • .8 .. 0 ... c a1Ylh1 "·5 S 148. Free delivery. S c · · le al II Salected 1983 rnod .. 11 ...,., v • '!o. • Open Sun t976 ol atam1ran. Ilka new. many awtru. tomat • c, am m cat-Call NOW ror delallll engine. an rl, 12 Volt. Mon-Fri PIP 842-4644 TV Joh~·, 6-48-1786 )(Int cond .. ready to Nil 16500/obo, 968-3469 Mtta, '4000. 494-6857 11900. 494-&llOe ---------! plu1 T.H.E tr•llerl with •78 Cvcc new tlrll lo ml 1171 It Yllt ~~--+--t---t Muntz projection wide 11Jl·bo~. 12800. lnspec1 4 ftttl Drint 9031 cl9an, s 279S/0Bo: .. [l,l • '11 MUil UlllT \/ery clean. 1960. Runs
acrMn w/SOn'J remote In Fountain Vllle\'7 · Con-F .....,k oll b ~I Mii. P.P. 6A0·1131 ~ LS 4 dr, 1unroof. air, good. 548-6730. Evea '=~===~=~~;=~=~~=~=~~~===~=~= control COIOf' TV, never tact: Jey. 751·8 11 M· Jeep..-up r er. 1116PM & wlcnds am/Im et•r•o 8 trk, 982-3718 •02 ueed. retells 11700, aall buelneN hours. $100 Of' MAKE OFFERI . 15500 984-7100 i..---------latipH Mlt hraitart S Fanitart 1025 s12oo. 760-1184 842-1885 avenlng1. ·75 Honda Civic grHt · '8 1 Eldo 38K, spotlen.
Antique 54" rnd T,_, Oak I Ill flllmlE • ., .. ,, MG" at-~eo . 80 wattl '!!_~lr.l~r.310r1'. ~wtndt ~i '76 FOf'd F150, good con-tr In• Port a '11 on ' 2833 HA . '71 BUS . SH~RPI wire "'· pvt pty Dys
'V"" Couch & Lov-t, ......,; ... ... ... ...., " ,..,_ •tSOOIOBO. 75t-2402 •" ttfl $2300. pip 846-6953 548-4746 ev.a ~228 dining table, bell & claw Lee 957-8133 Dining Room set. $320. $1300. 831-8748 Npt ellp. 124,500. pp. dltlon, need1 clutch. i-'"...,.......,.......,.......,.......,...---i •
ped. b .... opens to 74", ---------• 855-6480 552-7755 Sacrifice 13700 firm '8t Civic. Lo"'""· utraa. •7-------d.....,....., '69 BUG. Immaculate. '80 OleHI Fla11wood
I l300. 4 antique plre" **I BUY** 7011 751-8876, Tony lmmac. Mull ucrlllce. 7 Midget, •Int con ·· new everything ne•. many Brougham, loaded, MW 1>ae11 oak chairs, S60 ea. Hlde·bed couch, earth· INtl IJtt4/l ki $.4500/obo. 979•1883 brk1, clutch. tires, stereo extru. 12750 844-8248 e n ~ & I 1 , e 1 . 673 1689 I tone $95 Brwn chr/ Tr••L--35 & lugo r.at, $3500 080. I 1 5 o o I o Bo · ftlllTH ' · 19 fl Waikiki Blue/blue -aa -750..,.,.,. )(5250 rt 6 '81 vw full window 1>111 · Oak antique hbl• & MASTERS AUCTION ~~~8~n911~45 Xlnt Gntral 7111 metal ftllk•. Jacurzl jet, 78 Chevy C10. 350. 1111 'll &eeer• lettlt'"' 963:;'103'Bruoe ' 8 • 1unroot, am/Im cua: 844-5596. 67~70
cha lr1, 2 IHves & 5 141-Mll llJ-Hll New 12· Zodlak. heavy 455 cubic Inch Olds. New w h I . PS . S 2 5 0 O GrHt cond. Sllver/blk new reblt eng 12400 '80 Fleetwood Brougham
c:Nlra. good c:ond.1250. duty, w/lota ol •xtru. upholstery and much 951-4591 ~~~· 13sog~~188 '~M~t, leU .:h:"e: obO. 67~170 ' 15.000 ml. O'Elag•n1: 988-7853 Rust Flor1I Sofa. 8' Ci1 I e S1J11 $1200.(213)92&-.3973 mote.$4,395obo7. '77C ....... ·•Lton,6cyt.,8tt m .. MWp n . I I bit 110,900.&M-9828 plllow-b8dc, 1250 r I (714) 53&-820 ,__.. ,.. .71 CllllC WAGON type rlm1, new llrea. '70 vw aqbk, x n re
963-<4058 • f·l ·E-ll bed, xlnt cond. Make OrN l bo<fy. need• mech. Weber Cuba, Cullom eng. N-lntr. Radlala. eneltt 1313 ~Re:R AREAHll NEW MATTRESS SETS: Cetta.... IONASAILBOATMOLO · Slip a Deeb till Ofter. 642-8100 wor k . 1 1100/obo. Exhau1t, Hard-top, and ~1~. ie::.~24~·:!;':: SH II FllSTI
APPLIANCE SERI/ICE Twn 12 $60, tul etze S65, Guitar. Golobel, new COMPLETE You haul 20' Sailboat Sllp. Newport ·73 Datsun plctl up w/ lbt. 873-3388 ~j2-~2s~ 8~~!:m: 673-8355 -· WI hav• • ~ selec· W •......... r-.... , ""•'· I ~ S105. King St25. $30. Marble coffee t•ble 549-9671 BMch rack. Tool bo•••· •lnl '· 1127 Uk t M S
app14.-:;.."."""S,.i.3on ANDY 750-5832 S 15. Hldaabed 611 lone Pntr '1012 Mark 673-6606 =·=am,~· aaUa Ptnc;t ary IJS'I 7~1V:· ,:':" .::,n~inf>C:: g::.,~~~ & U ED
I
"'
•-ia-.. NEW MATTRESS SETS S60 Portable lamp "40 Clualc 18. Lapatraka Boat & 36' mooring for ,7 ....., p U /lhell In & out I 1 9 5 0 . M"r~ Twn 12 MIO. ful 1f?e S65, Rain lamps 170 pair Ber u1e Ball>oll ISiand 1 ..,.1eun · · w • 1171 P111t1f 11111 831-3590 L• 957-8133 ~ 1105, King $125. stools Must aee. Beet Century bay boat, 4 cyt. 87s.'.o777· 2t3-87i.3535 eng. )ult rblt, newly ---------• 583 otter takes. Moving this Grey. 13500. 675-8t6I · paln1ed 116501080. Sliver with bl.ck leether '89 \/at1rebl1ang,111!50 Refrlg, $250. WHher & ANDY 750. 2 weekend. Ca ll before 1987 20tt Sabre Craft FIG Boat lllpt1 •vall~. ~ 850-0258 aft 7 PM. Interior, II.In roof, loaded, 982.e138
COMMlil
CHEVROLET
.... ~ ·1 •• ··-~ h.
,... : '\H \ dr'J•r. 1135 each 2 alngle bedt $60 each, 98m . Aller 7 pm . cabin cn.iieet. na.d, oat· port Be•ch 25 ·30 ·35 . Pick 26000 1 only 30.000 mllet. Very ---------1
0 I h w ah r ' S 1 0 0 . cheat ol dra-1 175. 3 631·9t08 ley, t20 HP Memul1er Call 842-484-4 ~10~ co~ SOO~: clMnll (791YTX) $22,495 ·~· ;:~ ~=~nJ
646-58-48 bed tp read I 2 w I 110. \/HF. DIS, luH can· N4tW1)()(1 tale. Up to 4-0 fl. 646-2278 -..... ..-1. K1rt1 7-t t am or~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!i Wuhar. clean, works matching bol1tera 125 YH, •ll Hlaty equip., $150, 673-6336 or •I 9tlllll'I ---.., 1v1 meu 12·9 P"' .. '74ChevelaL..aigunaS/S.
good, 185. Dryer. OH, each. Afl 6 759-ll39 J ... lry 6214 tr•ller Incl, $4995 offer. 842·1Ml68 la~"' som 208 w. 111, Sanla Ana 552-1355 41,800 mlie.. Loaded. all
SU-1 200
~~· 115. Ouar. New Couch & Loveeeat. SAPPHIRE • Investment 55t-1993 •lier 5pm. Pv1 doclc w/60' allp, aide Cludn M49 111-1111'1 --1-...,--..,..,,----r.--i power. Excellent condl·
---------1 c •• ornth,.tomnp•o·r· a,r3y8. 5plrbeottlhy grade, 3 llonetd, 13. tOktd, '71 Sklpl•o« fib. New tie, gOOd loc. AllO 30', a •u1111m COUln Cloeecf Sunday • • • • • • •• I • ttr'lofl ••• ~ .... ~ ~ •• A~ dbl door 29 cu ft In an antique amon eng .. canvu. $9000. aide tie Fred, 120-738t. -lllD • • .,._ ..,_..,..,.
w/lce maker $300. 54-4-2427 setting. Apfir1lted $13, 548-8300 dye 1Hl Ill 1111t. ·e3 3568, Jult rHtorlld, ..._.,.. ta~. ahock1 6 mutflar.
7 5 1 • 2 6 5 6 d a y •. CHI Iron brHkfast set, 500. Sell 6500/0BO. llYE a •• , Want: Nwpt ~arbor PVI Extra CIHn and oood .... WILL HT $8000/0BO. 982·7510 ..,.bk in. 97 -0594.::'.!s wtld•ye.
851-1078 -42" round glall w/4 875-3205. paint. A great tnY••I· II _.., •n •89 912 Targa, only 300 '83 .,... • MW t 1 MW~an~l~me~~~~··~~ W __ .. _ K~e M>rke ch•lre, wht w/blue Matt, t3' Zodiac. 40 horl8 111p for 30' aallboet, mantl Prl. pty. A1klng v ....... ~5-...... ..-• .,_......._ made, xlnt eond. all re-ball .. rebll eng, ~800.,::
---"'"" ' S $250 b M : l'·-t 211 mercury eng. Highlander qui.Illy loeal cpl wlll not $8900· must -to llP-.,,..,,_ -.,.._,,, I 00/FI 154$-0830 '81 Chevette, met. blue, i o50od,21c3o/14n22o9p2•!!t•d, 8~:o,~;;,ew. o o . ..ilCt '8!!!!etll traller plua ••lru.12500 dl1turb Owner. Need prec!'atel Call (714) llld Leulno cords. t t ,O rm. '79 Oii Rabbit dlll ed., lllr, kl•H'J aaat cover1, 4 1
· • "" • POOL TABLE 080. D•y 875-1976, lhore 1.w;..2;!,.~c. lreah 548-2198 wHkenda & 1871l 8Mch~. 494-7224· stereo, '-dr. avw. tank. apd, preclou1 lltlle gas Stove, wortc• good. 175. Side b'/ Sid• Relrlge. 4'x7'tlate,cultomwooct 848-5707ukf0f'Tony water. evening• or {7 14) Hun.lngton '69 912 Targa, Mint 23K ml, 14900/0BO. eaYerl 12400. 776-4012.
Wiii deltYW & guarantM white. $225. Twin Bed design. Comee w/bllllerd ••• lllP ... -WANTED the ute ol an off 53S-112fl weal!days. (714)142-2000 Cond., r.-bll engine. al· 851-3922 533-1535 2131422·9285 135. Oe6k 125. ~ llght & wall unit wl~. &• -ahOf'e mooring In Nwpt loy1, alum. S10,000 . ....:..;;._;_.;. _____ -i---::::::--=::-:::-:=:-=-::-=-----------i 135 Coffee Table 120. Valued at $2000; Mlllng 0&)00 model, 225 omo. Harbof. 67~n56 -J 'II lllT• .V. J!IUI tllt 780-6582 '73 WESTPHALIA 'll IAllAll U1 R;:~ =• ';:!:' ~;~~ 751-6674 ()( 953-8487. IOI' 1500 llml. 8814237 I . · e~S:2":s ~,..,5i;:•:·fr:: .. 1111 MllUll '81 928 .. dk brown11an. ~:~of.'9er~~·.0~·.:~~· ~ Tk,c~i. ~~:·,,:;
Wiii deNYar & guar11nt•. King IZ Waterbed, Mr1h 30 ORAN AN wood, ' ..... I boat Dyl 87S-1395• All modela .. moat colof• toaded. IHther. •lac. $3900 7ao--0835 II &I 15200 2131422•92e5 tonH, beaut. mirrored Guitar. Globe!, MW l30. twin dl•HI, 101ded 1u1p1 .. Jta Of' 631.3eo<& · In toclll Call Of l1op f'Y anrf, cw .. new Pro th'• · wh • c. ·
l>fy9r, wortit good, 185 ~o~~~~:. ~d~:.dc.k c:,:~: ~=~"= :!n~ ~: ~-:':~~~ ~ll1•1ond .~ llctclet U12 C:vertlble. '78 cadlHac no!~.-·-· :~".fis~~;~~ ·~.~· ~t::':'1in1~~ '83 =~: ~
Wiii MINw & guarant•. 1tlll'ld•. twin matt. S225. Portable lamp $40. Rain 873-0954.-875-0924 Cu1tom BHch Bike. 5 El Dorado, Wiit/Wiit. _.. •-wtidyl body. rblt. S21150. 110,000/obo. 213/422~112e5 840-4812 Torn. lampt1 $70 tor a pair. Call BAY LAUNCH 20th Cen-lpHd, hand brakH, Red IMther, All extru. 2925 HMt>or BIYd. 'H 912 Cpe , clH"· 1 881-3982 844-5691. 873-4870.
Hot Pointe rwfl1g!freezer. 2 ••II-hugger recllnlng atter 7PM. tury Lapatrake 18', 18, 1200. 494-5317 Fllel lnjec:, IO mllel, Im-COSTA ME.SA ownr, local car, 41pd, '70 VW V11n, panet, ,_ 1317
13 7 fl. 1125 or trade lor I chlllr'a, t>royi teethertrt· 631
"
9108 12!500/ofr. 875-1835 Sctiwtnn Super Sport •I macul81,. 7~1!· .1.13°.;990•~• 4• lll-llN h ol M\/fm. 17!500. &42"-7Me eng. ~ body. MUST mlctowava. "3-70n le, xlnt co1id. 1225 M . lea yellow 10 ~ I •· .. v-'' "• •• JU8t 2 mlnut .. aou1 SEU. S1700 892-1884 '74 Station Wgn. pt>, 1)1.
Elec llov• wldbl oven. Tabla lamp, llke new, Wllllll •Ill t :~~·;:n J~P ,:,; ~etching chlld carr1!, wknda 81t-747~151 the San Diego FfW'J. 'ell BUG paint ale, auto, good eond.
pert cond. 1 250 . S25.51amp1hadH. Slze3or5.neverbeen 4.551.()3()5 · • · MWtlr•l115.M7-3939 &8 ... ,a.,.,,.. Rare '68JaguatXl<E n.1bber.'t=~~ 1 1000/obo.7514531
844-109-4 :!:15 846-0423 ett. :s:1~:5::::1 otter 18 18' Raine& IB/08, fully Uni Cycle lor Nie, good Adi tlt7 ~l~~d:~~~.~~~=rt~~: 'Q PIUlll 144 IM!de, vwy deplndable. Ftc4 1311
"'F Refrlg 19 cu It IYee:zer, 7 bd Ml .vvwt cond 1 24" ,.... """ wltr•y. S50 aqulp'd, OMO drive w/ cones 150. 876-0658 1111 ._,. ..... blf.ie w/blk Int., wht top. w''._Y1'1'1 "•l/l~trt•"···· =~5g~~~84· 1393 '78 F ... t• Ohle, 1 ownr, both perfect c:ond. 1270 pc rm • .,~-• .-""" Volvo Penta eng, 120 ..__...._ UH --A 1 ll In II I 1 2 , 5 O O, • • • r hie entrf. mega, loeded
• -=ti 552-7801 $600. 63l·8748 2 amall aree rugs, ISO & HP, m111yextru.16.000 ~~ 5 epaed. I.MUI« 16498 &73--2040 l11t•1r lattrltr. '87 VW 8UO CLASSIC S31500. 720-1157-K~ w--& °'Yef. Sota, lovHHI. chair & SSS. &46-?889 537-1311-4 (714) 'II YW ...a 1551MS-43 ...... tll1 .... Xlnt oond, new paint, 13. , TO W le
Xlnt cond guwantMd. ouoman, never UHd, RoMnthal Romance P•I· 18. boet, \/anaon trlr, 50 POP TOP. Cullom Int• 1980 Audi 50008, oreY.. 1111 ilAll&llt Mttt ..... Pl lll 000 ml reblt eng. 11 L ,1~0'e3f..a:;..
175/MCtt 544-6468 e1rthlonea. coll 1800, tern. 1100. 751-2858 hp el«:. ltart motOf', all rlor. mech. excellent. 1Unrl, AM/FM a.a. 151, We have Orange Count· ' ' • l2850/ofr. 780-0956 loecled. ·
· Mil 1255. (213)924-8698 days. 851· 1078 -g .. r & tank I , I l850. S n r I S 2 5 0 0 • ooo ml, •Int oond. 1 tO, y'• flne1t HI:::: 1o~ ftr ..,. ............. .tidy ev, any11rne wtlnd '78 Pinto HB. xlnt In/out.
Sacr1flce.•r and ~~yar.• :,~~ Dining rm set, all wood. 8 Patio & Hanging Plante 540-0824 7Hl876-G3015 000. 776-15182 ~._:i:ftu~~. and >Ls ta I I YI r 1 I• I a 1960 R•bblt Convert .• lo auto. pe, am. htr, bdcU. c h • I , g t • b I • 15 I 125 &4<>-0824 • ..-•-/ .,.._ ••• ·-ml, ,_ top & ur ... air, Ntl ciiec bf'tt•. rlld ... All Llk--Whltlpool no· r • 5 o . 1l n IAYUID tt ... :r.-. '73 Fox, good mech cond, ooupea. a. u1 nowl -ww. m..,,• idnt eonct., $8,000 b•tt. Run• fine. 12295.
frost FWrloat•tor, 12215. $3!50/0BO.
7 1
•
4221 ~· """ Volvo 110, xlnt, 13000 .....,.,. Hll needepalnt&eomebody um MTlll ftrm. 780-9892 842-8561
Tom 8&1-f'137 Solld O•k dining table & 4 ... _ I 11..A -a. obo. 873-4a.6, 875-2051 •8t K----"I KX1""' dirt .-. no n.19t, gr .. I tum-2925 H•rbof Bllld. -----C---
Capt. ehelre, $400, M·~RJl SeTS: .... ,. ...-&48-4eso "* C8f 8'4-t578 COSTA MESA "" 79 Rabbit, AM/FM .. ..., '71 Mu•t•no onvert. hit te In Mn 8'0-828t Sava 50% to 175'/e on 15 HP Johnson with 14' bike. !50. . 1978 Audi Fox, xlnt ~1 111-llN ... aalt - -cue. Mint cond., 135915. 3151C, )()nl oond. 1-4200.
------==-iftft'"""".-.!0tn1ng M(· buffet 6 cnra NEW top quality bed Boat & Trelltr, all lllnt Honda, '78, 750 F, vefy auto, AC, eunrf, A~/FM U &Mr U Dyl e82 ·7990: eo1_7_20-_18N __ . ____ _ P•Paau table&2.lfe.soiidw<>odl Mt• Notaecondaorre-cond. 11500/080. o1Mn.S1500.840-8211 ttereo.cau, 13.500 '73JAOUARXJ12 ga 731.em 1978 Mu•t•ng, 4 cyl, 4 ~~.Ah•.'!.!.~ • ..... kbl~ldk '495. Ph 552-7801 )ecta. Twin tet1 Ju1t f89, 873-8728 ' '75 Vtitnah• 350RO, Cale 080. 1548-96ea .~T. E. XLNT ~~25 9. ID ·ea van, orig. reblt eng. 6 IC>d. 11!500. ,,_ "" ..... -•--------1 "5 H 17" "5 Sa _. • -·-1-•••t & -...0-1 1111 """" trana, reoe1p11. S 1350. 840-2$4!1 •" 8pm. =upplH that nMd 2 Sofa Bed• wllh Bolaten • ; flJ •t• •·• · .,. .,......,_, -bike, new eng. -· · ID R • 8 hOmaa. AJA era run. 1100 l0t both. &415-2590. even more on King & SALE ALI. SPRINO leOO. 8"4S-9614 _ Luela 1131 llaflCllf 846-"84 '71 COUHTAY IOUIAE
_ _.._, PM Ou.n Mtl. Fr .. dellv· Allleon Matlne/845-«)15 '8t H-.. a XLSOOS , .. _, &artD '73 vw .......... t On...._~. .. ..._,,,.,___ -..._..... 9 pell. WOfl, ale, pa. pO, .........-*"" C .... 751-4'""1 ind "'"' · ''"' • .,.,.._, p .. n • eng, ......... --100 .. 1 goood, rune well, Mt·1• ·--ex-e_C_UT ___ lv-E""'DE~S-K--1 ;.k' tor·~ ~us. '58 Owen• Expr•• 3t', cond. Man'/ utrH. llrH xlnt, • bargafn ""\..: 4 ~.air~. S1*'tO 1715010CM>. &44-fft4 2 "' old lovlno black Swlv. chair, credenza, SMTH CORONA port ble T.tn 283'1, Xlnt Cond , 11525, Cllll 831·1197 s.,.. 9•~ 11700. 75t-oel50 _jQ~nge .. -c:atMt\e..:=a ,
70
Font ...,~ . .._
" b••~· "·~··· •Pl. bkcaee. l300. 5152-1211 I 'Wu:'n :fll1t hl•t• need• CHh. '75 KawH•kl KZ200. 1.111111 .... t -. tne<lodca.1121.c.I 1 eMet'r1c er. I 7 9 5 0 0 B 0 . OOOd ~ 7000 ,,,.._ 08S _. •79 Conv, VW. llNlf a ............... , .... -... , « llY9I UU & 1~111 u• Ilk• new 7141496-2229 1175 ot>o. Call 873-384T llVDl•Y COii• iN ye llow. 111\/frl'I OHi, ------·-----~ '° OOOCI hm. yng Wtll Reitan group: couch. 111 '
8874939 •n 23 ft MAKO 2315 h/p or 120-04M * '11 HOI; auto., low (ml •mt IMO'-!Ont oond. taaOO. •• ....... OriO °""'· btlt--',,,. ~bf.ad end tabre,: eolld teak Deluxe bfUI c.lflnO ran Jotineon. N.-bait tentc. ~ (180029) tsf.aeoe red. elc. auto.,_._
...... 173-4200 mettlle top oablnet, z.. (new), wood/oana fldlo,outrteoen. .--. * 79 ~.!..4 apd., Ml flfl 'ti . "'"'QOOCI, t 1790otiol1$.71'1
Axt; eoc.... ~ 2 yr ntth s· 1t•eo coneote, blldee, 4 llgtltl Ind. w.. eoctr ... Trallelr. >Ont oond. '00!· (&4nmO) • • nu ~1:rT!rff, $ tlOO ••JI ND o4d 11t• trN to good drop IHI din. t able, 1 400. take S 130. tl4,l500/obo 873·9003 * 70 320!; '4, apd .. loW • -.902t __ _ _
11m.. 642.-4021 aft• pm Norltllk• din. eerv. for 8. no.ot8I Ot &42-7~ 17W113 .. ~ ~~ ic>.. ~ llml. '11 ~ • ..,.,. ~ NW
a.., -...toft WOft, 1ti•. 1100 talJt• all t3t...._..
7 9~~ ...oondr: .~ pld 80' Vacllt Doreal, 1824 PP want• Mdtor Homa. ed. {971uxi) ' 't ::ia-==:::. ~::1i"'~::. '.::'::: • IM1t runfMncl,' you llaul. Couefl, gm 2 po NOtlcnal ,_ • 1.35 aq. yd. elegance, unique m8ho-RHd'/ to buy. Have * ·to 320!; 8 apd .. IUft 1 d e 210 0 _,__ 14a ?Ill , .,. c... It. o . c.M. 1100. Maple dlnlno tit 152.f1 a•nr & teak. rormerly Catlt\. 213-420-7810 roof. (1AHVI03) HS 111 Ji .. _..'°~~ :.~n • · --~
drp n tbl, 2 ~. 2 IBM ..-emory t~lter, feetured In ArCltlltectual •RV RENTAl.8* * •eo 821l: auto .. low NII '°''* ':'::!~~ , I' "h BP r "'-;; ... 0. pt c"'. 11 1 0.J Wal Pftdl. C/a, ~ carrj. DIOHt. Twin dl•Hlt , Alt .a.from 1198/wtl mllea. (8721VL) .. ., .... tk. 71 ____ 11700. ~. Dl.~TA ~ ,.
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e4o. all •Int cond, w/mattr"'· bJt aprg1. MOMll plank. 3 St-. at..,rno, *•at 6 ti• •uto., aun I O ~I o:,db l;~;, ·~llWt ., ....... '11........ IM'9 10 CM-. "tt•~
7H-4111 l otld Woo.i. 1110. exo1ualve = 11rarid rnuoh mote . Hl,000 toOf, (15!111 :nJ• • · =-==· :::o;'J ~:,--._ _. ·~ ~ *" bdrm .,e, 190.. .-. .,....11 Qotd *" . t 11500 firm. "' ..,, .. lo b4rf Tta'fel * •u auto .. IOado :. • M •
...... ttoO. OIMlll9 • 0111 Cl•• 100, dinrno ~ .... peld. t 1000. 110.2...0 w11 841-0t30 1raller. Reedy to eur ect. O&IM 4) •eo M•M 9'Xf. ~. fit100..., ...._... 1 vw ..... ,,. •l.f!t . ~· "9ff'll, "9af NlfJ ..... 721ft..•cihalra.. 111114 Ptl: 4tM112 evM. 143--tMO *"IS~~·· tOi9 AJr • ....,.,.,_ OMt •· ..,..,. ...... .,.. .... f~o. t:fH & efta oond. MOO. 494.&.Sh 3 ......_. bprw round 11 ft open bow ftllfl/;kl II' 1t H Kel\t a&lll full mlel. <1-.:;111 '1900 ,.,_ ........ Tl T~ ~ ,_ ~ W ..... , ~!11!1111• =· •• -:. := Ou.en .... "4 tlhnoat trllJ t101ieitt to Hawaii. "40 hip 0/9. 0-.J.: 'Nttt, '*"°a'n mo IOI ~:..~ 1-.......... .=.Al ~.~~·:..'::. ..,. .._ ... ..,-.. ,...9a00, l f1t ·H. UO ea fWI '*'L-IOOdecl' • obo . f • aO.d,..._ .... ...,~ --
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Deity Not Photo by Richard Koehler
Dr. J. Brennan Cassidy heads up t
Emergicenter Walk-in Medical Gr
Quick fix 'Doc in the Box'
thriving in Costa Mesa
By JODI CADENHEAD
O{tfle 0.-, ..... ...,
Located next t o Der
Wienerachnitzel in Coata Mesa,
man y p eople might easily
mistake the sleek, white building
for some new fast-food place -
until they spot the Red Cross
sign.
That's the first indication lhat
something else is going on at the
THI DRlllil COAST.
Emerglcenl~r Walk-In Medical
Group, opened 10 moot.ha ago by
Dr. J . Brennan Cualdy, former
director of Emergency service at
Hoag MemoriaJ Hoepltal.
Emergency cent.era, nicknamed
"D oc In the B oxes" and
"7-Eleven .Medicine," are• fut
becoming a growing trend Jn
emergency medical care. There
are now seven in Orange County.
-
Unlike trauma oent.en for \he
critically Injured, emergency
cent.era offer quJck treatment for
minor Infection., cuta, sprain.
and physicals at a lower coat than
hoepltal emergency rooms.
In March , the California
Medical Aaaoclatlon paased a
resolutJon ca.lUng for a study to
adopt standards for walk-in
(See EMERGENCY, Pase At)
..
COAST 110111
&sta Mesa. TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1983 OH ANGE: COUN l Y CA LIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Not a
clean
sweep
----··-LB~-----· 1n
By STEVE MITCHELL
OflfleO..,Notlwt
As far as experiments go,
Tom and Eileen Chadick
conside r Laguna's Street
Sweeping/Tow-away Zone
program an enormous flop.
The north Laguna Beach
couple have written to the
City Council , the city
manager, the police chief and
their own neighbo rhood
association protesting a street
sweeping program they term
a form of harassment.
~--Last fall, the city installed
signs in a six-block area of
n orth Laguna, warning
motorists not to park on the
street during certain hours to
allow unencumbered street
sweeping.
On Hawthorne Road ,
where the Chadic ks and
neighbor Roy Marcom Jr.
live, parking is prohibited
between 10 a.m. and noon on
either Monday or Friday -
depending on which side of
the street one lives.
Chadick says he lives on
the "Friday side of the
street," meaning cars left
parked on his side of the
roadway between 10 and
noon on Fridays are certain to
receive a $12 ticket.
The problem, as Chadick
DelJ,.. ....... .., ............
Kevin Cha dick and his kid brother Brian study parking sign and
hope their bike is immune . >-
As~eIDbly
groµnds air
• • noise _suits_. __ -···-
By STEVE MARBLE
O(tfle 0.-, ........
N early 250 Orange Coast
residents who have filed small
claims lawsuits over noise from
John Wayne Airport may be
forced to abandon their court
suits.
The state Assembly, on a 50-19
vote, approved a bill Monday
that would ban small claims
ac1ion over airport noise.
The bi 11, au t.h ored by
AsseOl_blyrnan Richard Robinaon,
D-S~ Ana, was prepared at
the request of Orange County
government, which controls John
Wayne.
The legislation, which still
must be approved by the state
Senate, would force resident.a
claiming damage from jet noise to
take their fiaht to Superior Court
instead of ihe cheaper, quicker
small claima route.
Airport operators maintain
residents have filed small claims
action • a way of harassing the
county. Robinaon called the suits
an abuse of small claims court.
But residents claim the bill ia
special inte rest legislation
designed to give airports a shield
of protection from noise-weary
citizens. Moat of the Or ange
County small claims action.a were
filed by residents in Newport
Beach and Santa Ana Heights.
Newport Beach, which la
under the airport takeoff pattern,
has hired a Sacramento lobbyist
to fight the Robinson bill.
Ken Delino , a city
administrator, said the bill not
only will deny "the little guy"
the ability to go to small claims
court but will have sweeping
changes on proving damages
from airport noise.
I (Sff STREET, Page At)
t -----------------------~--------
Coniputers Irvine wants details on costs
for kids involved in bullet train plan
stressed
By KAREN E. KLEIN M ... DelJ,...IUlt
The day is fast approaching
when it will be more important
for cruldren to own computers
than cars. In fact, that day may
already be here, according to
John P . Imlay Jr., a computer
software executive who spoke
M onday at the National
C o mputer Conference in
Anaheim.
, Imlay said parents should
insist that computers be taught in
school and should begin
educating themselves in
c:omputel"IJ and "computerese" ao
they can communicate with their
children.
"The 'hava' and 'hav~nota' of
the fututt may be children lhat
know c:omJJUtinB and thoee who
(See COMPUTERS, Pase AZ )
Michael the Robot e ntertains
conventioneers at the National Computer
Conlerence in Anaheim.
By GLENN SCOTT OflM.,..,,... ....
Irvine city leaders who set up
tonight's meeting with the
president of the American High
Speed Rail Corp. are hopeful
they'll get more detailed plans
for the bullet train than ever
before.
So are about 400 Irvine
residents expected to show up for
the Irvine Cit y Council study
Ad spurs new wrangle
in leasehold debate
By STEVE MARBLE O(lfte 0.-, .........
An attorney representing
the Committee of 4000 aays a
full-.,.ge ad taken out by his
clie nt.a does not violate a
secrecy agreement with the
Irvine Co.
The two sides, locked ln
ba(tle for nearly two years
over land leaaes in Newport
Beach and Irvine, are under a
court order to negotiate In
private in an attempt to settle
the bitter and volatile
leasehold diapu~.
The ad, which appeared in
(See LEASING, Pase AZ )
--lllSIDE----------------------.
Dynamite theater
While Torpor'• drama "Nuts"
raieee aome erilieal question•
about the judieial 1y1tem, th«*!
i.Mues would be moot ii the
play were not a dynamite piece
of theater. Page 83.
Jack Anderson
complain• tha~
Congreu i1 always
outraged when
tomeone withholch
information from
the memben, but
let Congreu
1uppre11
Information and
nary a peep i1
heard. Pa~e A6.
" '
In the tee0nd part or the Daily
Pilot'• 1peeial lour-part eeriee
on rape, 11all writer Jodi
Cadenhead lntenlew1 a woman
prosecutor to lind out how
theee 1en1ili•e ea1e1 ue
handled la eMrt ud aJ•et
eome tlpe lo womea who mlfht
be confronted by a pote_ntlal
rapi1t. P.,e f:ll ·
What'• the runniest
thing you ever saw?
Well, if you 're not
1ure, turn to Page
A4 and take a look
at a wei1ht·lilting
rl'OI. It'• 1ot to
eome elote.
11aey'•e llowed dowa; bat t•etr
competld•e ........ .,. J_. u
........ Tlult'• die ..... ~ ••
tile Oraap eom.ty s. ..... _
CUI••• eoltball leape. p_.c1.
--·
&e88ion ·at 7:30 p.m . at Deerfield
Elementary School, 2 Deerfield.
At issue ia whether the private
firm proposing to construct an
electric rail line between Loa
Angeles and San Diego will
ag re e t o pay for an
eight-to-10-foot-deep channel for
the track.a to muffle noise and
improve the scenery through
residential parts of IMne.
So far, Lawrence Gilson,
president of the corporation.
hasn't committed to the public
works project. However.
representatives from the firm
have suggested in past gathertnp
that such J?.l'Ojecta are ~ble.
It waan t clear earlier today
how specific Gilaon intends to ~
tonight, but Jim Rom. a project
supervisor In the city's Public
Work.a Department, said "the
impreaion we're &erRfj' ia that
(See ButLET. Pqe
EMERGENCY CENTERS . • •
centers and delete the word
emergency from the name.
Dr. Morton Goldstein, acting
chairman of a committee
studying emergency clinics, said
there is concern that patients will
become confused and go to them
to seek help for life-threatening
injuries.
Ottterwise. he said, most
physiciaris view them 8.9 adjuncts
to medical care, an al t.emative to
free them from the hassle of
having to treat nosebleeds and
cuts aft.er hours.
The rule of thumb is that if a
patient requires an ambulance,
he or she should seek help at a
regular hospital emergency room,
said Costa Mesa's Casmdy.
In his 10 years at Hoag,
however, Cassidy said he saw
more people simply usmg the
emergency room as a doctors'
office when a nagging cough or
stomach pain kept them awake at
night.
"It's not that I'm opposed to
traditional practice," said
Cassidy. "All of us who work in
emerj{ency medidne have come
to eee a number of J>ttfenta uae
the emergency room u a primary
facllity for epi.aodic Wnea."
Uniu<e most physidans' offices,
no appointments are necessary.
Jn fa c t, they're not even
accepted. Most patients are seen,
treated and out of the center
within a half hour.
A spokeswoman for nearby
Hoag Hospital'sald the
emergency clinic has had no
e ffect on emergency room
bu.sin~ at the hospital.
But Marshall Kandell, a
spokesman for Hwnana Hoepital
Huntington Beach (formea:ly
Huntington lntercommunlty
Hospital) said the so-called
e mergicenters have forced
several Humana hospitals in
Orange County to lower their
emergency room charges.
"They are generally serving a
need by offering lower costs for
servaces," said Kandell. "The
danger comes when they claim
they can do everything for
everyone.
MESA BUDGET. • •
down a request from .Police
Chief Roger Ne~ to add two
civilian police aides to the
department.
The budget shows the city
receiving a whopping $14.6
million from retail sales tax,
~ ~up 8"1 peFWn t. but spending
-,..-less for-t:apital:improvements.
Included in the capital
improvement package are:
$1.4 million for extension of
19th Street from Park
A venue to Fullerton A venue;
$800 ,000 for street
maintenance throughout the
city; $750,000 for extension of
Sunflower A venue and Park
Cent.er Drive to about Flower
Street; $500 ,000 for
construction on Canyon Park,
and $442,000 for various
housing redevelopment
projects.
Not included in the
proposed budget are possible
~ ~12!:. -ci~_.'!'orkers
wno belong to tnee-OSta"Ntesa
Employees' Association. Last
year, police and fir e
employees agreed to a two-
year contract for 5 percent
wage hikes.
Salaries for police. fire and
other safety workers make up
about 33 percent of the
operating budget. or nearly
$12 million.
COMPUTERS P US HED . • •
do not," lmlay said.
lf there are still skeptics who
don't believe the computer
revolution has come of age, a few
hours at the mammoth Anaheim
convention should make them
true believers.
Billed as the largest conference
ever held at the Anaheim
Convention Cent.er, the computer
conference is expected to draw
about 125,000 attendees over its
four-day run.
The computer executives,
Newport Beach
A ~ ermed -a ~ knit• end ~ • red 11111 ...... held I.IP Wlnd'lell'• Oonut HOUM. !IOO E. 8albe>e 811/CI .. and .. ca1>9CI with $90 In c.ltl The robber,
Cleacr\beCI .. bWlO tllOt1. '--'llelty left tlM
.,..on loot
Mo<e tNin SIS.000 worth o1 ~ al'CI
flatware u ltlnge were 11olen lrom •
·-on the 2900 bioc* ol Llglllhe>We i.-
/\ _,.. plete r-.g .. SKI OOWN"" wu
-ppect from • car periled on the 44-00
bloCk ol W• C0Mt Highway.
computer junkies and the just
plain curious -about 20,000 of
them -crowded into the 18
football fields worth of exhibit
· space at the convention center to
interface with disk drives, edit
menus and software.
The huge, plexiglass exhibit
booths filling the exhibit floors
read like a Who's Who of the
computer industry: IBM. Apple,
Printronix, Xerox , Texas
Instrumeni.s. Commodore.
Costa Mesa
Ouldc working Ill-removed lour llr•.
• st-~· end e T -top rool 11e1Uee1 at 12. 100 Mond8Y night trom a c-o peril«!
,, 6)5 Beker SI-A MCUrlly guerel In IM
Newport Vlll•.fi:.=rtment compl•• ~eel 1"9 Y9llide IOdoeO on topol Mclu
Laguna Beach
An olt pelnllng Yalueel II s 100 w .. tllten
from • ~ In the 400 block of South
COHI Highway yUterdly by Unknown
IU~I.
TIM po11ce Cll111>atc11et heerd a atr•noe
beeping nolM on the -gency 911 llne
encl dl~ldlecl an o"'-' ID e loc:allon on
IM rMdout The olltcer IOund a clltQNnlled
c1t11.,, wlloM nhlcl• heel recenlly b""
towed
Al SnMrll, -...... on Vlcl0ty Wiii, wu
erretteel on 1u1plcton of auault with 1
CleeClly .._, _.,he~ attlciled • ne!Qhbor yeetwe1.,-wtth a 1tldl TIM W;tlm w•• tOen to 81delleb1c1t Community
Ha.pl1ef. Smith. 47. wu being 11e1C1 with bell Ml., 110,000
Mesa .rejects $567 million .claim
A $567 million claim file~
a.f:ainst Costa Mesa by 189 people
a leging their relatives were
victims of mass cremation at
Harbor Lawn Mortuary was
rejected Monday by the City
Council.
The claim, filed May 9, claims
city. county and state employees
were involved In an "ongoing
conspiracy" to conceal evidence
of alleged 11nultiple cremations at
Harbor Lawn.
Each of the 189 claimants Is
seeking $2'-milllon In punitive
damages an~ 1 million for
injuries and emotional distress.
Council members voted to
reject the claim, a routine action
before steps can be taken to sue
the city.
City attorney Tom Wood aald
he was surprised by the claim
and didn't understand why Costa
Mesa would be slngled out since
the city does not regulate the
funeral lnduatry.
"The claim la totally
unfounded," said Wood . "It'•
almost an outrage that people
would include the dty of Cost.a
Mesa. I'm juat amazed they
would lnclude the dty in such a
lawsuit."
Tustin attorhey Betty
M c Mullen , who• alao is
representing a number of
relatives In a class action suit
against the mortuary, could not
be reached for comment.
The al!esed mua cremation»
came to light in January when
two siaters tiled a suit on behalf
of a Panorama City man who
died last year.
A law to prohibit multiple
cremations has tailed ln the put
In the state Legislature, although
a bill banning such a practice la
now before the Aaaembly.
-JODI CADENHEAD
Ex-Newport resident
sentenced in f rand
Gen ti~ touch ,, WINpMto
Actr ess Brooke Shields cud dles a koala
bear a t the San Diego Zoo where she's
working as a part-time intern fo r her class
·----pr oject. ·------ -------
A former Newport Beach
resident and one·time mobile
home dealer has been sentenced
to six years and four montha in
state pri.9on for drug and fraud
crimes, authorities reported.
Robert L . Swick, 46, was
sentenced Monday in West
Orange County Municipal Court
in Westminster. He had been in
jail since late March.
Swick was arrested March 25
in Garden Grove after allegedly
trying to sell 3. 75 pounds of
cocaine to undercover officers.·
He also was charged with
possessing $165,000 worth of
stolen diamonds.
At the time of his arrest, Swick
was out on bail and awaiting
sentencing on charges he
swindled 13 mobile home
customers out of roughtly $500.-
000.
Swick was owner ol Country
Style Mobile Homes. ~ defunct
Garden.+;rove-bued firm.
The former. Newport resident
..• oleeded guJH-v + .. -hnth..J.he.fraud_ and Ute diU.g~len property-
STREET SWEEPING IN LAGUNA BEACH ·.
From Page A 1
sees it, i ~ the Jack of
consistency in the program,
which was initiated by the
North Laguna Community
Association and approved by
the coundl as an experiment
about eight months ago.
For one thing, Chadick says
the sweeper rarely appears
between the above ·
mentioned hours.
morning at 10 a.m." Sharp.
But what really frosted
Chadick was one rainy
morning in March when his
car was ticketed for parking
in the tow-away zone and the
s treet sweeper was a no-
show.
Chadick and neij{hbor
Marcom say the program is
just a means of imposing fines
and raising money -not for
sweepinR· the street.
But City Manager Ken
Frank terms that ac:cusation
"ludicrous." adding it takes
more time for the sweeper
and meter maids to go up to
the experimental area than
it's worth.
Regarding the
i nconaistency with the
sweepers, Frank admits there
are difficulties.
"It is true that sometimes
the sweeper does not make
those exact hours." he said.
"We're working on that. We
want to improve it "
He expects the test
charges.
At one point duri~ the case,
Swick was held in ,Jail on $5
million bail. believed to be a st.ate
record for fraud charges.
-STEVE MARBLE
M esa S tre et
work OK'd
The Costa Mesa City Council
has taken preliminary action to
establish an assessment district
on Sterling Avenue that could
cost property owners between
$2,800 and $16,000 apiece _for
improvements.
The council's action clears the
way for the city to begin
areepting construction bids and
authorizing_ the sale of bonds to
initially fir*nce the work.
A public hearing to di8cws the
propo6ed project is scheduled for
July 5. Mayor Donn Hall aaid no
final decision on the project will
... be~ ~~)he_pu~~ m two monuut.
• •
program to run through June.
at which time, "we will
probably do some type of
evaluauon."
In the meantime, Chadick
and his neighbors have
initiated their own defense
against ticketing.
"We're running up and
down the street on Mondays
and Friday s warning
everyone," he laughed.
"Maybe if there's no
revenue coming in from the
project they'll kill it."
"I saw the sweeper on the
other side of the street one
Monday at 8:30 in the
morning;• he said. "He swept
both sides of the street, then
he came back at 9:30 and did
both sides again." BUL~ET TRAIN DETAILS AS KED. • •
About the only consist.ency
Chadick sees "has been the
appearance of a meter maid
every Monday and Frid~
Fou n tain Valley
TllleYea pried open a wind wing of •
window In a Voll!~ wfllie 11 -perked In the 10000 llloclc ol hlbet1 ,.....,.,. encl
stole atllletlc clotlltng 11114 llama Y-at $413.
vane1a11 b•otc• windows to an otflee •I
Motole Schoo4 In .,, ac>PMWll uneuc:c.ealul 11ug1ary ettempt Dameoe to the windows
..... reponed at s 100
Four hU!>Capl Ylllued II S:lllO -· 11°'1" from a e« wlllle perked If) the 10000 blOClt'bl
Owl Clrole
Irvine
n .... 111•11• lrom automot>ll•• .... ,.
reported Mondll)' A tlereo wu lifted frOtfl •
car on 8ultemuf L-In Unlwr9lt)o Perl!.
USMttM and • camera -• tallen lrom • car on /\ualln In El Camino AMI end 1
cueette player wu llfled !Tom • eat perk«! ., • ~ _,,., ., ·~ c..... D<M
From Page A1
the private firm will formally ·
submit its plans tonight.
The meeting will begin with
remarks by Mayor Larry Agran
and then Gilson will make a
presentation, according' to the
agenda. Following city council
comments, members of the
audience will get their chance to
speak.
The lowering project ~ould
have a double benefit m lrvme
because it also would ease noise
and unsightly views from the
Santa Fe Railway tracks. The
bullet train tracks would parallel
existing tracks.
City officials have long ao1.1ght
funds to lower the railroad
tracks. Lately, residents living
alongside the tracks have
questioned the seriousness of city
proposals.
LEASING DEBATE. • •
From Page A1
Monday's Daily Pilot, listed a
series of demands from the
Committee of 4000, a group
represen ting residents who
pay annual lease fees to the
Irvine Co.
Bob Currie. an attorney for
the development firm. said he
was "s urprised and
disappotnt.ed" with the ad. He
sugges1ed It violated "at least
the spirit of negotiations."
have any effect on the private
•bargaining sessions.
Negotiations between the
parties was ordered by
Superior Court Judfe Claude
Owens 8'a means o ending a
class action suit filed against
the Irvine Co.
The bullet train lowering
would get the job done for Cree.
However, a growing· number
of residents are opposing the
bullet trains -raised or sunken
-rushing past their homes. At
meetings Monday night and
earlier today, residents diacussed
an alternative technology for
high-speed trains using magnetic
force rather than electricity.
ad was prompted by recent
remarks from Donald L .
Bren, new majority owner of
the Irvine Co.
Bren. earlier this month,
said he is optimistic about
ending the lf!asehold tquabble
and predicted a settlement by
the end of the month.
Sunny and warllJ
t.'U.n1e, w ho said he is no\
"terribly optimistic" about
the ongoing negotiations, said
he la unB1.U"e II the ad would
Ray Ikola. the attorney
representing the Committee
of 4000, said \he ad was
written by people who are
not privy to the secret talks.
He suggested the ad will not
affect the negotia\ions.
Ikola alto aaid the full.page
"The timing of Bren's
statements bothered me," said
Ikola. "He made them the
same day the Irvine Co.
delivered its latest proposal to
us. 1 think he made some
assumptions th't were unwarranted.••
Coastal
Summery 19m94Watur• er• In
llOr• for lh• COHiii re111on1
Wedneedey, delpite -pat~ tow cloud• along the coeet during
ew1y morning houB. Hlgha up 10 as 1n UM coealll .,._ and up to
95 In the dw«1• ere forecut ~ O\l9mlght towe down 10 '2
EleiNMra. P01n1 Conoeption to
Meirlcan b«d« ene1 out eo rn11ee: <>wt OU1--tan ~ Point
Conception and Sen HICOIH
'll&end nortttw.1 12 to :n w11t1 8
to fl foot HH Wednudey
EIHwhete llOhl and varlabl•
winds nlOflt and morlllng hour'8
beCOmlng -to ~ 10 to 15 knot• duflng afletflOOnt.
Two 10 a foot wlftd wevee.
W_.erty ..-. 2 to 3 i..t. "* ~leldllV bu1 -low oloude ~ ,,_ "°""*" _..,.. ''" lllGfli ltwOUOfl "'°"*'O llouts.
811Nng•
8imltnghetn
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Dayton
Oen\W
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Hertford
Helen• Honolulu Houlton ~ Jede90ft ......
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BUY wmm Till JIWILLIQ~ BUY!
No need to travel· to the
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f
Our regular prices are up to 7 5%
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'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, May 17, 1983 * Al
Coast students honored for • science
Two dozen Oranse Coaat
students won awards or
honorable mentions in the recent
Orange County Science and
Engineering Fair.
The event, held earlier this
month at Calif9Tnia State
University, Fullerton, was for
stucfents in junior and senior
high school divisions.
Following are local students
who won awards:
Junior Sweepstakes: Kennedy
Muche, Circle View Junior High,
Hunting1on Beach.
Junior Behavioral and Social
Sciences: Maura McDonald, Fitz
Junior High, Garden Grove,
honorable mention.
Junior Blochem!Btry: Jennifer
Ulick, Circle View, third place.
Junior Botany : EJnar
Christensen, Marine View
Huntington Beach, first place;
Kimberly Novkov, Marine View,
honorable mention.
Junior Chemistry: Jaaon
Marcus, Circle View, th1rd place;
GreJ Zmak, Marine View,
honorable mention.
Junior Earth and Space
Sclencea: Glenn Plank, Marine
View, second place; Joel Metz,
Fitz, honorable mention.
Junior Engineering: Tracey
Miller, Fitz, second place.
Senior Engineering: Robert
Vandervolt, Newport Harbor,
Newport Beach, lh.lrd place.
Junior Medicine and Health:
Mlhlr Parikh, Circle View,
second place; Marc Winger,
Harbor View, third place.
Junior Microbiology: Philip
Wolf, Circle View, third place.
Junior Physics : James
Hollinger , Circle View ,
honorable mention.
Junior Zoology: Kelli Hunt,
Marine View, ~nd place.
' Newport athletes
slated for honors
I~ ~\~Search for male birth control
Top athletes from Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar
high schools will be honored at a breakfast banquet May 25 at
the Newporter Mesort.
The 22nd. annual Athletic Awards is sponaored by the
Commodores Club of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of
Commerce.
Master of ceremonies will be former basketball star Hall
Uplinger. Guest speakers will include BUI Toomey, the 1968
Olympic decathlon winner, and Julie Leach, winner in the
women division in the 1982 Hawaiian Ironman Triathlon. pill goes on despite pessimism
For more information. call 644-8211.
SHREWSBURY, Mass. (AP)
-The lab that discovered the
birth control pill is hard at work
on the nation'a; biggest research
effort to undentand the other
half of the sexual equation -
how men reproduce.
Even though two possible male
pills are being tested elsewhere,
they have drawbacks. 1\nd
experts concede that the quest
for sexual equality in
contraceptives is complicated.
Through the miscroscopes at
the Worcester Foundation for
Ex perimen ta! Biology, seven
scientists and their assistants are
unraveling the sexual workings
of sea urchins, rats, sheep and a
mini-zoo of other creatures.
The prospects are not terribly
bright," says> Dr. Sheldon J .
Segal. director of the population
division of the Rockefeller
Foundation.
They sleuth 01.1t such esoterica
as the makeup of the proteins in
a ram's sperm. When all goes
well, their research turns up
clues about the intricacies of
human reproduction. And, the
scientists believe, it could be the
basis for solving a puzzle as tough
Dr. Mahlon Hoagland,
president of the Worcester
Foundation, says he knows why.
"The biggest obstacle is
ignorance. We just don't know
enough about the points at which
we might attack the problem."
. as the birth control pill: an oral
contraceptive for men.
This is why the work of
researchers at places like the
Worces ter Foundation is
important. They are not looking
for a magk pill; they are simply
trying to understand how
.
Whips and chains
big business for
kinky sex addicts
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dressed in knee-high.
red-laced boots and a black spandex jump suit,
Jeanette Zinkan stood with authority in her
boutique filled with whips. shackles, handcuffs and
other kinky sexual apparel.
"We sell thousands of items a year," said
Zinkan. 44. displaying what she called a $119
bondage "starter kit."
"I brought this business out into the open
because I'm in the open .... l feel no need to hide."
The Bersatile Boutique. owned by Zink.an and
her husband, caters to what police and psychologists
describe as a rapidly emerging subculture of middle
and uppe!:-class Southern California
sadomachochists.
They are people · whose sex lives include
whippings, spankings, physical restraint and
dominance-submission games. Participants said
such activity culminates m sexual gratification and
that physical injury is rare.
"People think of it as bizarre, satanic and
painful, but it's pleasure rather than pain." said Reb
Stout, who edits Reflections magazine, a n
S&M-oriented bimonthly published by the
Zinkans.
The couple have taken their personal fantasif'S
to the marketplace. They are not alone. Their
boutique is one of two m Orange County. More than
20 so-called bondage parlors advertise in Los
Angeles County.
The owners of those places are making a lot of
money," said Los Angeles police Detective Fred
Clapp. "In the future we're looking at a vast
proliferation. Those places are just going to go on
and on."
In Sacramento. a high school football coach, his
wife -a junior high assistant principal -and a
teacher of handicapped children recently pleaded
no contest to charges of operating a brothel
featuring sadistic acts and advertised as a "sex
dungeon."
The Bondage Buyers Guide in Los Angeles'
Van Nuys area lists 15 local suppliers of S&M
equipment. •ne Garden Grove firm named
Centurians adveru.ses a $300 latex dress and a $65
body binder.
a y the time Los Angeles' first bondage parlor,
the House of Domina.nee, burned in a 1977 fire -
four years after it opened -others have popped up
all over Hollywood. Moet accept charge cards.
The largest, six-year-old Chateau Church,
claims a membership of 4,500 people. James Hillier,
49, who also operates a San Francisco branch, said
he considers his services a form of therapy. HJis West Hollywood parlor is s1affed by 16
"counselors'' who work In four dungeons equipped
with mirrors, whipping poets, pillories and wooden
crosaes.
Californian wins
conducting prize
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) -Criag T. Zerbe,
a 23-year-old native Californian, won Hungarian
Televlaion'a fourth International Young
Conductors' CompeUtion, the Budapest evening
pepel' FAtl Hirlap reported Monday.
7.erbe, a student at the University of Indiana at
Bloocnglnton, wa. awarded first prize and 100,000
Forinta ($2,500) Sunday nJabt by an international
jury beaded by eminent Hungarian conductor Janoe Feienclik.
Jury membera included well-known Weat
German conduct.or Christoph von Dohnanyt and
Italian maestro8 Alberto ~ and Roberto Derul.
Second wu Andreu Wells of Heidelber1,
West Germany, who won 80,000 Forints ($2,000)
and third wu Robert Houlihan, an lrlah-bom
youn1 conductor Uvtn, ln France. whOM prtu
moJ'9 ~ 80,000 Forinta ($1,600).
Zerbe conducted mUlk by Mozart In the fin.al
round of the compedtiol'\ and Tchaikovsky at the
tUt.quellt pla at Budapest'• preltl,:toul J'rani
Uat Acacleriiy of Mu8'c.
The American. S.U Hlrlap OOCMMft-.ci, "haa
c:aUed \he au.ntkln of milUonl to hla mUllcal llf1a
• • • a career Ml opened up before him with men .,._.. hmcetorward."
A total of 61 tntl'te. from lG oountn. took s-rt
tn the competition held April 26-May 1& here and at
Saomblthely ln W-.em llunpry.
L
I
!
reproduction works.
If they can figure out the
complex life cycle of a spenn -
even a aea urchin's spenn -they
believe it should be pos&ble to
find a safe and effective way to
interrupt the process.
"We ha ve to make
fundamental new discoveries
about male and female
reproduction if we are going to
get anywhere," says Hoagland.
This, along with neurobiology
and cancer, is the major goal of
his foundation, a private research
institute where 40 scientistsi and
150 support staffers w ork on a
100-acre campus outside
Worcester. The foundation is
supported principally by federal
grants.
"In my knowledge," he says,
"it ~ definitely the largest group
working anywhere on problems
related to the male."
Each time a couple has
intercourse, millions of sperm are
discharged. Each s perm is
propelled on its journey to the
femalfs egg by a hair-like whip
of a tail. Scientist George B.
Witman is trying to find out how
the tail works. e
"Ultimately, we hope that by
understanding this, we will have
a rational basis for developing
drugs that will interfere with
this mobility and therefore
interrupt fertlli:zation," he says.
Like other scientists at the
foundation, Witman does not
experiment with human sperm,
because it is available in
relatively small quantities.
Instead , he works with
Chlamydomonas, a one-cell alga
with two sperm-like tails.
@ Pac\~\c ,-e\ephc>ne .
Laguna museum to host dance
A "Spring Fling" dinner dance. sponsored by the Junior
Council of the Laguna Beach Mu.sewn of Art, will be held
Saturday at the museum, beginning at 7 p.m.
Tickers, at $125 per couple, benefit the council's
Children's Art F.ducation program. For information, call Janet
Eggers at 494-0028.
Mesa Goodwill marks 27th year
Costa Mesa's Goodwill Store at 620 W. 19th Street will
celebrate its 27th year in business Thursday through Saturday
with free doughnuts and coffee for customers.
Kindergarten signup set in Laguna
. ~egistration ~or .kindergarteners in the Laguna ~h
Unified School Distnct begins Thursday at El Morro and
Friday at Top of the World elementary.
Signups are from 9 a.m. to noon at both schools. For
information, call the district at 494-8546.
CC>NSUN\ER YEL\ OW Pl\GES
Orange Coun'-Y
Nor'-¥\
1he best llCld book has gotten better.
PacifiCTelephone is dividing .. Ona Counly ConslR11rYellOw~ into two new 1ocanr..illd0ries.
/.
J
,
•
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..
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOf41f10tU ••<1.uo• TltAOH O• , ....... YO••. Mt OW HT, ... C.,I(, , ••• .0.TO., D•f.OIT ••o (lll(llOIAfl noc• l.JllCM&MO•t AIOIO •t"O•flO av TMI NAt.0 A•O ••ITIN•f.
OtMge CoMt DAILY PILOT!Tu.ct.y, M~ 17. 1883 NB U I
DOw JOnes Final
UP 2.81
CLOU1,1an
Wendy's to join in
hamburger ad wars
DUBLIN, OhJo -Wendy's is launching a new
salvo ·in the multimillion.dollar advertising war for
America'• faa~food dollar, one depicting a.tomen as
victlma ·of bad aervice and poor quAl.ity at "some
hambur1er places." Unlike the aasn-tve Burger
King ad.a that began late last year, however, the
Wendy's ads will not name the opposition. "We don't
want to mention them by name and give them free
advertising," says William M. Welter, aenior vice
president for markettn, at Wendy'• lntemaJiona} Inc.,
the nation'• third largest fut food chain. "People
know we're talking about Burger Klng and
McDonald's."
Strike settled at Bekins
SAN DIEGO -A month-kme ltrtke that had
sharply reduced operationa at Be~ Moving &
Storage Co. ended Monday u more than 500
Teamsters throughout Southern Cali.fomJa returned to
their jobs. The unJon, which includea moft than ~
members of Teamsters Local M2 in San Diego, had
walked out April 18, a day after the old contr&t-t
expired.
Guilty plea in solar fraud
-.
SAN DIEGO -Ronald Farnsworth, former
Rresident of now-bankrupt )hjor Dynamics Inc.,
pleaded guilty Monday to charges tied to a maaaive
10lar energy tax lhelter fraud CMe. During a hearing
ln U.S. District Court. Farnsworth, 45, entered guilty
pleu to conspiracy to defraud the government, and to
aiding and abetting the preparation and filing of a
falae income tax return. Proeecutora laid the case
involved $8.3 million in loeaes to people who had
invested in Major Oynamica.
SoYiets to get new grain deal
WASHINGTON -The Soviet Union has
accepted a U.S. offer to negotiate a long-term grain
sales agreement. a Ragan administration oftidal said
today. The old five-year agn!ement. whkb has been
extended twice for a year at a time, will expire on '
Sept. 30. It WU ne,gotlated in 1975 in an effort to
atabi.liz.e the erratic buying runs on U.S. granaries. The
pact went into effect on Oct. 1, 1976.
Oil-price drop worries Regan
WASHINGTON -Treasury Secretary Donald
Regan says a second round of world financial problems
could occur if oil price• drop sharply or if the
industriallxed economies are slow to recover.
Meanwhile, a Treuury official, who would only speak
on condition he not be rwned, noted that oil prices
have declined aomewhat in recent days and aatd the
easing could lead to another major drop in thoee prices.
''Unless we 1ee a better incre111e in the demand ,
for oil, we're got.na to 1ee a 80ftening of prices. which I
could exacerbate tlM! crlaia," the official said.
Regan deecrtbed the finandal situation as .. still
precariou.a" and said, "We are not out of the woods at
all."
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