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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-06-09 - Orange Coast PilotFrank 'Jake' Abbott Ex-Dodger didn't . dodge soon enough Frank "Jake" Abbott has a black eye and a red face. He got 'em both when he was playing center field for the faculty team in the annual end-of-achool softball game with students of Wintersburg High School. Abbott, superintendent of the Huntington Beach High School Di.strict, was highly recruited. Alter all, he played for the Brooklyn Dodger organization in the early 1950s. His colleagues at spring training included Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale and Roy ~ella. Ohly Abbott, 51, was a pitcher, not a center fielder, a position he waa uked to play on the faculty team. The second batter lifted a high fly to center. Abbott called for It and ran under It-looking good 90 far. But then the ball became lodged in the middle of the lens of h1a bifocals -BOmething he didn't have to wear 30 years afl.O. Abbott was taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital for repairs. But the major injury seemed to be to hia pride. "I've got a shiner you wouldn't believe," he said. "And It's embar- rassing, too. Nobody will believe I ever played baseball." .=., lU ........... i -11 --JO ........... 11 -..... ,. =-\JI ........... :l~ .,,.,......°' .... ' America's medla.n age lsTiow 30. Where were most people born? See Page 85. u cu Strip tease? ~,.._..,c...,_.._ Garfield of the comics waves to traffic where "his" avenue crosses Golden West Street In Huntington THI ORANGI COAST COUNTY EDITION THURSDAY. JUNE 9. 1983 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Passengers toast as American takes off BY STEVE MARBLE otllle...,,.. ..... "I think they ought to buzz Newport Beach on the way out," suggested Fountain Valley resi- dent Robert Rexanne as he walked his mother to the Ameri- can Airlines passenger gate. Others cheered and raised their complimentary glasses of cham- pqne as the DC9-Super 80 jet pulled alongside the terminal at John Wayne Airport and fueled foe its fight to Dallas-Fort Worth. "All that worrying for nothing," commented passenger Slaying suspect silent Bi JODI CADENHEAD on • ._.,,_..,. .\ Costa Mesa man who con- feued to holding up a liquor st.ore ii! still considered a suspect - albeit a weak one -In the grisly slaying of a Chino Hilla family. Funeral services for the family were to be held today in Orange. San Bernardino County Sheriff's Capt. Philip Schuyler said Milton "Bill" Bulau, 33, has refused to talk to detectives since his arrest Tuesday when he walked into the C.OSta Mesa police department and said he was responsible for robbing a liquor store Monday night. Bulau was staying at a C.OSta Mesa motel on Harbor Boulevard, where a witness said he saw a station wagon matching the de- 9Cription of a car ta.ken Crom the murder victims' aecluded home. Bulau, who was booked for investigtion of armed robbery and residential burglary, has not been linked to the alayings at the F . Douglas Ryen Camily. "A lot of the things he's done have caWled suspicion, like the fact that he turned himself in," said Schuyler. "He doesn't look as much as a suspect as he did before. But until we can prove he didn't have anything to do with it, he isa PUl•PI='~\ " . - C6 82 A5 C4-5 C9-12 C6 cu C8 AlO 8 7.8 Hor· ClO 82 AlO 87-8 A3 B6,C7.8 Cl-3 a B8 87~ A2 A.I - Ken Geeslin, a businessman from Fort Worth who was preparing to go home. After weeks of courtroom fight- ing with Orange County govern- ment and a surprise 11th-hour victory for the airline Wednesday, American employees were in a festive mood this morning as they checked off passengers for the first of four daily flights. passengers had to walk under, was placed next to the jet. American Airlines, which of- fers three daily flights to Dallas and one to Chicago with a stop in Long Beach, had won the battle for Orange County. Attendants handed long-stemmed red r06eS to female passengers and yeUow roses to the men. A garland of roses, which "We did it," shouted one airline worker as the blue-and-red jet lifted off at 7:58 a .m. and roared toward Newport Beach, disap- pearing into the morning haze. Until late Wedneeday, it ap- peared the airline was not going to (See AMERICAN, Pa1e Al) o.tr,.. .,_.., ........._ ·-- First passengers board American Airlines' inaugural flight from· John Wayne Airport. ...,,_ ,._..,....__ll ..... Awaiting their respective graduation exercises are three members of the Gram s family-daughter Karen , mother Marie and son Karl. Everybody graduates Valley mother joins son and daughter in commencement BY PHIL SNEIDERMAN OflMo.tr,..llllfl The Grams household in Fountain Valley might be dubbed Graduation Central th1a month. Karl R. Grams, 18, will get h1a high tchool diploma next week at Westminster High School. His sister, Karen, 21, will receive her bachelor of llcience degree Saturday at UC Irvtne, where she majored in infonnation and computer ICience. And on Friday, their mom, Marte Grams, will pick up her aaaodate in arts degree at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. The family members say it waa ju.It a coinddence that all three cap-and-gown eventa will occur just daya apart. The youngsters say they are particularly proud of their mother, who works as an ad.m1nistrative aecretary at OCC. For the put five yean, Marie Grams has taken counes during lunch hours, eveningJ and summers to qualify for a degree. She now plans to continue working through the Univenity of Red1anda Extension to obtain her mut.er'1 degree in buaineei adminiatratJon. "I thought it WU a good Idea, .. aaya Karen. "I encouraged her. I knew it would take a lot of patience to 11.ick with it." Still, her mother aya she wu a bit (See VALLEY FAMD..Y, Paae AJ) FV pushes golf course at park By PBD.. SNEIDERMAN cWllle...., ,_ .... Fountain Valley's City Council wants the county to proceed with elans for a new golf cour&e at Mile Square Regional Park, even though military officials have suggsested that the same acreage be Wied in a land-swap deal. The council's unanimous vote occurred Tuesday when residents living near the park converged on City Hall to protest the possible land exchange. Mile Square is a county park located within the city limits. County officials have been con- sulting with Fountain Valley's elected leaders concerning de- velopmen t of a comer of the park bordered by Brookhurst Street and Edinger Avenue. The council voted Tuesday to notify Orange County Superviaor Roger Stanton that it supports a plan to build an 18-hole, inter- mediate-size golf courae on the com er property without a re- servable group-picnic area propoaed by county planners. Residents Living near the park have expres&ed concern about alcohol consumption that would be pennitted in such a picnic area. The council motion also urged that the city share in the revenue generated by the golf course to helpoffaetcity expenses related to Mile Square. Tuesday's Mile Square dis- cussion came on the heels of a strongly worded letter written by Stanton, chainnan of the Board of Supervisors. In response to a land-swap plan suggested by U.S. Navy officials. The Navy controls a 137-acre triangle in the center of Mile Square. Navy officials have said this land could be traded to the county for 57 park acres at the comer of Brookhurstand Edinger. (See GOLF COURSE, Paae At\ Hearings on Irvine hospital prepared BY GLENN SCOTI' on....., ......... Proponents with competing plana for building medical facili- ties in Irvine will learn Tuesday which aide, lf any, will enter the hearinp with an advantage. That advantage would be a poaltive recom.mendatiofl from the Orange County Health Planning Council's .Wf. A 200-page staff report is due to be released Tuesday. The council's Revifw Commit- tee will refer to that report when it holda a public hearing at 6:30 p.m. June 21 at the lrvine High School Auditorium, 4321 Walnut Ave .. The hearing la 1eheduled to last no more than four hours. If time ISee HQSPJTAL. Pqe A1 -------':l.'----INSIDE----------- Geor1e Yardley, the lint Friday nisht pacb a double doee of Extensive re pain are 1ehed- NBA player to score more football when alumai teams from Fountain uJed to begin on the than 2,000 poinh in a single Valley High and Edbon High equare off at 1torm-battered Huntiqtoa teaaon, talk• about life alter Weetmin1ter, while Newport Harbor and Beach city pier in teYeral batketbalJ. P~e B 1. Corona del Mar aluma taqle at Newport weeb. P .. e A6. Harbor Hlgh. Page Cl. News tips pay dividends Know abOut a good etory? Call ue wtth the detalla. The Dally Piiot wtH 1)9Ycuh award• for the three belt .... tlpe eech week. Juet call 842-4321, ect. 229 on WMkdayl, or M2-588eevenlngeand WMkenda and you oould wtn the week'• top prtzeof •16. Some f rieada of former Pre.ideal Richard Nixon want to 0 elarify'' the record aboet Mt put beeauae they tlalak W ateraate o•er- tlaadowt dae pablle memory oa 1Ue40y~of public ..me..PapA7. l • I \:l Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9. 1983 ~' \'\''t> Continued stories . HOS PIT AL HEARINGS ... runs out before the test1mony, however, the hearing may be c'Ontinued until the following evening. Three groups will present cases for winning a state license to build medical facilities in lrvtne, the largest city in the state without a hospital. HealthWest Foundation of Chatsworth is seeking to build a hospital at UC Irvi.ne. People for an Irvine Community Hospital (PICH) want to develop their Irvine Medical Center north of the San Diego Freeway near Sand Canyon Avenue. United Medical Centers, wtuch operates West.em Medical Center m Santa Ana, hopes to be licensed to include surgical services in an out-patient clinic under construc- tion on Barranca Parkway m Woodbridge. The staff's recommendation doesn't have to be followed, but it will represent the conclusion of the council's professional planners who have heen involved in an intensi~ review of the three proposals. The Review Committee's own recommendation will go to the local council and then the state Health Planning and Develop- ment Board, which is charged with issuing a ruling on the license applications. That ruling must pass a final review by the state director of health planning. ln recent years, staH members of the Orange County Health Planning Council have not been encouraging about proposals to build new hospitals until existing h06pitals in the county reach a higher-average occupancy rate. New facilities, they have said, cause rates to go up. However, groups seeking to move into Irvine claim the excess hospital beds are in northern Orange County while hospitals surrounding Irvine are busy enough to be considering ex- pansion. SLAYING SUSPECT ... Gail Carmichael defended the man, known to his friends as Bill. "He's a lot of things. but he's not a murderer," said Carmichael. whose family housed Bulau. "He walked in and confessed (to the liquor store holdup) because he thinks he should be punished " Costa Mesa police Lt. Jack Calnon said Bulau also has ad- mitted stealing a motorcycle three weeks ago and a rifle Monday morning. but has refused to answer questions about the Chino investigation. Bulau. who was paroled Crom the California Institution for Men in Chino in 1972 alter serving one year on a forgery conviction, told detectives he was hitchhiking on a highway near Chino Friday, said Calnon. In a phone mterview, John Bulau, 32, said his brother left h 1S home in Grand Junction, Colo., Wednesday to hitchhike back to Costa Mesa. He called Saturday morning and said he was staymg at a friend's house in Costa Mesa after getting a nde from a w oman headed for San Diego, said J ohn. "I can't imagine him doing something like that," said John, when told his brother was a suspect in the slayings. "But he has a habit of being in the wrong place at the wrong time." lnvesugators said one of three escapees from a Chino detention facility has been eliminated as a suspect in the murders of F. Douglas Ryen, 41; his wiCe, Peggy Ann. 41; their daughter, Jessica, 1 O; and a neighbor boy, Christopher Hughes, 12. who were found hacked to death in the sprawling ranch house Sunday morning by Hughes' father. Hughes was buried Wednesday. Schuyler said investigators have practically ruled out as a suspect AJboro Knori, 31 , who was arrested Monday m Temple City. Authorities are still searching for Kevin Cooper, 25. who escaped from the California Institution for Men Thursday, and Michael "Fast Horse" Martinez. 17, who escaped from the Boys Republic Saturday. GOLF COURSE ... Navy oHictaJs would then try to trade ttus pa.reel to a commercial developer in order to procure land for military housmg near the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. A Navy official asked that the county halt plans for the golf course untu land-swap talks are initiated. The officials said that if the land swap falls through, the Navy could be forced to build Irvine ~-·-•o•-...--on~ A....,. w..,,_.,., to 1..ip -• be1>J loclled -· A 187~ -...... -,_,.., 11.-, =11·--~s~"' A .,. twou into• -on 11w 3700 -o1 0.. °*"'> A-Wedn-,. -llo'9 a ·--.-----........., poll09 ....., housing m its central Mile Square park property. Military housing at Mile Square has been opposed repeatedly by nearby residents. Stanton also has criticized this proposal. During Tuesday's City Council discussion, Mayor Marvin Adler claimed the Navy is using a "scare tactic" in reviving talk of housing at Mile Square. Huntington Beach ~=..°i2'bo91!::1...:' .. '=-':9~~~ -""'1iln0 lot ol l!w MeOorv>ell DooJ9lu '*"'' .. ~I 9olM AW The ---al '30.000 A I~~ MClen -repot'led Our-glat'-I-" -.,......., OYWl'llgM In • lo4 .. 8 lZ~.a10"'-8t The---• eitteo '~ !*yw ._ e1 MI I At-lol1"" 11200blod<ol~~ ·-~ _ .. _.. bfOk• "' Illa '-'"' llvougll • -"°"' and _,....,.,.., ~ -IOod American plane fin ally airborne By JEFF ADLER O(\M 0.., -....,. Seemingly against all odds, American's on-again, off-again plans to fly four flights a day from John Wayne were put back on track Wednesday afternoon when a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals suddenly revened its earlier ruling and reinstated a lower court order pennitting the airline to launch its inaugural flight this morning. "I'm not very happy. The unusual seems to be the rouune• when it comes to the Orange. County, airport." Supervisor Thomas Riley said shortly after Police probe sudden death Coroner deputies are trying to determine the cause of death of a 29-year-old Fountain Valley man who collapsed and fell after police stopped a car in which he was a passenger. The victim was identified as Frank A. Jaime of 16520 Mt. S helley Circle. learning of the court's latest ruling. "The court is januning, jamnung, jamming American Air- lines down our throat." The appeals panel ruling came after the airline's attorney, Ray- mond lkola of Newport Beach, filed papers with the court early Wednesday asking the panel to reconsider -on an emergency basis -its earlier decision that would have blocked the airline's first week of scheduled flights until an appeals court h~aring in San FranciBco set for next Wednesday. The tangled legal web of events that culmm.ated with today's in- augural flight began in February, when Amencan applied for entry at John Wayne Airort. A chronol- ogy foUows: •May 4 -County supervisors voie to adopt a moratorium on any new air carriers at John Wayne Air port until completion of a safety study. •May 10 -American Airlines files suit in federal court claiming the county is discrimin.ating a«ainst it by denying it access to the airport after it has met all conditions necessary to gain entry. .,., .... ,.._.., ...._... ll_ American Airlines pla ne joins AirCal on the apron of John Wayne Airport this morning a s a third aircraft takes off. When paramedics arrived a t the scene Wednesday evening, Jaime was still breathing and had a pulse rate, according to officers. But he was pronounced dead after arrival at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Lt. Dave Brok.aw said he be- lieved that Jaime had a history of prior heart problems. •May 13 -A federal judge fails to order the temporary restraining order but sets a date for a full hearing on the issue before Judge Hatter on May 23. •May 23 -Hatter orders the county moratorium be lifted, clearing the way for the airline to begin flying. Superviaors decide to appeal the decision. AMERICAN TAKES OFF ... Jaime was standing on the sidewalk on Newhope Street north of McFadden Avenue while police were giving the driver of the car a citation for driving with a bald tire. Officers said Jaime complained about feeling dizzy and then fell to the sidewalk. •June 6 -American again asks Hatter for a court order to permit them to fly beginning June 9 after learrung supervisors don't plan to consider ratifying an operating agreement until June 14. Hatter issues the order, but it is stayed by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court . (From1>age A 1) ge t off the ground in Orange County and tentative plans were being considered to bus the 350 passengers booked on the four rnghts to Long Beach Airport. Orange County supervisors, who wanted a moratorium on new airport camers until airport ex- pansion plans move forward, said the airline had "bullied" its way into the crowded airport. "I think the whole thing has just been a bunch of foolishnes.5," said Rexanne, wh0&e mother is flying to Dallas to visit a sister. John Daaa. a resident of Da.llas, said he was unaware his takeoff plans were m jeopardy until he picked up a newspaper last night. "When l booked the flight nobody said there might be prob- lems," he said, taking a sip of champagne. Alma Gleason. a resident of Irvine who w as headed to Boston with her son, said the airline called her at work late Wednesday to let Fountain Valley A tMglar 1111>1*1 lllrougll e Ooggie doot laedlng "°"' ,,.. ·-yero to • ,_ "' '"'-18000 -ol ElC>w1 -81-11 836"' ...... A dlclatlnQ ,.,,..,,... .. ·-Ot '30o WM lll)ietl lrom PAC AMlly Syt11..,. 17050 a..-11 S1weo ~I ·-•I S600 -et_, "°"' • wNclle ~.., on .,,. 1eoo 1>1oc11 °' &o.mi C:0.1 11~ ., 6 4& p"' her know she'd be taking off from John Wayne. "Until then, I wasn't sure what was happening," she added. 1 VALLEY FAMILY GRADUATING ... (From Page A 1) apprehensive about college study because she hadn't attended classes since graduating from high school in 1953. "My husband graduated from USC with an MBA degree," Marie Grams says. "The children w ere al ways interested in education, and since I was working at OCC, they encouraged me to study there. "I got a lot of help at home. The kids taught me how to take not.es and how to write term papers .. My husband wu very aupportive, too." Her IOn says homework chores have been "a mutual trade-<>ff." Karl aays hia mother has typed some of his papers, and he. in tum. has helped her with her studies. "l helped her a little with computer science. but she picked it up pretty quickly," adds Karen. If the children are proud of their mother's achievement, Marie Grams is no less thrilled with what her aon and daughter have accomplished. At Weatminater High, Karl competed in three varsity sports -basketball, badminton and cross country. He a1ao was vice president of the Gennan Club and a member of the California Scholarship Foundation. He was part of Westminster High's six-person academic decathlon team. Karl also is one of just 225 students nationwide who have been accepted at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London. Conn. He's now preparing for "swab summer" (boot camp) and plans to rnapr in electrical engineering. His sister Karen will be working full-time this summer in quality assurance for Burroughs Corp. Next fall she'll return to UC lrvme to study toward her master's degree. while conunu.ing to work part-time for Burroughs. Because of the busy schedule of classes. jobs and sporting events, Karl says the Gram house "is sort of like a bus terminal. We're constantly in and out, leaving notes for each other." His mother agrees that a lot of creative scheduling has been required But Marie Grams believes the graduation day rewards will be worth it. She's particularly proud of her OCC diploma because no other member of her own family had attended college. ''My mother back in Chicago is really excited about thia," she says. "She' can't wait to see a picture of me in a cap and gown." J Continued cloudy • Coastal Tempera lures IH• 91 • 40 .. u •1 M ... 41 n .a 11 eo • eo .... n • . ., IO ... " .. ... u ., u . .. 11 40 .. n c.,., ~on.SC Clwlee1on.w v CNttotte.l"C ~ Cl\lcleO Clnclnnall ci...lend Columbla.S C Columbu9 o....flWonh ~on o.n .... 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The 01her1 A brillianl. man-made ''produrtion -a diamond ~1mulan1 call~ Cubic Zirconia. 10 striltinaty similar many cxpens can'l tcll thcm apan• Which is the real diamond? Which is the Cubic Zirconla? It \(IU llU"'" corrc.11•. )OU ... 11 bt In instant winner of. brill••nt. na .. lo\. foet)•Wll•IC (. Uboc lircon•• •IOn< "I'd )'OU .. ,1111u1hh fllr Ille (ironJ Ptlu Dro .. '"' • w "111 11 '""' d,.m11mJ """" J.YIOO 00 IC•..U Velw' 1 Hn 1t ,,,u -ut•\ "''nn11 \c•u '""win' f •rryonc cn1cnn1 ll'tl\ cnn1c.'1 1u1om111n lh rtcc"c' • 1()'", dl\tount 11•h «rt•ftt••< •ood 10-•rd• 1h .. purth••f' .,f ant h•m on d••l'l•r at R•lt ,,,..,,,, !-o fnltt 1114•'! J u•t brina Ille cnlly (()rm btlow In ,.,·,.,.,. I& !ht Ha fr J•"•''' nnr ... 1 1nu llmll 11cm1 '''on d"play •t 111 thc uortt All tnlrlf'• m1111 bf' In by Mar :u , I~!\ RAFF 1eWCltY p •• • 0 - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9. 1983 A3 NATION Education reforms have their limits , Crippled Alaska airliner limps in to safe l~nding Legislation would improve quality, but wouldn't weed out incoplpetent teachers By the Asaoclaced Pre11 ANCHORAGE, Alaska -A crippled airliner with l~ people aboard limped to a "pretty good" landing on two of four engines after an engine exploded, blowing loose a propeller that gashed the fuselage, authorities said. Reeve Aleutian Airways Flight 8, a Lockheed Electra turboprop on a run from the Alaska Peninsula to Seattle, landed Wednetday night on its second approach to Anchorage International Airport after circling for about two hours to bum fuel, officiala said. No injuries were reported among the five crew members or 10 passengers, who slid down emergency chutes after the plane rolled to a stop a few feet off the runway. Panel seeks compromise budget WASHINGTON -House and Senate conferees seeking a compromise 1984 budget resoluuon may give President Reagan only half the amount he requested for a buildup in defense. The conference committee, formed to N'SOlve major differences in spending blueprints passed by both houses of Congress, began its work Wednesday with poLitical bickering that has characteriz.ed this year's budget debate The Democrat-controlled House authorized $263.8 baJlion for defense when tl passed an $863.6 billion budget plan for next year The Senate's $849.7 billion spending plan cont.ams $270.6 billion for the Pentagon, a 6 percent mcrease. Booklet to aid senior complaints WAS HINGTON -A new government publication urges senior citizens to overcome their generational reluctance to complaining and tells how to object to ill treatment by businesses. The new booklet, published by the Federal Trade Commission with the American Association of Retired Persons, gives elderly people practical advice about making consumer complaints. Copies of the booklet a.re available from the Public Reference Branch, Dept. CE. Room 130, Federal Trade Commission, 6th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue N.W., Washington D.C. 20580. STATE University Women snub Reagan SAN FRANCISCO -The American Association of University Women has responded coldly to an apparent at~mpt by the Reagan administration to wangle an invitation for President Reagan to the group's June oonvention here. AAUW spokeswoman Robin Stevens said Wednesday that U.S. Education Secretary Terrel Bell called the organir.ation on Tuesday and asked whether there would be a spot on the agenda for Reagan if he were interested in speaking to the group. The group's president, Mary Purcell.said "Consider- ing the disparity between the AAUW's goals and the policies of the Reagan adnunistration toward women, we were very surprised al this initiative from the WhJte House." Rams linebacker sent to jail SANTA ANA -A second-year backup linebacker for the Los Angeles Rams has pleaded no contest to charges he killed a teen-ager while dnvmg while intoxicated. Superior Court Judge Lws Cardenas suspended Michael Reilly's prison sentence Wednesday and placed him on three years probation and a year in county Jail The 24-year-old defendant was ordered to report to jail June 17. Students die in plane crash SAN DIEGO-A Light plane flying lil overcast weather barely fru.led to clear the peak of 1,292-foot Fortuna Mountain and smashed into a jumble of brush and rocks. Two college students died m the wreck, authorities said. Deputy Coroner Robert Pettit identifed the victuns in Wed.nesday'scrash as Roger Murray. 22. the pilot. and John Duffy, 19. Both were students at San Jose State University. WORLD ' NA TO blames Kremlin for stalemate LOS ANGE.U:S (AP) -Major education refonna approved by both hou.tet1 of the Leglala tu.re should improve the quality of instruction but probably won't weed out many Incompetent pub- lic school teachers, offlciala say. The bllJB, now awaiting con- fereru.-e committee action, would strip tenure protections from new teachers, speed d.ismiB8a1 hearings for incompetent tenured teachers and allow schoola to retain less senior but better qualified Massacre • survivor in shock SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -A sheriff's captain says young Joshua Ryen was "very emo- tionally shaken" when told his parents and sister had died in a ranch massacre that left the 8-year-old seriously wounded. Doctors say such a victim oould need psychotherapy to recover from a shock which may cause amnesia, feelings of guilt. hostility or a death wish. For eight to 12 hours after Saturday's attack, Joshua lay semi-amscious in a pool of his own blood in his parents' bathroom, his throat cut. collarbone and ribs broken and body battered by the assailants. ln a nearby bedroom were the bodies of his father. Douglas Ryen, mother P eggy, SJ.St.er Jessica, 12, and a neighbor friend, Christopher Hughes, 10. "The more terrible the circum- stances, the more severe the trauma and the more need for professional assistance," sa1d Dr. Spencer Eth, child psychiatrist at Loe Angeles County-USC Medical C.enter, adding that children who witness the murder of their parents •·greatly benefit from professional treatment, which they often don't get." "This is not a unique event at all," Eth said Wednesday. "It happens as often as 200 times a year in the county of Los An- geles." Sheriff's Capt. Phil Schuyler said Joshua took the news of his parents' deaths badly. "He was very emotionally shaken," Schuyler said. Eth and UCLA P6ychlatri.st RobertPynoos recently completed a study of 40 children who had seen a parent murdered. They presented their findings in May to the American Psychiatric Asaocia- tion in New York City. He said children who see their parents killed of ten suffer anxiety. nightmares and fears that the event will happen again. Dr. Wolfgang KJebel, a San Bernardino psychologist. said a child might feel he has lost all sense of aecurity or feel guilty, perhaps believing he aomehow caused the murden. teachers during layoffs. However. "lf the public 14 expecting incompetent teachers to be removed bec4uae of these reforms, they are going to be disappointed," said Jack Wilson, a lobbyist for the California School Boards Aaaociation. Teachers could still only be tired "for cauae," Wil8on aald, and it typically "takes two or three years to build a caae against a teacher." The 11ehool board group aald there have been about 100 teacher-dl.smissal cases filed this year among California's 1,044 school districts. and Wilaon added, "I don't think we'll see a marked increase." George Moffett, assistant superintendent for personnel in the Los Angeles school district, said removing poor teachers ls a very ti.me-consuming process. "There ia a tendency (for ad- Premature hut plucky Gloria Patterson and Ernest Hudgins of San Diego took their 4-month-old baby Ernestine home Wednesday weighing 5 pounds 8 ounces. She weighed l 7 ounces at birth. Below, Sandra Maurer and Dr. Wadieh El-Mahmoudi hold her 14-ounce daughter in Victoria, T exas, born June 1, four months premature. ministratora) to say, 'Why should I go through this?' " he said. California Teachers Association Presjdent Marilyn Russell Bittle' sa1d principals may give instruc- tors undeserved "satisfactory" ratings. "(Teachers) are not the ones who do the hiring or the evalu- ation," she added. Too often, "administrators are not trained as evaluators and they don't know much about instruction." Showers at the corners By Tbe A11ociated Pre11 Scattered showers and thun- derstonns dotted the northwest and the southeast c.'Om ers of the n.a ti on today as most other sections enjoyed fair weather. Storms continued over the Florida perunsula, the southern Atlantic Coast and from thf;! northern RockJes to Washington state. On Wednesday. thunderstonns hit New Mexico. Colorado and parts of Texas, spawining tor- n.ados m the latter. Hail and wind gusts up to 60 mph m Texas damaged some trees, but no mjuries were re- ported. Wednesday everung showers dampened parts of Iowa and Wisconsin. A tornado was re- ported at Moose Lake, Maine . in the east central pa.rt of the st.ate Wednesday. Bnef but heavy thunder.ito~ with pea to marble-siz.e hail pelted Utah and Idaho. Nearly an inch of rain fell in less than an hour at Reynolds Creek and Pocatello, Idaho. Temperatures at 3 a.m. EDT ranged from 30 degrees in Brad- ford, Pa., to 87 de~ m Phoenix. Ariz. NOW pickets • insurance • companies By n e Auoclated Pre11 In its first nal.1onw1de protests since the defeat of ERA. the NationalOrganizallonforWomen picketed msurance company of- fices m cilles acr06S the country, accusrng the industry of over- charging women. The industry replied that most women would pay more for insurance, especially for life and health polkies. if a bill advancing through Congress becomes law. The measure prohibits d istinc- tions based on gender m setting insurance rates and benefits. PARIS -A key NATO group today blamed the Kremlin for the stalemate in the Geneva talks on medium-range missiles and condemned the Soviets for threatening to increase their nuclear arsenal. The threat will not ''intimidate the allies in to acceding to an agreement on Soviet terms," the group said. AB Secretary of State George P. Shultz opened a two-day foreign ministers' meeting .eeking allied solidarity, a spec:lal NA TO group monitoring the arms talks issued a gJoomy status report on the negotiations. Champ dishes up 'ratatouille' ln Washington, D.C., about 35 women and a man picketed the headquarters of the Acacia Mutual Life Insurance Co. at the foot of Capitol Hill Wednesday. "U insurance companies have their way, women won't get ERA," the demonstrators chanted. Al ricans urged to develop nukes ADDIS ABABA. Ethiopia -Black African nations should develop their own nuclear w eapons to counter white-ruled South Africa. the outgoing secetary-general of the Organization of African Unity said today. "Let us not be told ... about denuclearizing Africa when South Africa already haa a nuclear arsenal." Edem Kodjo of Togo said in a report on his five years as administrative head of the African body Three guerrillas hanged at dawn PRETORIA, South Africa -White-ruled South Africa hanged three black guerrillas at dawn today, calling the executions necessary to protect "internal security." But the group the guerrillas fought for said the hangings would "serve as a call to battle." Futile pleas to spare the young men had come from govemmenta worldwide. The men were African National Congress guerrlllaa and the fint rebels to be executed in four years. They were Simon Mogerane. 23. Jerry Moeololi. 25. and MarcuA Motaung. 27. A wh1te man and a black man sentenced on separate murder charges were hanged along with the three ANC men, he aaid. WASHINGTON (AP) -Four- teen-year-old Blake Giddens of Alamogordo. N .M., correctly spelled "ratatouille," a vegetable stew, and then capped it with "Purim.'' a Jewish festival, to win the 56th annuaJ National Spelling Bee today. Blake put the "e" at the end of ratatouille aft.er runner-up Eric Rauchway, 13, of St. Petersburg, Fla., had ended the word incor- rectly with an "i." The finals today marked the flnt time in recent years that two boyiihave faced off for the title. Of the 59 champions crowned since the bee began in 1925, 33 have been glrla. Blake ia the 26th boy champion. Eleven -year-old Tany a Solomon of Kansas City, Mo., returning io her teCOnd national contest abowtnc more poile than when she waa one of the youngest contestanta a year ago, finiahed '============================~third. millpelllng "vichyite" We're Listening ••• Whal do you hke al>out the Daily Pilot-> What don't you like" Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropnate editor. Tht• '>am•· 24 hour answenng service may be used to record let lt•r-, to thl' editor on any topic Mailbox contributo.-. must Include !ht•ir narn1• ant1 telephone number fo r verir1cat1on No circulation r •• 11 ... pie JM' 642·6086 Tl•ll w 1 what·~ on your mind D_,., Piiot D.tlvety 11 OINlrenfMd liotldar r •odty 11 you "" not ht11_. your u11per h°" 6 )O~M to• llO>h•• I IJ '" .,.o rov' l up~ .-+II t • ....... u l elutO•y •nd ..,no•r 11 tQ\I C)t1 nnt ••<••wft r~• coo=,~ ... I • m (fl t'4"f1w• 10 • "' ~,..., ,f.,. q;l(ly '*"" 00 _P'.., Clrcul•tlon T~ Mq.1 °'""'°""""' ,,,_ Nor-• ..,....,Of' .,_,, I w.,,,_, ....... i.....,."'9-"" -, ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. l . 8ohw•rtz Ill Pvbliahef Chazy Dowallbr fditor end Aw~ran 10 th~ PubliSi't~r R•ymond Meclean Controntf 11-.iMn '· c., ... ,.,n$KfClin M•""O"' CMef1a A. ~-.. • AIM ... AO,twrv'\I ..... ......,.. CIHtln.d edVertltlnt 7141'42·"71 All other depet11Mnt1 M2-4n1 MAIN O,,tCI 330 Wffl a.y 81 Coll• MeM CA l.41" .aCllMt OOo llleO C4t!1 MeM. C..A Ot9'6 CO!ly•l\)l\t ltU Ol1W19" C<latl "'-~ No new• tlodn illutt••llOno tdho•lat mllt.ar or •O-•-· ....... ,,,., 0.-~"'"Qlll-""' ,,.,_ °' QIP)"<Gihl - VOL. 71, NC>. 111 o n e who bac k ed the Nazi-supported World War II French government of Marshal Henri Petain -in the ninth roun<t. Fourth was Jeanine Wil- liamson, 13, of Tu8Cal0068, Ala.; fifth was Bi.ndhu Gopalanl 11. of Wichita Falls, Texas; and sixth was Mike Williams, 14, of Steven.wille, Mich. Two three-time veterans were eliminated in the seventh round. Jennifer Lynn Miller, 13, of Marion, Ind., misaed "glitch," meaning mishap, and Randi Langworthy, 14, of Anacortes, Wash .• misspelled "macron," a pronunciation mark uaed to in- dicate that a vowel has a "long" sound. NOW President Judy Gold- smith said that during the unsuc-. cessful 10-year struggle to win ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment which ended last J une, NOW lobbyists "found in- creasing connections between legislative opponents to the ERA.• and the insurance industry." INTI\\.)[ )L 'l l'\l( I TASt--1A N Cl l )Tl I, l\Y ~l )L Tl l\\'I< " Till VERY m:~ T l )I THE Wl )R~T~ l )~ T,1,111.111 ( ·11 •! h f'\·1'1. II'' dtl' fllll',, \\111,fl',J .ill wool tn 1r1l .1l 111 ~·o1r rlH ~1urhwicl.. l.tbl·I f111, J1~lllll It\·~ Ill'\\ l11w 111 ~Ult~ llH~r' p111,rn1x·'· ~11i& .. ,uhd1• r .llll'll1' \nJ u 1ll1r,1111 ,.,, rh.11 'Pl'·'" \\1th 4u1ct d1~nrn .ind rl''mun.r ·" \h"-'' 1hl· n11tur.il ,h,1ulJl•r t.11l11fll\j.l th.11 h,,, roccn .1 ~111thw1ck tr.1d111l1n h 1r J.:l't\l'r;it 111m. -6-~thwick A mJilll'l'I •Ml~ tcllth-llW'f\ 119 faahlon h.land ~ewport lk1ch (7 14) 7H·l622 4728 Admlrah)' ~'ay Marina del Rey (213) 8 $-7955 I I r j r , -------- "4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1983 County waives rights to purchase Ziggurat B~EFFADLER Of Dlllr ,... ...,, e Orange County Boa.rd of Super· visors agreed Tueeday to waive its exclusive right to negotiate with the federal govenunent for purchase of the qtet Holifield Building in Laguna Niguel -better known as the "zig . gurat." Supervisors voted unanimously to inform the federal General Services Administration that they are no longer interested in continuing exclusive nego- tiations for the building nor will they submit a bid for its purchase. The federal agency had set a June 13 deadline by which it demanded an imvocable offer to buy the giant office building accompanied by a 10 percent down payment, County Administrative Officer Bob Thomas told board mem- bers. ever, of submitting a bid during the public sale procesa, Thomas said. Thomas informed the board that it was not to their advantage to bid at present because the federal govern- ment's $62.4 million asking price is much higher than the probable value of the building to the county, especially if special legislation is required to relocate the Superior Courts to the &0uth county as has been proposed. Following completion of a feasibility study of the building, the board will be asked to consider whether it wants to enter the public biddin( process, Thomas said. Constructed during the late 1960s, the seven-story. Babylonian-style structure sits on 93 acres and contains 902,000 square feet of usuable office -.... By declining to pursue exclusive negotiations for the building, bidding will be opened to the general public. The county still has the option, how- space. The county has long considered T h r d I b ·1d k h z thebuildingasatopcontendertohouse e e er a UI ing nown as t e iggurat in Laguna Nig ue l. county offices and courtrooms in the rapidly growing south county area. Irvine's Bommer C8nyon gets a spring cleaning By GLENN SCOTT Of1M o.IJ,... -- Bommer Canyon in Irvine, the city's old-fashioned picnic grounds, will get a good sprucing up Sunday from one of Irvine's newest groups. They call themselves Friends of Bommer Canyon, and they say they'll visit the former Irvine Ranch cattle camp armed with saws, lumber, buckets of paint and not a few sodas and hot dogs. Their objective is to make improve- ments for free which private catering companies seeking a concession at the canyon would have charged for. Projects include painting the old structures, building shutters to protect windows, reinforcing doors and taking down an old barbecue. City officials for the last year have been studying ways of operating the newly purchased canyon tucked in the foothills on the coastal side of Turtle Rock. Initial proposals were to rely on a catering firm, but officials have been bothered by C06ts such finns would charge. "My thought was the major portion of the improvements were not necess- arily designed to benefit the public but the catering business," explained City Councilwoman Barbara Wiener, a group organizer. City officials still haven't decided whether to contract with a catering firm to administer canyon activities. Clearly, the new group, if successful, reduces that need. Wiener said 75 people attended a recent organizing committee meeting for the group, and they've raised at least $400 in cash to match donations from local businesses. M06t of the organizers are from Turtle Rock, as is Wiener and the group's "head honcho," Jim Colclaser. But she said people from all parts of the city are starting to join, which is what she'd hoped for. Anyone interested in fixing up the canyon, meeting new people and "working for the bettennent of the community" is invited Sunday, she said. Organizers plan to reach the canyon, off Bonita Canyon Road, by 10 a.m . Sunday and workers are expected about noon, she said. It's i. family event, she stressed, with one objective to expose children to working on comrnunity projects. The only requirement, she said, is to wear work clothes. · Harbor kids aid High Hopes Students at Newport Harbor High School have raised $1,000 for Costa Mesa-based High Hopes, a non-profit group aiding victims of head injuries and their families. It was the second year in a row the high school students have directed proceeds from an annual campus char- ity drive to the neurological recovery group. High Hopes was organized in 1975 by parents of children who had suffered major head injuries. GRFAT 10 SHOP J.H.BIGGAR 'TTL.____-~ I I Drextl Et Celfra Hall Piece and Minvr Naw Only $675 Finished in black lacquer with hand-screened chinoiserie floral motifs. Regularly Priced: $1,008 Now Only: S675 Form your own opinions on mat· • •111 ters or local. state and national in· terest by reading the thoughtful col- u.nns and editorials in the Dally Pilot. llllJ Pl ' c • 1n Film Target's low prices always include developing and printing, unlike so many "other guys" in town. You'll never find any hidden charges at Target. Clear, bright pictur~s at low, low prices. Total package pricing Don't be footed by all the talk about per-print pricing. The quoted printing cta'ge is onty pa1 of yo.Jr cost. .. you also pay for developing. At Target, k:>w tota-pockage pricing cuts the confusion on the cost of film devetoping. Qualtty results We take extra care in developing your film to make SLl"e your memories tl.m out just as you remerrber them ... c~. bright and colorful. If you are unhappy 'Nitti any of the results, we wil cheerfuly refund ycxx money. Qulckser.tce Just leave ycxx 110, 126, 135 or disc film at the self ·SM'ice drop-off in the Canara Department. Stalda'd size matte finish pmts wil be back the next day if brought in Monday ttYough Thursday; back on Tuesday if brought in Friday througtf Sunday. Rettm scheclJle not in effect in 0XJ"8'"d. Save~roughSaturdayoostanda~slze cc;>lor' print fllm developing with matte finish. 1.99 12-exposu-e 15-expoeure dliC; sali 2A9 20-expolUre, .... 2A9 24·expoeure, ule 2.99 38·expoeure, ule 3.99 2.99 12·8><PC*J'8 Super aa. 4" color prtnt ftlm dentapno• &pended length and wtdth, gloa8y ftnl&h. ~clec, .. 3.5' :t:=:::= ......,,.., ...... 10.•1 9l9ncWd .. color,......, .. from your fava1te ook>r negattvet. Matte finish. .99 5x7" Cdar...,...,..,.. from color negatives. Matte ftnleh. IX10' 'I •le 1.19 .99 20-expoawe Cab'..._ wttn pMtlc mounting. r••ut ~'----· de4'1oplno• 50' roa. Bring fltm « lleQetMI In now through 8-furdly. June 11, 1983 tor.-. ule prlcM. Press panel workshop set A w orkshop for conununity service volun- teers is scheduled Wednesday from 9:30 a.m.-noon. in the plaza at Villa Del Sol in Fullerton. A press panel at the workshop will feature Daily Pilot editor Chazy Dowaliby, Orange County Register columnist Franklin O'Donnell, Eyewitness News reporter Ed Arnold and other members of the media. Registration, including the workshop, brunch and a book on volunteers and the oonununications industry. is $12. For information and registration. call 636-6045 or 680-4985. Rabies clinic planned United Hwnanitanans of Orange County will sponsor a low -<:OSt vaccination clinic Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Huntington Beach at Murdy Park, 7000 Norma Drive. C.ost will be $3 for rabies vaccination; $8 for a 5-in-l vaccination and $4 for parvovirus alone. Dogs must be leashed and owners must make payments in cash. Cruising film, lecture set A free film and lecture on cruising the Mediterranean will be presented Monday at the Irvine Senior Center, 3 Sandburg Way. The program beginrung at. 4 p.m . will feature Richard Sparks. manager of the World Travel Agency for the Southern California Automobile Club's Newport Beach office. The film will include shots of the Black Sea in the Soviet Union as well as Turkey. Greece and Italy. Door prizes and refreshments will be offered after the presentation. Wine tasting classes offered Two separate classes on wine tasting for single people will be offered later this month in Irvine and Laguna Beach by Sadd.Jeback College. Taught by wine connoisseur Alex McGeary. the community services classes explore the California wine Lndustry, with emphasis on the systematic comparison of wines. The Irvine class begins June 21 and runs on Tul!sday evenings from 7 to 10 o'clock through July 12. It meets at the Irvine Fine Arts Center at Heritage Park, Yale and Walnut avenues. The Laguna Beach cl.ass begins July 19 and runs from 7 to 10 p .m . Tuesdays through Aug. 9 at Laguna Federal Savings & Loan's Communi- ty Room. Fee for each course is $48. For more ~ormation. call 559-1313. Nielsen to address builders Thomas Nielsen. president of the Irvine Co.. will ~ "working together to build Orange County" when he talks to the member- shlpoftheOrangeCounty Builder's Association June 28 in Irvine. Nielsen became president of the county's largest development firm early this year after aerving as a vice president in the firm for five years. The dinner meeting will be held Ln the Monaco Room of the Airporter Inn. There is a $20 charge per penion. For reservations. call 543-8225. Acquatics program starts Sadd.Jeback Community College's sum.mer aquatics program i.s under way at the Mission Viejo campus, with the college pool open for recreational swimming from noon to 1:30 p.m. and from 5:30 to 7 p.m . Monday through Thundays. C.ost is $1 per visit. Other programs offered this summer include Parent and Me, Tiny Tot. junior lifesaving and therapeutic swimming. For lnlonnation. call 831-4646. Laguna archeology studied The Laguna Beach Community Historical Society will preesent a lecture on the archeologica.l history of Laguna Beach Sunday at 7 p.m. at the eociety's headquarters, 790 South Coast Highway. Profe911()r Nicholas M. Magalousia, an archeologist and a member of Santa An.a College and Chapman College, will diacuaa the famous "Laguna Woman" discovery, and lnfonnatlon about the Creecef\t Bay excavation. The lecture, one of a aeries sponsored by the historical group, ia open free to the pubUc, but donet:ioN are accepted. For infonna lion call 494-9965. "3K r o111 lOUTTA C.CI 144-1317 FOi" Appojnl"*'I HU l. COUl llWY. COICIM Ill• ~. FREE MARKET EVALUATION ON YOUR HOME No Cost or Obllgatlon Utt Youf Home "FOi SALi" In Multiple U.tlnt IMI& PRORlllONAL l!RVtcEI "FOR 8UYER8 Olf IELUlf•" l. r.....i Alt..... ' 6. ftH-.1. h ..... z ......... ...,., 1. c.,..e. MltlUtt a.c.t... .... •.~ .... ...., •. ...,.-.. ....... t ....... f-~·-b LC.du....... 10..... .... U,..l()UI: liVMl:S -- --- Orange Coast DAIL v PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 Madonna 'miracle' rejected " STOCKTON (AP) -A "weep- ing " Madonna that drew thousands to a rural Catholic church doesn't seem to to be a miracle, a bi.shop annoum.'ed Wednesday, prompting outrage by shocked believers. Bishop Roger M. Mahony of the Diocese of Stockton, who had reviewed results of the year-long study, declared tha t the events at Mater F.ccleslas Mission Church in Thornton "do not meet the criteria for an authenticated appearance of Mary. the mother of Jesus Christ." "These investigators are not investigators .. " fumed church vol- unteer Manuel Pitta of Thornton, a retired fanner who had taken photographs of the statue. "They are a bunch of devils. How can they do this?" has ap~ beside the statue tn photographs. Since the reports, which started ln 1981, church attendance has tripled and an average of 400 to 600 people have visited the church ea.ch week. Mahony said the statue, which stands at a side aJtar, could have been physically moved by some- one. "No report has ever been made of anyone actually oberving the statue move from one location to another," he said. And he said the tears may have been applied. "No one has ever reported actually seeing the 'tears' flow from the eyes of the statue Rather, 1t was reported that at a given time, liquid was on the face of the statue," he said. One witness said she touched the liquid, which she said was oily and sticky. "certainly not the texture or consistency of human tears." Mahony :;aid. catalog. 'The 1C1en Uata determined tha t the beared male unagea ln both photographa were "cut out of <.'Ornmercially available 80Urcet," said Charles V. Morton, labora- tory director. The bishop also said the com- mission was bothered that mir- acles validated by the church always have been accompanied by a clear, important message. "In the case of the alleged happenings at Thornton, there I.a no report of any clear and import- ant message in the con text of Christ's work of salvation,'' he said. "One could rightfully ques- tion, the refore, the reason for the divine or supe rna tu ral pheno~ena alleged to have taken place ... The church ts an outpost of St. Anne's Catholic Church in Lodi, and Mahony told officials there to treat it as any other church. ,,..,.... ''You are creating a great in- justice by what you are saying," shouted_LaVeme Costa of Lodi. who put her head on her arm and wept. 'Witnesses have claimed the 60-pound statue has moved as far as 30 feet toward the main altar and has shed reaJ tears. Others have said that the face of Chnst Mahony sent two of the photo- graphs to the Institute of Forensk Science crim.inalistics laboratory in Oakland, along with three pages from a religious art goods "It is my Lnt.ention and the intention of the priests, clergy and staff of St. Anne's to restore Mt.er Ecclesiae as a parish mission rather than a shrine." said the Rev. Harmon Skillin, pastor of St. Anne's. La Ve rne Costa distraught at bishop's decision. 5 ghslening diamonds rn a S#Tlply styled setmg •. carat T w Aeo 299 99, .... 149.119 9 diamonds ClJSt9f rn 8 Ir aclillOnal band ' • Clllet T W Reg 399 99 .... 1H.H \ 7 dtM'lOOds "'8 handsome men s settwlg. '. caret T w Reg 399 99 u611N.t9 14 Ol8monds W1 ll dOuble r1ower setting •, carat r .w Reg 5 79 99 .... 28t.H Target has brought over 1 million dollars worth of diamond rings to its Los Angeles stores. You 'll find a wide assortment for men and women, some accented with other stones and pearls. Save on styles shown and m~ more. Selection varies by store. Enlarged to show detail.~ Hurry in for best selection ... sale ends Saturday. 4 Cltamond'> clOCI 5 fiery ruooes '1 c<11.it T G W Reg 299 99 NII 149.99 4 ckamonds SUfrounded by 14 rubtes ',carat T G W Reg 399 99 Mii 199.99 2 1 diamonds shimmer in a cocktail sett1n9 ' , carat T w Reg 579 99 ule289.t9 3 dWTlondS tn 11 cless.c: settino fOf hm • , cara1 T W Reg 699 99 ... 341.911 J cs.amonds •n an openwork heart sc11rng 15 c.a-.it T w Aeo 299 99 sale 149.99 9 bngnt diamonds rn a SWltllng band ' • carat T w Reg 399 99 Nie 19Ut 14 dlsnondS tOfTTI 2 rows ot eteoance ' • caret T W Reg 579 99 Mle289." 3 dWrlond3 In • hMdlomO settino ', caral T w Reg 699 99 .... MUO 3 diamonds tn an rnlr.cate settrng 06 ca-at T W Aeq t64 99 ule 82"•9 2 OQOI$ pned by 12 diamonds '• C8r81 T W Aeo 399 99 ..... '"'" 8 dt111Tl()nd5 tn 11 degonal double row ', C8'81 T W Reg 579 99 .... 211u9 5 diarnondS 1n a N\Mlv bold setting •. carat T w Reg 699 i9 .... 349.tt Styles not snown. reg 164 99 to 1299 99 Nie 82A9 to 641.99 T W refers to totAI diNnond wetghl T G W refetS to total Of1m weight 1 diamond hrghflghlS a lreet0tm sen~ 06 carat Reg 299 99 .... 149.H 2 ameltl~ts accented by 12 diamonds '. car&t T w Reg 399 99 ..... '"·" 9 dllltnondS rn e at11r-11hape<1 setting • , ca-11 T W Reg 579 99 ........ 8 Cllnmondll In 8 Q8111tll settrno t(I( htrTl • • c.11 T w Aeo 699~ .... ,... ... r. -: ... J Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 0.-, ......... ~~ ,.,_ The Huntington Beach Pier, worse for wear after winter storms, is due for some repair work soon. Huntington Beach Pier scheduled for facelift BY ROBERT BARJtER OflMDl!lr ........ Extensive repairs are scheduled to begin on the storm-battered Hunt- ington Beach city pier in several weeks. And thanks to the foresight of city llilbility claims administrator Ivar Gitsham, the work ls expected to cost taxpayers about $25,000 at most -a mere pittance when compared to esti- mated total costa of more than $260,000. Oty officiala, who didn't know the pier was covered by insurance at the time of the fierce March 1 storms, have hailed Gitah.am's diligence. They noted that the Seal Beach and San Clemente p6ers, a1ao damaged in the same storm, ~not covered by insurance. Gitaham, a former bicycle safety officer with the Huntington Beach Police Department, refuses to take credit. He said he took out a $2.5-million four years ago. "I was just doing my job. That (insuring city facilities) happens to be my business." Meanwhile, city council member1 th.is week awarded a contract to the John L . Meek Company of San Pedro for the repair work. The construction - replacing about 30 pilings, adding new bracing and replacing about 4,000 square feet of decking -is expected to begin in about two weeks, according to City Engineer Les Evans. "We are hoping it can be completed by Labor Day," he said. Evans also said that an architect is preparing designs for a restaurant to be located at the end of the pier to replace the End Cafe, which suffered heavy damage from a huge wave March 1 and had to be rued. .insui'ance policy on the pier when he joined the insurance department about In addition to the insurance coverage, citizens have embarked on various fund-raising programs to defray costs. 2 indicted in bank robbery Two Orange Coast men -one a former Newport Beach bank teller - have been indicted by a federal grand jury on bank robbery charges and will stand trial in July. Murray Wayne J&Nen, 19, a Costa Mesa resident and former teller at the Newport C.enter Union Bank, and Giovanni Carrillo, 21, of Irvine, have pleaded innocent toch.argea they rigged a bogus bank robbery in April. The two men were arrested by Newport Beach authorities April 24 afterreportaof a robbery at Union Bank in Newport C.enter. Authorities alleged Jansen, the teller, arranged the fake bank robbery. Police said they were able to see through the alleged ruse, arrest both 9U8pect5 and recover the loot. The FBI refuaed to say how much money waa involved. The original grand theft charges against the men were dropped eo that federal authorities could pursue more serious charges of bank robbery and aiding and abetting a bank robber. Both men are free on $5,000 ball. McKone h eads Mcintosh Center drive Huntington Beach resident Donna ·McKone has been appointed chairman of next l1lOllth's memben.hip drive for the Dayle Mclntoah Center for the Diaa.bled, a program which helps per- sona with disabilities to live 1elf-.uffidently in the commwlity. Mooey railed by the campaign will help bridge the pp between govern- ment funding and the financial hue needed to maintain aervices for lta clients. said a center spokeswoman. The Garden Grove-baaed center ser- ves people with physical. lef\80ry or developmental diaabWties in Orange County. Volunteers interested in helping with the drive can call 761-6877. ICE SKATING LESSONS! Cla••e• <;>pen -Register Now ,--------, Beginners of all ages I '5.00 Off I welcome whether yot: MESA VllDE I lot nat111 I have skated before or CENTER I LHlfft hr I not, one of these I le1l1Hr1 I 1 . f Harbor & Adami 1 ,.,...,,, C«Mt90ft '°' 1 c asses 1s or you. Costa Mesa • I Dlecount I L~~~~·~·~-l VISA or MasterCard 979-8880 Accepted PUBLIC SKATING EVERYDAY. ONLY A BUS RIDE AWAY! PUBLIC MEETING The Cannery VIiiage and McFadden Square Area of Newport Beach wlll be the topic of discussion at a TOWN HALL MEETING to be held Saturday, June 11 , 1983 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon City Council Chambers Newport Beach City Hall Thia mMtlng II part of a Reglonat/Urban Oellgn Aallatance T .. m ltudy, 1 program of the Anwtcan lnatttute of Ard\tt-=-. 1 • Eu: Trade panel almost lost funds !t!.!~~~ March Fong Eu, Calltornia Sec- retary of State and chairpel"IOn of the newly-formed California World Trade Cornmisaion, has told members of the Orange County World Trade Asaodation 'that the Legislature almost eliminated funds for the commission from the state budget. "The comm.isaion suffered a very cloee call a few weeks ago," Eu told uaociation members thia week at the Registry Hotel. "Legialaton voted to exclude funding for the fiacal year, which begina in July, but fortWl8tely it waa 'reinstated by the Senate, although there ia still no money in the AMembly bill." Eu said a conference committee ia trying to resolve the matter, and that she ia cautiously optimistic. She advised members to write, wire or telephone Gov. George Deukmejian, Senate leader David Roberti and .Assembly leader Brown. " It is urgent that you do it today," she said. Her 1peech, entitled "Trade and Eu," wu part of an all-day conference Monday which waa ~spon.eored by the Orange Coun- ty aMOdation and the Inter- national Marketing Aalociation. The conference waa called "Inter- national Trade Opportwlities: How to Target Your Market," and 16 other 1peakers diBcusaed worfd trade at the morning and after- noon aeesiona, includina repl'efJen- tatives from Singapore, Hong Kong, England and Australia. "I see the commission aa taking a very active role in removing d.ia-incentives to international trade, such as variation of product standard.a between California and the rest of the country," Eu said while outlining the goab she enviaiona being accompllahed by the new comrniaaion. Reeultaahe hopes to bring about include directing customers to proper 90urces for services; en- couraging and supporting com- panies reluctant to enter the international marketplace; com- piling, d.iatributing and main- taining an up-tc>-d.a te trade direc- tory. Dlllr ........ March Fong Eu Guggenheim president of hospital foundation Newport Beach resident and civic activist Robert Guggenheim has been named president of the Childrens Hospital Foundation of Orange County after many years o( service on the noepital's board of directors. Guggenheim, a resident of Linda Isle, is a past president of the Newport Harbor Art Museum, Hoag Memorial Hospital's 552 Club and Big Brothers of Orange County. He also serves on the board representing Chapman College, the Orange County Philhannonic Society, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, the Orange County Trawna Society, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and the Daniel and F1orence Gug- genheim Foundation. Others chosen to serve on the CHOC Foundation are Raul Rangel of Yorba Linda, Mel Miller of Westminster, Patricia Emison Cox of Santa Ana and Harold W. Wade of Miaaion Vie~. Advertised prices good through Saturday, June 11 Save 20°/o to 25°/o on Casio s rt watches ... precise timekeeping for doing laps at the track or pool. 19.99 Reg.24.99 Callo LCO jogglr'1 wRlh with pacer mode to keep YrAlf step at eny pace you aet. Otvea dally performance record& by reglatemg stride length, distance end elep9ed time. Stopwatch measure• to 1/100-aec::ond. Hours, mlnutee, aeconda, month, date, day. Black plaattc aaM, bind. 21.99 Reg. 29.99 C.., LCO ..,.. wMGh meaaures alr time up to 59 minute& 59.99 seconda. H~ time algn8I arid duel tine mode Stopwatch meeeuree to 1/100-eecond. Countdown alarm wlttl repeat function. Shows houri, mlnutea, seconds, month, date end day. Black ptasttc caae end bend. 25.99 Reg.34.99 CMlo women'• LCO ..._ IPO'tl wn::tt with 1 minute to 1 hour timer. daily IBTn and~ tin\e algnel. ShOwa hotn, minutes, eeconda: month. date llld day. Water-resistant stainless steel caM and black plaatlc strap. Goose stepping out A return of fair weather brought people to the shores of Lake Union, near Seattle, and these Canada geese and goslings quickly began a patrol for handouts. 'Whales have rights,' philosophers declare BOSTON (AP) -AB intelli.gent and emotional creatures, whales have a moral right to be left alone by scie.ntists who want to study their habits, two phlloeophers say. "To persist in viewing and treating whales, creatures who have a mental life of greater sophistication than many humans, as if they exist as a resource here for us ... is neither rationally nor morally defensible," the two professors said in a paper delivered Tuesday at an international conference on whales and dolphins. Dale Jamieson, assistant professor of philoeophy at the University of Colo- rado. and Tom Regan, a philosophy profemor at the University of North Carolina, pre9ented their thesis at a WhalesAllve, a global meeting attended by 200 marine biologists, researchers and activists. Jamieson and Regan said whales have language, feelinga and brains larger than humans' and should not be exploited for food. amusement or knowledge. Denying whales basic considerations "ia a tragic moral falling . .. such as rad.Im and sexism," the phil0&0phers said. They did not comment on the hunting and killing of whales, focusing instead on more "benign" uaee, including orpnized whale-watching and scien- tific field work. "Whales do not exist as visual comrnod.i ties in an aqua tic free market, and the businaa of laking eager sightseers into their waters ... lS ex- ploitative," they said. Regan and Jamieson said that 11Cien- tific study of whales might provide !IOme benefits to understanding the huge. air-breathing mammals, but said, "No benefits are morally to be allowed if they are obtained at the price of violating individual rights ... The moral task-before us is to let whales alone." In a question-and-answer session afterward, most delegates agreed that whales and dolphlrlS have rights but rejected the conclusion that field work and whale-watching should stop. Many of the scientists said the ocean-going mammals, known as cetaceans, give signs that they enjoy human contact and could easily swim away if they did not. The week-long conference at the New England Aquarium attracted rep- resentatives o{ the International Whal- ing Commission, the world body that has overseen commercial use of whales since 1946. Also attending were members from several scientific and conservation groups that have criticized the com- mission, including Greenpeace, the World Wildlife Fund, the Animal Welfare Institute and the International League for the Protection of Cetaceans. Eduardo lglesias of Argentina, the current commission chairman, said the commission provided the conference administrative and financial aid, but does not necesaarily endorse the opinions expressed WHO PARTIES AT LE CHARDONNAY LOUNGE? People who know where Happy Hour sparkles between 5 and 7 p.m with snappy conversation, our chef'5 speciaJ hors d'oeuvres and drinks priced 2 for 1. Also drink, dance and romance to the dynamlc music of John Mallon and Us tonight between 9 and 1:30 a.m. Make your plans now and don't be late! After all, who partieii at Le Chardonnay ~unge? EXCnlNC PEOPLE LIKE YOU. -:the ~ =f])]I~. --=-_. I~ MACARTI ltfR BOULEVARD, IRVIN F.f Al IFORNIA 92715 •-7l4-7S2-Am Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1983 ~1· Nixon backers seek to 'clear record'. LOS ANGELF.S (AP) -Some friends of fonner President RiChard Nixon want "clarify" the record about hia pa.at because they think Watergate overshadows the public memory on hit 4-0 years of public eervioe, a Beverly Hilla attorney said Wedneeday. "We think the Watergate iaue over- shadows all the other contributions he made," said Pat Hilllnp. one of what he says ls 100 people who are joining ln a plan to "correct the record" about Nixon. He aaya they will be sponaoring lectures as well as diatributing booka and articles by and about Nixon at public 11Chools and libraries. The material will be about "various phaaes of hia life over the whole 40 years." "We will take them around the world and eventually put them in the library," he said. An ~ment in late April to build the Richard M. Nixon Presidential Library in San Clemente provided the impetus for the fonner president's friends friends and former a.saociates gather, Hillings said. They hope to have their first meeting before July 4, he said. "Some of the old 'Friends of Nixon' group from the early days (aft.er Watergate) will form the nucleus of the new group," H~ said. "We have been waiting for eome kind of a rallying point. When they finally determined San Clemente would be the site for the library we decided that wu It." He aays the picture the public haa of the break-in at the Democratic Headquarters and subsequent White House ooverup is out of proportion. !' Tamper-proof bottles not very WASHINGTON (AP) New tamper-resistant bottles for adult Tylenol and Sine-aid tablets have been taken off the market because It is too easy for children to open them, the Consumer Product Safety Commisaion says. McNeil Consumer Products Co. of Fort Washington, Pa., voluntarily suspended production and shipment of the 24-tablet bottles aft.er tests .showed the "new pack- aging made it easier for some children to remove the caps," the commission said Tuesday. Officials of the drug company, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson Corp., told the commission t hP cap wou Id bP ..... ~HIPCI to Improve child resistance, the commisaion said. The commission aaid it waa surveyina of other companies to detennine the extent of the problem. Federal regulations under the Poi.son Prevention Packaging Act re- quire that certain product s be child-resistant. Drug manufacturers began rnaking new, tamper-resistant paclulging after seven people died in the Chicago area after taking cyanide-laced capsules o( Extra-S~ngth Tylenol in Sept.ember an4;. October of 1982. No arrests have been made an the case. ~· Meet He-Man and Skeletor live at Target . Super Heroes from Mattel's Masters of the Universe collection ... Now your kids can talk to the ''real'' heroes at the following Target stores: 11• Friday, June 10 long a.ct\·~ HuntinQton a.di Garden GnM . Brootchurst Saturday, June 11 long 8eectl • South Street Anehelm Menhetlan a.ch TCln"9nCle long Beectl • AU.ntie Blvd. Garden GnM. tt.bor Blvd .. 7:00pm 7:00pm 7:00pm 11:30am 11:301111\ 11:30 8m 2:30pm 2:30pm 2:30pm •' . .. i .. .. .- 3.49 Adll9rtlMd ~good through S.tlXdly. June 11 !lllllm----------------------------------..... TARGET -- 8 Orange Coast DAILY. PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 Surf guitar kings says he'll fight sex charges and win By STEVE MARBLE Ol .... 0.-, ........ Armed with a new record tiUed "The Tiger's Loose,'' surf guitarist Dick Dale says he is not the animal authorities claim he iaand predicted he'll prevail over felony sex charges that could land him in state prison. Dale, 46, has been ordered to stand trial in Orange County Superior Courton charges of child molestation and sex perversion. He will be arraigned June 16. The Balboa resident is accused of having sex wttha 13-year-oldgirl. The teen-age girl, now 15, testified last week at a preliminary hearing that Dale coerced into performing sex acts on six occassions dwing visits to Dale's 23-room mansion at the tip of the Balboa Peninsul!l. Dale, whose real name is Richard Anthony • Monsour. said he was not discouraged by the outcome of last Friday's hearing at Harbor Municipal Court in Newport Beach. "My attorney said if it had been a real tnal, no jury would have convicted me. That makes me feel good," Dale said. A preliminary hearing is held to Electronic cuffs collar wanderers ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP)-A judge's tests of an "electronic handcuff" to keep track of people on probation are nearly complete and the manufacturer says judges in other stat.es are interested. District J udge Jack Love of Albuquerque says hl.s experiments with the system of monitoring probationers ordered to stay home show the procedure "is feasible." But Love, who came up with the idea, said he is waiting until a third probationer assigned t.o the program completes his probation later this month before deciding what he will recommend to the state Supreme Court about future use of the device. "It's too early for me t.o know what I'm going t.o do," the judge said. The electronic handcuff is a small, waterproof radio transmitter worn on an ankle. It periodically broadcasts a sh ort-range signal that is picked up by a receiver connected to the probationer's telephone, which passes the signal to a computer. The computer's record then tells probation omcers whether the probationer stayed at home during prescribed times, such as overnight or on weekends. The manufacturer, Michael T. Goss, president of N1MCOS Inc., said Tuesday he is "99.9 percent sure" that a contract will be signed t.o further test the program in Lake County, m. Law enforcement officials in northern Cali- forrua, Utah and Oklahoma also have expressed interest, he SaJd. Milk protects kids· from diarrhea BOSTON (AP) -Antibodies passed from mother t.o baby through breast milk will protect youngsters from diarrhea, the world's biggest killer of children. a study shows. T he research found that when a mother's milk is high in antibodies that fight the cholera bacteria, her child is significantly less likely to get diarrhea caused by the germ. "This study demonstrates the protective effect of disease-specific breast milk an ti bodies against human disease," the researchera wrote. The idea that breast milk may ward off disease has been proposed by th09e who prefer breast feeding to packa.ged infant formula, especially in poor countries ot the world. Until now, however, there was no direct evidence of th.ia. Cholera is a major cause of diarrhea, the moo widespread health problem in underdeveloped countries and the biggest killer of younpters. An estimated four million t.o {Ive million children die annually !rom dehydration caused by diarrhea. The latest study was conducted near Dhaka in Bangladesh and was directed by Dr. Roger I. GI.ass of the Centers for Di.sease Control in Atlanta. It was published in Thuraday's New England Journal of Medicine. Firem en find man who d elivers blaze to them SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) -Firemen can't get t.o the fire? Call Tom O'Hara -when he's got a fire he delivers. O'Hara was driving home after having work done on his pickup when his floorboard started t.o bum and smoke began to fill the cab. He drove about a mile to a fire station, where firefight.era put out the blaze with a common garden hoee. "When he aaki there was a fire. we thought he was kidding," said firefigh ter Jim Miles. "But the dam thing was on fire. "lt'a a rare day to have a fl.re come to ua." AB to how O'Hara knew where to lake h.ta traveling fire on Tueeday, that fire station is where he worb, aa a li.refighter. Cats just can't have any fun AUSTIN, Texaa (AP) -Pigeons can relax and return t.o me.y perchea on Medical Park Tower becaWM! the cat patrol la being grounded. Cata were placed on the bUllding'a 30-lnch-wide ledges to chue away hund.rect. of Neons whoee dropplngll have cloaed the buildlng'I drains. "Everything e~ had been tried, 10 why not the cats?" said Nonnan Ponder, manager of the medical ooffice building. However , employees in the bu1ldina drculated a petition aaying they went "truly ahocked and disturbed at thia blatant dlaplay of cruelty to anlmala." The ca ta' only shelter w• the buildJ.nc'a overhAl\a. Doyle Nordyke, necutJve director of the AUltin Humane Sodety. lakt he did not think any c:ruelty wu involved. "'l'he l.eda-~not be the Mfest p1-ce In the world f o.r • cat but. cal un't '°"" to t.11 from a place like that. Now, If tt Wll a dol. rd be wntbly oonaerned.'' detennine if there ia su ff iclen t evidence to order a t.rial in superior court. Dale, who gained note ln the 1960s as leader of Dick Dale & His Del-Tones, has repeatedly denied the charges. claiming the girl either is '!fan tasiz- lng" or haa been allegedly "paid off" by his ex-wife. Authorities, though, have said Dale is purpoeely trying to obacure the sex charges by tying It in with his bitter, rnesay divorce caae. Dale was arrested at his home last February on the eex charges. He is free on $25,000 ball. Police lat.er conf iaca ted what was described as a large collection of photographs from Dale's home of younggirla, aome in nude poses. Dale, though, said the photos are the property of a man who also has been living in the Balboa mansion. "This whole thing just hits me ln the guts," said Dale of the case. "For 28 years I've never done anything but preach to the kids not to take drugs or be jerks or do anything illegal. "Before this I've never had a bad write-up, I've never even had a heckler in the stands. That's why this i.s e mbarrassing." ' Dick Dale stan ds on his r ecord. 32.99 ~.~ni«.Qe It I 0 11 • tl0IMID70 _.... Reel,_ •.2: 1 r"1eve. Mdan cb1 llbel'glllil rod ..,.. .-M _....Reel,_ •.3:1 ,..,....., llllOmlllc lnWNI "11. Fbefglllil rod ..,_ ltt0!9ll&. • 3 · 1 r"'9Ye. ftb«glllil rod Plug pulled ·= on robot grad talk Ml.AMI (AP) -A 2-foo~tall talking robot named Hero hM been barred from delivering Im muter'• high echool oommence-- ment apeech becau.e the prindpll feels "there'• too much dignity lo graduations." Mina-Han& Ho, who four yean ago spoke no Eniliah but now la the aalutatorlan of North Miami Senior High School, wanted Hero t.o deliver his remarks at the J une 14 ceremonies. The aalutatorian la usually the penon who ranks aecond in a cl.us, i the valedictorlan. "I feel very frustra •• aid Ho, who will e nter a -year medical program at Bro Uni- versity ln September. Principal Nicholas Borota said Wed.neaday that Hero will be pennitted to congratulate stu- dents at the end of the program but may not give Ho's talk. 250/o off .......... ...._IM.I. 'Oor 'M>. HO·Y'd. IPOClla. IO, 30 01 •o.ti. tllO-yd. ...,_ ~ L 1ttl)a.11.-.a..•1.11 .. =: .. .. ,. r Using one's head A new device to foil thieves has been introduced in Torrance. It's the Lett-Us-Hide, a plastic re plica of a . Drunk driving • • conv1ct1ons up in California SACRAMENTO (AP) -Drunken driving convictions aoared by 16 percent last year because of new, tougher laws enacted in 1981, state Motor Vehicle Director George Meese said Wedneaday. The new laws increased the penalties and declared that you are drunk if your blood alcohol level is .10 percent or more. Meese said it is too early to tell if an appeals court decision striking down the . l 0 blood alcohol level will affect the number of arrests or convictions. Attorney General John Van de Kamp has said he intends to appeal the decision to the state Supreme Court. The department said that 272, l 15 persons were convicted of drunken driving in 1982, which amounted to 79 percent of the 344,576 arrested. In 1981 it was 233,803 convictions, or 70 percent of the 332,647 pel'80ns arrested. In 1980, the figures were 218,848 convictions, or 71 percent of the 309.178 arrests. Meese said one reason for the higher percentage of con victions was that fewer drunken driving cases were plea-bargained down to reckless driving. Reckless driving convictions dropped 2g percent last year. Dan Parker, spokesman for the Highway Patrol. said the number of drunken driving arrests continues to climb because officers are concentrating on drunken driven, and becau.e there have been fewer accident.a involving drunks. The patrol believes the reduction in accidents is related to the new laws, and that eventually the number of drunken driving arrests will alao decline. The number of traffic fat.ala declined by nearly 11 percent last year to 4,609. The drop in alcohol-involved fatalities waa even greater -12.l percent to 2,422. The total number of peraons injured dropped 4.6 percent to 274,073, while the number of al- cohol-related injuries dropped 10.2 percent to 65,726. The number of penons under the influence of alcohol involved in fatal accidents dropped 14.7 percent last year to l ,535, Parker said. Meese said that 67 percent of the persons convicted of drunken driving last year were first offenders. There were 34,486 repeat offenders who were referred to one-year alcohol treatment programs in place of a license suspension or revocation, an increase of 55 percent over the previous year. All but six counties reported a higher conviction rate. The six where it dropped were El Dorado. San Mateo, Sierra. St.ani.alaua, Trinity and Yuba. Home of Lincoln showing its age SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) -Five 9COre and 18 years ago, this city's forefathers brought forth from the memory of its favorite aon a new attraction, conceived in tourism and dedicated to the propoaltion th.at all men are potential sight.Ileen. By now, though, so many people have visited Abraham Lincoln's home that it needs major repairs, the di.rector of the home site said Tueeday. "U you're putting 400,000 to 500,000 people through the home each year, obvioualy it's going to suffer 90me structural damage," said Jim O'Toole of the U.S. Park Service. O'Toole said Lincoln's home need.a supports under weakening floorboards and around the wood-frame exterior, and controls to protect precious Uncoln-era antiques. Architects are studytnc the situation and developing repair plana, said O'Toole, adding that he hoped work could begin by late 1984. He said no Mtimate of costs would be known until the architects complete their work. 'Jlle two-story home in a tree-thaded Migh• bodWJOd lix blocka from the Il1inoU Statehou8e waa the only home Unooln ever owned. Hil family lived In the home until lJncoln left SprinCfield after hJa 1860 election • prmidient. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1983 1\1 Jaycees still good old 'boys' Federal court backs organization's exclusion of women ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -The U.S. Jaycees can exclude women from full membership in the civic organiZ!ltion, a federal appeals panel ruled. A panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 Tues- day that the state cannot force the Jaycees to admit women mem- bers, calling a Minnesota law "unconstitutionally vague." The lower court had found the Jayoees to be a place of public aa:ommodation, similar to hotels and restaurants that are open to both sexes. The federal appeals court, how- ever, said the law was "un- constitutionally vague becauae it supplies no ascertainable standard for the inclusion of aome groups as 'public' and the exchwon of others aa 'private."' In hill dissent, Chief Judge Donald P. Lay of S t. Paul said the organization, in excluding women from full membership, was seek - ing ''protection under what I consider to be: an outdated rationale of our jurisprudence, one which relegated women to a status inferior to that of men." The ruling overturned a de- cision by U.S. District Judge Diana Murphy of Minneapolis, who said the Jaycees' all-male membership policy was banned by a 1972 law that forbids diacrimination on the basis of .ex in "places of public accommodation.'' Schoo' invocation challenged head of lettuce with plastic which can be opened to valuables in the refrigerator. cover store "This is not to say that no state law could be written to redress this kind of non-governmental discrimination," wrote Cin:ui t Judge Richard S . Arnold of Little Rock. "But if ... the First Amend- ment protecta the thought that we hate, it must also, on occasion, protect the association of which we disapprove."' LIVERMORE (AP) -A plan to deliver an invocation during graduation ceremonies at Granada Hjgh School was challenged Wednesday by the Ameri,can Civil Liberties Union, which says the prayer w ould violate the constitu- tional separation of ch urch and state. "This particular ~ue is a very important case because there hasn't been a definitive ruling on prayer at graduation ceremonies," said Elaine Elinson, public infor- Save S20 on Red Head mummy sleeping bag m.ation director for the ACL U in San Francisco. The ACLU filed swt in Alameda County Superior Court in Hay- ward, seeking a temporary re- straining order to prevent the invocation d uring Friday's gradu- ation ceremony. The sw t also asks mjw)ctions against future gradu- ation ceremony invocations. A hearing-0n the request for the temporary order was scheduled for this afternoon before Judge Raymond Marsh with 31Aa lbs. of Hollofil II. 18.99 Reg 21 99 IM'nblr a.ga ere pert.ct tor ovemlQhll Of iuet watctwio TV1 Mo9I heYe 2 bs of DuPorit Hololl 808 pot;eater rlberlil ChooM from IOdly'a mot! POOUlr Chenlctefl In cute. c:olortlA patterns lncMfrlg Return of !tie Jedi. Cwe Beere W1d olheB $ool1Tig Goods De(JI 25°/o off Adju...O.. dieWW-:.19 hood Our ...... °' ..... Amry 111"-of lrel·ClaM sllin4es8 SI~ Choose trom a wide MeOl1ment of mull~funcl10nlll styles. eome wrth large blede. .,,... blade, <*I opetW. eorewdriver. key mo. tclS&OtS end other teet\Jfel Reg •99to3999, .. U4to2Ut 2.49 Reg 2 99 w~aup...x .22 ~ rfle ~ 100 pei DO• Stock up r.ow Ind save &I T;11oet I • ------ "l 0 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. June 9, 1983 F ' D MAILBOX Labor opposes Veysey To the F.ditor: The Orange County Central Labor Council. AFL-ClO, and our 100 afflilates, representing ap- proximately 150,000 AFL-ClO members living and working in Orange County, would like to stress our opposition to the ap- pointmentof Mr. Vici.Or Veysey as direcl<>r of the state Dept. of Industrial Relations. How can that department be headed by a person so obviously against the protection of working people of this state? Mr. Veysey's voung records in the U.S . Congress and California Assembly show numerous votes against working men, women and children,. He has made attacks on the cur.rent system of prevailing wage rates of our construction trades workers and oppoeed an i.nttease in the $3.35 state minimum wage rate. Should our chi.ldren be ex- ploited at sub-minimum wage for financial gain? Should any man. woman or child work under dangerous health and safety conditions? It has taken working people years of struggle to improve working con- dt lions. Are we to regress? Organiz.ed labor says NO! MARYL YUNT Secretary-Treasurer Orange County Central Labor Council. AFL-ClO Gen e ral Warrants a ssaile d To the Editor: General Warrants has become one of the most controversial parts of the Laguna Beach Council Agenda. I now enumerate the following important ite~ which require answers or explanations ( 1) Taxpayers' money is a sacred trust. (2) General Warrants is a mapr part of the Laguna Beach Budget. (3) The Gentry Administration is using General Warrants as a Political Weapon. (4) The City Council members admitted that they are not fam- iliar Wlth many of the General Warrants items--yet they are vot- ing for them. Tiu.s is spending taxpayers' money blindly. This is ludicrous. (5) A shocking item was the $20,000.00 Bremner Claim which was hidden in General Warrants. After much probing, the truth was revealed. City Manager Ken Frank said it was a Lawsuit Settlement that the City of Laguna Beach was obliged to pay This does not include atl<>mey fees, court costs, and other ex- penses. The true cost could easily be $40,000.00 or more The awful truth is this claim might have been avoided lf simple precautions were taken such as clearing away shrubbery and debris. (6) Another shocking horror story was the Laguna Beach telephone bill of $5939.70. When asked for an explanation the City Council refused to give one. (7) Pertaining to the Council Agenda dated 5/3/83. the General Warrants totaled $916,122.67. For Laguna Beach this amount is astronomical. Still unaccounted for are numerous expensive items. The Gentry Administration, meaning all five Council Members and City Manager Ken Frank (who is responsible for preparing the Council Agenda) must be held responsible and accountable. This calls for a complete mvestigation by an outside body. Prudent accountmg practises require it and concerned citizens demand it. To sumrnariz.e the General Warrants Issue; It has been admin- istered badly ·and has wasted taxpayers' money A new way must be found to correct these mistakes. Input from the Citizens of Laguna Beach would be help- ful--let's ask for it. ALAN E. ADAMS Laguna Beach Ins tructor sighs with r elie f To the Editor. As an instructor at Orange Coast CoUege I was wonderfully encouraged to read the letter by Richard V. Simon of the Coast Commuity Golleges. He wants to kow "why ... the public does not hear from the faculty union about their average $40,000 per annum (including fringe benefits)· salary for a 20 -t o-2 5-hour w o rk weeklnine-month-long year." As a 13-year veteran at C.oast, who is in the fifth and last salary column, I'm getting a few thousand dollars less than that. so I suppose I'll be getting some back pay in the maU. Even with my two month summer teaching. which makes my job an 11 months assignment. I'm still a few thou short, so, as the reader rni,ght unagine, this news is fantastic. if I may indulge in an under- statement As to the 20-to-25-hour work week, l must admit that I was shocked, but pleaaanUy so. The district had led me to believe that the 25 hours were hours ON CAMPUS ONLY, which is to say, claM time, office hours, etc. l had been led to believe, in my inno- cence, that I al.so had to perform other duties, such as grade papers. not to mention read novels, plays, es.says and poems, in preparation for classes. Golly. what a relief! My family is frankly ecstatic, as is my doc1.0r, who treats me for stress every year from Apnl to June. during which time he thinks I'm a veg~ out space case GARY FREEMAN Irvine W e'r e the ones who'll pay To the Editor: Those who think we should blow the whistle on mi.ss- 1les--should realistically consjder that we would become primary and vulnerable targets! ARTHUR WEISSMAN Corona del Mar O ptn100' ... .,,,,.,,,ct 1n lh• \Pc:u.1• dOOvt-> c1re thO\t ol tht• Ottlly f'ilot U lht•r "" w • • prenf'(I 011 in,. IJJgt· M" '"""' ot tne1r dolnor'> -•nd "'"'' Rt-••ll••r , urnmt·nt 1 '"•" ed Add•t'" Ttu ::>,1.iv Pilot P 0 l:IOA 1)60. ( c;''" M t''d l A ~1olb Pnon1· 111 1, ,,., 4311 l. M. BDJd /Lukewarm Bartenden in Italy never put ice in any drink. The true middle name of actor Billy Dee Williams la "Decem- ber.'' Only three words In the Eng- Uah langllage ~ in "ceed" - ''proceed,'' ''exceed'' and ''suc- oeed.'' Such ia the claim of a &anguage expert. Can you prove otherwi.e? The 1urveytaken1 a.i.o thouiht flt to find out that Swwiay la the most popular day of the we.k for love-making among married American couples. At for time of day. any day, in thit popularity cont.at, LO p.m . i. tint. 7 a.m., eecond ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot --... ---·---.. ==--.:I" 3 I ,,_._ , Q. What's in that dish called Welsh Rabbit? A. Cheese and beer. mostly. A fourth of the aoldiers con- scripted into the Soviet Union army don't speak Ruaaian. Q. Does any IOrt of whale lave a throat large enough to swallow a man? A. Only one, the sperm whale. Builders of Europe's medJeval castles perched the latrlnet out over the moat.a. Q. Why ii the undenlde of the bill 011 a bucb&l.l cap usually green? A. That's thought to be the color most res\ful to the eyee. K.L loMrara • ~ c...,.,...., &-..-"41111111-.... ~ Arafat NICOLAS B. TATRO BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Yasser Arafat, an engineer turn- ed revolutionary, is facing the most serious challenge to his leadership ai.nce he became chair- man of the Palestine Liberation Organization 14 years ago. Rebels in his own Falah g\)er- rtlla movement. the largest of eight factions in the PLO. con- tend Arafat is too soft, too ready to play diplomat and not willing enough to wage war THE DISSIDENTS have the support of Syrian President Hafez Assad and Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy. Sov- iet-backed leaders who have long aspired to control the guernlla movement. Arafat, 52. has had the power m the past to crack down on dissidents who got out of hand because he built up a state-within-a-state, first in Jor- dan and then in Lebanon. But Israel's invasion of Leba- non last June robbed Arafat of his base and 9C8tteted his supporters in a dozen Arab stat.es. It alao radicalized many young guer- rillas, who seek revenge rather than diplomacy. MODERARTION has proved a difficult courae for top PLO officials. lssam Sartawi. a PLO 1i aJT, YAS5E~, 1HAT ~ -n.IE PLO! is fighting for his life leader who advocated re<.'Oncili- ation with Israel, was shot to death April 10 in Portugal while attending a Socialist International conference. A radical Palestinian group, Abu Nida!, claimed re- sponsibility. But Arafat has survived previous crises · by walking a tightrope between quarrelsome factions and their backers in the Arab world, issuing ambiguous and often contradicl<>ry state- ments designed to placate radicals and moderates alike. An example was Arafat's reac- tion to President Reagan's peace plan. a key issue in the current unre\!it. He praise<l it for having "good points" and condemned it for failing to provide for an mdependent Palestinian state - the goal of the PLO since it was founded in 1965. lN RADICAL Syna and South Yemen, he stressed the negative points of the plan and in Saudi Arabi.a and Jordan he emphasized the poeitive ones. Ara.fat then started talking with King Hussein about a con- federation instead of a state and Jordanian representation at peace tallcs in place of the PLO. The radicals clAimed he was selling out basic principles and forced Arafat to back down and end the talks in March. The rebels are now asking for the real Arafat to stand up and be counted. They also are demand- ing more of a say in running the PLO. The rebellion began May 7 when Arafat appointed two guer- rilla chiefs -Haj Ismail and Abu Hajiln -as corrunanders of PLO forces in the Bekaa Valley and northern Lebanon. Saeed Mousa, a Fatah colonel known as Abu Mousa, opposed the appointments and rallied like-minded guerrillas who ac- cused the two men of having fled in the face of Israel's advance last summer in south Lebanon. ARAFAT REFUSED to take back the appointments, but in- i ti a 11 y compro mised by suborchnating the two com- manders to a third chieftain. When the rebels persisted, Arafat ordered food. fuel and other supplies cut off to Abu Mousa's supporters. The seriousness of the challenge was that it came Crom within Arafat's own Fatah or- ganization and that the rebels struck back with force of anns, taking control of six Fatah ware- houses in Damascus last weekend with the tacit support of Syria. The rebels' demands that Arafat foresake diplomacy in favor of creating a new power base in Lebanon struck a respon- sive chord among the 10,000 PLO fighters in Lebanon. Many said they sympat.hiz.ed although they refused to break openly with Arafat. "We sympathize with Abu Mouaa's position but we cannot go along with him becal.18e it would be a break in discipline," said one PLO of£icial. And Arafat's 9e00nd in command, Salah Khalaf. said Tuesday in Kuwait he would resign unless the PLO insurgents ended their rebellion against the present Palestinian leadership. Arafat last week estimated the rebels had only l~ guerrillas but some Syrian-based guerrillas esti- mated the mutineers had far more support THUS F AR. the two largest groups after his own Fat.ah or- ganization have remained loyal to Arafat. They are the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberauon of Palestine headed by George Habash and the Soviet-line Democratic Front for the Libera- tion of Palestine led by Nayef Hawatmeh. With their backing Arafat's position seeJN secure for the moment. Syrian sources say Assad's gov- ernment is now trying to mediate the dispute, apparently fearing that If pushed too far Arafat will align with Arab world moderates and embark on a strictly diplomatic course that would ex- clude Syria and Libya. Addressing the real • issue The--head.line reads GRADU- ATES TO FIND JOBS SCARCE. How many times have you read that story? 1 don't offhand recall any year that wasn't the most difficult there ever was for graduating seniors to find jobs. Each of us, at one time or another in our lives, ha.a had a tough time finding a job, 80 we're sympathetic We want to help. We don't want to give them a job, but we want to help. The speakers at high achoo! and college graduation cer- emonies want to help by giving advice. Schools are all having their graduation or commencement ceremonies now and I've been reading excerpts from &0me of the speeches. FOR SOME re&ll(>n, giving a commencement addreaa brinp out the worst in • speaker. Otherwile bright. nonnal, nice people tum themselve. into pom- pous a.es for the day. Years 880 I spoke to the graduating clul at the high achool I anended, and I I~'" -•• -IY-11-ll_R_....,.§t shudder to think what I told them and what my attitude was while I did it. Pomi>ous speeches are not necessarily the speaker's fault. That's just what a commence- ment speech iB suppoeed to be. The speaker la there to give the ceremony some importance so he or ahe hu to say eome Import- ant-sounding things. (I don't know who makes the decision about whether to call it "graduation" or "commence- ment.'' There's a big difference ln attitude between the two worda. "Graduation" suggests UMe,per'90n has firu.hed with .omething and "commencement" suggeets he's just starting.) PRESIDENT A. Bartlett Giamatti of Yale Unlvenlty gave one of the speeches r reaci. Except for the fact that he UteS the "A.." \hit way for hia name, Dr. Giam attl is a brilliant, down-to-earth scholar. Normally what I aee of his writing IB so much smarter than I am that I'm diacouraged by it, so naturally l was happy to note that he's only human. When he wrote this graduation speech he fell into the rhythm of the traditional Gradu- ationeee cllche, proving he's mor- tal. There are some easily ident- ifiable clues by which a gradu- ation address can be detected. FIRST, THE speaker starts with aome light, often deprecat- ing remark about either h~lf or commencement speeches in general. Dr. Giamatti did that: "c.ommencement speeches .are often u difficult to endure as to deliver," he said "and you are, I trust, relieved that Yale doesn't have one.'' That's a good remark for Its kind but It la of a kind. And. of COW"le, Yale doee have a com- mencement ~d.rea and he wu giving It. "Commencement speeken wh o have mutentd the genre" he Mid, "manage to be at once con- de9Cending and conspiratorial ... ·• The key cliche there is the phrase "at once " You'll find it several times in most graduation speeches. Dr. Giamatti went for it himself a few lines lat.er w hen he referred to aomething as "at onoe satisfying and singular.'' That's perfect Graduationese because it's a little obscure and aou.nds at once important and euphonioua. LOOK FOR the word "indeed ... This indicates that the speaker has had another idea for padding out his ialk. "Indeed to blend pomp and independence .. " Dr. Giamatti said. • "Indeed . I think a healthy: family ..... He a.i.o told the Yale graduates that "No small cballense lies. ahead." . This must meen he thinks there's more of a challenge than It he'd just said "A big challenge lies ahead." No matter how the speaker aays It, challenges always lie ah~ in graduation ~. The meat of Dr. Giamatti'a: speech, though, came toward the end of it.: "l do not brtf\8 you any easy anawera," he aald. It tmta 9-50.000 to put a ldd throuch Yale. For that. the ._. their pnllldmt coWd do when they P'flduat.e is ifve them a fftW ' ~ amwera. Customs not hurt by cuts WASHINGTON (AP) -The Customs Service will be able to keep up its war on drugs even with a proposed personnel cut in the 1984 fiaca.l year, the agency's chief told a skeptical House Narcotics Committee Wednesday . . ,.,-.......... "The propoeed reduction ... does not directly pertain to the re- sources that are being used by the Customs Service to fight the drug-smuggling effort," Com- missioner William von Raab said. "We have tried to make sure that lhe reductions are in areas that will not affect our efforts to interdict narcotics." This would be accomplished by closing unneeded offices and lightly used border stations, and reducing hours of service and diverting manpower to south Florida and other areas of greater need, von Raab testified. Mark Randy, 70, and his wife, Mary, 67, finally get their h igh school diplomas tonight. But Rep. Gharles Rangel, D-N.Y., the corhfuittee chairman, and Rep. Benjamin Gilman, R-N.Y .. expressed skepticism about the plan. And they noted the House not only has voted to restore the $52 million for 2,000 pos.itions the administration cut from its budget but also tacked on $25 million more to add 650 personnel to the agency payroll. Better late than never for grads Von Raab said the Customs Service has decided to "concen- trate more on the hard-core crimi- nal activity" while using more discretion on whether to enforce minor breeches, such as "the little old lady" bringing home a souvenir pillbox made of ivory, a substance banned from import- ation. Passenger }>rocessing also has been streamlined at New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Houston and Chicago airports to short.en the time for rnoet Customs checks, he said. He added most major airports have been staffed with roving inspectors to keep an eye on SUBpicioua-looking ~ngers. And, he said, the agency is experimenting at the Miami air- port with a walk-through device, similar to a metal detector, that can sniff out the odor of heroin, marijuana and other drugs on arriving passengers. Von Raab also said military planes and helicopters have been successful in intercepting smug- glers' planes and boats since Congress 10 months ago looeened restriction.son the use of the armed forces in law enforcement. MODESTO (AP) -Mark and Mary Randy had their reasons for dropping out of high school about 50 years ago, but they always wanted their diplomas. The Randys will earn those diplomas, social science achieve- ment awards and induction into the National Honor Society today at graduation from Modesto Eve- ning High School. Mark, 70, and Mary, 67, are a half-century older than most of their fellow students. "Some of the ki~ gave us funny looks and asked us why we were here," said Randy, a retired church pastor and businessman. "But they accepted us, and wa ehjoyed each othe.r . "People who are willing and are happy can accomplish anything." Randy left high school in De- troit in 1930 a few classes short of graduation to look for work dur- ing the Depression. Mrs. Randy dropped out to help raise other children in her family. "I loved school, but back in thoee days, they didn't really believe in women having an education "r careers outside the home," she explained. The Randys did missionary work with Canadian Indiana for several years, opened a construc- tion business near Detroit and settled in Modesto in 1951. Randy became ~tor of the Church of Jesus chrlst, an evan- gelical denomination, and pursued construction and real estate busi- ness at the same time. Both took occasional college courses. "We've always been very busy people. With our businesses and three children and our church work, we always had more than enough to do," she said. "And when the children grew up and were married, we took m foster children and had seven of them in our home over the years. ''We really didn't have hme to think about education." Her new attitude is: "You have to get some schooling or you will be left out." The Randys became engrossed in history classes because some of what they were studying wasn't history to them. "The history courses were es- pecially good because it was like we were discovering part of our lives," Mrs. Randy said "It was exciting." Principal Art Hartley called the Randys "excellent students." Mrs. Randy got an A to Randy's B in their first American history course, and they both earned A's in the second class. "They have had a marvelous attitude, and they've been a tremendous inspiration to the students and the instructors," Hartley said. Speaking from experience. Mrs. Randy suggested that more senior citizens return to school for their degrees. ''It can be lots of fun." she said. "You are never too old to learn " Her husband added. "At my age, you can inspire a younger generation." I COMPLETE sports in the Daily PilDi I Doi Show For collectors this Sert. & Sun. COMPUTER CLASSES In Fountain Valley (See schedule In Sunday's Pilot) STANDARD COMPUTER Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1983 A 11 Onetime mountie seized in 1950s espionage case <Y!'T A WA (AP) -A Conner Royal Canadian Mounted Police corporal suspected of selling sensitive infonnation to the Soviet Union nearly three decades ago was arrested Wednesday and charged with violating the Of. ficial Secrets Act. Solicitor General Robert Kaplan said police arrested James Moniaon, 67, in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, and escorted him to Ottawa to face charges of giving secrets to Soviet agents between 1955 and 1958 while he was a member of the RCMP's security service. Morrison, codenamed "Long Krufe" while he worked for the service, also will be charged with conspiring with the Soviets to oo~tan offense that prejudiced Canada's interests, Kaplan said. The former corporal is ached- uled to appear in court Thursday morning. ln the 1950s Morrison allegedly told the Soviets about a Soviet KGB officer in Canada who had turned double agent. Morrison was not charged after giving a lengthy statement to the police. But he later told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. and the Win- nipeg Fr~ Press that he squealed on a KGB officer named Gideon to a Soviet F.mbaasy cont.act for about $4,000, becau.ae he needed money. MorrLSOn said then that he could not convince himself that "I sold my country out. All l did was to aeU a goddamned RUS81an down the drain.'' He was dwnissed from the RCMP in 1958 for pasamg bad checks. Former teacher arrested on child porno charges OXNARD (AP) A month-long investigation mto the alleged production and dislrib'-'- lion of child pornographic film and pnnted materials ended Tues- day wath the arrest of a fonner Oxnard school teacher, authorities said. Jerry Allen Gray, 45, of Ox- nard, who had taught art at a junior high school in Oxnard before becoming self employed, was booked into the Ventura County jail for investigation of possession and distribution of child pornographic materials and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Oxnard Detective Sgt. Bob Elder said Gray's arrest climaxed an investigation started by Ox- nard and Ventura pol.ace after they anawered an ad in an area newspaper for adult video film rentals. Anned with search and arrest warrants, detectives and district attorney investigators took Gray into custody without incident. The warrants alleged Gray made a portion of the video films seized which depicted children in sexual activities, Elder said. He said pornographic books and magazines also were found inside Gray's home and confiscated. Gray went on administrative leave from his teaching position last December, said Kent Pat- terson, personal adm.in.isrator for the Oxnard School Distnct. I \ I . &ouATION DAY SPt:CIALS . ·~ Diamond Reg: tS5.00 "9w •44.00 · a.; t 4k Rope Bl : $ U 5.00 now $95.00 C. 14K Dtainond Paadant Reg. tl'2&.00 "°• $99.00 D. 14K Ladles Signet Ring Regs $85.00 now $68.00 i. 14K PearJ T~ Tack ~eg: $25.00 !'Cow $20.00 P. 14K Diamond 11e Tack Reg. $70.00 ,,ow $55.00 G. l4K Diamond Studs Reg: $125.00 l'low $99.00. Items are not shown at actual size. RIRK~lt~ T1lotdMd 0.lls The Oaks l'tall (IOS) 497-07.)9 Cott.I ~ Hartlor Ctntn-(7 14) ~S·M8S Klnl'N4k tylcr 11all (714) 687·8120 r..p Rodl-t:.lgk ... nau (21.J) n!-1431 u.op rm railbrooll Squatt (lilt aJ-M70 "81•1tt• lkaQ l'bnl\MUll VIUIQe (lU) ,.._,MO ll<rA Irmo up to I J monlil> lo P"!I 91! J'IJ mtt'rN lrtt MCOllllb ii0 iii 1 Hiiiiun-tin-gt .. on.Ce.nt-er .lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillil ~~~~~~JUNE 8 thr1t 12 IS NATIONAL FISHING WEEK PLAY ... 964-8050 SECOND & FOURTH SUNDAYS EACH MONTH PARKWEST APARTMENTS cu1v;\U!c~!!~~~.vlne~ 95°' MINIMUM ... BRING THIS AD FOR ONE FREE GAME! FOR FURTHlR INFORMATION PHONE 133-1149 ...,_ .... ., IRVINE P.A.W.a, Inc. For the ''PromotlOft of MIM81 w ....... ,. I 'se the hand~ nightly TV lo~ ;.ind Sunda~· TV Wc<'k lO ~u1dt! vour \'1t.•wm~ st hedulc. · lilly Plat WIN Ht of fin ull .,, trl,a ftr IWO 01 Wiii· trll ,r1... I lltlll•I hit t1t ot Davey's ltchr ... ~.-.-Just fill out the en- try blank and drop It in the fishing buck- et located In plaln site. Drawing wlll be held Fri.. June 17, 1983 ... No purchase neces- sary, must be 18 or older to enter. Em- ployees of Kerm , Rima. the Oranae County Register and Da il y Pi lot newspapers may not enter. Winners need not be present. Sportflshlng 400 Main St, Balboa. CA 92661 (71 4) 673 1434 ------Phone ------- Let's Go Fishin'! ~I~ Orange Coas1 DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 2-DAYS ONLY SAT. & SUN. JUNE 11TH & 12TH OR MAR BRANDS AT LOW PRICES EVERYDAY AT 3900 S.BRISTOL ST. IN SOUTH COAST! SAT. JUN.11TH-9AM TO MIDNITE & SUN. JUN.12TH-9AM TO SPM THREE GRAND PRIZES ••• PRIZE DRAWINGS HELD AT ALL FOUR SPORTMART LOCATIONS st GRAND PRIZE· 2nd PRIZE 3rd PRIZE A WEEK'S VACATION FOR TWO CRIT 630 13X9 FT. DELUXE IN THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS SAILBOARD COLEMAN VIA WESTERN AIRLINES AND 'A $3000.00 WIN WITH CRIT! OASIS TENT SPONSORED BY AMIGO TOURS INC. VALUE! 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Yardley ••• He gave up basketball, but can talk good game BY LORENZO BENET .... Dllllr ......... The first pro basketball player to score 2,000 points in a seaaon ,Wded his visitor through the iron gates, past the ba.Uetball court that loQked as though it hadn't been played on in years, past the deflated &ound leather object that rested beneath the rusty rim like an old &.,tlefield relic. Walking in long, giraffe-like strides, he lumbered into the houae he aha.res with his wife, Diana, and youngest daughter and sat down at a ~in his den overlooking Newport bay. His other three children are ir'own and live away from home. Across the room is a glass bookcase filled with glistefliJl8 silver cups and trophies. But it contains none of the accolade he received four decades ago during his career as an All-Star NBA forward. The awards Oil display were earned later -on golf courses and tennis courts. "The minute I left basketball, I never came back," he said, his rumbling voice revealing a hint of bitterness. George Yardley, prepped out in slacks, a sweater and button-down lhirt, crosaed his iegs and lit a Benson & Hedges cigarette. At 54, he is an iDch or two shorter than his playing days' height of six-feet-five. His painful knees are 80 fragile, that he must spend 20 minutes wrapping , them before playing tennis. He weighs 190 pounds, just as he did when be retired in 1960 at the age of 32. And his illustrious scalp, a trademark, la still as bald as a cue ball, with just a touch of white hair around the temple8. His Detroit Pistom teammates called him "Bird" back in 1958 the year he accomplished what no man had ever done before. He ~ 2.001 points in 72 games, breaking George Mikan's single season 900rlng mark that had stood since 1951. He subsequently was named firat-team ~-NBA. along with the likes of Dolph Schayes and Bob Pettit. The tollowing eeaaon, Detroit owner Fred Zollner, the piston magnate, raiaed bJa salary from $23,000 to $30,000, making Yardley the highest paid player in the game. He had always been a prolific scorer and strong rebounder, ever lince his days as an outstanding all-around athlete at Newport-Harbor High, and later, as an All-America basketball player at Stanford. His jump shot, Boston Celtic's General Manager Red Auerbach once said, wu his best we.apon. He was named to the NBA All-Star team in all but one of his seven yean as a pro. Last Spring, in one of his most fulfilling moments, Motown fana e1ected Yardley to the Piston silver anniversary team. Despite playing in Detroit just a year-and-a-half, he finished third in the balloting, behind Dave Bing and Bob Lanier and ahead of such greats as Bailey Howell and Dave DebU18Chere. Off the court, Yardley distinguished himaelf from hia oontem- J poraries with his keen intellect and bizarre habits. He use to gorge • himself with candy and milk shakes. which, he said, probably accounts foe the blood sugar problem he experiences today. He alao could nod out anywhere, anytime. "I often fell asleep in the locker room before the pme," he said. Before big games, he use to work himaelf up into such a nervoua l&ate that he often threw up, forcing the team trainer to carry a steady 11Upply of citrate pills and rhubarb soda. During 80me seuona, his playing weight dropped to a red-thin 168 pounds. He al.9o was nicknamed "Egghead," not 80 much for his egg-ah.aped nosgin, but because of his work in the aerospace industry during the off -..m. Think for a 11econd-how many basketball players do you know of who can design liquid oxygen connectors for intercontinental belUa1ic ,miJlales? He al.9opaints. plays the piano and builds furniture. Some of the pieces decorate his home, which, naturally, he designed himself. • A little leas than a year after he became the first player to break the 2,000-polnt barrier, Yardley fractured his arm in a game against the Celtial. A. he lay in hospital bed, Zollner uncerimonioualy told his wpentar, the one who had led the Pistons into the playoffs four out of the five previous .eaaons, not to return to the team. "He didn't want one player standing out," Yardley explained. "He bad traded away a lot of good players in other years. He felt he WM being OYerSJladowed and his girlfriend took a great dislike to me beca~ 1 didn't tell her 11he was pretty and cute. I al.9o wasn't one the boys; I didn't ~y cards or anything like that. Gambling with friends is not a good poucy.·· A few days later, he was signed by the Syracuse Nationals. Later that aeaaon, he faced his old team before a national television audience. :_ h.,"Myann wasatill in a cast and I went out there and scored 30 points m,µ minutes," he said, recalling the moment as though it had happened dlrya ago. "We beat them easily. A. an emotional high, it was the highest I had ever been. Aa I left the game I turned to Zollner -he wu sitting in the stands -and gave him a Marine salute, the old arm and fl.st. I I never saw him again.•• ' ' Yardley smiled broadly and took another sip of his white wlne. He then picked up his remote controlled television box and snuffed out the ycjce of CBS announcer and fonner on..oourt adversary Bill Ru.ell, who this night was providing commentary on the fourth and final , championship game between the Lakera and the 76era. "Russell," he said in a belligerent tone,"~ the most incompetent announcer I've ever heard." Later in the evening, he listed the former Celtics' center as one of the five greatest basketball playeni ever. At the conclusion of the 1959-1960 aeaaon .. in which Yardley averaged 35 minutes and 20.2 points a game, he kept the promise he made a year earlier and retired from the game. "When I quit it wuat a time.when my kida were starting school," he said. "1 wanted to spend more time with my wife and start my own business.'' Yardley would continue to play sporu. He would win four national 11enior doubles tennis titles in the yean to come. His business, George Yardley Co., manufacture.ring repreeentative. in the petrochemical industry, lost money ln its first year. But like a reflection Yardley's baakeu.ll career, it grew a.lowly, and today employs 36 people and groaes 10 million ln sales annually. "My goal," he said flatly, "is never t.o retire." In the 23 years since Yardley retired from basketball, he said he has obeerved 80me disturbing trends in the game. Thia night, as he fixed his eyes on the Lakers-76eracontest, he talked of free agentry, the attitudes of past and preeent players, changing value systems and the Large amounts of money being doled out to players. His comments were not banal and did not merely fill time during commercial breaka. They flowed easily, almost &rro1antly, and usually developed into mini dilcounes, as though he had reearched them painstakingly in previous days. Yardley, It aeemed, was and is, the ultimate profe990r of basketball. "The whole perspective is sad,'' Yardley said, referring to how player attitudes have changed over the years. "They're not happy with what they have and if they compared playing basketball with any other way of making a living -they'd come climbing on their knees. "I think its due to the dominance of the unions," he went on. "They don't belong if\ sports, nor do player representatives belong in sports. UnionaguaranteelOl'nethlng without effort. Now long ago, in the days of sweat ahoi-, and the mine workers; they needed unions. But today, it doesn't seem as neceaary. "They (players) can be paid by what they produce. and shouldn't be rewarded for sitting around. Right now my company is wprking with the nuclear plant in San Onofre. I'll tell you, I can do in an hour what the hardest working guy there does in a day,'' he said, hi.a voice rising. He leJll'led back in his chair for a moment and took a puff from his cigarette. "What is the difference," he asked, "If a guy makes one million or five million if it can be invested properly? But the more money you make, the bigger target you become for 90me0ne to take it all away. The majority of the9e guys," he said, gesturing at the players on television, "will have nothing to do when they retire. They'll have unlimited funds, and the operators will come and suggest investmenta which will be the professional athlete'• undoing. Most players will be destitute 10 years after they retire. "Money is a curae," he aaid. "How many kids with rich parents are motivated. How many do you know?" His biggest reward, he aaid, was the comradeship he felt with his See George Yardley, Page 86 C 0 n tin U at i 0 n school ••• The laSt resort for many . : achool again her junior year to "go to my art ci...i.' Nora, accepted into the art studio c1aaa at the ..._ achool, plana a future as an artist. She paintl at!.-. and plana t.o attend art echool. t f..t 1;!'!;4.,W~DS Studenta ait quietly reading or working in anall ~pe consulting occamonally with their teachers J1119lly Malone and Darrell McK.ibban. l . ~ A large py cat meanders by rubbing himlelf on ~ studentl' J.ep. "Haa anyone fed Con Cat?" inquires Molly. John get. us:;: feedl the cat and returns to hi.a .. dr'tl. Steove his book ahut and goes outside a dprett.e. Gin.a quietly talb to Diane C-onnell. lleCfttary, about 10mething that hu happened to bs. Diane liftem. knowing that ahe, U.ke the two ~heft, ai.o function aa 8WTOpte pu-enta and ~for the lt:Udenta. ......i ~Continuation School i.a the lut reeort foe many IRQOenta 16 )'eAl'll of age and older who have bMn elmlnat.ed from attend.lng Lacuna Bnch HJah lchool due to truancy, dnap, or ICrapel with the law. Jl)a the only alternative for many to gain midJta to No-enter hich tchool, to prepare foe the profldency eum, or to obtain an Adult Education Diploma. . Acoord1ni to Connell. Contlouadon Sc.hool, in ~Uoo tn IACUM S.Ch for •bout four ye.en, hu Jnpered 23 lt\Mtenta to pua the profide:ney earn ilod helped 22 to receive thdr dip)omM. · The h.tp lldMlOl potideney exam can be 1aken anyUme alter e lt&Adent'a 80phomont year dsplte the .bet' of c:ndU1 he has ll«'UIDul.lsed. Ob1.llninC • ,lqh IChool dipkn)a requlrel 230cnd.lt1, but an Adult l ; • I F.ducation Diploma requires only 160. A student haa the option to take continuation clules and to ai.o attend adult educUon at night to earn hi.a de&fee. 1be C-ontlnuation School student body draw. from all types of Laguna famillea. r1ch and poor alike. According to McK.ibban, most of the 1tudent1 work at a job an average of 20 to 40 hours per week ln addition to attenc:U.na 1Chool. Some of the 16-and 17-year-olds are .elf-.upporUng. "c.owwet.lng and academics are 50-50 here," said Olna, a two-yar veteran of the IChool. 0 rve .een enough k1da come and go who I thoucht would never make lt...mouthy, drup. tt&l pn>bleml .. .and they've shaped up." "rve leuned a lot about my.elf,'' ahe -.lei. "I grew up a lot here belna able to talk to Molly and Diane.'' Glna found coplna with the c:llque. and the 80dal do'• and don't'• diffk:ult for her to conform to ln regular hiah IChool llfe. "l grew upl"Ml fa.tand lt wu hard for me to set aJons with thClll8kJdlto1 choee conUnuation IChool" Gina workl 20 houn a week at an lice crMm eton and hopee to ev9Dtually learn the retail doth1ni ~. She will beCtn a ccmputer coune at s.ctdJebedc th.la eummer •a start towards her future pl. Oina t.i. tbeclallnlot tbeOominuadoft&moal here will reeult In etudenta ~out f« fOOd. ''All U.. lddl an u~ I know they won't ID beck to the NCU1a.r hJ&h IChool." . Steve, 17. haa attended C-ontlnuation School off and on for two yean after a "drug bust" placed him within the juvenile court system. A chronic drug uter, Steve feels shaky about h1a future. He worries that his drug usage and dealing may affect h1a fUfW'C plans pf obtalnlng his navigation liceme. Becomlng a charter boat pUot LI aomethlng th.at he's been atudylng for a long Ume. He ii emphatic about thi.a goal. Steve'• ettendance at Continuation School haa le.-ned the hours and respomibllitie. of attending f'e8Ular achool. "At bi,cb IChool you have to dreaa a oerta1n way and docertaln thinp to be popular or get into a particular group.'' School "boree" him and he never knows if hi.a conatruction job la stable or not. Steve pays $220 a month room and board and hu a car. He •YI he IUl1 getl stoned a ~t. Thetwheraat the Continuation Schqohtood up fcw-him when Steve'• probation offlcel' came to check ur on him. Beca1* Darrell and Molly bebeve In him. " like to do my work to pleue than," he laid. Steve hopee to re-enter hJcb echool In the fall bj IChedWinl • aplit ~ ...t\h work and adult tduc.Uon counm at t. "I caN for. the bum"°'-1'8. but tl)OM wbo have ahould be able to make It tn .. .truccun.tt Nara, 18, hu been at the IChool fOI' duwe monUw llnce "ditchinl a Jot of ao!m my fl'llbroAn ,_.. finally caucht up with me." She ltaned lklpplnc -·---~ Nora wu in Challenae Engliah and did well ..; moat subjects except math and gym. Theee two claales she skipped habitually and failed. When it~ pointed out that ahe wu behind in c:ndhmi Continuation School wu given u an optkln to ClMdj up. . i "Comi.n8 here has given me a good look at baW lucky I had it at the high tchool. I mill dcMa 0--. · on Faulkner and really being challenpd ~J ~.. : ''I've c:li&overed llince cornJna here thet \her'9 M'f other th1np in life than belftc a ·~·· ln 111:111DU10'1 ai.o become more ttreetwile, Miefns all the lll'Olbllillilli the kida here have hat mlde me,..._ bow am." Nora wW enter Lacuna fflah School in the and la confidmt the wW be very ~ful IJ'lduate with her ci... ''We lhauJd ._...,. ... Continuation School f« tholie who cu't ftt way an U. lddl aotnc to hop an a tu Md Capo.'' John. 11. w.. pieced ln ConUnuauan becM.111 of truancy and famdJ .. ...._ thal him from lltendlnl echool recWartl'· HetWNd I•• Contlnuatton. ..... a1 • .J .. •• i! ., r I 1 . -: I :1 •• • !'M m Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 The Daily Pilot wants your wedding and ~tnews. To help you submit the required information, forms are availllbleat the Daily Pilot office, 330 W. &y St., Cate. Mea. For Wf!!ddJngll, only• black and white photo of the brlckt '8 acceptable. Snapshots, PoJarofd and c:oJor photos can't be uaed. The phoU> must be 1t1bmltf#!d no later tlWJ thn!e weeb after the wedding, otberwlae It will not be published. Engagement information is to be submitted at 1eut .even weeb before the wedding. Forma and photos can be dropped off at the olfJoe or malled to the Editorial Department, Daily PUot, P. 0 . Box 1580, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Engagements Padilla-Loots Lorraine Marie Padilla and Roy W . Loots are planning IO marry July 16 in the Newport Beach home of the bride:s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Padilla. The future bridegroom is the son of Audrey Loots of Sacramento, where he attended schools. His f1ancee Ls a graduate of Kennedy High School. Stephenson-Morton Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Stephenson of Newport Beach annc>WlCe the engagement of their daughter, Sherryl Stephenson, to Gaylinn Morton of Costa Mesa. eon of Rusty Allred of Los Angeles and Rudy Mol'ton of Texas. 'Ibey are planning to marry July 30 in the Bayside Drive Park, Corona del Mar. The betrothed couple are graduates of Newport Harbor High School. She is a graduate of Golden west Ccmnetology School, Westminster, and he attended the Universal Technological Institute in Phoenix. Yovetich-Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn R. Clark of Long Beach announce the engagement of their daughter, Rachel M . Y ovetich, to Tim Jacobs of Huntington Beach, son of Mr. and Mn. Richard J . Jacobs of Garden Grove. The bride--~be attended Cypress Junior Col- lege and her fianoe attends Cal State Long Beach. They are planning to marry Aug. 12. Dover-Durio Darcy Ann Dover of Fountain Valley and Michael Dennis Durio of Newport Beach are planning to marry Aug. 13 in Vista. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Wil91orl of Vista and Mr. and Mrs. John R. Durio of Newport Beach. The bride-~be graduated from Vista High School and Orange Coast College. Her finace is a graduate of NewPQrt Harbor High School and Santa Ana College. Raylene Hadley Hadley-Cowley Raylene Cowley and Dr. Dale C. Hadley were married June 3 in the Salt Lake City Lat- ter-day ~ts Temple . Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Cow- ley of Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. Earl L . Hadley of Portland, Ore. The bride is an ad- missions counselor at Brigham Young Univer- sity where she gradu- ated. Her husband is a graduate of USC Dental School and has a dental practice in Orem, Utah. The newlyweds live in Provo. Deborah Gossett Gossett-Healy Deborah Healy and Jessie Gosaett exchanged vows May 7 in St. Joachim's Catholic Church, Costa Mesa. After a Hawilan honey- moon, they are at home In Huntington Beach. The bride, who at- tended Orange Coast C.Ollege in Costa Mesa, i8 the daughter of Joeeph Dragon and Betty Passa- nan t of Huntington Beach. Her husband's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jesae Calvin Gosaett of Santa Ana. The bride works at Hoag Memorial Hospital, and her husband is a captain with the U.S. Water Ta.xi. EIMA 80M8fCI ATWIT'S END For the last decade, all parents have heard I.a how school enrollment is dropping off. Kids don't want to go IO school anymore. It isn't "fun." lt i.sl)'t stimulating. It isn'tchallenging. In typical adult fashion, we've really flexed our muscles. We've shortened the school day IO four hours or less. We've made electronic games out of English and math. We've added every frill from the History of Perrier to Holistic Car Repair&. None of it has worked. We've got to start thinking like teen-agers and use a little reverBe psychology. You want to dl.acourage dropouts? How about this plan of action? Tell them their parents would die if they knew they were in school. Within weeks, teen-agen would sneak out of the house by the thousands and force their way into school.Mt they had IO. T ell them they're not old enough to go to high school and watch them breakout fake l.D.'sindroves. Can't get your kids to go to summer school? Just tell them that out of season it costs more. The hotter it get.a, the more it costs. There won't be an empty seat in the house. Tell them they have to drive to get there. U the Deborah Albright Albright- McMillan Charles Chesley Aibri&ht m and his bride, the former De- borah Lesley McMillan are at home in Newport Beach, following a honeymoon in New Zea- land. They were married May 14 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Their parents are Peggy and Donald McMillan of Duvedin, New Zealand, and Josephine Albright of Newport Beach and the late Charles Chesley Albright Jr. The bride attended achools in New Zealand and her husband gradu- ated from Corona del Mar High School. Katherine Bentley Bentley-Price Katherine Diane Price and Theodore Crandall .Bentley were married May 28 in the First United Methodist Church, Costa Mesa. Their parents are Mrs. Wightman Price of Irvine, Dr. LeRoy Price of Orange and Mr. and Mrs. D. J . .Bentley of Newport Beach. . The bride is a graduate of University High School, Irvine, and her husband earned a degree in business adminis- tration at Cal State Full- erton. After honey- mooning In Europe, the couple will live in El Toro where he is marketing vice president of Ben tech Engineering . of every school in the country, sell tickets on a first-come, first-eeated basis. No reserved seats! Then stand back. Especially if the achool h.as had a "hit" within the last six months. U school is touted aa being fattening and gives you bad akin, they'll go for it. U you forbid them to asaodate with anyone who even goes there, they'll sleep over and accompany their friends to school every day it ia open. It probably aounds like a lot of trouble, but young people don't want to hear how unique public education ia in this country. They no longer believe in the American dream that if you learn how to diagram a sentence, you can become president. They've been raiaed aa a IOCiety of spectators where everything is done for them, and if you don't like what you aee, you just change channels. · It isn't an easy job to keep them in school as it was a few years ago when my aon said, "Everyone is skipping achool. It's no big deal. I don't see why I can't do It." ''Then why don't )'Oll?" I asked. onlO it. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I waa dlaappoi.nted ln your responae to the woman In Winnipeg who refuaed to go along with the rest of the family in their attempt to cover up the tact that the young niece had oommitted sukide. Where do you get off encouraging people to Ue? That young woman took her own life becauae ahe felt she had no other way out. AB you know, sWdde vi.ctlma always send signals to thoee around them. They are cries for help. Had the family been aensitive IO the girl's needs, she might be alive today. Denying the girl who killed herself the right to let the world know that she died by her own hand is the same • denying the fact that she had a problem. You goofed on that one. Why not admit it?-MAD JN THE WINDY CITY DEAR ~Y: Uthe famlly of a aaJcide vieU. decides aot to make tbe caaae of death pabllc, wby do you feel that a lone, meu-spirited di11eater is - juatifled la tbariDg the details with the world? Apparently yoar 1elf-rlgllteouues1 baa Jed you to the coaclaaioa tbat all pareata of cllildrea wlao commit aalclde are automatically pllty and deserve to be panltbed. I am horrified by eucb a Judgmental approacb wUlloat full knowledge of the facts. lsa'l there eaougb grief and misery la the world without addlag to it? If I can protect a beartbrokea family from tile pain of doieu of qaeatioaa from aoay, ao-called friends, I will do It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently I received an invitation to a baby shower. The shower was to be hosted by the mother-in-law of the pregnant woman. They are both lovely, warm-hearted. people but the invitation really upeet me. I received one of 74 Xerox copies. (It made me wonder who received the original.) The postscript at the bottom read: "The guest of honor must fly back to Texas sooner than expected, ao in lieu of a gjft, contributions will be accepted." What do you think of this? How can a tn.tly nice person, who is well-meaning, be re - direct.ed?-DUMBOUNDED IN MOBILE DEAR MO: It it aot ap to you to redirect kl "traJy alee, well-meaning penoa." U tM it old eaoegll to be a grudmotlter aad doeta't bow any better than to sead aack a boorltlt aon-lavltadOll (wblclt It achlally a reqaeat for money), site It beyond bope. Sac• a blatant pi&cla deserves to be I pored. DEAR ANN: Why do people make such heavy weather out of adult children who ask to move back home because of economic hardship? Uthe kida are louts who abuae hospitality --w ell, yc•u get what you raised and what you will put up with. Our daughter returned after being out of college for a year and working at a job that paid fishcakes. She is an adult and behaves like one. We do not question her coming or going. Wt:: do not criticize her friends, nor do we listen in on her phone calls. We respect one another, love each other and enjoy her company. She says she enjoys ours. When she leaves we'll miss her.-PEACE IN PENN. DEAR PEACE: Dow Dice to receive a letter like yoan. Mott of tlte mall oa till• 1abjec1 came from k.idt 1Jlth complahtts and parealt wlao wen miserable. Yoa maat laave doae aometbiag rigltt. "Bec:auae you'd kill me!" Fear. We should have h ~--'"--~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ school is only two blocks away, tell them that Plate NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE NlJC NOTICE Nil.JC NOT1CE anyway. They won't miss a day. '1CllTIOUI 9UllNHI FICTITIOUI •UllNHS ITATEMIMT Of' FICllTIOUS ltU ..... u you really want a mob acene at the front door NW STATE•NT NAMt! ITATIMENT AaANOOt..wT Of' UM Of' NAME ITATE•NT -----------------------------The tOllOwlng peraon1 we de>lng Tr>e following penon1 are doing '1Cnnou9 IUS8mal NAm Tt>e tOllOWtng pertonl are d<>4ng r.---------------------.. ooll""41U: 001lneases: The lollowlng per1on1 have bullnessru· Ru FFELL/ S I (A) FINO YOUR IMAGE: (8) THE OEYMAR GROUP. 2956 abandoned the va.of the Flct/t.loua LAKESIDE SPORTS. 27772 S.-3 I FREE FY 1 .. 8211 81ywood Or . N-por1 Mein S1ree1. Irvine. Calllornta Bu9inae1 Name: Vlsla def !AQo. Mlutlon Vlef<>. CA UPHOlSTOY INC *2/ I Beach.CA92MO 92714. THE RENOVATORS. 310 92691 ' · I • Patricia JH n Elllott. 826 ~hrk J Schulz. 26 f<be•o. Victoria. A-201, COiia M .... Ca. Leketld a Sporl1. Inc . a .......... _ -4 --· o~ YD. I B•Y'*OQCS Or . Newpon Beach, CA l~ne. California 92714. 92827 Calllornla corporation. 27772 8-3 I '\~ n~'?> VALUE! 92MO Wlllt •m 0 Btn gharn t • The Flctltlout 8u1lna11 Nem• Vista <t.i LIQO. Mllllloll Viejo. CA 1922 HUIOI llvt>. c cOv 4 ?> '\~ Pl 1 • Beth Camtlle Byram, 6112 Rick, Shooting Stir. lrvlne. C1111ornla rafarted 10 above wu tuad In 92691. COSTA MfSA -S.1-1156 I ~U.\~ e \ . ~~I Orange CA 92H7 92714 Orang• County on October 13. fhll bulllness I• GOndUC1ad by. ~=========~ ~u. \ P _}\)1' •• 1 Thl1 bull,_. Is conducted by • Thi• butlnen 11 oonducted by 1 1182. corporeuon. ~ I .o.I\' P ~teS ~el parlnerehlp. general partnenhlp. Matte cnartee st..,.,,aon, 2093 Laklnkle Spone Inc 't" ~°"'Q P. J. Eliott Mark J. SGhulz Mepte Ave •• eo.ta Mwa. Ca. 12027 Gary L Rogets 1140( ~-( This 1t••-• wu ftled with the Thie fl•tement wae llled with Iha Kathy Ann Kephart. 310 PrMldenl I .111 111 ·1-.. 1 111 ... r .it1·, ''" •Il l•• llhl lf.lllt •. ,,,, dt1\•"f"- lwt\\t "l'fl \ti .tlld 1,11 We h~ve ralei 30% under ~tandard r a1~ lor d11ver\ berween 1he ~ge\ ol lO and60 There'\ a good re4mn fur rhls farmer\ know\ th,.1 1hMe d flV('O IPnd IO b1• )<lier and more careful nn the highway You're the driven who h41ve fewer accident~ Thar'\ why r armers cre~11'd 001 J0/60 p.K l<age auto policy If you qualtly you ro1.1ld save ~~•anl•dlly on your prem1\1~ fMtnet\ ln)urancr• Cr1.1vp is worki~ rom1antly 10 keep the tom of 1n\urdnCf' down, .ind 1hc:-dmotrnl of Pfott'Oion up And 1h1~ .l0/60 pack.lge au10 poltry I\ Qtw' w~y WI? do 11 Why 1101 <o1JI me> DICK ANDREWS IOMOW-A ...... ,.. ,_..van., c.111. 9:1'70I 714--963-8988 ~ - 0'' 9/16" Aebond County Cler~ of Orange Counly on County Clerk of Orange County on Victoria. A-201. Ca.ta ,.. .... Ca. Thia ll•t-• was tiled w11t1 ,,.,. ·.CARPET -LINOLEUM -HARDWOOD-CERAMIC·. M;u:~ ... ~:: Or1nga Co•:.2= M;u~~l~~::3·orangt Coa:.2b'= :::~~=:.oorlduoWdbya ~n~.~~ of Ora~ ec::.: Piiot. May lSI. 28. June 2. 9. 1983 Piiot, May 18, 28. Junt 2. 9. 19113 K1thy Ann Kephart Publlthed Orange Coul Dally II FREE PAD FREE PAD II Nil.IC NOTICE 2314-83 Nit.IC NOTICE 2344·83 ~~!~:~~~;'~~~~Y t~ P1101. Mey 19. 26. June 2. 9~ K-GU11 flCTlTlOUI .u..... F111571 rtaJC NOTICE I I flCTTTIOUt .,...,. NAM! ITATS•NT Publl1hed Orange CoHl Dally ACTfTIOUS _,...... I ALL BRANDS AT TOP DISCOUNT I bU~~;-,,:T~"Z. dotng bU~'im~~R~A:;N::; P~01Jvne 2· 9 · 18 " 23 " 1~nM3 ~~:"~doing C I ~ I ASSEMBL·EAZE, 3303 Harbot 2965 Main SlrMt. lrvlne, Ctlll~nla "'8JC NOTICE UTE ENERGY SYSTEMS,_ I ' rpet p et Open EvH. 'Tll t Blvd .. Unit G-7. Coll•,.. •••. CA 92714 l'ICTTnOUa....... tf0113 2110 18th St .. Newport I I 8et. 10-5, aun. 12·5 I 8282:i II d w M 24 8 Irv! M~~lf J. f cc2u1•:. 26 Abelo. MAim ITAT'llmNT Beecfl, Ca. l2H3 c er · •I u , t ne. • orn • The fo41ow1nG per.one -dolnO Robert David Bertin, 10 tta I · I 1P21~a3:c1re1r•y' 0c9o0u:tg._F.~t8te18rt1o,n2,4C1A8 Wtllla m D Bingham. 14 bu .. _ u; 2110 1Sttl SI., N.wport 8eec:tl, ca. •REllllTS v ' v ... :;ff~.lng Star. frvlne. Calllornla SEA VIEW PARTNERS. 5100 l2e63 I •Bl.AO< CAR ~RPfT I Pln•cr HI Court. Fullerton. CA Thi• bUll~ la conduotad by• =· g:= Floor. Newport Marlt Wllllam Wlarlnga. 405 848 442 .... 82836 llmltad partnerthlp. oinnta D. Frencll. t901 Yac:trt ~~,,1ie ~!c, by 1 I • .. •With Purchase I ~· .. ooP:,~=.i:~Pconductad by • Mark J. Sclhulz Tl\lllnt ~ 8Mdl CA 92teO genlf'al Pllrtnerthlc> I Ill. W II • I. F y of New Carpet I ..-·-· Ricllard w Malu Thi• llllement WAI 11141<1 wllh the .. ; •. Owen M. Powell, 419 . Robert 0 8er11n .,.., '" .... 1•, ' ' ThlS stalement wu lllad with the ~yn:~.C1~~.of Of1~ Counry on ~-nOll B•y, SOUth ~na. CA ThM tlatemant -Ned wtth the HV County C*1t of Orang.e County Oii -----------------------· ~~n:~ C1~~~.ol Orange County on Publlahed Orange Co1:.21= 11m'i:: =:conducted by a May 27. tll3. "'11* '211310 Pllol. M1y 19. 26. June 2. I . 1983 Oennla D •FIWICf'I Publllllad Orange COHt Oalty 11 sizes M ................. ~-9 •................ ~ N .............. '~1 M ................ ,,~ Rato A new stylr with p.iddcd insulc for romlort . thl' pNfrct ~ummcr 11.1nd;il •vatlebl' '" whltl'Olf ~ ~~~ SHOES ---- Publlahed Or1nga Co111 01lly 230-83 GenerW Partnlf Piiot June 2, 8. 18, 23. 1NS Piiot. May 19. 28. June 2, 9. tta3 Thl9 •tilt-I -tllecl with the ~ 2333-83 Ml.IC NOTIC£ County etertc of 0rang.e County on ---.. ---.,.-Mf\-nl'r-----1 FICTITIOUI eua..... May 215. 1983 .-~ n111"4 NAME ITATEMeNT "11ZM The fe>llowlng Pl"90nt t ra doing Publllflad Orange CoHt O•lly PICltllOUI ........ bualnasa 11: PllOt. June O. 10. 23, 30. 1083 ,.._ STAT'QmNT NEWPORT BEACH INN. 8208 205&-83 fllCTmOUI ....... ~.,.,.~ The fOlowlng ~ -ooq ~-TIMI follO'#lng per1on 11 dolnv W Peclllc Cout HIOhway. Newpon bu.._ u; S.11c:h, CA 12eeC>. P\8.IC NOTIC( (A) UNCLE CHAALlf"S OF . ----------r SOUTH!AN CALIFOANIA: (8) tTATl•NTOf'~AWAL BU81NE88 OPPOATUNtt't' TILLIE "S HAIR DESIGNS. Ocean cnterPf'I-. • Clllfornla 10829 E. Slat•. Foun, .. n Vaitey, corPo<•llon, 8208 W. Paolllc Cout Cellf«nla 92708 Htghw•y. Nawpor1 Be•ch, CA Domtlllla Nl9w•. t7071 W110 02880. 81rM1, Fountain \/alley. Catllornfa Thi• ootlneaa It conducted by • 92708 corPQf11tlon. Tht1 ~ 11 OOllduated by an Ooaan Entat'Pf'I ... kdvtdvel. CtiaMI R. Gangl OOITllUlla NleYee Pl'llldent fhla ttatemant -tllecl wttti th91 Th. I• 1tatament wae llled with Iha County OMftl ~ Ofanot County on County Ciani 01 Orange County on May 23, 1083. Mr, 18, 1183. f't171M '219111 Publl11\ed Orange Ooatt Dally Publl1lled Or1no• CoHt Uilly Piiot, May 20, June 2. t . 18, 1983 Piiot. M•y 19, 28, June 2, 9, 1913 2415-«J 23-4143 FRO• f'AflTNIR.... CENTE". 12t10 HHter 8tr .. t, 0NRAT1NO U..R Gwden ~ CA t2MO ' ftlCTmOUt 9Ut•U NAM11 Loutee Low. 12tt0-A ....._ l h• toll owing pert on hu St .• OerOen ~CA 92'40 Withdrawn ••a genwal partner lroM J•y Marlow, 12t 10-0 Heetw the partner8h'P Ol*'•tlng un<* t St., Gwden Gt'Oll'e., CA t2t40 llCtltlOUt b11a1MM name ol HUNT'S Thia ~ II ~ br a GLASS ANO MIRROR CO. •t 8)9 Q9MfW =·· Paularlno Ava .. Cotta MMe. CA Low9 1>2020. Thie .....,. -tied .... Tha llcllllout bu1lna11 name Count\' a.ti Of Or-. Q01'"'Y on llatenl«lt '°' t~ p•rtnw.tllp WU June s. , •. flied on July 111, 1H2 In the Count) ,.,,... of Orange. Publlahed Orange Coeet 0..., • Full ~ame and lldd,_ of Pt<wn Pllo4, June I, 1e. n. IO, 1tla • rtaN: NOllC( Wlthdtawtno: ..... Ml.IC NOT1CE ----------~ J. Wyalt, &ff Matquette --,,,. llftftl't •·-~==~-===-:--PttTn'IOUI llUIMlt Clrele. Coeta M .... CA 924128. r-.n. ""'IK fiCTR'ICMle _,1111-.. llAMI ITATWMS.NT Ronald J, Wyatt tlAm eTA,_., The lollowlng praon 11 clolno "- The ~ .,.,._. AN dOlng butlnMI M ! Publl1lled Orange CO .. I 0•11) ~ -(A) SPLENDID: (B) PILLAR PllOt, May 11, 20. June 2. I. 1N3 LA NAUn', 21'12 ltlft I.II., PAOTECTtVE COA'tlNG8; IC) 2281-N ~Oft e.atl, C.. t2Mt CHEM·HART INTERNATIONAL, letlna lno. <• C•tllornt• 1409 Promontory Drt11e laal, Pt8.IC NOTICt corporation), 11111 '"•• Ln., Newport llMOI\, CA t2MO. .,..1'1 Hunttnl'On ...,,, Ce. t2t44 VlQI J. 14111. 1409 PronlOf\tOty l'JC1'fnOUI wa;e Thia~ It conduoted by a Drive IHt. Newport 1 .. 011. C,t, .... -ITA~ --~ • 92980. -UTlNA INC. Thia buW-la oonouoted by 111 Tiie follOwlnO "'1!0fll la Oolng AlbartlM L. ,..__ butlnMt •: ,,....... _...,...., tndMdvalV Htll1 ROLLIN' AOOTIA. UOO Tiiie 11.a11fM11t .. 11ec1 -"" "" Tiiie •tet.m.m w• l'lled wtth the F1trvi.w I · 101, COtll ....... CA Colll1'Y OWi! Of°'.,....~ on OClulltl Clel1I ol Orlll9I Coilllty on 12'2!.in llell HOO,..,.., 1-102, w.r n , ••· ...., 1e, ttti. "1lt1I Cott•~ bA 92t2t. l'ubltalled Ofente c_::. ~ Pulllltllff OrallQ9 CONt Dell~ Thll bUail14IM 19 oonclUGftO lly an fllDt .._ l. f, 1', R. "I'-l"ilol. MlY 11. It. ..kine t. 10 ~:r lndMCluel.io;w. ... ~==::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"°=Ml==::;:==;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;.a;1 "'" .. ~ ... ..., """' the 1·1 Oounty a.ti of °'.,.. ~ Oil\ Find money·aav n1 yet tuty May ,,o, tNS. ,.,...;---------1:1!!!:!!. ntelipes ln WedMtd1y•1 ... Plill Pu1111111ecs Qrenge Ooatt Delly ~· Pllol, Mar 11, H, ,._ I. I, 1• 99 Fashion Island, Newport Beach 759--9551 • 2SSl43 ----~~~~~-~ L c •• ,,,. .... -···-• --------;-"-- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursd~. June 9 , 1983 8 3 Continuation School ••• Last resort Robtnsal'S ''°"' ....... , .n high IChool and wu on the baske tball team. "When I ditched rd go to the beach and surf. I :hought Continuation School was for a bunch or low j fea, loonies, and 8CWTl but I was wrong. It's 1traightened me out. lt'soriented me to school and the ..eachera here have helped." John worka two jobs for about 50 hours a week in lddH.ion toattendingachool. He'll enter Laguna High 3<:hool in the f.all and hopes it will work out. Sandy, 17, has paaaed the proficiency exam but Nan ta to increaae her credit.a because the exam is good mly within California and she wants a regular bploma. AB a freshman at Laguna High School, she made 'riends with a group of seniors and frequently got Ugh before IChool, during lunch and was then too 1toned to attend afternoon classes so she left the :ampus. Sandy found the rigidity of a regular :lu&room difficult to cope with. S he couldn't sit for a )0-rninute class without being able t.o get up and nove around . Attending Continuation School was t.enned by Santiy as "aomethlng \hat motivated me to get up in the morning." She lives with her parenu now after returning from two drug rehabilitation centers out of state. "My family means more to me now than it did before and I don't want to hurt them again." Before, all ahe uaed to think about was drugs and getting high since she found nothing t.o interest her or t.o occupy her time. "Continuation School has cawed me to like achoo! more and I've met good friends here who aren't on drugs and thia has had benefit.a." Sandy is currently looking for a job and hopes to attend Saddleback thia summer to study fashion merchand.iaing. "I don't think anyone will get up an hour early to ride a bus to Capo. It's hard enough to get here in the morning," said Sandy. Nan, 17, who is on her own and lives with her sister said, "I care about this place because it's the only thing \hat's helped me. What's going to happen to the others? I was lucky. I had this place to fall back on." 100 YEAR S OF STYLI OWN A BACCARAT FIRST EDITION: OUR 1983 NOEL CHRISTMAS ORNAMENT. Dress your tree m truly luxurious style with the most exQu1si te ornament of all-our shimmering Baccarat crystal "No~1:· beautifully g1 1t·boxed. of course. $30. Delivery will begin 1n August. order yours now to ensure receiving the first edition. Start an elegant tradition now. from Robinson's Fine Crystal. 129, Beverly Hills only. To order. call toll·free 1·800·345·8501 Rob1nson'S 100 YEARS OF STYLE DISCOVER THE MOST UNIQUE COLLECTION OF BACCARAT ENGRAVEABLES IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. Considered the ultimate by crystal connoisseurs. each beautiful piece of Baccarat 1s slowly precisely blown then carefully. elegantly cut by master artisans, continuing the trad111on begun over 200 years ago 1n France And now we re proud to introduce an exceptional array of fine pieces ready to be specially engraved in plain (block) or fancy (script) lettenng See samples of our entire collection and special order your favorites now <Delivery in approximately 6 weeks) Discover the pieces truly worthy of a place among your finest Robinsons Fine Crystal. 129 To order call toll tree 1·800·345·8501 A Musta•d ,a• il"d o;poQ" w lh 1 script letter $78 • \ D SQuare flacon Clecan1er with 3 block tellers $290 • E Cryslal ball w•tr> Sfilrd w lh 3 block IPl!ers $65-0 • 8 Malma1son perfume flacor ( Harmon1f' perfume llacon w1111 w11h 1 script IPtter $155 • 3 script 1euers 1165 • J Massena flute champagne with t script letter Sto • I< Obellak wiln t blOett letter 1275 • ROBINSON'$ COMPUTIRIZID WIQDIN9 91FT U911DJ G Massena perfume llacon w•th 1 sc11pt te11e1 1140 w L Si>arta ashtray, medium. with t blook letter 1180 • 'Avellabte In Beverly Hiiia, Newpott and Woodland Hiiia MAKE AN APPOINTMENT WITH OUR CONSULTANT AT YOUR NIAlllT IOllNION'I. WIU RICORD YOUR GIF1 PREFERENCES IN EVERY STORE VIA THE ONLY COMPUTlllZID llRVICI IN SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA:. rt • .. ... •;..: .•. ·: .. ·. : -. . . : f. I :;a -uzq s $24? 0 & • • 0 4• g IM Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1983 Laguna Continuation School ••• Students will return to regular high school Belllngrath Gardens ... It continues to flourish despite hurricane !i, 1;!.Nc2!_'!22DS The small neat building nesUed on the south end of the field at Laguna Beach High School will no longer be the home for Laguna's continuation students. The Laguna Beach School Board voted to disband the Continuation School Program and to send Laguna's students 20 miles aouth to attend clas9es in September in the Capistrano School District. The reason is money. Direct costs of operating the Laguna Beach Continuation School were $45.626 in Average Daily ' Attendance funds plus $4,000 in costs to reimburse the guardians of the students for transportation fees to Capistrano. The $18,626 1085 U> the school district will be offset by ultimately saving Lagwia Beach $26,576 a year, according to Clyde Lovelady, Laguna Beach School District Business Manager. "When a district "gets smaller, you get less efficient in operating things. We had to take measures available to us to give the Board a balanced budget," said Lovelady. Superintendant Bill Ba.mes told the board Capistrano had a larger staff and many more resources and it provides counselors and a guidance service which Laguna Beach does not offer students. "Laguna Beach can't meet the needs of these students as well because of our limited resources and as a result the students would be much better off in Capistrano by merging the program," Ba.mes said. "We should either put more money into our own program to upgrade the quality or find an outside agency to provide the resources." Darrell McKibban, oontinuaUon teacher, feels Continuation School had a good program but the dlatrict let It go downhill. He hates to 8ee the progr~ goand wiahes the district would spend the money to build it up. The Laguna Beach Continuation School was funded to stay open only three houn a day. Two teachen and a eecretary were responaible for about 22 atudenta who came and went throughout the year. Any Laguna Beach student who will be sent to Continuation School in the fall of 1983 will be given $4 a day to travel on their own to Capistrano District to attend clasaes. Stan Shipley, director of the Continuation Program, was asked if he felt the students would go on their own that far to Capo's program. "I think we'd belucky to get them down there." McKibban feels studenta wouldn't go either since they had been habitual truanta. Ron Chilcote, 11ehool board member, said every e ffort must be made to keep these students in the regular high school and if they were sent to Capistrano, "We should not forget them, but be sure we kept contact.:• According to Shipley, all but three of Lagwia's students will come back to the high achoo) in the fall. The present facilities of the Continuation School will be turned over to the Alternative School program in September. According to Shipley, continuation students would be eligible to register for the Alternative School if they were "approved to go back into the regular high school first." GARRY MITCHELL . , .. ...._ .... MOBILE. Ala. -Bellingrath Gardena, the "fishing camp" of the late Coca-Cola millionaire Walter Bellingrath, relaina its appeal as a garden apot of the South, deepite being nearly plowed under by a hurricane. Some ecara remain from Hurricane Frederic, which destroyed or uprooted about 2,400 trees in 1979. Moat of the trees were replanted, and coming years will bring back the giant live oaks that were backdrops to the landscape. The gardens cloeed for six months after the hurricane for cleaning and replanting. "It was like lOISing a member of the family," said general manager John ''Doc" Brown, referring to the trees he helped bulldoze away. Brown said t,he hurricane was the greatest shock of hia 28-yearcareer in the gardens. The gardens reopened with a bright new look - flowers that grew in total sunshine -and the tourists came back. Howard Barney, a spokesman for the gardens, said attendance was rapidly approaching the pre-hurricane total of 200,000 per year. A new admissions building has been added at Bellingrath in recent months that provides a separate entrance to the gardens and houses the llllultimedia slide show about the gardens that runs continuously. The camp where the Bellingraths took refuge in 1918 from city life was developed by the family into the magnificent gardens in aouth Mobile County. Bellingrath, who died in 1955, turned the estate over to a foundation, assuring Its operation forever. By then, it included a houae filled with antiques and collectible treasures and the world's largest collection Baccarat Salutes fronsons of Boehm porce]a1n aculpture.. A walk down the boxwood-lined sandy pat.ha, IWTOWlded by f.hoi IMnda of Dowen of numerous variet.iea. ia a study ln beauty. Tilef'e are rainbow• of tlowen. Ducks lleek ahade under wtllowa. A fish Wallowa in the lake. K.eeptna the jungle-like overwowth and inaectB from overtakina the prdena requires oonatant prunlng and beddlng. "We spend $10,000 a ye.r on imecticides," said Brown. "We try to keep It under control and then you loee." The fertilizer budget ii about $16,000 a year, A walk down the boxwood-lined sandy path•~ aurrounded by thousands of flowers of numerous varieties, is a study in beauty. There are rainbows of flowers. Ducks seek shade under willows. A fish wallows in the lake. landscape engineer Joe Fonnwalt added. The flower beds are sand and peat mom. Brown said things had really changed since ''Mr. Bell had one man hauling oow manure down here from a dairy farm." Now, said Brown, the total work.force at the gardens is as many as 100 people. 10 0 YEARS OF S TY L E FLAWLESS QUALITY, ELEGANCE OF LINE, purity of design -the name of Baccarat 1s a synonym lo· perfection, signifying perhaos the finest crystal 1n thf' world What is the history of this universally acclaimed crys· 11? II began over 200 vears ago The Bishop of Metz Monseigneur de Montmorency Laval owned vast lorests in the domain of Baccarat 1n the region of lJ,r ra1ne France The establishment or a wood·burn1ng glassworks seemed to the b1sh0p the best way to put h is lorests to profitable use He pet1t1oned King Louis XV pointing out that France produces no art glas~ and this is why Bohemian glassware 1s imported in such large quant1t1es, causing an enormous outflow of funds at a time when the kingdom has such great need of them to recover from the terr•Ole Seven Years· War· The oet111on also emphasized the poverty ol the woodcutters. unemployed since 1760 King Louis XV and his council were convinced and granted the bishop's request on October 16 1764 In the nex• hall century, the glassworks at Baccarat would become a full lead crystal factory which would survive 'hree revolot1ons and four wartime invasions THE FIRST PRODUCTION FROM BACCARAT glassworks was varied Besides reqular glassware. craftsmen made '111rror glass and window-grass following the same methods used 1n 13th centu1y Venice Techniques were prim1t1ve -the fus •on point of all lhe elements for glass was unpredictable and depended or such factors as whether the wood wnc; wr• or dry, and daily temperature When the molten glass was iust right , a bell was rung to summon Baccarat's art1c:;ans Working hours varied each day, so •t was 1mpera11ve thal craftsmen live nearby Dwellings lor seventy fam111es were built near the factory In fact. the first owners of Baccarat became pioneers of social welfare-in 1827, lhe company had a doctor in residence and a school for boys In 1831, a savings bank was crea ted for employees, and a d1sab11tty fund was started in 1835. a century before such benefits became law in France. BACCARAT STRUGGLED through the \iimiiiiiiioiiiii.._._ last years of the French Revolullon and the Napoleonic Wars. but Baccarat craftsmen were becoming the finest crystal makers in the world A Baccarat executive. M de Fontenay, discovered the secret or Bohemian colored glass. won a French government reward of 8.000 francs and lent this formula to his company. 22nd in a Ser1er. Even hefore t~e company opened elegant showrooms 1n the Rue de Paradis in Paris. lhe factory altracted great attentiof' King Charles X asked to v1s1t the furnaces and as had Louis XVIII before him ordered a magnificent table se1v1ce bearing the French coat of arms TOWARDS THE END OF 1850, though. the forests of Baccarat were becoming exhausted as breweries. t1leworks saltworks and ironworks consumed more and more wood The lirst efforts at heating with coal gas were begun in 1853 and were finally successful in 1856 but costs wPre enormous ' Nevenhetess the second half of tne 19th century was a perioo of prosperity Baccara· ~::-read the prestige of France from New York to .__~~ St. Pete1 ~burg and from Madrid to Java Baccarat agenc1ec; .vere opened in Havana. Mexico City, Buenos A1res arid even in Bombay. where the English tried to fight the entry of French crystal into what they had thought was to be forever the1r private domain BACCARAT WAS NOW CONSIDERED the crystal of royalty In 1897 Czar Nicholas II ordered two candelabra eleven·and·a·half feet high for the lmpenal palace at St Petersburg In 1905, the Shah of Iran placed a similar order Sovereigns of Italy. Egypt. Germany and other countries comm1ss1oned state services from Baccarat But when the First World War broke out in 1914 tragedy slruck The Germans invarlcd Baccarat afte destroying the o.11y working furnace the previous day They were drivrn out two weet<c, later with th victory ot the Marne. but lhey took the plant manager. M Bardinet. as hostage 1 A IOllNION'I CHAIGI? 11'1 IAIYI During lhe Depression and World War II. Baccarat suffered great losses Baccarat president. Professor Parisot, was sent 10 a concen1rat1on camp for hi s act1vit1es in the Resistance. At the end of the war however, the factory slowly regained its balance Third and fourth generation craftsmen resumed ~-~ their pos1t1on~ The1r children continue Al Baccarat today BACCARAT'S HISTORY IS LEGEND. Filly thousand v1s1tors learn about II each year as they tour the museum in France Baccarars international awards are numerous-the c ompany is continuously saluted for its ~erfect blend of traditional and modern. plain and cut. liaht and heavy, simple and elaborate crystal New installed furnaces in 1970 gave Baccaral optically pure crystal. permitting lhe creation of heavy pieces with large. perfectly polished areas another reason why Baccarat sparkles on the most elegant tables of the world -Rochelle Reed !!!::~~~;) Baccarat Is known lor its !lawless quality, elegance of line and beauty of design The name Baccarat is a svnonym for t'Prfec11on This 1s the son that you treasure Baccarat crystal and t, for 100 years. you've selected the on's. View a maior xhibit1on of Baccarat crystal Including limited editions nd major sculptural pieces in Rob1nson·s BEVERLY HILLS, now through June 30. Our exclusive Harmonie Perfume flacon, $150 Harmonie bud vase .. $86, Massena flute champagne. S70 Hare, S55. Parakeet. $45. Robinson's Fine Crystal, 129 THE QUICKEST WAY: JUST PERSONALLY PRESENT AN AMERICAN EXftRllS, YllA. MA8TIA CHAAOR, DtNEAI CLUI, OA CARTI BLANCHE CARO TO ONE OF OUR THE !AllEIT WAY: PHONI UI TOLL ,.'811-IOCM22"4141 FROM 7 AM·10 PM SALESPERSONS ANO WE'LL·OPEN AN ACCOUNT YOU CAN USE THAT VERY DAY. ANO OUR OPERATORS WILL TAKE YO A APPLICATION INFO .. MATION. l '· I America is aging ••• The median age RANDOLPH E. SCHMID •• '($ ,,._.,.., WHERE MOST AMERICANS ARE BORN Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 8 5 • IS now 30 years old WASHINGTON -With the baby boom just an echo, .America's median age has hit 30. By states, famlly-onented Utah IS youngest at 24.2, whlletheoldestmedtan age is34.7 in retirement-haven Florida. (8111M '* 1.000 ~) The median for the U.S. population has increased by two yean from 1970, according to the 1980 census, and Bryant Robey, editor of American Demognaphlcs magazine, said there are three basic reuona for the aging of America: -Theagingofthepoet-WorldWarll baby-boom generation, now in their mid-20s and 30s. -The postponement of childbearing by this same group, leading to a smaller aegment of youngsters in the population. -Longer lifespans for most Americans, mean- ing more elderly people. Robey said these trends are expected to continue, adding, "There may well never again be as many people under 30 as there are now." The Census Bureau estimates that the national medianagewas30.3 by 1981, and 30.6 by last year, although detailed figures for those dates are not yet avail.able. The median age means hall of all residents were younger and half older. Robeysaidabout41 percent of the population is under age 25, down from 46 percent in 1970. Of the 226,504,825 Americans listed in the national head count, 22.6 percent were under 15 and 11.3 percent were 65 and older, according to the Census Bureau. Here i.sa state-by-state Ustshowing the median age of Americans in the 1980 census and its increase froml970: 1. Utah,24.2, up l.l; 2. Alaska, 26.1, up3.2;3. Wyoming, 27.1,down0.1;4. Louisiana, 27.4, up2.6; 5. New Mexico, 27 .4, up 3.5; 6. Idaho, 27 .6, up 1.2; 7. Mississippi, 27. 7, up 2.6; 8. South Caro Una, 28.2, up 3.4; 9. Texas, 28.2, up 1.8; 10. North Dakota, 28.3, up 1.9; 11. Hawaii, 28.4, up 3.4; l 2. Colorado, 28.6, up 2.4; 13.Georgia, 28.7, up2.8; 14. Michigan, 28.9, up2.6; 15. South Dakota, 28.9, up 1.5; 16. Montana, 29.0, up 1.9; 17. Kentucky, 29.1, up 1.6; 18 . .Ariz.ona, 29.2, up 2.9; 19. lndian.a, 29.2, up 2.0; 20. Minnesota, 29.2, up 2.4; 21. Alabama, 29.3, up 2.3; 22. Vermont, 29.4, up 2.6; 23. Wisconsm, 29.4, up 2.2; 24. North Carolina. 29.6, up 3.1. 25. Delaware, 29.7, up2.9; 26. Nebraska, 29.7, up 1.1; 27 VU'ginia. 29.8, up 3.0; 28. Washington, 29.8, up 2.3; 29. CaWornia, H.9, op 1.8; 30. Illinms, 29.9, up 1.3; 31.0hio, 29.9, up2.2; 32. Iowa.30.0, up 1.2; 33. Kansas, 30.1. up l.4;34. New Hampshire, 30.1. up2.l; 35. Oklahoma, 30.1, up 0. 7; 36. Tennessee. 30.1, up 2.0; 37. Oregon. 30.2, up 1.2; 38. Maryland, 30.3, up 3.2; 39. Nevada, 30.3. up 2.5; 40. Maine, 30.4, up 1.8; 41. West Virginia, 30.4, up0.4;42. Arkansas, 30.6. up 1.5; 43. Mi.s.9ouri, 30.9, up 1.5; 44. Massachusetts, 31.2. up2.2; w .. t North Cenlr9I South HortheH I Th e median for the U.S. population has increased by two years from 1970, according to the 1980 census, and Bryant Robey, ed itor of American Demographics magazine, said there are three basic reasons for the agin g of America: •T he aging of the post-World War II baby-boom generatio n, now in the ir mid-20s a nd 30s. While the national median age reached 30, it varied from region to region, with Northeastemers oldest at 31.8. The South had a median age of 29. 7. closely followed by the North Central region at 29.6. People in the West preserved their youthful image with a median age of 29.3. 45. Rhode Island, 31.8, up2.6; 46. New York, 31 .9, up 1.6; 47. Connecticul, 32.0, up 2.9; 48. Pennsylvania, 32.1. up 1.4; 49. New Jersey, 32.2. up 2.1; 50. Florida, 34. 7, up 2.4. TOP FIVE STATES eo n oM FIVE STATES •The post pone men t of c hild- bear ing by this same grou p, leading to a smaller segment of youngsters in the population. • Longer lifespa ns for most Amer i- cans, meaning m or e elderly Ul.811 29.0 MH MChUNIU 12.3 "AIHk• 22.5 Rhode 111.nd 12.4 people. WyomlnC 216 ld•ho 21.5 New HICO 20.0 Connecticut 12.5 flOfld• 12 .8 New JerM 13.1 Robinsons 100 YEARS OF STYLE THE AMERICAN HOME OF WATERFORD WATERFORD ONLY FOR YOU : OUR PERSONALIZED COLLECTION You can search the world over tor exQu1s1te 1reasures or you can discover the mosl unique ones ol all al Robinsons Through an arrangement with the Wa1erford fac1ory in Ireland we re pleased to presen a one of tl kind personalized collection of 1ne finest Wa:ertoro crystal Mouth blown and hand·cut this 1s the tull eao crys1a1 esteefl'ed oy colleclors everywnere for its breathtaking beauly and fineness Add a sh mmering work ot art to your own co11ec•1on or surprise a special Father grad or bride •o be w11h the most unioue gift of all-our personalized Waterford Here lo personalize your new crys1a1 favorites will be Mr Tom Wa ll Senior Mas1e1 Engraver lrom the Waterford factory 1n Ireland MEET TOM WALL, WATERFORD MASTER ENGRAVE~,_ HERE TO PERSOnALLY ENGRAVE . YOUR SELECTIONS Meo:!I Wa1er ford s lop engraver here lo personally monogram your choices from the manv line> co11Pct1bles we snow here plu•. many mo~e Wa1c11 n1m demonslra(P h1S deliC<ltP Clrj NEWPORT WP.dne<;rJ.iy June iS 11 a rT 5 n Pl Thursday June 16 12 noon.; nm an11 7 9 pr•1 Cnoose trom our eYc1>pt1ona1 collection A 81scu1t barrel w1 1n 2 lancy lellers $242 B 3 '11 • ashlray with 1 fancy letler $86 C Scent bottlP w11h 1 lancy 1e11er $90 D Powde1 box w1ll1 1 lancy leller $144 E Old fa shioned w11h 2 fancy letters $105 F Jewelry 1ray with 2 fancy letters $115 ~,nPc 1 11 nr<lH• W;ill complP.le'> d11r 1nq n1s ~·~1· •1. 11 b,., dt-'11v"'red approximately .1 rno· ti.., .iltcr Pl.tern~ ~our ordf:r (plan now tor '>Pf•(. ell t10l•OdY u1v1rig' GorriP 'iPE:' Sdmplf'S ,ind Pli1Ct' or<h•r tor 1 I rnQnoqr;1nin1P:i terns. WATERFORD ONLY FROM US: OUR EXCWSIVE WORKS OF ART AND NEW STEMWARE INTRODUCTION OocP you see our o"zeo collec11ons you wont want 10 stop add r•g 10 yours Come discover our brt"rllt tdk1ng .111ay or the ellQu1s1te Walertord crySICll so uniquP you I! find 1' only at Robinson G Dad s rnt1g $65 H Sm.ill IPller Opf'nf'r $48.50 J M1111 twll $37.50 K 1urtle $48 IQllNION'I CQMpugRIDD WIDQIHCI C11n M91111J Now. discover a Robinsons tirsl Introducing Waterford's very elegant new stemware pat1ern Maeve. the perfect way 10 enhance your mos1 1mpress1ve settings L Goblet $32 M Flute $32 N Brandy $51 I Come discover our unique collections now. And while you're in. be sure to register to win a Waterford "4 Year Apprentice Bowl", now through June 19. Robinson's Waterford Crystal. 142. Ask abOut our Waterford Club Plan To order. call toll·free 1·800·346·8501. MAKI AN APPOINTMENT WITH OUI CONIULtANT Ar YOUI"~ IOllNION'I. WIU RICORD YOUR GIFT PRIFIRINCIS IN MRY STORE VIA THI ONLY COMIVl'lllDD .lllMCI IN IOUTMllN CALIPOINIA t~~~~~~~~--~~- I ~ ' I I I ¥ Orange Coest DAILY PILOT /Thursday. June 9, 1983 Cfeorge Yardley ... Still talks a good game Invocation challenged This issue could be 1 very important' NlJC f()T1C£ Pla.IC NOTICE Nbnca Of TMISftf'I IAU NOTICE OF TRUIT£E'8 SALE • '--Mo. 1GllHALL Loan No. CLARK .,.:, fMt. )M. 10M T.8. No. O-os3tl Yvv AM • 0.f'Aut. T UNC>l[A A UHIT CODE G DlllG °' TMllT DAnD JULY 7, T 0 SERVICE COMPANY aa Ouly ttn..-..aa YOU TAKE ACTION TO~TICT YOUll "'OnATY, 1ppo1n1eo Trustee ur1oer lhe fT y .. IOl.D AT A ll'UILIC following descrlbe<l OHO or trust ·~· If' y O U NI! I D A N Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR • 1lON Of' THI! NATUAE CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR Of' ?Me l'ROCHOINO AOAIHIT CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN v~:vou 9HOULO CONTACT A CIVIL CODE SEr.TION 2924h LAWVU. Tot<AI BANK OF CALIFORNIA, 1 IP•Y•ble II Ille lime ot sal6 In lawful '"'-'tt money ot the United Sh1tes) ell ..,.. omi. Banking Corpo<allon, 81 right. title and Interest conveyeo to duty llPPC>lnted rruatM under the and now held h~ It under said Deed fOllowtng deecflbed Deed ot Trull and purtUanl 10 lhe power 01 aala ot Trust 1n the properly here1narter c:ont .. n41d In .. Id 0..d or Truet, Oescrlbed Will SELL· AT PUBLIC AUCTION TAUSTOA DOUGLAS G CLARK. J EDWIN CLAAI( TO THE FttGHEST BIOOER FOR BENEFICIARY THEODORE p CASH (payable II lhe lime or .... In NELSON, VICTORIA NELSON i.wfl.tl money ot the United Stat" or RecorOed Februuv 4 1982 as by I ceen...-·1 Chee« drawn on a / etate or national bank. a atate or Instr No 82-042899 or Ottlclal flldef1ll credit union. or a tlale or Recoros 1n Iha otr1ce or the f Recoroer of Oranoe County •der e t 1avlng• erid loen Seid dead or trust desGflbes the Meoctetlon. Oomlctled In the 11ate following of Cetllornla) all right title ano Lot 12 in Block 7 ot the lmarwt con~ to ano now held Reaubdlvl•lon ot Sac11on 1 ol by It \lndW Miki DMcl of Trull In 1"41 Balboa Isl end In the Cttv of prop9r1y ,_..nailer deacrlbed ' TfllUSTOR: WALTER F HALL. e Newport Beach 89 par map marrJeO men, ee hi• tole ano recorded In book 6, paae 30 ot mlaoellaneous mapa 1n tne ottoce or pr~ TOK.Al BANK OF the county recorder ot U IO counly YOU ARE IH DEFAULT UNDER A C 0 A. I C.lllomle banking DEED OF TillUST DATED 12-07 .. 1. Cotl>oratlon. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO Aeco<d9d Juty 10, 198 l u lntlr PfllOTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT l\O, 1aoe9, of Ofllcllll ~O• In the omc. of the racorOar of Oranne MAY SE SOLO AT A PUBLIC • SALE . I f YOU NE ED AH County, Slate ot Calllornla. H IO EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE Dead of Trull dH Crtbe • lhe Of THE PAOCEEOINQ AGAINST ~ ~e::'rhe Clfv ot lrvlft•, YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A ' ·-LAWYER. Coullly ot Ora n ge. S late ot t 19 Agate Avenue. Newport Ctlllfomla. u per map nled In Book Beltcil. CA 13't .. ~18M 27 to 36 lnctualve ot '(II 1 street aOdrass or common Par~ Mapa, In Iha otrk;e of the ~ Aacord« ot Mid county Oealgnat1on of property Is shown ThfAtraet adOre11 or other above. no warranty ia given as to Its com"'on daalgnetlon 01 lhe rHI completeneH or correctness)" The P'Ofl9'1Y hetelnabove 089Cflbeo 11 banar1clary under u10 Oeeo of p~ed 10 be· VAC"NT l"NO Trust by reason or a breach 0 , r,.. la no 11,...1 aooreu enO/or oeraun 1n Iha obl1ga11ons secureo olller: commoo O•tgnatlon tor the thereby, heretofore e•ecuteo and __ _, delivered lo tne unOers1gned a ·-P'ooartY deecrlbeo •bove any written Oec:lara11on or Oela111t and lntaA•l•d party may obt•ln Oemano tor Sa1e and wr1tten notice cllr~lon• by aandlng • written of breach and of e1ec11on to ca ~ wttl\11'1'10 Oaya from the flrll I use publlcallon of 1hll notice 10 the 1he unoarslgnao to sell sa10 ben,:rlcl.,y whoae nam e and property to satisfy a11a obllga11ons. actd~H follow Toki! Bank 01 1nO therealter lhe unoers1gneo can~rnla, 534 w 6th St • Loi caused seio notiCe 01 breach ano 01 ~ CA to014 Alln Gerald election to ~ recorded February MCMW\O ' Tiie under~ned TrUllM 16. 1983 IS Instr No 83-1 t5~22 In ,_...,,. d..ctaim• aH llablHly for any Ottic1a1 Recoros "' the omce 01 lhe ir.con.ct,_. 11'1 Mid 1trM t aooreas Recoroer or Oranoe County OI ~common deelgnallon SllO sale w 111 be made but T1* beneftclaty under Mid Deed without covenant or ... arranty of Tn19t by,.._, of • l>fMCh or •JCPr-or lmpllecl, regarding title defeul1 11'1 Ille ot>llgatlona MCUfed poueu1on. or encumbrances. to ~ hete1otor• •J1ecuted IJld P•Y the remaining pr1nc1pa1 SI.Im ot dill¥ereo 10 Iha und1r11gned 1 the notll(S) S8C\ired by u11d Oeeo ot ~ Dec:tarallon 01 Default and Trull w1rn 1nteres1 es in MIO note Oefhirld for s• and Wfltlen notice prov1oeo aovances. 11 any unOer of~ end of election 10 C.UM the terms of salO Deeo of Trust. th• janderelgneo 10 ••II ••Id '-· cherget ano e•penses 01 the ~ to aatlely Mid obllgalloni. Trustee and or the trusts createo by end thereafter tlle undettlgn•d MIO Deed or Trust ~Mid notice ot b<each and ot Said nle will be held on ~-to be recorded February Thurtday June 16. 1983 at ~ 00 19.!, ~ u lnatr No. 83-077583 Pm at the Chapman Avenue ot' ... Of11c1e1 Reoord• entrance to the Civic Center ~ u re wlll be ~ade . but &lldtng 300 East Chapman Ave oven ent or warranty Orange, C" Implied regatdlng 11i1e' "t t he time o t I he 1n111 a I or ancumbrencaa. I~ publication of tn1s notice, the total I Pffnclpel betance 01 lhe amount ot the unpaid balance or the ou. obtlgallon aecvred by obllgatlon secured by the above 9'1itQ o1 Trvet wtlll lntereel and oaacrlbeO oeao of trust ano o~ wm1 u provided therein. etllmated cosh. expenses. eno '*'9'edv.nce1. It any, under the advances Is $92.6911 33 l:s cr••l•d by H id DeeO of The total Indebtedness being en T Tiie Mtlmated amount of M id "llmate on which the opening blO o fetlon, Including but not 11 computeo may be obtaln&d by Yll08ld balanc. of the calling l71') 937-0966 the day vencea, f-. chargea t>.tore the 11le ~ of Iha TrvllM ... the Date M•v 18 1983 tVne 'pf tnl11et publlcallon bl lhll T 0 SERVICE COMPANY ~le I t41.359 74 aa u 10 Trustee 9.,d 1ate wllt be h eld on By RoM A Garc.ia ~. June 16. t983 ... 10 00 •·:?·~· et Illa Chapman Avenue Au1s1ent Secreter,, One City 81vO West en ~nee 10 Iha Civic Canlar Orange. CA 92668 ..,.._., 300 E Chepman Ava . Tel '1'1•·835-8288 OrMf9. CA eno wt11 ~ con<Ncled p o by t"*8t91ate Trvel DMcl ~ ubllahaO range Coast Dally ~ .,_ .oor-and 1~ IPnot. May 26 June 2 9 1983 llVl'l'Mt are 505 N Tu111n Ave 243&-83 := 238. Santa Ana. Calltornla "''°1 IC NOTICE • (714) ~ 1·3201, " egent tor 1 ____ r_UDt. ______ _ MIO .1'ru11.. 1<"°5323 - 0..: May 20 1913 f1CTITtOU8 8U8tHE88 TO!\M.eank Of c.iitomta NAME STATEMENT • ~· llenklng Corp The to!lowll'O parsons are doing • ...., TNl1ee llus1nest as ~ Truat Deed SAMMIS-VIEJO l TO 17922 • ~t F1tcn "venue. Suite 100 Irvine 8'1y. VP C11itorn1a 927 14 , Or..-ige Coal! Oally Lee Sammis Company 17922 fll!Ot.;Mey ff, June 2. 9. 1983 F1tcn Avenue, Suite 100, Irvine. _ • 245!>-83 Calllornla 92714 a California • •-.,. corporBtlon J ';' ,._ f()T1C( c h , I t I e I 0 " I n v e s I m e n I •;.JllCTJnDUl llU ... aa Company. a Ca111or111e 11m11eo • .... .,_ partnerat\lp, 17922 Fiich Avenue, • -ITATW•NT Sulle 100. Irvine. Callfornle 92714 nit ~ .,.,-.one .,. doing Tht1 business is condu<ited by a ~" cm; limited pertnershlp A KPOT PROPER TIES. Lee Sammis Company 1t _ 2 lkypark Cr .. Sulla too. Johns Hagestad ~ 92714 Elec v p c'r.-~ llentley, 17752 Skyparlc This statement was 11180 wllh the ~ too, trvlne . Calltornla County Cerk or Oranoe County on h II 0 Mey t3. 1983 • luck man. t 7752 Ati.n. Matlllna, lecll. Ct ., Sulla too. 1rv111e. Qllmble 1 Mal'°'Y ~714 ". buellleee 11 c:ondUCled by • 4NO Mec:Artttur hrd. C*"o>lellhlp. =~ lleech, CA l2W • ..,..,., lettttey f21t401 ~•111 1•1t -filed with lhe Publl1hed Or•nge Coal! Oally a.ti of Ofange ~7-1 Pilot Mey UI, 26 June 2, 9, 1983 ~llled ~anoe CoH I Oally 23:µ.113 ~Mey 21, June 2. I . 18, 19'3 MllC f()TICE - • 24ee-83 . . f'ICTlTIOUI •UalNHI •' STA~ Of' NA• ITATORNT '!"=IT Oii UM Oil,... ~~:::ng Pllf'ton• ate do+ng =--=.11 WU illAM9 C U R T I S • H E R R E R A tollowlflOJ•"O" .... ASSOCIATES. 546 OcMn All9nue, .. UM tN "1clltlout Seal 8eech, Calltornlll llOHO ~ Barbare " Cvrt11, general I W' 0 R T PHY 8 IC Al p1t1ner. 546 Ooean Avenue, Seel O*>UP, W "'-111a, BeKh. Caltfornla 9074Q. tot. N-port •••oh, C11 Sondra Herrera. genet1t perlner. 546 Ocaen Avenue. SHI T .. flctlttoue luelnt .. Name 8aacn. Cetltornla 90740 !•~ d .. ~o. ebc v• ., .. filed In Thi• bu1lnH1 11 onduotld by a uounty on February 25, llmlted part~al'llp 8arbere Ann Curll• C. ~ .... °"'"Y 0-el Patlner ' . ·~· c.. tttOe Tl'lll ll•f-1 ..... Iliad wltn Ille "' .. ':::r-.. ~ or eoutlty Clerll of ~·noe County on MlrtOO.. ..,.._. Mey lf. 19'3 '21tl,. d , :•A -ll9d wllfl uw P11bt1lhed 011no• Co111 Oally Oltlr* Clf ar.,,.. eownty on PtlOt May 111, 2t1 ~ 2. t . 11113 .. '-~~-~-~~-~'3•~2~·83!:!.J I , __ r 8t!LL Idle Item• w ith • __ ,,'t ... ...,,._ ......... Onn6e eo... ~ ~ "°' Cl•em.d Ad ,,_.,. ,, •• 1'·"· ,.. 142 ... 11 ~ But two weeks ~fore tnala, he broke hia arm near the end of an mconaequential game, and mia8ed out on playing for the Olympic basketball team A year later, the 2~-year-ol<l joined the Fort Wayne Pistons, which lat.er moved to Detroit. LIVERMORE, Calif (AP) A plan to deliver an invocation during graduation «-remonies at Granada High School h.u been challenged by the Amencan Civil Liberties Uruon, which aaya the prayer would violate the constitutional separation of church and state. Something elle: Yardley was never inducted into the basketball Hall of Fame. He a.aid it bums him to see players like Hal Greer, Bill Bradley and J ack Twyman admitted, while he continues tO be overlooked. "This particular lSSue is a very amport.ant case becawie there hasn't been a definitive ruling on prayer at graduauon ceremonies," said Elaine Elinson, public mformauon dirt:oet.or for the ACLU in San Francisco. "Nonnally I wouldn't complain about something like that, but the (Bill) Bradleys, the Debuaacheres and Greers, players I would consider my contemporaries, were not as good as me," he said. "Jack Twyman?" His voice started to rise. "I never lost to his teams. I was never outplayed by hlm. I suppose what hurt me was that I played only seven years. I guess the Hall places a lot of emphasis on longevity. It enters my mind once a year; when they make the selections and I don't get picked. Now there's no way I'll ever get into it." The ACLU filed suit m Alameda County Superior Court in Hayward, seeking a temporary restraining order to prevent the invocation during Friday's graduation ceremony. The suit also asks injunctions against future graduation ceremony invocations. The Llvennore school board voted 3-2 this week to allow the Invocation at both Granada and Livermore high schools. The vote followed more than two hours of debate on the lSSUe, according to Kay Honodel, public infonnation officer for the district. For the first tlme in the evening, Yardley grew quiet. A few minutes ago, his favorite team, the Lakers, and favorite player, Magjc Johnson, had lost the title to the 76ers. As Moses Malone and Julius Erving celebrated on the c.-ourt, CBS announcer Dick Stockton read off the four previous championship series that had ended in a four game sweeps. "ln 1959," Stockton said, "Boston defeated Minneapolis." Yardley shook hiB head. She said the district's legal counsel determined th.at the invocation, which is to be delivered by students, would be legal "on the premise th.at it was going to be bnef, c.-eremonial m nature and hit.er school hours." "That's the year we should have beat Bost.on " ID ST ARTS THURS., AD GOOD THRO JUNE 15 ALLTRADE 3 SPEED " DRILL PRESS 5 8 88 ;,., om Another 11bllng in the bag A lllrade family. a 11, HP bench model w ilh 11, .. chuck. (M y wile doean't care w ho wean the pant• in the fa m ily. ae long 01 ther e'• money in the pocket•.) h1Jn BLACK & DECKER ~ 11/• HP ROUTER ~ SAL£ PRICE 4597 L£SS JWL.IJt REBATE rROM B & D 1 ooo llET COST AJTER REBATE 3597 Ball bearang conatrucllon. depth adju11menta 1n 1 64 · 1ncremen11. II 1hough1 increment w a 1 foul w ealher.) #7614 RAACO 48 DRAWER STORAGE CABDIET 1288 #.SBL Here at 11 a whole ad lull of hardware to make you h ar dware lan1 happy (A ctually, the lan1 a re in the electrical dept.) WATERLOO SPACE SAVER WORK CENTER 4497 #90011 Built pretty tough. with heavy w rapar ound 1teel conatrucllon. revera1ble hardwood w ork aurface. You a u emble. 27''L x 2t ' •"D .x Jt"H. BLACK & DECKER 8" .. ~ TABLE SAW ~~~ 8888 #9419 1 HP 1aw ha• ad1u1table rtp lence and mitre gauge. Buy now a nd 9et a rREE Drall B1t Sharpener, #7980 or H obby T ool. #9421. by mail from B&D. A ALLTRADE TWO TON ;i.i ...... ,. FLOOR JACK ~~y (l~~ '2988 #661 J 2 u .. d to •ay "rolling" and hydraulic" but we k-p eb ortening It. Pretty eoon h• 'II Juel 9 0 by "Jack ... COLEMIM INFLATE-ALL I 8!2!0641 Eaay way to g•l lh• air Into tint• a nd recrea tiona l etull. Portable comprHeor w orlce o ff 12 v o lt car llghler. ALLTRADE ROLL-AWAY TOOL CABllfET WITH THREE DRA WEB CHEST The cabinet's got an adjustable shelf and peg hook door with ita very own peg hooks. (Peg Hooks ... she sat behind me in first grade. She was so bad ehe even flunked recess.) Y INSOMNIA IS GETTING WORSE, DOC, I CAN'T EVEN SLEEP ON THE JOB. HIRSH lDJUSTA-TOP HOBBY CENTER 2 6 97 #TL-HCl I UH min• for a rtwork. Top adju111 frOl'Jl h orl&ontal lo almoel vertical. haa etorage •hell forgoodiee. K.D. BLACK & DECKER 3/1" VARIABLE SPEED REVERSING DRILL 1997 #71 27 Here·• the drill: II give a you th• a peed ol a 1 ... drill w ith the power ol a :Ve" dr i ll. with a range of 0-2500RPM. MURRAY BICYCLES BIKES SOLD UIASSEMBLED MEll'S 26" MOllTEREY CRUISER ~""111-7 9 97 #S022 Beach bake ha• g l o H black frame. black aaddle and loam gripe. and gold linl eh rim•. aproclret and lork. MEll'S OR LADIES' 26" lllSSIU 3-SPEED TOURlllG BIKE YOUI CllOICt 8997116440 OR #6S41 Nice bilrH lor touring the town . with g old llnl•h lug Ira me. thumb •hitter. chrome touring handlebar and c hro me lendere. MEll'S 27" OR LADIES' 24" ~080£1111 ID SPEED RACER / YOUI CmcE ~ 999~6272 ft' OR #6771 VISE GRIP HOME & AUTO TOOL SET 9 97 #219A You get the long noae 9" locktng plier w ith w i re cutter and 10" 1tra1ght jaw locking plier. Two g ood 'uni. ROYAL HAND TOOL ASSORTMENT .~ ~." -, .. ' f"'[ --, ' -~' /~~-\ 97~ Buncha bargain whatzis like 6 ft. tape meas ure, 16 oz. hammer. utility knife. 3" C clamp a.nd more. MASTER GRIP 14 PC. SAE WRENCH SET 9 97 .-11s.1• )'he beat way to ke•p from atrlpplng nut• and bolt• la lo have lhe right elH eocket. SI.He from Y1"to I V,". 3977 EA. Th••• ch•op ehoep are the real thing. In Champagne or C harcoal colon lor Standard High lo~ll or Standard Sq\lo,. lock. .. High blood pressure the silent killer By GINNY OLSON DA VIES ~ .... Coi, 0 t 1 "The moet disturbing factor about high blood pressure la the lack of symp~." Dr. Robert A. Stein, told a health aeminar sponsored by the Orange Coast Heart Institute at Hoag Memorial Hospital recently. a Thia is "why it is labeled 'the silent killer'," he said. Dr. Stein, a Newport Beach specialist in internal medJdne and nephrology, said 30 million Amercans -or one in every six adults-are afflicted with high blood pressure. It is cruci.al to identify and begin treatment immediately, he said, "to avoid increased risk of strokes, heart attacks and lUdney damage," he said. At the present time there is no known cause and no known cure. The disease is mainly hereditary. "Hypertension IS high blood pressure and h yper- tension h.aa nothing to do with being hyper or tense," Dr. Stein said. He said patience and sympathy are important in dealing with the high blood pressure patient. "ffigh blood pressure is controllable, not curable. Treatment i.s lifelong and it often requires systematic and tedious trial and error with many medkations because most have side effects. The hardest thing to do is to convince aomeone to take medicine with side effects forad.iaeasethatdoesn'tmakehim feel sick, butcould cause a catastrophe in the distant future." Since high blood pressure can often be the first sign of lUdney diaea8e, Dr. Stein believes any thorough diagnosis should include blood tests, urinalysis, levels of certain hormones in the wine, an l.V., Pyelorgram, EK.G. and chest x-ray. Patients often stop treatment, he said, "because they feel fine, which can lead to strokes, heart attacks and decreaaed life expectancy." He believes almost every case of high blood pressure can be controlled by medication and thus prevent complications caused by the gradual damage of many years of high blood pressure. Smoking, obesity, salt, high cholesterol, stress and anxiety do not cause high blood p~ure. but they are significant risk factors and should be kept under control, he advised. Some people with high blood pressure will show symptoms of headache, weakness, tiredness, dizzi- ness, blurred vision, noee bleeds or palpitations. He noted that~ of thoee with high blood pressure feel fine and for th.is reaaon he stressed the importance of having regular blood pressure checkups. • SO COAST Pl Al A • u1.,._.. .. -ISi 4114 "'l.GI ....... , 1> .. • ""' TOMI CtHfcR ·n:a11 lOOU" ire> ~ 5,._~'° 10 ,., .. ., llof\ ru 11~ •UI llUllO" (II " -.,OCM tOCr CNl -'" / l\ '10 1Sl·4114 -'" 610 1000 _, 111 lW' (l\ -"'"" 100 ! I\ • HUNTINGTON BEACH • llollt!S4tooo 111oy ...... _d "llMWID"(llG) ... I-100 9 1\ -..nusr <t> ..,.,,,HO -10-Wfl~C~(N~T=cR-,o---,-l-l.IOl_OOt_IY- 10 ,.,....., "Wl1mlCJ M 11111" ,,_ °"'' 171) lOO 7Sl·4114 H.O,l lS Ill\(") TOMI CENTER JS .. ' IUCA Inf! so ,.,...... ....,. • Ill IJlf 14-O..,.,l1S 400 7Sl-4114 100 tlS l"l SOUTH COAST ,_ ~ .,"" -°'""' si .... -••nuar S46·2711 -I• "\ I lO 10 I\ SOUTH com --S46·2111 SOUTH com h loll -S46-2711 ·~=~~;; llol\ ''' 610 l lS 10~ • COSTA MESA • "'HWl • • ca> mwMOS ... fn 100 10 » -l OolOt StttfO -"t1Mwtt"(1) o.. ,,,_,. , .,.s.&6.......,·l.,,.IO,...Z =-"'-· _"_'_00_•_1s_1o_JO .,._ ~--; HAA80A TWIN "' ltlS 111 --I-"~ 1010 .w;,..;;.,;.~=-------ll&llCleo<• CJ) &ll·lSOI -I• llO CKMA CTR -· -979 4141 CllMA CTR _, .,_ ·a..111Jr an -I~ ,00 ~ClUlr'(I) -·-/JO 1100 11( _.,. 1110 ..... (II) "'°" I• 4 ~ a IO 10 70 979-4141 TWO.=-;; .._CKMA--.----C-Tll _____ _ -f11 6tOllO IOIS _, =~';, ;;t.4141 -I~ 610 l lS 1010 '*~~ -;;;:;;;:o;;;;:;;~-----::::0--~_ ~ "' ...... e..cro.1 ... .. _ "'U9r(N) Sot0-7444 .... '" '00 MISTOt "'WAMJJI'" Gil -""' .... ..,.. O'I) ....... ~ IUf" ... fn 600 I IS 10 JO ...,,S-0-·1444------- lllSfOI. --Sol0-7444 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursde June 9, 1983 FOREMOST SERYER-MICROWIYE CART 29~! You get to put together thl• Waverly Walnut fh:ilsh cart. If lt come1 out looking like a '52 Studebaker. you've bought the wrong kit, Fred. 418 PLYWOOD Ye"la 647 l.D. llTERIOR v." 7•7 Yi" I 2 97 Y1" 9•7 Y4" I 5 97 I . , ID STUTS fBURS ., ID GOOD TBRU, JU1E 15 4 out of 5 dentist• aurveyed recommended plywood for their patient'• teeth. The fifth waa away at a convention In Laa Vegas. ------------------------.... ------------------------e;~ -t il: .............. a.. ....... ... .., web .acet1, man DD CIEIP CD:ltl oa s.t.rMy, Jui Ilda CIRSOI 9:30to12 TORRDCE 2 to4:30 ,. 4 . . ) ~ ACTION SPRllf G BACK CHAIR Our hero Super Cheep strike• again at t.he evil forces of inflation that have threatened to take the chair out from under you. Assorted colors. BEHR PLUS 10 8 97 cAL. GoodlatexoU •talo that won 't pe91 or bllater. lo 110ld or Hml hanaparent color1. UH on wood. 1h.icco or mo1onry. ~~·. 0 CJll.(115897#HP-1030 "'=> Hecny duty •uclrers for wet or dry 1tuff. Ball bearing motor, 1lde lntake. wa.babl• filter. caater 8J•l•m cmd acceuorl••· PUROLATOR PRODUCTS ICOST PCY YILYES I 22 EA. ..J..J:J llOST IJIEllCU I "" w m aa. m.ms EA. DY JIB FD.TEBS 2 22 EA. " HIBISCUS 5 97 sGALLON Tb11 l1 Safe Boating w-1r. llO moire 1ur• ..._~-you don't 1llp on your battlHhlp• when playing lo th• tub. ARMOR ALL PROTECT AJIT )('U, H I ;,ac 'lUc: ..... __ .. _ .. ___ .. 1T ELLWOOD 6 n. ' PICllC f DLE SET, "''-'. '.cim• .,.i;. \911 11'11< • i.ie . ~,,, 3777 ·· ·eih GlTH a quick bond to china. ~ramie, gla11 and other DOD·porou1 materlal1 Ollr• you - 80 be careful). ~ MISTOI. -........ S.0.7444 ._..,.(Pl), ..., r11 uo ao. 1oso you'reatlt. Three p ... tty ch90p war• to k .. p tlM "alh rolllng i ....... •- 1 ·~-cmd-•l•m•J)fO"--t•:b•••pe•donncme9•·---•cmd-•mU-ea_ge_w•hil-•.. ..' • MISSION Vlf JO • 4 DZ. 87t 147 31• 4'' '1l'tCl9 r ., .... I\ &• 1 ll ltl'O Vl(JO""' so,.,,, .. 'ul°""'"'• ..... VIJO""' u ,., ,, " ,.,_, IJHttO =~ ... 111 100 t l~ WJOllALL .__. u '"" ,, Ill ... IPll "-'*' °"" 11 IS JOI m-tzzo H1 '" ilJO MAl.l .... u ,., ,, Ill.,. ft) c-••• '*' l l~ 4!HUL •-oe.1-.t~ VIJO MA[l :"Ji= .. ,_,,. . .. -,.., .... "' .,. , ... 4ilf - _____ .. __ ..,.. __ ,._· ~.IS t 2 lt,. .. llttll tlO lt•- '1UI~ -"' , .. ,. -~·-~----~~~ DTM COW Cllll.., :.tis1'l ..... .. _.Gil .. 1\ ...... ltl' ~-I .. ," ., . ...... GI) ... " 100 , ... SB£LL FIRE • ICE IOW/41 WT. ILL SEISOI N MOTOR OD. f-9 79cQT. I I OZ. II OZ. Wnl IPllTEB 3Z oz. DllBLO SECUBITY SWlttl , •. ., R.plocee f0\16 woU Hrl~ to hiN ligtau OD and oil •P tott._.. a daJ. Baa__,, IGTflagdlm 1"91, too. (ThlallDe la.,.,. becnae~bo.e .............. ,) -·· -, • I t ' f I· Bl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 --------------------------------------------. EV1!HIHG -1;00- Cl D HEWS HAPPY DAYS AGAIN BJ /LOBO HAWAHAVE-0 OVER~Y STUOIO Stf CBS NEWS AllCNEWSQ NSCHEWS MCHALE'S NAVY MOVIE •• An Orphans Tale !Part 3J ~8 ti Petulla Ctark Fabrice Josso MOVIE • If You CoulO See Whal 1 Hear I -7:00- f) C8S HEWS 8N8CNEWS HAPPY DAYS AGAIH DA8CNEWSO 0 POLICE WOMAN CJ) NEWS Cl) JOKER'S WILD flj) BUSINESS REPOfrr o:D MOTORWE.EK P M. MAGAZINE ®l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT ~MARY HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN m OAAHGE COUNTY TOOAY l0 JMOVIE • * • Enchantment" (1949) David Niven. Teresa Wrrgbl lZJMOVIE • • • • ·coming Home" (1978) Jane Fonda. Jon VOtghl -7:30- 1) 2 ON THE TOWN a a FAMIL y FEUO 0 LAVERNE& SHIRLEY & COMPANY D EYE OHL.A m Wl<RP IN CINCIHNA Tl Q) TIC TAC DOUGH Sergeant Esterhaus (Michael Con- rad) and Grace Gardner (Barbara Babcock) embrace at the Hill Street station, in "No Body's l'erfect' on tonight's episode of '"Hill Street Blues," at I 0:00 on KNBC (4). 1982) Marc S1n9e1 R H Thomson -6:30- .., LAVERNE I SHIRLEY & :::OUPAHY fD DICK CA YETT IR) ~OVEREASY J)HEWS !J BARNEY MILLER l! LOOK ALIVE I!:) GOMER PYLE 0MOVIE • • 1 Sparr~,. 119;91 Ranch Het man Don G0toon flj) MACNEIL I LEHREA REPORT o:D COMPUTER PROGRAMME (I) LIE DETECTOR ll]) YOU ASKED FOR IT Et) DRAGNET C AA SHOWCASE S PERFECTLY FRANK -8-00- 1) MAGNUM.P.I O Q!FAME O MOVIE • * Journey To Shtloh' ( t9681 James Caan Michael Sarrazon D @J CONOO 0 MOVIE * * • Soectre 11977t GIQ Youno. (' ........ -·---· .......... _ ---NOW PLAYING--- lllU fQnfl 81 t.f ~ ...... U9 UJ• •CDtlAMlU (f.¥cb 8'·511)1 flO I CU •COITAMIU W•Jrd" C."-e"'.a S.6 )•01 #1 u fOtlO lA llAlllA WllTMIHTDI fdWMll\ s.aci .. 11¥... •MC r • .,,,,.,,, SQu••• ld ..... ds enem, WHI ~Bl \!MIO 69• 0633 891 3935 • tlllllllllCI ro• IUCM • OMllCI( WHTMIUTDI IO•••O """""QI"" ~. Pac!llC's "' W•v 39 C "'""' e•~ OJU 631 1\!>J Dr•vt 111 891 JH J lllYUM OtlAllQ( f '3•¥tt Wl)l;,ootdQt S•~l>·vt ln .,...CD"',....".,.;;.'0._,••=-~ , ""'"'• •,\1 06\\ ~)q ~710 ,__.....,, W1•• ... ,Af(t•'f 9t,,_r-...t"'°"'!IU'W!llit] HIGH RoAo "HARLEQUIN" (PG> 1b CHINA T-...f'rt. •-*I. 10:M (ll'O) • a.t.-1-. 2:29, •:JO. 10-..M • '1E T " ... • • (TIM utrattrrnlrlal)" r-..fll tJO (PC) ! s.t.J.. U; IS. 4:1$. l:JO Tue • ..f'rt. t:.41, 10:11 latJ-1:11, t:.41, 10:11 "EVIL DEA.D" ,,., fllloft • ..flrt. 1:40 ••t.. -b41, 1110, l:olO e dword!t WESTBROOK CINEMA :::~::·~;:::." o,001tnu1•• 530-440 1 STEVE MARTIN IS A WORU> FAMOUS SURGEON. HE INVtNTED SCREW TOP. ZIP LOCI< BftAIN SURGERY. TRUST HtM Robert °""' i£MAGAZH t t "Ghosts That Sii W'*" 119111) Ann Nelsotl. Mall Botton 1:~coum H "The Lldy Slyt NO" ( 1952) David NIYwl, JOln Caulfield (C)MOVIE t t "Rlw Deal" ( t978) Gtrwd Ken- ;~ M1tcurio t t •.; "RaooedY Man" (1981) Stay &~IC-Robert•. •'Ir "Aohtlng Blclc" (1982) Tom Skerrttt, flalti lupone (%)MOVIE • t t • "Das Bool" (1981) Jueigen Procllnow. Arthur Gruenemeytt. -8:30- 1 ®l THE NEW 000 COOPlE CHARli'S ANGELS UEOETECTOR INSIDE STORY SHEAK PAEYIEWS -t.00- 1) I SIMOH & 8NON 8 G#ltME A HAI< TOO CLOSE FOR COWORT ·~ '1i) MASTERPIECE THEATRE (Q)MOVIE • • "The Unseen" ( 1981) Bltblr1 Bach. Sodney Lassick (S)MOVIE * t * •, WOiien" ( 198 I) Albert F1t1· ney. Diane Venor a -t:30-B R~rwo mwws·H '1' M VIAGINIAH -10:00- B (J) TUCKER'S WYTai a HILLSTREET sue aemeNEWS 1 @)20/20 WILi.JAM STYRON: A PORTRAIT ~~ •• "Buddy. Buddy" (1981) Jecil Lemmon. Walter Matthau <HJ RED SK.El TC*'S FVNNY FACES '" 0MOVIE • • '~ "The Patsy" ( 1964) J«ry Lew· is. tna Balin. -10:30- tl) IHOEP9l>EHT ~ NEWS CO) LOVWG FRl9ClS AHO PERFECT COUPlES (%)MOVIE t * *'h "The Front" (1976) Woody Allen. Zero Mostel -11:00-eaeCl>OQINEWS I SA T\JADAY NGHT IN SfAACH OF~· THE JEFFEASOHS BEHNYHIU. 9 8USIHESS REPORT Ii) P8S LATBIOKT m100cwe (f{)MOVIE "The Terry Fox Story" (1983) Robert Duvall, Eric F~ (D)MOVIE "V -The Hot One" ( 1978) Anrieltt (C)MOVIE * * "Conftuiont Of A Pop Ptr· lo<rn6r" (11175) Robin Askwith, Anthony Booth. -12:00-1 ::::: AIHMENT TOHIGHT H "lmpultlon" ( 1972) Alejandro Rey, Katherine Justice. e LCM. AMEflOAN STYlE (J) SEX 8UAAOOA TE.8: INT1MA TE PROFU8 DMOVIE • • t • "Lenny" ( t974) Oualtn Hott-man, Valef le Petrlne. -12:16-(D)MOVIE t *'' "Flying L .. lhemec:b" (1951) John Wayne. Robert Ryln. -1230-M ~ NOHTwrTH OtAW> ·~C*OHE ~~ AMEAICAH STYLE • t 'it "The EIM;atron Ot Sonny C&1· son' (1974) Rony Clanton, Don Gor- don -12:40-a Cl> MCClOUD (R) -12:45- CIDMOVIE ~ u "Oh God!" 0977) Geo<ge Burni. John Denver -1;00- DMOVIE ••'Ir "A Covenant Wllh Death" 11987) George Maharls. Laura Devon 8MOVIE * * * "Buck And The Preachef" (1972) Sidney Poitier. Harry Bellton1e .MOVIE ••'Ir "I'm The Gitt He Wan1s To Kiit" (1974) Jullt Sommers. TonySel-i :::JJ:AIHMENT TOHIGHT * * "Honot Quaid" (No Date) Rod Steiger. David Hut1men -1:2S- (C)MOVIE •• "Oh Helvtnly Dog" (1980) Ct+ vy Chue, Beojl -1:30- 1 QI H8C NEWS OYBNGHT TOM COm.E: UP CLOSE -2:00-1 =NEWS NIBHTWATCH t ••.; "Raggedy Man" (1981) Sissy r~rlc Robefts • t 'it "Blue Collar" 11978) Richard Pryor. Harvey Kllllel. s .. complete Hating In TV Log CHANNEL LISTINGS I) ~NXl 1CBS1 LU'> AnQ<''t"' 0 KNBC 1NBC1 Loe. Anqelt''> Q KTLA 1ln<l t LOS Anqo•lt!5 D AABC TV tABC1 Los Anqeres ([; '4.FMB tCBS) Sdn 01eqo 0 KHJ TV tlnd I LO!> An 1Pl1><, ®' KCSl tABCt San D•,.Qo ID KTI\l 1lnd 1 Los AnQt>'L' Cl> KCOP TV t lnll 1 tu'> Anq1>1.-s fl) KCET TV 1PB5t LO'> An l"""• o:D KOCE TV 1 PBSt Hunl•n41on B(>acn IT'S 22 YEARS LATER. AND NORMAN BATES IS COMING HOME. ~ ......... _ REfURNOF 1HE JEDI • 70 MM 8 Tr8Ck Dolby Stereo • IS MM Dolby 8tereo .•alOf'Mna •1....,. ,.. . ' f tt '' ' 1 I ' I • I l flt ·•. -" , ~~ ' ---.,. . -, j c • Ted Turner joins overnight mail couriers I' Bv FRED ROTHENBERG W"r ............ NEW YORK (AP) -Theae may not 80Und lik.e worm, but they are. '"!be next belt thlna to it there younelf," •YI Ted Turner, wn corporate pitchmen for DHL, the newest entry in the overnight delivery market. DHL'a oommerdala, and ada for eeven other major overnight oourien, have become TV staples - an air war over the airwaves, eo to 1peek. ''They're fiahtina it out on TV,'' aaya Roser Rice, praident of the Telev111.on Bureau of Advertiaing, who notes that spending on televt.ion by the ovemtght aervk:es wu up nearly 300 percent in 1982 C1Ver the previoua year. f>rojectiona for 1983 are for inc:reued spending, and that's by an industry that didn't spend a nickel on televilon advertiling aeven ye.in ago. Of oourae, that • wu before Federal Expreea decided that TV was the best way to say, "U it abeolutely, positively has to get there overnight." Now, prime time's car chues and equealing tires are commercially interrupted by even more moving machinery -either I08ring planes or speeding vans carrying small pack.age. anywhere and everywhere overnight. Or else. "It's on time, or It's on us," aaya F1ying Tiger. ''We're ahoof:ina for 100 percent on-time de- livery," says Airborne. The poet office's Expreea Mail Service doesn't boast speed, but pl'OllliM!9 you will "look good for 1e91." And let' a not forget Emery, which calla itaelf "The Air Foroe In Air Freight," or the talking pack.agea of United Air Expre91. or the restlesa vans and planes from Purolator Courier. But, in both volwne of buainesa and TV viaibility, the leader still is Federal Exprem. with its humorous plugs, including ones featuring the guy with the fastest guma in the west. Federal la the yardatick for DHL, a courier ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• NOW SHOWING IN YOUR GALAXY ~ ............ _______________ ___ REIURN~~DI . ~g~~Nc~I~~KETSTICKET MASTER OUTLETS ~u<;~~~L~~ LUXURY THEATRES 111 Twelbti1ttS...iusONl.YS2.llU.ltssOtlltnrilelltM S 113reJ44•111fl6J~'25sJ/~;:,) S * FOR FUlll EX(rTEmEnTI V111tOur... -tf -~(!] rlut 41 Hour, R rtu1 areattltett(RI * OrlH·lllt Open 7 :41 Wk11ltlttt/1:JO Wke11111 * Cllildro u..cter 12 Fret Unless Nete.t DAN AYIROYD EDDIE MURPHY Tllly'rt .. jat llttlltl ricll ... Tllly'r1 ldtlltl mm. .ervioe that cla1n» more international lhipmenta than any other oompeny but la just now breakJna into the U.S. market with a repor1ed $10 m1lllon adverdsing campa.tan. "A. t.r u we're concerned there'• Federal. and then all the others," M)'I Malrobn McConnell, a eenlor vice pn.ident for the Ted Bats advertising agency, which la handling DHL'a conaumer bom- bardment. "We want to beoome the Josica1 alterna- tive to Federal." Al.ter research tesdna. Bates found that over- night oow1er c:ustomen were most concerned with speed and reliability. That puta the polt office, with ita bureaucratic w.,e, at a disadvantage, aaya McConnell. DHL'a alopn -'"Ille next best thing to taking it there younelf" -conveys that DHL will "treat the package the way you would," uya McC.onnell. Bates also wanted to di.ltinguiah Dill. from the a-owd of courier services. The ad agency dl09e executive huckatera. DHL'a commerciala feature Turner, the cable-TV magnate; rat.ingl king AC. Nielsen; attorney Louis Ni.zer; Horchow collection head Roger Horchow, and Women's Wear Daily publlaher John Fairchild. In all the. ada, the executives peraonally hand packages to couriers. ''Our reeearch indicated that theee were credible business heroes who were very aucceasful en- trepreneurs in fielda dependent on quick delivery of documents," says McConnell. '"Ibe companies all bear their names, which waa important for identifi- cation. We could have gotten ecton, aporta figures or astronauts, but we're aelling to busfnemnen. "These men were role model.I for the people we're trying to reach. They all U9e DHL. and credit DHL with IOme measure of their M'ICCe9 '' Bates determined that the potential DHL uaen would be watching news, public affain and aporta programs, and 8Cheduled the ada accordingly. * BARQ~lll MATINEES* Mond1y t11ru S1turd1y All Pefformanc:H MfOfe S:OO PM (Es~ SflJIQll hp11.., w .._.,., "BREATHLESS" 1•1 ,~ ............. .. "THI MAN WITH TWO 9flAJNI" 1•1 , ....... , ... ,,. "FLASHDANCE" ,., ,,., ......... , ....... ''ftET\IRN CW THE aDf" ~"=='~ tNl LAKEWOOD CENTER WAllC IH focul.,, at Co,,.,l••OOO 213/531·9510 "THE MAH WITH TWO 8AAINI" 1•1 , .... , ......... _. LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WALi ... focul!V Al Del M>O 21J/6M·t211 "WARGAMES" 1 .. 1 , ............... ,,. "FLASHDANCE" "" ,, ........... ..... ... - ---MTOOTSIE" '"' .,. ........... . "WARGAMES" ,.., w ......... .. -PACl_,..ll ADVl~l•n.. f'~Z0."1M1 ... ...a:-. .............. 'AC!ft( fHIAf llU Oll•l·lll IWU •UIS SllllC• -lij(U -l l'l•f lltf I•• U AHA"EIM DlllY(.111, HAlllOll IUD Olll•l·lll I OllAllG( DIUY(·IN 1 •• ti>"' &Arv: .. .,•'"""" , .... , ......... ...,, • ., ........ tt-..U• A"4A••I ..,,, ANAHEIM OQ1vt •H ,.._,1 .. ~ .. 119-fflO "PACI _,.II AOVISfTUllll 1 "CM[UltOUO(T IMOWQa.8• .. n. f'OMIDOI" ZOM-_, L -MIOCMINl Y A WOllAW' ..., -L -..0. TO lllMI l OVI TO A ..,....Ill Of' ,.,. -... ___ L_Ol_T_AM" !Ml ~,, _ Iii:• I ... A I Ai.rt. BUENA PARK 0111111 ,,. " 't4 .. ' ..... LINCOLN OlllV( IN LtnCOlf\ A"e W•tl Of SnGfl 121·•070 1 lrN'A N FOUNTAIN VALLEY OQIV~ IN lo"-.., lrwy ot ... °" ..... '(lo I t62·2411 "fUSttOMter· 1111 -....... ·1•1 CW"- .... ' IA ttARRA ,. o1 .. "CHAIHEO HIAT""" -"VICE aOUAD" "'' "PSYCHO II" 1•1 -'18AO BOYi" "'' "BLUE THUNOE"" ,.., -"VIOILANTI"..., '"TM9 -..ml TWO..._.. -..,,. W0M..D AC"'CNC.,.M""- I w I ' ,.... _. __ •--T0~4111 l 17HMl • J I I I t Bill Workman Daily Pilat THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1983 BUSINESS STOCKS COMICS C4 C5 C6 Cl ASSlfllD ca Some things just don't change E d ison, Fountain Valley alums playing f or keeps "One of the things we'll have to overcome might be that there is more frost.ration on their side to give them added incentive. We're having a reunion party, they might be having a revenge party ... -IEclMin CM dl 88 W-rnan "That's a nice way to approach 1t, about par for the course. But 1 guess he's on that side and enti- tled to it. .. -Feunt81ft V ... y CN Cll Mille --By ROGER CARLSON Of -0.., Not ..... Clearly, the battle lines have been drawn for the first alumni collision between Edison High's Chargers and the Fountain Val- ley Barons. The two football juggernauts will put their pasts on display Friday night at Wesuninster High (7:30) and all indjcators reflect a matchup that will be as intense as any of the past games where the results were for the record book. Edison leads the 14-year series, 11 -2-1. and although this one won't count for ttie record, it's pretty evident feelings will be riding h.igh . Here's aome conunents from the two principals in Friday's spring showdown, an event whlch could very well be a standing room only situation: Workman -"We're going to drink bottles of Geritol, rub some horse linament all over and try to survive out there. We're just little surfers who never go hunting for any horse meat out there ." Milner -"ls the Ocean Pacific Masters meet going on? All of these surfers in town, or what? Are we surfing or playing foot- ball? I hope he has plenty of wax." Workman -"To be honest I don't know who are starting quarterback will be. I haven't started thinking about that That's our secret weapon (quar- terback depth)." Milner -"You can only play one at a lime. Our starter is Gil Compton ." Workman -"Our tailback? Whoever it is will be probably be out of there on the next play Maybe we'll go to our oldest (See EDISON, Pa«ie C3) -Mike Milner Adams a hit after lesson from Carew By JOHN SEV ANO Of"hO.-,-•wt It began during the rruddle of last month in Seattle. Rick Adams, dissatisfied with the way he was hitting at the plate, de- cided he needed help. So the utility infielder sought out Rod Carew (who else?) for a few pointers. Carew, alter watching his young protege take a few swings. however, determined what Adams needed more than help was a complete overhaul. For what seemed like endless hours and days, Adams worked with Carew on a whole new bat- ting style--pne very similar, as you might expect, to Carew's. Major-league .h o und? 0.-,_ .... _ Three weeks, countless cuts in the batting cage, and a few base hits later, it appears as if that work is starting to pay off. Edison High baseball standouts Todd Mabe (second from right) and Ric k Abbott (also seated ) with Kansas City scout Guy Hansen (left) and Charger Coach Ron LaRuffa after signing professional contracts pose For it was Adams who was the Angels' catalyst Wednesday night as his home run in the second inning-the first of his major league career-coupled with ms two RBI. bases-loaded single 111 Orange Coast polo: It's hack in the water 8yCURT SEEDEN ofiM Dell)'-ew For a couple of months. Orange Coast College had plenty of players. a fme aquatics facility and a rich water polo tradition . The only thing missing was a bona fide team -until now. In February, you might recall, the college announced the elimination of five sports in order to reduce the school's athletic budget. Among the casualties was water polo. But thlS week. OCC Athletic Director Dick Tucker announced. that water polo has been rel.J'\Stated and the Pirates wtll be back in the water next season. "Actually, there are three reasons why we are puttmg water polo back in our program," explained Tucker. "First, and foremost, lS the fact that it's an inexpen- sive sport to offer. We already have a pool on campus and, whether we offer the sport or not, we still have to maintain that pool. ''The two remaining reasons are tra- dition and history. This , is a water-oriented community, and Orange Coast College has always had one of the finest water polo programs in the state," Tucker added. The news was welcomed by OCC water polo coach Jack Fullerton, who for several months was ex-OCC water polo Jack Fullerton. "l had gone through enough channels to believe we w ouldn't have it (water polo) back this year," Fullerton admitted. Biggest problem confronting Fullerton now is: Finding players who haven't commjtted to another 8Chool upon hearing the earlier news that water polo was e li mirul ted. "The coaches and athletic di.rectors we've gotten in touch with have been super-cooperative in regards to getting in touchd with the young people (and spreading the news),'' Fullerton said. "There won't be any excuaes. thouRh. We're going to be out there and we're going to be tough. I'm very optimistic that we're going to have a fine program," F\Ulerton added. Since water polo was established as a sport at Coast in 1953. the Pirates have accumulated a 470-219 record for a .682 winning percentage. In addition, Orange Coast has won 10 conference cham- pionships and two state crowns. OCC is a member of what is considered one of the toughest water polo con- ferences in the state. Among the other members is district rival Golden West, whlch has won the state championshjp 111 sjx of the past seven years. tht! fifth. propelled the ~els to a much-needed 7-4 victory over the Cltlcago White Sox before 28,754 at Anaheim Stadium. The win was crucial to the Angels for a numbers of reasons, not the least of whlch were: a) it snapped a three-game losing streak; b) it moved the Angels' lead in the AL West back to 3 'h games over Oak.land; c) Starter Ken Forsch (5-3). rn going the dlStance, provided the pooped out Angels relief corps with a much-needed night off; d) Adams was able to finally alleviate some self-inflicted pressure, while giv- ing himself a confidence boost as well. "Now maybe it's time to try to do what I feel I can do," offered Adams, who started at shortstop Wednesday rught for the injured Tim Foll. "I know for sure I was pressing before. But when you have a few nights where you don't get any hns you can't help but try a little harder." At the beginning of the season, Adams was struggling through more than a couple of hrness nights. In fact. he started out O-for-21 , a figure that quickly reached 2-for-26 (an .076 aver- age) before Carew entered the picture. "He was trymg to ml..l.9cle everything," analyted Carew-the teacher-of the old Rick Adams. "He had no hands at all, he was all body, and he was pulling off the ball. His total ap- proach was wrong. ''All I did was give him an idea of how to think at the plate." Adams' mental approach. how- ever, was just the first step. Once oompleted, Carew, the major league's top hitter (at .421). started on the 24-year-old 's (See ADAMS, Pac~ C3) F ern and o, LA p l ay long b all Family fend on tap Friday ATLANTA (AP) -It won't go down as one of Fernando Valenzuela's sharpest pitching ef- forts, but no one will argue with hil hitting and fielding per- formance. Valenzuela drove in three runs With a homer, single and long tJMes..loaded sacrifice fly aa the Los Angeles Dodgen unleashed a lS·hit attack that included four home runs in an 11-5 victory over the Atlanta Braves Wednesday. The Dodgen and Braves will go at it again today with a 4:40 •tart on thinnet 11. "He knows what he's supposed to do with the glove and on the ~d, and you saw ,-hat he can do with the bat," Los Angeles M.llnager Tommy Lasorda said. "lt w as not one of hill real good games, but he pitched good enough to win." Valenzuela, 7-2, twice u8ed his dove to put out Bob Homer - ltra when he coven!d the plate (or the tag durinl a Braves' threat lD the fifth and again in the ninth when he~ Homer'• liner far the final out of the game. ~e eighth-Inning aolo homer w h1I fint of the year and the of hl.a~r. wun't aurpriled becauee body WM bittiJl& home , even their pitche r,'' NJd. --J'oday, J WU .-.urUUll W.Jl and D*le c:oni.ct." 90UthpeW WU lacpd for l hltl. lnc1udlnR 80lo , .. PEaNAN'DO, Paae Cl) .............. Pat ( 49) and K.C. Connell will both be going l or the ball Friday night when Pat'• Sailon a nd K.C. '• Sea King• bang heads together. Conn ells on opposite sides for Tars-CdM clash By ROGER CARLSON or...,.., ....... There comes a time in every brother's life when you simply cannot pua up an opportunity to stick it to the other -all above board, of coune. That's how it is for the Connell brothers, 33-year-old Pat, a for- mer pole vaulter and football star at Corona del Mar High and 2~-year-old K. C. Connell, a for- mer high jumper and football star at Newport Harbor High. The two will be meeting head-on Friday night when the two .choola hold their aecond an- nual alumni football game with kickoff acheduled for 7 o'clock. A year ago Newport Harbor rolled to a 21-0 victory, but neither waa preeent. Thia year K . C. will be i.n the Newport Harbor leC01'ldary when hla brother lines up at alotbeck or at the flanks aa a receiver for Corona del Mar. "Whenever Pat's i.n, we'll have K .C. i.n the aeoondary," promises Newport Harbor Player·Coach Bucko Shaw. A meuurlna atick for their re~ 1pective abilttlea are these previous endeevora: Pat wu a 13-9 vaulter for Cor- ona del Mar before the c.onnell famll.y moved Into the Newport Harbor d.Jltr1ct. lt held up u the achool record for eta.ht yean and II atW the No. 2 marlc ln See Kina ~· ,qwialh!ed In the hJah Jump. ~ • .:hool record e-eW,thenad~to8-lOW at Oranae c.c..t Cou.,i and flnally to 7-0 at USC where he was a member of the Trojans' 1978 NCAA championshlp squad. So, while the bones may be getting older, it's obvious each has been i.n good company. AB for Friday's collision, both say the game should be closer than the 21-0 blowout of a year ago, but on the other hand -K.C. gave his brother nine points - "And I took it," sayg Pat. "Actually," says K .C., whoee immediate boss at Connell Chev- rolet i.n Costa Mesa just happens to be hla brother, Pat, "my brother has agreed that I can keep my job providing we don't win by too much." Alumni games of this time are unique lnaamuch as there really is a lot of good will between the two rival teams -yet there is alao a common competitive challenge. "I hope he (K.C.) does well," says Pat, "and I hope I do weU: I'm 5-ll and he's 6-3. so he should be able to cover me all right. We've been talking a lot about this game. We don't talk about practices, but I know he (K.C.) ia really up for it." Over the years the Sea King.s have pretty well ta.ken a back .eat to Newport Harbor ln football -- the series record reflects 16 Sail- ors' victories, just four for the Sea Kinp. "Yes," admits Pat, "K .C . always brings that up. I don't know why Harbor always 9eefna to come up with better kida ... or whatever ... but they do come up wt th aome fine teams." Like a new car's feature - there is a guarantee in this one - each school'• football boosters' club figures to net a tidy profit. Montreal chooses UCI pair The UC Irvine ~ team hu had two more playen choeen i.n bueball'• free .sent draft, and once aaatn it WU the Mani.re.I Expoa doing the dra1ti.na. t.arUer, 6-S rtaht-hander Cu Soma WU IM!Jected on \he fourth round by MontrMJ. Soma WM the team te.der ln lnnl.no pt\Ched with 108~ and an Alf-Southern Callfomla BMebal.1 Amod.a\lon .i.cuon. The llxpoa ai.o ctw.e ca\Chw MJke Rupp and reU f f!tcher Gary BraN from th.la year'• Ant- eater aquad. Rupp Mnled fim team All-SCBA honon th1a )'NI' after leading the Anteaters In homers with aeven and RBI with 41. Rupp al8o compiled a .327 battlna averaao. Brahe wu the UCI ato~out of the bullpen, worldnc i.n abort relief lttua Hil earned run ·~ (2.l4) aod total appearanicm (19) led the temn. Bta.ha wM s.2 overall wtth nw Nvet. Ht 1\arted only cne Pme thia IHIOC\, ucra tlnal one ot lbe .. • ------------------------- C2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 BUlllTIN BOARD Swim stroke ellnle Beach SWim Qllt> It ottering • fr• awlm 11ro1<a cilnlc Saturday, from 10 a.m.·noon at the Newpor1 Harbo< High pool. Coach Gary Kimble wlll demonatrlta and give lndlvtdual Instruction In the lour atrok .. : butterfly, bacitstrol<e, breattatroke •nd lroe- atyle. More Information on the cllnlc la avallab!e by phoning 831-2292. · IJe•(!IJ volleyb•ll The lollowlng Is the remaining schedule tor the 1983 Pro Beach Volleyball Tour: June 11-12 -Florida Open. Surfside Hol- iday Inn, Clearwatef, Fla. June 18-19 -Laguna 8'8ch Open, Main Beach July 4 -Tournament of Champion•. East Beach, Santa Barbara July 16-17 -New York Open, LOflg Beach, Long Island. NY. July 23-24 -Hermosa Beach Open, Hermosa Beach Pier. July 30-31 -Colorado Open, South Bould9f Recreation Center. Boulder. Colo. Aug. 13-14 -Chicago Open, North Avenue Beach, Chicago. Aug. 20·21 -Santa Monica Open, Santa Monica Pier. Sept. 10· 11 -Newport Beach Open, New- pon Dunes Beach Park. Sept 16-18 -World Championship of Beach Volleyball, King Harbor, Redondo Beach Angels' Carew, Jac~"1ave All-star leads NEW YORK (AP) -Angel teammates Rod Carew and Reggie Jackson, George Brett of Kansas City and Robin Yount of Milwaukee-all starters for the American League last year -are leading at their positions in All-$ tar balloting announced today by Com.rrussioner Bowie Kuhn. Carew and Brett are both seek.mg to extend long All-Star strings and have wide leads at fU"St base Md third base. Yount, the league's most valuable player last year. and Jackson, a perennial All-Star, pace the votin&at shortstop and in the outfield. Carew, batung well over .400 and seek.mg a 14th consecutive selection, has 345.618 votes to 136,027 for Cecil Cooper of Milwaukee. Brett, the AL's starting third baseman for the last seven years. leads all players in the vote with 408,138 to 123.413 for Doug DeCinces of the Angels. Yount (361,474) leads at shortstop over U.L . Washington of K.a.ru;as City (139,237) and Jackson (203,667) tops all outfielders in the balloting. which is underwritten by Gillette. Frank White of Kansas City leads at second base wtth 189,856 to 124,996 for Jim Gantner of Milwaukee. Besides Jackson. the outfield leaders are Dave Wmfield of New York (200,506) and Willie Wilson of Kansas City (191 ,594). Milwaukee's Ted Simmons (185,195) is the top catcher with Detroit's Lance Parrish (141 ,413) running second. Early leaders m NL voting ~ounced ~artier this week are shortstop Ozzie Smlth and outfielders Willie McGee and George Hendrick of St. Louis, catcher Gary Carter of Montreal, first baseman Steve Garvey of San Diego, second baseman Steve Sax of Lo6 Angeles. tlu.rd baseman Mike Schmidt of Philadelphia and outfielder Dale Murphy of Atlanta. Helmet maker sued by Hart LOS ANGELES (AP) -A fonner Cal State-Long Beach football player, paralyzed during a game against UCLA a t the Rose Bowl last aeuon, has sµed the manufacturer of the helmet he wore in the game. The Supenor Court lawsuit was fUed Wednes- day on behalf of Todd Hart. a def~nsi~e.back who w~ 18 when he sustained a severe spinal lfl.JUCY last fall m UCLA's first game on its new home field at Pasadena's Rose Bowl. Hart's Cather, Orange County sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart, joined in the suit against the Sike Corp., the state of California and 20 unnamed individuals. Hart was injured because a defective football helmet proved "unreasonably dangerous for its tntended use," the suit contends. The suit cla.ima the state failed to provide proper insurance coverage for Hart's medical oosta, which have been very high. He was hospitallz.ed in critical condition for eeveral weeks following the injury and underwent a .eries of major operations before being allowed to return home early this year. The suit seeks unspecified damages. Benellt 11011 tourne:r JOhn ROblnaon, Dick BaN. Pal Haden, Al Downing and otMI •Port• peraonalltl•• will par11clp•t• In th• Hl83 JOhn H1t1 Qoodwtll Golf Cl1N lo Juno 20 11 lhe Altl Vitti Country Club, 777 Alt• Vitt•. In PllC*llla. Rog11tr1tl0fl wlll begin al 10:30 • m with a noon shotgun llltl acheduled All procoodl wlll go toward purchaalng 1ra1n1ng equipment w ithin the Goodwill lnduttrlea facility. The tournament II open to men and women For Information phone ~7-6301 Speedw•y elJ•mpleasldp The llret leg In the roed to the world cham- plonahlp of apeedway motOf'c:yde racing ~ t:c:_•turday at Veterans Stadium In Long The Nluan Amertean Speedway nnai la the nret In a eerlea or International qualifying racee Which wtll determine the final lleld fOf' the 1983 World SpeedVtay Champlonthlp, wttlch la slated for September In Norden, Weat Ger- many. The race Is Mt for 8 p.m. Ticket Information la avallable by phoning -492-11933. Haatln•~ s• .. tl•• s•ow The Western Hunting and Sporta ShoOtlng ShoW conllnuoe through Sunday at the Long Beaich Convention Center. Hours are 3-10 p.m. today and Friday, noon-10 p.m. Saturday and noon-8 p.m. Sun- day. Olaplaya Include, bowt, rtflea, ahotguna, ~eet and trap anootlng and four-Wheel drive ...,.,lclea. Hunting movtea.,. ahoWn d.ity and hunting aemlnara .,. alto on the llgenda. Admll8'on 11 $4.50 tor adult•, S2 for youth•. 15-and~nder and fr• to dlildf'WI under ahc. Brave fans shower . Lasorda with boos From AP dlapatclle. ATLANTA -Atlanta baseball Ii fans love to hate Los Angeles Manager Tom Laaorda, and after waiting more than two months, they have made the most of the opportunity when the Braves and Dodgers met for their first series of the aeuon. There were loud barrages of boos for Lasorda each ti.me he ~tepped out of the Dodgers' dugout during the finlt two games of the series which concludes here tonight. On each of Laaorda's trips from the bench thus far, he has been blasted with boos and taunts from the crowd. "Ididn'thear a thing," Laaordaaaid. "llove it. It's great. Tell 'em to keep doing it. "That just means they're leaving one of my players alone. Did you aee the attendance? That's the bottom line. It's great for baaebal.l." The two teams drew 38, 193 fans to Tueeday's opener and attracted 47,142 on Wednesday. Luorda became Public Enemy No. 1 in Atlanta during last year's National League playoff aeries between the Bravee and the St. Louis Cardina.la. While doing televbion commentary, Luorda told a national television audience that Bravei1' catcher ~ Benedict was ao slow, he ''would finish third in a race with a pregnant lady." Piniella thwarts Indian rally Pinch hitter LH Plnlella knocked a Dave Wlllfleld in with a one-out a:lngle in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the New York Yankees a 6-5 triumph over Cleveland Wednesday night in the American League. The Indians had rallied from a ~-3 deficit with a pal!' of runs in the top of the ninth .. Ehlewhere in the AL, WUUe AJ.keaa had three hita and drove in a pair of runs u K.anaaa Oty drubbed Minneeota 9-2, deei>'te having three regu1an sidelined with various allmenta ... Cal Ripka and Jou Lowea1te1D each clubbed two-run honlrn dur- ing Baltimore's five-run eighth tnnlng and the Orioles rallied to pin a 7-3 eetback on Milwaukee ... Lot W'1taker belted a homer, a triple and two doublee, ecored four runa ,..I.LA and drove in two more to power Detroit to a 6-3 victory in Boston ... Dan Stieb became the American 1..-,ue's tint nine--pme winner in pit.china Toronto to a 5.2 triumph ln o.k1and ... Leny Parrttlt r90ed homr on a wild pitch ln the .wnth tnniJ\I for the only run of the game and Mike SmJtlatoa outdueled Matt Youc u Tex.as edpd Seattle, 1..0. FERNANDO PLAYS LONG BALL • • • From Page C1 homel'1J by Rafael .Ramire2, rooloe pitcher Rick Behenna and Horner. Ramittzand Behenna h it their lint homen of the year on consecutive pltche9 ln the fourth when the Dodien were sitting on a 5-1 lead. "It didn't bother me because I waa just ~ to throw atrtkes with the lead, ' VaJenlUela ...id. ''I juat took a little off the {81lb&ll. "l waa plea.led bec:auae It'• a Vl!ry Important pme," he added. 1'The team needed \he victory to we could lave toWn ln lint place." The triumph bffore • crowd of 47,142 gave the Dodgen a l ~-game lead aver the Brtvea in the NL West and a spUt of the fint two pmea in tM lniti.tl tieriee betwem the two teanw wtth the best recorda in buebtll th.la year. ''nte Draws and Doda"n. to me, are the moat evenir e_alred teama in the ~·· Duaty Baker Mid. "But ll • much too euly to tell.how many tetma wm be tn the race." Balter delivered the pme-wlnnln& BBl when he belted a two-run homer of( BJck Camp, &-&. ln the flm lnnlnc· Rick Monday Md t tolo clout for the Dodpn ln the sixth and Pedro Guerrero collec\ed hia 13th homer of the year. "1 wu happy," Beker Mid. "That was my fint homer in a month to the day. 'nlat'• what'• bualna me. l'm'y yetAr 1 have that period of t1me I 10 without a home run.'' Beker, a former Bravuald he la. tlwar-confident when he re-- tunw to Atlanta to play. ·1 still feel Wal lt'a my home turf," be u1d. "l fll psyched up. 1 try harder. YOU MW!' want to look t*1 ln tron t of tnendl." ••~etlutll e••• The w .. 1 Coaat e.Metblll Youth Foun- dation Will hold It• 11th .,,nua1 eurnmer t>Mket· b&ll camp beginning Monday, Juty 11. The found.tlon. locai.d In HuntlnQ1on BMch, wt~.I ovtde baaket~ lnatruc11on from MWf'el h IChool coechee. lneludlnQ ~ Brown of ountaln Valley, Jim Han1a of ocean View and Gary McKnight of Mat ... Del. The camp 11 open to boyS In gr9dea 5-10 and glrlt In gradea 7-10. Entry r .. 11160. Youngatera will receive fr .. buketball ahoee, T·thlrt, league play and Individual compellllon, prizee and trQPhlM. The camp wlll run July 11-23. To ,.gltter and fOf' 9ddl~al Information. phone 848-3914. Footb•ll tourney TMnty-one teama have roglatered 10 par- ticipate In Iha June 18-19 Danny Jaremlllo eight-man flag football tournament at El Prado Regional Part< In Chino. fhe tournament la being held lor the benefit of the Danny Jaramillo Truat Fund All proceed• from the entry f ... wtll Ullst In c:owring the coeta of rehabilitation for Jaramlllo. a quadrlpleglc breathing with the aid of a reaplrator u the reeutt or a football llCCident at Ontario High. MM• team entrlea Wiii be accepted at the final tournament meeting IChedulod lor Mon- ~ at 8 p.m. at Foothlll Beverage, 2800 S. Reeervolr St .. Pomona. FM• more Information on the tournament, phone 881-M23. Perez sinks Sutter, St. Louis Toay Perez blasted a three-run • homer with two outs in the ninth Inning off St. Louia reliever Bruce S.tter to give Philadelphia a ~ victory over the Cardin.als Wedne&day night. It was Perez's fourth homer of the eeason . Et.ewhere ln the National League, PbU Garner's two-out ling)e to left in the 11th innina acored Omar Moreno from second base to help Houston edge San Franciaco, 1-0. A.stro starter Joe Nlekro 9C&ttered 10 hits in 10 innings before being relieved by rookie BUI Dawley, 4-1. who pitched the final Inning to get the victory ... Sixto Lezcano and rookie KevlD McReyaoldt homered to support starter Dave Dravecky, who became the National League's fint nine-game winner aa San Diego knocked off Cincinnati, 5-3 ... Bill GalUcklon pitched 8 ~ innings before needing relief help from Jeff Reardon and AJ Oliver drove in two runs to pace Montreal to a 5-4 triumph over Pittsburgh .. Ryu Sudbera'• ninth-inning homer tied the 900re and lteldi Morel.a.ad drove in the winning run momenta later aa the Chicago Cubs rallied for their aewnth straight victory, 2-1 over the New York Meta. The winning skein is the CUbs' longest since May, una . Quote of the day Job LaJly, trainer of the Waahington Bullets, on Elvin Hayes, longtime Bullet.a ttar now finishing his" NBA career with the Houston Rockets: "For aome players and ooeches, being around Elvin every day is like Ch1ne9e water torture. It'• just a drop at a time-nothing big. But in the end, ~drives you crazy.'' Albeck, Lynam fill NBA slots Stan All>eck, the San Antonio m expatriate, waa appointed to CCMICh the N~ Jeney Neta and Jim Lynam. the one--dme Poriland umtant. moved aver to the San Diego Clippen u the National BMket.b&ll A.modation'• wn1on of "musical benche9'' continued Wedneeday. Albeck's appointment tilled one vacancy, but al8o c:reeted another. Pa.ibWdea to fill h1a position with the MJdWelt Dtvilioo champion Spun were Bobby W~ an ..a.wit at San Diego, and 0eorae Karl, a former NBA ..m1ant. 1'tMt ClJppen, meanwhile. ended their two-month 8eU'Ch for a held buketbtll COllCh by w.lec:tfnC Lynam. an ..tltant ooech wtth the Trail Bluen the pelt two~ Lywwn, 41, rep1ac8 Paul Silu, who WU d1lrn1lled April 19 after three non-wfnnlna eeuon1.. Lynam wu dmcribed by San Dteao General~ Paul Phlpps u ''the one man we fed we needed." Vilas becomes second victim of suspension • PARIS (AP) -For \he eeoond t.ime in 24 hows, a renowned t.enn18 player h.u been 9Ulpellded by the Men'• Intemadonal Profemional Tennla Council. On the heela of Yannick Noah's 4~y auapemion Tueeday, Guillermo Vilaa WM hit with a harder alap Wectne.day when the IP1'C knocked the Argmtlne IW' out of competition for a year, along with fining him $20,000. Vilas,• the world'• fifth-ranked player, WM suspended and fined for accepting guaranteed appearance money to play in a tournament in Rotterdam. The Ktlon 9gllimt Vilaa was announced by Philippe Chatrter, president of the International Tennis Federation, who said the Argentine would have 30 days to appeal the decilion. The orpnizera of the Rotterdam tournament last March &180 were fined $10,000.The ban will keep VUaa out of all Grand Prix and Davia Cup eventa, although the tennis organization said that the Argentine player wouJd be allowed to participate in "special events" such aa exhibition ma.~ and certain WCT events. VUaa, who has denied the charges, became the first player ever suspended for allegedly accepting guarantee money, a practice reported to be common among the pros. Such guarantees, paid regardlem of how a player perlonna. ~smaller tournaments of top-name participants who can generate big gate receipts. "After an investigation of 8e'Venal months, we have fonnaJ proof (against Vilaa) provided by the orpniz.era t.bermelves," Chatrier told a news con- ference. No date wu 11et for Vi.las' suapenaioo to st.an, pending hia dedaion to appeal. Noah, winner of the French Open last w~kend, was suspended 42 days and fined $20,000 by the council for refusing to participate in last May's Nation's Cup toumamenL Baseball today 1914-Honua Wagner of the Pittaburgh Pirates became the tint major Jeacuer in the modem era to collect 3,000 career hita. 1946-Manager Mel Ott of the New York Gianta wu ejected from both end.a of a doubleheader few arguing umpiree' c.alk. He was the first major leegue manages-to gain that distinction. 1963-Hall of Farner Ernie Banks belted three home runs in a lomng cau.e as his Chicago Cubs lost 11-8 to the Lm ~les Dodgers . 1963-ln the first Sunday night game in major le.gue history, Turk Farrell and Skinny Brown of the Houston Colt . 45s combined to blank the San Frand8co GI.ants., 3-0. Pennisaion was granted for the then unusual starting tune becauae of the op- pressive heat in Houston during the day. 1966-Rich Rol.llna. Zoilo Venailes, Tony Oliva, Don Mincher and Hannon Killebrew all homered in the eeventh inning of the Minnesota Twins' 9--4 victory over the Kansas City Athlelics. Today's birthdays: MontreaJ Manager Bill Virdon is 52. Pittsburgh outfielder Dave Parker Is 32. 13 expected for Belmont NEW YORK -A field of 13 ~ three-year-<>ld.s I.a expected for the l 15th Belmont Stakes Saturday, the third jewel of thoroughbred racing'• triple crown. They include Preaknem winner Deputed Testamony; Slew O' Gold, partially owned by Laguna Hilla' David Ringler and fourth-place finisher in the Kentucky Derby and winner of the Peter Pan at Belmont May 29; and C.aveat. third in the Derby and winner of a 1 1-16-mile allowance race on a muddy track at Belmont on Memorial Day. Slew O' Gold worked out at five-eights of a mile in 58 8eCOOd.s and CwTent Hope in ~9 2-.5. Off-track betting bill passed The California Aseembly'a fi8cal • conunittee, owr the objections of hmw racing track union1 and church groups. Wedneeday approved an off-tnck bettinB bill Wedneeday that could net lhe st.ate $200 million a year. Off. tnck waaering la allowed in four other st.ates: New Yoik. COnnecticut. Nevada and New Jtt11ey, but bWa to legaliJ.e it in Callfo~ have failed 89Y'e1"&1 times in the put ... Jlmmy Ceuon, Jolm McEaroe and lvu u.tl, the top three eeeda. all had '°'-'ah battle1 but advanced to the third round of a Grand Prix tennil tournament ln London ... The Philadelphia Flyera of the National Hockey League traded· de-- feNeman BeU WU... to the ~ Bl8Ck Hawka in exmance fOI' defememan DM1 Croumu and a aecond-round draft cha6ce next ...or\. Television, radio TV: Btae'-11 Dodl'ft tt Atlanta, 4:" p.m.., Channel 11. RADIO: Buebtll-Dodaen at Atlanta. :40 p.m., KABC (790); ChJcaco White Sox at ft.Ill~ .... 7:26 p.m,. KMPC (710). UCLA's Fischer to retire? Valen1uela I phone. "I will have • commtnt Oft J'riday. "I deflnltely am not ~. You don't ..W 31 r-n et an iiwtatutklll Ind rellp. ~'· retlrmlm\t.." The pomlbUity that l'llcW would 1-ve hJa ~=-y--:.,~ XABC-TV ln A.It-..... l't1cher. el, had =--~-:~ aotdU'll .. the nm.. Plechir .md when aon· I I~ ·1 I Sunset stars to challenge Moore's best LONG BEACH -The cream of the Sunset and Moore leagues, two of Southern California's finest prep clrcutt8 m baseball, collide Saturday night (8) at Blair Field in the second annual All-Star game featuring many of the best graduating seniors from the respective leagues. Huntington Beach H1gh's Mike Dodd, who led the Oilers to the Sunset League championshlp, is the Su.nset'acoach, while the Moore League is coached by Lakewood High's John Herbold. "I'll probably start Ocean View's Jeff Biggins," says Dodd. "Then we'll go with Steve Betz (Westminster), Shaun Takkinnen (Edison) and finish up with (Gary) BuckeIB (Huntington Beach)." Other Huntington Beach stars include first bueman Scott Green, shortstop Lou Harrigan and third baseman Charlie Hasrwell. Fountain Valley's contributions mclude out- fielder Ken DeMarco, catcher Steve Pra\l and designated hitter Jay Russell Wielders Bill Dodson and Pete Wheeler, along with catcher Shane Flores, will represent Marina. Edison's other s tandout is first baseman-outfielder Steve Overeem. Todd Mabe, who was dratted and signed a professional pact with Kansas City, will not be available because of his prof~ional status. Golf champs Wielders Phil Hillman and Keith Mullally of Ocean View and Westminster's Bobby Goode (outfielder) and Ron Harriman (catcher-designated hitter) round out the Sunset League roster. The game is sponsored by the North Long Beach Kiwanis Club. Neil Fine of Newport Beach and partner Gary Newton of Corona del Mar were winne rs recently in the Gifford H. Teeple best ball tour- nament at Irvine Coast CC. ~\"''''-.. -· ~~~ :~:~~=-= = ~~:=~ ; ~ ~ l I .,, ~ MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS A~lc.an LNVU• WEST DIVlstON W 4.. ~C1. Ga ~ JI 2• W.. l(enw• Cllv 1S 24 S 10 O.l!lend ,, 21 500 l ''> T•u• 26 76 500 l '" Cllbi>O 25 11 •n s MIMU Ola 1J JJ •11 l 'J Sfflllt 7J JS 397 9'"1 IEAST OIVlUON Belllmore 37 ll .Sl2 Toronto ?t 2• 5-47 1 ao.1on 21 7S .S2t J OtlroH 21 lS S2t J New Vo<lo. 11 76 519 l '"I MIJwaulcff 26 2S S 10 4 ,_nd 2• 1' •SJ , W-'t'tS<eAI A,.,.,.n 1, C Muoe> A Toronto s. O.t.lend 2 Ottroll 6. Bo$1on l Belllmore 7, MltwaukM l New Vork 6, Ci.•el•nd S l(enul Clly 9, Mll'ltlfl41a 1 Teaet 1, s..111e o TNn't Ga"'" C11lca90 !Burnt 1·3) el A"91ft (JOM S-21. n C>etroll (Pttrv S l ) at Bo11on IEClttntev •·21. n Mltwaultff (Auou"lne 7·11 •' Betllmore (a6ddlc.i.t r )·21, n Mlllnftote IWll•l•rn' 1· 11 at Kanw• Clly (Cr"4 0-1), n Toronto IClencv S·41 •' 0.kle"<I (Ul\OerWOOCI J·2l. n THH (HO<Jllh l ·S) at ~ .. uie (BHtll• •·l). n Hatlonal Lffvu• WIEST DlvtMON W L ,.ct, Ga ~ 3' 11 619 Atlente JS 19 64 l'"I San Fr encl Ko 2t 26 S 19 IV, San OleQo 26 21 491 10 Ho..ttOfl ._ 16 30 ... 12'1') Clnclnnell l3 n •11 If E AST OIVlSION St LOYll 2t ?? 560 MOntreel 17 l3 S..0 1 Ptillede4Plll• n 2 s .., • 'l'l Cllleago 14 21 '62 S Pllllburlll\ 19 30 .JM l '"I New Yor~ II l3 JSJ IO'h w...-.,.. Scwft ~ 11, Allenle S Clllcffo l. N-Yon; l MOnlrH I S, Pllla.bY<9h 4 PMecle4ollle 7, SI. Loult 4 Sen OleQo S, Clnclflnlll 3 Hout ton 1, Sen FrenclM:o O I I 1 lnnlno') T.-v'1CO-~ (Hooton, 4·7) el Allan!• tMc.M4J<trv. 7·21. n New yon; ILvncll. •·1) II Cllk:.a11o lltulllvt<'I, 3·41 SI Loul1 (AnCIUler. 3·11 et Ptille<lele>l'llt tllntrom, 0-J), n Plll.i>urllll IMcWl•lemt, 6·3) al Moll· trMI (Gollehon. S-61. 11 Sen Oi.vD (Hawkin•, J·l ) et Clnclnnell 1a.r ... v1. J-61, n S.n Fre nclllCO (ltrut.ow, J·l ) at HoutM>n (I(-. l·l l..n AMERICAN LEAGUE Aft9ilb 7, ~SOK ~ CHICAGO CALIP'O-NIA ....... ...rlllll ltuw cf ) I I 0 C•r-Ill s 1 I 0 6-n.ml :It> 4 0 1 O lltnlQUr " • I I O a.lnel rt 4 0 0 0 A Clerk H I 0 0 0 1.utlml< dl'I 4 0 0 0 AeJk.-. rl l 0 I 0 PKlorll Ill 4 0 0 0 0.Cn<t lO 4 2 I I Kiili•" I I 00 Lynnd s 0 I 0 Hein Ion If 1 0 0 0 AoJck•n dh 4 I 3 2 Fltk c 3 I I 0 Grich 2b 2 I 1 1 VLew ,., 2 0 0 1 9oone c 3 0 0 0 Soulrn 1111 I 1 1 0 Aelem' u • I 2 l F ... c:N )II 0 0 0 0 D ... llMI u 2 0 I I -. T.... 1' 4 $ 1 T""81t U 1 II 1 Sat'ttry-... Olllc:99lt 1• .. t lt-4 c..... Jll .. ___ , C.-WlMlllo ltlll -ltoJK ... 0<'1 (1) E~t OP-Celltotnle l La.-<hlea90 2, Cel!fo<nla 10 2~oJ~IOft Hit-AO.mt (I) Sll__._'--w (?2) ~ Kootl'llAllL,A•l ..,... HlcM'Y ~ """'°' w.s.-> Hll~lllle a .n.• If' H9'81tllaSO 4 ,., t • • I 0 fM 2 1 I l 2 I 0 0 0 0 t t t 3JS I'"' FO<WIJ T-2~ A- ..... .iew J, A'• 1 TotOftlO 110 000 O'n-s 14 I Oellle.llO oeD 000 11~ 4 0 Ill•. J.Mn.t\lllN!fl Ill _, Wlllll, -llM1 161 COCIWOll, ~ 171, IC--" '" 9N "--· ~ii.. t-4. &.~ .... Hlt-0.-Md, ~N'I (6). Sutton, TeMtneM Ill •nd Slmrnont. ltemlrez, 51ew8fl (I ). T ,,.,.,,..,.1 (I), StOOO.rd (8) end OtmPMtY W-SlodcJerd. l ·O. L-Te<lmenn, J·2 HR•-tl•lllmore. Slnolet()<'I (1), Rlc>ken (9). LOWtnlttln (81 y ....... 6, lftcleM s Ctev.w.no 010 ocn 01:1-s 9 N1w V0tk 210 100 101-6 12 0 Suldlftw, Sl>lllner (1). H"lon (9) and Hen••. Eulan ltl, How .. , Mev (9). Goueoe It ) •nd wvneoar W~11t. 3·2 L-SOlnn..-, l·S HRt--New Vork, Wlmleld 1121. Nettle'I Ill. ltemo (1) MlnntiOll 000 001 000-1 S 2 Ken .. , City 010 300 U x_... 16 2 FllM>n, Cu llllo (•I. Whltltl'tou.. Ill •no Enole. Rtnko. OulM<'IO.(tV (I ) .no SteUllM W-ft..,ko, S·'-L-Ftlson. 1·1 ·--1, MeltNn 0 Tt-H 000 000 l~I I 0 S..llle 000 000 000-0 9 I SmhllM>n. J_, CtJ e nd !>unct~o. Young and SwMt. Mt<ceoo (II w- ~mhnM>n, •·•. 1.-Youno, 1·4 Cerew o.cinc .. l.VM Foll Ao Jeek•on 8t<1lout1 GrlCll Sconlen Boone Cieri< l/alentlnt Oownlno It• Jacl<ion WIHono AO.ma Fer11uton T- Aneel aveneei a.ATTING All R H Hit 190 30 IO 2 193 34 S9 1J IS. ?t .. 13 17S 71 S2 7 ,, 1J n J 163 2S 0 2 IS1 16 43 S 100 20 21 1 174 16 ., l IO'l S H I 78 • 18 • 91 20 20 2 173 ,. l1 10 21 , • ' S. 13 10 I 11 , 0 0 1,m at 51' •• l"ITCHING '" H 1a Ital ,.ct. 2• 471 l3 ~ JS 199 20 ?97 u 171 IS 216 2J 21• 11 _210 II 241 I llS 13 2:JI 7 220 27 214 4 190 4 llS I .000 J7S .VS J<IM>n 6~ 62 23 SO W•LIRA .... , 313 LeM ll''> ll 21 35 S-l 3.24 Foncll 77'1') 7S 23 31 S·l J.26 19 •·2 3 3S Stncller ·~ .o 19 Jolln 75 11 I 1 15 S-2 3.84 Curll& 11 9 3 7 0-0 4 10 Wiii 41~ 41 16 II 3·S 4 10 II 0· I 492 I 0-3 S.SI I O·O 6.7S Trever• 21 16 II Hanltf 16'1J 20 s McLeUll~ll" I 'J) 1 I Gotll '4'h 61 19 19 0·4 ''° T9tab 4~ Sta 1•1 720 ll-24 ~ Save• Witt 4. S.rlCll~I Cut1l1 1 I 2. Hauler I. NATIONAL LEACUR Ood9en 11, BraVH s LOS ANGELES ATLANTA ss.. 20 Le nclrx cf Boer tf ltoenlclt." Gue<rer lb Lendtlv lO ll•OCll lb MOndey rl Tnomtlrl YHQer C AnOHn" Vetenzle P ell r n bl 6 1 , 0 • I 2 0 s 2 2 l 0 0 0 0 s 2 J 2 0 0 0 0 l I 2 0 4 1 I I I 0 1 0 S 0 0 I S I 1 I • I 7 l •• , hlll Wtll91n rl S 2 2 0 HullC><d111 S 0 0 0 Murllflv d S 0 I I Ho<ne< 30 ~ I l 2 Welson lb 3 O 0 0 Heroer ~ • 0 I O Btnecllct c 4 0 1 0 AAmrr u •I 1 l Cemo 1> I o o o Bellenne p I I I t It Jlln•n Pll 1 0 0 0 MoortP 0 0 0 0 Geroer P O 0 0 0 Cnmll4t 1111 I o o o 41 II 16 II T-Jt S 11 S ~.,.. ....... '-" ,,.,,...... .. JOI Jll -II A..,,.. 001 100 011-s Geme·Wlnnlno Rlt -Beker (2) E-THaroer, Wet1on, S.S.1 LOB-Lot 4nlltlel a. /<llenta I 211-4nder&on,Guerrtro. SS.x. THare>er, TllOmH, Murllflv Hit-Boer 161, ltltemlrH (1), lltnenne (I). MOndlV 131, Guerrero llll, v e1en1uel• (I), Horner 1101 S&-W••lllnoton 1121. Horn..-t3l S.-lAnclrH uX SF-Vtltnluelt I~ H R IE• ae SO LM...,..._ ve1en1ut1• W,1·1 II S • S Alle"'9 Cemo L,S· S 3 2-J lllfltnne 2 1-3 s s 1 I I 0 MOD<• 1-l 3 J 0 Gerber 22·l s 2 I 0 wP-v11emuete T-n1 "-47,142 Natlenal LN91Ue ·-S, l"lreM 1 ' 2 0 2 PllttDurell 000 00 I 00)--4 9 I MonlrMI 103 000 Ohc-i I 1 It'*""· Scurry (1) enct "-· GullcikM>ll, lteerdon <t> 11111 Cener. W-O~IOft. 6-6. L~hocNn. 2-6. Hlt-Plrt•bl.lrllll, hrr• It) ...... 1. CenlMI• 4 Slloult 000 400 G00-4 1 1 ""~ IOl 010 91>-7 ' 1 Lt JlllolM, k lr 111. a.itter m •nd ...,,., ; o-v. HerNllCle• 14>. • .., m. Ho1enc1 ltl MO Oln. w--"°"9nd, H. L-iulter, •-> Hit• >f'tlnu1111Ptle , Meddo11 <JI. Pwe1 (4) ......... It ... kn Oleoo 010 "2 011-S 10 o ClftclMell 11» • llo-l 1 0 Dnvedly, De~ (U, MotlM Ill end l(flW*IY I P\1Qe, Hl\18t l l ), SO.rat (f ) -lllleto.llO, w-c>revedlv1. 9·3. L-Prlce, 4-) Hit~ 04et0, MClttvftOllh 121, !(.,,,...,., Ill, I.ti~ 141. Clftc!Mall, CeclleM (J), •HUI (t) Oi19itl.Mlltl1 N.-Y0111 000 000 010-1 9 0 Chleeee • • 007'-1 4 O Terrel lftcl ltevnolcll1 Trout Smlll't ttl IN l.ellt, Dewit (t J. w-$1n!lh, 1•1. L- Totff1, 2-7. Hlt-<lllCMO, s.ndMre (41. A llrO$ 1, Ole"" 0 San Frar1el1<0 000 000 000 ~ 10 I HoustO<'I 000 000 000 01-1 7 0 (II ~) McG1ttl11en. Levellt t 10) eno Mev, Brenly 1101. Nlel<ro, Oewlev (11 ) eno A&l'IOv W-Oewlev. • I L-Levelll, 3·1 MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS AmefiUln LN..,_ BATTING ( IOS •' belt) C.rew, ........ ,.,,, 80911>. Bo•ton, let, Brett. l(enws CllY, ..369, McRae. l(enw• Clly, MA, T llOrnlOll, Cle••land, JJ I RUNS· Cu tluo. Mlnnesole, 42; llrett, i<ente1 Cllv 41, RIPken, 8elllmore, 38; 0.Cln<e-I, """"'• 3', E Murray, Be lll· more, 36 1tB1 Ward, Mlnt> .. ote , '1. Hroe+., Minnesota, 40. 1(11111, C11Jca90, 40, Brett. l(anw• Cllv, 39. Wlnfleld. New Vork, ll HITS C.rew, ,.,,...,, IO 11099•. Boltort. 1•, CH llno. Ml-.ota, 73. Grlffev, New vor ... tM, Wl\floer, Detroit. 64, Vounl Mllweukff, 64 DOUBLES Hr-. Mlnnewle , 70, McRet. t(...... Cltv, "· L H P•rrl•ll. Oetroll, 11, 8 Bell. Ttot, 16, lloqos. 8ollon, 16, 8re11, Kentel CllY. 16. TRIPLES C Moort, MllweukM. S. G WllaOll Oelroll, S. Hern0on, O.trolt, S, Winfield. Ntw York, S, Gentn..-Mii weuk" 4, Grl"'"· Toronto, 4, Wl\lte "'•nttt Cllvt'• HOME RUNS DeCIMn, ........ tJ, l(lttlt, Clllui>Q, ll, L'l'ftft. ~ U . Brtll l(enwt Cltv 12. lliCe, eo.tOll. 11, Wlnllelel. New York 17 STOLEN BASES J Crur, !>Hiiie. JJ. w Wll&O<'I. IC •nWI Cltv. ?S, II L•w Cl'>lcago, n , R Hel>Cl8rM>f>, 0.klend, 71, SttN>le, TeMet. 11 PITCHING t• Clt<:lalont) Fie.,a11en, Bel llmore, 6-0. 212, Kl-. ...,,...,, •·•· Ul HeH Mllw a u>. .. , •-I, 4 1', 1(09,men. Clllcti>O. •-1, • S6. R L Je<Kton. Toronto • 1, • ... ~om Mlnn ... ote ' I •6J. Whltenou ... Mlr>ntt0te •-I 2 90 STltJl(EOUTS !'>tltb, T0ton10, It. 8 tv .... en, Cteveleno, 11. MOrrlt. Ottrolt, 67, w11coa, 0t1rot1, S7, Tuoor. llo•ton. S6 SAVES 0u1 .. 111>trrv. ltenw• Clly, i., Ceu<llll, S.atti., 13, Stanlev. 8ottO<'I, II, LOPtl. O.troO, I, 0 JO<lft Tt•et. 8 N•tlonel Lnvu• 8.ATTING (IOS e t belt) Oewton, Mon- treel, ~. McGtt, SI Loul•, 340, MecJlock. Pltttburlll\, 331, 11....0lcl. Allenle, l71, K nlglll, HOU"Otl, -326 RUNS MurPllv. Alie/lie, 47, Gervw. Sen Oltoo, 6l, Evenl, Sen FrendKO, ll, H0<n..-, Atlenla, JI, Oewton, Mo#llrM4, JS lt81 Murllflv, Allente. 44. Henorlck, St Loult. 6l. Dawson, MOntrNI, JI. Garn..-. HouttO<'I, 31, T l(enf>t<!v. Sen Dleoo, 37 HITS Dawson, Monlreel, 'I. Tllon, Houlton, 71. Gerv•v. San 01890, u. A Ae ml[er. Allenta 66, Olivet. Montr .. t, 63 DOUBLES Dawson. MOnt•M I, 16, Ger-•ev. Sen Dle9o. Is. J Rev. Pllltbur91\, 1 s. Ollvt r. MOntreal. l S. I( Hernendez St Louh, i. TRIPLES Moreno, Houlton. 6, Dew.on, Monlftel. S 6 ••• tied wllfl • HOME IUJNS. Even,, San Frencl..:o, ll, ~ •• DtO!loln. U. Murllllv, Allen••. ll, lll"tdl, Dldlen, II, Scllmldl, Ptilled4tt· C>llla. 11 STOLEN BASES S.S.•, ~. JI. Wilson, New York, 70, L•CV, Pllltllu<llll, "· Mor-. Houtlon, II. Reout. Clnclnnetl, II PITCHING (4 0.Cl•tontl p Perez, Allen· la, 1·1. 26'. "·"-· ~ S·I, UI, Dewley, Houaton, 4·1. ltS, Montf'fllKO. S.n Oleoo, 4·1, 6.30, S-•r1. Ded9tn. 4·1, 1,6.J $Tlt1KEOOTS: Cerlton, Plllle<ltll>hle, '2, Solo, ClnclMetl, IO; McWlltlerm, Pit· tW\lrol't. 75, ltooeu. Montrtel, 6A, v~-.~.11.l SAVES Be<lrotlen, All•nla, I, Fonte<, Allenta I. uvellt. S." Francltco. I, LeSmltl\, ClllcellO. I. S..Hewe, o.deoon. 1 C°""9 wono sen.• <•t0me"8, ....,, w.-....,..~ Arlzont SI '· Oltl•llOm• St s (0..lellOme SI tllmlneted) Mlchlo1n 11, Stanford 4 \Stemord tOmln•ll<ll TMl'l't Gema Teo1 (63· U) v' /<leC>ern• (45·9), n Grand Prl• ttumament <•• LAllRll) lltaftd lttlllllll ...... SI-Oenlon (U.S.) dfl. Chn' L.r<irl1 (New t .... nd), .... 1·•· Peut MCN- (Auttrenel dfl. Tim OulllUOl't cu.s..1. 6-S. 7-6; Wollek F~ (Polefld) d9f, P9tet It-I <U.S ), •·2, .. 4; Metcot Hoetver (l ru MI dfl. Mike 0.PAll'Mf CU.$.l, .. J, l·•· •·>1 itevln Curr111 lkull't Al'l'~l 41'1. Fritz l utlllllnt (U.S.) ••• ,, •• ,, IVtll L.111111 tC1echcKIOvekle) C191. Tim WMltlton tU.S.l, M , M, •·~; TOCIO Het1MN1 (U,S.> dfl len Tttletmen IU-S,), .. ,, t.-11 11111 kMIOll tU.S l Mi JoM Fiii-aid C41o1•trllle), .. f. •·>. ,.., c .. h (Auetr.O.l fttf. Vliet Glnllelllt (U.$.), S-7, •·1. t>-J. l<len Oollfflect IU.S.I 41'1 ltlcet• AC\.IM ((tli&e), 4-6, •·>, •->. Henll "•let IU S.l dfl ltoct Frewi.v <AUttrellel. 4-6, •·•, .. ,, f'"' Ma111011e (U.S.) dltf. Mafll OoTlt (U.S.>. ... , •·7. •·Ii Cre'9 Wlttu• (U.1.1 de!. Tom c.tn (U,i.), 1•6, .. 4; Jo1111 MCl?l'ltoe (U.S l dfl, Freddie 5-utf Cloulh Affla), .. 11 .1·•. JllnMv (-• (U $,) Mt Ndl*I QClltOf (NIMtl•), J•S, 6•1; CeulO Molll (at .. H) de! i.mmv Glernmellle <U.1 l, J·t, >·6. ,., ., . " -,,. ...... ADAMS. From Page C1 mechanics • • h WM a totaJ restrueture from top (Ado.ms' thought procesa) to bottom (iQCludlna his footwork). "I think he's swinging • lot better," complimented Carew of his pupil. "The nice thing Is that Rick llstena and ia willing to try lhinga." Of coune, Adams would be the first to admit the major league. ls not exactly the best place to try to get a baptismal education in hit- ting. "U you're going to readjust something, it's tough to have to do it in the big leagues becauae thlB I.a where you're supposed to per- fonn," agreed Ad.ams. "Still, it was a choice I had to make. It was a matter of survival. "The way l was hitting I fig- ured if it took a change to make things right, I was all for it." And, so far, so good. From a humble 0.74 beginning, Adams has now raised his average to 185 More importantly, since the transformation to Carew's style, Adams is batting a crisp .285 (8-for-28). "l don't know everything yet," said Adams. "But I'm feeling more comfortable. I'm seeing the ball a lot better, and the stance lets me see the ball longer. "All I have to do now is stay within myself and realize I'm not going to hit the ball out of the park. You know, my last three years in the minors I've always h.ad double figures in home runs. "But this isn't the minors, it's Lo' AJ.amltos waoN•S04Y'S RESOLTS (llrcl .. ,, ....... _,,.,.._... mwllfte) ""ST ltACa . 3SO verd• Oii.CO l(tltv (Berd) S.60 4.00 UO coureoeou• Quffl (H•rtl 6.20 l.10 Mlledv Commender (Crteuerl l .00 AIM> receo. ltH Go'" Ber, Funnv Me, Sol~T~ er~'&> Pride Of Oavll n •XACTA 13·6) Pelc! M2 60 HCOND RAC•. 3SO verdt Meoelorct IPllll..,ton) 10 00 5 10 4 60 l(ltly e.nc1 < PeYllne I •.60 4 00 C..O To Vlclorv ICrH11trl 3 IO Also receo Cerrvlno On, °"9111 To Pen , Wllel An Eew. Aemotln ArOUllO, Jlrn• Cnlck, New W•••· You For Me Tlmt. 11.34. TMIAD ltACIE. 110 vercJt KIPl CemelOt <Ce rdoie) ISOO 660 S40 Ftvlncl WIM Oner (Ctrlu ) uo J.20 SUclden Clllf'f CE0wero1l too Also read Nol'Y iteo. Tenino PoHcv. HOISi• "'"•". Luveleek. UnconlHfed TI,... 46.04 P'OUllTI4 It.AC•. 440 verdt Reconnoltet (l..ecUvl 20 70 1 IO l.IO Armebel IC>tWn1>el S 00 3 60 Swlltebo (Herl) 2.60 AIMI raced. e.r ltl~. cnaroa C•~, Milo !(now", Founo Tiie Te, LOI• Uf ~'""· Reo•I Act, Too Heo Time· 22.IS. n EX.ACTA (5-1) e>elcJ wt IO "l'TH RAC•. JSO vero, Moon~ (Trwrl 440 790 740 Ouottcele Pollcv tOtlom-~ 360 ~60 Roule Creek ICrN -) 2.IO AIMI raced. P9ecA Otterlno. OltCO Memt. &or911ffe, Thi& Jtlt Lee•ln Time· 17.IS SIXTI4 aAc•. sso veros. Tu Tun JoM (!Hrel) 13.10 12'0 600 Oeeleno' (CrMOtrl 11 60 s 40 TrlPOI llonut C Pllkt<'lton) HO AIM> rece<I Jut tln• EH Y Sia, llroed- moor 0..0., W•VlOll Awev, llolltlv Otl Otl. Pttenlom ltooue, Slleclly &oof>t Time 11.l1 0 • XACT A (I· 10) e>eld ~ IO HVUfTH 9'.ACa. JSO vero,. somerv J.i 1C1trlswl Jt 20 11 40 5.IO , Dee>' Turn (Fr'tcltv) S 60 UO Sllvet GrtY Fox (lltevln•) 160 Abo r~: ldlv Oltco, Tiny Overdrive, HMVY Coot, 8rlatol lto•er, l(erent Jel, Ail'~~,.:~r~~ :1~1 Potlllcle n st •XACTA (l·t ) Ptlcl 1212 40 llGHTH RACIE. 40C> vercJl LuGh &tow (Hert) l IO l 00 Go Ofl liC*'M <Cre-1 SIO Aletcedero tTreewrtl 2 40 2.IO 3 40 Atto rlleled· GU\IOtO Sllool, Oel'ldn Sotnoln, Two Ooo Moofl Time 20 13 U • XACT A 13·4) pelel '10.20. 12 f'IC.K SIX U+S·l ·l ·ll Ptkl M.59'-IO wllll nva wlnnlno tlckll• (five hOnff). 12 Pick Six Cllf!Mllllllon pelcl ,73.40 •1111 149 wlnnlllo tldtett (lour llOrtM) t2 Plett Sia tcr•ICll 'onMllellon peld ill 40 wltn lntH wlnnlnll ticket• CIJV" llO<Mt, -•<1'8tc111 .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1983 l '3 Rod Carew the big leagues." And Adams is learning the dif- ference very quickly. ANGl.L NOTES-The lelHI ,,. .. , on Oeelf .z.M l•n'I ••rv encoureoln9 Tiie leH ·h•ndl• 11 tcheduled to l>t re·exemlntd lode• ov ttam llllyte:len• A O.Cltlon will thtn oe meele concern· lne lelln'• luture Tiie 21·0.• ctlH Dll<I K" I• • dltllnct POUlbllllv In , ... , .., "''V dlellnotl• oetermlnecl 1na1 Zelln woulcl be unel* to Jllrow IOt pr-Illy •not,.., 10 CS.VI •nd ,,..,, It WOUid l•k• fl•• more efler tllet to llfl lllm..if '" lhei>e. Sale! Anott• Menioer Jetwl M<NMNr•: .. , cJOn'I know whlll to expect I cen't entlclpett llt"I IN •l>+e lo met.• 1111 MXI ..... . but ,,..., I cen'I tlllnk Ille wor,1, ell,.., Hevlno two ttarter& l>O CIOwn •I Iha Wmt llmt, .. Dt(lelly lllO .. with Ille two llttl reco<d•. reellv crlPOles You and llmll• wlle t you can CIO wllll vour pltchl~ •'•"·" Tl'tlncn ertn't •erv encoureoln11 ellout an.co IOMft, ell,.., S.lcl tee m pnvtclen, IAwll Yecwn: "II'• • metier Of llrne, bul he's 111• very i,;ncomlon•l>+e <wlln tne oec1'. sP8Mfl'l We won'I know envtlllnQ lor •u•• tor e l IM•I t wffll.-mevo. two or tnrM . lk.tt lt's llOfno 10 o. e lon9 lleul Ht '' very truttrate<I e nd very dllGOUte~ He'& bMf> llVO<Jllll • IOI wllll llb •rm, end now 11111." • E .. V...,,..,. acciulrld • pre11v 0000 •lllner •bo•• 111, rlollt •v• eller loullno • Piich In llMI dirt durln11 l>elllno e>racilct Wedneldev end 111v1no II coma beet< and 1111 him In 11\e lace Velentlne, wllO wH unable to Pley beCllu .. of the lnkKY, wu so ln!urlelld ov wllel II•-lie tllrew Ill• bet end b&retY mtu.O • &H<telor tltllno on tha Anott• • benCll Gl9ewett 10t1 ... , .. , J lO 3 00 8eml"91 IMCCe rron) 3 40 Also rec.a· NtvefOl'Mn, Honlo, L.10111 Oe nc;er. Alet>edo, Or Vietor la, lee K Time. 1;4S 1/S, U •XACTA (1•4) Peld SSO SO U ll'tCIC SJJC ( H· 10-2•4· I) Pti9 S74,"6.IO wllll lwo wlnnlno llcll•" hlll hOl'Ml) U PlcJ< SI x Cllfl&Ole I ton 1>41 Id '457 IO wllh 1' wlMll'ICI llCll•I• Ill•• l'torMtl 11 Pict< Sh• i.cretch COMOletlon NIO sSOO 60 wlln 25 wlnnlno tldl•I' <lour nor.-., one tcralcl't) •IGHTH ltACI.. 1 turlon9• Orl11lnel Ctn (De· le l'loulWVtl 3.60 2 20 2, 10 Skllllul Jov IMcCerron) UO 2.20 Coleelle ISl\oel'Nktr l 2 . .0 Al'o reced: Luci!• L•<I• Etten, Mlllnoo. Tlmt. 1211/S. U •XACTA 12·5) Ptkl S21.00 NINTH RACE. , .... mllet on tur1 Ci.er Verdie! lf>lercel I 00 UO l.40 Forty Eight Face" (Vl<'llle) 920 620 Bunnttt IGlltlenl S.40 Also receo Saroos, Crou F1eQ1, El PKllO Anott, Ono Queck, Bu"'>tlnp Under, Tellel, llttdl Grove, Time: 1.4' 4/S U IEXACTA 14·2) DtlcJ \194 00 Attenoence: 21,sn. I I ~-DMC> ... fllhln9 ART'~ LANDING <NewPOrl BHCl\J-3S anole" 13 rock ll&h, I 1cutpln, 40 oon110. S berrecude. 1 ve<IOwlell, 1 •hMo•lle•d, 120 tneellllf.C, t 1 beU DAVI.Y'S LOCIC•R ( _ _, ... dl) -lot •noltn I I 1>errecuoe. 1• .. no oen, 11 roell nsn. 1 llellbut, I 1<1no wtmon. 1 ce11e1on, 25' meekere< DANA WHARP'-90 enc1lers 250 Den. I oon110, I llellbul. I rOc.k IWI. 1• O\eekeret, 11 .-sn..o, I •culPln. NHL draft Ut ....... °* 5'lleC1leM Flrtl Aound -Ho t>ldl S.C:Ono Round -Ho P4Ck Thlrct ltoun<t -a ruc• $Mtlle>Jtom, ..it wino, PeterbotOUOll Pttft (lunlOl'IM-1 Fourth ltounc:t -Guv Be<'loll, Ct<'llet, Sl\ewlnklen C41ertclft (lunlor IMouel Fifth ltounct -aoo ufo<hl, rlohl wino, North 11•1' Ct<1leMYll llulllor IMouel. Gerrv G....,, ~"· llowtlnv Gretn Untverslrt (from Ectrnonlonl. Slllll ltound -Oeve Oundrnerk, de· len-n, Vlr9lnle Hlilh School, Minn, Kevin Steven•, Ct<'ller, Sllvllf Lake Hlilh Sc!lool, Men. (from Toronto) Stv..,lh Aound -Tim llurOft.t, de· fen-n. ~Plewa General& (luntor '"9119) Elttlln ltound -Ken Hammond. de· leni.emen. Porl Cr.Oii, °'11 Ninth RoullO -Bruce Fltl\Ceck, c.nter, Marlntr Hlilh kllOOI. T..,lh llounct -Tllorn11t Alllen, Sweden Elt-...nlll ltouno -Jen 11181\e. rlollt Wll'ICI, C1tdlotlo•ekle. lo, Twetfth Round -CM<I JOMM>n, C:lllter. •-u Hloll ~. Minnesota Wedneldav'• "•ftMctloM aAJaaALL NalteNI~ CHICAGO CUllS.-Sloned Jeck It OevldM>n end Gerv LM Permenter, 1>llch-.,._ CINCINN4TI ltED$-Sl9neel Jo. Oliver, celcher, It'd HUOh K.-. PllCMf, encl euloMd 11\en't 10 BIMlllo& of Ille Plonetf ~w YORK MET$-Sl91*1 Stenlt'f Jl'llerlMNI, oullleleler. •llO •• "9ned l\tm lo Little Fe•• of ,,,. New York-"9M L .. Oue PtTTlllUltOH PlltATEs-Exlencted 11\e Oll'ltrecit ~ He.rdlno Petet.on. u.cvllvt 1>' vie. ~t. •1111 Cll<d Tennet', men· ·-· '"'-" Ille 1"7. AnW1CM i..we TOltONfO llLUE JAY~ONCI 0!11 c;r_,, nnt t>esemen-outtltlW. •"II n • tloned him to MHICIM Het o4 Ille ,.IDMllf ~ Reverse Argosy slated Bahla Corinthian Yacht Club will be the tenninal point Satur· day for a fleet of yachts from Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club tn the annual Revene Argoey race. On Sunday BCYC will start the fleet on the return race to CBYC. Other action in Newport Beach will include a one-design regatta at Balboa Yacht Club and New- port Harbor Yacht Club for classes sailing lnaide and outside courses Saturday and Sunday; race three of South Shore Yacht Club's Hi-Point Series on Saturday and Voyagers Yacht Club's Bogart series, also Saturday. At Dana Point, Capistrano Ba Y Yacht Club will send Per- fonnance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts into action in the third race of its Ocean Racing Series Sa tur- day. Dana Point Yacht Club will oonduct a School's Out Dinghy Regatta Sunday. Biggest attraction on the yacht- ing scene iB Long Beach Yacht Club's Race Week for Inter- national Offshore Rule yachts which got under way today and continues through Sunday. In other Southern California Yachung As8ociation areas: IAl ............... a..dl L-lleeCI Yedll Oub-4lece Week, 100.Y. Frldev. S.lurcle11, Sutldev. Cwllo lleectl Yectll C~terl Aev., .. Arocny, S.turdey, !Int.II lt•verw Aroow, Sullcle• s-~ .. " Wlncllernrnert Ved!I C~lleflle Brown Reoelle (c:»ntet11oercltl Salurclev Ith~ Hert>or Vect>t C~nl Dume Rece ISolnnellllf Seri.ti S.turclev. Ce1>rl·2S rtoottiL Sttureley ltedondO llteC/I 'l'edll CluO-f'olnl Dume rece (All Ser!Hl S.turO.Y $outn Co••I Corlnlllle n Ye cllt Clul>-Ont·CIKllln R-11•. S.lurdew. Sunol'f; Erloon nellOnat ct>ernploft&l\lp S.turO.Y. Sun· oev, Pe1111r.on Bowl (St.,) SliturcSn, S..ncltv $811~ Coroneoo Cevt Vecttt CIUb--Clenle Serie., Saturoev. San O'-Yecttl CtuO-<herlly Cut> lhe<'ldl· UP) S.Jurdlll. MJu lon Bev Vectlt CluO-Junlor•!.enlor Atoeltt, S.turO.Y, 5'lnclev S.nle Clere Recinci Auocletlon-U~SSA lteoetta. Stlurdev. s..no.v CDl'-do Yecht C~r S<lrntnef Strief (lflvlte llCNI l\endic:lp) Sunelev Octerti kM Y 4.dlt ~ Olnellv Str!H,Su<'lctev, San Lui• Aev ffow11r Squedron r ece s..ncSe v Solllllwftl.,., Y edit Clulr-V elle Serlet (htncllceP) Sunclev Sil-Gete Yecllt CIUC>-Ctl-S..IH. SUndlY San Dle90 Crul-Auoclet1on-Sou1nw .. tern VC lnvltatlonel P<edlclld I09 rect ~unoev ....... Mel~ AnteaPt Vedlt CluO-AnecePt ltlend Sofflft S.turCltY v..,lu•• Yecht Clul>-i!llue Weter .no GOICI Cuo Serlet. S.turdev. Sundev Cnennet llle"Cll Y ectlt Ctuo-Junlor S.bOI Dev, S.turCltY. Blue We ter s.. .... Sunol• While"• Yac:llt Ciuo-W .. lleke Cue> Reoetta • Sunclev Polnl .Dume Yeclll Cluo-Sorl"9 Strofl !>elufdlv San Fe'""""° Val"" Yacht CluO-Sten N JllM'I Rt11a111. Sund•• S..nle Barbe•• Yeci>t C1uO-Wllion Ser!H S.Jurdev, Sundey EDISON. • • From Page C1 (Billy Ru~erford) fU"St. (Jerry) Hinojosa lS our oldest quar- terback. I don't-know" Milner -"Sam C.entofante is our starting tailback. Tius LSn't evasive heaven. You want an ~er, you'll get an answer." So, nothing really changes when it comes to &iison and Fountain Valley. it doesn't matter whether it's October or June. these a.re the Arabs and Jews, don't expect them to agree on too many things: They do agree, however, about the extra benefits involved. "We've never laughed so much or had so much fun on the prac· Uce field," says Workman. "Some were a Uttle overzealous at firs1 . They hadn't been in a uniform for a long time and were trymg tq make up for last time. "Practices have probably been better than we anticipated. I didn't think some would pick it up that fast. Their work load capacity isn't what it used to be, but a surprising n umber are not only doing a good job, but are much, much better than they were in high achool." "When we sat down at first," says Milner, "I thought we would have to put a lot of time into techniques, but after 40 minutes on the first day we ruwen't gone back to it. It's the one thing that has as- tounded me. For me, personally, it'& the most fun I've had in 15 years of co aching f oo tba l l. a heart-wanning experience to be able to talk to them and 11ee how their lives have gone on." The anticipated crowd 1s ablo a key aubjtct for both UCI selects Semonsen Aileen Semonlen, • 19'1f sraduate of Corona c:leJ Mar Hli~ hal been nernil!d u UC lrvlne'a Ullltant volleyball C09Ch for the 1983 wamen'a aeuon., accordJ.na to head coech Mike Purlta. Semonlen. 22. WM th9 ca~ of the s.. Kina YGlleyball -.m 1D her -.'6ot y.u and W9 Ml all-See View ~ 9tlecUon ln 1e11, me and im. She .a.. attended Cal Po\)' Sen LUii Ob-~ where the comp.wd • .ft out.llde hitter tor tl'w M~ ' C..t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1~83 Fewer kids add up to hard times for hard candy Bv ANDY O'CONNELL Of .............. _ Hard c8J1dy has ta.Uen on hard umes. Sales h~ve slumped, hun- dreds of candy makers have been laid off. and now Life Savers, lrlc'., plans to cl<:>!W its oldest plant and allow the gargantuan rolls of mock candy that stand outside to be turned mto park decorauons. To the government officials who monitor lollipops, lemon drops. sourba.Us and suckers, it's all a matt.er ot demographics. America's median age rose from 28 to 30 between 1970 and 1980, mearung hall the populauon lS now 30 or older. Neil Kenney. an analyst for the Commerce ~part­ ment in Washington, said the changing population rrux and the growlfl8 »0p.tibticaUon of adults have had an effect on candy aalet. "All the population matures, It.a t.aste preferences mature," Ken- ney said. Americans are eaung les.s candy than they were a decade ago. At the same time, bard candy's share or the market is shrinking while candy containing chocolate i.a in- creasing Its market share, he said. "Candy containing chocolate generally is a more complex taste sensation," Kenney said Wednes- day in a telephone interview. "and, one might argue, a sophisti- cated combination of tastes and flavors." Life Savers nevertheless have their adult admirers, such as Maryanne Morgan, who often eats. them aa she corrunutes to her job at a Manhattan credit union from New York'• Dutchea Coun- ty. She likes them beauae they're unobtrusive on the train. ''You just leave it ln your mouth and It dtaappea.rs," MB Morgan said. ''l like (chocolate) but it doesn't like me," she said. "It makes me fat." A\ a press conferenc.-e Tuesday in Port Chest.er, N.Y., Peter Rogers, president of Life Savers Inc .. announced that the company will close its candy plant there in April aft.er 64 years of operation. The shutdown will put 14~ people out of work. In 1981 , 300 em- ployees were laid off because of slumping sales. "Sugar. roiie<iycand y cons ump- tlon ia down 3~ pen-ent in the past aix years," Rogers said. After ApriJ, all Life Savers candles will be produced at the company's plant in Holland , Mich , near Grand Rapldil. The plant in Pon Chester lS the oldest belonging to the company, whk h has been owned by Nabl8CO Inc. for a year and a half It l8 located within sight of the railroad tracks that carry commuters into New York City from Connecti- cut's Fairfield Cow1ty, and the 10-foot-long rolls of Life Savers that decorate the building grounds have reminded more than a few passing commuters to pop candy into their mouths. The building has been sold and is to be developed In to office spa<.-e Three of the giant Life Savers rolls w1U be shipped to other company plants, and two are being given to the mayor of Port ChPSter, Peter laiuUo ''The mayor said he WSB going tO put them ma park as part of the history of his town." said Barry Chapell of Nabl.ScO, who is helping Life Savers Inc w ith the phase-out. In 1977, he said, 40 mil hon boxes of Lift> Savers were sold, or 800 million packages "This year we'll sell 29 nuWon boxes," he said. Kenney said the per capita consumption of all candy in America was 18.7 pounds m 1972 and had dropped to 16 pounds by 1891 'Tis the season to be sensible about sunglasses By SYLVJA PORTER We're now into the biggest season for buymg sunglasses -with the mfonned estimate that before 1983 ends, we wW have spent more than $720 million on 72 million pairs of sunglasses. This • unquestionably has reached the status of a fashion "accessory," with men as we U as women stocking up on wardrobes of glasses in different styles and colors. But sunglasses go far beyond a fashion item in importance. They affect your VlSion, your entire physicaJ well-bemg. You must buy wisely. If your eyes are especially PORTER sensitive to light, be sure the lenses are dark enough to protect you in bright light. Wear the glasses if the day is cloudy but bright. to shield your eyes from glare -even if the sun isn't visible to you directly. U you wear prescription eyeglasses. wear prescnption sunglasses as well, prescribed by an eye-care professional. Change the sunglass prescription when your regular prescription is changed. If you wear contact lenses and you want lO wear sunglasses over them to protect your eyes Crom glare, wmd and dirt, be sure to choose optical quality lenses that are distortion-free If you're among the 100 million wearers of TO START A FORECLOSURE 24 hr. Service RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL ~ E~ P \C RECOi'\ E' \"\CE A .tlifn'"'"' 'VUt•r •l•fH" (71 4) 955-0696 2000~ ~ non-prescription sunglasses, you 've almost certainly misplaced or lost a pair occasionally. Consider using "photochromic" lenses that darken in bright sunlight and lighten when you wear them indoors or in lower light levels, so you can avoid taking them on and off too often and lower the risk of loss. If you're buying sunglasses with designer logos on the temples. think again. You're not getting extra value for your money. and the famous designers frequently don't design them at all but merely license use of their names. If you're spending money on costly "advances" that provide little or no benefit, don't. It's silly to buy sunglasses that fold in hall, models with small transistor radios bwlt in and sunglasses with flashing lights to make you more visible in dimly lit nightclubs. But you may find of real worth some of the new glasses designed especially for driving. There are several brands on the market that can be a worthwhile purchase, parucularly if you must drive Ultrasysterns net up 76% over '82 Irvine-based Ultrasyst.em.s lnc. reported this week its ne t income for the first fiscal quart.er increased 76 percent from $8.3 rrullion last year to $14.7 million. Net income rose by 85 percent, from $430.000 to $794,000, said President Phillip Stevens, who said the earnings represent new records for the company. F..amings per share, based on l 1 percent more shares than last year, reached 13 cents, a 63 percent increase over last year's 8 cents, he said Ultrasystems is an engmeering and construction company involved m high technology projects including alt.emative energy s ystems, power plants and food pr~ing. 1 • During June. with the purchase of a Canon PC Copier and a cartridge. you will receive a free cartridge with black, blue or brown toner good tor 2000 + copies. SINGLE FEED $1295 AUTOMATIC FEED CANON'S REVOLUTIONARY PC DESK TOP .COPIERS Virtually maintenance-free, disposable cartridge contains toner and working parts Highest quality reproductions, multi-color capability, accepts almost any paper Easily portable, under 50 pounds, less than 10 inches high Perfect for •The busy executive who needs h}a own personal copier •The small office •The office at home Canon (((~@))) ' P!RSONAL COPltRS • Ooea not tndude CMIC)er (714) 540-3234 UNIVERSITY C1aN rutwm 2900C Brialol, Suite 208, Cosla Mesa. CA 92626 mall kinds of weather. These sunglasses have yellow or amber lenses that cut glare by absorbing some of the blue light m the spectrum. They make driving more comfortable and less tiring on your eyes, and thus reduce squinting. The Chameleon lin1:'s spec1aJ driving glasses, priced under $25, darken an bright sunlight and al.so adjust tO overcase <.'Ondit1ons such as fog ~d mist to give sharper contrast. Chameleon's sunglasses were introduced this year by Coming. which also makes the high-fashion SerengtH1. Sungl~ may seem as fashionable as this year's earrings or cuff links, but they're far more important. To buy wisely· • Check o ut the lenses for distortion by holding them up to the light and examining them for clanty and scratches. •Be sure the frames fit correctly. T hey shouldn't slide down your nose whe n you shake your head and they also shouldn't press too tightly against the sides of your head or behind your ears. Your eyelashes OVER THE COUNTER NA SO LISTINGS S411Kt OTC I NEW YORK (Al') ComCIH NASOAQ GuOtello<:• CmlSlll' l/IOWll'O hl\>h9tf t>ld• CmwTtl olld IOwnf o!I.,, Dv ConPoo mer•t l mele<t H OI CorOll • 0..... Pl'k:•• dO nof CortSI lnciucM r•••ll mer •uo Cro. Tr me••dOwn "' comm CullFO • ·In ion kl< Wed 0100 • , Soock Bid A.. o .. 1M AEL llld >e• )1•. OB- "" t\Pro• :it •I O.IOt\ AVM Co I 9 Oe•ConT .Ac.cttn1 27 171 • Dewey 1 Ae<llf•Y ""' """ OloCrv• AOOl•nW 14''> lS Ol1nCru AovRoo •111t '''• Oocu0t¥ AflB'11 n 2l"" Oo<rOn s Al~lnc 07 .. DoylOB Amer• h 1"-l 0".icn """'" 13,,, 11"' oynao • •Gr•• , l• , l •-lo Ollflron t\lnGo , 71 ,..,, 1 Ea lnVnc: ANlln• 111\o 19 E<Olll l> AQuev , .... 6 , EIPH AR•~ II l'lo I..., I El(MfBt A,..Ollt IJ , 1l 'I E .. Nuct ArlOSA 10>\ l'O_.. EIMocl ' Ar!Ot\Od llSlo 111 Er111Conv APCMe<: Sfllo 60 EnrMel AOldMI lt'I> ,,... Enlhv Aro.nGD 6h 71, Entwl\tl AllO•LI It 19 'J EotOH Atlenlt 1 Sl SJ • F•rmG A•nl• 11 11 'I Fldl<Of BBOO s Q', '3 " FtB•Sv BolfdCp 11 .. IJ FIEmPS B•r!OHE UYJ 10>\ F•wnFln B.,atF, So So"" FleoBk Bov~ 11 '> 11' • 1 Flk•vr BM41,,. I I''< 11"'-FleNFI B I LI> J6 l6" Flu<oct> a~o tt.,, :io•~ ""'"'o l lrd3"on 70 20'4 FranllCD Bln<'W '"' .,, FraM EI Biv-I._.. 16ll Fr"SG Bonana '"' ''-Fr-nt lkwT-t llOI Ful!HI Bulla!\ 67' • '11\o I G.ntctt • BurnuoS 1,. '"' GnAulm CNL Fin l ..., 4''• I GnO.va CPT l~ )SIO GnltlEat CtiWth tt .,..., Govern CentadH ti'> '"" I GraPllS< C.PEn l • 1"' GrnAov ca.swat I•"' 1s1o G"lnhl CaoAlr J " 3,. Gyroovn Ctr.CP s 11 11 l't Ha4M>n C•tua 16 ,, ·~ HernlPI CNtltl'-"'" os•i. Herdw1' Clll'mS 1 n>ti. U'-Hrpltow C ... tlH lJ"h u Herl>Go Cllmlnv 1S· 16 1-. HerllNI Cllml.. ll \'t IS Hellner • C .... UH 20 ,I .. twnfdF CllullO -llO\oo H-Clrll<o ,.. SIOI Hoovaf' C1l15oG• H .... HOrl1R1 Cr1u A • ll''> U'" I IMS 14'1 CtaU a l lS .... '6\'t ISC C1a<1' , 1l ll''-lntre1no CIOWCP 11 11 , ln!ot CotrTlo 11'1> 11" I :~:0r~n~ CO'oO., MUTUAL FUND shouldn't touch the lenses • Use a mirror that gives you a fuU view of your face and neck. and check the proportions. Men tend to buy sunglasses too small for their faces, while women often pick frames that are too big. If the sunglasses are unflatt.ering, you'll tend not to wear them. Flashy styles are fun for weekends: but for everyday use, your first pair should have conservative frames. For 1ns~nce, gold aviators for men, thin-line tortoise frames for women . • Additional pairs might have more unusual colors and shapes. There will be dorens of style c-ombmations on the market thts spnng and summer. with optical-quality lenses. • Keep your sunglasses free of lint and smudges. Store them in a sturdy case for protectJon from scrat.ches. When dnving, aJways ~ke off your sunglasses at twilight and don't wear them dnvmg al rug ht. tO .0. ~··" JO Jo·, TIME DC f ' .. f 'l Temo• IS .. 16'> hl\dtm B"-1l TllCumP .. I • Tt lUnA 111'1 14 l tf'•lll tS OS"-Tl1><arv Sl'" Sl'i TomtOll '" I\\ Tovol• u .. 1•'" TW\IE • ., ,., so ,. 7'''> ltoeoPd 11"' 11t\ Toon 1 ll' • ))lo US En< lt•i :IO US Sur 61', 6l ~ US Trek IS 1' UVa8'11 Jl l?', 1 UnvE"9 .... 5'> UP-P Sl'fl S7... VH IR 41' • 41"-ValNll M .,.,. vanOu~ n .. 14 • Vtl<ro JI'> )7"' VletraS• -"'" JI VIO.OCD 10 l 10\o, VoN81h JS"" )6 WarnEI H\o H'-W\nEnr Jni 11"' WOMP H" H lo WHotd JJ "'" wmorc 15-'lo IS>\ Wtllra 2J • 11,. w 1, ... o :M " )t • WOl•Atu -)Ot. Womal lJY> )4 , WOOCILot JS•• )0 WriOMW 61'1 6'' • ZIOnUI S6''> SI n a Not 10'• 11 '. UPS AND DOWNS NEW YOR~ IAPJ -Thll ,_,.lrlO W\f ,..,., 1"9 0-.w lt>e ,_,., 11oc1t.t ano warr•n'' fP\lit ,._...,. tont ~ ,,. mo11 a.no ctown the motl t>eMd on -~ant 01 Cf\er\09 fo< w.., No HCl>fifln irodlnq "940• U or 1000 '"•'" .,. ln(1.UC)li0 Nel olld -C»fll-~ ore ,._ dtf! ... tnea llelWMll 1"9 OfOVIOu\ CIOtlnG 1>1<1 1><1Ca alld tOda• • 1a11 111<1 Ptl<t , .. , ., " ll '> ~, 11i.. ll ,.. ... 1 NtMt Tr°"" wl Tr°"""" Elcmed AcroEn Rlbl ,., Tround UnlvllE 0.-• OCTrao 00r .... UroeCr • WlKlt! o-o tl"L Sv Fd0"1 B AOClf wl TSC Inc IRIS "" EnwrT•t BHICO l'Nmcll ATl.E (;«IMO BdlOCPI Cllnl1 " lA"'' >•"-' I• .... J Sii\. S11• • JV) •'. s /~:" 1 :::~I t 11'1> ,,.. I IJ " ll"-~ 11"' ,... 10 10~ II'• II 9 ... '"' 11 )0 ''• JO.'-1J 11 11'1 I It U'-lt!ll IS s. S.''1 1 16 S01SI ll 10 10'" 11 """ " I 1, n ... n~ 10 I•~ 1•\'t 21 :ioi.. 11 . n ., .. jO n 10'" 10\0 l4 11 )I.... H •OO<ka!>ie No,,,. I Trllon 1 Vuel>Ot > GQOCll\IW f ASolr t S Reoe.1 6 Macnlc 1 ~nCollot • Pr~$·• t EH tnl 10 MlnlM I 11 AmNuc.1 It A~• n 11 RtV\tlld It NYAlrl IS S•a•GIO t6 Nuc:tPtl II COO<>ilfn It Vottln 1 lt Fwl'IU :IO GtSwtl n 11 La.,lc WI 21 \llOCon lJ OCG Tc l• AFP Im lS Gu"Nuc 16 1-t ~ LU I Cr>e ,..., +l)·I• ''" + , 11 16 + , 1011'1 + , . ., S11 + ',.. ... •I • .., t ' • , .... I"' f 4 ... .. l t .., IS • 1.., , ..... J.. • ,,, 11, • ( .. s' + .. ) ., . ., s • • .. 11 ., •• 7l • ) SJ·l6 +II 16 -+ .... IS• + 1 .. 1'-• ' IS .. + l\o '., • "J DOWNS l •S! " " )\ IS'-0._ 11>\ I°' l>o s .. I 7t .• ,,, ) 10 6. .. (0 .. 1) ,. . 10 , ., ,.,., •'·• 10''> • .... " ChO -... -.. -l"'--7 _ , ... -I .. -"' -.. _, -1 -.. -.. -71'> -.. -., -•'· -1 ... J -I -~ -.. -1 -"' -.. -I'> P<i UD .. I UD 3'0 uo no UP ll J UP JI J Uo 17 6 uo JJI UP no UP ?I• UP 200 UP 100 UP Ill uo II 2 UP llt UD 17 I Uo 161 UP t• 7 UP 163 UP ISi uo IU UP UO Uo IJO UP ll 7 UP IU Uo 11 S P(I Of! 1'6 °" It. Of! 19' Oii It. Of! " s Of! 11.J Oii ,, s Of! ll s Of! 11.1 Of! 11 1 Of! ll s Of! ll I Of! 111 Of! 10 7 Of! 10 s Of! 10. Of! " Of! •.J Of! • 1 Of! " Of! " ()fl ti Of! 11 Of! .. Ofl .. Ofl " -------------------------------------...... .. -'"'. NYSE (:(JMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OUOt ""ON\ lN(lUOl f lUOU ON'"' NtW YOIU( MIOWl\t ""''"' ... w I OUON Ot. tllOtf AliO ClNCllOfATI noc• l 11.CN'INOI\ ANO ltf ~ltfl 0 I Y f Hl N•OD AND tNU INt t $2.97 million Fed aid given out in Los Angeles By die Attoclate4 Pree• LOS ANGELES -The first $2.97 rrullion m federal aid to vict1ml ot long-term unemployment has been handed out ln Loe Angeles County -leSR than a third the amount requested by local charity organl:r.a- t.lons. A seven-member boa.rd of pnvate chanties Judging 114 requesta for funds made awards to 74 appllcanCI Wednellday. including big awards to the Salvation Army ($390,000) and the Catholic Welrare Bureau ($229,000). The average request was for $135,000 but the average award waa $38.899. High Court rules on bankruptcy WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court has ruled that federal bankruptcy laws. which are designed to give troubled companies time to straight.en out lhe1r finances, provide protect.ion against claims by the Int.ermal Revenue Sevicoe as weU as other creditors. In a 9-0 decia.ton, the court said Wednesday that the IRS doer; not have the nght to keep seized property in payment of the debt. ''Ownership of the property is transferred only when the property is aold to a bona fide purchaser at a tax sale." said Justice Harry A. Blackmun in h1s opuuon for the court. GE to close 10 I acilities CLEVELAND-General Electric Co. plans to close IO plants, reduce its workforce by 1,595 and spend $250 million to upgrade its facilities over the nex1 lhree Yeani "to keep th1s business healthy and competitive," a company executive said Wedneeday. GE said that 2,540 jobs would be elimlnat.ed but ~45 would be created. Most of the employees would either be eligible for a severance pr<>8J"am, be eligible for early retirement or could seek jobs at plants that are increasing production, tht> company said. Interest rates rising again Interest ral.eS are rising again, and the hnanc1al markets a.re in a tiuy about it. AB the interest rate on a long-tenn Treasury bond pushed above 11 pen.-ent Wed.neaday for the first time in four months. the stock market took a dive. The Dow Jones average of 30 indu.strial stocks, which had lost more than 19 points on Tuesday. shed another 9.41 points, closmg at 1, 185.50 That put the main market ind1cator at its lowest closing level since April 19. when it was at 1,174.54 Volcker may retain his job WASHINGTON (AP) -Reagan administrauon officials say Paul Volcker may keep his pb as chaum.an of the Federal Reserve Board. President Reagan met privately earlier this week with Volcker. whose tenn expires Aug. 5. Larry Speakes, deputy White House press aecretary, confLrmed on Wednesday that Reagan and Volcke r had talked Monday afternoon, but said the president hasn't yet made a decision on whether to appoint a new head of the central bank. AMERICAN LEADERS SYMBOLS d M..-Tit•'t-. 10., " P4•,.. , •• ,,, r\•Qft Uf'loMH OtfWfwtlt t\01..0 •• , •• o• 01'1tO•~O• .,. 1.nnw11 d11buUIHTMH"tt1 b•Yd on lne ••at 1u•f'1••1v o• t •"V •""ul• Otc•a111•on iP4tC••t Of •~H• d1'11dtH'\01 Of C>•vme~ta not "''0"•1eo ea •eov••• ••• ode<1ll'••t1 '" '"' nflOwt"Q 10()1~01 .. 1 A••o ••tr• o• •••rat O•Annv1• ratt e>4vt olOC• Otvtdel\CI C l1Qu1C111tflQ Clt•tOe lld )ect"e<J or o••o '" p•~"'9 1; m""'"' .0ec1a1eo o• P•od •1111 ••oc' O•v·-oi IC)l•I uo , .... .., '"" YH • Omo...O omtHed ,., .. ,.cj Of "° ltCloOI\ ,. .... a1 .... d•~ -~ ll·O.Ct...., Of P•iO I"'' ~ .,. l<C-'81Ntl ti-""I" O~l"' .,,_. METALS HEW YORK (API • 5pol ,_,,,,,_ ...., .. -Todaiy ~ • 1-1 -.u • ll"'Jl>CI us 0.011 --~. 7• 40 cenu"" pound ljY ~ "'°' "*'"' -IN.a ....... lt-23 -.t •• pound a...40..,.,,_..,,_ "" ... '* ....... w-comj)Cl9ff• II> ,.......,_· 11-•pound H Y -._,. ~ CIO-alO OOpet 1111>--,,,.,. "-"-• '403 00.1408 00 dO .... Oll( -lro,-NY "·N•'A 11~1 ' 0.Cla•.O CM O•td •" O'M"-0""\ 12 M()llffll OIUt tlOC• 0•.,01<'0 I Pt •CI " ttOC.-1n P'9<.0•"'0 1~ ~Hu 1 1ttm11.c C•t.n vttu• O~ tA•Ofv1oenct 01 t • Ott1h0ult0t dt ll e..•l ••01v•a.t"Ot Of ••·UOhtt y { • O•..,•a.nc ef\O ••J•• '" full ' S•'" I" •u11 c•d C•.ll•o •O WP\eri d11t'lbutit0 •111 w~ •tt ut O ww Wi t" ""'"''"'' •• W+tf\o\.I •• ,,.,, .. •0•• ... -cltt1'•0Ut~ D ( '11•0 flle Otoe. of e tlp('t H t mulltO .. OI !)el tftt te -ll·"Qt -..0 II) dovJO•"O IM 18lt11 I,_, .. N "'·"tt "O<l'f fl\10 IH I .... D<tC• ------··- •. ' I i .. --------·----------~ ('I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 OORDO THE J',\'9 IL,. CIRCl'S by Bii Keane 11Why does Grandma drinl decapita ted coffee?" :ti \R'9 \Dl K•~ by Brad Anderson "Who taught you that trick?" Bl(; (;EOR(;•: I by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis ()000 OC ''YOOP. OAYS ARE NUM8E~E.O AS SOON AS JON TURN'5 ~15 BACK. ~£R01( II "Well ·· back to the u lt mines." GOif N ON BllDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF Bolh vulnuable. West deals. NORTH • 1032 ~ 10763 0 885 • 1096 WEST EAST • K 8 7 •Vold <:7 J 911 <:7 KS42 O AK72 0 Jl0943 •K 72 •J853 SOUTH •AQJ96 54 <:?AQ OQ •A'l4 Thr bidding· Wut North t:.: .. t '011th l 0 PA111 2 ) Obit Pan 2 P118 4 • Pa11 Pu11 Pu• Open1nK lt•Jd Kini( or ~O~MAN, CAN \. A~K 'iOU A QOf.51~? Htrt's an opp-0rtunity 10 lt'Sl your ll'<'hniqut· Would you rathn J1l11y or ddt'nd four llpadcs'/ Wt· do /IOL approve or l ht• bidd1nK. East should show his four rard ht'llfl suit rather thun rais,• di11munds. How· rvn , thnt would not have changt•d the r1nal t'Onlract IL se1·m~ that declarer can gel to dummy only once bcCllUSl' or Lhe poor trump hn •ak. lit• rum lhl' second diamond Jnd rnn t'nler dum my with tht• trump ten l>OOnt•r ur l:slt•r llt•'I '' lo f(•,1d l h•· 11·11 or rlulh. hul 1-;a)l dol')n't t'O\l'r ,111d dt•c·l.trl'r will 1·nd UJ.I lt"'ni: .1 tr1rk 1n 1•ad1 '>Ult ~u.>A'i~ rE.Et-r~et 10 Ml( ~ovR 61~ 6R01'~R AN'I QUE.~110t.1 A1 ALL\ l 'OR BETTER OR t'OR "ORst; UXtU !-NO l"\ORE 8Ct\OOL .-I CAN I HARDLY BE.l.IEV~ rr. Yau·\~ t-10 Ho"'1t=llJORK, NO G~TtiN \)f' ON 1iMe .. •'l 'K'' "''Kt;RHt~.\' HERE~ fYV.i kATE5T PIUA CREATION ... PEANUi Bll1'TER -GUACAMOLE ~ Rut look what happtn~ 1r, at tmk three. drclarer lt'.idi. the club queen from h1111d. If Wut takt's the king. h•~ sa fosl l'X it 1~ a l rurnp. Dum my wans and declarer lt•ads the ten or club~. JC E11st covers. det'larer wins and gel!> back lo Lhl' t11bll' with lht' nine or clubs lo lake lhe heart finesse. So Easl must duck, but declarer 1s in dum my to takt> thl' heart finesse -mak111g four-odd . Let '5 buck up a bat Sup pow Wl'i.l allow!! dt•cl.irt•r 10 wan Lhe 11uren or rlubs What th••n'! Now d!'i'1Jr1•r nl't>di. nnl} Olll' r1ni'S)>t' for hi!> l'un trat'I lk ran t'nlt'r dumm\ -.1th I~ 1 K~OIJ 1Hf. A~~. l\l AllJA'4S "ff.U.. '4oV ,.__ _ _, 1'"e. 1'Rvf~ lht• tt•n or trumpi. to tn kr lht' h1•arl f1n1·~lll', and hr wrll fOSl' d tmk 1n t'3t"h SUit t.'ltC!'Pt h1•arh, no mon· So rongratulat1ons 1r you t•lrcted 10 d1•dart'. W .. 'd likt• lo huvt' you on our s1d1· 111 our nt·xl learn rn;11rh II ave you been runn.lq lD· lo double tro11ble? Lei <.:harlu Goren help you flad ' yo11r way throqh the mau of DOUBLES for penaltie1 ud for takeout. For a copy of hie DOUBLES booldtt, tead 11.85 t4 "Gorea·Douhlu." cart of thi1 ntw1paper, P.O. 8011 259, Norwood. N.J. 07648. M1kt chHkl payable to New1paperbooka, by Lynn Johnston by Tom Batiuk I 'LL ADNllT I IT~~ Dl56UbTING TO LOOK Ai! II' 11' '' by Ferd & Tom Johnson DR. S'90CK by eorge Lemont PEA~l'T8 I 60T A •'c " IN MATH, A 'C" IN HISTORV, A '' C IN SPELLING ... Tl' M BLEW EEDflJ . . . .. .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . uH? IT1S WAY TOO ~MALL ACROSS IHt= STOMACH! \NH.AT l<IND OF rHINk'ING IS 1HAT? by.Charles M. Schulz SARCASM DOES NOT BECOME VOU, MA'AM ~ _..~~~~~~~~~--- ">.-WAS e>O RN \)LJSj' IWO HUN PRE::P Fee-r eeFoRe we <So.--ro "f'Hf; L.ANPING S"f'RIP. .. i • 1 1 I .. ll'IH;t; PARkt;R WtLL, 1l1E L.ATE SAM ()RIVER' 1F 'IOU HAD ARRIVED AN HOUR A(;,O, YOU WOULD HAVE SEEN A88EV • wHA.-eveR eeCAMe OF "GOO -GOO" AND ''GA-GA'' AND Al,...l... "f'HAI 5,.-ANPARP eAeY J AR<SON ~ 1-tHH IC.fHH N011CE OF DEATH OF NOTICE OF DEATH OF LESTER RAV MONO GENEVIEVE CONRADY A D ER E R A N D 0 P ADERER AND OF PETITI ON TO P ET I T I 0 N T 0 ADMINISTER FSrATE NO. ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A·lllHl. A· l J 81!!. To all h ei.n, be.nefld.anee, To all heln, benetldariea, credllora and contingent c reditors and contingent creditors o f Lester R..ymond trt!dltou of Gen evieve Aderer and per11on1 who Conrady Ade~r and penoN may be otherwt.e lntel'ftt.ed who may be otherwise ln the will and/or state: 11\terest.ed tn the will ~°" A petJtJon haa been filed estate: by Gail Marilyn Barrett in A peution has been ft.led the Superior Court or by Ga.i.1 Marilyn Barrett ln Orange County requesting the Superlor Court o r that GIUI Marilyn 8'.rrett be Orange County requeeung appointed as parsonal that Gail Marilyn Barrett be repreaent.auve to admlniater appointed as personal the estate of L ester repreeentative \0 admlruater Raymond Aderer. Costa the estate of Genevieve Mesa, CA (under the Conrady Aderer, Costa Independent Admiruatrauon Mesa . CA (under th e of F.sunes Act) The petition Independent Adnurustrauon is set for hearing in Dept. of F.atates Act). The petlbon No. 3 at 700 C1V1c Center Dr , is set for h earing in Dept. West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Dr .. on June 22, 19113 at 9:30 a.m West. ·Sant.a Ana, CA 92701 IF YOU OBJECT to the on June 22, 1983 at 9:30 am granting or the pelltton, IF YOU 08.JOC'T to the you should either appear at granting of the petition, you the heanng and SUl\e your should either appear at the objections or hie written hearing and state your objections with the court objections Q.!' file wl".ltten before the hearing Your objecuons "1th the court appearance may be ln person before the h earin g . Your or by your attorney appear&.J'\«' may be IJ\ person I F Y 0 U A R E A or by your attorney CREDITOR or a L'Ontrngent 1 F Y 0 U A R E A credit.or of the deceased, you CREDfI'OR or a contingent must file your claim with the creditor of the deoeaaed. you court or present It to the must file your claim with the perso nal representative court or present it to the appointed by the court personal representative w1t.htn four months from the appointed by the court date of f irst issuance of within four months from the letters as provided Ill Section date o f rlrst issuance of 700 of the Probate Code of letters as provided in Sect.Ion California The time for 700 of the Probate Code of flJ.i.ng claims wiU not expire California. The time for prior to four months from filing clauM will not expire the date of the hearing prio r \0 four mont hs from nouced above. the date of the hearing YOU MAY EXAMlNE notil'ed above. the file kept by the court. U YOU MAY EXAMINE you are interested 1n the the Cue kept by the court U esi.ate. you may serve upon you are interested in the t h e e x e c u t o r o r estate, you may serve upon administrator, or upon the t h e e x e C' u t o r o f attorney for the exec\Jtor or administrator, or> upon the adnurustrator, and Hie with attorney for the executor or the court with proof of adnunlstrat.or. and file with service, a written request the court with proo r of stating that you desire service. a wntten request special notice of the ftling of staling that you desire an inventory and spec1al nouce of the riling of appraisement of estate assets an I n ventory and or of the pet1t1o ns o r appra.llement of estate asaelB accounts menlloned in or o( the petitions or Section 1200 and 1200.5 of a ccounts mentioned in the Ca.li!omia Probet.e Code Secuon 1200 and 1200 5 or T H E O 0 O R E Y . the C&llfomia Probate Code H A N A S 0 N 0 , t 3 1 l 7 T ff E 0 D 0 R E V . Hawt.laorae Blvd., Salk %05. 8 AN A S 0 N 0 . 1J1 l 7 Torrance, CA t05Gr., (!13) Hawt.laorae Blvd., Salt~ %05, 313·&804. Torraace, CA '85(15, (%13) Pubtlallod 011ngo CoHt Dally 373-8&'4. Piiot, June 2. 3. 11. 1963 Publlllled Oraoge Coast Delly 2S4,.·83 PNot. June 2 3, 9, 1883 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, June 9, 1983 C'7 PlB.IC NOTICE PlBJC M>TICE Nil.IC NOTICE MLIC NOTIU NII.IC *>TIC£ ~ K.-11 8'1•M'PM MVtaD NOTICI l"ICTlT10UI llU .... 8 M COflDl!O MAY '1, Ila I~ COUftt Of' NOTICI 01' TRUITH't tALI TO CONnlACT0..8 MAlllS ITATDmMT PU NO. 0-IMCMI CAUPOflMIA TrvtlM .... No. TIC·ml CAU..91G POii ..,. Tiie IOffOwlnO P«eoN .,, OOlnQ °"'ICIA&. MCON>t COUH'n Ofl ~ YOU Aft! IN DIFAULT UNDIA A idlool OlettiGt lfWINE UHl"t!O oull~ u OftAMCMI COUNT'V, CA.llf'OftNIA 700 CIYtcl cu.°'· WMI OHD Of' TillUIT DATWD 1-11-12 Bid DMdllne. 1000 o·~. m A Ip c 0 MM f "c I A L NOTICI M OCl'AULT S.ta AM, CA 1Dll1 UNLHI YOU TAKI ACTION TO of Ille 2111 dey of June. 1183 8ROKEAAOE. 6100 Biren 81•-.I. ANO ILICT10N TO Hll l"\.AINTF't TOYI..,... ue, INC., l"AOTICT YOUA l"AOl"lftTY. IT Pi.-of 8ld ~ OISTRrCT ~ Beeoro, Celll0tnle 82MO UMDIA OllO °" TftUIT • o..----lllioft. MAY er IOLO AT A l"UeLIC ADMINISTRATIVE C~TER A .. ocl •••cl lndU tl • l e l ~TANT NOTICI DIPINDANTe: TIARA ,.AMA I AL I . 1 P y Ou HI! ID AH Protect tdenllllctllon Nam• Prop•rllH . Inc .• a Celllornlt " YOUA l"ftO,EftTY II IN l"ftOPIRTtll, INC., a Oelllomlt U'lANATION OP THl NATUftl Dt81RICT ADMISTRATIVI! CE NTER corporation. 6100 Blrcll St,.el. l'ORICLOIUftl HCA.UH YOU O«P9111tioft; l'OOOMAKlll, INC 1 Of THI "ft0CHOINQI AOAIHIT SHOP, OFFICE a WAREHOUSE N9wport he<in. CelllOfnle 12te0 A Ill I e IHI HD IN Y 0 U ft D•leware o orro,ratlen1 M.Y YOU, YOU I HOULO CONTACT A IUILOtNOll. Tiiie bull,_ 11 COl\Ouctecl by I PAYMINTI, IT MAY •• IOLO OAADIN • A •OCIATll • LAWYIA. Pleet Plan• .,. on Ill•. THE 00<poretton WITHOUT ANY COUlllT ACTION, pt r t 11et1 h I p ; A e C 0 On 8·23 ·83 11 11 30 a m BLUROCK PARTNERSHIP, 2300 AMOOlttecl lnduttrl411 encl YOU hi.,. may have Ille le9•1 CONtTAUCTION CO,, INC. t IMPEAIAL BANCORP o 1n1 Ouly N9wport Bllid., N9wport S..Ch, CA P1099'11M, Inc;. tight lo b<lnQ VOUI ICCOUnl In 0000 COtl"Ofttlon; JAM«I I , MAftTIN, eppotnleO T1ut1e1 unott a no 82~. By: Donald W. Gllmoof 11an01ng DY P'rl"O all ol your Pt•I AALITON PUftlNA COWAN\', 1 pur*"'artl 10 o.od of Trull rec:otO.O NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN ll'ltll tu PrMldtnl due peymenle plut petmlllecl eotlt Ill I•' o v r I co r p or• t Ion , on O 1112182 .. Oocuman1 No Ille ·~~ ~ Olllrlc:l ol Tlllt 11a1~ w• macs with IN end txl>tl'I-wilnln tnrM month• fllTlfU!MINT PUND TftUIT 01' 82-011111 01 011ic111R«OI011n 11\t Ofange Co~mty, Ctlll0tnla, ect1ng Coun1v CWll of Ofenoe County on from 11141 Gett 1n1a notice ot deleull THI l"lUMelNQ, HI ATINQ ANO olf1ce or 1n1 Record., 01 Or•no• by end tnrouon 111 Governing May 23, 1893. WU tlOOIOlcl. which Oal• al ptPtNQ INCMJITRY OP IOUTfflAN County, Ca11101n11. eucuttO by Bottd, ht<elnafttt rol.,r.O IO u 0.U.W1" a WAQNDI recording eppurt hereon Tiiie CALlfOANIAI TRANeAMIAICA CL VOE A McKAY and WINIFRED E "OtSTRICT", wltl ,_,.,.up 10. but A l"fofeMIONll Uw Cefpof111aft amounl 11 147,436 36 of wllloll TfTU! IHIUAANCI COWANY, o McKAV. WILL SELL A.T PUBLIC nol l11t1 thin 1111 obov•·tle lecl lulte .. 168850 I• Hllm11to lorecloaure -por•ltoft, ... .,.,_unainown AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST tlmt,-'tdbld1I01llltawarclol• ~lntneAftftllll COlll •• ol Mey 8. 18&3 end Wiii olelmlng .~, ...... , ~11llabl~ BIDDER FOR CASH, (p1oyabl• ., oontrecl '°' the •boYt proi.c;t. ....,.,. e.Mtl, CA,_ Inc••••• untll your 1coou n 1 rlOhl, llttt, nt•I•, IMft °' lftltl'M\ time of sale In l11w1ul money of 1ne Sidi llloff ~ rtc*Yad In Ille pleoa '21191 beeomM cutrenl. You may nol neve lft ltlo ptoptfty deec~ lft ltlo Untied S1e1es1 11 the f1on1 ot Ille IO•nlllteo above. a nd •h•ll be PuDll•h•O Orano• CoHt Dolly lo P'Y Iha entire unpaid porilon ol Complefnl ed••tea to the lmpottal T&L BullOln9, 102 WHI OC** and publlcly rMd aloud el ~.May 28, .!.-2, 11. 18, 1883 your aoooun1. •v•n 111oug11 lull ,._tiff'• tttte • .,. enr ~ ..., Ftr61 S1ree1 Tu111n, CA. 111 right. the aboYa-etatecl 1im. end~. 2488-&3 peyment -.u dtmanatd, bul you "'91nllff'• tttte ~~ ..w DOii t 11110 ano 1n1orHt con.eyed to and Th«• Wiii ~ • S 100 00 dopotlr •-.,. W\ftt'C mu11 P8)' lhO amounl .iatecl abo.,. ttlrouoh to, Inc......,., now M40 by 11 unoar H td Ooecl 01 required for aaon '" ol bid ,._,.. nu1n.L Aller three months from lhe 0118 NO. •1241 lrua11n ma prope11y tllualod 1n se10 documtnl• to guarlll'llM lh411rt1Hutn 01 1oco10111on of this Oocumonl I UMMOMI OH HCOND Counly Ca11lorn11. dHCltb•no 1110 Ill 0000 oonllllon with 7 d•vt llttr (which <10111 of rocordallon appears AMCNDtlD AND lano therein Iha bid opening d•I• hereon,. union lho obllgallon being IUPf'U!MfNTAL COWL.A.INT PARCEl 1 Loi 32 or Trec1 No Eech bid mu11 oonlOfm end ~ lorectosed upon permit• a longer NOTICE! YOU HAVE •IEN 3749 1n 1he Cny or Co111 Me111.,1eu1ontlv• to rile oonlrect period. you have only 1ne legal right IU.O. n4£ COU«T MAJ O«CIOE C ou n 1 y o 1 O 1 a" g e. Su 1 e o I document a lu stop lho foreclosure by paying AQAINtT YOU WITHOUT YOUR Cehlornle as Pit• map rocord.O th Etich bldo.< el\tll eut>mll. on the lhe O!'flto emounl domanood by eUNO Hl.AftO UNLll• YOU Book 131 Pagot 20 1nrougn 23 torm turnl•h•d with Iha conlrect your c•ed1tor ftESPOftO WtnaN ao DAYt. MAO M1sce11eneou5 Map1 In 1na otltc• of Oocumtnl•. • Hat ot Ille l>'OC>C>Md To hncl OUI lhO amounl you mull TIW INf'ORMATION HLOW. 1h11 Counl/ Roc.ord•I Of sa10 tubconlreCtOll on lhla proi.tt U pay or lo artange for paymon1 lo AVllOI UtTID HA 1100 Counly required by lh• Subfelllng and "OP tno toreclo1ur11. or ti your DIMANDAO . fl TttleUNAL P ... RCEL 2 Thal pornon Of LOI &.ibcontrKlfng Fllf Prec1tc.e Act 11roperty .. In torlt(;IOSUIO IOI any l"U«M Dt!CIDM CONTftA uo. .... 9 ol Berry Rancno tn tno Clly Of GOVI. Code Sac 4100 IH aeq o111or raasoo contact Robert C AUDll.NCIA A MINOI QUE UD. Coste Mesa. County or Ot1ngo Each blddtl' mull tub.tnll with hla Wes1myer dbi R W Investors. 406 ftEll'ONOA Dt!NTRO DI llO DIAi. Stale ot California 8' shown on a I bid ctlllllt d or catllltr'• c11eck E FltSI SI • PO Bo~ 1!>71. Long LEA LA INfOftMACION QU~ map reG01de<1 1n book 9 page 7 or p1y11>1t to Ille DISTRICT or t bid Beach, CA. 90801 1·213·437-1251 llOUE Mtscelleneous Records ol Loa bond In 1ne form Ml forth In t'1o II you nave any quosllon1, you TO THi OIFENOANTI: Angel•• County, Calt101n1a. contrect dooumenle In an •mount snould conlact 11 lewyar or lhll 1 A. clvll complalnl llH been f1le<I des<ttbtd as follows not 1111 1'1•n 10 percent of Ill• government •goncy wlllcn may have ao•lnll you Bog1nn1n~ al 1110 Norlhatst mei1lmum emounl ol bid •• • Insured wour loan Remember YOU I L I 2 • T I N 37•" ...ti MAY LO'IE LEGAL RIGHTS" YOU 2 II you wt1h In O•lonO lhil cornet 0 0 O• rec 0 ~ ... guwantM that tho blOd« .... 1 "'"' DO NOT TAKI. PROMPT ACTION. t1wsu1t. you must. within 30 Oaya h shown on a n19p recorOoO In Into Iha propoMd conlrt.cl II lho NOTICE IS HEREBY GlllEN Thal .11., lhll 1ummon1 II Hrved on book 131 pagu 20 lllrougn 23 Hm• I• •werd•O 10 him In 1no RE ... L PROPERTY TRUST OEEO you, Ille with lhll coun • Wfl1141f't 111clus1vo Of M1scelltnoou1 Maps, -· of 111111.tre 10 '"'" Into ukl rMponlO to 1n• compl411nl UnleM rec->rds ot Orengo Counly, contrect. euel't H curlty will b• CORPORA. TION, a Calllornll you do so your ooleull wlll D• Colllorn•a lhenco Soutll 62 Oegraea lorlolt. Corporation o t San Otego antered upon eppllcellon ol 1ne 2J'ot ·wos1a1ong tll0Nor1nllnoof DISTRICT r-vN Ill• right 10 Celllotnia, '*Trustee under• Deed plalnlllt and tnla ooun may en1er a aa1c. Lot. t06 •5 1001 10 the retect any or all bide or to waive any of Trus1 Oattid Julio 9. 198 I, judo"*'• ag11ln11 you ror 111e relief Northwaat corner of said Loi 32 lnegulerttlea Of lnlormellll" In any e A 8 cu 1 • d b V R 0 GER L oemandecl tn lho compll tnl wlll<:h s<1tcl No•ll\WOSI corner being 8 po1n1 bid•°' In Ille bidding. THOMPSON end LEA 0 . "" t • 1 THOMPSON husband ano wife as could ratult In g1rnl1nmenl of in a curve concevo .. osier y, nl• no Purtuenl to th• provlllon• ot communlly property II.I Trua1or 10 wegee, taking Of money 0t property a raorus ot 240 00 IMI, a rad11l 11ne 8«:11on 1773 ol the L•bor Code of secure centin obllg.atton• In l~vor or olh., relief raquHl•O In th• 1nrouo11 aa10 po1n1 DHrs Nor111 82 the Sl•I• o1 C.Ulotn•. tno DISTRICT 01 REX HODGES REALTY ANO complllnl degrees 23 01 Easl, thence hu obtained from the 04ftc10f ol DEVELOPMENT CO . • Calll0tnla 3 Tne ol>Jec:t ol thlt a.cllon It, Not11wir1y eloog uld curve tnrough Ill• Oepartm•nt ot lndullrlel Corporalton (tsSIQnod 10 ROBERT emong oth« tlllngl, 10 obtain• tlnel a cenltal 1og10 01 O dogroas 33 16 .. Rollllona the general prevelllnQ rel• C w EST My ER 11 b • R w tuogmtnt of 111a 11>ov•·•nllll•d an arc lt!ngtn or 2 32 feel. lhtnce 01 per diam wagoa ano 11141 oer-at INVESTORS. aa •Beneficiary. Coun qule11ng In• rlghl, 11110 eno Nonn 83 Oog1oe1 38" 00" Eetl prevailing'"' tor llollday end recorded July 16 11181 File No '"'" 01 plalnllll 10 lh• reel 106 SO fool 10 point of 1>eg1nn1ng ov•rllmt worlc In Iha 1ocel1ly in 22049. In Book 14143• Pago 497 propotty llete(nalter Oetcrlbed; tnal The srroel addron ano orner wlllcll thl• wor1111 lo~ performed Olliclal Records 01 Orange Counly Ille abov•·nemed Oelendenl• be commor1 clasignellon, 11 any, ot lho for eecll creft or type of work•r Calllornte, oascrlbinn ine lano requlrecl to Mt tonn 11141 naturt of r11111 propotly detorlbod al>ove IS nHOed to execute 1ne oontr101. inorein 15 Tne Soutn H;il 01 Lot 62 their c1atm1 10 .. 1d rMl ptoc>ttl}'. II purported 10 be 2832 Dreka Av• TlltH r•I•• "' on 111• 01 th• of Traci 722 In the Clly Of Buena 1ny 11\ty ha .... and lnal Mid dal~ Cosl• Motll CA • DISTRICT oltlct locettO " 2841 Park 11 per Map roc0<0od In 8ool. ~ 1clfud~ ..,bftcl 10 plalnlllt a T n e u no e • s i On• o T • u st e e Mon A ...... trvlnt, CA 82714 CopiM 21 PtQO 39 ot Mtec.e4laneous Mapa right, 1111e and Mlalt 10 MIO reel 01sc:ra1ms any lllblltly for any may be obtllnecl on 1~1 A copy '"the olt-01 tna County Recorder property; a t e er 11tnlng eno 1ncottoctnets ot me street adoress ol 1'-rat .. lllel1 be poalecl at the ot 5810 Counly 1110 obllgallons determining a11 .. 1t1•. rtgllll, 1111•. ano 01fle1 common deS>Qnahon. 11 lob lllt. lncludlllQ one promlnoty note '°' lnler•t. and Ilene In 11\0 10 Mid 106! any snown herein II 111111 De menOelory upon Iha the ot1g•nal prlncipal sum 01 properly. coat• or aull. demagea. Sa•O sale w111 be made, bul CONTRACTOR 10 whom 1n1 $45 000 00 ano OlllOt r841tl requoelecl In tho w11nou1 convenanl or werranry. contrect I• awerdecl. 100 upon 111\Y Thal the '11enetlclel lnl&ratl un<lor Complllnl. •~press or impllOO, regarding tillo, aubconlrector und., him, lo P•Y '1CTTTIOUe .U .... I NAMI ITATl•NT TM loltowlng pereone art dolng bulllMN U : OUllLITY PAVING COMPANY W27 OuMn AnnM ,Coun, Oeroen Grove. C1llfornl1 92644 Petrick 0 S t nd•r•. 1727 ~ An.-Coutt, Garo.n Orove. c.lllornll 92644 S•m A Oercle, 9127 Ouo•n Ann•• Court Garden Grov•. Calltotnla 82844 Tnla Dutlnt .. II conOucte<I Dy • general pannartnlp Patrick 0 Sanoer1 Stm A Garcia Tiiie 111lam4lf'll wH llled With Iha County Cltrlt 01 O<anga County on May 23, 10$3 n110112 Pubt11n1d Ore no• Cout Di lly PtlOt, Mey 26. June 2. 9, 18, 1983 2373-83 PICTITIOUI IUSINeH NAM tTATll!eNT The IOltowlnQ pe111on• llrt (l()jng bullnett u . WOFFORD ENTERPRISES dbe MOUNTAIN AIRE CONCESSIOHS. 4 18 S Deming , Se nta An •. Catllornle 82704 Jerry R wollo10 . 4 18 S Deming, S•nlt Ana. Ctllfornl• 92704 Tar11e A Woflorcl, 418 S O•mlng. Senta Ana. Celllo1nl1 92704 Tlltl Dullntlt II GOfldUCled by a oar-II penneralllp Ttt-A Wollotd Tlll1 1111_,t WU tiled wtlh Illa Coullty Cieri< ol Orll/\Qt County °" May 24, 1863 "171M Put>lltn•O Orenga CoHI Otlly Piiot, Mey 28. June 2. II. t8, 1983 24St·83 MLIC *>TICE i::W eUNNCMt COURT CW THI tTAflOllC~ MOft'T'MftlT •TMCT PLAINTIFF TOM LUCZAI< Ol!FENOANT CLAftK WOOLRIOOI!. w OUY coea. DOVER EOUITIU, INC , OOU I lhfougll L, klClluelve ""WOMI C:.. ...... fte_ NOTIC•t Yw lleft IMOft ..... TheMWt_, ............ ,_ •lthMll ,_ ...... "-" ..... r.: .. ::::.:-:.: . ..,... fleM II ~ ~ lo ... Ult edvtoa ol •n ellorney In Ihle me lier. yov ~ 00 '° promptly '° lhel ~ -111an twponM. II MY mev be flled on time A'f'llO I Uete• lie ol•• demand•••· II lrlltvn•I ftllM• .... _.,. Ud."" ., ....... _.,.Ud.r::= .... ....... L..NleflR .. "fi'·u atocl d .... tOllCll•I •I COnM jO de un •boaado .,, Mtt ••unto, d•b•tre llao•rlc lnmedl•lemtnlt, o. Mt• maneta, .... r~ll MCrlta, " hey elgufta. pu.ot -ttOftlradl • llempo. I TO TH£ DEFENDANT· A oMI COMPl•lnl 11 .. bffn lllad by Iha ptetnlllt eg411nal you It you wtlll 10 delanO thf1 law.uJI. you m11st Within JO oaya ettar 11111 1ummon1 I• l«ved °" ~. ftlo wlttl .,. COUr1 a wnttan ~ to IN ciomplelnt. UnlMI you oo '°· your deftult w4ll be en1 ... ec1 on applk:t llon of tt.a plalnlllf. end tnl9 coun may enter• JUOgmant aoafntl you tor IN ,...,. Oemandecl fn tilt complatrn. whlCltl could rHult In oarnl1llm•111 of WltQll, !eking Of money Of Pf'operly or Olhlf tefltl llQuMtoO In th• complllnl OATEO. October 21, 1882 John J Core0ton County Clttll By: C Mon1oy1. Oep.lly LAW OfftClt OP" L.IOMAN> ... A.HOU• -c--..•-· Woocllend ..... CA tt.-r (2,1) 1Qt-o7n Publl•ll•d Orang• COHI Delly Piiot. Mey 28, June 2. 8, 18. llle:t 2464-83 PUBt.IC M>1lC£ ... ~ l""NOfl COURT OP" CALWONelA COUNTY °' OAAMCM '" ,.,. Mauer f1f tilt A6-"*' l"ttltl«\ .. FMD WIUIAM NRT, A6opllnQ l"atOlltL C'AN NO. AO 11)11 CITATION,_~ To: fllCHAM> E\.UOTT: such Oood o f Trust and lhe 4. TIM real property reterrecl to possess1011 or oncumbrancoe. 10 not ''" th•n tna Hid epocllled obllg4!tlont aocurad thereby are herein Is a11u1lod In th• City ol pay the romomtng principal surn of r•IM to ell work.,, employed by now owned by Ille unde<stgnod. ~nahalm, Counry 01 0•1111Q41. Stelt the nola(SI SOGu•ed by 5910 Oaoo or them In 1n1 111acut1on ot In• Tn111 II b1aecn of and a dateull tn "' 1..1111ornla, ano II pat11cu11r1y Trust w1111 tnleresi thereon aa c;ontrect. Ille obllQlltons '°'which such oeeC OMcrlbtO aa IOltowt P•:>v•ded tn setd notO(s). t<lvenc.et No bidder mey wtlhdraw hie bid 01 rrusl 11 Meurlly hu occurrecl in PARCEL 1. Tile no<lh 8 hall OI Iha 11 any under 1ne terms of lhe 0..0 fOt • period ol FOr1y·FIYe (•5) Ot1y9 lh•I paymttnl nu nol boon meoe or aoul"-1 qUltler OI the aouthetat o I T, us I I e o :i ch a, g •a •no •Iler tno dlle Ml l0t Iha oe>tnlno ol 1 TIWl unpalo prnlCIPal b•l•nc.e 01 quarter Of aec:110n 27. tn lownllllp 4 e~pentes of 1no rrus1ea and ol 1110 bid• By oro.r of '"'-Court. you -hereby cllecl anO reqUote<I to ~ .,.,tonally conoem•no tht e009oon ol RICHARD LOUIS ELLIOTT. JR and MISTY LEE ELLtOn. 1 mtoor. bfrfOft the Judge ol !Nt Cour1 In the Counly ol Lo• Ang•'"· 81•1• of Calllorn11 " 111a Courtroom of Otpl 111, 700 Civic Ctnltr 01lve w .. 1. Santa An•. CA 92701 on July 22. 1983. 11 8 45 am .. ot tna1 day. then ano Iha•• to thaw cauM, If FICTTTIOOa llU ... at any. wily Mid ldoe>lton ~ not NAlttle ITAT'lmNT ~ qrontecl ICCOtdlng to,,,. pell\IOn ~•5 000 oo plus occruoo ln1t1at1 aoulll, ranoe 10 -•·In the Rancho l•ustt cre1100 Dy sa1<1 Deed ol A P 'Y m • n I bond and ' due February 18. 19113 nas not been lH BolMI. a.• eho•n on a mep l rutl. to·wtl U 1 716 90. P«f0tmence bOnd wlN M required P&•d thereof r-decl In bOOll 51, PllO' The beneltctary undoir said Oltl<I prlOr to executton of tllt con1ract 2 Any aum1 advanced by 10. mtaoetfenoou1 m111>1, t8COIOI of ot Trull here10101e executed end 1111<11119" ~In the IC>f"m Ml tortll In bonel1co11ry unoor lhe terms and aalO Or8nQO County deltvereo ro lhe undersigned 1 Iha oonlrec:t documtnl•. p1ov11ton1 ol ft\e aDove Oescrlbe<I E11cap1 th• wtttarly 40 reel w1111en Oac1ar111ton or Oelaull and Pur.ull/\I 10 S.Ctton 4580 or 11141 Deed ot Tru11 tl'IO<tOI Ottman<! •or Salo and • wri11en Gov.<nmtnl Codtt ol Ille Siii• of Thi! by tt•son 1nerool the Aleo exc epl therefrom In• No11ce ol Oeraull ind Efa<;tlon to calllotnll. the contrlel wlll contain The tallowing P«ton• we doing on nit M<Oln OUtlnett U 11 )'OU wlah lo Mall tflt ldYioe of J 0 H N L AND 0 N an lllorn•v In lhll m•lllf. '/OU PRODUCTIONS. 2988 AnOtOI, •llOUld 00 ao promptly ao lhal '/OU Colle M•N. CalllCKnlt g2828 . will be ptop«ly repr-led et the Henry John Maruyama , 29811 hearing Andros. Cott• Men, Celllornla 011e<1 92826 David t.anoon Wtlllemt, 18682 O•mlon, Huntington Be•cll, Cellfornl• 82848 Thia butlneu I• conoucted by • general partn«W\lc> A.prll 27, 1983 LM A Btancn. County Citric Joyce A. Noll•vec. "->u!Y ..._,., Oodlll undorStgnoo na s eaeculed and 1outl'terly 220 1101 lhereot Sell Thi! unOersrgnod caused Stid ptcwtalont permitting the IUCQfflf\11 oe1rvore<1 10 sa10 Trustee e "'"""" ..-.urecr llOng lhe -terly fine ol Notice or Oeraull ano Elocllon to bldo.< to eubttllvt• aec;urlllee for flC11TtOU9 .,...., Doc1era11on or Oeltun and Demand Mid no<lh hall Sell '0 be •l'Cn•oeo tn 1118 county eny mon•y• wllllhelcl by the NAm STAra.NT for Salo •no llU Oepo11tod Wtlh PARCEL 2 n.. IOUlh 180 00 IMt Wllt!fl" U•e real P•Ooe<ty IS IOUled DISTRICT 10 '""'" performance OtvlO L Wlllilma Henry David Mwuyem• Thia lllltmenl wU llled wtlll Iha County Cltttt ot Orange County on May~. 1883 201 I . FJv-oe It. •270 LOI A~ CA 90012 Publtlhtd Orenge Co"t Oelly P1to1. May 19. 26. June 2 9 1883 2331-83 NOTICa OP" FLING OP" IAYIN09 MID LOAN l'ACLITY APP\.ICAT10N NoncC:-: ~~EN lhll "' llC>Clkatlon ..... ~ llllld with lllt t>EPARTMENT OF SAVINGS ANO LOAN rel•llno to •n 1ppllcellon by CORNERSTONE S A VINOS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION, 3300 lrvlna A...-. Sulla 288. Nawpotl Beech , Callfor1111. tor permrulon 10 H lebllah • taclllly ti. or In th• t~lete v"'ntty of P~e AMI end Le Alamecla. County of 0.enge. A publlo heetlng win be hold et In• 0.pertm•nl'• oltloe •• •·oo p.m., on the 14th <lay of Juno. 1983, 000 South Commoua..ntl A.,.,_, Loe,.,....._ The ~·ion le oC*'I tor public lr\tc)ec11on In acoord-with the Commln lonar't regul1llon1 11 """' °"'°' of the °"'9rtment ol SrMQa end Loan o1 the Si.le of Calllornl• located et 800 Sooln Common•••llh Av•nue, Lot Angaiff, ooooe, (213) 738-27115, •nd 350 S1n1om• Str•tt. San FrtllldOc>o, lltt04 (415)557-316e Wtlltln o bj•cllona or otn•r Oocum•nll rtl•vlnl lo 1110 ~Ion "'°'*' be lllecl with the Dapertmant of SrMga end L.oen. and • oopy .,.._eel °' ~ to tt1t applicant. Cotnerwtono StMnge end Loen AMOdlltton. not lat« llWln Junol3,t883 At IN publlc llMrlng, !Ill)' pel'.an m ey appoer and meke an or1t .....,,_,,, during "' amounl of time lmlted by lhe '-1"Q of'l\Qer. af!lctl In tti. C8M Of .,..,., par'IOI\ wl'O hM not llled prior ...ttltn ~ °' other cloc:umtn1• la to be lrntlad 10 not more lll•n 15 mtnul•• In dutellon, Of IUCtl anorter time .. m•y Dt •llowad by the hHtlng offloar Putllltll•O 011.nge CoHI Delly Piiot. Ju~ 8. 1033 LIOAL. AO'f'IJllW OUAll'TWJtf ~ ~ llJMCa8 ~ameeotl NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN by t'1• O.penm•nt of O.vato&:• kvlcet, City of Hunl.ln(ltorl • 111•1 a publlc '-Ing wllf be held by Ille Cal"oml• Cooelet ~ lot lllO following ptojecl. MlnOt modlftcellon ., to the Ctty' 1 Cooatol Zone 8oundery lo oonlomt lo per1* .,,.. &aid '-1nQ w11 M held tt the hour of 9:00 A.M. on FflcWt, ~ 24th 111 Bunon 0-Parle, end of Mlndeneo W•y, Merine dtl Roy. Callfot"nla. l'urtnor lnlormellon mey be ~ irom Joe ~n tt the Cotlfornl• Co11taf Commtn lon (416) "43-eMe °' Mwc "1fwtone •• th• City or Hunting ton 8atcn P le nnlng Oepettmenl (11 4) 536-6431 CSeudtne Oup.ty ..........,,, '"*"* Delo: Juno t. IN) PubllellOd 011r;r. CoH1 Ot lly ftllot. NM t . 10. t • t"3 296'"3 T~ lollowlng P•t1on 11 Going said Tru11oe sucll Deed of T•u•I and or the notlhWHI querter ol the Oa•e O!> 111'83 under tilt contrect ~ .. a 11 d 0 t um 0 n I • • v Id 0 n c Ing llOUthee•I quartet °' MCtton 27 In IMPERIAL BANCORP Govtfnlng Board JOJOBA. LTD. 3801 W . obliget1on1 seourad lhe,.by end townllllp 'aoutn, renge 10 -1. ""'d Trusiee A StlllolyCof'ey Sec Mec:At1hur BIYd •807 8111\ft Anl, has doclattd and dOOI hereby pertly In Int Ranono Lu BOI ... , By Jotttltna c VHQuez Publl•h•d Orange co .. , 'oany ,,,1'080 Publltnto Orenge co .. 1 Delly Pllo1, May 26, June 2. 11. 18. 1983 2317-33 P\8.IC NOTICE CA 9270<4 declare all ..,ms aecurod lhe•oby 111\d pertly In tilt RtnohO Sen Juen At1omo~ '" facl Piiot. June 2, 9, t983 Shlrla n e R Pletce, 9 t64 1mme<11a1aly ouo and payable and C•IC>n De Slll'lll Ano, u ellown on• 1120 5 Roberuon Blv(\, 253!>-63 '""iiiOii cOUM Olf ftll ITATI ~ C~ONllA POii LaBarca Clrcit, Founlllln V•IW.V, CA has oltclod ano does llt•eby elect map thereof tlCO<Otd in book 51, Lot llngetes CA 90035 82708 Ito Clu14! tne lrull 1><00ttr1v to be P•O• 10, mlacellantou• mtpa, 1111 12 '31 21•-oeo7 Pta.IC NOTICC ~ COUNTY ~ OllA.MCN lllo.A1'77'11 Thia bu*'-le cond\iC\ed by an Jold to u111fy 1ne obl1gat1ons r-cl• of Mid Oltnge Count)' 1"•D1••"9d Orange Cout Oetly ,IC ........... 't .... _11 lndlvtdual ;ecuroo tt>.iroby su1>1«1only 10 ll'lo EJI°"" Iha -1 40 t .. t lheteot Ptlnl June 2 9 •6 1983 ,. , ...,.,. __ .. ~TO tHOW CAuea l'Oft CHAMCll Oii MAim Sl\ltlent R P\troe 11gh1 ot ro1n1111oman1 as P•OV'de<I Aleo e.c.~111\erehom Ill oil, gu, 1 ___________ 2S0_!>_·_63 NA.Ille tTAR•NT Thia atei-t wu flleO wlln tho by law m In tr• I I • n cl n yd r o c" b on l'tBJC M)llC[ The tOllOwtng .,.,IOl1' art (l()jng FlCTITIOUa tuU«H NA.Ml ITATl•NT tn r·• TAN OfNH OANO I Minor. by AN DINH 0AN0 end KHAM THI DANO County C1er11 o1 O.enge County on 0111& Maren 1 1983 aut>ttancea ba10w ' daplll Of 5001-------------ou~~y PARK P LAZA 516 ~ 3. 1983 Rooert c wn1myor. IMt from Iha .ur1eoa. wtthOu\ lhe l..fSSJI Th• lollowlng peraon la doing bu1ln-... Wtt«-. Ille pftltlon ol AN 04NH OANG enO KHA M THI DANG N peranta of Applki1111I, TAN DINH DA. NO. 1 minor hM bMt1 lllecl wt1ll the clt<tt ol Ihle Cour1 for en order cn•nolng 1ppllcen1'• n•m• from TAN OINH OANO 10 JAMES DANG. rnmr db• R w investors r~hl ol prtace entry lhereol. u Emer•IO Bay. L•oun• Beacn, CA Publlah•d Orange CoHI Delly Pub111no<1 Orange Coas1 Oallv r~ by L Eerie Pttllllp1. Inc . • B NAOTZ EICEL OLFO ORERAATHI NOEF 9265~0WARO B. JONES, a-.i All BRITE, 711 W I 7th Street, B12. Cotti MHt, California 82827 Judy McKlnlan, 202 Intrepid. Pllo1. June 9, 16, 23, 30. 1883 Pilot May 19 26, Juno 2. 9, 1983 c<H'pot8tlon, In 1"-cited rec;ordecl Pann«, 518 en-lld e~y. t --• 2584-83 2330-83 J1nu1ry 24. 11155 1n Boo~ 2932. HE NDRICKSON ANO OF -..-·-Newpor1 8Mc;h, c.lllomla 92003 Thia bull""8 It conoucteo by en lndlvlduef P•o• 555, 01110111 1ecorcl1 In th• p E T ( T ( 0 N T 0 BMch. CA 8285l. ---.-_-JC_"""_""" __ c__ ptBJC M)TIC[ olllc• of the County RK01dt1 of ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. SUE KAT HR Y N J 0 NE S . n-. nu1~ Mid Orll/\Qt Count)' General Pettner. 518 Em«•kl B•y, JUdy McKlnllh IT IS HER.E8Y OAOERE.O !NII Ill pal"IOOI tnt*_,ecl In utO rnat1- eppeer btfor't thll covn °" J\lftO 27. 1983. tn the courtroom ol Deperlm•nt 3 el tO:OO • m .. to ehOw cou .. wily Ihle~ tor change or name 1hould not be grent"2 FlCTTTIOU• llU ..... NA.a. IT AT'lm.NT The fonowtng ptr90lll .,.. OolnQ ~-: THE HEISPEC COMPANY. 2700 Peter.on ~ M27A.. eo.te ,,._, CA 92926 Dorothy BrOOka Heidie, 2700 Patttton Pl-1127A. Cotlt M•e, CA 11282& Wayne George H•IOI•, 2700 1'91onon PIKe 1127A, Coet• ~. CA 92828 . Thie botl-.. conduetecl l)y a gener .. pett,_.ntp Oofothy B Heidie flCTmOU• au ..... NAME 81' A TbRNT The tOllOwlng pereona .,., Going l>ual,_ ... SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LIMOUSINE SERVICE, 485 E. 171n SI . C:0.11 MMe, CA 82828 Or•no• Coun1y Llmou•ln• Servlc• Inc • • Cellfornl• C<l'POl'•tlon, 4e5 E. 17111 SI .. Coete M-. CA 82626 Thia buOI-,. conducted by ' oorporellon Of enge County Umouelnt Servtce Inc. ChlH Cooper. PraelOtnt TM attMI eddr ... ol .. Id tNI A·l18SU. Leoune 8-c:ll, CA 92851 properly Is 2222·2232 Harbor To all heln, beneftnanes, THE A.NCIL A lnO ZON'°' Boulevaro. An•n•lm. Calltornla. creditors and contingent MARGARET SWAGERTY TRUST. which lncluO•• lh• .... properly ---''to o( U---1 Lo-·--0•1•0 Jun• 25 t874 LlmlleO noar 111• 1oullloe11 corner ol <:n:v.• rs n&R: 'nu""" Pertn«, 203 A.....,IOt Conchita. Sen Harbor Boulevard and Wiiken Way. Hendrickson and persons Citmtntt, CA 112672 Jpon wllkm • mot.i, T~ "R"' u. who may be otherw11e Thi• bualneaa 11 conouc1ec1 by a 11 or• 1,.. d J 1 ck 1 n 1 n • Bo• interested tn the will and/or llmltecl penneonlp r .. 11ut1nt1 la now roctttd end • Howerd B Jone• Thia lllltmenl w .. lllted wttn the County Clttk of 0rll'Qt County on May 23, 1883 '2f7'11 Publl1n10 Oreng• Cout Dolly Piiot. M•'/ 28, June 2. 11. 18. 1883 2380-113 PllJLIC M>TICE "Whl~l1on1·· 11ore wH lormerly estate: 0-•t Partner ~ed A petition haa been med Thi•""""'"' Wit fllad With Iha irtennou• eutlNE .. IF YOU WISH TO SEEK THE by Richard Stanley Dwyer County Clark of Orenga Counly on NAm STATDmN'T ADVICE OF AN ATTORNEY IN THIS In the Superior Court of Mey 2 1963 Tn• tollowlng pareon I• doing ~~blJ~r~~us~H~~~~ ~~~~ Orange County requesting NVP'ITIDlER, -..UA, "114U buel=:.:. BAG VIDEO. 145 E. WRITTEN RESPONSE, IF ANY, that Rkha.rd Stanley Dwyer CAM.ION a llEMOIL.EY lllln Slt-.1. Cott• Meet. Calttomla MAY BE FILED ON TIME be appointed as personal !c~~ 9282t.ut Oevld L•n•burg, 2318 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED lttet • COllY of I,_ 0tOer 10 lllo.. <*IN M publl•h•d ono• • •Mk for lour ~ .... a prlOf 10 Ille <I.., of H IO heerlnQ In Iha 0 •11)' Piiot, a n-•P•~ ol o-•r droul11loll pr1n1tc1 1n '"° County ot 0ranoa Oat.a Aprll 5, 19$3 FRANK OOMENICHINI JUOOE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT Thia .... ,_. -.u llllld with the County C*1c of Orenoe County on Mr, 23, 1983. Thi• ••••-1 waa n1ee1 wnn 111t "110ll County Cieri! of Oranoe County on PubllahaO Oreno• CoHI O•llw June 3. 1963. SI USTEO DESEA SOLICIT AR EL n-preientatwe to administer 4000 MacAr1hvf .i.d •. tutl• ''°°" Gardl SlrMI, Bf•dbury, Ca.llloml• ~~~SEEJ~ soi Nu: 0 ~B~~OEOR ~~ the est.al(> of Hazel LorTaine Newpcw1 heel\, CA . ..., 9t010 HACERLO IMMEDIATAMuNTE. OE Hendrickson. Coat.a Mesa, Pubfltlled Oren~· Co111 D~ Thi. bual-I• oond\IClecl by an PuDllallaO Oren1tt Coatl Oelly Pltol. Mey 28. June 2. 9. 18. 1963 2423-33 3 , "211911 Piiot. June 11. l6. 2 . 30. l8~ Pvbll•h•d 011no• COHI D•lly ESTA MANERA. SU RESPUESTA CA (under the lnde~t Pllo1, Mey 13· 2(), 2 ·Ju~ :1~ lndlVldul~oul O. Leneburg ESCRfTA. St HAY ALGUNA. PUEDE Admln11trat1on of Est.ates Thia····-· ... lltod wttn Iha "8.JC *>TICE ------------· Piiot . .!.-9, 16, ~. 30, 1863 2581s83 SER REGISTRAOA A TIEMl'O Act) The ~litlon ,. let for --... """"""c County ci.rti of Of-County°" l'IC'TTTIOUa ....... l'JCTmOUe WU.II ...._ ITA.,._NT Tiit lollowlng ptr90lll ... ~ ~-THE AMATEUR BOWLERS TOUR. SOUTHERN DIVISION. 7231 Grand Oella, Sl11rtlon. CA 80680 John Dow Vame, 7231 Gtand 0"'8, StMlon, CA 806eO Lewie John Ruclnk*, 4423 Ce.aa Or•nde, No 213, Cyprtu. CA 80830 Thie ~ It OOf\duCted tlV ar> ln<!Mdl>al. Jotw'I Dow Verne LMI Joftn Rudnlc;k Tiiie 118.t-t -llled with 11141 County C*1c of Orlll'IQt County M June ~. 1883 nf111t Publl•h•cl Orono• COHI Oelly Piiot. June 9, 18, 23. 30. 1883 2857-83 P\a.IC f«>TJCE FICTmOUatUllNell NAME ITAT-eMINT T 1141 1onowtno .,.,'°"' are doing butln"• ea. HARRIS-QUINN WORLD CO., 1810 Tlllune. COion• del Mii, CA 82825 Kevin S Oulnn 1810 Tthun•. Coron• del M81 CA. 92825 Roes G Her1l1 18 to Tahun•. COl'Otl• 011 Mer. CA 92825 Thia bU*'-1a conoucteo by • g-•I P-'tnenl\lp l(IY1n Quinn Tlllt tllt-1 wt1 nlaO wtlll tM County Clerk ot Ol1nge County on M•y 18, 1883 lntM11 Publl•h•d Or•no• COHI 0•11) Ptlol, May 18 26. June 2, 11. 1883 2260-33 l'\a.IC NOTICE n<:TinOUI MlllH€11 NA• STA TftlllNT Tll• lollowlng pareon I• doing l>ualnea• u EOUIPMC NT LEASINO CONSUL TAN TS, 22048 ANOWh41Ad Lail*, fl TOfO, CA 81630 L•tOy Doto Magner, UOO Arrowna•O L•n•. Er Toro. c ... t1t30 Ttt11 ~ 11 conducted by en lndlYldutll L Dela MttgMt PlllUC M)TIC[ Plennout .u.ea1 ..... Sl'Arn.NT The IOllowlnQ petlOttl ar• doinQ l>v"'-M: SPEEO CENTER USA - PHANTOM AIDER, 1200 E Pacifico A. ...... llnllholnl, CA 92605 EurO·M•rkotlng Inc., • Colllornfe corpor•llon. 1200 E Pocllloo A ...... Antlnelm, CA 82805 Thie ~ •• conducted by • OOfPOI' ltlon Euro-Mllllatklg Inc John OINOn. Preeldenl Thie attt-1 WU ntec:1 wltll Ille County Cletk of Orango County on Ju~ 3, 1083 '21n\J PuDll•llad Oreng• CoH I Delly Piiot. June 9, 18, 23. 30, 1883 2659-83 OMln unO« my hand end Mel Of l'"UUU\I nu1n.L -...-MA.Im tTA,....,,,. the Superior Coun ot the County°' hearing ln pt. No. 3 at 700 Mey 23. 1"3 1'11'1'11 Ofanot. Sitto of c.i11om1a. on Mey Civic Center Or • Weit. :lf:.:.W~:.; Publl1ntd Or•ng• CoH t Oefly ~ ~ pereone -dolftO 18, 1083 Santa An•. CA 9270 I on ...VATW •AU Piiot. Mey 28. JuM 2. II. 1e. IMS SCHAFER KENNEDY' 271 ~~.:._~rt<;:·~ ci..1i June 22. 1933 at 9:30 a .m . .... A..11.-.ui 2400-88 coe1• M ... s''"'· Coet• M- Coun 01 111e St•tt 01 IF YOU 08.JlX:T to the tn '"' ~ Couf1 of me St••• 1------------C•ll•oml• near CaHIOfnta . In ano tor the granting o f the petition, you of Ce tllornle , lor th• County 01 PlllUC M)TJC[ M-°:~.~=-~~= Counly ol Orange ~OU]d either ap""""r at the 0r.,.. In tti. Metter of lhe &t•I• i-----.----C-... -----....... ,7 C RSOlol. "'--• ..-of MURRAY KAAPMAH. 0-..CS. ~ ..,_., ""'"' H ~N~ aW~TOtol hearing and state your Hottoe 11 haftbV given thet the Oii CAUr~ SI..,.,, ~· Walltt. 2909 [. l •• -r--b"""\IOnl or file written undlll•oo•d wtll Mii •I Pflvllt• ..... COUNTY Oii GRAW Hemp11110 Aot d · lln•h•lm .. ...,.. -.-r-d tMt 1 blcld 700 C .... C..... Dftft .... Calltomlt 92808 mo WWW.. 8MS., ,._ bjecllona with the court 10 111• htghH t •n • er, ,,o. ... • K41f'fn•tll L .. Brown, tu 1111 ~,....,~ .... ~eoz11 ~fore the hee:!n·g Your S:, ~"c!!::•= ::_ ~ ._..A-. CA.,.. s1rM1t. H«mou &Mdl. Cellfofftlie "'ub""".._.. t•"""' Coa1t "·ttu ppearance may ln penon dey of Ju,_, I~. ol the offlOo of lll.AINT1Pf'1 Ol.D HIOll4Hl•I 902541" K~ w ,.._ ,.. .,........ ...,.. ..,..,, b "~ J L R b I J AL• C0..,0C ....... ~1W1 °"' • 1""" _,, Piiot June 2 9 18 23 1983 ~r Y your a,...,.,'""y. em•• u • ' r.. ., Dl,INDANT: OYlllLAMD Drlv•, Newport h, Celllomla · · · • ' 2536-83 t F y O U A R E A Corpora tion. U32 VI• Oporto. -c-, .. -. CO., _ 0 ........ 1"T\ITOR · l'WwpOt1 8tecll. ea.111otni. 02883, ... -·--i •""" 1111_"' Mn'hM' i:.u or a ronungent Coun ty 0 1 Oren o•. Stet• 01 Cellfotnlo Ootporotlon, Ill • Kent ~tar SmM. 15$1..,... ..-~ ""'~ tor of the deceued, you Callfornl•. ell th• rlght, tttte end ll(~ •,.......... .., • ..., etl Drive, Stnl• Ana. c.lltomlt t210l' NOTICI! M DtelOf.UTIOM mUlt file your clalm with the tnlllf'•t of u ld d~ et th• ...... DOI• • ~ t........., Thie ~ • cionduC1ecl 11>Y • OP PAlnlmRW cour t or present It to the ttmo of <IMth end al ttlo right, tltlo C.:-. _,, ~., ~Wellll Nolle• fa given purauent to peuonal representative end tnt-1 that tho oat••• of Mid MOTICll YM lwn ..._--. Thia •t•l-1 •• lllecl wtlt'I IN SectlOn 16035.5 of the C•llfoml• 1• 1 t d b th t d •c••••d h •• e c~ulr od by -..... __ _, .............. ---....,.. Coun ... C*1I of........_,. _ _, on Corpore1tone Code 11\M RICHARD ,.ppo1n e Y e cour oC)atetlon of....,°" othotWloo OI'* ,,_ -· - -" ...... _..,.. _,,, J RANGER ond C AM ERON !Within fOW' months from the "'°"Qt In llCIOltlon to tt\a1 of Mid ........ ,.. ................ M•Y 23, IN3. "8..)C M)TIC[ VtLLAOE 11. • Cetllornla Umllecl !date of flrll l11uance of o.oa-d. •t lflO time of ci.th. In C',....... ..... • ._.....,. Co ~ --·• 11U-ll Pertn•r•hlp, h•ratolora doing ,_ .. __ u --'"..A IR ""~•on and to II tflO _,..,, reel property """'' •rn ~· • ...,.... ,.. ..!_u, b!!'"-! 0!~092 1 1"1 '1.! .. '' ,._,,,...., bu1lnt1t •• Partner• unOer Iha M::•.c.1• ,...v.,_.. u• ~.. lltuel9Ct In ttlt City of ca.ta-..-, "you wltt110 -tl'IO _._"' ,..,,., • ..,.., ""• ....,_ • • • ...., NAm eTA~NT pertn•t1hlp name ol AIC 700 of the Probate Code of counly of orenga, 81•" of •n attorney In thl• matter, you 2!!6-fl Tiit lottowlng per•on 11 doing ASSOCIA.1'E8. have cllotcJIYad their !Californi a . The time for Ce11fom11a. pwtlOUlarfy ~bed .. llhould do'° IJ"Ol"Ptly '° lhal YoUf "8.IC M)TlC( t>utlnaet aa: Per1ncnlllp .. of tho t3tll day of fWJ\a cla1ma will not expl~ fcMtowe, te>-wtt: written rnponM. II any, mey be suP~~::o:.s~o~~D~ ~:r·.~:,113.-.!l c1=::"~ prior to four montha from tn L~ ~ ~:" ::= ~ :'; ~~· u • t • 4 11 • e 14 • Huntington Baeofl. CA 82&49 h •d •utllortty 10 incur a ny the date of the hearlna r«oofdod 111 800ll 1o, Pego 2t of 4ota••4•4•. II trll•111t•I pff4'9 cano11 Auattn a.mott Jr., 3455 ot>4100t1on• on btflalf of the former noticed above. ~--Mape. In the omoe o1 ....., .....,.. "'-• P '1 • Wlnd9CMI DtM, Hunlfn01or18-Clt, P~. YOU MAY EXAM INE 111• County fll•oorcler ot H id -... W. •:;:=...,. CA lt2&48 EXECV1'ED th .. 13th dey of MllY. th .. ,_ k b ,.__. tf County. • • ..._..._ lall ... Thia buelMM ta oonduetod by wi 1083 e ,....., ept Y u"' court. Mor9 oommooly 111-ea: 25t7 ...... lnclMOYel ~o J. Ranger you are lnt erested In the Or•no• Avenue, Coate MoH, ~I U•t•cl dnH 1011c1ta r el Carroll A a.nett Jr. c-on V"'-Cle. 11, en.aw. you may let'Ve upon Clillfomla. oonMto d• un ebogedo en "'' Thie st••-• wu fllecl With Ille , c.Nfomt• L.lmltod 1 h e • x e c u t 0 r 0 r Torm• of Hit 01111 In •••fut •dun to, d • b er I• h • o • r Io Coun1v Cieri! of Orenoa County on Per1~ 1Jdmlnlatra\Or or upon the money of th• Unlloct 8tato• on ~.!'*',. ~ •1., .,•.!., ~ June j, 1083. 8)' J. Mtcnaol MC>Ot9, ' oonftrmetl0'1 of .... Of pwt c.t'I .,.. •......-.-_.., ·-1 ---. ,,.,,_ liif8NQlno ia\t.orney for ~ executor °" end be.I•~ •vldenooct tly note p..rodo • ~•ltd• 1 tleme>O. Publlahed Orange COHI O•lly 04not-ll Port119r _._,_,~-ator, and file wh.h __,by~ ot frwt OMc1 1. TO THI' DU"eHOANT· A oMt Piiot, Juno 11, te. 2.3. ao, 1183 . 'ub111Md Oreno• Coeet Oelly ~he court with proof of on Ill• p roperty 10 •old. Toll oomptelnt l'IH bOOn flloct ~tM *1..a Piiot • ..kM'9 I . tM:I 1tervlce 1 wrltten ....,.Ufft percent ol amount bid tc b• pWnlM _.. rGU· "'°'1 to 2!01 ... , • . ~, ~ ..... bid. datMnd •• i.-i1t. you""*· wtttl ---.---.,.-""-~----.. -IC ""'TIC·( •tatln1 that you deal re-· ....,..,0 b01nWl1tlng and 11 d•y• alltf' thta evmmon• I• ..--nu1~ rUU&. nu !rJ>cda1 not.b ol the fillna of wilt llO ~ •t tho 1foneald ..wet on~. 11111 wftfl "* _,,, • ...cmou.~H NAmSTATllmNT Th• foll owing-po11on I• doing ~ ... Jl!RAY'S TREf SERVICE. 171 Wlllrtut 81., Coota Meea. C.. IH21 Jerome Peul Horwath, 11 I Welnut St., Coete -..-, C.. 82921 Thll ~ ltl oonducltad by .,, lndMduel. .Jerome P Hor<rotll Thie ~· ... llod wtth ,,.,. CoulltY Olol1i Of OrlllQt County on Jvttt •• 1"3 --~-TITIOUl----1111-... --,-,--ia n I n v e n t o r y a n d offtol •t a11y tlfM 1tter tho ""' ..._ f'elPOl'WO to IN 0011'*'91t. _......._._ ,__ end ~ Oato u...a '°" do eo, 'Pll ~ .. NAMI ITATWMINT lappralaement of .Ute uaeta ---· llO "''°'"on applloatlon of the Th• fOllOwlng pe11on II dOlnglOr o r t he petltlonl Or ofc:,ttllllnd.._ofJuno. I~ l*tlnt"',endtNooounmeyanw1 l'lualn11•1 ••· "' I d I ....., )l.ldolMnl eoatnot you fOr tflO ,..... PACIFI C OUI L.01 NO,_ccounu m~nt Q.11• n Llnde~ ~it ... ~t • ....,., CONCEPTS. 23' E 17th St . Su1te IS«tlon 1200 and 1200.& of ~rbt ooutd ,. .. ult In gernlehmtnt ot 205. Cotl• 1o1 .... CA 02e.27 It.he c.&lifornla Probue Codtt Wllll .... WW ...... lalllna of IMMY Of~ Cre lg Steven Hampton. 3&& RICHARD STANLEY ~::9Dloedent or other rorltf requMted In Iha ;;:2cro D I Cott• M•H. CA D w y E R • I N p R 0 .... L.._ "· • oomcMlfll Thie butlnna 11 conduclecl bV an PERSONA, ltll Amell• A '--0..-•1. Dldod; ~"'t ~~. c.ti ln<llYldu.i AYt., S.. NN. CA M'JIJ, ~ =~•:: .... -l<atllllan H--. ~ CllllO Hempton (tU) 111.fl'll --· .-: MAlrnN ft 11\AMO UQ. Tnlt 1ta1!tfMll1 wu tiled w1111 the Publlehod OtanOt OoMt Oolly ,.....,. .., • • • ,,,..,.. CTA 110 ~ °"· o;. ,.,a. Thll Ital-I WH lllecl with Iha County Clwll of Orenga County on M.-, 18, 1183 mn. ,,.,.,. l"vl>lllhoel Orenge Cout Dally Puollall•d Otano• CoHI Oelly n'I,_ Publlalled Or•noe OoHt Dally Pltol, ~ •• 10, t3, '°· 1~ ~ County OIOtk Of Oronoo ~:.: Piiot """' t ' • ••U 'ulltlltMCI Otanoa OOMt Delly ~ ...... CA .... Mey It. tNJ ' • ' . tJ.40.U, l'tlOt, "'-I, tO, ti. I.la -..... 11'4) MCM010~ Pu1>ll1lleO Oreo• CoHI Oelly , , ........... O e t Dal ... Ptlot, JI.wit I, te, 23, ao tlla P11o1 Mey 1~ ~8 June 2. 9, 1883 ,...,.., 2343 83 Piiot, Mty 111 28 June t . 8. tte3 ~ A.di. )Qlf on.-'Ind whit ~=t In lltl't ...... 'lllCIO OQ ·~ 2339-a itop ~ _,.., Delly Piiot • Hot, NM t , I . ti. n . 1-z~ 'I ~- Cll Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 DIATH NOTICES RUIZ Clara, dauahter1 Mary C anterbury Ept ecopal of Upland ln cl\arae of.,.. fl01'm0UI .ua .. H M.u. ITATHIDIT f he lollowlng per1on 11 doing bu"'-M NIUC M>Tta: NOT!n TO CONTRACTOM CALL.a POlt ..,. Sdtool Olatttct: Huntington 8Md1 City 8d1ool Oltlnct. CllSSlf 110. 6 CLASSIFIED t.o1 11"" 1• JOE II. RUIZ, age 72, a rem-Crayton and Marth.a Myena. dent of Co.ta M eu, Ca. both of Hollywood, Ca .. Church, Lakewood, Ca., ra.n,ementa. North Hollywood, ~ JU --"'----00-M-ES ___ _ PET COU NTRY , 1891 11 :;~g:huret, Foun111n Veney, Ce tics OMdllne. 2:00 o'dOdl p.1'11 Of m. 1ett1 dey °' "'-· 1N3. PU8f'd awa y on June 4, daughter Rlta Cardenu of 1983 Survived by tu.a wife C.O.ta Mea,ca.. aon Larry Clara, da u ghten Mary Ruiz of Santa Ana. Ca, IOn Craytun fUld Martha M yus. Manuel Ruiz of Fountain ::; ~~f~th~ JULlUS JAMES GOMES, Memorial ~ will ~ a.ee 70, reeident of Hunt- held at Padfk View Mem-Ina-ton Be.ch, ~. Pa.ed -~-• p k N .,_H... away on ~l;./~ 7, wuu .,. ~. Newport ~·. 1983 at the P Ho.pi. Oarre11 HOrlllch. 1144 B T1tmln1I Wey, Coel• ,,,, .... Cl 92827 Thia t>ual-I• t;Onduotecs by an lndlvl~ P l 1 c 1 OI 8 1d ,_ICllCll Admlnletr allon OlllCI, 20451 Ctlltnlr '-""· Huntlng1on lead!. Project Identification Name 8utkt a Qlalef lcho011 Port•b,. Wllll 4 To Plalc~~~. Cd .... For Tu.dey tt1<ough Frt- day l)Ubllcatlona: 4·30 p m t"-J)feYIOut d•Y Fot Saturday publlcatlon, deedllne It 3 p m Friday Sund•Y dMdllne la Ii p.m. Ftldey Mond•y deedllne I• t t:30 • m. 8a1urday both of HoUywood, ~ , Valley , and aon Frank Ruiz daUSh~r Rita Ca.rdenaa of of Colta Meea., Ca.. he ii C.O.ta Mesa.a& .. aon Larry survived b y 20 grand· Rua oI Sant.a Ana, a. .. IOn c h 11 d re n and 3 2 ca. on Wednellday, 8, 1983 t&l Mr Gome. had been at 2:00PM. Pacific View IU~-":_ t N--'--f a Mortuary directol"9. ,.,-.. _,r or uo ... uup or more than 10 yerara and Oerrett Horfllctl Tnla al•l-1 wa1 11141<1 wlln lhl County C!«k of Ota/\(11 COunty on M•y 2?, 19113 fl211WI Publl1h10 Orenge Cout Dally Pllol Ju111 2, 9, 111, 23. 1983 2•97·113 Pl•o• Plena a re on Ill• Admlnl•trallon OU101, 200 1 Crall'l19f Lane. Huntington 8Mcll, CL t2&4e NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN thll the at>oYe-nemed School Dletrlot of Onange County, Cattfornlt. ecllng by ind through ltt Governing 8o•rd. "-t•ln1f1•r 11f1rred lo •• "OISTRICT", wtll receive up to, but not leter than lh• abov•·•l•t•d time, MAled bide tor the award of • contract IOr the above profec:t. 2 64 2-5678 REAl ESTATE Manuel Ruiz of FounLaln gre•t-grandchlldren, 2 Valley, and 90n Frank Ruiz brothers Philip Ruiz and o f C.O.ta Me.a., Ca.. he la RAlph Ruh, 3 siaten Ida 1urv1ved by 20 grand· Lopn. Mary Mendoza and c h l l d r e n a n d 3 2 Frances Ruiz. Vlalt.atlon at great-grandch ildre n, 2 Peek family Colonial Fu- brothena Philip Ruiz and neral Home, 7801 Bolla Ralph Rul:r., 3 aiatera ld.a Ave., WestmiNer on Mon- Lope:r., Mary Mendoza and day, June 6, 1983 from Fta.noet Ruiz. Vlalt.atlon at 5:00PM to 9:00PM and on Peek family Colonla.I F\i· Tue1day, 9 :00AM to neral Hom e, 7801 Bolla 5:00PM. Roary will be re. Ave., Westminler on Mon· cited on 1\ae9day, June 7, day, June 6, 1983 from 1983 at 6:00PM at Peek 5:00PM to 9:00PM and on Fanuly Chapel. Requiem Tuesday , 9 :00AM t o Mau wlll be held on ~:OOPM Rosary wW be re· Wedneeday, June 8, 1983 a t cited on Tuesday, June 7, 8:00AM at St. Joachiml 1983 1t 6:00PM at Peek Catho lic Church , Costa Family Chapel Requiem Mesa, ca. lntennent at Holy Mass will be h eld on Sepulcher Cemetery. Ser- Wed.n~ay, June 8, 1983 at vices dJ.rected by Peek Fam· 8:00AM at S t. J oachuns lly Colonial Funeral Home Catholic C hurch , Costa 893-3525 or (213) 596-2701. Mesa, ca. Interment at Holy LARZELERE Sepulch er Cemetery. Ser-LOUISE ELIZABETH vices directed by Peek Fam· LARZELERE. resident of Uy Colorual Funeral Home Co.ta Mesa, ea. Passed 893-3525 or (213) 596-2701. away on June 1, 1983. MILLER Survived by her loving hWl- MlLAN M . MILLER, died band Richard, daughter June 7, 1983 after an e x· Penny Mahon and aons tended illnees. He reilr'ed in Mic hael and Patric k 1965 from M c Do nnell Shaughneuy. Services Douglaa and Uved in South were held on Sunday, June Lagun.a since retirement. 5, 1983 at 3:00PM at Pacific He la survived by hia wife View Chapel with Rev. F.d Fr.noes. Private services Smith officiating. In lieu of were held. Padlic Vie w flowers memorial contribu· Mortuary d.irector1. tiona may be made to the LARZELERE American Canoer Society. LOUIS E ELIZABETH Private interment. Pacific LARZELERE. resident of View M ortuary directors. C.O.t.a Mesa, Ca. Puaed LANE RALPH WILLIAM •way on June l , 1983. LANE, resident of Orange Surv1ved by her loving hus· County He ii 1urvived by band Richard, daughte r hil brothers Lawrence of Penny Mahon and IOl\I Albany, ca. and Robert of Mic h ael a nd Pat rick Andover, Ma..aaachuaetta. Shaughneasy Services Private 9etVioell and ar- were held on Sunday, June rangementa have been held 5, 1983 at 3:00PM at PaciI1c by Baltz Bergeron Smith & View Chapel with Rev. Ed Tuthill Mortuary. 646-9371. EASTMAN wu a1*> a re.1 mtate broker ROSEA MOND REAH and owned h.ia own office (SUNNY) EASTMAN, a known u Cal-Weetem Re- n!Sldent of Orange C.ou.nty alty In downtown Hunt- aince l946, ))U9ed away on fn4rton Beach. He had ai.o June 4, 1983. She i1 been employed tor a short 1wvtved by her huaband lime at McDonnell Douglu. Robert, children Robert C. Beloved husband of Roll· and WUlJam R . Eutman, l ande M . Gome., beloved grandchild Chri.t Jeanine father of Lorraine JohNOn, Eastman. Private family Gae Brummett both of aerv1cel were handled and Huntnington Beach , Ca .. arranged by Baltz Beraeron Richard Gomes of Garden Smith & Tuthill Wet\cl.lff Grove, Ca . and Rocky Chapel Mortuary 646-9371. Gomee of Chino, Ca .. aJao LeOOUX 1urvlving are 5 grand· ALPHONSE G. LeOOUX, chlldre.n. Ricky Gomes, De- resident of C.O.ta Mesa Ca. n1R and Liu Johnaon, Brett Pa..ed away on M...y' 24 and Danielle Brummett. 1983. He wu a member of Fr1enda may call at Pien::e the Knlghta of Columbus Bro thers Smith•' lrom # 115-4, Anaheim, Ca. He ia 2:00PM to 9:00PM on survived by hi1 wife Wedne9day, June 8, 1983 Blanche Marie LeDoux where the Holy Roury will Monfette of Newport be recited at 7:00PM. Mau Beach, Ca., aona George of of Chriatian Burial will be F1orida, Marcel and Anhur celebrated on Thruaday, of Connecticut John of June 9, 1983 at 10:30AM at Anaheim, Ca. ~ Roger of St. Mary's By the Sea Ca~­ Con n ec tic u t , daugher ollc Church. lntennent will Theresa of Con necticut be made ln Good Shepherd brothe1"9 Gerard and ~ Cemetery, Hun tington both of New Hampshire Beach, Ca. Pierce Brothers Robert of Mi.ourt aiaetn' Smitha' Mortuary directors. Ludlle of Mon~. Can~ 536-6~39. ada, Eva and Blanche of ----------- New Hampe.hire, Bernadet· ___ NJUC __ NO_n_cc __ _ te of Michigan and ~Una 1e.-, of F1orida, 26 p-andchildren ~ COURT and 14 great-grandchildren. c~~C::. R«itatlon of the Rcury waa 100 Ctrto c-w °"" W•t held on Thuraday, M...y 26, a..~ CA W701 1983 at 7:00PM at Smith & M•ll•r of CHRISTINA MARIE Tuthill Westcliff chapel. ~=T~N;,!.;~o~~'C: Mam of the Resurrection 1h1 cu11ody and control 01 her WU held on Friday, M..,y 27, pat1rll ~19 1983 at 9 :00AM •t St ~n:f: z:=) JOlcltlm'a Catholic Church. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF P\B.IC NOTICE "CTITIOUa I UalNIH NAMI ITATIMINT The rollowlng p111on 11 doing bua1ne11 H (A) CALIFORNIA C HECK INVESTIGATIONS, (Bl CUSTOM CREATIVE IMAGES, 2215 Mayfair Court, Co91a MtH. CA 92827 Kennetn E Rlcherda, 2216 Meylllr Courl Co111 Meu. CA 92627 Tnla bualness II conducted by an Individual K E Rlchaoda This 1111emen1 wn fllad with tne Coun1y Cieri. 01 Orange County on Mly 9 1983 '21I068 Publll hed Orange COH I Delly Ptlol May 19 26. June 2. 9 1983 2091·83 PU8l1C NOTICE "CTlTIOUI aua1H111 NA• ITATIMINT Tne following p1raon 11 doing butlnee• u · COAST LANDSCAPE ANO PROPERT'I' MAINTENANCE. 11124 Sandalwood S1r1e1, Coall MIH. C1lllorn11 021128 Rober! Allen Unverl, 1624 Sendalwood S1r111, Coat• M1H, Celllornla 921128 Thia bu1l111H It conducllO by •n lndMdoal. Roben Unvert Thia 1111-n1 waa 111.0 with lhl Counly Clerk or Or1nge County on Mey 23, 111113 r.111040 Publllhld 0 11ng1 COHI Dally Pllol, May 211, June 2, 9. 18, 19113 2376-113 P\Bl.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI 8UllNIH NAlllf ITATl!•NT The lonowlng p111on 11 doing bualnMau· NEWP O RT P HYSIC A L THERAPY. 355 Plec1n1la Ave .. Sull• 307, N1wpor1 BHch, Ca 92643 Ll e n1 T Goodrn1n . 239 Morning C1nyon Rd . Coror• d414 M•. Ca 92825 Baltz Bergeron Smith & CALIFORNIA. Tuthill We.tcliff Ch•"'"'l T o 0 E B 0 R A H L Y N N . r-McNAUGHTON Ind JOHN 00£ and M or t u a r y d 1 r ec t o r a . 1111 l*'90M dalmtng 10 be the f11her Thia butlnMI la condue11d by 1n lndlllidull. 646-9371. of Mid minor. 1 •a'7VLERE Yo u ere hereby c lled e nd &MUWoL required 10 appeet 11 • '-'Ing In Liane T Goodm•" Thi• llllement WU 11141<1 wllh lhl County Clerk of Orlr!QI Coun1y on Mey 27, 19113 Bid• lhall be reoetv.d In the pl-ldan llfl •d above, •nd 1h1ll be opened and publtoly rNd aloud •1 the ·~•t•ted time and pl-. Th•re wlll be • .o. d1po1lt flQUlfld IOr ••cit Ill ol bid doc:umen11 to guerant .. their return in gOOd condltlOn within ..O· days lfllr the bid opening d•t1. Each bid mull conform and be re1pon1lve l o th• oon1 r1c1 document a Each bidder ahlll aubml1. on lhl form furnlahed with th• contract document•. • 1111 of the propoeed aut>contraotora on thl• proi-;1 u ••Quired by th• Subl1nlng .,,d Subcontracting Fair Practic. AC1. Govt Code Sec. 4100 II aeq. E8Cll bidder muet aubmll w11n n11 bid c1rllfl•d or CHhler'1 check peyable to lhl DISTRICT Of' • bid bonO In lh• form Ml lonh In thl C0<1tract doc:umen11 In an llnOUnl not ,... lh•n 10% of thl maximum amount ot bid u • guarani• th1t lh• bidder wlll e nter Into lhl ptopoe.O contrect II the aame 11 1w1tded 10 him. In the event of lllllure to enter Into MIO oon1r1e1. tuch ~rlly Wilt be forfeit. DISTRICT reaervea lhe right lo rejec1 any or •II blda or 10 waive any lrregulerltllll or lnlormallt111 In any bide Of In the bidding. Pureuant to the prov111on• ot Seatlon 1773 of the Labo< Code of th• Stal• of C•lllornla. the DISTRICT l'laa obtained from the Dlreotor of the D1putm1n1 of lndut1rl1I R1lallon1 th• g1ne111 pr...,a111ng rell ot per diem wegee and thl general prevalllng r•ll for holldly 111d OV9t11rne worll In thl IOcall1y In wnlch 11'111 wor1c le to be perform.a for MGh cr111 or type of worl11r needed to e xecute lh• oonlrlC1. T,_ r•IM .,. on Ille al lh• DISTRICT off ice located •I 20461 Crelmer l ine, Huntington BMot. Coplee may be ot>lalned on teqUMI A 00PY ol 1'-t8IM lhlll be pe>alad II lhl Job alll. II lhall be mandetory upon the CONTRACTOR to whom lhe ooniract II ewardecl. and upon any IUbeonlractot under -him, 10 pay not ._ lhlll thl Mid apeclfled rll• to 111 wonc.,. employed by them 1n thl u.cutlon Of 1he oontrlC1. • 5 6 7 8 D ,,.,.,,,,., A11 ... h1101 Uill• 0 ... 1 .......... ,.,_., 1'-11"""' J•, n1m1t...1 .. t ... ,.~u .. w, I~ ... t• ' 11111• +h I M+o ,,,..t.. M""• ''·•llti t'111tll • , 11 111 ~ dlJlll"lll " 11!1 lt•111i111.ct•m l~·--t1 lhmt lt .. 11 ... .,, II .. llM j ,,.,."''"' ...... ,. l••IC•rl·• llill I •IC,.,,, ,...1.,V' i I ''*'' ... ,, •• '''""' tll \If #I .......... , , ..... '·fl I h •••11h r I t11 I• ft t ••I h•f1nHh l•o• "' f I II''""'"·'•"°''""''' "" .... •·· ,, .... •• •·• 111 •. , 11 I ,, I ''··'· M ,,., tt tt• I''" \t1 11111 ... , 1a .... 11 I '"' tr I 11-. 111111111 ~,. .. ,, "'·•h u.,,.'. • ~!I ~ t'rnt:.,rt~ 11n .. -;.....,,,. tt t* •·•' h•nlf Kt! \\11n1.1<tt A lll ow• •u•~t~l~•~ALS lt11, .... \ I ulu1111\fw4f I L y If 1i<o1• ••11rw.lu1I 11 l 11ll.11+n,l11 I t,, • ._ ••• 61!+ I ""'''""'.. lu!t I+ •til" uw I '111 J ., ; 1 I; "~ t 11 • ·~--·· ..... l flf i'\jwdUM HI• I ~•l•u\f1t•f --., ............ 1,11 ,1\1•1 t u111 • Luf fl>• .. II·•" 'tti. .... 1·t It .. ,. M· ••·I• C Ill• I It NII•' ...... ''"'' "'''""'" '• 11 11 H.11•1 .. u •k111• ...... '4'···· *1(1 I ... " \\•1111•1 1, ,, •ti'" p,, H11 ''""'' H• "'-' • H ,.,,,.,_. t~• n•,., I Ult.ti h• ""''• ,,,.,,,, ........ - ........ Ii{. \he lh 11 lllUlll •11meu Klllt and COl'r.ctlone may be m• on Mme deed· llnee at tbove. P!MM IUk lot • "klll number" wtlet'l cencielllng your ed. :::~~ UHll '"'' Chec:lc your ad dally and ou\• report «rora lmmedl· ::~. •ltly The DAIL V PILOT 1, ·• &Mumee llablllty tor the ' nrtt lnc:orrect ln-11on ~'. onty. t •1• I f.!~ 11'"4' 1•.01 I It° l•tl , ... l!WI<. 1)9( n al l 1Um•1&Y...U , ....... 0t4, ... tltet111t ....... .,. -4.....,, ... . htettth ..... . ....... ,....8114 ......... ,, ... llat,111. 111· lllD, TRADITIONAL RF.ALTY 11\0( -------~-i&i~ 111 OUYM FllEIT WJTINIL , .. , o~ ....... hlghly upgraded ,,.w Broedmoor hom.. ca- thedral oelllnga, 2 tire-~:.;, g:d:i:;~~~ :i:~ ,,,, h1nd1ome 11on• ex- i"~ t«IOI". Lov.ty 4BR 3bl ,,, home with pool and NP- ,.... erat• epa otf m••t•r ... o ault•. $705,000 lea. '"'"' 1131· 1400. -=~: MIT& mu TllPLIL , ... ,. Actually 3 ~at• 1 ltOtY .. , ' !lorn. with garcs.nt and • •• yerct.. Nicely maintained • .... with -.otled ran1a1 re- "' cord•. 2 bdrme INICl'I and ;1i quality --.11i... Own. ·••• wlll excnange l24g.5o<t .. ,. 831-1400 .~:~ WISTIUn IPPWJll ,,. lovely famlty home In good lrN. All amanl1lel Smith officiating. In Uet1 of GREY ~oweni memorial conlribu-FLORENE WATS 0 N t1ona .may be made to the GREY, pQ8led away on M...y ~enc~ Cancer Sode,ty. 30, 1983 l.n eo.ta Mesa, Ca. ~vat.e lllterment. Pacillc beloved wile of Col. Richard LOUISE ELIZABETH thl• ooun on My 1. 1983. •t 8-45 LARZELERE. n!Sldent of 1.m In Room No. 19 localad et 700 '211-7 Publl•h•d Orange COHI Dally PllOt June 2, 9, 18, 23, 19113 24911-83 No bidder m1y wlthdr-h11 bid for • penoo ot 1Nny (301 days •lier thl da11 Ml tor lhl CIC*'lln(I of bide. p I L AHHOOHCEM£HTS for enjoyable ttvlng 1n • • View M ortuary direct.on. E. Grey of Colt.a Mesa, c.a .. RUIZ mother of Richard E. Grey JOE H. RUIZ, age 72. a resi· ll of Balboa, Ca. and Loma dent of Coeta Mesa, Ca. G rey-Kusiak of Warwick, Passed away on June 4, Rhode Ialand, grandmother 1983. Survived by h.us wife of Eric Grey of Balboa, Ca. and Stephen and Jennifer I f'IHCE HOTHHS l lEU. HOA DWA T MO•TUA•T 110 Broadway Cos1a Mesa 64<' 9 150 IAL Tl H•GHOH s..tfTH & TUTHILL WfSTCllff CHAf'U 4'l7 f I 71h ~r ( c ,11 M1,.,a f'4f; Q''H I . ,AClfiC VIEW MEMOllAl f'Alll t "nT't"ry Mo rtuary C.haoel·Crematory l5Q(J Pao 1llc View Drill(' Newport 0eac11 to44 noo McCOltMICI( MOITUAllU l aqun.1 8'-ac 11 494 9415 l ayuna Hills 168 0933 ">..ira Ju,m G.lp1~trdno 495 1776 HAal 09 LAW~MT. OUYE Murtuarv • Cemetery Crema101) lli:>5 G1sl('r Ave Go'>la Mesa 540 5554 D Kuaia.k of Warwick, Rhode laland, mt.er o f Charles W a l so n , Fl o ren ce Hutchenion and Francis Cowart all of Tex.ea. Al.lo survived by n ieces and nephews She waa a mem- ber o f Ftr1l Christian Church of San Bernardino, Ca. for ~ years. She was a Real FAtat.e Broker for 20 yeana and waa pn!9e.Dtly em· ployed at Xcaljber Realty and lnvestmenta. SelVices will be held on Sunda~, June ~. 1983 at 2:00PM -et Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary . SPENCER OSCIDLA E. S PENCER, of Irvine, ca., born November 11. 1905 in Webb Clty, Mia- eourt. He waa a career ac- ooun ta.nt for the Bureau of Priaona, Department of Jus- tice. He leaves hla cherished wile of 53 years, Jewell, hla adoring daughter Sandra POawn, and beloved grand· 1on Stephen F.dwarda. He joined the Ancienl Free and Aocepted Muon1 in El Reno, Oklahoma, Lodge # 50 in 1934 and has al8o maintained memberahip ln Abou ~ Ad.hem Temple A.A.0.N.M.S , Springfield M1-oun m.nce 11H3. He wu a member of St. Thomas of Civic: Center 0.-tve W-1, s.n1a AN. Co.ta Meea, ca. Paued Callloml• 92701. and to g1w any away on June 1, 1983. leQal r_, wny. IOCOfdlnQ to the P\8.JC NOTICE Survived by her lovinj hua· wnfl9d P91111on flled with thhl COun. I---:==~--_;..;_ __ ba d Ri h d d h The minor child, CHRISTINA l'K:nTIOUa au ..... n c ar I aug ter MARIE McNAUGHTON, lhOukl nto NAm ITATW•NT Penny Mahon and aon1 be declered Ir• ot the cu.tocfy •nd Th• foll owing patton · 11 doing Michael and Patric k control ol her n•tur11 parent or bulln.e u . Shaughneesy Services will Plf«lla. L 0 N E B T A R F R A M I N G & h Id . S··-..1-J Oiied May 19, 19113 LUMBER. 280 EHi Oyer Ro1d were e on \UKMIY ~ LM A. Brll>Ch, Sul11 "C":s.nt• Ana, C• 92707 · ~. 1983 at 3:00PM at Pacific Cleork, D1nn11 R. Gro11, 2 '983 View Chapel with Rev. F.d By Nancy Gran1. Vellowatone l •n•, El Toro. Ca Smith oflldatlns. 1n lieu of Publl1~rang1 CoH I Delly 92~ bu.W-11 oonductld by an fiowena memonal contribu-Piiot. June 9. 18, 23, 30, 1993 lndlvldual tions may be made to the 2885-83 Denn11 R Groe1 American Cancer Society .,. .. ,1C NOTICE Thll atet-t wu nltod wllh 111e Private intennent. P --'••A ____ r_"°'"-------Covnly Cllr1I Of Oreng1 Coun1y on ...-u.... June 2. 1983 View Monuary d.irecton 'ICnTIOUI .,.._.. ,,,,,.,,. A P•vmenl bond and 1 performanoa bond wlll be required Pflor to ••eioutlon ol the oon1r8C1 and ehaU be In 11141 form Mt fonh In lhl contract dowmen11. Pureuant to s.ctlon •500 of the Government Code of the St•I• of Callfornl•. lhl oontrlCI wtll oontaln prolllalona 1>«ml111ng thl llUClCeMful bldd« to IUbllllule aecurlll• for any mon1y1 wlthlllld by lh• DISTRICT 10 enaure plflorm1nce und1t lhl contract GOV9rnlng Board By Sherry 81110w Cieri! Publlahed Or•ng1 Co .. I Dally Piiot, June 9, 1983 29&5--83 PUellC NOTICE ROSENTHAL The following peraon 11 doing u • r•nge CoH t Dally NOTICE Of' l"UBUC HEAAtHO I N,.,_ ITATW•NT P bllltl d O DANIEL WIL1AM ROSE-buel,_ u PllOI, June 9· Ill. 23• SO, 19~~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, ......u .. , (Al MIC RO LOGISTIX IB) ---------....;;..;.;_....;;..;..1Purauant lo C1lllornl1 tteelfh end "• nru.., a former resident MICRO LOGISTICS, 1300 Adema "8.IC NOTICE S1re1y Code. S.C11on 5473 1, or a of San Ji'tandaco, ca .. paDed Avenue. Suite 30-L, Co111 Mew. pubOc heerlng lo be held by Cotta away on June 12. 1983 in Ce 92629 f'ICTITIOUI ., ... ,. M1 .. Sanitary Olawct Ju,.. 9. 1983 Bilhop ca He la IWVived ~ Spence Mobley. 1300 NAlllR ITATW•NT el 7 30 P M 11 Coate M11a Clly b ._,_ ' th. .. _ , Adema Ave Suite 30-L. Coat a The folowlnCI ~· are doing Hall Council Chembera , 77 Felr Y ma mo er nntoi.nette, 1 M ... , Ce_ 92629 buall'-.. : Drive Cot II Men. Callforn11 brother and l tlialer Private Thia buel-•• conducted by"' CHAN TE, 12211 N Tu11 ln 92828, .. io ,, .. ,.ng to be Mid IOf services will be held under lndMduel Orange, CA g2ee7 the purPQM ol reoetvtng of 1 wr1111n h ... , __ ., f Ha bo CO!eman SpenoeMol>ley LOI< '"c , • Celllorn lt report~1lningloprovldlng.._ t e '"""'uon o r r Thia at•t-• wu !Ned wtth the corporellon. 12211 N Tu alln. ""'ic..a for •II propenlea within 1r.. L•wn M o unt Oli ve CountyCl«kotC>rlnge Countyon Orange.CA92097 0 111r 1c1, 10 h11r pro1esu 10 ' • Mortuary. M0-5~5-4. M•y to, 19113 Thia ~ II oondvct.O by • objec1lon1. II any. 111<1 10 1a11bllah "1et .. ex>rpof•tlon. H<VIOe charge lo RM collectee on HUNGERFORD Publlaned Orange Co11t Delly LOI<, Inc Ille property lax rotlt for Ille ne XI M A R G A R E T y Piiot Jone 2. 9, 111. 23. 19113 L.411111 1<111. ll~J yN r 2170.83 Pr~t SY ORDER OF THE BOARD O HUNGERFORD, • resident Thi• ... ,_, Wll ni.d with lhe DIRECTORS OF THE COSTA MES F of Claremont, Ca. Pu.ed P\Bl.IC NOTICE County Clertl of Orange County on SANITARY DISTRICT OF ORANG A e away on June 6, 1983 at June 3. 1983. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, 77 Fe p V n<:TTTIOUI 9U.,..ll nt1'110 Dr ive , Colle Miu. C1llfornl Ir omona alley Canmunity NAMI: ITATW•NT Publlah•d Oreng• COHI O•lly 921128 Hoeplt&l at the • of 83. The followlng PlftOn •• doing Piiot, June 9, 19, 23, 30, 1183 ELVIN HUTCHISON, Born in Riverside, Ca. o n bualneae ••· 2ee0-83 s.<:re11ry F b l" l900 Sh HONEY RUN 8 POLLEN CO , Board or Dlrectora e ruary "· . e WU 2006 w Balbo• Blvd . Su111 2111, NllJC NOTICE Coate M11a S•nllary Dlat a n!Sldent of Claremont for 8 Newport ee.cn. Californle 92883 Publlahed Orange Cou 1 Dell ye&r1 and of Upland, Ca. 39 Tim S•wy•r. 2005 w. 81lbo1 f'ICTITIOUI ., ... ,, Piiot June 3. 9 19113 • y yeana "'"~~ t.o go'~" to Clare· Blvd . Suite 2111. N-pon S.ach, NAm ITATW•NT 2402-8 .,..... u'6 C1ttforn11 92883 Thi fottowlng peraon1 .,, doing 3 mont. IW'Vived by her IOn Thi• buel.._. 11 conducted oy 1n bull-... Ted Mertz of Ne wport lndlllklu11 BETINA'S. 39<11 B<laiol S1, Ste Beach, ca. and 7 grand-Tim Sawyet "E." s.nt1 AN, C1 92706 children. Private ee--'-Thia a111emen1 wu fMld with lhl AIOerlln• L1rlo1 Gongora, • v "'"at County Clet1< Of OrW>ge County on 21152 Sh.w I.II Hun11noion Beech, and cremation wW be fol· Mey 23 11193 c. 9264e lowed by burial at aee. 1"2110a Fram. M ClonQor'a. 21 152 Shaw Memorial ..cl+. ma~made Publlth1d Orenoe Coaa1 Dally I.II, Huntington Blectl. c. 92648 to the ~:_-So-Piiot, May 29. June 2, 9, 18. 1$83 Thie ~ la c:onc:IUC!ed by a '""""' 24e7..a3 ~ .. P8'1nenhlp. P\B.IC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI IUllNlll NAMI aTAT£MINT The fOllOwlng peraona 11• dOlng bu91"-U H L ~ SEPULVEDA RESIOENTIA CONDOMINIUM PROJECT 40161 Chi nn .. Piece. Newport Bffch, C A 92883 t d ety. St.one Funeral Home ----:-:-------Frlnll M Qongor1 "°"!!~=======================~~;;;~;;;;~=-1 NllJC NOTICE Thl9 mt-t _, ni.o wtih the ------------County Clerk of Or1111(141 Counry on "4:TITI0Ue _,..... Mey 27, 1983 Newpor1·Belboa Oevelopmen Inc . • C•lllornl1 corpora11on 4018'ir Ch1nne1 Pl1ce Newpor t Beech. CA 92883 IF CREMATION IS YOUR PR EFERENCE Call THE NEPTUNE SOCIETY The '\c:ptunl' "oc1l'ty hrought crcm11t1lll1 to O ra nge County in 1974 foday w e prov1dl' more ~crv1ccs to Or.in~c County famtlil's than a n y otht'r o rgan11a11o n HAim ITATWWNT ,,,,,_ The tollowlng petaon 11 doing Publllh•d Or1nge CoHI Delly bu•lneee •· Ptl01 June 2, 9, 18, 23. t9113 RANCHI TO MARK ET, 900·D 2500~113 Sen Jo•quln Hiii• Road. N-port i----.-_-IC_NO_Til'_r....:.;;.;.;,~ BelCh. California ueeo ~-·~ John Alex1nd1r And lklen ,tcTITIOUa •u•••• 221101 Hiiton HHd O<lve. No. 111: NAMI aTATl•NT Diamond Bat, Callf0tn11 91765 The followlno p1r•on 11 doing Thia bulllnl4l1 la conducted b)' an buatneee u lndMdual CAT TAil COPV', 723 Vlc;torl• John A. Andll!lan Street, Coaia M111, C•llfornla This bu11net1 11 conoucled by llmlled pannetthlp N11Wport·B1IOOe Oev1IO!)m1n1. Inc C1rl M Zeller PrHldenl • lhla 111tement wu filed will! thl Counly Clerk or Orenge County on Mey t8 1983 0 y F21Mf Publlahed Oreng• Co111 0111 Piiot May 19, 28. June 2. 11. 19113 2282-113 Thia 11a1emen1 wu n1ed wtlh 1111 921128 Coun17 Ci.rte Of Orange County On Chrlatlne Mar11 Purlll11, 723 .,..,llC ""TICE May 23, 19'3 Vlo1orl1 Street. Co11a Mau, n"1 "" "2110IO Callloml• 92828 fllCTITIOUI •u ....... Publllh4'1l Or•nge COHI Dally Thll bull'-II conduoted by an NAMf STATllHNT Piiot, M•y 28. June 2, 9. 19, 1093 lndlvlduel The followlng peraona ere dOlng 237•-43 Chrla Pur'lllM bualneaa u Thie 1111-t Wll llled wflh thl R & R ENTERPRISES. 1111 Fel P\8.IC NOTICE County Cllrl! ot Orange Counry Ol'I Dtlve, Coat. Mau, CA 92628. May 23. 19113. RI ch a rd J Tu Io h, II t 4 flCTITIOUI 8Ul1HEll 11117ae1 l<lngftal\I< Of'ive, Huntington BMch NAMf ITA'tlMUfT Publl•h•d Orano• Coal! Dally CA t 211•11 The I0110w1no '*'°"' ... do<ng PllOI. M.., 29. ~ 2, •. Ill, 1913 An 0 n d. s A 0 I• r . II,. bua1n11t u 2379-13 KJnglltM< O.lve, Huntington lkeoh T"M·RANOAZZO-WRIGHf CA 92$411 , 1 t ~ll011U •I fT f I ... ..._."' ... ,.., ... , .. , ... ••• , ... ,, .. ~l\l.• ,,, .. ,, . " ... BUSINESS & FINANCIAL lh1 1.11\t"""" '"' •• ,1. •1-....°'''., ... f lj J>ir 1ur1110 h1n.1IH.Y Y,. ii h4f • 1\.1 .... "'. ,, ,, ..... 11 ... fh I ti\! HI \\111tO~f 0 '""" .. ··-" • \1 ,, •., \.\•u~nt ,,,.,,,. ·~·"' 1 r EMPLOYMrN T T c L 11111 lo\1111 I 'J ... \\ ····•·1 ANIMALS .... r•..-u,,.,,.... L.""'-"'1•• l'•lt MERCHANDISE \t I ' .\11 ...... \1,,. .. I\ fll, \\I I I I l ·• ..... ' ... , •• ,. •• 11 l 1 "po1l1 •" • ,. h ' • • 11111,11 ...... Iii(, -· \ . ' .. H •U•h .. 1.11 ""' '•'A I Ir\ M.-•1 llt"I\ A · M ....... UH41 "·· \!\ ...... Mu ...... 1 S.1,1 • 11111' ~ ., fl t"'"''' .. '"l'I• ,, lllllW'l\h, t .. ~ .. "'.,. s "'1·rto11tii•• f \' IC....1h1• I ••-Hh I tit II BOATS ,,., .. ,,, s I\,,.,,, '··· ,, ••• ,'Iii• \I Ulf , .. ,u11 \11ti"' ' .. , ,1 Ii•""' • ·~ .... I "'il•l!I• .... ... ,,,,, .. 1 ... 1 '-'·lt• .... l·t TRAN fu-h Sf>OR TA HON F .. ,, , .. .. \ ...... ,. " •· 1 tttat •At .. -..,.,,~ ~, I U '0'' I tc\ ,,,,., I r ... " •th AUT <>MOTIVE E '""'' 1., .-..o-c ........ ! ..... ''"-. , ........ V..;11111•1 ''""'" hi.1 I "to._ I jl-'I\• l1 .. 1h 111 .. tii D \ ·•"· '\t•"••11• I I• AUTOS 1\111 ll•+tll•• 1Mf'ORT£D ... Aw•1 A~1 .. 1111 llM\\ '111••11 IJ.1h1,i1 I~ I •If•,,,, t.,, ... ,, 6 .,,,, tfuH1t.1 ''""' 1 .. .iu.11 ,, "'"'" t .... mt••te•mu 4 ........ ,. '· "" M,.,,j,. ,., .... ~ ,.,, M·••••I• ~ .. J.t1\aul••tu We c.iffcr c1emat1o n w11h burial al 'ea. tn the moun1a111~. nr in the dc~n and our complete serv ice co,ls abo u1 o n e-rifth a s m uc h a s a co nvcn11onal gro und burial I he rc\pOn\C to o u r 'cr\.-1cc h.t\ been extraordinary• We have 27,000 mcm~r~ ~n Orange Coun1v. :ind in o ur nine year h1~tory we huvc <icrved O\.-c r 7,ooO famll1l') SECURITY SYSTEMS. 999 HerHa<d f'la.JC N0TIC( Thlt bullNM la oondueted by • W•y Cos•• MHI. Cehlom•• 92626 1---fllCTITIOU-----.-8U-alNli--1-1--~·• pertnerlhlp. P11er Ti m 1625 Tedmer A.,.. fl!Chard Tulch An•heom t:eltlomia 92805 HAMS ITATl•NT flhOndl Adlet Victor Antnony Aenoeno. 9451 The followlng peraon 11 001ng Thll ll•t-1 wu lit.d with thl BrH kwller Huntington 811c;h. t>utl""9 •a. County Cieri! of Orange COunty on 2 Ir.hi ,1,.1 ••...-n1rt• p, .••• ~ .. t'h~h· II you have any qunt1on\ regarding c rem ation , pleaiie call u s ot: 646-7431 ------------------------------- P IC'U$C \end free 1nforma11on to· Nl\mc ---------------- At.ld rcu C:11y --------------- Mnil to fHE NEPTUNE SOCIFTY 474 E. 17th tr«'t Cosu Meu, CA 92627 19 NEP1 UNE Of'f'ICES NATIONWIO r • .. • ,. • C1llfomle 926•8 ISLAND LAOY INTERIOR M.., II, IN3 Wllll em ArnalO Wrlghl 999 DESIGN. lt7 Sr lreAve , Balboa '1l•U Heriford Way Coll• Meu. lalancl, CA 92M Publlahed Or1n"e CoH1 Delly C11ilor1111 92628 Lind• J Mlf'lln, I 17 S•PC>hlrl Piiot, Mey 19, 28 . .;:,.,. 2. 9. 1913 Thia bulln ... 11 COMUCled by 1 .. • 81100. ltlll\d, CA 02t02. 2340-a3 oener11 p111ne1thlp Thlt bu"-It Conducted by •n Wiiiiam A Wr !Qtll lndl\lklual. Tllla Uelern1n1 waa fllld w1111 lhl Lllldl J Martin Coun1~ cw.ti. ol Or•noe County 0n Tiii• ate•-• wu nled with lhe I M•y 16 111113 County Clerk Ol Orenoe County on 1'11M27 Mey ti. 1h3 -....... Puol1•n•a Or•ng• Coul Delly ,.~ PllOI, M•y 10 ~Cl Ju~ 2. 0 1911.3 Publl1h1d Orenge co .. , QtJly 2338·113 Pilot. May 19, 211, Ju111 2. t , 1"3 2331·13 Nl.IC NOTICE IC-Nit ~TITIOUI au .... H NA• ITATOllNT Thi tollowlng ptrtOn• .,. doing bualfttM1t· JC M MANAGEMENT COMl>ANY, 24842 lhadowfllll, El ti;::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::;iToro.CAt2830. J1mH w. Mol<••, a•e•t Orgumze your coupon sa\'ings with The Supermarket Shopper. ap· pcurln(ll Wedn~sday and Sunday In lhC' ..., Piil 8h9dawfu, El Toto, CA H930. Chrl1lln1 A. Mel< ... 24t•t lhadowfu, lt Toro, CA 02830. Tl'll1 bullneu I• oon4uctld by lndMcklall .Hu'°""' & W• OllrittlM A. Mel<• Tillt ............,, ... fllld With the COunty ~ of Oranee County °" ~·y 11, 1113 ,.,... ""Oii•~ Orano• Coeat Dal~ ""°'-,...., tO, M. June 2, t~ f'trNV-1, . "•"''-RA•YI• tt ...... • _., ~ut.rll '''"""" 5 rr1unwt1 I ,,,11w ... .r-n "'".,." a.h. 6 AUTOS, /\Ml llu~ll t· ... t111.llti t•h1#\lt11~·1 \'hr\"lto I OOMCSTIC 7 ~~f' h~1;rft11t "' w .... .., ... ~k~ '~"""''"h 8 t\-.nt&• ·~pa11t .... ' , • bdrm home with pool '"" $1g7,000. A11um1bl1 • · ' ftnllllcing & owner 11 flex· :·:,: Ible. (280,500 - \\\lll(fl{ll'f llt 1'11 .., In~ Rllol !:STAIE , .,, r 631-1400 I I I ,. • .... H L 11&1 :.:• FH11121MOI • • l uxury condo• on 1he '' " ocean~ of hwy· with I .• UM of pool and epa'. Ideal '"" ,. .. ~· '·'· "'"' .. ~111• 111lt"f , .. ,, l•tll ,, . .,, J~ "" "l.!t "I.!' •1J7 iioll;'4 tflH ""' ~·" ... , 4'ttl •II I 410 •11: I •II~ •tll ::~~I 'l'l .,,"' ''"• ··~· ·••l ··~' ··~· ... , Vlll vrn v1 n "'11ng nMI bMctl, shop-. ping and 1rantp0r1ttlon EJ11c•pllonal financing &«-7020 UHt llAL EITIT1 r 1• 1 '•r I I II' 11 .... ' '" I•••. t ' .. 642-56 78 ltl 112 '* ~ • p 4 • • • , f 'On 1k •JM!n· •lvl nnt hl')I In prict. no1111m· •blfl M~L. rl ... lnf'd •d~rti•in1. I Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1~. Hoaate lor Sale Rtaat1 ler lal1 HH111 fer lal1 au .. tdal ~ UH i""' Oafarablat4 let!!! VafualaW .......... It!. ...... .. !al. .._, , -----------:.:L & _ __.._ ,,_ ... ft•J1 01 I •t.t• '' Gta111l 1002 Gta1ral 1002 C"ta •na 1814 lfnrrt Ifft~ 1061 l&I ....... llQtlt..... IMt.,....... DM mMn m•I•, nc.n·<'• HHH• tar Sile ,. II =.::.;•::;.;•;;.;•.;;.•~-.-.-.-.-.-..... -.-.-~-------• llSTl IUA 'alley UM t 8r T "' ~ dwt 2 bdtm 1210/mr '"' MUQNITlflll Nwneiw hlgflot11no-.nr. t;;;,y 4 bC! S ti; i:o;;;: Nloe4~1~i2112.., Medi ='·1.S"'eoo.t 114 be.teae 140• Ut9i 131.7406 LIMDI ISU IAYFIOlfT •UYI.. P~::nu~or~l~r ~== eprl~.Plllklna.~ PMifo-~w/wetbat& e::· w 75• Na Aml009 P1.eec).1q,a:te0ott21. pe6d, NfrtQ a..-.. t ~ '" CQ.1 "y•1 r llll'lil L.a"OOll Vll'W r1u01 mngn1ftl't·nl 4 •n1••11111 ........ , "-··---· ...... 11 ~"'~llOef t2X 12 door. 201>o-21 ' beth. CloM 10 toflool. .~1s-641.+W90 lfNlll C!Nfdren Ok. "° hom•, 5'.1t...... II 0 10 -.,., ~ ... , ""'' 3000 1.1. Chuck 8plller Prtv Clbhae & pool. Mo ' 9ecNlor Unit SSIO lltll pea. Cflrle an ' :. · bdrm, ·I bath pool hnnw SI. l~1U,O< 120,500 down $ to.4.000 e11ch1noe fOt pr09ef11M 13,_12ee pett 2 ,_., ..... req. pa6d. fll*I. ,.. QWPet, 1MO Wlleoe .. MtOI .IYSIDr Pllcr IAYFROllT 1at TO 90d o we 15.000 In/out 1tat•. AllO wlll ... t 120o1mo 11' ~e· a___. h r--1-"'.J "° ~. u. 1-4121 ""' IOt c.J• • II• I 'II Ir. Ir. " I. c 0 n d . A I k I n alat wlllnan<:lng .!'.!!!... .. .. _ ITUHNING latoe a "· 2 per.on ht '~·· ,, IJ · I .. I nt .... .,1•'1 l11 ·11>11u1}''hr •12"•""Ca11'""1151 OPENSUNOAY1-6 laat. .... C •Ha IAYTIMtlERAPT k a-din tpt, l)OOl.~o:, •. ,; • s~, ww a1 ,,.,y ro "r ~ -.. . • • "'·"""· .....,.. 1864 PORT CARLOW ~ ...., Cereaa ••l llat HU 18r. trpto, PoOI. pnwiea 16Nlmo. 110 w. 18th tt. Am. N;~, I 2 bu tl11 'J ,,.._,l ,11<""'-n ... 1u111I Sl.500,000 Jo AnnOoren ~IOI 2br, 1'1~~condo.eoroee petlo,endldgertllt. TH ™2• I W &lnio ~ PEMllfSUU HOME OCEHFROllT CALL 759-0e io Prl•• o..t1 .... trom pool. lnol. w..,_, 2 B« 2 ... pool, IP9o M7Stmo. Mt~-e.ly IL E -~ · • fCj sa up ~~ , •~• 'I dryer, rell1g, OW. MOO. primelooatlon. ~. ... MU il: -.-. btllnt, •~• 26fl{. • , (.ll t'Jll&)l•llV\l•·IA:. M ,1111tl'l1l11111.-.vuirn' lllTllLLI llt4ll1trtel 913-73200t9e04113 Avall.1/1,144-8a7$, ~ ~~~·....,pd._.,._.,._ "' b.11h. :nuo ,q 11 $1 .. lttJ.OOO o. t·J11fiu111 ---11111111 --•-• 3 Br 2 B• "Lln<l• .. Moo.I t 3 . 3 o o • q 1 t . 2 br 1 ba. Cloel 1 * 2 8r 2 le rw IC Pia.a, 11 J' lentaAN A¥9. Aoom 1o1 1 • LIDO ISLE llU Yllll Nil 11n01e 1tory. 1n the e1utte' aprlnkler9d·two 19 x 10 °*" No~· 1150 mo° lut. ..... 1141 !~:. Pool, .,._ QarPOft, 1620. Ctll 1-a, 136-' 120. on 1 111111 1 I, J, ... •'I y t Remodeled 3 Bd 2 ea. lam Newport eeacfl Eiceel~ door• 20 It cie.r height, 111 l IUt Ne 01580 . YDll DWI -·Mo.,... •• 752-5122. .,. .. 1?1' .. J R1·111ollt·h~I .I l~ll ni, :.! h.1111 r l.H lo:l' "' rm 1m, 26K dwn. OWC 12% lent condition. lg. rHr yard. &45-6570 0t condO, 2 8r, 1 be. rw 8C .... fUt 11• ~ !x-.i111~·t·lllll).!•,IUrrll!.ht'\l,11.1t111s s~:W.OOll 30yre.Agnt857-2040 ONLY $185,000I 03 1-7838 3 Br,2Bahc>nwnrbcltl,all OIUOIY Plaa.FullMC.PoC*.Jlra. mm 2&1ZL'. SULJtO hlr .• F•IRIAlllS RA11CH HILLTOP Call Agent/Owner It tr alt 4 eppllanc,!!· ... !'/,~0 • welilh1 rm. '625/mo. PoOl..,,.,2111Mtoboh Wlcty r•""'" .. ·•ii • " (7 14)844-8382 1825/~·~-:;'·~~ '· ESTATE lmmed oooupanoy. ~ •1 ao. 910 -1140 11~8 & "'' 11,1 v Nt·w 4 l.ir. I • h,,, ,·ui.toni Fr 1•11d1 Nor11;;md) POIL llME l-lllT HIHTI FULL ACRE ewe 21..--e-9.,_, ...... 11 ... & ~ ... II"• KtrY ~7383, ..,,.. 1119 ~ndol. Photwe ~" 1 , 1 • ·.c E°.!;l<\11.' I :.I IJllllll' ol(rl' hilltoµ $1 .:.150.llOU Cullom built 3 BR. 2 Ba. K.Wr GOfgee>ul 2 •tory condo. -·--" " -0&0-8318 Hewpo1. I\, ' ·' flreplaoe, 1hake roof, RV 2 bdrm plus bonu1. Lg. lot. &REIT 2BR. 2 1 . G t loo with larraoed pool. ao.olol• 1 8df rw Dana COROHDO CAYS BAYFROMT acceae. Owner wlll carry A1klng 1110.000. 12 17501 oerd':.c r:. · Prtvet•PetlOt Euttlde, ltlarp 1 BR. neiw Merine. 1310. Cell leiif1,Jltteh l '1o4 1 •.,1,111,11111 1~1.111d \U'l lhl\'t1,.111 1111 H.>' lH1:11 111 toan $148,500 114'~ fl nancln 619 lrvlre VIEW OM-7~· a1 • *Cowr9d Petklng op11, IJl!~1·,.."'° garc, no11 2-IPM, 4N-9482. --.-.... -, ... -;, 41 ,-· • ' It M O .... , llltr Ave. Agt. Bob 8<45·9181, vv• 8 acloul &n p.te. ... " mo. a ._ -·~ , di>< k l-'l.11 " ,i\,ttl Nuv. $.l':t1 OIHI \\ 1' 1111" ty t IUI •1 648·3191 SURROUNDED BY mllllon VACANT •ge:I Al ...,ti 540-1151, Pam°' &..any, l!Jll'l)I I 1: PARK LIDO Co .. 00 141• 7121 Newport Shores, Canal I homeel Nor1h Tuttln. 'BR, 2 ba, h• IOI, c:loM :wa1::Yn c:..i, .tt e. 978-3641 Pwn lut. .... 17 .. Wkty rent•'•' I... "':• •. " Ir t lk 10 beach ten-Rick Alderetl•, Rltr. to echooll, lhope, fwy9. •He>me-1111• Kltchenl 1&1T191 lwm 1Jj 6iOCi( tom. f idf. Coiof lV · 1 '', '" :l ln . .! h.1 f111l1 1n1111.11ul.11t•111111t .. Un SANTAANAHTS. n1c:'1.::~mlngSt6isoo 731..,...« 1825. rblk to Huntington. 28'11AM35/mo ••so. '22 8111 St. heeted pt ,• lu l ll ,. I $1 •fl •11111 • • • 3 BR 2 ba, walk to ocn, F-. . ~71. OONl'I f•U t 5 ~n·t·nx· '"""" puu -·' Carl Mou n Age nt, IEWNRT,JLITS• pool,Muna.JM:,cloeeto ·m~·-·LmEIPIEE cwpor1,yard/beklony,ell Nt." ' Prftt lld10t4 760-2643 Adj, $80.000 ea. ~ 1--41111 ldlooli. lhope. '826 bltlne, lndry rm. 1 Br. bultt ln et0\111 & OWtn, lagtlna 0. Newport Shor11, Canel 982..,... 71 · 988-9853 1 Bdrm. From 15eO 253e Santa Ane Aw. '9frtge, cari>et•. dfapee. Ftr l1lok llltl front. walk 10 t>eecl\, ten-t ti tate ' 2 Bdrm. From M50 TSL Mgml e.42-1803 No pete. M0-2875. aaatr 3Br. t•..\iji,lam rm,laun-nl1,1w1mmlng S t67,500. Prerr!J ISSI antae 2244 LAOUINTAHERMOSA E/tlde 3 Br, 1 Ba, amall 1Br.bulttlrutcwe&oven. leat1l• dry rm, 241130 gar "11 Cerl Mosen Agent EltUll 18f c;ona0 In&-,.. 18211 Pertllldt Ln 1 bla encl yd. 1 car ger. refrlge, c:arp9ta, drepw. *Br x9 • tl'leee leatures PLUS,,_ I 760-2843 _..,..., W of a.en. 3 bit!• S. of sec>otmo lit IUI plul Mo.-M0-2876 ~ '' a crpt, new vinyl kltcnen. v 1c1t1 on In St rat -(lhort drlYe to Yguna at Edtnoer ciMn ~ &45-33 l 8 ,...,,, to bee<:r batl'I an<' laundry room OCEANFRONT IOfd-Avon tour Brltlan 9nd of 133). Ltg llvlng Ul·M41 · 2 bd, 1 ba. pftv""' dectl, iia'ibOet lloorlng Md new paint In By owne<. 1450,000 Older and Europe aod enfOY room. deck, tannla prtvt-E. Side channar 281. 1e., anctoaed ga1 with W/O w/docil • Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy~ode Drive N 8 6 7.S 6161 * HARBOR RIDGE * & O\lt Don't mlse this dupl•11prlced11101velue freedom and saving by leoe & ewlrnmlng pool. l~t INcla c:pll/drpe, bltnl, lrplc, tiootcup.C1oM108ch and 13000 super buy $129,900 Wiii consider trade owning your own 18th $550/mo. Avall. lmrned. g11age, patio pool lndry lhOpC)lng center. 1485. 650--88 Cnnw v1<,I\ tlw n11"l f.1'1lllt1u-. \'ll'W nt•v. FILLEIRULn 640-7090,559-4221 Century apt F0t cs.ia111 ee&-1750. Furn udloapt.1525wt.it fectl Moo rn0 111 +aec Mopete.114-841_1481 __ _ ('U"'lon1 ht111\t' 111 Nt·'"'"<•r I .Nothinu lt1 call 714-483-4101 amenltlel, 1 bit! from aV81i July 1 54&-4ee<t '1 ...... ---:----.,..--:-CdM b -• ~... "' 141-011•. Reduced 10 lowut 2 br, 1'A bl condo. ale, bet\, pkg.,. ... 552-11« · Bac:tielor Apt neat t>Mch, Ptaot l'umpc.1rt.• \.\llll 1111., 4 hdrn1 f.1m rm, 5 --------"" pric e -TOWNHOUSE· RHIH Farailkt4 pool1,epu,tennle.ll50. EHc Condo.1 &, Oen. all utlll pd. Non lmkr. ba 14()< b<1th . forn1Jl J111111g ·1 £1 pk~. Ii ear Towrmome lease option 2 Desperate owner movedl -489-3573 213-599-3813 partially turn, car pon, 1375/mo. M0-2888. dy: Aet• o.iragt< Ldf"l! """' & '·llU/71 Coml' tu ~~1~~~d~7...4~~.000. 1P2rlc2eooo.11~!;000wt1lch1-~~ C..t1•Ha ZlM 2 Br lrvtne condo Spaclousstnqle.one pool,cioMtoS.C.Plu.a. Bach-F" kit nr bell no - " 0 ,---.r ' • .,.,.ow appra"'"' · w/garage 1125/mo Agt & two bedroom apts. S-450tmo. 1 yr 1e.... u • • CdM bll tht' gall• .ind J~k fo1 ;< "t'orksh1rc, £)fort lpl2 value 3 bd, 2 ba, apllt SANTA ANA HTS. 3BR. Fed Gib•' 659-HOO · 646-7585,875-9228. pet1, no amol!~90 P1aoe 7:19-1931 _ level. Bkr 833-8182 1112 ba. 24ic30 garage, r eon · mo. Incl 11111. 7 ba. $4cY Hf 100 no pell, $750 tatllu t+ X LG 1 Br $-405. 2Bf1586. BMutlM MW lullury llPI•. dy Real OPH DAILY 1-8 HELEN 8. DOWD REALTOR, INC. 644-0134 IEWPHT CLOIHIT llAHOl VIEW llLLI Secluded lg 3 or ' bdrm IJ10,00GI hms In Back Bay gated A very neat. pride ol own- community Lg lee lots 8f'Shlp, Lusk Mallbu plan bullt 1980, water view with 3 Br's • famlly room. avall. $25 ,000 dn The home ts e11qul11tely w/reduced prices landscaped and features Trades possible tool 8 shaded rear p11lo with 760.a!OO. pool and apa &44-7020 LIHI lllil Hl&TI Near new ~ Br 2 Ba lllU•Hll IUYIEW $300 dep. 548-0814 ~~. ~l~~:a../rplc . lot rent, 21t0fy, 3 8'. 2'..\ H":B:COn.1 slngle ievel 'condo' Nice •BR. Freahly painted 1!§1!rt hacla Zl Ba. dlhwr. mlcro--w. cott•o• Choice location 1220 aq + new landecaped work Laioe 2 er. 1 Ba. dlhwahr, 9nCllld 2 car Qf. pool & c I• 1 n ft new crp'ttpalnt In back. Located ln gate 1 LUXURY CONDO, llllPllU g11age, ntce a1 .. , no •P•· C ell Kar•o, &38-ti:.t- D;aperlea & lndry alcove' guarded comml nlly with fully turn, cloae to Hoag dog•. Victoria/Canyon. I;;:::::::::;::::;::::;:;::::;::;;::;:;;: ~:::~,~~~by~~ ~~.!~~:::=:;~~ei~b:,: ~~~~. (J184~0{~~~-7;2•~'. L:.~~~~1~~~ G~~~~~~~~E~. 1510/mo. 831-6812 alt 4. C: t~~.!ti:'.J:: ~r:, call 10 see & compare. Call day. 673·231 t nltetlwtmda 1-948-2143 :.v:1=':c.'.tvto~;. ALL UTILITIES Laroe EutlkM 1 Ek natu-pet Ok. 15751mo. lndde t>eacn Ownr 581-98•9. 23268-2 llHEll llULTY or 845•260' Poot• and much more. no PAID. HEALTH =rlg~."s~~~'11~~ 11111a. 538-4837. vetlona, Orange Ave. second bldg C1ll lll-2S 11 NEWPORT CREST pe11. S87A. Call -· CLUBS. HNNIS. 20th. St. #0. 851-9623. DELAWARE PINES N-pon by pool next 10 tot lot. --CONDO. wkndt 550-0378 SWIMMING. plu• 2 Br, MOO/mo. wstei vi ,.......:--=--.,,.----=""""""" Spyglua Hlll, pMoramlc e.aut 38r or + den. , Laroe rwwty decor•t9d 2 Frplc pool Baal. hack 1040 view, pool. jac. prof. s t300t mo. Agt 646--0295 Near Jeftr~ & Trabuco much more' Sorry, 81, garage, central ar.._ ~1• ~:J:· r': ~' IUOl ll•E decor. Carl Mosen Agent Rd. 6 8'. 2112 Bl with no l)fts. Models FW'• req. anded o-r. Mo pet•. 142...ao7 0 n 1 Y 760-26-43 e ..... Oafaraith4 lrplc, dlahweahar, patio. open daily 9 to 6. •mall yard. M 75/mo. 1""""'1 ....._._St ... , "1H Euy walk to bch, 4 Br, 3 "NORTHWOODS". !Ode ~763-071 9, day1 .,., ._..... ""' "" Bl, spacious llVlng rm, 11.1 llEIT llE Gtatral uez & pet• otl. 11150/mo. Oakwood 11!7. ·~Oeluxe--28=-=R-=2~~-:-ln-:4-:-ple....,.ex-. Newpot• J family rm, laundry rm. Lu.11ury 4BR pool home 4 Bd 1 hOUM with $850 NC 6'C>· Agent, q>ta, drpe, bulttlrw, and. beKh, II~ 1 large baleony St55.ooo PLUS eeparate 600 eq ti rm upper, no re. 545-2000 G•rlkn Ap•~nts gar. hk-upe. "O pete from 157' • · 536-1718 gueet houte with fire-from beacl'I Avall yearly • "1a::alfield 1625. 540 4414 --- I 1 II ? ,, I .. " •I · ht "• y I ,. ir I lllT1I OIAIT PUUUU WE FlllHT r -l 044 pl8". Lge lot Ind lots ot I 1200 . 1mw Newport BHch So. •am.r IP1'I ,..__._ ..... ICU.". 7 -~'Cl Seller mull sell by yester-ma• fru it trees Priced ,, ~~~::i:,n:;:o~rm, tully 1 to 4 bdrm. $700 -I 1200. 1700 16th Strttt ~~ vr~ 11·~ 3 bdtm,' ""· ... .. ' ly dayl 4 Bdrm 3 Ba, lamllyl BEECHWOOD 1335.000 w•TERFRONT HOMES 0 BNP .... ~~~I g.,d~ ..!P.t'2 • nowt Ag• , • room with wel bar, 3 car Fl If• TY ,... (al over) •• ....,dfdtl. ""...-~. Bdrm, with garao-. '-1 __ _ VIiiage Walk Townhouse Beamed c a lllngs Enclosed patio. Excellent condition. Oallgtttlul decor Air conditioning 1 115,000 garage Located In I Modal In Woodbridge. 3 lLMtllUl CALL831-1'00 ~ 642-5~13 c:tllldren1"llc:Olna. & wet.-oatd. te6evteed ON,, .• woodS1y area or $200,000 bdrm, 2 ba. Wood, entry Hl-Ol 14 9 2 9 Cd•• I"""......, 2 Bdrm. 1 Y• Bath '580 aacurtty. From 1510. Cell SUMl-11 4 r a, .., .vu, .. ,. N rt B ~ .. N 388 W. Wlllon •d1•13 from" "'. 3 "-. 2 B·. "• 1 1 " homes Ou1olthl1 worldl tloor&mlnlbllnds t llv ---3 8r2 B1,S1000yrty lty ewpo r•Ul 0 . e.31•5683 ....... " ...., ~etJ 1, , ·' price S 160,000 751-3191 rm. paneUog Covered Harbor Knolls Condo Special eummer rentala-1 880 Irvine Avenue _, lncld. Sw ~~ IALEIOUT IHI IEACH llEALn 131-7300 C:::. SELECT pallo wHh redwood deck. 3 br. 2'n be $280.000 Br condo on bay, ' 8' 6 51•1177 (at 161h) Ltg 3 Bf. 2 ea, orptfdf'pa. ~ bdnn 1-425 + 1375 dtC>. QWllQ& , ...... PROPERTIES 1151.900. Byowner, 760-8961 rambllngttouMonBallll. 645-1104 nr OCC. No pete. 1576. Gu pd Mature cpte TSL Mgin• J S Cl lo71f .a&otll llULTY 751-3098 prel'd. Nr. 405 Fwy. ,~1 LllO OllTI• ~i H ••Hit • Pill• IAUIEllllT ,.... Condo 2 B<. , e.. 893-4894, 0-46-8243 acat 011 sor t14,t0011-FIXH 111·1111 A,.rt•••t•, Val. 1rp1c,1ndryl'IOokup,many IUWlll l.eat1l ~·Hlill1 ltrlallt, ealfy OCliAN VIEW F "WM -• lltrU , no p.ce. 1595/mo. r.m;no- ollttrfwl Hit Cadlllic 3 bdr~ee2 n~: Lido lale. 3 bdrm & eun rm, Ill ... 111... 1711 e.31-6812 lift 4PM. YILUIE :u~u~ , ' r11tl1l111rHllllHOI 651·1177 1 279 0 00 O..;,n.,· tlrepl-. lhutt ... lm·wOOOBRIDOE-LAKE 1 bd, c.,paled, •P-.. _ "'-1 & 2 Bdrm lu)IUry f\ilNOr11"1 IPYIUSS MILL ""8 575' 9 547 6738 maculata I 1900 VIEW VIII , 11 I f111 ltt1flH. "" • or • Baytront Condo: 2 bdrm 3 Br. 21+ Ba. family rm.. pllancu , no pelt, 3 BR 2 I,\~. attached gar. apt• In t4 plane. 1 Bdrm •o •••10811•• Tet1lly ottrllll11ttlll ...... , •• 81•11 11 with pool and MCUrlty trplc, ale, wet bat, dbl 1526/mo 073-8293 07~ from 1545. 2 Bdrm from w.-ot .a..... a. I llrll .. • RO OMES MOO. Townho\JM from prloe I ' • ••'• •••• 1 llleoer wlttt fr, lllffrt, 351 Trattef w/pallo & yard. WATERF NTH garage w/Of>«*, lulh 2 br. ' ba. w/get No petl, N.-Condo 3Br, 2'A&a, 1195 + poo1e 1 n1a -- ltt. ltHtlhll ,1rlll Ult 11 I -~OMW low space rent. Muet be lalhl ltlu• pttlo w/automatlo 1725/mo. on 1 yr INN. f'rplc, 2 ~age, ~ulel -tar18lll, pond•.'"ou .WP ./.rl •• t.l .. ,l .. 1• &Hr•• t H lltw. o-r 55 17500 0 80 v •Prlnklera, ,.,O• eun Tom wkdy. 988-1818; _ .. unit. A-. 7""' I kl & h ti For J t.ol • • llrlllH f1•lfJ r•. A .::238.; 871 3 89 · Pretty, clean 2 8f 1 Ba deck. vltiw of North LMI•. 5i--0885 ..... •• "" orcoo ng •• ng tftf Wlftr , .. 111. ff11 • .... ,.fer ftit HLY Sll,IOG _~_ ... _ '" · 1. _ Cape Cod. 1 bllt from I 1050/mo. 758-0104 wknd 7 mo. 75e--00eo paid. From San o..go 11500'' S,1tlHI II••• wlttt • -Trees. swimming, tr-. NB. Unlverl81 2•ictl0, 2BR. wllef. 1825 875-9ee7. -.'wlmda. c.rtM .. I li&f l'IU .._ 1 8'. with g11age. Frwy drive Nonh on fully fu• fi•lfJ r• Hiii f•UY lt•1•r. llt111Ht4 t~~~~:"o'u';~ "f:! 1Be, xlnt cond, mature ma 1 bdrm, ltov.. r;;tg;;-No p1t1. 1420/mo . 8Mctl to McFadden !Ind kMll'1 1 ' tt S 21,000, Ing prevadea this axoep-moblle park Boal lac, Cereaa 4tl lb.r ....... ltlcla ._ •tOt, gar1t09, yfly. mature 646-6577 ;:9! wo:'n dMeFV~g !o lntala It• a,1t1lr111•tr•. wt1 llonal Towne Homed• bayacceae.S>\5M.l 20M 2br.2 ba.fp,bNtnilVrm, 2 .... 11/21a edutt only. Avail 7-5. N-'Y r9'TIOdelecl itudlo (71-4)803-5198 UH~ Tranferrelll .... , LIN 01111 velopmenl. ldeallocatlon dwn, owe baJ, 875-8487 2 c gar. nr bch I 1100. No Laroe ywd, OOWl vltiw. 18()()/mo. ii 1e.222-a1ee IP1. 1395 Inc. ell u111. ' Jl/F' ar,.1 Hry .. th1telll Hiii 01 WATER on this Slngle itory unit Ceatttry Let1 pet1. 8-4()..()619. P'r099rtY on rnartl.t, mutt 2 br, t ~ duple11, So. of gardening. 1892 E. CK-YILUll ... non-Stl'• WHllll HHllller Security bldg wtl h 2 bdrm Plenty of guest parking C ti 1225 Cnta .... ll24 ..-10 "'°" for lale. l!wY Frplc. Avail. 811. ange. Drive by. c•ll S50 mow In crectn. eff«:-u111 8 d C rorvlsltlngfrlend s. Trana-'11 1150 MO. 497-1232 Quiel 91ng1e only 1975 &4'-7009 11119 now thN 8-30-83 2 _ IH'••I• fer ereat ar>d den on l level Boal lerred owne< mull Miii Crypt, companion. Paolllc 1 Br houM with frplc, mo 97~15 Br. apll for ran1 Cl\arml1>1 lllelM1rllla,IH. sllpavallabte Ownerwlll 759-1501or752-7373 View Memorlel Park, elnglM only $350/mo. Customwood/Ql.Ul,•bO. · PALM MESAAPTS 1 510/mo .. encloud Pre! p1 11111 lilt 1111000 lseiopllon or sell tor chOtce location. 25% u1ll1 lncld 751-7718 3 ba 'lame. lrg garage. PENTHOUSE APT-2Br. 1581 ...... 0r. patloa. Call Boyd or 28-30 • •HI 1 ' • $549.000.831·1'00 W.ALKER&LEE •caeh discoun t 2 bd 1 be quiet Ocean vi•••. pool. 1e., bMm4IO ce1tlng1. $440.Untum.1&. Nancy .... 7-8920 76~· • \\ \11 HI Ht'" I n .... -t Estate 610/328·7270 •It 8PM cul-Oe -uc ' l c;;,O/mo. I•' u_:~j . "7 $031 1' O O pool, no petl, 428 SM-Call btwn M . ~8880 ~ INtla• 2741 F/non ' nccu -----year-r...,.,...4 .. -1 ward . 1 750 mo 1111'11 ..., Inc. DaJltl ll/Oaitl ll00 Ref1 ReQ 6"42·5241 -· 040-1209, PINE BLUFF APTS. 2 Br 11 Rl ~ 1 l c; 1 Al£ I - -I Sun dranc:tled hill tide 2 BR. 2 ea.. wt1h bluff view. 99 bdrm. qul9t 19t-C.M s, ~~= 6311400 r::::TT. Hugeduplex,C M.Ownera 3Br 281, big family rm, ttome,38f.3"'· formal U"""-.......... _, W/O, ,.. .. ,ld ..... ,__..lo, ............. llng,OceanVlew Part~ ••25• .. ~ --~ unit, 3 Br F & Din Rm, 21 DIW, 1750 Agt, Peta. dining, lrplc, 24oo tt o'fw°'7 Pr7P~. 3 bike :t';_.,d~~--w;;_ 1y hKn. If ~ 1750 _.,..._. ~ Townnome 1e1te option 2 lrplc's All on 1 llOfY 7st-3 t9t Ctl*ed front a badt to bctl $-415 851-2255 lndry rm. mo. 4t7-7124 ltllf ,, yr $2500 down 196.000 ,L11aH litHl 1052 Mu11 aeel S185K Agt 3Br. 38a upgraded condo rerd 0 w/gerden ar. daye; 72()..()353 ...... l SPMC e.31-6107 StudlO, 2 bllU 10 beech, Cowrh111 751·9195,64•-4157 §er,29aCONDO 642-9666 on park $825 mo. 11000/mo. INN. Avell wknde. lr'llltl paint, dean, Well LllQUnr ~, on El Niguel 7th Fairway. & --..,l.,El 631·2282 Agt Julu 1. For app1. call 1C.A • It•• _...8 ..,.8 nu MOO/mo 1-240-8070 &e1-.1pq lalHa a peek at the ocn. '" n. -487-182.5 alt 7PM. · -•• ... -~ u ,,.. . I 1007 I 1 3 7 5 o o o wner Balboa Peninsula vln11ge, 1875/mo, 4 Br 2 Ba, nu •;iv; ..... flit Male 1n • llPElll OHLITT PllUIH 1 788.-6684 alwayt rented, R-2 lot. •.; cpt, drapea & pa.Int. Va-•I11ita Vlei! U.7 1 Bi u1>9«, rilOiid ~ IPU'Nllll Eat Bit An outsta11cl1 Engllsto block to und Priced to cant. Raft re<fd. 500 MALLORC~ B&m 2 age. l\O ptltl. 1375. B .. utllully land.caped a EW doMtoOs. p 0 0 I ManorHO\lse.~ommand·OITNEPEllHILl ltwrertleacla lOii Hll at $2 4 5,000 Tra versa Or. Ag1. ba,Lek•Vlew,db69p. del Mar arH. C•ll getdenapte.Poot&epa. Lar9928f.2Ba.lrpk:, 1260/m• Ing an e11pan11ve view Duple~ 1 block lo bey or 850-5711 ah 5PM. -~21 with opener, pool. 1826. 751-9905, tv n-.ge ~dectle. No pett425 patio. 11~ 81~58. ~:6'-'14~1 from Its Harbor Ridge ocean and easy tummer 11 ltHrt lac••• Pre.1 -1 SO Beaut 4 Br, 2 Ba, lencd, 837-3341 2 8dr 1 Bl, crpte. drepee, 1 er S505451o 1 Bf condo, '576/mo. S.. __ site. Authen1lc1111y end ac~s 3 Bdrm and loft llarlttr lllllls• 1¥. Ddwilt HORRY 1prlnkler, oek lloora., I rt..... IBi OIW, pa11o, carpon. 718 2 &. 1 y. Ba 1590 c urlly complu. Call M/F Of'' " exqullltlllydetalled Per· plu1backunl1.l 199,000 • -redac $870/mo . ~ I Shellm•r·B. '415. 131 Ellth. _.e-ea1e 213-830-2323 ~c1oa" feet tor the ~ph11tlcated Call lor dalalla U,Hl,000 What: ' Unll Apar1 Bldg 404-6087 31iF. 21JC Ba Condo. 558-9550. """' couple wno entenaln Ire-, ...... 200 O I k When. NOW-FOR SALE seoc>Jmo. N9wpor1 Tar---------181 E. 18th. e.42--0858 2 BR 1 Ba1h, nr ocean, 311 982.7.,?, q u en t I y T, u 1 y 8 n ,.& V W•. eta, It tr Whef1· Hunt Beach Condo 3 Br. 2 car garage. r-..... 2_7404. 2 bdrm, 1 ba, carp9t1, Jeth. St. 1145 yrty. FrlS>C. __ ultra-luxe prooerly 110-1100 Wtty· S25K Tax Shelter 1785/mo. Xlnl location. dr.,_, bull1-lnl. ~. 8achelOt $430 gar, d/'fthr, See Fri eJtO MIF •"~"' Priced reallet1cally et How· Allume Ln 10 S'~ Int Po o I 7 5 1 -0 1 9 5 , 4 bd, 3 ba. on Canal, 2 2218 Mepla. 831-2927 1 Bdrm. t605 4 PM. 8 PM . & S 1 t t pa, • • $2,200.000 Cell su .. n -Alk:S289K 844-4157 fllli*,pool,tennta,w81k1o 28R 2~ Condo, et0\111, 2 8drm, 1V.Ba 1690 10AM·12:00. 646-24"1' TrlVleon lor a private 'Br, 2 Ba OWC. $147K, Cell: Gary 960-2838 alt Condo 11911' SC. Plua. 2 beach. 11300/monthly Cid, rtfrlQ. w/d, patio, 2290 ~-=d Wfly 2 8r ptu9. Avalt 8-18 M/Fto iPH ~ 759-9100 , : ' ' l2fK dn. Acroae from 8pm Brl 2 Be patio pool on '-· &40-6272 ....._ 50/mo. l52.-S72 .. 7&/mo ~IM. 481' o.ne P1 pool, tennl1, clbhae & • ' · 2•"-42e2 o cenil Fest u corw CdM re1alllottlce bldg llP-carport, evall Jur>e 15th, DOVER SHORES 3 bdrm, 8' 2 Ba ttudlo 8P1 11.U ... ,. Neptune. I .,« c •• n • • 962_1227 983-6682 pro.11 10,000 sq fl 1575/mo. Call B•tty pool. new cpl/paint w/~ yd ult Ellldt s .ac1 E eld• A t• Larry 0t 2131374-1013 non-am• · $950,000 1250.000 dn &42-5200. 831-2260. Oood credit req. ~. 100 SU6' 720-014' f.: out paflc, ~ & ~. S300 pl\.t< • 5 bdrm,3 ba 1pa home )(lnl financing, graal Eutllde 3 Br 1 Ba, and9d 11100/mo.11).1734 7~1. · ' "°""gerMo.t u1Ji. tr.. Mo 3 Br. 2 Ba. and9CI gtr111g9. d•f. f !OftGI! a.KINI C ' l1 'I 10 111 II j t .. 1l' c f .. JI. ' r l~ ·ii _•t. 0 :.-"' .. 1 ,.,, 15(' -.. C.'t. ..... 102• We11 Clltt 1268,000. Wiii potantl•I 876·8'700 agt Du ...... w ..._. ~ 3 .,_ .-, · 111.. &B•lboa Blvd. _es ·93-' .. ~ 1111~ to ott-1 ..... 2-49511 --ga1age. patio, large yard, ,,,_., ,._,,, • ..,. • * 2 ... " ... UPP9f .._ ,..., • " lsf TIMER -· -"'" DELUXE 4/PLE.X no pete 1555/mo + 1 2~ S.. 2 etory, : cer gar. .-,,"' ~ Nr SC ,..:::: 1 BR. 1 Penon '446 1125/mo. 71414"-"t42 N.8 . ctn ii Near new condo w/lofl , 2 ... om11 3 Br, 2 B•. o-• unit Nr mo u curtty dap . MS..90N or 142--4082 SA Moot~ ~"';;' 1 BR 2 P9nonl MM aft 7:30PM. M/F lo ,, j sty, 2Br. 2BI, lrplc. ., ......... 1,. SC Plua o we 111. 5.18-5'42or770-5829 L.ge -hOme on 1/3 . . 2323EJOan AV'1 .. C.M. CIMn28r,lr1lkltc:tlan,Npt ~ob·• I ,, stained glUI. 2 C4r gar, 2• 1 w/175,000 dn Bkr E/•' ... 4 Br 2 Ba llMT't rm -• 4 ;..., 3"'" -. 28' lndlvldual unit, Nk1 541--785-4 ..-... '500. }421 E 10th ··Ii low down l\O qualllylng • •Hr•H• 5~171 dr:-rm. f~ple •• ~ yes'. ;oo,.,:.,. ;tr.;.~ own home. encl gar, VILLA VISTA APT8 87."'5-&10t . l380Jmo J I Wiii con.ider trede for Beautiful cualom. fotmel. EASTSIDE TRIPLEX 2 '850 1 .,. IM, 111, IM1 pool malnt & ,..., dewhr, lrplc, petlo, no 1575/ 2 8r 11/2 Ba. NMt ScMh '" S k 1 ' bd home Fle11lble • ,. · anMOe --f19l1. 3e 1 Eu1 181h St. mo. L.m llU d 1 .,, 11 d wn p1ymen1 P lerme-lender owned Wiii Bdrm, 1 beth, S185,000 plu1 ci.p Aviall 0115. Klde d9n., 12100/mo. PP Mgr Ap1 3. &42·1112. Townhome, c:,l>elt, 9War w ,,. '· io 839-7582 conilder trade 831-.3846 _ OK.no1>41t1.846-l5089 842-4118 • l/r.c20:ei~8 ~ ...... y. Un.T eo... 2 S 076 000 I leld """"' Lrg 3 Br. 2 e., pvt bClh, lhare P· ·• •' " 1. . . N.Md 3 or 4-ple11 In Co•1• E.lide Coeta MMa cut• LIDO ISLE. 3 bdrm •. 2 ba. M'l:!wt~ TSL Mgmt 642-1803 comc>let• kit, gar. 11900 petify ''" " ' <A. lltl'1t-. rnc 842~727 MCUr.J<>y09 Waltn,agt SytvlaMo .... 7~13-41 -_..,. 714 17~1 ,., , Qr r Ill (13\"''"' \ti $94,500 -~ .\ 11 HI HI I'\ I Meu. Prln. only Call agt bachelor $305. 1300 P•tlO, ~ 1 1200. ··-r ·-yrty. 07&-7817 g. rage ,. • . ._ ' 11) AC JI U..., -•• , ... 1,.fllHtt, R(AI £SIME -0....,.Frl. lO-t 131-12&e. •-Ill.I &Mutltull gerden epte. meatiBJIU NEWPORT PIER AREA. 7141720 O?fllt <.all "" • ,,_.. .._. P•tlol/decb. No pete. 2 deluxe 3 8r 2 Ba no A DAILT ,.llOt 2Br Wi Ba.F/P,Spa 831-1400 UI01r11ffH IWYElll llr J••,,,.. 1 .. children welcome 2 ~ pete, )'Ml1y.'l1200imo. NwptBch Co .... ri •• ,,.., -'B• •o.moa Ac•lf Hl-1111 IWI CdM Trl·Pl1x 3 bdrm. 2 ~. 2 Fple. on • __, ' • .aa... Bdrm W• aa111. *680. e.utlfullylrlncllolped 1113-8640. home. e"N1u1 ~., MIF . ... J.U71 If II 4 Br 3 qa plue 2·2 Br oul·de-H C. CIOH lo f=' ._, ~· 3 t 8 W , W I I 1 o n aarden epta. Pocl & "'9· 1315. Aah I'» l,,111.i..11 Ot -;:=;;;;;::::;:::~iiiiiiiiii~~~~ UOltFIOE unit• AIJll::t!540,000. •c hool1. perk•. golf "' ...... ., 031·5513 1 1't1t1091de0ke. Mop«t. NWPT HOTS 8peclou• st-831 , ' ~ .Ill Ill lirhr. SUl,OOt Tru1t pt. oouree. 1826. Altar 8. 111M/-. . * 2 Bt. M9aa Verde, neiw ~ l \4 8a = ~22~t:.8i;, m::.:.~ Prof. pe.1,.,. 1 or. I Lowett ln Seavtew Dan Lewt1 833·7822. 213--488-7233 Ca104 111-tNa.,.. fnM d9Cor. 133-8914. No 22So VengUard bltne. pvt deek, avail July 3be Cdl-1 ' .. n I COLDWC!U. BANl(C!RC lllWIUIAY llUYllllU For one day only, you are invited to tour a f89Cinaung variety of e xciting homes: 2662 Crestview $310,000 2622 Crestview $385,000 2451 Bayshore Dr $428,000 2502 Vista Dr. $464,000 Fee 2581 Bayshore Dr $499,000 2641 Circle Dr $640.000 Fee 2752 Circle Or. $710,000 Fee 2482 Boyshore Dr. $1.275,000 Fee 2616 &yshore Or. $1.:.695.000 Fee tnl •1t1tAY 1u.2 IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 L-091 avellable. NINln ... m• lart pete.1525/mo, 540-MH 1. STISO mo. IM&-7400 vu. Reh I .ti Aft 8 for appt, 840•8227 llAllllEMllT 3 Br 2 81, Incl. gardener i300 e1rig1e Retired • , d UllHllMI Sm1llto11roarep11unlte, 1850. hlact Prop 48R~~~;=-· ~:':iv.~. ~..,, ... ., Bartend• ·• 28 Room Eltate lndu1trlal commerclel 7& 1-3191. L.arQey1td, .-. ..,,-8&4 Weet 17th, IMl-0358 ~WU ,. FrM rO<l• r, t-•II SpectecolarVlew Own« direct Of brOkar ~ Verde: ettrM:. 3br. lla&o/mo. 3 II. 2 Ba. 2nd. ftoof, neat .. lllWii 1enanco A• n .;o •• •~'J 12,896,000 protectlOn 10 )'WI e>C• 2ba. nr Adame. Mo pet" nQ.03.41 ell hwyl l I ChOOll. BMutlf\MyltocMclC)ed 640-22•> Wm. Cote, B<oh r perlence. Avall. '850 ..... 1-3037 8521/mo. + depoelt. aarden epts. Pool & ._ IN NIWPOAT eeACH Rmmte. M • Call(714)780-1900 TSL Mgmt &42-1803 , ... h . Pl t•·. Needed hOme '°' .... A_,. ...... 1 IM0-2* ~deeka.Mop«e. ~1&21dnn.Apitrt· 5 t'lllnlC' c \ zl I• ~e ;:::======::::::..!.1==~~~=== NMt "' eottt -.. momhe? LCMlf)r otdet 3 .. -. __ , · • 1 ldml rnent• a T~. 781-9'6'-'~~,·:,it•' QfiQ ~ ,i\.,.. A_ f} t ~s· woH Br.1314 8&.endlldpatlO, Br. 1 Ba.lnNll!ptHgtefor llr 2 Ba •Pt wllge l808451028drm Meo Some a r• •legently Rmmt , ; l v~,.~'!;i<~\ '~" <1· ... , ~.~~ :;--~~2.:i'ee~t? ~:,.::~ ~~~1':'1dnn~~ lumWledf10ml5tCI coa:,,,. •tt• ' :-5 0 ... ., .. .,.11" ...... , ~• ••· ::Ii· ~ent no 1••· PANOMMfC mo. OS 1_...7 M10 OnJemb«Wrd.at Cerpott A , • •llN 1~ .... , • .,,.d -·l• i.. ~ OCl!AH V1IW ;ra, I eo 8r • 151 1! 21M ...._2409 San~ H1111 Ad. 5'H'81l 1111 JU • ,;;... tO '"'"' '"" '""''-~ '11 t ( N SC Pl 3 B 1 ~ Ba. ....38• ' 1 IDI'. gee • Bed*« = .. 1r07,. aza8 • r. n Hlghly ~ 4 er, 2 wster petct, Mdld ... -1 ......._ .... , Ammie w11m 1 i'•' ~ bd. I • ant a ..,oae. la,__._...___ 1141q dlhWlfW ...,...., 1"4 ba. ';·1' • , u111, ~ I o o IC H E o leOO/mo 178-1090 ,_, .._.., OM ... &_,. ..:.. a ~d"' le v...... 1 er, *" Of d • P N "" •1' ' , • 11 I I I I Duaftlat UM fr/ •• ,,..... u _ _..,.. ~ ooeen. Poot. clbhH. S.t-9081 . -. . . ... .. ,. 1121. IMdy 1M2-tl4t ~tlct 111 I r ' Dr I I a£.§ L'. rn :;;;;;;. ..... "'61mo. 2 •• 1 \4 ... v .............. PoOI houee. $?S01tfl • t/3 H E B R T downltlllrl IMnQ quar• 11171/ .. , lows unit, patto, LIA. ~-ftU ~ ft1llo. t?OO. ut". 8.12 1'1•3 ""11 1 lltlt I I I' I I '"'· CIOM to !>Mell, .... ,... ~. me........ leftdy141 ... 1.. or Merle '-· _.... _ __.. _ __. ___ ,___, l deoka, vtew ... 1a. Cell aa1 w Wliont VIMAIUil I H E CR E I:; Mv bon and 111• pannor :..~24~. 759' 8peclOul 4 Bf'. 3 '.4t k TSLMgrnt • ,.,...·110a .. ~ .. -VtUA~ ~C:,~~~.~~~;rr I Is I' I ..... c Oul I() luncn wl'l•ll ,,. ..,.,!!.. ~ ....... ""· ""',Mii. l .etde tower, 1 • i fi'rpiG,-~...... OOHD09U1-4HO 21~4'1-0 ll5~t. •Ulltll<l ht hedn'I pvt I W!lY r. t •• rm, .. ,.._. --,,.,,.,_ • • • • , n " oer pool ~ 1 lNrm - lrto Cllll DO• So WllAI Uyt .. , u· ..... h•no. l'tlet(y lndeclPd. 09C1/drapee1ralnt. Ho ,,.·... • •• 1110 laa a.-.. llta $lflalt P.t'\lf!I nf>fld• Rtnmt r--------..,,k 1 w•11> ·· I !Jo: .._ 1 15110/mo. 040·1i27, -..... ,~,. ·-:r... w ;;;:;ii lnb.M.•tH.lC)r. !'"°Ba, I S A .. , H 0 P I "e ptr n~r ~ ·• ••a .. M _._ -..._1 ,..... .,._.. .... -m ·-I Ir -.,~_...., .... S .,.. , .. " 3 bdrm f ih G: -1 •""' ·-Iii 1-." ·-' .... _ ... pool, tndry, '>'"'""oJ " I I' I I I' e , ........ ·h· ,., ..... """'·d· Neareohoolt.'altine Ola _...... ':.~ ~'·~ ...,..,. • ..; ..... =mu. .,..... "'"'' •, d"P "" 4 '-· -4. -'-· -4. -'-· ..,4. --'· , .... ::.;,~·t,;. ~,;., ~:~"'? ,;:~!' end 8rootchlKl1. MOO Monteoo moclll In ._ ---'· U7 w. WiiDft "4WIG . - 1 .-i. rl>.l ljl«~fO!t· I' I' I' 1· I' I' I' ,. I te.3-4221 wtnd. OGMrt ~ olty ... TIL..... .....,. ·-=---~ o.o~Miii • ..c.~. WAlKTO JU.Ct! ~ tMwe. New _, & .._,, ir~--------~ .... 1111\ ?."*"· "°°"'In largie "~ hou-.. 1· 1•· •• ..J•J 0 H Selling •n~thlllQ with 1 ~ 0onwn""'poo1. _. Rii/MO.t •• ~,.... IOOI. ... l..fl. _,.,., QolelO~ ...... '2Htn<> +1111, 11u i. I e , ... ,..,,,,I • Oelly Pllol Cl ... lled M ....... 1 1sooimo. ~ ...... ~.no ......... ,., •• I ,, .... , ... no .... + Ollpoell ~-ton ••\v.I• l••llmpi.mttt« ... Velentlne fllrop aal.ltntl,.,.._.1'7 -.-o ... /Me.AWll.Jt.9'911, ,.lref,only A~·1llJ<1• t$ IOUll..uTt .... .,. ................ Mll~-oell ~2.a871 1~. • 11AM-1 Tk JM.Oolt (?14)141Mtll ..... , ......... ,. , ---_____________________________________ ... ____________ ... ____ _ r10 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1983 _____ _,Aatw tfft Cuztt a.me. ht lrtMllat 18uaaiat ltut Cleulat ............ talatl!t ,._..., llJ·!~·~··;,=·~;;:;w $1.84 per day ---.611tt•X"'l'"'"l--F1R&TCLMS-0uk*dry U:.y, iog•i dr;omlng mDIWllLlt &Ul...U PUlllWlU ,.,..,.. a.1ir•• ... 1m IW!,_ __ r.___ ·r •• , x:: ~ ~~~ =:-= m_.:,7~11 f,"'y;._ ~xp~-&.2:* Let me IT\8lce y<>ur garden Roee Hlkpg 973--05&4 8od, :t::!* end lfWb by Nctlefd Sinor I.IC. WATEA HEATIR 8'*'91 ~ Melnt tree Thal'• ALL yo.A pay for • hl\11 your <* prol de-grow & yOUr Of ... or-i1 bper houMCiMnlng, ,.. lnetel atlon. Our work ~90844. 14 Y"9 ot hlPPY Pool tl9eW9*fv'Moee eyetem e •• 6'2-6007 • 1 a I I e d P r k ' g Ctata t C.Mrtlt Drf1ialf rm Nil)' lnluf9d, IP99ll Mable own trane Call only look• ._,,.,.e1v.. local cuetomer.. ThMk OrMne ~ from M o.45-ef74 provlded/Wflole day. Call &tom &Q:S1one 1RvwXLL TAPING Eng~ wlll find mii Cwo4° &4e-6502 Cheel(buy1 °""~a~ you. ~ 114 ........ "°"'SH ~ •-r-------- 642-1422 Blodc-Concrei.Stucco Ail Textur• & Aoouatlc ~773• If !w, ~) c1U: Action ciw-1 ~ ~'t .......... --ll'fDW f'Vhltlltnd ..,,. . S. M&M l"'l"""'"llt_.Pft'IWlll'IT'lr"ft~• 30 day ad In the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY IUJwlttlaJ Reta. Fr• •1. 549-9492 Fr" •I. Kevin 973-tao3 PiMM kMp trytngl Kevl~ £e9, ~ home I tipt ... , ..... 1111 & INTER. Reu. rat•. F,_ N 1-M04 '4Z..eos3 AM ~~~~!cs -U9v§lff1Ro Rod'• concrete' muon-lltttrical Bigg• ~ M .. n. clnlng, In• d. 842~92&4 .... 8teYe 647-4281 ST<>ftPAGE? REFS .K>+iN .~7 My Coeta M ... home nr ary, 9 yMt1 wne I~ ElECTRlCiAN tenanoe & lnetalletlon at HOUSECLEANING LAWN THATCHINO HOUSE PAINTINO Pnoe by~. John 1-..,,....-· --,,..--,.--=:-- Vlct0tla 642-8482 oatton. Fr•• HI. Gd tat• Fr .... , Uc yourMtVtce, WMkdaY9&WMkendl Bermuda graaa & St. INT/EXT.EXPERT 831·11".24tlr . ..W.. CuetomC.amlcTUe PENNY'S DAYCARE 714-840-1705 418449 Wayne 831~7630 011'• l.Andecape & Malnt. Marla "4-3426 -:..2~~~;IM. 64~/2~ TOM 873-29G8 f1tl lll!Jllilbl ~J,... ""·9~2 t Lunch/Snecl(a/Potty Concrete: Small or Lge ELECTRICIAN Reeld. & comm, R .. a. ROBIN'S CLEANING ••-p•--•a...•--1 'I DO IT NOWI ..... , ....,,. training Incl. 646-7939 Jobi. Remove old, re-Lie 233108 Small/I e rat ... Exp'd & cs.pen. SERVICE: a thoroughly ·M~ -•19 -•--•-_. f11t ..,,... Pl.oe w/,_ 646-8512 Jo;..• 1 • , ... 8 .. 203g deble. 54&-8027 clMn h°'-1,. 5-40..oes7 BRICK wK. 8 :t1n b Int/ext. C&blnet..1. r.tlnleh. E•perlenc•d & Pro• Wiii babysit In my home tor • ""• rec>• re . .,.. ·u · " · m .. M 0 •· Llc'd, Ina. 842-7479 feel6oNl. VfllY r-.on-LOW RATES lnfantt only, nr Bl'latOI & Ollllm ELECTRICIAN· Priced Tll 1111118111 ELIN'S HOUSECLEANING ~ CO.ta .... IAYIS Pllll* •* "*for .. of your Tr .. trim & ren'ICN91 Alt 9'gefttrom. 751~943 Framing & all maaonry right, rr .. eetlmate on Lawn-tr-ahrub lnl1all Old laattloned clMnlng .,_ lrvtne. 1· 876-3176 Int/ext C&bllWt r.nnten pool neec». FOi ~ ~ ~7017 Your Dally Piiot SeNloe D4rec10fY AepreM11tallve CaMatt Maklat neeci.. Lv mag 876-8890 ~~2':' •mall :1":.-0kt8 La~ .. ~~':;'{)~~~~~ng ~s!:.:~:ble· REF. Att t=~nv~~..'i uc·d.'1na'd. 842-7479 • ~o ~1Pl'l~r~ W!!etC&'*I ;N;W cabiMt•. cabinet Ctrlllic file · I Fr .... tlmate 546-6086 H ·--'-·-I s---•·•t 1 Bob 873-5387-otoe PAINTING: For better anewer, Pl.EASE KEEP ~In" LIC'D El.ECTRICIAN OU-.-• no ..--' work. low« prlcea. call TRYING... SUNSHINE WINDOW lacing. bare & formic& lttttth Tiit ... Qual. worti-Reae. ret• a... Feat, efficient & r-. B<letlwOfk, Small or 1.,ge Jack 83M793 (11•)•Mlll CLEANING 642-1549 countwtope. 842-0861 Freet. Guer. 963-3283 Tom 831-50721973-75« 1-~ nG-1155 065-.34« fob• a repel(•. Local refe. • Ml-1111, Ht 112 Acta1tlc&J I Cu~··= n "-rt *•™ME REPAIR THE CLEAN MAKERS e.46-8512 tl&UTY PlllTlll -~ .. /llnair WE WASH WINDOWS Ctilla.I!... CHAAContr•ClOf• Gfttr•I "' _.. a.J! EJec...Ptumb-Cw'pentry 5 yra exper home/Ole ·~ pr 0 mp I, n . a' pro-FMI -Prote.lonal NeW I RE.; RefnOd au:': w~'r." CRPT/LINo/Woob Patlc> eovw.Fenc:ea Rell avell. 8i!>-4853 . leealonll•. 836-7140 :F:n -,;;·~ &~ ~-=,~~~ carpentry ey. .. 654-4254 839-~27 Addlt'a kit batha patloe lnetall Uc. 380260 I Remocl. Keith 846-4872 •--t 7 8C UoVIRO:: P1 ~ s>«Mttt. Bond-Ina. • 3 decks hlgi-.t qu'tty ouar' 495-9270 831·9755 FAIR PRICESI Painting ......... .wTICff Quiett, Cweful Service rt I 401081 851-3868 Uc. 1 4tOt2 Ab~ Repalr/eml Jobe. Fences. wwy r~able. yr• of axp: 11•• ~ It~ roonng, Clllpentry, : Rmeaper. OOOll, Win-Lie. T13804e 552-0410 Blee welder Paper-1 · · Bldre 730-1 shelves, panttlona. Lo IXOVE 836-0672 wlf! _, I denlng, crpt olean~. dow dMnlng, gardening, TWO COLLEGE MEN hanging & Remov•l IMflaL__ I 11 l'l.tt t· \ UU( I ,,,, IC,. 1111 ApJlluce ratM. SteYe 731-8311 SPRlmls-HiNGE • EW etc. Starr 54&-«71 gen'I ma1n1. 87S-3 t77 Wiii Move you 8 YT• up. Oual. work only. s1...,. H s;;~;a typea l lt1$ AFFORDABLE carpentry. luMI OHttnietfe• OPENERS. All Repm. .. II~ Vlal/MC 547-9107 494-3818 u '•1\1•• lt1r1·1 fnt\ O Add'na/Remod. Plana& Loweet rateel 18 yre CM. bper1 Handyman Service: ue •• We Gila Should H Hew-Recov9r-Oedle blecount lancerepalre plumb, alee. uellty Petmlta. Bonded, lna'd. Lie. Tom 557-«80 Cir pen try, roofing' Mature cOU av911. "'· ••-1 ..,... Together 839-()730 :::. UC. #411802 548-9734 111 ( di ........ .....yday.lnatantMn/lce work/1trv1oe.751•1118 Llc.11418570 54S-.27t eprtnklerl,etc.643-4980 & bondable. S30-7817: Beetquallty.26yrexp. flme " la&helfs ....... 11 by beeper· Dlepatcher Rec>alr-AlteH11on• Remodel/Repair•. comm. Qar .. alat JACK OF Al.L TRADES 656-1876 d•Y9 ~ltt\19 rateei Fart hi lntcwto< Deelgn 403901 fr .. eet. 24hr 631-6300 ~i;:,:r.:=•• & teeld. Llc'd, bonded. CiM1l-up1 -(an<llCiiPlno Plumbing & electrlcal, all Mel prof lady will care for Uc. T-t 6• 28 730-353 HAN~G/STRIPPINO 1•r-,-l,------------------AfckJttclar&J bttritfl Jetry, &46-4413 Ins. For .. t, 552-9142 Haullng -Trae Trim odd )oba. 740-0112 yOUr home, plan1', pelt STARVING COLLEGE VISA-MC Scott e.45-9325 1_ .. _ .. ___ ...,. __ """!'! ___ , ..... Law ..... " ---------Free pr&-llm N-& re-Fr .. eet. 642-9907 whtle you VIM:. Non-emkr. STUDENTS MOVING CO. •'T W&lll That ell contrectors whO fotXC DESIGN stRV All Ph .... Carpentry model eitP llc'd end Johneon & son· Do own 11.U.1_ Bondable. 840-8938 uo. T 124-438 tneured Pl11te1/lt~lr Tm I~ pert«m work over S200 111 Con~ltatlon F,.. &~:.:.·~ ~k~~ ! bonded. w111 '11a111y°" to w0tk. 15 yr-. ·malnt. & RXOC.U oVE-REMOVE stu<Mnt w111 hOY.-lt, or WAT~1u8:~aowt PtlstERliXTCHiNG A quiet 18C1ot11te 1a thal Inc luding tabor and custom remod. a. new Palombo ge2-8314 obtain llnan. 649-1978. landecaplng. 754-1999 Fumllure. TrUh, Tr-rent •tra rm, wtll do •Ira • Reetuc:coe. Int/ext. 30 yra. your energy bllla may go meterlal• mull be 11- con1tr. by architect & de-R.J HUFFMAN & SON Mow ..,...... clean-up trim 963-6416 NORM malnt In exchange ror p l Ii Neat. Paul 545-20n up 2 to 3 tlmM .. high.. cenMd. Vnlloanted con-•lonaf team. 840-6455 Curet ltmct R.,:,,od/Add. #306888 Free ;;rAeaa. ratM. Jim HAULING dl900Unt on rent. Relleble • • ... your~, r•I• In ttle tr8C1ors lhould IO •tale Shempoo a 11eam clean: 648-8586 645-4644 646-1968 FURNITURE & TRASH w/rete. 831-1068, l•I• Stevena ilalnong, lntetfor or CO'S ntlCI ~al ~iii~· In ,,,.,, acl-11ti.nQ. Con- AIJh)t color b<lohtenera. Wht B 1 Wit•~ & Sona MATT645-5069 ...,.., SCOtt & exterior, quallty work, -f1 PLASIClllllC tyOUhl ?.,....lfnotng t1o11.,, et~!>! !_'~1!'!,'5~;aTGr~~le 11• .... m"""'---•-... ---: CfPI• • 10 min. bleach. · · ~· 3 TIEEI rea1 r•t... Fr.. aat. .---i:!._,, "''' "" '· I • • yOU ...,._,. ........ -· "'"' veway-Perklng Lot Hall llv/dln rm• sis· avg Remodel/Rm add. o yrs DUMP JOBS ltaH1lttia.1_ 64~ or 5-46-458! ~ .. , ··• w •• ,, IUce Information on &OW (714) 6 with any Repalr>Sealcoattng roOOi S7 50. cooch 's 10. es.p. Bonded & lna'd, Uc. Topped/removed. Clean & Small Moving Joba Mature Prof t:dy Will care '45-1258 energy, Cell Don lnmen quMllone. Contrae1or·e S&S Alphlt 631-41991.lc chair $5. Guar. ellm. pet #3577487. 64e-1740 up, MW lawne. 751 -3476 MIKE 646-1391 f-"""'r .. ~-. pl•ftta --paam• 11 Stale lJcenM eo.td, 28 .... 1~ ,..,.,... -· .,_,_ • (l1•)M l ... 1 Civic Center Pitz•. Dan Hallberg Grading odor. Cri>t repair. 15 YT' SELL Idle Items with • Exp Gerdener. Malnt, HAULING pete, whan you vi e. 26 YRS. LIC. 403~1. INS, Have somelhlng you want • Room 800• Santa Ana, & Paving Co. Rea/comm exp. Do WOf1t myeetf. Dally Piiot Classllled Ad cieanupe, tr .. 1rtm, lrae Clnupe, yard/Ir .. ..,..,,. Non-emkr. Bond able BONDED. REFS. COLOR to sell? Claullled ads do 1---------CA 92701 Lie. 3978804 642-1720 Retl. 554-<I 123 642-5678. •t. Call Pete, 64 1-t098 RANDY 642· 7647 840-8938 EXP. 983-0911 RICHARD it welt. 642-5678. W8111 Ada Call 642-5678 --------- • HOROSCOPE BY SIDNEY OMARA Friday, June l 0 ARI ES (March 21-Aprtl 19). Check resources, review references, take definite steps to improve security Be i;elect1ve. realize there is an abundance o f material and you a.re in position to pick and choose. Cancer. Capricorn persons figure m unusual scenario. TAURUS (Apnl 20-M ay 20): Overcome any tendency to be needlessly extravagant. Know your own worth --and limi tations. You are on b rink o f ma,JOr discovery. Ha ppiness replaces gloom and you have nght to be optimjstic Check really is m m ail. Sagattanan plays k ey role GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20): You'll break from restrictions, t.tmmg will be on target and you 'll know what to do and when to do 1t A ccent on spe<.•1aJ appearances. personaJity and m div1dual effort.s which overcome odds W ear bnghl colon>. com mun1cate ideas Ill clear, concise manner . C ANCER (June 2 1-July 22): Be an alytical, seek mouves, re)CCt superficial explanations. Protect sou rces, get ideas on paper and create special format. M ember of op posite sex 1s m your <.'Omer and you'll know at Genuru. V i rgo, Sagittanus persons play key roles. LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22): Wan your way, make domestic adjustment, purchase items needed to beautify ho m e surroundings. You get what you want and probably at "bargain rate" Lunar emphas1S on fnends. hopes, aspirations and exceUent publtc relations. L1bran plays important role VIRG-0 (Aug 23-Sept. 22): Define tenT\S, see people as they are, avoid self-deception and r ealize necessity or streamHning prpcedures You'll be ask ed to participate in community project , career gets boost and you 'U have acce~ to privileged m fonnataon Pisces and another Virgo play key roles. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22): What had been n ebulous or far away is suddenly within reach and is very solid indeed A ctual achievem en t r eplaces speculation . Overseas commurucatlon could h igh- light scenano People o f substance wall be available. wtll support your effor ts wtth more than mere talk. SCORPIO (Oct 23-N ov. 21 ). Be walling to break from past procedures •• get rid of unnecessary burden, realize pot.enllal as tremendous. Accent on rompleu on . enlarging horizo ns, multipl y ing financial opporturuties Aries, Libra per~ms f igure promrnently. SAGITTARIUS (N ov 22-Dec. 21 ): Light IS shed o n area which had been tangled with legal red tape Direct approach 1s best, you'U have v alid chance to imprint styl e, to g et vie w s across in gra phic manner M ember of oppo6ite sex ls involved, lends spice to SIM Otlict lnt&J1 2t141C.-trd&J Peneaalt 3012 Htlt Wa•tt4 5100 8111 Wutt4 5100 ltlt Wu... HM •It Wu ... 1s11w .. 1C11W. R.e 27&to 1n1w n11 OlllOUS OF --3800 aq. "· 2.435 aq. n. *'UT Miii Lt&IS* ._...,/......,/ llUYllY..n. v .. ertrwv HIOCH\8l 11enne1 Sultable for medical Of 81\opa, offices & ator• S No Credtt Required f"4,,.,.,..... Full time, permanent,""-' a• t 1 •I In I A I t e r - denial. Agent &4 t-5032 ~ avail. C-2. 800 II SAIE 738--0522 9-9 7 dye bier Opening and cloalng be 19+. 'Tliu...-Mon. 495 noona/eome wttnd•. Non aq.ft. CM. 5'8-7249 719 NO. HARBOR BLVD Cbh loane. up to $5.000. lhlfta. MetUl'e, pat1 time. Eut 17th St. C.M. emokar, etudlO IPI ...-.II. 4()() 1 Birch N B. J.Uutrial FULLERTON llow or bad credit OK, SEA CLIFF COUNTRY --··1•-.... :·=·If=~~ «<> aq It $450/mo. lntab ltZO llM112 even II unemployed. UM CLUB.~ _.,_ ,_. Agent S41-5032 ... 1• te .-.... lunda any purpoH Beautle4an lmmed man-~~~ ~· _aw __ , ------ Bayfronl omoe. from 300 1200-2500 aq fl W. lrvlne I & .... -551-2443 _,,_,1 'poeltlon evalt ...._. ,.._ OM L...ing Manager to leaM aq It. ., ... lncld• omo.. trom ATTRACTlllE •••i,." r-~~·tldan w/ellentele. otc. Full llme. Salary luxury apartment• tn •1•.100• $540/mo. 533-1058 MASSUSSES , F 11 .... ~ • ..a.~ 1 °'*' & t>eneftla Ort'I COeta Meea and Laguna • • TO SERVE YOU T 4021 u ... wge, -1 neQO • 642-68e0: l'YMl.wtcnda, ....,. -'. Must five on Ille. --.tw.-"~-. • 561·2«3 673-3403 ;..~, --· 1~t ...... Colla M ... 250 el suite ...,. ---llOllTI I .-n T ,.,,_ ·-· ...... from 1200/mo. Utll lncld PMwpor1 8eectl l.L IATIUI Beauty --8-nd background to: 779 w 19th St. 651-8928 2700 tq fl. well malnlalned MlllLI l..t.r11• 0..1... Dazzler• s.ion. NptBc:h. Heney Batt, 3&40 au. bldg on quiet etr .. t. spacialtiing In lat & 2nd hu avallable • Pf'fvete Weltnu/Wlltef cMnan Slreet, San Fran-Deluxe ottlcM on Nwpt 64~800 CK 645-3323. 0 U T C A L L 0 N L Y TD'nlnoe 1949 room for rent 10 1-2 hair-Experienced food and c:laco, CA 94123. ~~to 4.000 aq ft. • $775 up. 22e5 It India-636-9199 R.E. Brotler Bd Realtor• C\ltlera. Call &7~828. c:ooktallt. A.WY In ~-1--------- trlel olfloe. 18101 Redon-DITlllAMlll 642-2171 646-0811 S AMI M F eon. Ben Bl'own'a Re-UYE• llL.u .,,IAlf I nu ---------Body hop etant. I • HUrlnl, 31106 Cout at Udo, houM cieanlng ~ I do Circle. #T, Huntington Bachelor/Bachelorttte ow N ER 11 N v Es To R Qood working con-Hwy. South Lagun• and cMd care for aum- Beyfront b. ldg 800-1, 107 BMcll. 642-2834. I Ofnce & Blr1hday Par11e1. naed• 135.000 2nd TD at dltlona, Mon-Frt. Contact "-' 1 "* S40 wtt plut room aq fl avail from St.26 A--na---h 3w TIE UST 1111111 24% Int. Prln only. Call Larry, JOHNSON & SON .,..,,,., CK auto Part• etora. and boerd 876-0895 BASEMENT $1 00 aq fl. w ~-· ~· 738-8538 558-853& Mr. Meadowe 639·7682 LINCOLN, MERCURY. muet know ArM, M\11 1,_~,,,---·----- 2600 aq It. Call Mon-Fri 1 International Student Ex-9.5, 540-5830 valid Call!. Dr!Yer't lk. Loan Prooeeaor 9-5. 842-4644 change. Hoa1 a c:ol'-ge BOOKKEEPER. TYPIST. and good drtvtng record. Ex1>9f Loan ProeeHor lludenl trom Europe for ... TIMI WIDOW HAS SSS for APPl V: HUB AUTO needed for busy expan<l-~LUXE OFFICE SUITES 10 w•kll aum"*. Stu-T.D'e, Sl0,000 up. No must be expentnoed In SUPPLY.2120Hatbot81, Ing offtce PIMUnt tut• Bayfront b+dQ. 700-1.007 dent pey. $4S/Wk. Wort.a ~ ITllM credit en.cit. no penalty peg board bootlkeeplng Cotne Meaa. 646-2464 rounding•, lllnt benettt•, aq fl avall lrom St.25 In Hunt Bc:tl Call Randy Beautlfvl 9llcltlng glr11, Cell Dennlaon Aaaoc:. ayetem. eccounta P•Y· ... ClaucM. muat be ~IOed In BASEMENT s 1.00 aq'il WltllameJUCi 833-1176. Prtv•t• room• &73-73t1. •ble. recelvebl•, CUI-FHA/VA/Conventtonal 2500 aq f1 Call: Mon-Fri ' Deify 10AM-2AM toniw Invoicing, type 45 Orlvet N..o.d Good d11V-proceaalng. Send R&- 9-5 642-4644 SCRIU LETS 1885 Park Ave. C.M l t llJlut.. Sloa wpm New boat ulel of-Ing record required -.ne to· UndMy 4 Co. F f ot ftlll• 631-9883 :ioUXCifY clElNING* flee, Newport Beech Apply In per aon 17871 ,...._ BM!, Ste or ...... coorpore • -I ... ~-... s a I a r y s 8 . 5 0 I hr BOATSWAINS LOCKER, •• ~,...c t nee apeoe. OOMn vltw •NSWERS 11'ndOW111owtoo, ,, .. P"""' 642-6200. 931 w .. 1 18th S1'9et 201. TY*tln, A, ·2MQ Preetlglou• DoV9r Dr In ft Hallo Lo~y Bu1lneu ne. ratH ally Coela Meaa. Loan Proc:-or Secretary. N.-.port Beach. near HOOked _ e.nti Men. Attr9011w voung 536-5167 Braae Pol~ nMded 10< ,._~ "-··t ......., $1 3~ fl , •2· Y ...... t ....._ __ ... p~ ,..~ par1·ttma now . ..........., be _,.... • ·-1 " IQ C"-' -Potath L • d y • v 111 f or ACI Marketing Group " ...... , · ... -. -.... -. full-time eoon. Laguna Full Mf'v1Ce with wet bw BOTH HERE lunch/dinner H cort need• dynamic people. Call 548-1995 Towc>rtt par1 time. Muat be Mortg•g• Firm .Min & ample parking Call My t>Ou and hie partner 83a-3080 Pan CK full time evall. Busy medical dlltrtbulor bondable. Call Mr typing SOWPM Good Sytvta Pellcan Propertlel were out to lvl1dl wt1en " Gall •I GrM I SS$. Call for more ,,_,, per90n e•per In Barnum 646-1651 pnone "°'°9, attrecttve. Inc. 7t4/64M50t he rMll:Zlld he hadn't put • W... -Info (714) &49--0827 C\lltom«awvtclew/good ~ help. 8 daya. bonue lnc e n llve FOf' ..... executive otncee ..,,ey 1he CMtl box. .. So SPIRITUAL READINGS a •• t..&..,j I gef*'al ottloa lkllll. Muat Wiii train. BEAGSTAOM 497-&eee. Udo Penlnaula. PMwpor1 wtlat," N)1 the par1ner. Advtce In all matt.,. _ _. ••er be able to wortc well CLEANERS COf'ona dal1--------- Bead1, 3122 aq It High • ._.,..BOTH HERE.'' love, ~ &. ~ Lanz. located on F"" .. hlon under Pf--and u ' I lfte Jll llaliHW :iz 0~J:: Lett i,,... BM ~So~ c:-=: ::~~ng~•~ ~,: r!c!:ble~~ :,:a1nmen, and Cr\li9e UllTllllll on Newpof't 8tvd In Land· FOYlld: U mo. BJOnd Ger-San Clem. 492·7298. 1>9f .. nced ratall HI•• 841-2685" btwn 10-12 Ship Dlr.c:tore. Mull Meture. dependable. ex· mark c annlf)' VIiiage i man Shepherd. vie. New-• ;, .... 111 •••• A....,~• per90n .• ~ve1 2_:-al4I noon only. train. 1-312;.!!8~~7 perlenc•d. bondable. .,...,, ,... tlnct'"-...__.. t port 8Nd CM 642--0294 ...,. -.... ~ yeare a......,..,_ n r., Ex1 C-1533 . ..,... ._....,.. Fulllltme de-for offloe ~h·wood~ & aft 8 ' · ' In all matt.,., bualnMe aalel and aome euper-Car WUll dable. bulldl nga.'-Newport wallpaper prollld• an low. marrtage. Anoel• T~~~I _J!~ldnadte' ~J11 NSOUTNEN~UGEHX~l~€1:~~ E • p • r I • n c • d Beectl. Pfl. 844-1528 bet. xlnt atmoephere for 876-24951473-9784 ,,. ,.... ,_.,,,. ... , I I c I 9-12 weeltdayt only he\11 been Involved In St-Detalllng le now Wa ttr Waltreaa. ti • Mtte:UIMt offlcee. Avall fNIU\ ADS Karen for 2·6 v-t term. ~Ing \M1ll ltllMb I high volumn women'• hiring yOUthf\.tl, 91'141r'gttlc · '"'Ull IEllU 11.20 eq tt, 111~ eod., lamutMa 3111 Oul'Mdy-10 ~ uJee. ~ing' ~w~· M4-t6&0 Earn M50 10 saoo per Annual CPI ca1r Sytllla: ARE FREE r Co. o .... _ a c:orn· --· -·-· -· ~ ~ ~ --"you have. ltL Pellcan Proper'tlea Inc. Pl't\l.ae ;;;;;; lnetruc1iOli, petlllve ttar11ng aalary Ferrlltll. Ro4lt Royoea, ary.-t,...,,. ldeel IOt WICIOfl or ven and enjoy 714/845-8501. Broker 1 Cal·. IG9' a mo-12 Y"9· 11 yre and exoettent benefit•. Mwcedea. and Pcncn.., wldOW'I, dt¥ol oeee & ,_ wonitno with teen~. coopwetlon. uper. 640-M58. I For lntervt.w P1MM ~: white '°O up the people to the tot> mencet. C.11 Mr. Rountree et ---------sue Gee PMwpor1 tun Full 540-4322 543-7058 btwn 11AM & For...,. otnce 8Pacll In Mf-1111 ladatu O,,. 4014 ...._..11 or part-time poeltlon• 3PM ..-daya. Tuatln. WerahouM apace 1 _ avail. 1545 Newpof't Blvd. ~not ..-y. -------=:-- aleo avalf Call 661-Mel l&TAIUIAl ll&T1 A a 1 I1 tan t M • n -CM., 831-8000 We train. ldHI for IHllll Tllml LAAGE DELUXE Be your own bou. agat-SMaoned. maturt •&-Wldowl. devorcea. ancs ,saoo-ssoo,_. '°""" traln- EXECUTIVE SUITES FOUND: Beegle~ dog. C.t.atnwan mfg rnolda. per.on needed to help -,_ people to the tob Ing. No aper ~ 202& NEWPORT BLVD brwn/wtit, vie albert & C1VS tOO hu41e. 1 compl. expend retail rental GPW· Ellperlenoed, good ~ mattl ... ~ Olilcount Card ~ " · Buenard. F V. 986-41182 boat. MOOO 1-3$()-1551 atlon. Heavy phorlte end pMr&nee, OOod ref•· -·-...__... .... _.well dr-.cl COSTAMESA ......-. well wtth b11c -,_,.,_,. MARV STAPLETON Found Blk & bm M puppy, counter HIH. Apply ....,,.,., pu · ~ to work near AEALTOR 860-1238 ~~Springdale, Ca~~:"~ ~~~!~ PMwpor1 ~ s~~~.a't'ty. 1450 F0t~~ =•no Mr Helrner L~~~ ::::W.ba~11=: F~ ~'to~ =· :00~~11>1 ;::_~~:~ng need• re-~~~~fie':': ~~":.,,"=' ~uper ~ win Ca~ VIHage. 900 aq 67s.osM 1 12PM to 3PM.. EARN EXTRA MONEYI eponel!M. dean cut In-make money ., IN ume e>cecuti... tlomet. Part '"*'· rNeCI .... _.' well It, 673-53 Start your own ~I cffvdual for auto Oetalllno. time? Dawn age 12, Greg time wtlnde lnUMI .. _,. N.B. APPfOK. 643 ''"· Found: Eng She.pdog R9qulree amall IP-· 1545 PMwpor1 8'lld C.M 10 .... 1oo111na for a oom-P9non. ~'"""be :,;:c' .:;:::-~ upper oMoe ~ & vldnlfy Of SpringdM and Cu.tom plMtlc engrav-831-8000 penlon to wflia ~ ~°°"*'a heve card butlNN In the Kitchenette $480 Telbert. &40.2116 Ing. Owy 642-4019 eummer d._ Call an out penoneilty. count~. Mr. Helmer 646-2947 UTt•llllll (Linda) 111 8PM. Peter inewtttiRI:. 1--...... --1-.--.... ---,F=: :;;'·1::;, ~: "ol.:t.~=J. Own tOOla. 60% oomm. 54&-53141ordetalte. r Uc.~wnteto _&48-3 __ 1_o ____ _ .. 11 .... I .... ma I• brown I w h I triller with efficient =t: ~~.:~ Clertc/Flle Reoec>l. tor In-REAL ESTATE HOSTESS. l11l11Fht• Pl .. lftt Wltl't • oocaapoo. Numeroueklt· ~ 1Y11em top«-HllN.T AUTOMOTIVE auranoe Ofc. Part time. 216W.1et.8t. #1061T, Needed lrnmedlately-toc> CAPRICORN(Dec.22-Jan.19):CoUectdata.be 2700eqtf,wellmalntllned teneandadultled\11\C:.ta mlt ua to Mii IMtered CENTER 494-8600, 12·5 dally. 13.60 hr. Tuetln,Ca.02MO. aalaty.Ca.11543-93-« analy tical. proteet your interests and take steps to bldg on qul•t '""'· avall now.~ eteem ' l>OMI' to na-833-8088 ' 631"7140· Oenetal Office, muet 1YP9 MllFlne M4ICflanlC Needed. ltfe 646-4800 or 645-3323, foundlrllfls.tt. 19ma11 tlonal companlaa •••mmi _ .. ,._. 40wpm eocuratety, full Mu11 MY9 own tooll. rem ove h om e safety hazards. Focus on finances, d•Y9 v 1 c • · 1380,000/yr groa• In-_ --•• time. Ooata MeH. ~otgaa.dteeel. income potenllal, basic tasks and r eview of resol-NEWPORT CENTER. Full Yorktown/Brookhuret. ~ ~blet:12.. 20% tax Needed for 1 toddler In my ne•d,•d Im, med lately 54a.31M2. lhah. c.M 876-2837 I MfvlOe Ell tt\19 S It ... ~23-... _. .. , ,..... acletlon NftP0'1 a..ch home part lime « Prlnceu 1----------------,,...,..,-.,....,.-ution.a associated with d iet, exe rcise and genera acu u ~ ..,.... u . IV9llabte 714 24()..8123 A.f HOY .. Pl'oducta, • Col· ~ _... •• nu...- h alth An th Ca . . · I ed S676-M26. 640-5470 0 D: .,.._.._d · Ooc. da and -· ~· p--......-........... n... ----e . o er pncorn lB mvo v . F UN . .,.._,._ pupsiy da)'t, 714/493-1153 or pfeaae. aao..s294 -, ....... ,... ................ , R.E. Dev • ...,.d n-.ded. 2 yra exper. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. l8). You'll find NICE omce In Corona dell vtc 2111 & Oninoe CM. 8t0/129-304e-. 11'"· ~. land-mature. Laguna Hiii• unique way of g etting product across, of improving Mer. 320 • q. S280/mo Aoo<ox 4 moa. 846--IMeT ~~ ........ ~""ATM .. (11 ...... ) acape and MW oone1. fW ~7641 pl~ utll. 64~6383. 2333 Ah.8 11.L.IMITlllLlll. """""'"' ~· ... ~· nae. 1tyco 1no. 645-2251 .~ ... ·~~ ,.._..., sales potential and of communicating with those in r:. Coaat Hwy Start up rout• and 2~ x W£LL8 FAAOO BANK "'8 Part/time ..-.nc:ta. Prl-1,.....--_.--__,-,-,.-_,_ .. _ .. _ ....,. .. • ' FOUND: Slam... Cet, an ll"nmedlal•oc>enlng tor vat• reeldence. Local '9f· Hoc> Stng11 now h!MQ dnt tlaneftb, Send ,... transit. Demands will be made on your time --In 1 WoodbftdOe.,.... trtend-g<OM. 7514031 an Acioount Aapteeent• ....-io. req. 87M7t8 oounter ~p-/Ftun I w to P.O. Boll 2~. pleasant manner. Social activities accel erate. Gemini Ofctu1t•."9Wfyr~.w12, 1y. tovlng 867-144 1, Patt/tk'N or ~Ired. ttw 1n tht Automat«' COOKWA.NTtD Fold, p,_. tcw hand LagunaH ... 92e63. P!Ays s~. ficant role. otca, bath & huge atcnge 85 t.0702 attome, II« penilegal. 8u1lnff1 Oe91r1ment. P•n or tullfttme. All ltonlnD. AWY In pereon. ·~ ~. 9'>9fOx 500 n acoounwn I.IOI tnwtt-The ldeall ~ mutt 1000 ~ COMt Hwy -Pl ES (Feb. 19-M arch 20). What had been tO'al, Incl utll, o1een1ng, found: Yng ,,_,,, OfY/wtlt rnent a.oo&ate to ~ • around oooti. Country , -Bdl. •~ · ..... w. tak ( ted uall Ch k unlum. S300 mo. Avail d 0 g . \/ I c . v I 0 -,--., ·--WW:. heve peyt'Oll PfiCI c 1-"D Club Pwmerlent Poe-..._ p ltl I :luift I en or gran "aCt y requires review. ec ltnl'Md. 831-32" _ 10 r 1a 1 R •Pub 11 ~. ,-~ for -... bec*ground with k~ ltlon • 488 1448 ._._.. -....M-t. .._. o• on nc u .. n- fine print, read between lines Tighten security, be ... ,.. 642.0178. polntnwrt, 647•9220 '";; edge of **81 and Ital• · --euranoe, typing. WUI aware of property values, have frank discussion *111.ID.,,...* Loet: ey. gi.... 1n ~ reac>Ondbymttlto:HRW. tax reqv.,.,._,ta. Ac-lllTl-RmW• """"· tre1n.6*-t319 with one who is on "borderline." Taurus plays vital 1 1 MO FREE A£NT c... Lion'• FWI Fry. tno. 1820 l. 1et8t. #240, oounttng •1119 dealred. Coat• Mala DIM. loc*lno bptfteil0td14-6day Modela 1 oom to 4 rooma. AdV s.ma CA t270G Travoal ~ tttrouclh-llof ••oeac lndMduil .... ~1r1perw. LJnoar1e lfMIP • FlllHOn role. ~etlMl,-twy1.NO M0-1142 Ana. · out 8o. Callfornla wtlh ttwttlk .. to~.,._. MaoOr••dnn.31109 etloM.MtE lhft,C.U . --------.---------:--------..... ~. L.oet: ltlfVil ~. INrhtfe ta .. ta•1 oompeny «* provtded. pflOfMlt Incl ...... ..... ~ tMy, lo. Uigun&. ot eel Tonv'a 8oaney ........ II lata.la Wu ... ntl OftMe ltataJ1 Jilt Cell AM 83W223 ,_...cat w/brown fur & Ouutultlel .. II Exollltnt ~and t)en.. :::; ":7:'~3i Hou••llffP•r, llv•·ln, Panty, 6414444 IUre ltll PrOf ;n:t D• fiflii;tl\ e __.,.,. ..._. e mltWn Ptl"-e toea on llftte. '« f\Ji1tlet lnfot· ...___ ~ ..-. MllMdlel~ I OOOll-Mortge-Loan r•pe, non•lmkr looklng to --·-• t2t0/up, oarpeh, eecti front Ptl'f. No "" ••m•-mattonoell: c;M7.;'~ ll'ID. Ow m.4012 -Lil••·•-... Mortgeaa WE Liii Foll ~ toe town "°'* or 1 MO FAE! ~NT di'..,.., ale. ~. erouncl '**' "'°· W•· ~· !!..:!'!:',,.,.10 0001\9< -· ·1· 11 .......... -. ·~ 17. """ '*tno I ,..,.. "° oondo w/all amenltlee With ~ term ...... Ml 17J01 8-JI\ etvd. Hunt-oM .,..., NB. M&-3030 ...,._ ---• -"" -... 1111 ~,'oc'u.::t.:!: :':.c,""'19~~~ lngtonewh.142-2134. ~i ::::\!.:nu~o =-~~~:: Eqllll°rft'11~ Mm-••• "'u"ft tor a::~~~ .... /l11aa.... pert. Coutllne ~lmlaaNQll.Mt ladwt area.Cell'4&-2141 time. iritno -otw""9nMIM_.tc»--let IF 901M ~ ~ Cell Wdf Dov. Dr. 8ufi9 1.f. New· In•·•· .... ' w.,. -~·~ cMla)'ed _....... • • 111n=reo. eM-6110 daytOM9 pot19wtl.e31-3151. .... ~ LOiT:W4iOCilftCl!1"0,6or ""'-tOt/Pertner """'*'· .,....,_ A~~ ClllMwl. Cell eft. Plft. ... ~ .... .ot:ta _ or 8888 eq. H. co;:ON a; 9 .,.,,.,. dWnoncJt v1e otct oompeny 1n tooct-M*' nwttt "'° LOan ,.. .. ~ 11t lldwweber'e ..., .. * M .• .,....._ ~ ~l~d Wlrar.T..... Mill'. Only .85 per eq. ft. "oblnaona, fl!Hhlon Hrvlot lndullry. eooi9ttOn hM M lfttry l*l!nMltcill, e IMdlnQ ••• e ~hMol Qtfl ..... tall 2tH NEWPORT HACH on Greet pot«1ti.I for ver-lllend. ~~ 7114020.tee>-6641. ~ w'9ll GP-._OlllOll ~cllltNbutor, JHIMIMHALI. -•••-• ·er':...· E W"'-8 ---Coeat Hwy, eppf'OlC 1,000 lety o f UHi. Ag l , ~ wtted hi hOriie fer ....... llof "' 11\dh...,.., .. •MA WAU. .-TlllTI ......, T'lml.,.......,.,._ ot11oupeoeror~ 747 aq ft. Sllpu wlt. e1w100 t.=:~ v-:.~ = = word8'~cm1f10 MNtc». = n • ,,.,.., ..., ll\Ollll•1d, '-food '~r--:i;r 74.,. .. H l<NX .... .._ Ofio ft, Mttl/mo utll9 pd. A/Cl 714-641-7100 - , • ,_ """1 .-.,. ..:' . ...._.. Udo "7 ===..!,!:. ~Ilda aftd °"' Rllr... --... · ,___. en! llr. 10H E -· "8 r_._ • · _, eMWfM»Plir9~'° ,,_ •-• '3.2_.1M Dr eo.. ...... We 1141\19 IPtl09 w/deeka ln•ala !!' 8Mdlt ..._I.Me~-.. ...... MM _. •· ....._ ,._ ~eot FotOhil1"'11dM .......... .. ' i.ofteo_, • ~ • HOWi "-· .... June 19'. Call Linda ~ Uber9I .,._lj ...... M· lllOIOO ACTION _., • '! ""°.,..,...,.... ~I.°',..,..., • ...,,. -Cotna by & '8111:. i86 aq.H. P¥tbettl tn-10l3-..:.....U'4 Hlt,VVV to ••yv.vvv ..... GelO.W.•w.t. 11ct•1 • • Celt • ... ~~ Tuedn Ofio m .. ,,.. 114-1040 Mr.,._ 1111 Weltollff Drtw, Npt. ' OM Pd. a/o ~. Ind. ewe. t Ntii. AltO ... , IMIY tf'fl Tiw1ft MCI Loen. ~ fl'lot ,,. ltl ... ! -------·1-...:.::::..::::::::·:.=...:.:.:·-::!_1 _1 lkltl. 142 ... 14. ~ or tlOO eq. ft. -..,.., ncMe. 'MT 8"10Yel ,,........,,. t.O.a. ...... --=~ ..,.t A.Do""°" ·~ F 10 riv 28r ept He. '221 811.1.. Idle 1i.n1t with 1 lw yard. C-t . ._ T. 180 I!. M•e l'O"' ~ .... Md fUf!dlnt. •t .. 1M, to allJ? ~ ... dlD ........,. W .. Mill j mo. & 14 utll. E119ft Detty p"°' Cl..ifled Ad 11th 81, C.M. MOO/mo. i. ~ watng the Dr1i1fy,.,. OW. Corri. °"Ill 8wl-WANT MJnoH'? wall I 0 •11 NOW. , lh e ..... a»-1•. t7WJP 642-&e71. . c~ Ada 64Mt71 ~rt. lot~·""° Ml. .,, •. ~,.,,. .., .... ,. ~--M11. ' _: ·----, 0 ---7 '~ .. ~ - --• T .. -~~ ~ ~·"'l!·, . . . ~ . . . .. . . .. ~~~-~~--------------------------·--------~. Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 C ll ........ llM&nu.... Hll rv.Jlut MU ll!Htllawu llll IMll,fftll 7112 ..... , .. , e.w. a1auon an t llY APft.IAml 18 H :hlie IJik eola I tH. a lelend cerd ... NI ll&T ........ 9'*1 ~~ Aclcllv,~ Laa 967 .. 133 :re~::...::,~ H'll 1~"!~1terehl~UOO. 11' ftbetgl .... 50 ttP, lt1r. 111'1PrTa~~-.IR'"T.~liiii;im.iii;iiiiii!!ll!!!~~~ ,.,...... '"" ' 1....... · &4•-2110. cov.r, oc:1 oond. a1eao. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZIE ACROSS I Soft IOI> 5 UI< na11ves 10 Vacclll4)5 14 Take It easy t5 Custom 16 Mid-term, eg 17 S trange 19 Mention 20 Use logic 2 1 OvaUons 23 Weight allowance 250n --· equal 26 Soothes 30 Quickly 34 Knave 35 lmpollte 37 Cargo vessel 38 Gratu11}1 39 Transm11ters 42 Frlghlen 43 Firsl Olym- pics site 45 Canadiens or Yankees 46 News medium 48 Mone1ary unit 2 3 .......... 50 Roman - 52Com~tlon 54 Beck SS In - -: crude 59 Tire parta 63Sktpo~ 64 Favor &6Swamp WU>NISDAY'S ~IOLVED Nl'wpor18Mctl.. NOROE eleolrlo dr~er, *t 'BUYt* 8472 Moklhana. HB ...... ....... X: o d • h • P • S o · •n llU te2.eo.1 -1.,..11"'""10.,,---H,_o_n_,d-•--,C'"'R=-1""'2~0 7~939 --119Ym Eltlnofe, Mutt hit-Beeti-.-..,...-----.-ii.._. .,.,..., Older retrlQeratOf', Rune M S~A~TION lllng wal., bed. Mc1tle ·~... otter.&4:z.7107 Marine produc1•. good. sao. Vlnyt Sofa A H / •• .... w/d.30r dr....,,2nlghl CleMlc190819 CMecratt 1"7" s··-· .. I T81•"'. n .. -. 64e-1481 lied. a50. 840-7848 ..... le•~ • 1tand1&& 1 iounoecnair runaboUt, oompl, r•te>-~ mi.;. Mu.I.., W- i HARP A EC E P • REFRIGERATOR 8' Soft 70, SIM Oak Oeek obo. 56&-89n. ~·~r· t:.d~ ~r;:;: 8-1 Oft•. &42·7107 S .. TION68TICLERICAL AS· like new, 2 dr, tro.t Ir•. '715, exeo ohr S35i ~ lell 11-..4 lletth w/brakH. Apprel1ed •74 Honda 750 • 4 catl>, ·~ ~· llnd..vo:: :.::~1ng~•,::,~: •106• m-ooeo ~':" :.:i~s:'9s.:i:i Wed. June 10. Cathy 1~~2~~~ on. °' Completely rblt. eng. 2800 Ml uooo. eoiM OOtnl>\ltOf' tH\eR•frlgerator 1160. Stereo 1200/otr 549-2&42 tr · • llfel,brak•.tri& ... t 549 eue and eaaow proowi"t 646-11511 873-3149 llTllllPAUll SMcfaf\ SF-23. Center ;ga:otcet & oha ln .1==.-------irT"lnr ~~W!u,•I Refrtg, froat tree, famll)I l 'Sofa,N11htoneflon1lon below wholeula at =~~ F~:r mtO 1~7~Vr~~ e>- 67 Choice words ~ ..... +14., 88 Correct 69 F1eeoed 70 LOdglnga 71 Withered 4..._1792 COAST alz.e. VflfY c!Mn. 1215 bona. Xlnt cond. $1004200.8-45-0490 16()-1174 ' ult tor Andre. __.._ ··-.• -. ~· :::.1. · 1 Kanm«e waaher '-llY 1175/ofr.17~27.,,.. ........ " ·-cmc:u ESCROW duty, multl c:yole, S126. · fYllWllllT Southooal1 18' u.p.lrak•, '17 125 Cao-Am, good tlr91, flleupunk1 /FM 848-24118 I' Sofa, Mr1h toned, lloral Loee 10 10 29 lbe a monlh I eyt. Or*Y marine, tleac;I. cond .. $240. 84e-8123 atereo c .. Mlt, only DOWN t Insult 2 Zilch 3 Code lor ""A " 4 S tucco S Emits hghl 6 S tate· abbr 7 Dealh notice 8 Headdress 9 Eitotlc dancer 10Ge1s 11 Theater sign 12 Class 13 Iowa city 18 Ethics 22 Exclude 6 24 Lead alloy 26 Perlormed 27 De1ec11ve - Vance 28 Learner 29 Where ~hartoum 1s 3 1 -Flow 32 Ory oll 33 Debtors 36 ObJe<:I 40 Old Italian 41 Weapo ns 44 Grooved 7 8 9 49 Chnlcal coun- sellors org 51 Length units 53 Onyx, e g 55 Explosive 56 Islamic olfic1al 57 Terrible 58 Finales 60 UK r1ver 61 Gloomy 62 Dirk of old 65 Bedstead 11 12 13 TD.91111 Refrlg, xlnt $195, ~~75~g~~.ll~l~~rnd. Nlely and keep It off. a2100.548°""7t9 ·eo Vaapa P·200E. Xlnt = :,.,onlllo;:: .. ".m.m Wltlr/dryr $125 .. ch l00% natural harbe, .... lall 701.a cond. 997-9800 de, ....................... , exoalant Fnr xtnt 196. 647·2911 · 8' off wht brocade aofe, 100% montl}I back guar. I, "' H8-9S80 .,.... ·--llTTUI . S95. 9' blk vln. IOfa & 2 Call Brad. 213-e97·f083. 12 " Ro6' xlnf cona. -()Of1dltlon t~ & a !Jls>« nec:.Nry Suo. Seare Fr .. '9r, l7 CF, cnre s 100. Parq~ 1op I LP '400 8 tt Sabot $375. .• ... .. -mu.t ... car 10-400. t~ Thure. 6:30 PM rro.ttw uPflgh1 s 1so. tbt, ioo. Merbla lbl 100, Pfo1. :to1v:· :J: g;,:, eq'. 1192.ioea tttr 1 " -(7141 M2.01aa. tot:30PM.Gu111.Muft)t 873-60311 S36.SrfbdSl5.831~48 bake pu. 1350 115• Abetgl .... fut, Mlf Forreni.28 Motor Home. '11 .. llU plue comm. Pfuah and Wlllfl Pool waeher dryer Anllq Braadbrd tbl $40 &45--605-4 balll~ wtth lrall«. ll.11'11 fully io.ded, lleapl 8· Buy one 09t 1 hel NO proleHlo.n•I . working and ref~ Gold nice .,._ • ..., S125 Cl 23·· TV o ' *8001080 e.ut.lnt.&4~ll. JOKE Mult .. 11 condition•. LaQuna Hiiia ' .,.,,.., · r Ref~. S135, Baby o n · • · · · office Scon. 951-2777 cond S4 · 75l·5485 S75 Sllfee> radio & r.-crib-g mallreH $38 2131387-9172. WANT TO RENT Small 836-*XMI Mietlaaj lMYe (M ) , . W1h1r/dryer. SllO ee. cord pt1ytf 125 Box ci-t S22. 1153-8487 , t5 It Solcat Xlnt cond. motomome by rellable1_m_ ... _eoa _____ _ 494-8087 aprlng & maur... 120· Traller Nit•. 1rapc. aac couple 673-21~ ·73 BMW 2002, rad/tan, . 1 aA14 14~197 evea s~x~~ i1r!~'i*i:' ~ $t300.'0BO 642-4037 Trallmt eu1o, air. AM/FM, v..-y ~ II• . •111111 I -COMPLETE BEDROOM white 5 lug rlma. 25. Catamaran & mooring Tre"I HU ciewl, "4000. 731 .... 541 ~ .. ~~·~~ H · OllTUOTOll. ~iD~e~ .. ~lg:.'~~~;: L25~55o~: e 11 0 I,. r. "~· ~ 1-;i;ir.2:~~ fr rn m . '78. •1:.:o"'t~l1.""' pty. perienoed or wlll train. UMCI brick• fOf ule. 35 double bed w/head & H · · Ille, awning•. twin bedt, 1 ___ • ------ Full time 2 PM 10 9 PM cenll/aa. 842-5252 wt\, loot boatd. MUST SEE Sola Bed 199. Eleclrlc attet 8 pm. Ilk• nu. S5900. 557-32~ '80 320tS, blk, am/Im Mon-Fri . Alter 1 PM. 873-1783 hom.. $1200. Kitchen table & 4 Typewliter StOO. 2 End 2 Hobl 14, cuatorn 2 boat •58 E>CplOrer etow/retrlg cue, 5 epd, lfll rl,lit, nu 886-0151 C chrl. $100. 548-1707 T1blee 125. Weight Set & trailer, lake allfOf' S1575 nu tlrH ' nu wire' tlr•. alloy~, lnvnec T..._.._.. SollcltOf'e •••111 645-5737 · ben<:h $25. Vecuum s10. 0t betl oner <>< .. u S850/0Bo' 637•13114 ...; cond. S12,000 obo. Allen ........ ~-... i~eat 1016 Aquarium S25. Compeat 1 a p a r a t e t y . · dya &4s.3804, evee i amm111 suP.r T equip. ilke c=~~~~~~ Car Cover $25 499-5529 714-240-6093.., meg. wltnd• &4M 121. We want good tetepnone MW-Beeulleu 4008ZM II. Ill l~alallon eyelem Of' 499-1194. 42. Columbia MIS i.aM BUV FACTORY DIRECT large M6ac1Jon of Q\l&ltty r..-vatlonleta lo Mt ap-wlall aocaa1. '415. Can· $ 1 5 O. 6 7 5 . 3 8 8 9 , Tennla/Swlm Famlly Mem· '850/mo !Of' 113 UM. L=•1y;.1 & ll~;r~::: r a con d It Io ne d i polnlmenla. non 514 XLS $195 2 875-7728 berehlp et excluelva Ideal fOf' ~ Long 1 ~ & ,,... 1g• 5th ~BMW•. Other IALAIY C 105 11pe decile 1 Man Verde Country ecn lllp Carl 9&4-275e. r fine 11\M• In ltoclc alao. ......... w/1ound 1lnc-THc II Drexel Dining Table. Club. regular 12500. · wheel. Cell now loll tree Come tn O< cal today! mixer w/brldge S495. trultwood Mcilon, WOf'rn S1500/0BO lor fut Mle.1'73 Hobie 14 w/trall«. 1~1192 tor tr .. ~Ctl BMW, 3e10 lllllEI ElmoSOUnd&lllentedl· hOtea wor1hS1,800,Mll Owner moving SIOOobo.131·7160-brodlU'e &SAVEI N. Ave .• Long PIT evening worit. Call t~tltler, olher llOOMI. for Se00/080 . World 714/559 .... 741 al1 6PM. & wl<nde, 557-8640 daye, A•lt l.tlttt 1M5 Beectl. (7 4) 136-6790. ettlf 1 pm, 751 .... 223 pp &«-1307 Booka $35. Child Cralt u1c tor Wtyne. · Seflee $35 548-0492. Upright Plano, $300. Con· IMPORTANT IMW'I WllTlll TOP $SS C-~•1111 l 1 of e St• r • o S 5 0 . '11 hw,.,t II lleMI NOTICE TO READERS Female• Preferred. Furniture. Bar wllh 540-8299 Mini lully equipped !Of' -AND WlllYUll, 1---+-+--t---tl Model1 & Eecort1. (213) App 11 P1u1, 64K, 2 dlac storage Ellgere. cruillng. S22,000 OBO, ADVERTISERS _ .... 8fll-1984 drtvee. printer & monitor, Bedroom qullted Head· Wllllll MUI 213°""'15-0701 The price ol 111ma ContactTomawtc pro0ram1 & O"'* Take boatd, IPfeed & ben<:h lo Size 3 Of' 6, ,_ ba«'I , advertlNd b vehlcla . TUYELllllT OY'ltlMatS148.32orbYy matc h. end lable!, worn. S100 or beet offer. Cofonado 15 . xtnt cond., deeler'I In 1~ vettlde ~ ~~ CornputOf' trlllnlng Pfet'd. al $3150 641-8997 ,or lamp a, 9ufltll 9 548-595e al15PM. w/lrit, 1rapce, compua, ·cianllled adver11elng l ~Y~ CALL: LIDO TRAVEL. 752-1805 7141846-3290 xlru.11950. 780-1478. oolu adoeanotlnclude 1M-1111 · 173-33lO ''"II TH IOU t>.cj q-elze Iliac. Waal.. 1221 Udo 14 w/lraller. 1975. any m;ppllcabl• tax ... I 208 w. 1•. Santa Ana h...+-+--t--1 TraY'el agenl tor N--Cul• kitten• ;;;:a gOOd H~•I new $225 ·WAITllYlb-• 992-eoe8 lloenM, tran1fw ,.... CloeedSundey porter Trevel. n .. d• home Of 1.._ mu9t go 10 S45-7fl8.4 Reas. 548-1435 1 -1,,. 1-.an 11• flnence ctl#gea,,... lof ~tty LOc8ted uper'd all round egent .... , 8-&433. -~ ..._ •• ,_.. air pollutlon control c»-Priced fOf lmrr.4'dlale f\111 lime the pound. 84 · I an FllllTllE lulcel lul. 1224 Radno °' famll)', oood vice certification• or & ~ttlYaly empioymenl. Call SU. Of Fr" 1011 101t0fage thed, Lee 857-8l33 FlDTE $165 concf. $1100. 87~f78 daaler documentary ~ Carol k4--0360 plcll up & haul -•Y· 1l' old, w/cue, xlnt cond. Pflndle 18, 1 yr old, xlnt i::-r•tlon c:hargae un-'i;J1 Trim r~ hand looll & 8 I 3 . 7 3 3 0 or Ct11aa ...... , 1122 195. 75&-1400 cond.,hvydtytrtr,$3900. olt'*WIM epeelfled 1--+---t--+-+-~ _,.,$8 h K 213/430-14811 ..-875-8«8evea bytheldverttear. ~l.eaalng exp nee. P9I' r • urt L91 Paul copy Elec Guitar. · or Carl, 171A E. 17th St, Frae k1t1en1. 8 wk• old, 6aMO~G ~AL1E&I & Amp & dlat box S150 ITithttt A•te Lf'ricn/ [{)(CARVER CM. 7-10AM blk/whl, need• good ~1& U J um~u1r0• 11 875-825e Morn &0EYM. · 17 .. No 2775 11700 Plltl HIS D'"'lli c an.r-c.uuw h 0 m.. 6 7 5. 9 2 1 1 .....,... ancee. une •• . " ' • . 1------~~~!"'!""·I ~ "-'"" i;; [)IVIH nPtST 548-8205 . & 12. 1 -5 . 1828 OHict ruaitu•/ ' High performance. , ......... , .. ).... 6&0-"-110! ~..,. ,...,, Experienced accural• Marg'*11eAve.(Bayvlew ~ i•-873-8325 102 So. ~ "'-""•"'" ... , ...... .-typlt1. 15 WPM. good Fr .. kl1ten1. (Female). Apt•) CdM 1eut ... Bayfron1. Balboa ll&lnd. 1100. 831-35 3 M1ary ~ beneflll. San vanou. co6ort. Dbl• Garager Fri/Sat. DES~~ IS. met81, Wlndeurlw, 3 eeta Miii, 'II •AU IM IT ~ ~Jmn 1---+-+---t~-t--+---t Clemente 881-8111. 873-4324 St--mlac BatoaJn1 wood grained formic. car....i~ + bicycle ALL OR PARTS. RUNS ~-~ ...... · top excallent cones 175 .,, ' ......,,. 221 wanted ma1urewom111110 Frea to ~od home 509Jumlne (all9y) 842 1207 · · tr.,..,. Al1er 8 pm. ......1 ~ "TZ+-+--t--1 work In undwlch adorable k ene, orange S t Only! 10°"" HMhld • 831-3108. UTEBODY WORK LlllllT 8"op P1111 time. Pteue color. Very lov1ng and • lq 0 L E A s E : 0 " I c • ... Up lo 50% off yo4ir eat. ~ 11 Hucldebany·1 pleyful. 897· 1175. ~:.:inl:a. 1 c • furnltur.-oapllon and 2 1b, a. eL.t •O/ll Plnatrtplng, a., Mt-1221 mDT•Y Sandwlcfl Shop. 15891 Fr .. 10 good home. 1 Y' otno.. Oeek• wal. wl1h : .... l.., 1 • •76 2002· 4 IPd air Gothard, H.B. 0 1 d m a 1 e telta •na 1124 leather Inlay, conference '81 rmi J:t §ill i&e S.C of 4 Oreg M ... E. oond (033NJL) ., S d II llble. ai.ire, ate. S250 S .. 51... ' 1 llOll14ttree mounted on . • 20!· ...,... .__ IHl-tlT Chow/ hapllar . • i-11 • .., ,.~48 new. 14• ..,.,at or. hit• 6 lug rim• • 79 3 , 4 ....,., ...,... r 11-ano11, good with klda, ,._ mo.-~ 875-8820 w · mllae. (640XIV) llM ••It Wu... Slit Bt11Wutt4 SlOOWHkende. Colewell u:.f 3 ho me only. PAUMILITl&U MIHltalPl11 Oll 1 226/beet o fter,• '797331;4epd.,loeded . -Bantcar, Newport Real 10. 54M798. Sat only 7AM .... PM. 111 ILrlie ls!ll:.__7 &45-0lll8· (971UXBI ()pUc•I A .. lllant, ·~1i PIT aecretary naeaed IALll Ea1•1• Office. TY1>1n9 ,. 11me aale many many Copying Mechlne, $2 lOO '" CIVlnoaton tangy eoo Set of .. Ono MU1er E • '80 320!• 5 epd IUIW'oof P«~2~ful, w 5-10/hr Pf' wtl. Coate Full Of part time ahowlng quired. Call lor aw• & F•rait u• HU Item•. tt9ahld. clottie•. cuh. Term• avall. Tu 1.~ HP Outboard: 80X14 u .... mounted on (1ANV203) .. . tnlln. · Meea. 54&-2170 8-10PM. axcltlng, high quality gtft Info. Cieri• John1on f\lml1ure, you name It. 645-8484 (uMd twtoa) l lOO, 4 men white s lug rime. • ·ao 7331; "'1o., loeded. PAIT/ml na ... f>IT s.cr.tety, N9wpor1 =· ~:.:roe: .... n·· I F1ralhtre/1"4"'"' CM'1 LulMtan Church. SAVIN 230 COPIER, com-Calawlle lnftet•b4e S55 '22 5 / b .. I 0 fl• r (18ST118) Wanted adulte ,,.,., 22 Cent•. M-F, 85wpm, ••· 714-497-3128 -1 pc. pee#I Olnlng room 760 Victoria, C.M pletaly rebuilt. rec.lpt1 lnc:ludee oara and !>\Imp. &45-5898 • '81 5281; eu1o., eunroof wtio enjoy WC>ftllng wtth pert en c e d & Full time MCtet11tlal Ill· MtandhvtchseoC>.8pc MOVING SALE June ll& a11a ll . Mull aell 850-4749 l W .. (1CGB811) you1h. Mull be well NII-motivated. Mu1t leles, ...... 1ftt perlenee. bl.lay office. Call I wtclcer dlnnetla 4225. 12 g.5 .74 Flal Spld9r S 8 0 0 I 0 9 0 SI l.-8111 HI • '81 133cel; 5 epd , groomed, ~ •• lla"9 r••um• w/rel1. Part time 875-3324 Jan S49-7t41 Hall cabinet S30 GE Pa'uo Furniture, Couch: 714/142·2813 ~5 a':'-:..nc1: Rigt;;lt CUJ1 m . for ~-(1CLH374) poatttve rnottfttOf. S*1 84()..1811 Je~a Waat• SI $3R9trt75ig. ~~t~ CS: Crtb Toye Clottie. 1&11 Plaan/Ol1aa1 1121 '550 831-ao11 YOlJI vetitc:M. dom.tic °' • 82 320!. au10 .. aunroot. at '70 per .... Cal Saieapereon, OU1alde · --· p 1' (; M Mau _ _ foreign. 651-8285 (1FDN542) 2-69m. 846-7021 (MUOJ IW'f/aDI ..,.., open lerrltory. So. u;: In companlall, mad!-hMdbollld $250. Pecan v!:.~s.,.. 556-4211 Hammond organ, iU5 •u.r 'Deeb JOH WE"' • '82 526e; auto., loW 8Nrron). 8'-r omc.. Typing, llllng Celtt. ~ 10AM-5PM. cal bedl~ouod. drtvea. cot!M tibia S50 8 pc . ot>o 545-7884 ,,,.... (1EJA474) and oen-81 offtca wonc. 11,June. 714W.11th St. lnlelllgant, reliable. plllo ... S1 25 MllC Multi famlly yd .... Kid• . 0 TSOO CA ACCOMODATE OLUI •••• • '82 7331; 6 apcl., loeded. PAIT 1m Newport Beach llport Coate Meu. "3-4322 Item• 636-7022 clothM & toya couch & g Hammond rgan • BOAT UP TO 40'AVAIL -(7356637) IYU/WflliM w. Cel La Juannna SatN world tr1veled retired Marble Top Pedatl t1bl. fl aall~t &4mucnr mvcn ~~~~.::;~ ~! ~HPfNRJeH~~~oi~~ AllllHll Ul-1111 Make extra IS haliMno ... TillllT lllllllt•tlt wldowd .. lr .. polltlonu 38",xlntcond.$250/olr ;:~S :~ Ceaway quick $1850/0BO OFBOAT&MIN.CASH. 208W.1a1,SantaAna YoUth airr19fw promote Rap6d OW1h high tech. y ...... Companion/Driver, L 845-1572 un. · 850·5294. 8 44 . 4 3 5 o o A y S , ao..d Sunday COMMRL CHEVROLET their own •l•bll.rled ~ ~ firm need• 5 ...... __ " M t 2 World treveled retired I GI"'• .,~-~ Fr~h Prov 873-2332 EV LARGE SELECTION OF rout•. Mllt1K9, outgoing, ,.,...._ WO<tl ptir1 .,.,,. • A O widow dealr• poattlon u " ..,.., • -"' sw•• Min Klmball uprlghl, 1898 , at1rac'llve patftflt .. tyi>e ~ie aecretllrlea lo PM Of 4 PM to 9 PM with Companion/Driver. Llte'1 c:anoc>Y 5pc bdrm NI Ill Yin tage, Ser. 70251. NEWPORT ISLAND: PRIV. I NEW & USED BMW SI peraon f.IHH call work on c:omp.11ertnd the Lo. Angel8I Tlmea ~I 11 nee 5 day w/maur... & boupr· Evwy Sunday, 8am-3pm. $500 obo or Ired• for rOll-DOCK. EASY ACCESS. :~II.o r!••' 11 2-5t>m M.. &4$-7021 ;:.::• ey11em. (No Clreulatlon Twn In,..._ kng Selary. ope n Inge, Ilk• new 1350 Orange Cout Coltege. lop <Selk. 557.1739 Up to 30 It. e60-19e0 · · ). Minimum~ ptlOf1e Mlea. Earn an :!_!11 • 71._586-1893 · 166-2898 Fairview & Arllng1on, -----,,.,,...,...,.--,,,-------..,..,.......,--,...,,,..-----------i ' • r-. I \ \1 t" • su.1200 P9X • ~ s.w:.. menta: Musi type 70 hourty Wage ~ comm r>OJ• •• Coat• M.... Piu• Au1o lJprt Plano, l300. Con• Newport Marina/Ille> WI llY Cord 808fda. Mature, wpn.ShlftaAvaM:7AMto Tr le provided FM H l d•·•·b•d Sl OO Swap Meat i Art Faire. Stweos.50.540-82119 day • ..-.mon1h USEDCARS&TRUCKS Dependable. Evening 11AM. 2:30PM to 7PM. m!':informellon · call C1t1 SHS 543-8803 AdmluiOn fr• to t>uyet1. wurmz.er Splnel $450 ~61 COME IN OR CALL FOR 1 w • ..__ - """ (Sc>m-~ Wllnda. 5PM to 11PM. W• wlll 640-0301 112 Per el an Klttan1. Kg Wltat'bed man (floet• Setlar ~Iona/Info. w h l , 11 In I c 0 n d ' w.... ..... no AlfilAllAL ~U~LES Npt Bch. 71 . "*' you. Achwament cameo, R&W, S25 & '35. llon) llner & mall cover 55$-5880. 552-3337 _.. C<>nni.-Oal.Jlto l.EASIM<I P9r'ton Friday needed. and j)(omoUon ..t1h1,, IHrttarr.... Shot•. 548-19e5 S 100. Din rm ..,: rettan'. . lnb '::r ~3 ~or ..,-:1~ ~ SERVICE~ PIT. Home '"'8rtof'I Re-firm. Active Morlgaoe C!>. HARL.EOUINCAT 43·• rnd table, 4 awtv. laat IMCll ilf0 SJ!rliat G.Nt 6230 71~6-7100 182118EACHBLVD. 38~~~BEA~ve. tall. DutlH Include: .... l1•• 11lntl1M need• •harp, exper d Other unique ca1t & kit· ol'lrl, '350. 556-2143 ~ I i50 -HUNTIM<ITON BEACH (No. Cherry ..it~) 81111'Wtrlc1Qpflone.-"fno A1-4l" ~~~~ ten1 Mele lltellme em-King e£ze t>.cj. hdbrd. S90. 2w=· f,:O. 3 end 4 >< 7 Pool Table. Frerich iter9t 7024 Ml ... ltMt-1111 llH)IM-ITM on cu1to mere, •le . A9captlon6a1, ...... Dr"• r11a':!'d to Mor1gaga ployment w/carlng 494-ec>87 tabtaa, $50. 0r ..... $40. 1tyle. Solld Oak. '600, SIOf'lge 'Of eoau. UotOf' fr~lna Weloome t73-7830 Offtot, 56wpm, 10 k*Y by Banlclng. Bad( ground In peopte.110· 982-280fl Fan, S10. Dining table, firm. 7fl0..8842 evea. Homee, Campen, New· WI PAY TIP-.ul touc:fl,$6/hf.2PM·7PM4 RE, 8'L'1 Of e.ntclng Klttene $10 Incl tilt snot. L:!~rSo~I ~, Ml~5 MO Retr.'36. et7-1 279 CROSS BOW-Barnell poft8Mctt.M2~904 PMllllUll Daina 1117 Pent•llllll ..... tin. Sat AM. 146-0018, req'd. Contact Stave 857--8314 dy, 83S-9162 MCtl Antique Pool Table 1__... ..... lllt Comm•ndo Alumlnum llmlft Oil IUIMll• fAfO:t9Unl2tBWaoon. 40% Commltalon. Cati Meryb•ll. 9AM·10AM 545-1402 epm to lam 1190· Oek Coffee Table ~ atodc, 150 lbl, lelelcopl<: great condition. Tue PHOTO LAB PRINTER RECEPTIONIST .._ Ore lllllfllf I . 2500 Ml s1s.9!<> Pertec1 rQW9, 1trl,,g1. 175 lb low hre. loaded with 2480 Hwt>or BMS. AM/FM 1tMeo/c H1 .• Ruth 7141 548-292& M-F. IF-5511 $76 7fl0..907t -'11 S-I light, 12 alumlnum Ill· c;un: 'ti fUft)O 182 RO , ""111/111111 OYat -... •1&4 mo w/Nottieu epw. ~ *-06WPM io k , by P\lbllc RNttona Dl9t. ofXkc.8wttai up. M • t c h 1 n g • 87'3-71·18 · · extra bow, prep algh11 avtonlce. oxygen. low COSTA MESA AIC. o •Pd C a ti 8naplflot 1 Hour Ptioeo · 1PM. fut-i>eced agency re-COIOB. Show a pet. couch-lovHHl·chr. $200.8-45-1288 down, take over pal" 14141MMt-141T 708-8073.•tOfSpyro. l•llRMrlldaDr N.& • ~°i:'S:~M 2=:.o519 QUlr• ~·d, enw09tlo t 15041000.fl.46.7M1 l429/b9toff.179-408 t F11/SatJune10th&11th.8 Wanted:BacUwfng men ... Ownef875-737 . HD l&Tm,.IP Prep COC* ~ Ex· Mery Bell tAM· 10AM ::.:" W'!:' =~~ AllT WPllll Matching IOveaMI & 901a. ~~Senna Cour1 ofl Celt-"nga.. liCYt... All J"JI .:Joi Ca/A 846-fell patience necHiary. M-f. ~-g7i-7000. tmoMS.:1456-~~694 ~~8-~~~ 1100 LIDO ~RAGE SALE 7fl0-8342. 23~rn Bike, § IPCi. ···~ '12 2".oz. good condttkil1, Wed-Sun. All(1tf In par-................ c 3 .. . --s ~ ··~·-good oond, '30 20" ...... • 8 K I I . eon OHL Y ~ . i-3 pm. ... Chow Puppy, AK mo. Matching Sofa, L~t. Set. 11-4, un. n, _, Mongooea great c:ond. 1y•11 ••• 11 .. o r ' g . m , 8E9.A8TIAN8 DINNER ........ old, bit!, $350. 650-4137 Tablea, l.aml)I, OIMtte. Antlque1, oll palntlng1, ltrM IJ32 ll30. 731.alS3 -.-.... '3800/080. 183-1311. ~EA=~~":',:·:=.:--;~ ~~~i!-t. ac-o:~Relne-:r=· ~~lrc;-~t11!':'::· =~~8'c:!~:.n•g•· 8EXOTIFOL 25" RCA Peugeot U-100 boyl' 10 .,,,; •• n ·~eozx.i:xc!;!:;~ ' ~ ~ excel-tlve N9wpor1 Center Re-· · • ' · 1211 Color TV. 2 yr wmly tpd, l!lnt eond, 1100 or and · lltklk Aakina ~ COC* needed. Ex· lent drWftl I 9'1lh •¥911-altor't office. Front offtca Avail 8-1 . Call 840-1040 831-0337 llbteU.....1 S 148. Free deltvery. Open beet o"8r 870-2&44 wwr, ,_ er. M ...r. parle nca n•cHHry. --to=~afy. poeltlon requtree good GREATDANEPUPSAKC Muet Mii nowt 9" IOf• iioertlfiedRuelEJ.ReiAll . Sun. R.c wn..ta ddle llUlllLll ~~~=~ . Wed-Sun Af/f1t'I In par· mull be~-Cal ~ voloa, typtng. tr1ndtaa, S300 & up. good cond. green & wfl1 12700, Mfl for 1400. TV John • 646-1783 Ing • .. • .. ............, eon oN·L v 1.s pm. tor ec>P': MG-4030 lhorttiand & eppewano8. 111 Ch. tired. 832 .... 578 pfln1. seo. c.i1 uaa evea 840-8888 • = ·~~'-·~~~ .JO.range .. _ a. ext, _r Int, 2 df SEBA8TIAN8 OINNEA RMI ~·~-= Male Box. Pup. 8 moe-947-774& 5 piece din Mt. Walnut'°' llngton. IMM. 55&-90&4 coast ~ ~ :. ~ epd, THEATRE. 140 A-.. U ~RE =local reeldant FM Fluh~. Fully paper-au.ltty lleltan Deelon Rel· m1Ca/ru11 chra '300 .,. . open , ,._ Alf ::::: amNm It;: Ptco. San~. ~io.n co. Corona d., lnterlew cal Mre. DuN. ed.. , cell Orlld _ ~ ..... ~1on8a1. N~:; Glrta wtlt Fr Proven dbl 110 210 MerccrUIHr. -llJ!!L m:,~::tlD 111:S~'s~ c au. tOOO o bo Prtntlng Mar DANAE CORP • ..,LTrnterlt •--Slti .......,,,,.,..,.,, poe d r ar/m lrro.r . a 75. bank rapo. MM!a ofter. 1fS~ten1camper, 835-124? PIT~ oount• s-ec:· ~ es1-81:io . Reeltorq• ~1110. --~. = 13~.:W~ :..~~ w/~~1;45 :0::. Avery & Co. 175-nllO alpe 8, seoo. &42-4771. fnm RH flit llU e:'.'~ ~ a:::-· = 6.t-::io'::.~ Mlt1~~ut-'ooled tn1\o01~r~c;,~r dbl dt, ri:s. ~ 2~:;'!~~~~=:la K~:::-.:.n2a502!J~ .~ 't:.i=.ninao.::n. 'ff FQ xti R& ;;;( .,.., ~~~STA-mcMtvated, abletogarw-'""'a.et..,. Longhom,lrkenew.$100. Palntlnoe. w oodDlntnci 8 drawer druur eng,M h fll'idet, CB. ooo. 061-1075 Bob .11 FORD 314 ton AIT IS450. Ma'.'e111 mona. laede Comm ~ • 131-3523 Tabla Etc Very low w1rna1e111ng night lltand• po!'t ..., toader ••L IOll . . ..... llD T~ERS INC. ::nua, 0 otant1et un-~...:'"Pi!~AP~!~ p..a. 19•9 p0cea'.150-10.t8 & baby 1tem1. 5151-fl251 tlMrfr, ll i cond. llka •tttr -• A1!J.· f'ltne• bodymf::11111piiijj~..---"!"!"!.-.~ .._.._. ~o Iv-:=. A--. .. ~ ..... "XtO St 8.._... ~ ""~-&47-9617. 1111 Puch, u .. 1 Lux .-·· 791< ~ _... " ™ m = Mora lemlllee are 09f1lno ""m-. · n .. .,,...ng, ._, '"""' ,... llMUtlfUi pet~• 110 QualltY Italian Deelgn Rat·• orage ....... M XLNT Condition 1400· PIP 4e..7..... lnik• Good ooudftlol the camping "'bug" th• port. o•n•ral ledger. ... Variety of cOtOf't 1an hollonal Nllural cond. w/floor1ng & n-II'~ '3~obo 542 2937 . '811 I t'I I tcu MW Allc)lo talOO 111.eaO ~aar 11 you ti eve • jTlle fHIHI drew In lh• llnanolal •tatamenta, eome mlnlelurH and coloffabrtc. I Pce. lncld1 datlon. llOO. 842•9702 FB Ooubl• Ender , · • ~ F~ ~2 u..d -I wtu1ck 7't.es&a camper thll"• not o-tttno waat ... a D1l1y Piiot oan-t1 oMoe ctut-. • eome regulat ea. c.n cottM tabla 1 ottomen. 1 Lift UI 1 _. Monterey type boat. 1112 P200E wt11 Vaae>a. 10 boat Alter 5 daye.. U9ed. Mii 11 now wlUi • Clalaltled Ad. Call Today required. 11100to1 1400 for d•t•ll• Loulu yr old. Coat '3800. Mov· 30 Hellunl &allOOI: <Ml '3too. 7 14-MO-eeeo 1ron1 I a 1 r Ing & ...l..ao1e ' · ~ • ....-.,,,..,~.....,.,..,..,,,,.__,=--~ Cl•alfled Ad. M2-5C178. mo. 752-4112 "7·1870 Ing, Wiii Merffloe tor lme P-*t f aii bacllrHl .• 1000 /080. 71 CvtC XLNT Cond. "'-" TL°C wtroom to i:no.~~= :'...on.-Fatw:'oav. 2~~~~t~a:1~1::: ~75-3343. ·~~n~~0:1.••u~: ~~·am•1•11. Newspapef pl.,. I moa old cocaw Tebl•. etc. Very low br1dea & grad11 l73-4411 PP. L "?' ~~ 645-7571 llH KIDS EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! Spenlel. $60 tortghtf.m-prieea. 850-1048. Btcklwlng, new, only 7141M 7-4?5e Alan 7&:~ · '74FOtdF100 lcyt, Sl!Pd liiiilaan....._ __ _ • • :.::;;.459Bab dvctt RaUtn Couch, com· 1246. Cell AM. 646-0729 31' ~ l1Y1no ~02 '82 Yamaha Towny l(lnt air llhoOlla. emnm, fW'oni m AGES 11·14 EAIM ll' TO S75.00 PER WEIK Wt flO• h,nc I~ oe>cn1ncs lor younc u1t1 br•..,, 10 *"' mdm 101 ll!f Oline• Cool Otlly f>ilol Ovl trrw\ lllll 11 J )0 0 111 incl -oi• v111• 8 30 ~ 111 werld1ys On S11Ui~r "' woi• a lew mou hour\ You Will '*'n 1111oy "~ •llO pr11n •IOl1C •1th u1n1111 rour own motwy 01trr ll no dttlvtr1nt nt rnll,thon 111¥0tftd. H you Mt 111ltrttlfd. pltUt Ull Mr c.,1 • (714) 548·7058 14 50 .. 640-~ '· ~50 M~1,r10 ~ 111Ntllutn1 1211 =.i & ...:;o·.,. e: cond. 1350/b•t ' otr. dlec118001>f1t!.1. .1..~.LOCIO ml, · -· ... .,.. ...... · e 631 23119 ~ 175-6418 • ~0 hveit produoar.rtlttz.r, lampe 110 vp, dining tbl CARPET 3 ROOMS l1H l 53.000/080. 632-212 ' ev11. ' 1'11,..a,......D=-o-d,...;g-1e-=P""'.u"'".-x"'"ln..,.t, be91.tt. young rebblta $6. a2a. 131-1447 Utton pluah (bt!Md on 30 '8e CENTURY AAV!N 12111. EZ ttnna. 1940 IMe-e602. · 8ofe. 10veeaa1 ottoman, IQ yde). Frw mttmeta. ClaMIC b8Y l1uncn1 ... ......,. ... / Nwp1BMS,C.M.8P80at1 =~ All otialr ... '320. Twn bed 714-533-7391 1tcltt, w/traller. '3000 I I Hll ,71 Ford Courter p U li-iftifl-~P-"!""'~~~it!ll MO. 7eo-ot13· Chain UM 000 Aun $250 obo. M\191 ... thla .... ... •n Meda "'°"' llOO/oBO. ehQt) ~.-,.g:~tonmen Twin bed9. wNta & p1r11c 2 Antique 8uc h 87°"1393 1'10 Yem8he 115M)(. lid. 14t-?NO. ' · •no i;g antique~ :ro1. wt mattrenH, CNiaerl..142..029. ·11 21• Ha19tt. 464 ~ d8ft 5)1 try Olf1, •• ""'· Ii Mada PU lont bed s addition 10 ~ small 50 Pf. n.-1400 OAf EDOER ~~ 132•792 : ~~ ~!;, .!.8115· .s. AMmi. AC. 16,oOo ,,.,,,., Mlltlcle ContlOrt-Watarbed:. moa. otd. Mir· He¥9f uead s 125 ml, .... MW. '4SOO. ,,..,. Conneotton. f11 rOf9d headboard. c. ... 2~1ot ·11 ... Aey 1r . full 'i1YitMtiiLCiYi6.11111t 112 4111 Weet 19th a1. Cotta '650 N II ror s 2ao liUCiilC loeded wlttirJ.. IOw hrt. oond t1100. aa1.-...1.-------.1111 ....... .,.., Meta . M on /811 en-'teoo . av/wtcnci °a:':~C:-~ 115,IOO.PP . ..,1~ ~..... Y• tOAM-UM. 6'&41C>tl. 54"°4M ThrH. &ut o iler: ·12 11• eat, 1~ 61a. ·u HONOA 460 Cuatom.1'1w••t50G--e;:;;p;--·.-1 ... ;;;t;•1 .. ..11 • " • ~--tea.7123 V-tiull, •llrtr & utrel. l.ma tNfl t,000 ml, Coa ~ rMio. NM ... ... , aMPJ4 -S?IOO l41-SH7, U400 H C •uoo 1711,M0-1947 110 W h• WOOd o.nopy. .... INSULATION,~ Cot--7•2.1....;,. •~• ....,~. 'lliiiJiitMil,-----~1 , .. ,., • .. •a50 Of mak• Offef'. nfng •• A•1 t, 4 roll, 18" " -· --I• .,,,,,.,.,, •1aa ... DWI-.,~ wldia, eedi roll 70' iong.1"•13..,,.....w,.,..,....,,.,,---,"",,..·-:2""5,-• "=',..-~=y ._ .... --.... ---·10Cl.8'1-M41 887~ ~·°"~,..,_ --· HAMOfllXfllfl wat•rb•d. Kno u • -.•·":zn~~ 1111mm&m APPUANCE SERVICE w/Matf!I. Od ooncf. NO. (;-'llpr1nt MllbOWd, 119 t10. , NI 11r1!t of """-pftoed We ... r800fid., .IWI· 117.at4 dy, 116-eMI 1700. .,.._.. ""1..,._ <*Mal INf1r 1foM -· to. down/I 111pil•1Ce&. NN07T Youttt..,,.;c;miitWi\iie LlMotOWI"-.... "°"' •llae. cuice41 hOOO ~ ............. &trr.:7'"1=--=~=~r'll~ & O•t! lamtnated. t..-y 11" tM. .. ,_.. tieeow • 81 an~ M.O. Cadlllaea 10 Oo-Cem M1-011S o.11 iete. yeotli CiQ t1C5Ya) IU I ON°' .....a1u. •-=•--~lt~f.. ... ~:i--;;t:=.. Til• IH.1•1 draw In lhe '":"'911tp fOf N ie &liii01f~QM: ....;.,.~· . wit1taCINelfledM w .. t. a Dally "101 a1soo. M•·HOf att ,_.,....,.J-L•1nioy1.,'~· MWl1I t--------10 • .., c.1 ~ 142...-71 ~ Ad. ~•r• TflM.. aeoo .• ,w1 " lo\ I ~ C.' I S Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, June 9, 1983 '''"· 1a,..,.. '•'"· ••rrtt4 la ... , lapr9" A•l!t· tarrt.. ,,,.,, laprt.. 1Aatn, laprt.. A•lt1, laprt.. AatN, haHll• '''"' ..... ,.. '''" ...._. J..... flit..... 1141 ....... .... tin .... 11 IHI '~ tlll1Ytllnr~ tlU 1, ..... .,.. tlU CUDIM HM C~entltt HU,... Hit ... J&llllll 'lllladt .aTllU. ii c: e;, IOOIC. I runt ;~Oii• Wgn a Ir. :tr. 'it IJQ.""iTiUi1 ... qUQ. KWINM Ohle 'It, MW '18 Ekio. IUW. alit. 2 font m ........ 'll,..,.MAIM1' wa~OninoeCountf• Sunroof."' oond, ~ 460 SEL 'IO, 11,000 ml flfllelttle. 1tareo. $1500. 1uto, 1tereo , •Int Perr oond, ~paint, l>flk•, ,,.. Int, run• bfn. 25,000 ml, caea, r"'911 2300 4 ll9d dbl Int flneeC ~ of i-s M\'9t MCI 11111 18500 fully loaded, allYer. Tet-4277 Of 838-5e31 $5800/blt. &63-9833 rblt ~~ ofr ~ I rut 12000/obo. mint 19600. PP Wt have 1 ~ -.ctlOn 1 1 oc.10 ml · l tto0' ~ s.-.11. 8eriel 11 ....... 19 uuao oeo. LIL LY" llll Tri N 1171 12000. ise 73-1222 eeo.1«0 7tHM4 °' NEW UMd Chell· e..•2.7221 ·....,.528 Ill }(.lee and XJ$ ooupee ,79 AX7 4 ..,... 75 000 ml 9.9 'IO H ,000 Ml....aa '97 VW bug, ~K ml. rw vw 1979 bMuly SVC* '80 Eldorado, xlnl cond • '~ ve S.. ue nowl • -· • • apeclll ordeNd wNcM. '71 TM . roil bit, IM!Tm. eluldl & redlall, ~. Beatie ConY. Ce.nary with llhr, AM/FM ca.., RR 78 FOid ~Ohle, · 111119llllS '4800. Karen 97µ259 ()llve Green me11111c. ™CARVER $2700. Aon 97&-0141 11..0 ltlOO 497-1875. black top Air eond ~ loeded. 112.000. :~,:.:: ~·MA~~: 2925Hart>orBM:I ctvwo.4-7340-.. _, .. ,.._~500 __ ....,, .~ '7t TRI, roll bar, am/tm. '988AJA8UG·N.wfronl B81aupuCnhkt A~ 91. OBO. 859 -7330 . COSTA MESA ..., " -•• """'' _,_ • .., NJ 1~ L $2700. Ron 875...Q 141 end, wiring, Ur•, wt111 terao. rome ... -. Tll WIUT 7 AM-3PM ·llWlll .......... J 1141 tlh41yn•P.,.•Cllntlomn I oond1110:. An•d~ ... ~~.'.:~"'. ~:'" .:::..!:'.:'' '78 TR 7 Im CUMttl 11800. AIM> ~om vw 23.000 Ol'IQ ml. W• heve low _ ........ --------300 D MBZ 1978, Mu.I • 1 8..,. • tow bar track• per1eet1y Ill racalpt1 10 thOw Gllf•. IELIOTill '79 FairmOl'lt, "-· -1111 ...... -· ... I ... 110 .. -.. ,,.._ Cllll Of oome end -~An .,.. ciMn cond. 2 <N. Call ..... c-~"""" UH 17,500. Firm 99t-o6M p/1, p/b, air, MW bltt. -• • -1111 ,. up. •""""• look. PrlYlla Party. ...._ 97µ8"3, """"· -......,.....,.... -· of let1 model, low mlleaQe t1re1. brlke1. $3650 All modela .... ~ .. moet oolOtt 875-t459 7144$7-t067 AM '78 TR7 low mll••g• '89 automatic, blue. ldrlt • " ns Cedlllec. In Southern c~ HU 873-7355 lnowln ltodcl ._or lt()C) by '81MBZ1""'"'L, _.... ~· •••• lffD ' d 8 b k "~11~1a1 .,_ "t t""'--' --P7"f~~'l""!'ll"'!!~~~·1=~--.,--.,.,:-=~-::"."~ """' ,......,, _. 12200 ra11onable con · ~uara •e · '88 PflOO ~l5000r-. ..,. _,, -.. ..,....7, "' al,_ """' ,7.,. G ___ ... _ •• ooo _........, I 2 ........... ..,.,., • • run• • . . •"eoo ....... ...... . ...... • .. -.. """'' .. , __ -· "-· 11111 mtm 7~_.. _.,., · Unique 1 of a kind, 1982 new, 12696. 752·7952. H().9433. -..,... ....., 1 0 r • 1 1 0 n • n u ""'"'" ... u.. good home only. p/1, p/b, lie, 4 dr, good 2926HatborBM:I. 390 SE Merced... ~2e01 Aly MeK• .77 TR7• 6 19• a1r. red ·ee vw Auto •tick. Flew· ~rC:~ot~~~:~c . O&llLUO 11200. 5M-IOOO LY• oond. $3.400. 0o4e-3o420. C08TAME8A '87 ~ 2608, MW loaded. •37,600/ofr. f ilit wltan Int lhatp $3400 lw oond. lo ml. 11875. . . 2800Harbor81vd ~ '81 E.tcort OL 4 dr 111-2111 factory lhort blk, 14600. 77+9910 dye, 562-3677 !J!tl 496-429l ev/wk~ • 93 t·2991 '70 VolYO 144, rune good, C08TA MESA . Eltate Sile, muet NII.,_ air aulo lll~J«OO: Jutt 2 mlnut• IOUth o1the PP 845-9233 1Mf oyola SR5 Pick Up •80 TR7 venlble Lo '71 SOBK. GOOD • 1500. need• tran1 WQF11. $300 140 1110 83 Chryslel' Cordon di•. 5~9833 ' San 01eQO Frwt. '78 3000, ICJnt cond Extra •I 1141 with en.II. 5 apeed, FM Mlleege ~ 1 1 Good '73 412 WON 12400, N 11. 951-0719 " Price negol. A real tteal. -------- '97 4.2 R<Nldtter, 6e.OOO ~,i:;k. s 1 uoo. •u uig;;: &lg, 6' wired ~'Tr'·· :terao,o~Ult c 0 n d . I n5." 9 5 0000 COND. 846-2323 '73 144 Volvo. 1 owner. IO t• tltt HU 112,000 000. 548-1207; ~1111 ml, 1 ownet. lmmec, · lettera • ....., ~. 1terao. et2 7 07 ••t •r · 21~·244t ·11 &per Beetle nu eng & ml, n1w1eat Oflg. cond, m 846-5219 -· Spec. 94'h Muetang, orig. $19,500. 044-1~ dye, '78 450 SE. c:tean, muel xlnt '2400. 875-t277 • 1 ltarter radlalli em/fm auto. I Ir. Nev Ir 70 ChelleMe COflver1. Ndt ~· l7 own«, TLC Must .-. 720-1909 -/111kndl. ..n. 117,000. '70 Corona, automatic, Yelbwyta 1173 cw i 1960 875-e3o5 acratched, nicked 01 eng/body work. A reel 13450/obo. l>57-Ge70 54&-«52 ·m ti SS good cond. $800/080. '74 &per Beetle good • . dented, garage kept. You OIMic m5. "3-724e Dodge Mpen 4-dr, lo Llactla HU •--..1-tl•l Call 548-3331 • '11 HI .-eeH. may find one for i... but • ,,..__ 1 ml, need Cllh. worth ----------"'-1'82 2400, white. vary ~.bGClt.#U9iln-• · cond In & out. 54a-eoee ,,....,&.2•7218 you'll~flndonenlcer 71 .,.. .. 1ro, rN nlea. 13800, wltl take $28e0 1U Mark IV, sunroof. '79 RX7 GS 5 lpd llr clMn, iunrool, •tick tecllon, an/rt, air, am/fm 74 Cofone, Good Cond .. $2500/0BO. Owner Del-It $2750/obO. 970-0~ Mu al 1111 $3200 . nowt Dan 999-7085. wtlll•. ,_ tran1 & etc. • ' • Mutt Mii thll WMkendl •t•r•o CHI s 18K Lo MllM, Xtr ... $2000. peret•. Evt1/Wknd• •1• 1----... _ ·--' 644-a50!5 NIOI Cll $2,600. Call =·.$~fmei!':g~op $17,500.Call780.e285. Franch bon bon: 842-6572832-5890otc 552-1520 ~utihii°:nd.~h=h· 75 245 wegon, auto, air, '75ChevyMonu,rblleng, Fer• 545-9808. · · 835-1247 ·77 Cellca. n1W1e11 orig. '74 B•l• B~. llc'd for out. $5,500 0 9 0 i~~~o83~-~~~ cond. Jt500. &52-9738. 1911 FOl'd Pinto. 11,oool••""'er-c-~------.rr.=5 'II Ill IOOSI PtncLt 157 tan body, never nicked or atreet, full c11wua. run1 875-9306 · •75 Chevy ,_ tlr" new orlglnal mllee. EJcoellent Anthracite, leatfltr, • dented, 5 1pd, runt, Kint. $2600. 636-1924 •72 Super Beetle, am/fm '80 244DL 4-1pd, Air, pelnt. Perfect lnitHt, condition. Red, 4 lpd. 1977 apf1 2.3 Iller. 4 ~:::: polllhedwtleeta, 1900ml. 1e5 §56 q>e, good cond. auper, $3150 /obo. 179 BUS, wtilta on red, cue. grMI ltlape, 00 AM/FM CHI, lmmae. runt good $1500 $800/bat ofr. c ell 1peed, rune gre1t: I :::1~1~w . $36,000. Mult..U.857-t933 970-0548 am/tm cw Mk:hellna 11,.2500obo640-7843 17750. Aft 8Pm, M·F, 963-5408 9e0-'40a4--.lngaooty 29m~. 6-t1pm '68 912, AM·FM, llloy9, rbl '77 Cellca GT, lft Bk, blk. clean. 13200'. 980-<4024 • :;1.!ir: S a 1/ S un •78 MONTE CARLO '82 Flleon Future, ,_ Tom. 2· Sllwr Alk about lhe money -eng. Nda body worll. Ltd Ed. Xtru. Xlnt cond.,.77 Rabbit, aunrool. ((lj) · NMda WOl'll Make otter Mlc:helln tlree, runt good. '7 3 Co u g • r X R 7 cain llYe you thru our $3800. 875-~. $3950. 945-8291 atereo, S2300. 044-7093 ~ S3t~8 ne•d• body w ork 12250/0BO Clean JM,1rchU1 & ..... plane. 71 Poractle Clllllc 91 lE, '80 SR5 IOogbed plctlup, att 5PM. ·~ • ~ Iliac. t177 '78 Vega OT Htchbk. $500/ofr. 975-0241 ~-642 : 'Y' old eng .111 llflllll TARGA, 83 reblt eng, elat cond, air, 1mlm · •78 Duller 2 dr gorQeOU• com; In 1 -m;t euper clean, Orig owner, '83 F"con R1nchero, ---:-:::,..,....,.:-:-::=:--- Ul us rJ 11 ... TS blue/bltcil lull extr11. etareo, buctt•t ...... lo wtilt• body 4 lpd, air e..cn•a llneat eelectloo new radlala, AM/FM good cond, runt good. '74 CAPRI '01 TOUI • • ' 1301 Quall Street Compl llrY record. ml, llkl rMr wind. $5500 nawteaa lnt,'grMt 00 gN: of prtYloualy owned CUI, $l400. 67~939 $1300/080. 548-9215 or Xlnt cond, mutt Hll. llll'TM4lD4. '"' NEWPORT BEACH $11,000. PP. 761-&115e obo. 84~582, 957-2877 runi fantutlc, ,,_ tlree. PorechH, Audia and 845-3340. SIOO/ofr. 545-9991 1fW IT & IJJ-tJOO hme, 5-47-5128 ext 257, Peter Olbton. $2575/obo. 970-0~ Volktwtgena. '78 Camero. xlnt, t lr, ,89 Mull•"". n.... ownr, ou:=Lut •. 3-c;u.a., Try mel $3995 PP -.,. ~'Iii -RI 61 ""' -.. "' ,. MB 450 Sel '80, 18 ml. A· 1 '72 91 n . 95K ml, compl. '81 Cellca GTA, collec10B '78 Rabbitt lllflO IO<)t(e •u ... -.... (714) 775-1783 lllnyt top, paint & Body In '73 &a. com;;;tJ6', 5~R fACIUfYI cond. Sl!Yer. ong ownr. orig. S 10,800. D~• edition. ehow-room & runt • .. 11 12800 --gem cond, 3 IPO. FM mlae regular gaa many 1111 111/J n u1111uuu1111 Mu.1 tell qulclc. S27K 788-2311; eve 87~ cond .. Mua1 NII. $8750 791-4277 or e3a.sset . SOUTH 'll ..... Oartt •5t5ar2~t.""2V!_ eng.21281••50. ~ .. ~.20Fun c.v. M300. OBO. 857-1557 AM •73 914 Porache good 552-4524, Eyea I wkndt, 55 E Coa Eltcellent cond. T-topa, -• -~ ..., .,.._...., cond, $4000, M4-~897 833-98e 1 days.. I '79 Scirocco, black w/grf/'f cou1n 4. . II Hwy. wire wt'IMI•. am/tm 8 '7 c Sq f ••re"".... tl45 lltrCfftl .... 9145 •ft 5PM/wlcndl. '81 CELICA GT CPE 1· Y414our Int, 5 apd, lie, al· YIUIWllEI ~~ track, •Ir cond. $4200. 81 p~ r.:;~n· an;~· '8t CuUIH Supreme '°YI orig OWnet $4200 Call 979.900 elll 105, • • · Brougham, 4dr. V8. ·73 914 PorllCh, Yellow, Flully loaded, IO ml, Uklng 640.:0003. . , .,_ WIU llT 830-0563 aft. 6 PM. $700. 875-8305 pvt pat1y velour, llr, crulM. etc. good cond. 11ereo 7500· 857...,.975 --,u; 1-•c• f'IA7 '72 Muat•nn II, euto, blk $6300/blt. 553-"3S $4200 983 5495 • • Cel G , • 79 VW Bug cony. 11-•lllJ" ., -'80 Caprice ClaNlc 4dr, -.. · • · 81 k;a T c:pe 5-tpO, wht/wht 40 000 ml •-171 Li!L Century, 2 dr, 306 ~· atereo, wlnt on blk, nu brak•. •Int '82 Cuti-Q,_ • dr, . utr11. grMI mltaage, -'-• • ' Volumes ..... Servlcl v ...,.....,. "' cond $3000 536-2442 ....,...,_,_ 78 911SC. tnrl cpe. ... low 39K I. S59ee ~hup. IC1300 ObO. And Leulng lllYef on red, tlr, •tareo. $5500. 9 5-1277 . . dl'lt blue. 18,500 ml GM .~tlooal. 118,950/0BO. 84~121. m • · 4~2t5, 84&-0110 18711 BMchBlvd. runt grMt, aplffy. $3900 ,81 Malibu worth 14800 '72 Mu1tang,PS,PB,arto. exec cat. Arn/fm atereo, '13 IEllCEDES 3DOSD Chanpagne with dark bro wn leather, sunroof, Becker Grand Prix radio. $35,700 or offer. Call Virginia Fredericks at o83y2s-075_!7 -0842. ev11 •80 Rabbitt de6MI, 4 tpd, Hunt)f4on 8Mch ~~ 1 s.. 2 •7. to appreclll• ...... 11 t-"• .:..50 11 _...., ... thl•' mega, 351 eng. 74,000 crulM control, pl'\oc:U & "' ,.2:: ...,.,.. .. ... -....., ..,.., ml 11850/bat ofr. wlndl. 1111 wl'IMI. apltt · • I llr. atereo.mlnl. $3150. (114) 2-2000 weak.LQ mllH . Dan 844-4798 IHI, padded root '78 9t1SC TARGA 2500 Ml, $13,9 . Perfect. 831-301CI '78 Riviera, Sliver, 43,000 999-7085. $7700 990-3M5 Niee. $14,500. 546--4452 673-7118 82 Rabbit convert, '72 Super Beetle, am/tm M ILES. S 3 8 O O '76 Pinto, Clean In/out, · '78 p---.. -SC T•"'I, .. 2 Q,---'/blk .... _ ... __. •<> 000 caaa, greet lhape, ,_ 71~94-4133 '81 Z28 Camaro, 1111 wheel. n-paint. rune ...ii. Pip;.. Hit .,._,. _,, 'o .... .,.a, 1111Um41 leale, r.., ' ._.._., ••· I •2300 ••h7D•3 ..,..._, b lk 4 •"" pit •1200 h ,..,., 1771 1\1 "'"'.,._ ______ _ etereo. P-7'1, WJ!fy nice. 13 t5 par month. OBO. 548-4213 tr•.• ·.....,. ,_ •79 REGAL, 43,000 ml, ... ~-~ r "· .,...., · m•..,., • P .,....,.. '8 hemp cuttom. • o "'80 "537 Mop, am/Im CUMtte, ..., .18,50 . • ... • black/black. 1por11 82 VWJetta dleael 4 dr 5 '73 Bug Reblt Engine. Oflg. owner, good cond, 32,000mllet.2 ye11war-i---,---.,-----loeded. air, r.w tlr•. ICl-4100 "2-3232 padcage, tut, Ill optlonl. lpd air ..;nrl cNlM ai,. Under warty, XLNT 1uto, $4300, 431-7507 ranlte. 19500/0BO. '78 Grenada Ghia, auto, 13995, 642·1234 BLACK TURBO re911CI, ~!:~<;,~· 720-094 1, 1ay1', rnetalltc P.,nt. K~ _Jn/out. 12700. 55~1334 '79 Regel LTD, Ill power, 983-3748. lully •Quipped, good p tbc I ( .... -frt. laM-1) '70 911. nu motor/lrent. ............,..., AM/FM 81-.c> ca., 27M '74 Super BMtle. Mint Cf\lfM, llr, etarao, lo ml, cond. S 1895. 548-2123 .._.---~~~~~.;,,;,- 011 p tr ate $9850. Sell things rut with Delly ml, Mk• MW, a.350. PP. cond. Rune perfect. Lo orig. ownr, lmmac. '78 Pinto Runabout.,..., '12 llllll 845-"28. Piiot Want Adi 873-1322 ml, Sac 12375. 831-2991 158QO/OBO. 495-6313 $900. Cell &48-ee19 ATLAS CHRYSLH·PL YMOUTH • 2929 HarbOr Blvd Cosla Mesa Tel 546· 1934 3 blocks sou111 ol San Diego Freeway oll Har1>01 Blv<l Complete oody snop Sales Service Pans Service Dept open Monday thru Friday 7 30 AM to S 30 PM and 8 A M to 5 P M on Salurday ORANGE COAST AMC/JEEP/RENAULT 2524 Harbor Blvd Cos1a Mesa 549·8023 645-7770 = I Jeep Dealef in the West' See us today lor sales service & ie.ising Tnere are reasons wily we are a I Price and :seiectt001 Also 11141 all·new Renault Alliance 1s here• THIODOIE IOllNS FORD Modern sales. service, pacts, body, paint & lire depts Compelthve 1a1es on lease & dally renials 2060 Harbor Blvd . Cos la Mesa 64 1·0010 or 540·82 I t flANK'S fOHIGN CAii Orange County'• ONLY Independent apecl1llzlng In the s.tMe. s.vtoe & lMiefng of fine pre-owned Mer<*tea Benz 11111oe. "There 11 en Intelligent alternaUYe to high du* prklel." 900 S. CoMt ~et~·~ t..gun1 BMch DAVID J. 'HllLIPS BUICK-PONTIAC• MAZDA Sales • Servi<• • le811ng 24888 Alicia Parkway LAgun1 Hiiia 837-2<100 G 1ount couHn VOLKSWAGIN/11uzu ('Fonneny Jim Marino VOlkaw-oenl 117 t t 9eactl Blvd . Huntlf\glon 8Mc:h. (7 t4} 842·2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE WE WILL NOT BE UNDEASOLDltl 5 y.., FlNnclng 0 A.C. & Fleet Olaoountt "IE ~" ~ c,~ ....... •• ~ "' II) sw ~\, , .... ~ MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE WITH THE NU.MIERS IN THE BOXES C) LONG HACH BMW Large select1on ol new & quallly used BMW s and otner fine cars• Sales service & leasing Trade-ins welcome• Telle 405 Freeway to North Cherry oft.ramp iurn 119hl & go 6 blocks north lo 3670 N Cnerry Ave Long Beach (7 14) 535.5f90 (2 t31 427 5494 • NAlllS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd . Cosia Mesa Tel 540-9100 Orange County's Largest Cadlllac dealer Sales Service Leasing fD SOUTH COAST DODOI "Your Frlendly Nelghbortlood Dodge OMlerehlp" 2888 Herbor Blvd., Coat• M... 540-0330 Siles, Leulng & A Full Service Oep1rtment lnciudfng Body And Palnl Shop W• IP9cilllre In euatom Yin conw11"1lona In ell price r10Qe9 AND WE PAY CASH FOR USED CARS TOOi CHICK IVHSON 'OISCHl-AUDl·VW 4 IS E Coast Hwy . Newport Beach. 673·0900 The only dealership In Orange County with these three greal makn undflf one root! • ALAN MAGNON PONTIAC..SUIAIU 2480 Hlfbor Blvd . Co111 Mete Tel 549·4300 Sales, Service. Leasing "Mr Goodwrench " CLASSIC AUTOMOllLH 76S Newton Way. Coate Meu Tel 83 1· 1393 "JAGUARS OUR SPECIAL TY XK 120'1/ 140't / 150'a/XJ't /E· Type1 Sales -Service -Res1or1tlona 011 P11cent11 betw .. n 17th I 18th In Co1t1 Mau • 101 LONGPH PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd WeS1m1nste• Tel 892·6651 Orange County ' oldesl and largeSt Ponhac dealership Sales. Service Parts • DICK MILUR FIAT/LANCIA · Probably the lowest priced Fiats In Soulhern Ca11101ma· (Located 1 mfle n()(th of South Coast Plaza near Main St and w arner Ave 1n Santa Anal 120 W Warner. Santa Ana 557·2132 • SANT A ANA DATSUN 2001 E 17th Street Santa Ana Tei 558 ·78 I 1 Your OrtQinal Dedicated Datsun oea1er MtlACll MAZDA . We've moved• Our new location It 1425 Baker Street, Coat a Mesa Tel 545·3334 Slop by & visit our modern showroom and see why we're the • I Mazda dealer In Southern Colllornla Sales. Servk:e. Pa1te end Leasing 0 COIMlll DeltLLO CHIVIOLIT (Formerly Groth ChevrOl•t) 18211 Beach Blvd .. Huntington BHch New • Ueed • s1111 • L••••no • Paris • Service Come by and lff our Hug• Inventory! 147-to87 549.333 1 • llACH LINCOLN MHCUIY "W1',. new and MOW for yOUr bvlln..a:· Complete ••In. HtYIC• end body •hop lacflltlH. On• of th• ltrgeat ln~tor... In Southefn Calll0<nl1 of new l.lncolna and Metcurye. Locued 3 block• aouth of th• Sen Diego F't9eWay on ~ 8lvd. In HUf\tlnQton IMctl. .t. 16800 8Mcll 8'\t'd M•773t or aM-1008 HOLMIS Tunu DATSUN 2845 Harbor Blvd .. Coale M .... Tel. 540-6410. Thie Dataun locallon hu bMr1 MNlng Orange County for 18 yeeB. 1 Mlle So 405 Freeway. Stop by a Ylalt UI lodly ,_ owner.hip pledget 10 !>Mt all competition SUNSET FORD, INC. tHome ol Wiiiie lhe Whalel 5440 Garderi Grove Blvd Westm1ns1er Tel 636-40 10 OIANGI COUNTY VOLVO 10 120 Garden Grove Blvd • Oardefl Grove Tel 530-9 190 Exclusively Volvo lo cov« all your Volvo requirements New•Used•Sa1es•Le111ng•Part1•Serv1<eo9ody Shop Freeway close In lhe hearl of Orange County at Gar<Mo Grove Blvd & Brookhursl CONNILL CHIVIOLIT 2826 Herbor Blvd., Cotta M .... oww 23 )'ellrl MrVlng Orange County Sales, laatlng, aervlce Call 546· 1200. speclal parls llne, 546-9400; body ahop line, 754..()400 0 . IOY CARVH IOLU IOYCl..aMW 1540 Jambor" Rotd. Newpor1 Beach f>.40·6444 Sales. Se1111ce, P1rt1 And Leasing SHOW IVllYONI WHlll YOU AH ••• on our Or-. eo.t Cer Outde Mllpl ~ you ""' yow ,.utomotiv. ~ (no new car d .. 11....ipa piMM) In tM Delly Pltot, you r•ech th• ptlme Coaatal Mancet from Huntington IMcf\ to San ctemente. Cell tot ~ rat• and ~ Information -Mic fOf 8enclra LAe, ext. SU. Nft Cer DeeltflNpa ... cell ~ outllcM .... ,.._ FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED l ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT ~~e. - 1 • I I ' I' I ~' .. Fra nk 'Jake' Abbott Ex-Dodger didn't dodge soon enough Frank "Jake'' Abbott has a black eye and a red face. He got 'em both when he was pla ytng center field for the faculty team in the annual end-of-8Chool 90ftball game with st udents of Wintersburg High School. Abbott. superintendent of the Huntington Beach High School District, was highly recruited. After all, he played for the Brooklyn Dodger organization in the early 19508. His colleaguee at spring training included Sandy Koufax, Don Dry3dale and Roy Campanella. Only Abbott, 51, was a pitcher, not a center fielder, a position he was asked to play on the faculty team. The seoond batter lifted a high Cly to center. Abbott called for It and ran under it -looking good ao far. But then the ball became lodged in the middle of the lena of his bifoc.als -aomethlng he didn't have to wear 30 years aao. Abbott was taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital for repairs. But the major injury seemed to be to his pride. "I've got a shiner you wouldn't believe," he said . "And it's embar- rassing, too. Nobody will believe I ever played baseball." THE ORANGE COAST :.. fi' -'1 -I -- America's median age Is now 30. Where were most people born? See Page 85. Strip teaae? Garfleld of the comics waves to traffic where "his" avenue crosses Golden West Street In Huntington COAST f DITION THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Passengers toast as American takes off By STEVE MARBLE on.. Dlillr ..... ·-"I think they ought to buzz Newport Beach on· the way out," suggested Fountain Valley resi- d ent Robert Rexanne as he walked his mother to the Ameri- can Airlines passenger gate. Others cheered and raised their oomplimentary glasses of ch,am- pegne as the ~-Super 80 jet pulled alongside the ternunal at John Wayne Airport and fueled for its flight to Dallas-Fort Worth. "A ll that worrying for nothlnR," commented passenger Slaying laid to ,drugs Drugs allegedly lured a Full- erton man and his estranged wife I to a Balboa Island apartment late Tuellday, where a violent argu- ment ended with the man's death from a single gunshot to the head, police said today. Gary Timothy Bell, 32. an out--0f-work laborer, was dis- covered slumped in the doorway of an apartment at 119 'h Agate St .. less than a block from the Balboa Island Ferry. Sharon Lynn Bell, 27, the estranged wife, and Cory Charles Claeys, 33, the apartment resi- dent. w ere arrested in connection with the shooting and remain in custody today. They have not been charged. Meanwhile. Newport Beach police resumed a search early today in the murky waters off Balboa bland, wt¥!re police be- lleve the gun was tossed. Police detectives said they be- lieve the Bells allegedly went to the Agate Street ad~ shortly before midnight either to rob the resident or take drugs from the property. Detectives believe it was Gary Bell who was armed with the gun. A struggle resulted and Bell w as shot once in the head, police Mid Authorities said it is unclear whether the gun went off acciden- tally. Neighbon who heard the single gunshot reported seeing a lone fem8le running from the apart- ment. P olice, called by neighbors, quickly sealed off the island. -INDEX-- ' C6 8 2 A5 C4-5 C9-12 C6 Cll C8 AlO 87-8 Hor- ClO B2 AlO 87-8 A3 86, C7-8 C1·3 a B8 87-8 A2 A3 Ken Geeslin, a businessman from Fort Worth who was preparing to go home. After weeks of courtroom fight- ing with Orange County govern- ment and a surprise 11 th-hour victory for the airline Wednesday, American employees were in a festive mood this morning as they checked off passengers for the first of four daily flights. Attendants ha n ded long-stemmed red ro&es to female passengers and yellow roses to the men. A garland of roses, which Mesan held in slaying keeps IDUID By JODI CADENHEAD °""-.,.., ..... ...,. A Costa Mesa man who con- feued to holding up a liquor store is still considered a suspect - albeit a weak one -in the grisly slaying of a Chino Hilla family. Funeral &ervices for the family were held today in Orange at St. Paul's ~utheran Church. San Bern a rdino County S heriff's Capt. P hilip Schuyler said Milton "Bill" Bulau, 33, has refuaed to talk to detectives since hia arrest Tueeday when he walked into the c.o.ta Mesa police department and said he was responsible for robbing a liquor (See SLAYING, Pa•e A%) George Yardley, the f in t NBA player to acore more than 2,000 pointt in a 1ingle .euon, talkl about life after ba1ketball. Pa"e 8 I . r passengers had to walk under, was placed next to the jet. American Airlines, which of- fers three daily flights to Dallas and one to Chicago with a stop in Long Beach , had won the battle for Orange County. ··w e did it," shouted one airline worker as the blue-and-red jet lifted off at 7:58 a .m. and roared toward Newport Beach, disap- pearing into the morning hue. o.9r ............ -I( ..... Until late Wednesday, it ap- peared the airline was not going to (See AMERICAN, Paae A%) First passengers boa rd American Airlines' inaugural flight from John Wayne Airport. o.9r __ ..,~ .... Priest and police e~ort Mary Howell, mother and grandmother of victims, at the Ryen family funeral this morning in Orange whe re teacher Irene Gonzales hande d out flowers to students. Friday night paeb a double do.e of football when alumni teams from Fountain Valley Hilh and Edi&0n High aquare off at We1tmin1ter, while Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar alum1 tangle at Newport Harbor High. Page Cl . News .tips pay dividends Know about a good atory? Call ue with the detalle. The Dally Piiot wtll pay cuh award• for the thrM beetnewatlpteachWMk.JuatcaJl842-4321, Ext. 228on WMkdap. or842·5eleevenlnpand weekendaaMlyou Could win the week'• top pra of$15. 6 CM plaza project hits city snag BY JODI CADENHEAD Clf ... Dliltr ........ Plans to build a manunoth high-rise commercial center and two department stores near South Coast Plaza mall have been re- jected by Costa Mesa city staff, w hich recommended& denial by the Planning Commission Tues- day. The Amel Development Co. has proposed building 409 con- dominiums, a million square feet of commercial office space and a 17-story hotel on 51 acres bounded by the San Diego Freeway. Bear Laguna backs legislation helping gays By llA.REN E. KLEIN ~.,.., ......... The Laguna Beach City Coun- cil's long history of support for the homoeel'ual community was dem- onstrated again this week with a unanimous vote to endorse two bills benefitti.ng gays. The council agreed Tuesday night to send letters of support to legialatorson behall of both issues. One letter recommends more fed- eral funding for battling a disease which primarily attacks gays, while the other urges the passage of Aaeembly Bill l , which would prohibit job diacriminatlon on the basis of .exual orientation. Mayor Robert Gentry, who described himaelf as "a gentleman (See GA vs BACltED Pase A%) Some friend• off onner Pneldent Richard Nix.on want to 0 elartly" the reeord ahoat lu. put heeaue they thhak Watersate 0Yer- aluldow1 the pa,hlie memory on hlt 40 yean of pub lie M?"lee. Pap A 7. .(i--. ... Street and San Leandro Lane. J .C. Segerstrom & Sons, de- velopers of the highly suocemful mall, have proposed building two department stores and a two-story mini-mall on 18 acres located across from South Coast Plaza on Bear Street. Senior city planner Mike Rob- inson said the staff believes the intensity of both projects does not fit in with the ne arby single-family residential homes. Instead , planners have rec- ommen ded the land remain zoned for housing development only. A recently released traffic study shows that both projects will generate 50,000 cars a day. with substantial traffic predicted on Paularino Avenue between Bear Street and Bristol Street. (A study is now under way to cul-de-sac that area). A survey of 220 residents living near the proposed projects found that 94 percent were opposed to commercial and high -density de- velopment there, s&d Jon Parai.s, president of the North C.OSta Mesa Homeowners Association . Meanwhile, backers of the propoeed 98-acre Segerstrom Home Ranch, also scheduled for review at Tuesday's 6:30 p.m. meeting. have requested a delay until October in order to re- consider a city request to provide housing in the project. Segerstr om s po k esm a n Malcolm Ross said company of- ficials are now looking at plans to build off-site housing in Costa Mesa or high-rise residential unit- aon the property along the San Diego Freeway between Harbor .Boulevard and Fairview Road. Exten1ive repairs att tched- uled \o begin on the 1torm-banered Huntington Beach city pier in several weekt. Pa•e A6. L . ' A2 • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 9, 1963 At graduation, Valley famlly stays together BY PHIL SNEIDERMAN °'"'-.,.., ....... The Grams hc>U8ehold in Fountain Valley nught be dubbed GraduaUon Central this month. Karl R. Gram., 18, will get hia high achool diploma next week at Westminster High School. His sister, Karen, 21, will receive her bachelor of science degree Saturday at UC Irvine, where she majored in information and computer ICience. And on Friday, their mom, Marie Grams, will pick up her asaociate in arts degree at Orange C.OUt College i.n Costa Mesa. The family members say it was just a coincidence that all three cap-and-gown evenL'l will occur ju.st days apart. The youngsters say they are particularly proud of their mother. who works as an administrative secretary at OCC. For the past five years, Marie Grams has taken courses during lunch hours, evenings and summers to quality for a degree. She now plans to continue working through the University of Redlands Extension to obtain her master's degree i.n business adminiatration. "I thought it was a good idea," says Karen. "I encouraged her. I knew it would take a lot of patience to stick with it." .,.., "91,.__., ......... It ..... Awaiting their respective graduation exercises are three members o ( the Grams family-daughter Karen, mother Marie and son Karl. country. He al.a was vice president of the German Club and a member of the California Scholarship Foundation. He was part of Westminster High's six-person academic decathlon team. SLAYING ••• (From Page A 1) atore Monday rught. Bu.lau was staying at a Costa Mesa motel on Harbor Boulevard, where a witness said he saw a station wason matching the de- ecription of a car taken from the murder victims' secluded home. Bulau, who was booked for lnvestigtion of armed robbery and residential burglary, has not been linked to the alayings at the F. Douglas Ryen family. Authorities believe the alayingJ occurred last Saturday night. "A lot of the thl.ngs he's done have caused suspicion, like the fact that he turned hhnaelf i.n," said Schuyler. "He doesn't look as much as a suspect as he did before. But until we can prove he didn't have anything to do with it, he is a suspect." Up until about two weeks ago, Bulau was staying with a Costa Mesa family on 19th Street, living out of a trailer parked i.n a driveway. Gail Carmichael defended the man, known to his friends as Bill. "He's a lot of thi.ngll, but he's not a murderer.'' said Carmichael, whoee family housed Bulau. "He walked i.n and confessed (to the liquor sto\.e holdup) because he thinks he should be punished." Still, her mother says she was a bit apprehensive about college study because she hadn't attended classes san<:e graduating from high !1Chool in 1953. "M y husband graduated from USC with an MBA dftgree," Marie Grams says. "The children were always interested i.n education, and since I was working at OCC, they encouraged me to study there. "I got a lot of help at home. The kids taught me how to take notes and how to wnte term papers. My husband was ve ry supportive, too." Karl also is one of just 225 students nationwide who have been aoc.-epted at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn. He's now prepariiig for "swab summer" (boot camp) and plans to major in electrical engineering. His sister Karen will be working full-time this summer i.n quality assurance for Burroughs Corp. Next fall she'll return to UC Irvine to study toward her master's degree, while continuing to work part-time for Burroughs. Costa Mesa police Lt. Jack Calnon said Bulau also has ad- IJUtted stealing a motorcycle three weeks ago and a rifle Monday morning, but has refused to answer questions about the Chino Investigation. °"" ,...,._..,.......,....., American Airlines plane joins AirCal on the apron of J o hn Wayne Airport this morning as a third aircraft takes on. Her son says homework chores have been "a mutual trade-<>ff." Karl says his mother has typed some of his papers, and he, in turn, has helped her with her studies. Because of the busy schedule of classes, jobs and sporting events, Karl says the Gram house "is sort of like a bus terminal. We're constantly in and out, leaving notes for each other." His mother agrees that a lot of Ct'fative scheduling has been required. But Marie Grams believes the graduation day rewards will be worth it. She's particularly proud of her OCC diploma becauae no other member of her own tunilY had Bulau, who was paroled from the California Institution for Men in Chi.no in 1972 after serving one year on a forgery conviction, told detectives he was hitchhiking on a highway near Chino Friday, said Calnon. On again, off again American up again "I helped her a little with computer acience, but she picked it up pretty quickly," adds Karen. If the children a.re proud of their moth.er's achievement, Marie Grams is no less thrilled with what her' son and daughter have accomplished. At Westminster High, .KJtrl competed i.n three varsity SJX>rts ~ basket6all, badminton and cross attended college. ; "My mother back i.n Chicago is really excited about this." she says. "She' can't wait to see a picture of me In a cap and gown." GAYS BACKED IN LAGUNA ... In a phone interview, John By JEFF ADLER Sul.au, 32, said his brother left his on....,..,,...•- home i.n Grand Junction, Colo., Wed esd to h'tchhik back to SeellUngly &Sainst all odds, n ay 1 e American's on-again, off-again Costa Mesa. He called Saturday morning and said he was staying plans to fly four llightsa day from at a friend's house i.n Costa Mesa John Wayne were put back on after getting a ride from a woman track Wednesday afternoon when headed for San Diego, said John. a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S . Circuit Court of Appeals suddenly "l can't imagine him doing reversed its earlier ruling and something like that," said John, reinstated a lower court order when told his brother was a permitting the airline to launch its suspect in the slayings. "But he inaugural flight this morning. has a habit o( being i.n the wrong 'I' h Th (From Page A1 ) la h tim .. ' m not very appy. e p ce at t e wrong . e. unusual seems to be the routine of the gay community" at the been 16 cases of AIDS reported m money and we need it fast. Tlus when it comes to the Orange l-Ouncilmeeung,saidhe hadcalled Orange County, with another 15 crisis is as dangerous or more AMERICAN County airport," Supervisor several lawmakers' offices this to 20 cases which may be AlDS dangerous than the (bubonic) • • • Thomas Riley said shortly after week to urge passage of bills related.) plague." learrung of the court's latest mtroduced m the House of Rep-Minkin proposed that thecoun-(From Page A 1) ruling. "The court is jamming, resentatives. The bills authon ze cil draft a letter supporting the Assembly Bill 1• which the get off ihe ground in Orange jamming, Jamming American Air- more funds for research into AIDS bills' passage. council also agreed to supJX>rt, County and tentative plans were lines down our throat." (Acquired lmmune Deficiency D W ld 'd Lag would "end the stigma and the be' ·d red b th 350 The appeals panel ........... caJne . d an oo en ge, a una oppression" which homo8exuals mg COl\SI e to us e • ........ -& S yndrome). a mystenous isease resident who attended the council have to endure, said Woolderidge. pa.wencers booked on the four after the airline's attorney, Ray- which has surfaced an the gay meeting, said he obtained expla-He and several other residents fUghts to Long Beach Airport. mond Ikola of Newport Beach, community only recently. nations of the various pieces of expressed the; .. support for the filed papers with the court early .. "I think the whole thing has th There have been 60 known legislation. council's endorsement of the bill, just been a bunch of foolishness," Wednesday asking e panel to cases of the disease in Orange The bills in Congress call for $40 which would add "sexual orien-said Rexanne, whose mother is reconsider -on an emergency Courity. council member Bobbie million in research funds to be basis -its earlier decision that talion" onto the employment prac-flying to Da.J..las to vi.sit a sister. Minkin claimed, and at least one apprppriated to the Center for tices law which prohibits job would have blocked the airline's Lagunan has died from it. Minkin Disease Control and the Nallonal discrimination. John Daas, a resident of Dallas, first week of scheduled flights said she obtained those figures institutes of Health, he said, said he was unaware his takeoff until an appeals court hearing in from "Outreach,'' a gay support ''The gay community is ex-The bill was authored by As-plans were in jeopardy until he San Francisco set for next group in Laguna. (County health periencing utter panic (over the ~~~. Art Agnoe, D-San picked up a newspaper last n.lght. Wednesday. officials. however, saJd there have problem)," Gentry said. "We need .. '"'"'Ull'-v "When I booked the flight The three judges -only a day ~ -----~----------------------~~y~~re~Mbep~ ~~-~~~U.S.~~ ~ ~ " lema.'' he aa.ld, taking a sip of Court Judge Terry Hatter Jr.'s ~,~~ ~~~~:.;r:~~:;~~~~~ ~!~;;~~~~e;~-= _charn _ _,pagn:.....:~e_. ___________ o_rd_er_.:..pe_nru_·t_tin_· g American to ON '\ _,periling lot or !'-1.kOonnell OouQIM plant at -of Elb91 anc111o1e S 1,935 in ie-- '" 1130 I 9o1M A.,. The--·-at S30.000 Irvine O.-•-•-...•-per1&•on .._... ,....,. w..,._.., "'""" .,. .. • D.c.y --" A 197~ ...,_ 9w>Z -•-1ed ol-:,.-:= o1 a -on ~ 9,, ... "' A ""9111r•a 1n10 a...,._ on IN 3700 OIOO O* Ou C'-'O ....... w--., -alOle • ·--.-~r-o-""" _..,.., P011Ce MIO All~ butl!*Y•M repot1"" at lhe Owi. ond lloyo Club, t tt 1 ~ Orlw TN -•u 1-'0ln-. A tN 2 P9Uge0! ..Oan wu ,_,_, but· giattred -" -l*i<ed .,.....l"Qltl in a lot at B 4 Z lmpof11. 410 M .... 91 The -1ed .._ wu I tlW90 1-.1-pla'fW valued 11 le I I A 1-1 of the 111200 l>loct of Ser-1..- tolcl pollca -· _... btolcl In the -llWOUQll I -door end conoumed llquot end lood Someone ..,,...., ., -e-'~ In 11'9 11.ooo-tlloc* Of 8'W -·-·-.,..._ .. ...... _.ll\ICll_ s-~-.. l600 --1rom •_.,.,....,on h llOO -Of l<Mll ea.t Hlgllwey .. 6•46 p .... Continued cloudy Coastal c- cn.n.too.S C Chet1wtoo,W V Ct!M1o«•.N C ~ ClllceQo Cinclnn.tll ~ ~.S C ~ ~FI WOflh ~on begin sel"Vlce from the airport even though the Board of Super- visors had not yet ratified a formal operating agreement with the airline. A chronology follows: •May 4 -Supervisors ..adopt moratonum on new air carriers until completion of a safety study. •May 10 -American Airlines asks federal court to okay service start-up preparations, claiming the county is discrim.inating against it by denying it airport access after it has met all con- ditions. •May 13 -A federal judge doesn't grant the temJX>rary re- straining order; sets a date for hearing before Judge Hatter on May 23. •May 23 -Hatter orders county moratorium Lifted. Super- V1S0rs plan appeal. •June 6 -American again asks Hatter for a court order to pennit them to fly beginning June 9 after learning supervisOrs don't plan to conside r operating agreement until June 14. Hatter issues the order. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal reverse it when the county appeals. A June 15 hearing is set. •Jue 8 -American asks the appeals pane l 'for emergency re- consideration. The court votes 2-1 to reinstate lower court order. allowing the airline to inaugurate service. o.n-0.Mol .... Oetrol1 Oulvth EI Puo FalrlHW<I F.,go 74 52 71 118 Tt 47 Tl r.8 70 .. 11 12 71 la ... 41 12 11 74 61 1M 13 75 52 71 .. .. 13 ee " 64 37 " eo 59 ... Study the pms carefully. One Is a briltlant-c:ut ""'diamond. one. or natur~) m~st danhna creations. The othcr1 A brilliant, man-made rrprodurtlt>n -a diamond s1mulan1 ('All~ Cubic Zirconia. so strikinaly similar many o~rts can't tell them apan• Temperatures tH.• 17 40 .. 12 11 51 ... 41 n N 11 IO .. IO .... 7t .. . .. . .. 14 ... .. N '1 II .. . •• 40 ... J1 FleQet.il OrMtF• Hllf11cwd ~ Honolulu Houeton ~ ldl9I oepol9 '**-· ..... ~ ~ ~City l•Vegu U11 .. Aocll lo.Mgelee 78 43 75 43 11 ~ 75 43 eo ae 17 71 ea 11 II 54 12 .. 74 ... 71 96 71 51 .. 70 ., " n .,. LoulrAlle l.uOllOCll MempNe Mllmt ............ ....... t.P.ul NMIW!lle ,.._on.Me ..... Yortl NorlOlll 11 H Nottll ~ 82 M OllW-Qty 11 eo OrMlwl 15 74 ~ 72 12 ~ 11 62 ~· ... 17 PltlllbUl'Ofl 12 ... PMlllnd ...... 71 96 P0111et>d,0re . 7 4 at Prcwt6en09 Aellll9h ~()ly Alflo SURf RIPDRT .. ... 4 4 M t: ,., ... 80 IO 11 81 12 at IO 74 'It .. 103 71 71 44 ... )I eo " 71 .. 71 17 70 .. 11 ., Which is the real diamond? Which is the Cubic Zircenia? II \Ou j(Ut" l"OlftCll~. )Chi will be In 1n~•an1 winner of. htllli•nt. nawlcu. (1cr)•Whllt Cubit Z1rcon1a \lone .... nd )OU w1rt 11uahf) for the G''""' ~l:r l>ro" in1 • 111 "m o rrol d1om11t11J "mrh JJfHK> (/() lfl,.11 V•lw • I 't" 1t ,1111 llU<'" v.ron-\OU •1111 win• [\C'T)'onc tn1trina 1h1• con1eu au1oma11ca ll\ 1ctr1H\ a 20', dl\Ut unt a•fl «111ltc11t ao11d •o••td• 1hr purrh• .. ,,1 •ny h~m 11n dl1pl•) at Hair Jr,.rlr) ,0 lntff fo41t! Just bnn1 thf fnlr)' form Min• In P""o" lo thr Rall J••tlr) nurn l '"" Roth arm• arc (lft d1~play 11 all I~ •IOIU All t11lrl" mutt b.. 111 b, Ma7 ll. l'Hll RAFF1ew€Jry FASHION ISLAN D -NEWPORT BEACH ---------0---~~~~--~--~--------------------------------------------------------- ,-l ' NYSE COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS OU Of U tONS IN(l.UOt fltllOt' OH '"" IUW 'fOIU( Mtowan .... , ... ,, ... w •OtTOlf Ot ,.Off ANO (tNCllOfAfl noes l.ll(HANOU 4110 llll'Oaf & 0 eY TH L NA'D 11110 IN'11Nl f Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, June 9, 1983 NB CS Dow Jones Final Up 3.50 Cloetng 1,1 •• 00 $2.97 million Fed aid given out in Los Angeles • By tile AHoclated Prt11 LOS ANGELES -The flral $2.97 mtlhon in federal aid to victims of long-term unemployment has been handed out in Loa Angeles County -less than a third the amount requested by locaJ charity orgaruz.a- tions. A seven-member board of private charit.Jes judgin8 114 requesta for funds made awards to 74 applicants Wednesday, including big awards to the Salvation Army ($390,000) and the Catholic We lfare au ($229,000). The average request was for ,000 but the average award was $38,899. High Court rules on bankruptcy WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court has ruled that federal bankruptcy laws, which ate designed to give troubled oompanies time to straighten out their finances, provide protection agai.nat c1a.ims by the Intermal Revenue Seyioe as well u other creditors. In a 9-0 decision , the court said Wedneeday that the ms does not have the right to keep 1eized property in payment of the debt. "Ownership of the property is transferred only when the property is aold to a bona fide purchaser at a tax sale." aald Juatioe Harry A. 81.ackmun in his opinion for the court. Interest rates rising again Interest rates are rising again, and the financial markets are in a tizzy about it. AB the interest rate on a long-term Treasury bond pushed above 11 perc.-ent Wednesday for the first time in four months. the stock market took a dive. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, which had lost more than 19 points on Tuesday, shed another 9.41 points. closing at 1,185.50. That put the main market indicator at 1t.s lowest closing level since April 19, when it was at 1,174.54 AMERICAN LEADERS UPS ANO DOWNS tMm"'C,, La•~l'o t.ny • ~ormtr11 "'1 ) .. ., J ftF~~3:~"' ?J.. "· ' '''• '. ~ .1:::-.t,t rw .. ~ I • .. ·~tt1 n ' •"';fi. "'· I ~ « I ),j . l I) .. ll~IP 1~ ., ... 1 I ;c:~, .. 1a. I, ,,,. {~Oft~' 1(1 I GM-~ n1 ... ' e ··· 14, .. Fell. ' r ... ~if, .. 1 .. I • 3: nit " ~ rno pfA i ': .. ""'' '. SYMBOLS I'll ()I ') I . ) I : J ' I •1 I • I ~' f I ) I )) ) ) ) . n n •• • • • I :1 : ~ •• METALS NEWYORKCAPI· 8""' ,,.,.,._.,...,_... .,,._ TOiiey- ~. ,__., .,.,, •• """""'·u s _ .. -a-.7440_, .. __ HVC-• opal--Wed ~·••23-•pound --40-•llOU"d-eG nt·Ml2"....._W ... ~atb __ ,,_._ .. ,, ...._,.t3QOQO.t3lQOO-t&t0-- """' ,...._ • ~ 00-t..Oe 00 doma1t1e -"'"'-"'' GOLD QUOTATIONS SILVER ...... t11310 -lroy -... ....,.,. 4 -1~ _, CIU01• I .... 811.123-IJoy-HY<:onw.""°' --- STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT •• -~! tJ •l .·.;J 1:.i I;, . ,,, -ti ' II •t. fr. ''! 1n 1n .... ,,.. I • .. ' •I .:.· ,,, . . ... .. ,., '•