HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-07-18 - Orange Coast Pilot,.
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MONDAY, JULY 18, 1983 OHAN CI COUNIY L ALl'"OHNIA l~ CENTS
ine hoIDeless in HB fire
aHJily evacuated after being roused by boy, 13
Nine members of a Huntington
family were evacuated
ely early today after fire
ed their one-story home.
~ blaze, which sent heavy
plumes of smoke into the early
morning sky, caused more than
: $85,000 damage.
-Fire officials credHed an
off-duty Huntington Beach fire-
fighter and a passerby with help-
ing prevent injuries to family
.. '
members.
The blaze was reported at 8:10
a.m. at 9402 Krepp Drive, the
·home of Tailau Fuga, M, an
electrician. Also residing at the
home were his-wife, s.ix sons and
an elderly grandmother.
.•
Huntin~n Beach Fire Depart-
ment· spokeswoman Martha
Werth said the (amily members
were all asleep early this morning
except for a aon, Sam, 13, who
diacovered the fire in the garage
and ~elped rouse the famijy.
At the same time, Werth said,
off-duty firefighter Ed Thompson
was on his way home from a shift
at the nearby Bushard Street
station when he spotted the fire.
Werth said Thompson and
another puaerby, Carole File, of
19432 Bluegill Circle, carried the
grandmother, Lise Tufege, 79, to
safety across the street. She said
File ordered her daughter to
phone firefighters from a nearby
home, as Thompson helped evacu-
ate the remaining family mem-
bers.
Thompson and Mrs. File "were
very helpful in getting everyone
out safe and unhurt," Werth said.
Neighbors used garden h06eS on
the blaze until firefighters ar-
rived. The blaze was quickly
e~hed by the t6 fire-
fighters responding to the scene.
No firefighters were injured.
Cause of the blaze was under
investigation. The damage was
estimated at $70,000 to the struc-
ture, $15,000 to the contents.
Family members stood outside
the home this morning but declin-
ed to talk with a reporter.
,, .......
Semi-sexy poses like this one are featured in Loi
ngeles firefighters' beefcake calendar they're
elling for charity.
Firemen grin, bare it
to aid heart research
LOS ANGELES (AP)-A doum city firemen decided to bare
at least some of themselves for a "beefcake" calendar to rai8e money
for research into heart problems among their colleagues.
But the 1984 calendar, dubbed Firefighters USA, is no rival for
those marketed yearly by Playboy and Playgirl magazines.
lt.s pinup men appear modestly enough to offend no one -
especially not city officials, although the most suggestive photo does
show a fire.man reclining on a fire station cot wearing only boxer
shorts.
Mr. January (Terry Manning) and Mr. June (Manning'•
brother, Tim) are sons of city Fire Chief Donald 0 . Manning.
Mustachioed Tim appears bare-chested holding a dalmatton,
with fire station equipment in the background. The brothers were
photographed together for the back of the calendar, stripped down
to their boxer shorts and passing a bucket of water in an
old-fashioned bucket brigade.
Chief Manning declined comment on the calendar, but Terry
Manning said his father "just kinda smiled about it, and that was
that."
The $6.95 calendar was the brainchild of Fire Department
Battalion Chief Ed Allen and his two partners in an enterpri8e
called Face Facts International.
Huntingt~n Beach fire men mop up after fire this morning.
Fire investigators confirmed the
blaze started in the garage but said
the exact cause is not immediately
known.
Besides ntaking some money for themselves, Allen said, thf-
partners intend to share any profits with Dr. R. James Barnard, a
doctor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who studies
firefighters' heart problems.
BB teen killed
in Catalina fall
b ROBERT BARKER ~Dlllr ......... I A 16-year-old Huntington
aeach youth fell to his death
Bunday while climbing down an
1,800-foot cliff on Santa Catalina
laland, authorities said.
Los Angeles County sheriff's
deputy Robert Stoneman said the
boy, identified as Jeff Pigage, of
9442 Greenwich Drive, was hiking
"Jeff did a lot of hiking
and camping ... and he
wanted to get away from
the city for a couple of
days. He was real happy
the last time I saw him."
at about 1 p.m. Sunday with a
friend when he fell about 180 feet
In the Palisades area of Catalina.
Stoneman said he didn't know
what caused young Pigage, a
student at Wintersburg High
School, to fall
His 20-year-old, unidentified
companion told investigators he
couldn't reach Pigage after the fall
jlnd climbed down the rest of the
cliff to a beach, where he called to
a small fishing boat which took
him to Avalon.
A sheriffs helicopter was dis-
patched to the area, but Pigage
was pronounced dead upon the
arrival of paramedics.
A friend of the dead boy.
Kenneth Anderson, 18, said in a
telephone interview today that he
drove Pigage and a companion,
whom he knew only as Joe, to the
boat in Long .Beach which takes
passengers to Catalina 26 miles
away.
"Jeff did a lot of hiking and
camping and he wanted to take
lots of pictures and get away from
the city for a couple of days,"
Anderson said this morning.
"He was real happy the last time
I saw him Saturday. He spent his
last money on film and food. He
and Joe took backpacks and were
going to be camping out," he said.
Anderson said he was informed
of the death Sunday by Jeff's
mother, who was attempting to
contact her son 's hiking compa-
nion to get details. Anderson said
he and Pigage had been friends
and neighbors for about three
years.
Both funeral services for Pigage
and a Los Angeles County cor-
oners investigation are pending.
lllEI
C4
AS cu
86 Cl a
M a
OI a
Ertc Dickerson, the Rams' $2.2 mllllon
running back from Southern Methodist
University, made his training camp debut
Sunday. See B 1. •
ForthePaat two years, Richard 8tev.n1 hu
• beenthe~of Orange Countycos-
metOlogllta, "•true artlat who eculpta facet
llkepatntera do por1relt8." Page C 1.
Irvine mudders
Three young Irvine residents train
for the upcoming official Mud
Olympics to be held Saturday at
Adventure Playground in Univenity
Community Park. Mud isn't just for
kids -adults are invited to compete
in the six events, too. Competiti1on is
from 10 a .m. to 2 p.m.
Ruling
• near in
dentist's
hearing
A preliminary hearing to de-
termine if former Costa Meaa
dentist Tony Protopappas will
stand trial for murder in the
deaths of three patients went into
its fourth and possibly last week
today.
A spokesman for the Orange
County District Attorney's Office
said the hearing in Harbor Mu-
nicipal Court, which suppmedly
has brought as many as 100 ~
to the witness stand, is expected to
be completed before Friday.
The press and the public have
been barred from the hearing and
lawyers have been ordered by
Harbor Court Judge Christopher
Strople not to discuss the con-
troversial case.
Protopappas, free on $250,000
(See DENTIST'S, Pa1e A!
Meadowlark
air crash
studied
Flight safety investigators ar-
rived in Huntington Beach today
to find out what cauaed a
twin-engine Cessna 411 to make a
crash landing Sunday night at
Meadowlark Airport.
Officials said there were no
injuries and the plane sustained
only moderate damage when the
wheels failed to come down and
the plane came sliding in on Ua
belly.
The pilot wu tentatively ident-
ified as Ronald C. Rafferty. He
reportedly told police at the 8Celle
he wu making a routine appr'OllCb
shortly after 9 p.m. He Mid . be
didn't have an inkling an}'UWw
wu wrong until he hearcf metal
from the plane hit the pavement of
the runway.
(See MEADOWLAR&. Pqe A.I)
Orange County Fair attendance declines
Attendance at the 10-day Qr-
ange County Fair in Co.ta Meea
dropped lllghtly this year, with
336,753 vtaitors puaing through
the turnatyle at the carnival and
livestock exhibition, which ended
Sunday.
One 15-year-old boy wu ln-
jUred Friday near a ride but wu
relea.ed from the hoepital.
'( • t I
Alai.slant Fair Manqer John
Burke 1ald scorching
temperaturee probably kept IOltle
people away from the fairp'oUnda
lut week. Attendance WM down
2,903 from lut yew.
"It picked up on the weekends
and ran very smoothly," Mid
Burke. "It WM a aood, c1-n fair."
lAw enforcement offlciala re-
J ~1
ported few problems this year.
Moet of the 436 dtations handed
out by deputies Involved minors
drinking alcohol or intoxicated
adults, uid Orange County
Sheriff'• Capt. Dennie LaDucer.
"Moet people were cooperative
and were there to have a aood
time," uid ~r. "We didn't
conlider lt a problem." ,,
A 15-year-old Co.ta M-. boy
was injured Friday afwnoon
when a ballast from the SkydiYW
ferrla wheel hit him in &he face and
ahoulder. Ted Mayer wu t.abD to
C.O.ta Meta Medical Center Hmpl·
tal with l.ceratlonl and a ..,.....
ated ahoulder. He was rei..d
from the holP'tal folloWinl pl...ac
aurjery.
•
,
U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, July 18, 1983
Cd' -We asked:--------
Bergeson:
will run,
aides say ·.
,,,.. Continued stories
What special thing do you do when the weather turns' hot?
DENTIST'S HEARING ...
bail, is charged with sec-
ond-degree murder in the deaths
patients Patricia Craven, 13,
Cathryn Jones, 31, and Minna
Kim Andreassen. 23. All died
following anesthesia for major
dental work, according to docu-
ments filed by the state Attorney
General's Office.
Protopappas surrendered to
authorities last April after a brief
search by law enforcement agen-
cies. He reportedly now is living
with friends in the Laguna Beach
area.
The fonner high-volume den-
tist, in addition to facing a
preliminary hearing to det.ennine
if he stands trial in Superior
Court, also must defend him.self
against civil lawsuitsaeeking more
than $65 million in damages.
MEADOWLARK CRASH ...
Police satd Rafferty was the
only person aboard the seven-seat
plane. 0\.
Police said the aircraft 01oc1<"ed
the runway and officers used
highway flares to devise a large
"X" ~>n the landing area to<,Warn
incoming pilots about the landing
hazard. Meadowlark does not
have a control tower.
The investigators probing the
incident are from the National
Transportation Safety Board.
40 aliens discovered
crammed into truck
When California Highway Pa-
trol officer Rich Soto opened the
door of a rental truck abandoned
on the Santa Ana Freeway in
south Orange County, he said,
"All I saw was faces and eyeballs
looking at me.
"I have never seen so .... many
people in such limited space. They
were virtually suffocating, they
were packed in so tight," Soto
said. -
What greeted the CHP officer's
eyes when he opened the rear
door to the abandoned truck was
40 undocumented aliens crammed
inside after an illegal border
crossing.
"There wa s stand -
ing-room -only in there," Soto
said.
The CHP responded to the
scene near EJ Toro Friday aft.er
being alerted to a miles-long
Sunset silhouettes
traffic jam on the northbound
freeway lanes.
Two vans responded from the
U.S. Border Patrol's checkpoint
along the freeway near San
Clemente and took the men back
to the station for processing and
the usual free bus ride back to
Mexico.
Soto, who speaks Spanish, said
many of the 40 men from the
Mexican state of Guanajuato ap-
peared to be suffering from de-
hydration as temperatures hov-
ered in the ..Ud-80s. U.S . Border
Patrol agents said no one was
h06pitaliz.ed.
The truck driver left the keys in
the rental vehicle when he fled,
apparently to avoid arrest for
smuggling illegal aliens.
Authorities speculated the
truck may have developed engine
problems.
Kelley uhel
Hunting Beach
"I go to the beach and
drink lots of lemonade.
Or I take a nap with the
fan on."
Carollne Ch•••
Santa Ana
"Well, I go shopping. I
can go into the air con-
ditioned shops and get a
breath of air. My family is
getting ready for a wed-
ding so I have to shop
anyway."
For many people, a day a t the beach
ends well before dark. They fight the
tralfic back to where they come from
and miss what, to many, is the best
part of the day. Dusk . h 's quie ter,
cooler and certa inly less congested ,
as this photo, taken next to the
Balboa Pier attests.
'
Rash of auto break-ins hit Laguna
Laguna Beach police say a rash
of automobile break-ins over the
weekend are probably not related,
"except for the fact that it's
tunmlertilne .••
'Ille police l<>s showed a hall
cb.en repon. of vehicle break-lna,
with Jomes ranaing from wetauita
to $3,203 taken lrom a pone left in
an unlocked car in the 200 block of
Broadway .
Investigator Linda Parker said
police doubt there is an organir.ed
group breaking Into cars parked In
Laguna Beach, saying the increase
ia moat likely the retuit of sum-
mertime crowds in the Art Colony.
A wetsuit valued at ,125· was
stolen from a vehicle parked at
Thalia and South Coast Highway
over the weekend. Other auto
break-ins occured on Ocean Av-
enue, High Drive and Broadway.
P olice suggest visit.ors and resi-
dent.a alike lock thelr cars and
leave valuables out of the car or
out of sight -preferably In the
trunk.
REAL VALUES
on items from applesauce to zippers the lll·I, Pl.lat are advertised every day in
-t I
Mlchael Scott
CoataMeu ...
'We jump In the pool
and play Marco Polo!"
Mary Stacey
.Santa Ana
"I lay out In the sun
then I jump In my jacuzzi.
That really cools me
down."
Jania Purtex
Fountain Valley
"I sit In the bathtub
with a glass of wine. Try
it. It doesn't matter what
time of day It Is."
Chrla a.viii
Fullerton
"I sit In my air con-
ditioned house or lay out
by the pool. Because I
live , In Fullerton the
beach Is too far."
BY STEVE MARBLE on..Oellr .........
. . .. -:..· ·..:
Newport Beach A•.~
semblywoman Marian Bergeeo&
will formally announce next M~
day she will run for state Senate;
taking on fellow Republican Sen.~
Ollie Speraw in the June 198'!
primary. ·~
The announcement from ~
paign aides comes as little surp~
Bergeson, a third-term lawmaket;
began campaigning for the Sena~
seat late last year. -~:
Speraw, who lost his Lo~
Beach Senate post through rea~
portionment, announced his plaoif~
to run in the newly-created 37di:
district early this year. He currenit:
ly has ditlrict offices in Newpol't'
Beach, where he also now lives. ;:
The district which the twCt
Republicans are interested in ~
eludes the entire Orange Coun*
coast and reaches to the Mexicat(
border on one side and l<> tM
Colorado River on another. :!·
Aides said Bergeson ori~
intended to announce her ~·
didacy this week, but that t.M-
ongoing budget stalemate in Sac-
ramen~ delayed her plans. . .. _.
The anticipated primary claah
between Speraw and Bergeson
has been a aore subject wiffi
Republican boosters in recent
months who fear the contest will
be a drain on the party's war chest.
A group calling itself Respon-
sible l\epublicana for Common ,
Sense-in Primaries has been ·
urging Bergeson to leave the :
Senate seat to Spe.raw and again •
seek re-election to the Aseembly.:
The group mailed letters to regis-
tered Republicans in four counties'"'
asking for money to support its
cause.
Badham praises
Reagan record
Bergeson supporters charged
the mailer was "grossly mislead·
ing" and asked the Orange County
District Aftorney's Office to file
charges against the Republican
group. Representatives for
Berge60n said the group was
staging a Craudulent fund-raising
effort for the assemblywoman.
Orange County Deputy District
Attorney Wally Wade said today
his office has rejected the request
for prosecution from the Bergeson
camp because of lack of evidence
the group was raising money for a : !l, ~~!,?~N DAVIES
''Nobody is mentioning Re-
aganontics in a derisive sense
today." according to Rep. Robert
Badham, R-Newport Beach.
Badham, · who spoke at the
inaugural Republican Unity Din-
ner combining the Irvine Re-
publican Club and the Irvine Coast
Republican Women's Club in Cor-
ona del Mar, has been one of
President Reagan's strongest
boosters.
He showed why Friday night by
treating his affluent GOP au-
dience to a checklist of economic
improvementa Reagan will likely
lean upon if he decides to seek
re-election, something the New-
port lawmaker is fairly certain of.
Badham said that in the last two
and a half years, "Inflation has
gone to practically zero; un-
employment is down. the stock
market. productivity and foreign
trade are up; the respect that our
Irvine girl selected
to be poster child
Thirteen-year-old Teri Hartley
of Irvine has been selected by the
Cerebral Palsey Foundation as
one of its three Orange County
post.er children.
Teri, who recently was one of
several winners in a Special
Olympics beauty pageant, also
perfonned a ballet dance last
week at the Orange County Fair.
Linda Hartley, Teri's mom, said
the exposure has given her daugh-
ter more ambition to improve
herself. '
We1re
Listening •••
642·6086
o:r. "'°' leQ~:r_.
lolmott roio.oy ,, yO.. tlO
f'lnt f\aw• yOVt l)AP•• by ~ )0 p M C•I lloelOle 1 p m
•ncJ yUut toety will t>t
~vmHJ
country entertains ... overseas is
higher than it has been alm06t
anytime since World War 0 ,
NATO is strong, ... and the only
thing stopping us is our deficit,
which is in tolerable."
"We already have $1 trillion of
debt," he said, and a $200 billion
deficit each year is added to that.
"The debt service alone is almost
$100 million a year," he said.
"Until the Congress of the
United States has the ability and
the will and the national spirit to
say 'no' to new programs and to
deficit spending, the situation will
only get worse," predicted
Badham.
OOUcult days are ahead for
Republicans, the GOP lawmaker
said , because "the Democrats have
dug in hard and are opposing the
president at every turn."
More money, time and effort
must be spent to elect Republicans
to the House of Representatives,
said Badham.
In answer to a question about
action being considered to force
the United States t.ostay within its
budget, Badham said there are
two risks. U a constitutional con-
vention is called, the bylaws and
rules for its conduct could be
subject to no restraints, he said.
The second risk, he said, is "if an
amendment i.s propoeed to the
Constitution which says, 'the Unit-
ed States of America shall have a
balanced budget unlees there is
some reuon not to,' and if they
throw that out to the states. a
battle royal would at.art."
"Bergeson for Assembly" cam-
paign.
Wade said it would be hard to
gauge whether the mailer, with its
request for money, was close to
violating state election laws.
Loa Young, a resident of Vista
and leader of the Republican
group, claimed the mailers
brought a strong endorsement for ·
keeping Bergeson in the Assembly
and Speraw in the Senate.
Berge.K>n supporters said their
field work shows otherwise.
Nurse to handle
patient liaison
at HB hospital
Marian Sntith, a licensed voca-
tional nurse, has been appointed to
the newly created position of
patient liaison at Humana Hospi-
tal Huntington Beach, fonnerly
Huntington Int.ercommunity Hoe~
pital.
In this role, Smith vi.sits patients
daily, helpi.rlg them eolve l)l"d6..
lems that arise between adml.ion
and release from the hospital. She
also assists visit.ors whose love~r
ones are undergoing surgery or
are hospitaliz.ed in the intensive or .
coronary care units.
A graduate of Harbor Junior
College in Lomita, Smith has had
nursing experience in holpitals
and with private physicians. She .
was employed at Little Coompany '
of Mary Hospital in Torrance •.
where she was named "Employee !
of the Year." !
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwerta HI
Publisher
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VOL7'NO.-' • .
.. '
Sun, skin forum at hospital
A free community health forum on "Sun and the Skin" will be
conducted Wednesday at Fountain Valley Co!'l'\fllunity Hoepital.
The aeesion begins at 7 p.m. in the auditorium at the hospital, 17100
Euclid St.
"Too many people are unaware of the damage to the skin.
cau.ed from radiation produced by the sun," said Craig Myers,
administrator of the hospital. "Problems, from early aging to
cancer, can be averted by learning about the different types of
radiation and how they interact with different types of skin.''
Participating in the skin program will be local physicians who
speclall~ in skin care, cancer treatment and radiation therapy.
Kids' beach program starts Friday in CdM
A one-hour program for pre-schoolers . to junior high
youngsters begins Friday at Corona del Mar State Beach, sponsored
by the Children's Sand and Surf Mission.
Two programs run daily Mondays through Fridays from 10 to
11: U a.m. and again from 1 to 2: 15 p.m. at Big Corona. F.ach program
features drama, object lessons, games Bible quizzes and 90np.
Parents are ....encouraged to obeerve the daily program.
sporwored by an interdenominational team of Christian high echool.
college and professional people.
Visiting artists to put works on display
The ahnual visiting artist program at the Laguna Beech School
of Art begins July 25 with abstract expretaionist artist Emenon
WoeUfer hosting the five-day series of demonstrations and
di8cuasion.s.
WoeUfer's works are on display at the achool gallery, 2222
Laguna Canyon Road. He will be guest of honor at a reception' July
28 from 7 to 10 p.m. and ia scheduled to give a slide lecture that
evening at 8 p.m. For in1onnation, call 497-3309.
--------
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Monday, July 18, 1983 Al
Just float your tr()ubles away
Never mind 'Altered States' -flota.tion tanks can ease stress
!1, ~. ~~J.t!NGSWORTH
It can help people learn a foreicn ~in half the time,
lta promoten claim. It can aid
student.a ln memorizing IChool
work, they aay. Some people U1e It
to help them.elves learn a sport by
liltenlna to inltructional tapes,.
Some try to eecape from the atress
of the day by aimply rel.axing.
"It" la • flotation tank.
Paul Ryan, who 1eU. flotation
tanka in Newport Beach, aald a
tank can be U8ed by anybody who
want.a to try and get away from
life's nonnal ha.sales and 10lve
their penonal problerna without
any eX16na.l pressure.
The tank la about eight feet long
and four feet wide and contal.na 12
inches of water with 800 pounds of
Epeom salta in It. The Epeom salta
give the water a high buoyancy,
Model Dan Barger demonstrates
how one enten a flotation tank
(above left) and relaxes away the
stre88 and strain of business and
Dmlf""' ,.,._ ~ llllMN " ......
personal problems (above).
Though the therapy supposedly has
lots of beneficial effects, it's not
usually done fully dressed.
Ryan Mid, and people can become
totally relaxed ln an hour'a time.
However, tome people cannoi
relax when they think about
flotation tanka. The movie .. Alter-
ed Statee•• depicted a man ln a
Ootation tank who reverted back
to a Neanderthal man. That and
being encloeed ln an eight-foot
box can give people that
clauatrophobic feeling.
"Unlike the movie, people who
go into the tanka like anlmala come
out like human beinga," Ryan
said. "After people get into the
tanka, the claustrophobic feeling
goeeaway."
With aeerningly more people
joining health clubs along the
Orange Coat, Ryan thinka the
tanka ~ a great supplement to
the health-<:onacioua.
''The fitness craze has helped
buaineea," Ryan said. ''The tanks
are not a replacement for exercise,
but they do add to a fitness
program. Number one, they help
relax mW1Cles and number two,
the tanks take the l'tre98 off
injuries and help them heal
faster."
One hour in the flotation t.an.k is
equal to five to six hours of sleep,
and after three hours in the tank,
Ryan said he felt like he had had a
regular night's sleep and was
ready to go.
Each aeesion ca1ta $25, and a
flotation tank can be inatalled in
the home for about $3,500.
Profe-'onal football'• Dallas
Cowboys and Philadelphia F.agles
and baseball's Philadelphia
Phillies uae the tanks for various
reuons.
Marine files may tab slaying victims
By die Aaaoclated Preti
Long Beach police aay they're
checking military records against
phoa of apparenUy lifelem
Marines that were found at the
home of a man charged with eight
homoeexual murders.
The phoa of the Marines..were
among 2,000 pictures found at the
Long Beech home of Randy
Steven Kraft, said Doug Otto,
Kraft'• attorney.
He said the anapehota were
confl.8cated from Kraft's home
during two aearchea following
Kraft's arrest May 14 ln the death
of a Marine stationed at the El
Toro air station.
Inveatiptors believe aeveral of ~ thoee photoe, being held by Or-
ange County Deputy Dimict At-
torney Bryan Brown, were of
Marines primarily becauae of
their regulation recruit crewcuta.
Otherwiae, they remain uniden-
tified.
Kraft. a 38-year-old computer
analyst, waa arrested after Cali-
fornia Highway Patrol officers
found the ~Y of El Toro Marine
Terry Lee Gambrel of Indiana in
the pueenger aeat of Kraft's car
on Interstate 5 in south Orange
County.
Kraft was charged with Gam-
brel's murder.
Four other bodies since have
been found near that location, and
Kraft haa been charged with
murdering one of thoee victims,
F.ric Church, 21, . of Hartford,
C.onn., whoee body was found
there Jan. 26.
In addition, Kraft has been
charged with murdering Rodger
James Devaul Jr .. 20, of Buena
Park; Geoffrey Alan Nebon, 18, of
Buena Park; Wyatt Loggins, 19, of
Montclair; and Mark Howard
Hall,,22, whoae nude, emaaculated
body was found near San Juan
Capistrano on Jan. 3, 1976. -
Boy, 8, drowns in Viejo
An 8-year-old boy visiting from
Utah · drowned in Lake Mission
Viejo late Sunday after he
wandered away from a group of
children he was playing with.
The youth, Glen R. Hurd, was
pronounced dead on arrival at
Mission Community Hospltal at
6:20 p.m., an Orange C.ounty
coroner's deputy said.
•
Lifeguards on the acene 1earch-
ed for about an hour before
finding Hurd floating within a
roped-off swimming area in the
lake. Efforts by Orange County
paramedics to revive him on the
1ame failed.
The boy's family had come to
California to visit frienda ln
Mission viejo.
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"" Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18. 1983
Kissinger to h ead
new policy panel
By tbe Associated Press
HOLLYWOOD. Fla -President Reagan
today chose former Secretary of S tate Heriry
Kissinger to head a new bipartisan national
commission to advlSC him on Central American
policy in a renewed effort to win congressional
support for his campaign "to keep the hght of
liberty alive." The president. in his prepared
remarks, did not name anyone to the corrunission.
But a senior administration official traveling
with the president confirmed that Reagan had
offered the job to Kissinger in a S unday night
telephone call, and that Kissinger had accepted.
The official. w ho demanded anonymity, said
Reagan had not planned to announce Kis.5inger's
appointment today. but changed his mind after
word of his choice leaked to the media.
Medical costs rising
WASHINGTON -A Reagan adminis-
tration health official says "too many incentives"
to spend money from gove rnment programs and
private insurers helped spur last year's 12.5
percent increase in medical costs. The $322.4
billion spent on medical care in 1982 accounted
for 10.5 percent of the gros.s national product and
marked the first time that health-care costs
exceeded 10 percent of the GNP, according to
figures released by the Department of Health
and Human Servi~ In 1965, health costs
accounted for only 6 pel'ttnt of the gross national
product. The average American spent $1,365 for
medical care last year. up from about $140 in
1981. the department said.
STATE
Hollywood arson probed
WEST HOLLYWOOD -A suspected arson
fire today destroyed a vacant five-story apart-
ment building owned by British rock star Rod
Stewart and forced comedian Richard Pryor and
his audience to evacuate an adjacent nightclub,
authorities said. The three-alarm blaz.e at the
Coronet Apartments at Sunset Boulevard and
Queens Road, reported at 12: 15 a.m .. raged for
more than an hour before city and county
firefighters contained the flames, said sheriffs
Deputy J ohn Broussard. The flames were pretty
much out by daybreak.
Quake rattles Arrowh ead
LAKE ARROWHEAD -A mild earth-
quake rattled homes in this mountain resort area
Sunday night, and several residents reported
hearing a sound resembling "a loud explosion"
caused by the temblor, auth or1 t1es said. The 9:37
p.m. quake measured 3.1 on the Richte r scale and
was locate<fnear Lake Arrowhead. a resort in the
San Bernardino Mountains about 75 miles
northeast of Los Angeles, said Dennis Meredith,
spokesman forCaLforrua Institute of Technology
in Pasadena.
Hospital strike in third day
OAKLAND -A strike by 450 employees o(
Merntt and P eralta Hospitals ente red its third
day today, and no new talks w ere scheduled The
striking dietary and laundry workers, house-
keepers. ward clerks and licensed vocational
nurses are asking for a 6 percent wage increase
Management has offered 3.3 percent.
USC given$1.3 million
LOS ANG ELF.s (AP) -A woman whose
only li nk v.'ith the Universit y of Southern
Calilorrua was that a relative once attended a
summer session has unexpectedly left the school
$1 3 million . Madeline M Kaiser, who died last
I October at age 84, named several charities in her
will and stipulated that the remainder be divided
between USC's Andrus Gerontology Center and
Claremont McKenna College.
WORLD
Quake rocks Nicaragua
MANAGUA. Nicaragua -A strong earth-
quake rocked the capital and other Nicarag\ian
1 ci ties early today. Officials and witnesses had no
immediate repor1S of damage or casualties. "The
seismic movement began at 6:50 a.m. and lasted
about 40 seconds," said Fabio Segura, director of
the Nicaraguan Seismological Institute. He said
he had no report on ~ibledamageorcasualties,
but he estimated its force at between 5 and 5.5 on
the Richter scale of ground motion.
J40 Armenians arreste d
PARlS -Police rounded up more than 40
suspected Armenian activists in the Paris area
today and reportedly confiscated weapons and
jexplosives in connection with their investigation
of the bombing at Orly airport which kiUed six
people and wounded 55 others.
Typhoon death toll climbs
MANILA, Philippines -Four days after
Typhoon Vera swept through the Phillppinet,
\he death toll continued to climb today. A
compilation of updated reports showed at least 85
people died. with many more ~ing and \.ens of
thousands homeless. The National Civil Defense
Office accounted for 21 deaths and 62· missing.
~rrespondents for Manila newspapers reported
other deaths, including 50 people kiUed in
taan province, acl'088 the bay from Manila.
OPEC ministers convene
HELSINKI, Finland -OU mlniatera of the
Drpnlzation of Petrole um Exporting Countries
:onvened here today, apparently pleued with a
1)enchmark price and quotaa worked out af~r
i:nuch haggling .i thelr laat gathertng. Today's
iather1ng bctgan OPEX:'s 68th regular SCMlon. ..
Liher,ace's really hot
McGovern eyes
another run at
White House
LOS ANGELE'S (AP) -Fonner U.S. Sen.
George McGovern, whose 1972 presidential bid wu
crushed by then-President Richard Nixon, aaya he
may enter the 1984 presidential race and offers 101ne
surprising praise for Nixon.
"I'm going to spend some time thinking abouti&,"
McGovern said of the possibility he will seek the 1984
Democratic presidential nomination. "I'm ~ the
month of August off. Some time after Labor Day I'll
d~ide whether to do it or to support one of the other
candidates.''
In an interview with the Los Angeles Tlmel
published today, McGovern praised Nixon's foreign
and defense policies.
"Nixon was on the right track in the lut yeanof
his administration when he was working toward
detente with the Soviet Union,'' h e said.
Flames from a nearby h otel fire seem
to be coming out of pia nist
Liberace's head, but the giant
billboard in West Hollywood was in
no danger of burnmg in .tit f-We
which damaged a five-story apart-
ment building owned by singer Rod
Stewart early this morning.
McGovern, who turns 61 Tuesday, became ,
history's biggest loser in a presidential election when
Nixon beat him in 1972. McGovern carried only
Waihington, D.C., and Massachuaetta. He WM
defeated for re-election to the U.S. Senate from
South Dakota in 1980 and has been earning about
$150,000 annually on the lecture circuit since then.
Firefighters battle Nevada blaze after California fires
Some 300 firefighters worked in shifts to combat driven bv 30-mph winds. he added.
By tbe Associated Press --the 100 acre blaze between the 8 800 and 9 600-foot In '"'-"f · f' c· h f 11 trolled f .---• • • \....Cl.U orrua, ire 1g ters u y con . our
level of Mount C?arleston, about 40 rrules northwest brush fires Sunday evening that broke out in a Fire crews ham pered by winds and dense timber
struggled to "pinch off" a blaze on a 11,919-foot
Nevada peak today a fter a weekend in which fires
that scorched more than 30.000 al·res in California
and Nevada w ere controlled.
of~ Vegas, sai~ Doyle Hanks of the U.~. Forest 20-minute span during the afternoon and blackened
Service. T he area IS popular among snow skiers. nearly 1,000 acres of brush in near Canyon Country,
The fire, which broke out Saturday night, about 30 miles north of downtown Los Angeles.
"made a big run" up and down the mountain Sunday. Officials suspected arson.
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' ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------T---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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• I
I MAILBOX
I No conflict with police
1 To the Editor:
l I would.like to clarify an aspect i of your coverage of my current
difference, with a Newport .Beach
police officer. Contrary to your
story I have never claimed police
"interference" with "my" party of
June 12. It waa not "my'' party and
' the officers asked the band to stop
playing with one number left on
their program.
Further, I have not had
"clashes'' or "run-ins" with the
local police. I have met. on one
occasion, with Chief Gross. to
' convey my concern over wha t r
feel is an increasingly arrogant
attitude on the part of some
members of his department.
Finally, I never at anytime or
any place "grabbed the hand" of a
Newport Beach police officer. I
have too much respect for the
difficult job they must perfonn to
act in su~ a reek.less manner.
The eWtire incident has been
blown way out of proportion and,
unfortunately, can only be clari-
fied through a fair trial. I trust the
final outcome will be positive for
all concerned.
JIM WOOD
Corona del Mar
Bolsa Chica plan supported
To the Editor:
, Senate Bill 745, sponsored by
the County of Orange and
; authored at the county's request
·by Sen. Paul Carpenter, would
' help the county's plan for a public
marina to qualify under the
ownership.
I Coastal Act. Your article on June
30 erred when it said the legis-
lation w ould "free up"
The county-sponsored legis-
lation referred to in your June 30
article actually is intended to
provide for the public marina
under these changed conditions. It
does ~ot affect the area which
would be devoted to private
residential development.
The public policy question at
Bolsa Chlca is whethe r the coastal
plan will allow for public rec-
reation and access along with the
county's proposal for the largest
attempt ever made in the United
States to restore coastal salt marsh.
A few people oppose this effort,
preferring to close off the area to
public recreational uses and to
keep the salt marsh unrestored.
marsh.lands for residential de-
' velopment.
When the Coastal Act was
1 priginally drafted for enactment
by state legislature in 1976, it was
i specifically amended at the re-
. quest of the state Department of
Fish and Grune and the state
111 Attorney General to accommodate
~ 1 the Department of Fish and Game
proposal for a Bolsa Chica public
marina on state-owned land in•
conjunction with restoration of
coastal salt marsh.
A 25 percent limit was imposed
· on the amount of degraded salt
marsh that could be devoted to a
public marina.
Since that time, state agencies
have changed the definition of
wetlands and attempted to expand
the area of Coastal Act regulation
to include salt marsh and historic
former salt marsh. Additionally,
the county itself has also de-
manded that a larger area be
devoted to salt marsh restoration,
extending beyond state-owned
lands into the area of private
The reason the coun -
ty-sponsored bill passed the state
Senate on a 22-7 vote is because
the public mandate under the
Coastal Act is to provide for a
balance between public access to
the coast and preservation of
natural resources, such as coastal
salt marshes.
We are of the firm opinion that
the county plan for Bolsa Chica,
which is based on the original
concept by the state Department
of Fish and Game, is in accord with
this public mandate.
WAYNE A. CLARK
Mr. Clark is Public Relations
Counsel to Signal Landmark. Inc.
...
Dally Piiot welcomes
commentary from readers
I.
r
' tl
' '
The Daily Piiot solicits your views on any matters of interest to
our communities. If you wish to contribute to these pages with a
letter. or a longer commentary on an issue, please send your
submlaslon legibly written or typed. Comme'ltary pieces shoued
be no longer than 500 words. Letters should be considerably
more concise. Shorter letters will be considered first. Address
such correspondence to: LETTERS To The EDITOR, Delly Piiot,
Box 1580, Coate M ... , CA., 92929. Please Include your name.
address and telephone number.
If you prefer, you may call In your letter to the We're Llatenlng
special telephone number ... 142-IOll. Be sure to leave your
name, address and telephone number so that we may verify your
comments.
Please do not call In longer letters or commentaries.
l. M. BDJd /The naked truth
Women more often than men
dream of being pursued Indoors in
brightly colored places amidst
animated conversation. sleep re-
9ea.tchers say. Men more often
than wome n dream of appearing
naked in public, they say.
Say you're standing by a rail-
road track in which is rolling a
freight train one mile long U it
traveled as fast as thespaoeshuttle
inorbit-18,000mph-theenlire
train would sail past you i.n a fifth
of a second
In a letter from Prior, Okla.,
comes a graduation photn of a
young lady named Wynter Wheat.
Pretty . They won't forget her
face. either.
Q. Who first delivered that
conversational gambit, "Tennis
anyone"?
A. A Broad way stage character
played by none other than
Humphrey Bogart.
Q. Louie, you're ao dumb you
think Omaha, Spokane and J ohn-
stown are rwnes of horaes!
A. Won't bite on that one. my
f riend. Spokane won the Ken-
tucky Derby ln 1889, Omaha In
1935, Johnttown In J 939. Inciden-
tally. you left out Seattle S lew.
1977.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilot
Q . Is it true that carbonation
rushes alcohol into the blood-
stream?
A. Quite true. Effervescence
speeds the essence.
Can a woman "walk like a
prostitute"? In Denmark. she can.
And be arrested because of the
way she walks. Prostitution is not
illegal there, but street soliciting i.s.
After a policeman collared one
suspect, he told the judge, No, she
didn't say anything to anybody.
but her walk made it obvious. The
judge accepted that. Then other
judges did likewise repeatedly in
other cases. The precedent now
seems set.
Rapid Reply: No, my dear.
"Euthanasia" is not an organiza-
tion of oriental teenagers ..
The hatband came before the
hat, pleMe note.
Q . What kind of money does a
head golf pro make at a top
country club?
A As much N $200,000 a year .
That w ord "bride" com es from
an old Teutonic word meaning "to
cook."
M06t beer is pasteunwd.
H. L 8Clhw.U ,Ill ~
CMIJOow.., (-----Ml lo .. ~
Carter-Vesco scandal revisited
WASHINGTON -The blood-
hounds oC the press are in hot
pursuit of the mole who slipped
Jimmy Carter's political secrets to
the opposition during the 1980.
presidential election campaign.'
Let us suppose that President
Reagan should become personally
implicated in the scandal, that
criminal charges should be laid
before a grand jury, that an
accused accomplice should be re-
warded with a presidential ap-
pointment, that h e should fail two
lie-detector tests and that the
president's personal attorney
should counsel a witness against
being "too open with the FBI."
How the bloodhounds would bay!
Then let's say that incriminat-
ing documents should be withheld
from the grand jury, that jurors
should accuse the prosecutors of
protecting White House witnesses
and that the grand jury foreman
should charge the Justice Depart-
men t with "duplicity," "manipu-
lation" and "cover-up'' to protect
the Reagan administration. What
a howl reporters would raise!
Finally, let's say that the grand
jury should want to bring indict-
ments but that the Justice Depart-
ment s hould refuse to prosecute.
Does anyone doubt that the news
hounds would holler to high
heaven?
Tbi1 startling !IC.enario is not
wild imagination; such events
have already occurred. But the
president who became entangled
in this mess was Jimmy Carter,
not Ronald Reagan. What hap-
pened to the vigilant p~ during
those explosive events? Where
were the banner headlines? In
fact, there was scarcely a murmur
from the press.
What are the details of this
Q
-J1-c1-1-11-11---11-1 -~
suppressed scandal?
Fugitive financier Robe rt
Vesco. described in a biography as
"the largest international swin-
dler of our times," made a deal
with some Georgians to fix the
federal case against him. The
Georgians had ties inside Carter 's
White House.
Vesco agreed to transfer a block
of stock worth $10 million to the
Georgia group. But first he de-
manded two signals that the
Georgians really couJd pull the
necessary strings inside the White
House. He wanted the Justice
Department to drop its attempts to
extradite him from Costa Rica,
and he insisted that President
Carter himself telephone Costa_
Rican president Daniel Oduber
about the Vesco case.
Nol long aflerward, Vesco be;
came satisfied that both conditions
had been met. He then transferred
the $10 million stock through a
complex financial maneuver to
the Georgia group. Here is the
incriminating sequence:
On Feb. 8. 1977, a smaU-town
Georgia attorney. Spencer Lee IV,
showed up at the White House
after a visit with Vesco in Costa
Rica. Lee had a 3:00 p.m. appoint-
ment with his boyhood buddy,
Richard Harden, who was a
trusted Carter aide. The two
Criends al.so had dinner together
th.at evening. Both later admitted
that Lee told Harden about
Vesco's multi-million dollar offer.
The next day. at precisely 4:47
p.m .. President Carter telephoned
President Oduber in C.OSta Rica.
This was an unlik~ly person for a
president to be calling only 20 days
"after taking office. Carter told the
FBI, according to a Justice Depart-
ment memo, that he placed the call
tocongratulateOduber for rece1v-
ing "a conservation award." Vesco
later confessed that Oduber told
hun Carter had spoken , as
pre-arranged, about the Vesco
case.
A week later-on Feb. 15. to be
precise -Harden dropped by the
Oval Office for a meeting with the
president. The White House later
admitted that Harden spoke to
Carter about Vesco's offer to pay
millions of dollars for a political
fix. Recounts a J ustice Depart-
ment memo: ''The president then
proceeded to write a note to the
Attorney General stating, 'Please
see Spencer Lee from Albany
when he requests an appoint-
ment.' The handwritten note was
initialed J .C."
Lee never sought the appoint-
ment. It was unnecessary. Some-
one else arranged for the extra-
dition proceedings against Vesro
to be dropped. Former New York
Times reporter Charles Kaiser
says he was told that Carter
himself made the decision to st.op
the extradition attempt.
This infonnation assertedly
came from Robert Fiske, a former
U.S . a\torney in New York City.
who in an interview hedged on the
question of Carte r's personal in-
volvement. All Fiske would con-
firm was that the ultimate de·
cision to stop the extradition
proceedings was made by the
White House.
These facts were laid before the
Justice Department, wmch was
controlled, of course, by the White
House. Lee fatl<4<1 two He -detector
tests. Harden refused to take a
test; his testimony was described
in Justice Department documents
as "perjurious " Incriminating
documen ts and testimony were
withheld from the grand jury.
The president's personal attorney.
Charles Kirbo. was picked up on
tape adv1sing a witn~. '"l think
1rs a mistake to be too open with
the FBI''
Members of the: grand jury
claim that tht.-prosecutors seemed
to be prot.ccting Wh1 te House
witnesses One juror sa1d the chief
pr~'Cutor "tried to lead tht> jury
by the ncise." The foreman. Ralph
Ulmer, tried to resign, charging
that •·ccwcrup activities are bemg
orchestrated within the Depart-
ment of Justice under the concept
that the administration must be
protected at au costs."
ln tbe end, the Jusu<.-e Depart-
ment attorneys not1C1ed the grand
jury that they would not pros-
ecute anyone. so the Jurors c"On-
side red it Cuttle to issue any
indictments Explatn<.'CI the fore-
man in a repon to th(• Judge. ··The
J ustice Departmtmt • ·•'1 the> grand
jury there wou! ex-no indict-
ments because .hey would sign
none . J urv was asked onJy to
clear tho5e involved Jury
neither indicted nor cleared any·
one"
Footnote. What happened to
Spencer Lee JV after he admitted
to the White House that he was
involved, at least temporarily, in a
conspiracy to obstruct justict> for a
multi-m1Jtion doUar payoff? Pr-esi-
dent Carter appointed him to a
judicial nominating committee
that helped to select federal
judges.
They still say it can't he done
By ROBERT F URLOW
A111 I Ill,,.._"*-
WAS HINGTON (AP)
Chrysler Corp.'s revival, using
government help to climb from
apparent near-bankruptcy to re-
cord profits, has put smiles on a lot
of faces in both Detroit ahd
Washington. But it hasn't quite
converted all the foes of govern-
ment "bailouts."
To be sure, backers of the
government program -born in
the Carter administration -are
crowing. Some are even trying to
hammer Chrysler's success into a
political weapon against the Re-
agan administration, which is
generally opposed to government
interve ntion in private business.
Bat a Hmp1e of original friends
and foes of the loan -guarantee
plan finds most stick.Ing to their
philosophical guns while applaud-
lng the return to health of the
nation's No. 3 automaker.
Treasury Secretary Donald T .
Regan sat cheerfully at the head
table at a luncheon last week as
C>ttmll .. ~-·-----"Are you trying to tell me
•"lat the glrl he's living with
Is his wife? towt"
NIWB ANAlYSIS
Chrysler Ch.airman Lee I.acocca
announced that the company was
paying back the last of its $1.2
billion in government-guaranteed
loans 9even years early.
But Regan, who had been
decidedly lukewarm about the
program when he took his post in
early 1981, stopped well short of
endorsing the idea for other
troubled companies. "We'd have
to judge all of these thing& on
themselves," he said.
Alexander Trowbridge, presi-
dentof the National Association of
Manufacturera, said he didn't
think it was "good public policy"
for the government to go to great
lengths to aid one company
without provision for deciding
whether others should be helped
in similar ways.
Still, he said, that position
"doesn't diminish our delight" In
the revival of Chrysler, still an
NAM member, which "con-
founded the critics" by returning
relatively quJckly to apparent
health. •
On Capitol Hill. Sen. Wllllam
Proxmire, P.. Wis., was one of the
main oppon ents ot the
loan-guarantee plan that Con-
grea pueed In late 1979. And a
spokesman said he atilJ felt the
same.
"He's glad that Chrysler suc-
ceeded and that the people who
work there have jobl," aafd a
ProxmJre aJde, Ken McLean. But
he said the llt'nator at.tu felt such a
t>.llout, by aetting a pomible
precedent, "erodel the kind of
dl.tdpUne" that helps manag.-
ment make hard bwl1ncm de-
clslon1 without the c.-omfort of
believing they can always fall
bedc on IOft"'")"""l help.
Jacocca mlgbt say such views
are merely those of an ideologue.
In fact, he did say that in his
loan-payback speech. though
without naming any names.
"The idealogues in Washington.
and there are many, simply
couldn't accept &hat something
truly worked.'' he said. "Well fine,
some people may hear inner voices
that tell them that what Chrysler
did is some kind of sin or worse."
What Chrysler did was fight for
and win government agreement to
guarantee up to $1.5 billion in
loans from private le nders.
Chrysler officials said at the
time that the company would
almost surely go bankrupt
without such h elp, and many
critics said even the loan guaran-
tees wouldn't stop Chrysler's
drive to oblivion.
Bat lbe plH apparently
worked, combining the govern-
ment help with severe company
cost-cutting, including employees'
agreement to trim their own
benelit.s.
"It was equality of sacrifice and
not just a simple baJJout, '' lacocca
aald.
From 1979 through 1981,
Chrysler 108\ a total of $3.27
billion. But the compnay post
f'ecord eam1nga of $172.1 million
ln the flnlt q~r of this year.
and analysta say that figure prob-
ably roee in the eec:ond quarter.
with 1983 profits estimated at
$700 milllc:m or 90.
~r.· Femand St Gennaln, O.R ... ctwnnan o( the House
Banking Comm ittee, said
Chrysler'• loan-payback an.
nounccment wu w elcomed by
thoee who believed "rallonal gov-
emmentusllt.ance-wlth ~per
tatuuarda -can pay dlvidt.'nda
foe ~ ~ eco1iomy.''
He at.> took a awfpe at what he
caUC!d ''knee-ju~ ~rvatlves''
who had opposed the plan. And
similar political comments came
from Walter Mondale. who was
vice president when I.he plan was
approved and who is now seeking
the Democratic presidential nomi-
nation.
Speaking in Detr oit, Mondale
said, "If President Reagan had
had his way, the Ch rysler Corp.
would be gone today and hun-
dreds of thousands of people i1'
Detroit and other places would"-
have lost their jo~."
While Rt:agan is generally op-
posed to government bailouts of
troubled c·ompanies, he did come
out in favor or the Chryaler loan
pack.age during the 1980 cam-
paign.
After he took office. his
Treasury secretary. Regan. be-
came a member of the Chrvsler
Loan Guarantee Board, ~hich
actuaUy was putting the program
into effect. Regan voted for the
final $400 million installment of
the loan guarantees, but he said
repeatedJy that he was merely
following through on work the
board had done before he amved.
He said hlS 3pproval would not
be won so e~ily If Chryalcr came
back for the final $300 million.
larooca !Mlid he wouldn't be back
and kept his word.
CllDIY Ill
Want to nralghtt-n this rount.ry
out ln a hurry? Ma ke malfe~
In oHICf' a capital crlml".
PETER MARCUS
_._...~--
•
•
o a customers o
reat e~ • •
ortant! . . -1s1m
You are urged to complete and
return your Proxy, today.
.
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• '
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.... D1lly1Pilat
Steve Howe's suspension . o MONDAY, JULY 18, 1983 has been lilted by the 0 STOOKS 84 Dodgers alter tests show
COMICS 85 he's OK. Page B2. ...
·Cheap lesson
for Moffet?
0.-, .... ,.,......,, ..... c......
Eric Dickerson went through his
paces as a Ram for the first time
Sunday. The S2.2 million run-
ning back says he could have
signed for more money with the
United States Football League,
but chose the NFL and the Rams
with the help of his mother's
advice'. The All-American run-
ning back from Southern
Methodist Univer sity ran,
caught and stretched Sunday
without incident.
By ROGER CARLM>N OflheO.-, ..... IWI
LOS ANGELES -It wu a
cheap enough lesson considering
what potentially lies ahead for
John Moffet. •
But yout~never know it watching tum 't the .stands as
others went their paces
in the 1 -meter breaststroke
finals Sunday.
Moffet, considered a blue chip
prospect to repreeent the United
Stat.et at the Olympic Games a
year from now here on the cam-
pUI of the University of Southern
California, made a mistake -for
the second lime at the
McDonald's Invitational Swim
Meet -he dq'd again.
Saturday it was a matter of
jumping too soon as the third leg
of the 4 x 200 freestyle relay,
killing his team's chances. Sun-
day he ducked hia head below the
surface of the water aa he com-
pleted his heat in the 100 breast in
1:05.1 -an error _which spoiled
all of the positives that would
have been derived from entering
the finals as the No. 3 aeed.
"I'm fed up with false starts,"
the Stanford University
IOphomore pid Newport Harbor
High product said as he watched
the 100 breast finals take place.
He waa even more fed up, how-
ever, in how his disqualification
WU handled Sunday. In abort, lt
wun't handled.
"I didn't find out I wu dit-
qUalitied until 45 minutee after
the race," Mid Moffet. "Not witil
I went to the computer to check
thingl out for my.elf d1cfl find I
was dq'd. I asked them why I
wasn't informed earlier and I WM
told they ·~dn't have time to tell
me.' I could have Come b9Ck here
for the finals expecting to swim if
I hadn't checked thinp out my-
.elf. It's ridiculoul that they
never told me. I had no ide9 there
WU anyth.ina W1'0n8· 11
In lone coune IWimminl a
breutstreke awtmmer must fin-
ii}\ with hia heed above the IW'-
face and lt'a a apllt eeoond th.inc·
Moffet doesn't deny he erred, but
still protested the dedlk>n be-
cauae of the lack of reapect lfven
him by the offldall. Shabby
treatment indeed for one of the
world '• t o p ranked
breutatroken.
Neverthele.., the result left
Moffet with a pretty empty feel-
ing for hia efforts at thJa invita-
tional. On Saturday he fin1ahed
third in the 200 individual medley
with a clocking of 2:11.22, on top
of Thunday'a 2:23.28 (lixth) in
the 200 breaatatrou.
Moffet'• time under unlhaven
conditiona waa respectable foe
(See MOFFET, Pa1e &I)
Mom was th.e difference
As the second player choeen in the
National Football League draft of college
players, Eric Dickerson commanded a
four-year contract worth $2.2 million.
football," said Dickeraon o( hia mother.
"But she said she'd sleep on it a night.
Then she said she thought I should go
with the Rama."
st.reaaed, would be "low key."
Part of the reason for that wu the
memory of the Johnnie Johmon 1Qnina
three years earlier . In that cue, the Ra.Jnii
No. ·l draft choiced received the teem'•
flnt Sl-milllon J>Kkace and four Pro
Bowl veterans walked out in protest.
Watson celebrates
British Open title
SOUTH.PORT, England (AP)
-After Tom Watson had been
presented with the British Open
golf trophy for the fifth time, he
was handed a telegram.
But the United States Football League,
Dickenon said Sunday on hia first day of
practice with the Loe Angeles Rama,
offered him more money.
"The money was better in the USFL
.alter," said Dickeraon aft.er hia first
practice as a pro running hick. "It was
very hard to turn down. But town deep, I
always had a feeling I belonged here."
Dickel"llOn said his mother helped
advise him on a choke of college, too. He
wound up at Sou them Methodiat Univer-
sity and gained more than 4,400 yUds in
four years. He finished third in the
Heiaman Trophy balloting as a eenior.
"I want to put that (the contnct) all
behind me," uid Dickenon. "I'll never
tell What it 1.J." -
It was from Peter Thomson,
one-time Australian great. It said:
"Delighted and thrilled to wel-
come you to the five times club."
That feeling got an us.isl from Viola
Dickerson, his mother. Last Monday
night, after hearing offers from the Rama
and the Express, Dickerson called home.
DickenlOJl said the lengthy neg~
tiations, which culminated Tueaday nlght,
had become "very fruatrating" to him.
"I wanted to oorne to camp on tiJne," he
said. "I didn't want to come in with the
veterans and have people sayinT, 'Here
comes Mr. Stud with all hia money."'
A. for his chances of lltal'tin8 at runnina
back with the Rama. Didcenon Mid, ••rm
very competitive. Once I pt all the playa
down, I want to be in a position to .iart."
The running back tram SMU added
that he was "very pl~ted. but I
don't expre91 them .. .it'• not llOmethina rd
bout about."
That reminded the golfers and
tournament officials raising
champagne glaases in the Royal
Blrkdale clubhouse that Wat8on
had truly joined the i.mmorta.ls.
Only four other golfers have ever
been British Open champion five
times -old-timers J .H . Taylor,
I "She doesn't even know much about Hia image with the ~· Dlckeraon
Angels host Red Sox, Y az, ~onight
arl Yastrzemski
Carl Y ast.rzemski makes the first of three
final appearances at Anaheim Stadium to-
night when the Boston Red Sox and their Hall
of Fame candidate invade for tonight's duel.
The Angels, a game behind first place
Texas, but in third place in the h~tic
American League West, will be trying to stay
withiJ:l reach of the top after a less than
spectacular road trip, capped-by Sunday's
11 -1 drubbing at the hand of h06t Baltimore.
With each start, things get a little better
for pitcher Allan Ramirez of the Baltimore
Orioles.
The 26-year-old rookie, eight days into
his second tour of duty with the Orioles this
season, hurled a four-hitter to beat the Angels
11 -1 for Baltimore's seventh victory in the last
eight games.
Jim Dwyer had four of Baltimore's 16
hits, including three doubles, and drove in
four runs. Gary Roenicke, who hit a homer,
Cal Ripken Jr. and Rich Dauer each had two
RBis.
It was the first complete game for
Ramirez, who has a 3-0 record after four starts
and a sparkling 1.55 earned run average.
When he was first called up last month,
Ramirez held Milwaukee to four runs in two
starts, pitching 14 irinings. Last Tuesday, he
blanked Oakland for eight innings before
being lifted in the ninth.
"I never thought I'd pitch a complete
game," Ramirez said after throwing 119
pitches in Sunday's hwrud, 97-degree
weather. "I thought I'd shoot for seven
innings, and after that go hitter by hitter."
But after yielding a home run to Bobby ·
Grich in the fifth and two hits in the sixth,
Ramirez retired the last 10 batters in a row to
deal the Angels their sixth defeat in seven
games.
The Orioles scored a first inning run on
consecutive doubles by Dwyer and Ripken,
and then added three tainted runs in the
second off Byron McLaughlin, 1-2.
With two outs and the bases loaded,
Dwyer lofted a high fly to short left.
Shon.top Tim Foli and left fielder Bobby
Clark, who collided on a pop fly in the finrt,
11eemed to bea bitcautiousonDwyer'sfly. Foll
pulled away at the last moment as Clark made
a diving attempt which failed, and three runa
scored.
The Orioles added a run in the third,
chased Mcl..auglin while getting two more in
the fourth, and made it 9-1 with two in the
fifth off Bill Travers. Roenicke'a tw~run
homer came in the eighth.
California's Rod Carew played only one
game in the four-game eeriea becaWle of an
ailing knee. He wu hitlem in three trips as his
average dipped to .397, the flrat time he's been
under the .400 mark since April 21.
Third buefnan Doug DeCincea mi89ed
the lerles while undergoing treatment for
back mUlcle apuma.
"OeCinces .aya he feels better," said
Angela Manager John McNamara, "but he'•
nowhere cloee to playing."
Harry v anion and James Braid
back in the 1890a and the early
yean of this century, and
Thom110n between 1954 and 196~.
"What a way to end a dry
spell," Mid Wa'80n. who had not
won a tounwnent since laat
year'• British Open at Troon.
His other victories were at
Carnouatie in 1975, Tumberry in
1977 and Muirfield in 1980.
A record 142,894 att.ended the
tournament. ~ 30,000 watch-
ed a thrilling doc-fiaht between a
doun tightly-pecked playen in
Sunday's final round.
Nobody could guem the winner.
until Wat9on came up the 18th
fairway and hiJ. a majestic iron
shot from light rough into the
middle of the green.
"It WU probably the best iron
lhot of my life,'' Wat.on aaid.
The shot left him with two
putts to spare for the title and he
could not mial. ·
Wallon finished with a
four-round total of 275 -
9-under-par for the 6,9e8-yard,
par 71 lealide linka.
Hale Irwin and Andy BMn
were one stroke t:..ck. tied for
9eCOnd pi.oe. Grabam Manh wu
at 277, Lee Trevino 278, Seve
Balle.term and Harold Hennina
279 and Nick Faldo, BUI Roten,
Christy O 'Connor Jr. and
Britain's Dents Durnian
bracketed at 280.
Other contendera lilte era.ta
Stadler, Mark .McNulty arMJ
Fuzzy Zoeller faded in the excite-
ment of the day's firin«.
At one stage he WU tied with
Marsh, Irwin and Bean.
~odgers give Cubs
iomething to cheer
. One mistake costly
I or MV's Louganis
..OS ANGELES (AP) -The
Seago Cubs feel the worst is
lind them.
!'hey completed a dreadful
!St Coast road trip, winning
,y three of 11 games, but at
at they closed it with a
wish, routing the Los Angeles
dlers on Sunday 10-0 behind
oenicke handed
lking papers
LOS ANGlllUS (AP) -the Dodpn announoecl Sun-~ that they have liven
uta.lder Ron Roenklce ht.
~t reletlle and recalled
J,atftelder Candy M.aJdon.edo
~ thetr Albuquerque farm ~-·~ the Padfic CoMt
~. 2e, appnnd in 81
.. J)od,_..1 84 pm.., fat
--.n, compmna a .221 •wnae with two
me run1 and 12 ... .., .... m. He bll 227. a
hlUir.
Dickie Noles' seven-hit pitching.
And as the Cubs ref\.lrn home,
despite being eight games under
.500, they're still only 41h games
out of first place in the National
League F.ast.
"We've got a good schedule the
rest of the way, better than any-
one ebe in our division," said the
Cuba' Bill Buckner. a former
Dodger, who clouted his 12th
home run, singled twice and stole
two bases in leading Chicago's
13-hit attack against loeer Bob
Welch, 7-9, and two succeaors.
''The Pirates are playing better
than anyone in the division right
now. But the Phillies and Expos
still have to make a Welt Coast
trip. And we've got one of the
best home records,'· Buckner
added, pointing out that the Cubs
are 24-16 at Wrigley Field.
Nolet, 3-~. who hurled hit first
shutout of the aeaaon, noted,
"We're 1tlll only 4 ~ games out.
No one's giving up. We all know
we've ~l a chance to be th~." r
Ron Oey, aI.o a fonner Dod;et,
aaid, "We've started playing a
little better. We've lost aome
pmes we should have won." Greg L~uganja riniahed Reond at 10 melf"·----
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bruce
Kimball of Ann Arbor, Mich.,
beat world champion Greg
Lougania Sunday in the 10-meter
platform diving event at the
LA83 International Invitational
meel
Kimball 8COred 632.16 potnta in
the 10 dives to 620.34 for
Lougania, who won the 3-meter
1prin8board title on Saturday.
"You can't mm a dive ._.mat
Bruce and expect to beat him.,''
Mid Louaania. who won the event
at the World Championships and
the 1983 World Univenlty
G&me..
"On the one dive I rru.ed (a
revel'M 1 ~, 3 ~ twill free) I had a
good 1trong top but du, at the
bottom. It'• a new dive, but I've
been aettina comfortable with it
ln practSce. I have to learn to
handle the flniah.
"U thete dlve1 (with h18h
dep"9 of difficulty) cClt me t.fle
meet, I'd rather have lt happen
thla ~ than ne1't.
"lt'110in1 to be a y.r-before I
~-mr new diwa." Loupnil hopel to have ~
•t f~ the 1984 OlYJt'I* G.-at
. .
the same new outdoor pool when
the LA83 events were coni.ted.
In the pell yeer, K1mball has
won three timee and Lo...,., ol
Mt.ion Viejo, Calif., four in lhe4r
meetinp.
Loupnia Mid, "It la vwy pm-
ible that Bruce and I can IO
one-two next yeer (in the Olym-
pics)."
Michigan Q~
•• proves point
DDlVER (AP) -It Mkhlpn
quarterblick Bobby Hebert wen
a pmblinl man, he mlaht have
made h.lnwelf a ton of. IDCJMy on
the PUlth•n' 24·22 vtdor'y over
the Philadelphia Stan in the flnt
United Stat.ee J'ootball X.....
champtonlhlp pme.
lnat.-ct, he WM the aame'1
MOit Valuable Pla19f.
"It'1 troNc that I ta1ad '° a
couple of NpClr'Wa beb'9 the
pme and I told ~ tMt If ,.,.
OoWd1CONl4..-..ow Hrr
would bald ......... 'INe ..... <'91 IGClllOAN, .... .
..
In Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1983
Dodgers put Howe
back in their game
LOS ANGELES -Reliever a · Steve Howe, who was suspended by
the Los Angeles Dodgers Saturday
night, was back in uniform Sunday
after providing the team with results of a test for
drug uae.
Dodgers spokeswoman Vicky Watanabe said
the tests on Howe, who has been treated twice for
cocaine de ndency. "did not show lhe presence of
any prohibited substances."
Howe underwent the test
Saturday but had at first
refused to reveal the results to
lhe club.
Howe's agent, Tony At-
tanasio, called the club about
9:30 p.m. Saturday to say the
results would be released, Ms.
Watanabe said.
The test results were
HOWE handed over to the Dodgers
Sunday morning by Dr. J oseph Pursch of
Ca.reUnit in Orange County, where Howe under-
went his aeoond treatrne.nt for cocaine abuse.
"We a.re pleased that the results of the tests
were made available to us, that they were
favorable and that Steve How e is able to rejoin his 1
teammates'.," Dodgers vice president Al Campanis
said before Sunday's game in Los Angeles against
the Chic.ago _Cubs.
Howe's brief suspension came after he
arrived J.ate for a game Friday night and later
refused to submit to team-supervised tests for drug
uae.
Quote of the day
"It was the worst I've seen in my 40
years in baseball," -Rall* Hoak, referring
to his Boston Red Sox's performance against
Oakland Sunday.
Edwards wins Quad Cities
Danny Edwards won a sudden n
death playoff against Morris Hatalsky
on S unday to win the $200,000 Quad
Cities Open Golf Tournamen t. -
Edwards sank a 14-foot pu tt for the $36,000
first prize after Hatalsky's 15-foot birdie attempt
lipped the cup. Hatalsky took home $21,600.
Both golfers birdied the final hole of
regulation play for 3-under par 67s Sunday to send
the tournament into the playoff. Alter returning
to the 377-yard first hole, they each hit the green
with their second shots to set up the final putting
duel. Hatalsky putted first then watched as
Edwards sank the winner.
They finished the 72 holes of regulation play
over the 6,514-yard Oakwood Country Club with
14-under-par 266 totals, which tied the tour-
nament record ... Bella Daalel sank an 8-foot putt
on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff to beat
defending champion JoAD.ae CarDer in the
$350,QOO McDonald's Kids Cla.Wc and capture her
first LPGA tournament in nearly a year.
Daniel led through out most of the four-day,
72-hole t.oUrnament ove.r the 6,283-yard White
Manor Country Club course.
Kolius riding
some big waves
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Skipper John K.olius
said he was overjoyed that his boat Courageous, the
sentimental favorite in the America's Cup trials, had
pulled off another upset in the U.S . preliminary
races.
But he wasn't ready Sunday to ask the New
York Yacht Club to dismiss the other two U.S. entries
from the trials, yet.
"U it had been the last race in August, it would be
really exciting. But we've got a lot of sailing left,"
Koliua said after guiding his 10-year-old yacht to an
eigh t-eecond victory over Dennis Conner's Liberty in
one of the cloeest sailing duels of the summer.
"We haven 't sailed against Liberty in a bunch of
breei.e," he said. referring to the light 10-knot winds
during Sunday's match. "Until we do that, we really
won't know."
Compulsion wins
Compulsion, co-skippered by Ralph Rodheim
and Bill Palmer, was the C1asa A winner Sunday in
Bahia c.orinthian'a 20-Fathom Buoy race, the fourth
in the club's ~Jrnan Series for Performance
Handicap Racin8 Fleet yachts.
0.. B winner was Streas Breaker. co-skippered
by Jack and Bruce Lanon, BCYC. and the C1asa C
winner wu Blueberry Muffin, sailed by Karen
Muon. BCYC.
Trophy winners in each class:
CLASS A -1. Compulsion, Rodheirn/Palmer,
Bahia Corinthian YC;· 2. F.ncore, Joe Hoffman.
BCYC; 3. Bis Apple, Johal\llon!Willlama, Balboa YC.
CLASS B -1. Strem Breaker , Jack and Bruce
La.non. BCYC; 2. Nugie Too, Jim and Karen Nugent,
BalOO. YC. 3. And.iamo, Bob Sodaro, BYC.
CLASS C -1. Blueberry Muffin, Karen Muon.
BCYC; 2. Mariposa, Did< Hayden, BCYC.
Naples Sabots triumph
Thirty-two boa ta in five claleee of NaplC!!8 Sabota
turned out Sunday for Lido Iale Yacht Club' a All Girl
ftesatta eaiJed over COUl'8ett lnaide the bay. Trophy
wtnnen:
SENIOR SABCYI' -l. C.-andra Smelu.er,
Newport Harbor YC. SABC1I' A -l Anne PemJck, BahJa Cottnthian
YC. SABOO:' 8 -1. Marla Coon, Newport Harbor
I YC; 2. TNha Roya. Udo We YC.
SABOi' C-1 -l .Rachel Jarrard, LIYC.
J 8ABC1I' C.2 -1. Andrena, DI Donato, Newport
Harbor YC: 2. l'.rtn WannJ.ncC.on, LJYC; 3. Cari &.. I, LIYC_
l
T wo-hitter slo w Blue J ay
Harold Baines and Carlton Fh1k
blasted home runs Sunday m support
of F loyd Banalster's two-hit pitching
over seven innings to leadth<' C hicago
White Sox lO a 3-2 victory over the Toronto Blue-
J ays. Chicago salvaged the finale of a four-game
aeries with the American League East-leading
Blue Jays, scoring the winning run on a pMSed ball
by catcher Buck Martinez. Banrustcr, 5-9. didn't
..,. 0 le., allow a hit until Gart b lorg
111111" tripled to open the seventh ...
T om B rookens' two-run
double and Enoa Cabell's
two-run single highlighted
Detroit's seven-run 10th in-
-ning as the Tigers ripped
Seattle, 8-1 . . . Oakland
combined 15 hits, 11 walks, a
Boston error and seven stolen
bases for a 13-9 victory over
FISK the Red Sox in a three-hour
and 34-minute marathon in which each team left a
dozen runners on base. Carl Yastnemskl hit his
sixth omer of the season and No. 448 of his career .
.. Cecil Coo~r drove in four runs with a pair of
homers and Jim Gantner and Paul Molitor also
slugged homers, power the surging Milwaukee
Brewers to a 10-6 victory over Minnesota ... Rick
Cerone's run-scoring single snapped a
sixth-Inning tie and Dave Winfield drove in three
runs with a double and single as the New York
Yankees stopped Texas,1l-6. handing the West
leaders their ninth loss in 11 games ... Amos Otis
drove home two runs with a bases-loaded single in
the eighth inning. breaking open a close game and
leading Kansas City to a 7-2 win over Cleveland.
Phillies Be n ch e d , 5 -2
Jobnny Be nch slammed a •
three-r un homer in the seventh inning
and F rank Pastore pitched a
two-hitter to give Cincinnati a 5-2
National League victory over Philadelphia Sun-
day. Pastore, 4-8. gave up Bo Diaz's ninth home..
run in the second inning and Mike Schmidt's 18th
in the fifth. He walked four, struck out three in
pitching his first complete game of the year ...
Darryl Strawberry's two-run
triple carried the New York
Mets to a 3-1 victory over
Houston. slopping Nola n
Ryan's eight-game winning
streak while he regained the
all-time strikeout lead, whif-
fing five to raise his career
strikeout total to 3,583, one
more than Philadelphia's
Steve Carlton . . . Marvel
U NCH Wynne lined a single t.o center
in the sixth to drive in the tie-breaking run in a 4-3
Pittsburgh victory over San Diego . . .
Right-hande r Greg Barger allowed five hits over
seven innings in his first major legue game and
Andre Dawson belted a two-run homer as
Montreal beat Atlanta, 3-1. to snap the Braves'
six-game winning streak ... Right-hander Bill
Laskey went the distance for lhe firsl time in 20
starts this year as he scattered seven hits m a 3-1
victory for San Francisco over St. Louis. 1t raises
Laskey's record to 11-8. Laskey struck out six and
walked two. Catcher Milt May provided most of
the offense off loser John Stupor. 7-6. with a
secnd-inningsingle in the fourth that cracked a 1-l
tie.
T e levision, radio
TV -Kansas City at Toronto, Channel 7, 6
p.m.
RADIO -Boston at Angels. KMPC (710).
7:30.
In the cool white bottle.
Ask for lt a t vo ur
favorite store or restaw-ant.
Availuhle through
Straub Distributing Co., Inc.
(714) 893-0758
(714) 768-34 75
(714) 637-7333
lmpnrtf'll by: Hnllmwl 1mp .. r1~
A tlllfll/11 t ,.,,ii61t
MOFFET • • •
From Page 81
h im and now, as it ts tor the rc.'8 t
of America's Pan-Am Gameti
hopefuls, it's a matter of pointing
toward the nationals at Clovis
Aug. 3-6.
l'U go down in yardage and get
a lot more rest," explained Moffe t
about hi.s tapering schedule,
pointing toward Clovis and the
rewards -the top two in each
event qualify for the American
team which competes in Ven-
~uela at the Pan-Am Games.
"Last year I swam my fastest
after eight weeks of tapering,"
said Moffet.
"He's capable of going very
fast," says his coach, An Simmons
of Tustin's Southern California
Aquatics.
"With desire and drive he'll do
it. He hasn 't come anywhere near
it yet. It's a very short period
from now until the Olympics.
Swimmers, on a day-to-day basis
may feel like it's a long ways off,
but it isn't. We'll be working on a
lot of little things -starts, turns
and pulls."
Another Newport Harbor High
product -Jon Ballack -excelled
for the second time in tttis meet.
The Mission Viejo Nadadore
swimmer won his second consola-
tion race in the backstroke, taking
the 100 in 1:00.28. On Thursday
he won the 200 back consolation
with a time of 2:08.71.
,,, .......... Fountain Valley swimmer Amy
Clark was seventh in her consola-
tion heat of ther 100 breast
(1:17.74). She was 16th in the 200
breast (2:47.91) after posting a
2:45.17 in Thursday's prelims.
Happy Michigan Pa nthers mo b Derek Holloway
(no t visible) a fter catching T D pass.
South Irvine,
Viejo triumph
MICHIGAN WINS • • •
South Irvine outslugged
Laguna Beach 14-12 Sunday in
the District 55 13-year-old tour-
nament at Woodbridge Park in
Irvine.
And. in another game, Viejo
srored a 16-5 decision over Lake
Forest.
On Tuesday, Laguna .Beach
will meet Lake Forest at 5 p.m.,
while South Irvine and Viejo will
tangle at 7. Both games are also
set for Woodbridge Park.
ln other tournament action
scheduled for tonigh.t. Seaview
will meet Huntington Valley at 5
at Edi.son High in the Little
League All-Stars District 62 tour-
nament for Senior League play-
ers.
Also tonight, in the District 55
tourney at Harvard Park, lrvine, •
it will be Viejo against Mission
Hills at 6.
From Page 81
would win the game," Hebert
said in the champaign-drenched
Panth ers' dressing room after
Sunday night's game." And tha t's
exactly what we did."
Hebert threw three touchdown
passes -two to Derek Holloway
and one to Anthony Carter -and
was voted the MVP by reporters
covering the game in Mile ljligh
Stadium.
A 33-yard field goal by Mich-
igan placekicker Novo Bojovic m
the first quarter provided the
margin of victory. but it really
was Carter who sealed the vil'-
tory.
The fleet wide receiver from
the University of M1ch1gan
caught nine passes for 179 yards
including five c rucial
third-down conversions. With
3:01 remaining in the game.
Carter took a short flip from
Hebert. darted around Stars' de-
fensive back Antonio Gibson and
raced into the end zone to com-
plete the 48-yard TD pass play
that put the game out of reach .
"I am No. 1 and the team i.s No.
l ," Carter said. "There's nothing
better than that. It was a great
victory and a credit to Philadel-
phia that they made it so tough
for us. On my touchdown, Bobby
automaticed and picked up lhe
blitz and I had an open field."
Hebert, who completed 20 of 39
passes for 291 yards. called
Carter's clutch TD one of the
great athletic feats he had ever
experienced.
"When AC scored. I couldn't
explain how I felt," Hebert said.
"l was so happy I aJm05t chocked
up and cried. But then I realized
there was still time left and they
still had a chance to come back.
Anthony definitely earned his
money on that play "
The Stars rompleted a 2-point
PAT after both touchdowns.
DISCOVER
TAHOE DONNER!
The Golf Course
Communltv That
Craig Stadfer
Calls 'Home'
Craig Stadler Is one of the world's outstanding
professional golfers and Tahoe Donner Is his
home course. Become a property owner at Tahoe
Donner like Craig and take advantage of an excep·
tlonal 18-hole championship golf course as well as
an abundance of ot ... four-season recreational
activities._. tennis, swimming, horseback
riding, camping, a beach club on Donner lake,
skiing •nd much more. Follow Craig on the
PGA Tour representing Tahoe Donner.
Tahoe Donner Is a $40 million family
resort community in California's majes-
tic High Sierra, only 16 miles north of
Lake Tahoe. It haa been developed to
perfection by Dart Resorts Inc., a
subsidiary of Dart 6 Kraft, Inc. Superb
golf course fairway homesltes are
priced from M0,000 to $59,000, white
other prime vacation building sites
start It $25,000.
For more details and a Fact Book on
Tahoe Donner and Its recreaUonal facil-
ities, Including H toel•llon 111e11ments
end fees for the use of certain amenities,
mall In the coupon below or caH collect
(213) 7°'4·6393.
r-iiiJiiiliii---------....
O•r1 flleeoru Phone
23241 v.ntiK• Blvd .• Suite 111 (213) 704·5393
Woodland HIN1, CA tt384 Colleet
Yes.'"'°'*' Ilk• funhef lntounetion on
TAHOE DONNER.
N•mt----A4Cl••n----------
C•1v _____ S1a1p ___ l 10
TtttOf>oll• I 811\ l ~
A~ --------1.!.J
t !M3 Bv 0.t1 R11wm Inc oc 7· 18 ~ .. ':'::.~I L----------------------~
•
Obtain the Properly Report roqu1red by
Federal Law and read 11 belore s1gn1ng
anything No Federal agency has judged
the men~s or value. 1f any. of this property ..
. ·-
~ . ' . "
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS
Amfftc.en LffVU•
WIST DIVISION
W L Pel. Gii
46 " 523 Tua' c111ce110
Aneell KanHi Ctlv
Oakland
M 1nne1ot1
Sea It le
4S 42 s 17 ~
4S 43 Sil 1 41 42 494 2 ,
.0 so 40 1
37 S4 407 10'1)
36 SS 196 111,,
Toronlo Baltimore
Otlroll
Ntw York Mllweuto.ff
Bo, ton
Cleveland
E AST DllllSION
SI JS
49 37.
... 38
47 3'
46 39
43 44 37 51
SllllcYV'• Geme• Baltlmort 11. Aneell 1
New York I, Tuu 6
Oakland 13, llcnlon 9
.593
S70
SSI S47
S41
494 420
Ken1es cnv 7, Cle•eleno 7
Cnlcago 3, Toronto 2
Mllweukff 10, Mlnne101a 6
Oelrolt I, St •lll• I, 10 Inning'
TedAV'I Gemea
1
3
4
4 ., ,.,,
IS
Bo•IOn IEcktrslev 5·7) ., Aneell
llCl1on 8·3), In)
TellU (Derwin 7·1 ano Hou1111 1-71 al Mllwaukff <Glt>aon 1·2 eno MCCiure
6·71, 2, (n)
K•nHI Cltv !Gura 8·10) al Toronto
cc1ancv 1·61. <n>
Cnlca110 !Hovi 10·91 " C1eve1ano
IBlvlevtn 6·91; lnl
Mlnntsole (Wllller•u S-101 al Ntw
'fori.. IGu1orv IO·S). (n) • Dttrol1 (Petrv1-6) II OekllnO (Con·
rov 2·21 (nl Belllmore (Oavl1 7·4) et Stetlle
iBeellle l ·Sl, In)
N•tt-1 Lnvu•
WIU T DIVISION
W L Pct.
S6 JS 61S
Ge
Atlanta
Dodeen HOU'10!l
Sen Oleoo
S2 36 591 , • ..,
,, 42 521 •
4S .. .506 10
Sen Francisco
Ctnclnnetl u 46 419 llh
.0 SI UO 16
EAST DIVISION
Pn111oe1on1• 43 42 St LO<Jil 45 U
PlttSt>urun 43 43 Montreal 43 44
c111cago 41 49
New Vor• 33 S6
SIHllN'f'• S<Offl
Cuo1 10, ~o
506
506 .soo
494
4$6 311
Ctnc111nt ll S, f'l'lltedtll)llle 7
Montrul 3. Atlt nte I
Plmouroh 4, Sen Oleoo 3
Sen Fr1ncl1co J, SI. LO<Jis I Ntw York 3, Hou11on I
Teda'f'a c;.me1
', I ,,,,
12
Houston (Nlttlro 1·11 •' Pr.lr.ottollia 1Car1to!l 9· 10), n
New York (Gorman 0·21 al Atlante
Y.cMurlrv 10-SI, n
Onlv 11•,,..., 'cn.ouled
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Orl*s 11, Aneels I
CALll'DttNIA aAL ~E
WIWong Jo
Foti u
Valentin 11 Sconlfl lo
LvMcl
Ownnoon
ReJ•un rl
Gr en 21>
RCterk ti
Boone c
OBerrv c
Toteh
abrllbl abrllbl
4 O 0 0 Bumt>rv ct 4 7 1 0
3 O I O Dwvtr rl S 2 4 4
I 0 0 0 MIVong rl 0 0 0 0
3 O I O Rlol<tn u S O 1 7
4 O O O 'EM<.Jrrv 1D S 1 2 I 3 0 I 0 Lown1ln" 1 I 0 0
4 O O O Roentcl< 11 l 1 2 2
3 I I 1 Slnonn dll 4 1 1 O
l 0 O O Nolan c 4 2 2 O
1 0 0 0 Oeutr 31> 1 0 1 2
2 O O o Sakal• 21> J ) I o
JI 1 4 I T .... s Ul1 16 11
5<9"11¥11"*'91 c....,.,,.. 000 010 000-I • ..,.,.,_.. 1J1 no 112>1-11
Gt,.,,.•Wlnnlng RBI -lllpf<en (I).
OP-<alllornle 2 LOB-<t lllornlt 5.
Oelllmore I 2B-Dwvtr 3, R101<en,
Sconiers JB-Nolen Hll~rlcll 191.
lloen1t1<e (101 Sii-Sconiers UJ, Sal<•••
IS) S.-Ot utr SF-Oeuer
IP H It Elt ee so ~ BMcLegnln L, 1·2 J 3
Tra •trs S 0
11 tltlmor e
Ramirez w,3·0 9 4 1 I 2 l BMcLeulllllin PllClltO to J t>t t1er1 In 4tn
T-2~ A-41,614
Am«klln LMVU•
ltrt'eh 7, lndleM 2 Kanws Cllv 000 001 141-7 10 I
Cleveland 000 002 000-2 8 2
Rtnko, Hood 16). Qui1e'ICltl'rv (I) end
Stt UO!ll, So•enwn, SPlllntr (1), Anoer·son
ti ) end HUl8Y W~OOd. 7· I
L-Soillner, 1·6 HR-«1n1t1 Cltv. Brtll
117)
Wlllle Sel J, lllw JtVI 2
Tor onto 000 000 200-2 ' 0 cr..cego 011 010 oox-3 n o
Aleunci.r, Acker (S) t !'d Mtrllntz.
WM• II). llennl11er, ump (I> e nd Fl1~
w -Bennlater. S-9 L-Alaunoer, 0-3
HR1-Toron10, JOhnson 116). Chlceoo,
Fl11< ( 14), Belnt a 16)
V.,.Mt I, R-. 6
Tt1e1 :ioo un ~ 1 1
Ntw York 70? 021 Ohl-4 14 7
Tent nt , Mallat• 141. Jonfl CSI eno Sundt>er11. Jonn1on (I ), Keouvr.. Howell
(SI, Murrev (6) end Ceront. W-Murrev, 2·1 L-Jont1, 3-4 HR-Tt O I, WrloM m
,,.,.,.,.. 10, TWIN 6
~Mnn OOl 100 002-6 11 I
Mllweul< 014 OOl 02x-10 IS O
Scllrom, Hevt nt (3), Wallen 171 Ind
Smllh, Lt UCIMr m, Porter, Sit ton Pl
eno kllroteltr, W-f>orllf'. 2·4. L-
k11<om, 1-4. Hlh-MlnnftOlt , Cu llno
(10) MlhWt uk ... Ganl11tr 191, Molllor (t ), C009tr 1 (:IO)
A's 13, RH SH t
Oe•lend 017 130 U 1-13 IS 7 B~lon 021 101 JOO-9 17 1
Lenoford, Unoerwooo (4) Beoro !~>.
Burgmeler (71. Cooiroll (IJ and Heall\,
Brown, APOn•e ISi. Jdhn1on (7) Clear
(7), Bird (8) eno Gedman, Alltn\on 181
W-Codlroll. 6·6 L-<leor 3 3
HJh-Otkland, Gron I 10) Honcoc• Cl)
Bos•on. Ya\lriem,to.i 161
Tleen I , Mariners 1 Oelroll 010 000 000 7-1 6 0
Su111e 000 001 000 0-1 9 0
Wllco•. Ba•r 171, Los>rt (IOI ano
Perr11h, Fahtv ( 10) Clar•, Caudill 191.
Vt nde Berg t 10), S1enton t 10) ano Swee I
W-Balr. J·O L-C.<1UO•ll 7 6
HR-Detroit, Pom 1n 1101
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Cubs 10, Dodv.n o
CHICAGO LOS ANGLS
MHellcf
Sndt>rg 20
Bucl!nr ID
Ournem If
Johnllnt 11
Ctv lb
JKendv 30
Morelno rf
Boslt v rt
JOevl• c Bowe u
Vtrvztr n
Noltl o
•b r h l>I t i> r h bo
S 0 I 2 SSu 1o 4 0 0 0
S 0 0 0 Lendrv cl 4 L O O 6 2 3 1 Ball.er II 4 O 2 O
S I 0 0 Thoma • If 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Gut'rrer lo 4 O O O 2 2 I 0 Lanostv Jt> o o o o
0 0 0 0 Brock lb 4 0 I 0
4 7 1 0 M&f\hal rt ) 0 1 0
0 0 0 I lleve1 c 3 0 0 0
S 2 3 3 Mondv on I O O O
3 I 1 0 Ande•n u J 0 2 O
I o o o we1c11" 1 o o o o 2 7 Roenc• on I O O O
BK~wlll o 0 0 0 0
JoMrls "" I 0 O 0 Ste ... ,, 0 0 0 0 0
41 10 1J 9 Total• Jl 0 1 o
Seo•• bv Inning'
Clllc•eo OJI 100 410-10
Lot A"91MS 000 000 000-0 Game -w inning RBI -JOav1, tS>
E-SSex, Bektr OP-<n1c<1110 I
LOB-Cllluoo ll LO• Anotll\ a
28 -Beker, Cev HR-Buc•ner ( 12)
SB-Bowe (3) Buc•ner 1~71 SF-Bo•lev
IP H REN 1111 SO
Clllc•eo
Nolt\ W,3·5
L"AneeM• WtlCh L,7-9
llteltwltn
9
Slew art 2
HBP-SandDerg
WP-Nolt\.
T-7 SI A-44,8S7
I
4
I
bV
NltloMI LH9Ut
Rach S. Pl\.i.• 1
0
s
1
0 I I
Stewart
Clnc;lnnall 100 000 301-S 8 0
PlllledtlDhle 010 010 000-2 2 0
Paatore and Knlct lv, Gron, HernenOtl
II), Allamlrano (9) ano Diet
w-Pa'10<e, 4·8 L~ron. 7-1 Hll1-Clnclnne11, Miiner t4) Btncn Ill.
EMskv tSI Plllladeton1a, D•at 191
sc11m1a1 I Il l.
lh DOI J, llreve1 I
MOnlrHI 000 201 000-) 8 I
lllltfll• 000 000 001-t 6 7
Barger, Reardon (I I eno Can er. Dev
i.v. llrluotara 11) Camo Ill ano 8tne41ct W-lltrO•r. 1·0 L-Davlev 2·2 HR-Montreal 01w1on I 19)
Olanf\ J, Cardlntl• I
SI Louis 000 100 000-t 1 I
San Francisco 010 101 00~-3 S 0 Sluoer. lluc•er 111 enO Poroer, Lill! ..
eno Mav W-L .. ~ev 11·1 L-Sluoer
7·6 Hll1-Sen Franc"co, Mev ISl
Leonard 1101
Plf'IMI 4, Ptdret 3
Plt11t>urgn 102 001 000-4 13 I
!Mon 0199o 101 100 000-3 9 I
Tunnell. Sermlt1110 161. Tekul•• 191 eno
P-. Sr.ow. MOnoe (1) end KtMtOY W-Tunntlt, 4•1 L-Snow, 9·6
Hll-Plll1burg11, T11omo1on (131
Mets J, A Slt'OI I
New York 000 300 000-J 5 0 HO<J'1on 000 001 000-1 S 0
Terrell, Oro"o Ill and Hoo11" Rven LaCon Pl, Oawtev (I I •nO BIOr~men
W-Terrell, 2·4 L-Rvon, 9-7
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Am.rlcen LH9Ut
BATTING (210 11 oaf\! Ctrew,
Aneefl, .3'7, BOGG•, Boston. 314, Breit
Ken.a• Cilv, .364, Grllfev, New York,
33J, Al1ten1, Kanu 1 Cltv, 326
RUNS Uosnew, Toronto, 64, Yount,
Mlh.,.ultff, 64, DEva n1 Bo•IOn 61,
R Henderson. Otkland, 61. E Murrav
Balllmore. 60
RB• Coooar. Miiwaukee 69 Rice
Bo11on, 6S. K lttte. Cnlcaoo. 61.
E Murrav, Balllmore, sa, Brell, Keni a•
Cllv. S1, Uosr.ew, Toronto, S7, Word,
Mlnnt101a, S7 HITS. Bogg•. 8011on 170. W111ta~er
Detroit, I 12, Rice. Bollon, 110, Ward
Mlnne,ola. 107 w W1l1on IC.anses Cilv.
101 DOUBLES 80011•. Bo•lon 79,
L N.Perrl1h. OelrO•I. 28. McRae, Kan
S8' Cllv, 27, Hrt>ek Mlnnt1ola, 75,
Breit. Kt nH• Cllv, 23, Coooar Mii-
"'•"""· 23 TRIPLES Herndon Dtlroll I
G WllM>!l, Dtlrolt, 6, Griffin. foron10, 6,
K Gloson. Ot lrolt 6. Wright. T "''· 6 HOME RUNS Rice. Bo\lon, 73, Coootr, Miiwaukee, 20, Kllllt, Cl'llco110,
20, Armes, 801ton. 19, O.Evan1. 801· ton, 11, Up1haw Toronto 18
STOLEN BASES. ll Henderson,
Oa~teno. SJ. J Cruz CnicollO 43
W Wilson, Kan1a1 Citv, 41, R L11w,
ClllU OO, 36, Samoi., Tt•U. ,.
P ITCHING II declslon11
R L Jackson, Toronto, 7-1, 4 H , RIOl'let-
11, Ntw Vork, 11·3, 3.27, H1a1, Mii
waukH, 7·2. 3 6S Koo•man. C1'ic1110
/·7, 4 OS, Sutctlllt Cttveland, 11 ·4 > 11
STRIKEOUTS Sllet>, Toro<Ho 120.
Blvlavtn, Cleveland, 110, MOrrlt. Df
troll, IOI, R11111et11, New York 97
Sulclll!t. Cltveteno, 91
SAVES. Qul1tnt>errv, Kan111 CllV.
11, CaudiH, Satlllt, 11, Slanltv, 8 011on,
17, JtOavl1. Mlnne,ota, IS, LOott
O.troll, 17
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. July 18. 1983
SCOREBOARD
N1tlon11 L .. ou• •
BAT TING U 10 al Dall) Hendrie~.
St Louil 343. l(n111111. Hou,lon 331,
Ea"er P1ll•l>ur11h, )27, Meaioc•. Pit
•sbur1111. 323. Murohv, Allanla 327
ltUNS· M,uro~v. Allan•a, 84, Garvev.
San D••110, '70, Evan•. Sen Froncltto.
66 Ra1n11. l\/\onlreal 65, Dew1on
MonlrH I. S4 •
RBI Oaw•on Montre.-1, 10, Murorw
Allante 6S. Guerrero, DO<IOtn, 60
Htndnc~ St Lou•• 60 C11am~11u Al
1an10, S7 '
HITS Oaw1on, Montreol. 117, Ttion.
Hou11on 112, Oliver Montreal 111
Muronv Alla nla IOS, Garwev Son
01e110 104 DOUBLES Buckner (lhCOOO. 1S,
Knlollt, Hou11on, 24 Oll•tr Mon1rea1
24, Hendr.ck St Lou" 72, J Rav, Pil·
1,our11n, n
TRIPLES MoffnO HOu\IOn, 11, Bui·
ier, Atlanla, e. Rorn11, Montreal, 1
Oewson, Montreat. 6. 1 a:re lttd w1in S
HOl'y\E RUNS Even1. San Fran·
fl\CO 71, M<.Jrol\v A1tan1a, 20, Oow1011,
M.ontrul, 19, Gutrraro, Ood9en, 1'
Sc 11mio1. Pnllede•ollla, 11
STOLEN BASES Relne1, Montreat
38, Wiison, Nt w York, 33, S.StX, OO<IOtn, J I. LeM .. ter, Sen Francisco
30 Morano. Hou11on. 21 PITCHING ti dect11on\I Falcone
Allante, I · I. 2 86 P Peret A11an1a,
10·2 2 SI, llvan, Houston. 9· 2 2 74,
Mon1tlusco, San Die110. 8·2. 4 20,
Ro11er1, Montretl. 12·4, 2 96
STRIKEOUTS· Carlton PnfledtlOllla,
14'. Soto, Clnclnnell 138 McW•ll•am1.
P111,1>11r11n. 114 Hemme~tr, San Fran
c11co 93 Roger\, Monoreal 92
SAVES Beoro11an. A11an1a. 14, lie
aroon Montrttl, 14, Lavelle Sen Fran CISCO, 17 Le Smith, Clllcaoo. 17
S.Howe, 0 009tn , 10, Luca1. Sen D1e110. 10, Tekul•e. P1llsburgh, 10,
Sutler SI Loul1, 10
lnternatlon.I meet
(al Lt\ AneeMS) Man·1 10-meler olallorm 01v•n11 -1
Bruce l(lmoall, Ann Aroor. Mien .
632 16 7, Greg Louganl•. Min ion v11io.
670 34 3, Lennv Le via nd, Mtu lon V1tlo
SIO OS 4, Rlcarao Benuel01, Mexico
S!>l.17 S Corlos Giron, Mexico. 504 81
6. Stt•t Foltv, Au11rane. !>006A 1
Jorge Mondre110 Molco. 487 91 I Jell
Hlrll, Ct l\ede, 466 19
Women's IO·meter olallorm 01v1n11
-I Wendv wvieno. Pl1t•fora N v 4S1 H 2. Megan Never MIS\•On Vlt lO
4J} 17 3, Guadaluoe Canct\CO, Mulco,
39119 4, Ellella de le Torre. MUICO.
378 4S S. Anoelt llloa1ro. Brezll, 363 24
6 Btckv Binnev Atuandr•a Va 1
EtH Ttnoflo M .. 1co. JJS 79 I. Ver onlca Rlool. Aroen1tne, 33S 16 9 Jone
Bogner .l\u1trel•a 324 J3
Womt n's l!>OO·mt ler lree1tv•e -I
Tlllanv Conen. M•n •on Vltio IO 29 ~
2. Anna McVonn, Au11reHa. 16.)S 4' ).
Stecv Slluoe. Ctrrl101. lo 37 23 4, F1or
ence Sarli.er, Min ion V1eio, 16 40 04 ~.
Tami Bruce Min ion V1t io 16 S4 14 6
Neomi Sa'°OO, Jactlln 16 S4" 1. Suu n Andr~ Min ion V1t t0 16 S6 70 I.
Danltllt Somerv11te-K 1m1on. Au11r.i1a ,
16 SI J4.
Women's 100 back11roke -I Ina Kleoar, Eu t Germanv, I 0761 2. Cor
nella Strcr.. East Gtrmenv, l'D1 •S 3,
Lari•• Gorcllekove, USSR 1'03 S6 4,
Joan"4! Btll, Autlralla, 1 OS OS S Dao
t>lt 1111111, Ovtrlend Parto.. Kan • I 06 16
6. Eva Lundahl, Sweden, 1:06.54 1 Nozom1 Sonoucl'll. Japen. I 06 67 8
Amv wn11e: Mtu lon'Vlt lo, 1-01 J1
Mtn's 100 oackslrOkt -l, Vladimir
Slltmalov, USSR S614 2, Sergev
l t l>OIOln•w. USSR. S1 41 J, SenOor
Wieder. Hunoorv S1 71 4. Cherie•
Slroltv, Tucson, Arlt , S9 23 S. K•m
Terrell, Auslralla, 59 37 6.Cameron
Hennlno, Conoda, S9 61 7. Bruce
Have. Della1, To .. S9 94 I, Kevin
Craig Venture, I 00 79
Women'• 100 t>rt u ts1ro1te -I.
Hiroko Neuuoto.1, JaPan I 11 16 7 Annelle Holmstroam, Sweot11. 1 13 3 ),
Tracev McForlant , Perm Sprln11•. I 14 OS 4,(tlt) Dlmilv Oouoi ... Au,1ra1· I~, and l(aorl lwaHkl, Japan, I U 33 6.
Karin Scllwar1, Wtsl Gtrmonv. I 14 SS
1, C1nov r ut1i., Concoro 1 IS 14 I,
Shannon Onutl Minion V•eio. 1 IS 14
Men 1 100 ortut1trok1 t
sn1oenJro l b~ana1nl, Jaoen I 04 37 1
8 111 Borrell. Lo• An1111n. I 04 S6 J.
Sleohen CooK, Auatrella, I 04 S9 4,
Peler Lano. W111 Gtrmanv I-OS 10 S,
Genneal Utenkov, USSR. I OS 47 6.
Altl<senor Sloorenko, U~R. I OS 74 7,
R1et1ard Schroeder. Sant• Bert>•••. I OS 1S I, Brei! Austin, New Zea1eno.
I OS 96 Wom1n'• 100 Oullerll• -1 Int•
Gelultr Easl Germenv. 1·00 34 7,
Lo1iroe Lehner, Ft Knox, Kv , 1'<1069 3.
Oare Torres. Min ion Vlt lo, I 02 19 4,
T •k•ml IH Jaoa n, 10110 S. Anna Karin Anoeru on Sweoen
I 01 93 6. t<lvoml T ai..1nesn1 JaPan,
I 03 04 1, Jenne Johnton. Santa Ro".
t 03 76 Su11nnt Llnlo., East Germenv,
dl1uuelllled
Mtn ' 100 Outltrll• -I, PablO Mort lt1. S<1nla Clara , SS 11 7 Berrv
Armstrono. Austrt lle. SS,M 3. Anll\Onv MO\H New ZtalanO, SS 97 4 Oa•ld
Lowe. Great Brllaln, S6 09 s. Bob Plecek Marin Counlv. 56.30 6, Jon
Sltl>tn, Au1tralla 1 S63S 7, Vladimir
T•echenko, USSR. S6 40 8, Robin
Lumv Lo' AnotltS, S6 t2
Men'1 I SOO lrHslvle -I, Svle tosla •
Samenov USSR IS 1• ll 2 Jett
Ko,toff Uotand. 1S 7' 37. 3. Wevne
Snlllln111on, Au•tralla, IS 36 69 4, •fonv
Cort>lstero. Oouo1es1on, N.Y . lS 37 61
S, Mlkt Devld•on, New Zeeleno.
15'41.0I 6, Mike O'Brien, Mlu lon Vlelo. IS 4SIO 7, Gt0r11t DICtrto, Tucson,
Arlr , 1S 49 S4 I . Frank lecono. Min ion
VlelO (Frencel. IS Sl 9'
Women's 4X 100 meo1ev rtlev -I,
Ea1t Glf'menv tine KteDtr, Pt1re Scnneldt r. lnt1 Gtlnttr. Cornelle
Slrcn1, 4 1S lS 2. Jt oen,4.16.04. 3,
Sw.oen. 4 17.37 4, Min ion Vlt lo A,
4.76 00. S, Indus Irv Hiii•, 4.27 16 6,
Aullrella. •·29.67 7, Minion Vlelo B,
4 31 S2 I, Canada, 4.31.SI
Mtn'• 4X 100 mtdlt v relev -I,
USSR lllVledlmlr Slltmelov. Gennt ol
lJ1ankov, Altk1ey MorkO•lkv, Seroev
Smtrleolnl, ~ 78' 2, Au11ralle. >:SO 01
l Bruin Swim CluO. Loi Anoelts,
J,S I 13 '• USSR 8, l SI.I? S, Jo Pen,
) SS 07 6. Min ion v reio A, 3 S7 14 7,
Soulllfrtt Celllornlo Swim Ctut>. Ntw·
POii Beach 3 SI 11 I. Ct nade, 4'00 62
Hollywood Perk
SUND A V'S A ISUL TS
('2nd If 6'·CS.M ltl«OUIMN'H ,,,..tine)
FIRST RACE. 6 lurlono•
Aoove 111e• Plnu IE•1ra oe 1
37 10 1(.00 9 '° Centerfo10 Quren !Vln11e) 6 00 l IO
Pine lor Gold IPlncavl S 40
A"o raced· F'elr Ame, Leet
Caml1ooe. A1kra Knll Two,
ClrclHwev Woulo You PltaH . Cen•h• Time I 11 3 S
SECOND RACE. 6 > tur10n111
le.• 11 !Ortega) .l8 70 13 40 I 00
R•clno 1P1ncev1 S.00 4 20
A11ane11ro I Bloom! 11 oo
Also recto Ruling Po"tlon, Emlntnl
Lad GolOt n M•n•trel, Triple Klno, One
M111er. Colllrl•Or Remenle Ttmf 1 18 n DAILY DOUllLE (7·11 1>a1d 149120
THIRD AACE. 1 lur1ono1
Mon1 e n <1 Cnolct' (Llone m)
48 40 l8 40 12 00
UmDrelle FIHI (P tr\C8Y) s 60 4 60
Sf'loc>o• Tom (AnOerson) 9 80
Also raceo Tne Argvlt Kid, Monolo,
Oon won Seraoa SOY. Quinta Rega,
Extra QulC~. Kapalut' Native, Prince
01 Nolt, Jensen'' Prlnct
Time I 24 4/S S5 EXACTA t3·SI oalo 11.001 SO
l'OUltTH RACE. I I I milts
Cr H ilu' IMcCrn) 3 70 140 2 ?O
!>auY8ge II I Detv\t I l 80 7 10
lne v tao•e Ltaoer(Hawltvl 3 20
Al'o raceo Huooov, C11t11eron.
Runawev Groom
Time I 41
SS EXACTA 13·11 Ol •d 114 SO
l'IFTH AACE. I I 16 m,,.,
Goldin Gra n o (G u t r•a l
Fancv W1nv1 IMtzal
\/lrg1n1e hte (S10111e1
19 40 10 60 110 980 6'0
690 Al10 •aced Coll Ctlller Foroe,
Brl11Mer Oav1 Ju\llt•cante Nencv'1 Bao;
T ,,,. 1 4S 2 S
'S EXACTA tl·21 oa 'O 136650
SIXTH AACE, 6 tur1on111
L ••d tr\ G ra nd I P nc v l
I) 60 6 00 3 10
Cl'llmt e L1tllt 181tel<I SIO 4 20
1100.• Lenn•" ILID"aml J 20
•••o racao Tu lv Oanctr. Queen
Neno1vn C ••' ., Crv\t•t, L a
Ou•'"''"''· 8eaut.ful Womtl\. A Fre'1°\ ~unn\; L•O't', Ptoo•r·, \l'•nltv Hor\Our u Baro Peacnan•nl rrme I 11 l s
SEVENTH RACE. S furlong\
Pat•lcto. M c F ig I S 10 111 a )
16 60 s '° no v a11eoono Sono (VlnZltl 3 IO 2 IO
Pomotli Court iPlncav) 2 IO
Al10 raceo Sundev's Pavdav. Cl'luHa
Strttl Texas .Commeract, TriomO<I
Time S6 3 S
U EXACTA I 6· 11 oa1d l!S3 SO
U PICK SIX ( 1 J·3 l•S·6l PllO
111 ST:J 40 .. 11n 11 w nn1no 11t•et' (ll•e
l'lorieu Total carrvo•t r 145',I S9 11
EIOHTH RACE. I I 11 mnes
Kl\\ lot L uc• (McCrnl
IS SO 140 SOO
Trv Some1n nu New tSnoel 10 40 ~ 00
Sen11ut (P ncavl 3 20 At10 receo Pr.oe ot llo•ewooc.
Madt mo"tlll Forv. Katteoer' Prioe, Btlo~olno. Skillful Joy, Merlsma.
AD'"nlle Mlllnoo Tlmt I 49 I S u EXACTA 12·•• oalO sns 00
NINTH AACE. I t 16 m1i.s on lurf
Dewllance (Mtta) I IO S 20 3 IO
Noell no (~floe> 13 40 9 60
Au Hou\t (Castaneda) 9 40
Allo ract d Lead 0'1 LuKe, Ar-
rownttd, llt m Two, Perrv Caoln,
Mulll El Jueoat, Wt\I CoH I Nttlve Pell '\ T rtumol'I
T•me 142 u EXACT.A 17·111 oald Sl6S50
Allenoonce -S0,69'
°"° ... flshlne AllT'S LANDING (New_, 8ffelll
-170 eno1tr1 llS meekant 121 t>eu.
SO oarrecuoe. 3~ oonito. 11 roci. 11111, 3
vtllowltil
OAVl'l''S LOCKER (Newoert
IHCh( -319 engler\ IOI 00<11!0, Ill
land DI\\ 22 calico l>eU, I l>arrtcuda ,
1 vel10w1all. 100 rocr. coo, l,947 mac•eret, I llellt>ut, I wllllt Ht OHi
DANA WHARF - 3 .. anoltrs 773
oen . 11 oonllo. 1,300 mael<trel, 1
nellOul, I wlllle \ti t>eu
SAN 0110 0 (H&M Ltncllftel -417 an111ers 12 Oluenn lune, 397 ye11ow1alt,
411 t>erracuda. 1,0.0 t>onllo. IS t>eu,
190 roo 11•11
Brltlih <>pen
(ti Sou"'-1, linttaM )
11S Tom Weho11, ,60,000 67·61·10-70
216 Hale lrwln.34,SOO 69·61-72·67
Anov Btan. )4.SOO 70·69· 70·67
111 Grenam Mer111. 77,SOO 69-70-1'·6'
211
Ltt Trevino, 20,,00 69·60·73·70
Vt
Seve Ba1testero1, 18.37S 11·1 I ·69-61 HarolO Htnnln11, ll ,37S 71·'9·70·69
2IO
Nick FelOO, 14,07 61·61·69· 73
Biil ll011er1, 14,437 61·11-13·69
211
Peter Jecot>Hn, 10,17S 72·69-70·70
Craig Sltdltr, 10.87S 6•·10·77-7S
212
Garv Koc11. 7,560 7S·71·66·70
Fuuv Zotti.r, 7 .560 11·11·61·13
Rav FIOvd. 7 .560 72·66·69·7S David Grallam, 7,560 71·69·67·7S
Mlkt Sulllven, 7,560 72·61-74·61
213
Greo Norman, 4,436 7S·71·70·67
Hut>crl Green, 4,436 69-74-12·68
Ti.nit Br Iii. 4.436 71 -74·69·69
214
Howaro Clari., J.ns 71-72·69·12
Roooer Devi,, J,ns 10-11·70· 73
E amonn Oercv, J,?25 69-72·74·69 us
Hal Sulton, 2.137 68·11·7S·7t
Clllen·soon Lu, 2, 137 71 ·72-74·61 Lennv Wadt.lns, 2, 137 72·13·12·68
Merk Jt mt\, 7.137 70·70·7•-71
Jeck Nkkleu\, 2, 137 71·72·71-70
Tom Kitt , 7, 131 11-12-71·70
Curll• Strtnot, 2, IJ7 7•·61·70-13
Terrv Gelt, 2, 137 72·66·12·7S
Mll\t McCullough, 2, 137 14·69·12·10
Tonru Nektmura. 2,137 73·69-72-71
216
Tonv Jacl\lln, l.4SO 71 ·7S·11 ·69
Klkuo Aral. 1,4SO 14·67-7S-70
BoD GllOtr, 1,450 10•16·10·10
Vlcenit Fernandez, l,4SO 70·72·12·72
211
Tom Wtl,kOPI, l,186 73-73-69·12 MarltMcNullv, 1,186 12-69-~·71
Graham Burrouohl. 1.116 11·14·11·11
Ctlvt Tu<:ktr, I, 116 7J-71-73·70
Mesenlro 1Curemo1, I, Ila 70·74·73·70
Manuel Pinero, I, 116 74·72·71-70
Tim Slmo1on, 1, 186 73·69-72·73
Vaughen Somtr,, I, 186 61-7S-7HJ -Booov Cr.mottl, 1,0l7 14·17-71-71
Larrv Nt110n. 1,0l7 10-n -n -n
Sam Torrance, 1,0l7 61·73· 14-13 .,
Bernnerd Lenger 1.0l7 61-72·76·74
"° JoM O'LH rv. l,Ol7 74·61·69·79
1'1
Ronan RafftrlY 637 1S-67·73-76
191
Ml~• lnof\am, 637 11·13-10-11
1'S
'fu-Snu H•lt l'l, 637 11-n 74 19
Ou•d CltM• Open
lttCMI V-y, L I
2"
•·Dennv Edwrdl, Sl6.000 66·.,.·69·67
Morr!' Ht tatsli.v. S21,600 61·64·67-67 • ,..,
Scon Hoch. s 11,600 69·6S·67·66
Lennie Ci.,,...n11, SI 1,600 67·61·6S·67
261
0 A. Wtlt>rlno. 17 .600 6S·66·69·61 o a.10 Peoole,, S1 ,600 69·6S·67·67 ,.,
Ron Streck, S6,4SO 66·68·61·61
Pevne Sltwart, 16,4SO 6S·68·66·70
270
Lon Hlnl<lt , U,IOO 69·66·66·69
VI
Sammv Raclltls. U.700 67·6'·69-71 Jim Ot11I, SS,200 69·69·67·66
Vl
80C> Cllarlel. '3,61S
Ral1>1t Landrum, S3.61S
Th0ma1 Grav, S:l,61.S Lance Tt11 Brock. '3.61S
Mike Morlev. '3,61S
Pal Llndsev. S:J,615
Ken Grffn, '3,61S
213
Curt llvrum, 12,424
Dt11nl• Htoltr, 12,424
Jon Cr.ell ... 12,42, Dan Forsman, 12,424
Mark Coro, S?.424 V4
Tom Lel'lman, ,1,705
BUOdv Gardnlf'. s 1.10S
Sltvt Herl, Sl,70S
Jim TllOroa, S1,70S
27S
OeWlll w .. vlf', Sl.273
Ruu Coellran, Sl,2n
Jeff Mllchtll. 11,171
Oave Elc,,.ll>lf'Or. 11,17J
Dave Berr, Sl,273 llred Fuon, 11,213
llOD EHlwOOO. 11,113 Ot•ld 09rln. I 1,213
•-Pr.volt winner
70·61-61-66
6t·6S-72·66
68·61·67·69
.61 -63-72-69
70·6S·67·70
6S·'6·69-72
71·61-67·66
63·67·74·69 65-73·71·64
61·62·71·12 68·6S·6S-7S
61·66·74-66
61·67-71-69
11 -66-•s-n
69-6S-71 ·69
69-69· 71 ·6S
61-64·71-)3
66-61-74-67
67 -71-70-67 61 -68-66-73
69·6S·73-61 61·66· 70-71
66·69-70· 70 61· 10·69·69
Senlen tou1 nament
(al New_,, A.I.I
• 200
Miiier BarDtr l?S,000
10$
Gav llrt wt r S 15,000
106
Frao Haw•lns lt,2SO
Mille Fttcr.lclo. '9,250 Peter Tr.omson 19,750
Oan Sikes S9 ,2SO • J01
Gene Lllllt r IS.SOO Guv WollltnllOlme IS.SOO
Doug F0td U ,SOO -Rol>lf'tO OIVlttnZO SJ,9lo0
llllv Muwt ll '3,t so .,
lltrl Weaver S31_4~ Jim Flf'rff '3,4W
AOd Funtelh Sl,400
6S·66·69
70-68·61
61·69·09
66-72-61 61·7l-6S
69·68·69
69·6S-13
69·61·/0
67·71·69
6S·70·7l
69·71·61
Camel Filters·
15 rng. "tar''. 1.0 rng. n1co11ne av per cigarette. FTC Report MAR. ·93
Warn ing : The Surgeon Genera l Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
LPGA tournem tnt
Ill Me!Yttn-, Pe.)
216 ,-attn Danit! '52,!>00 67-71-73·7S
JoAnnt Carner. 34,300 12·69·12·13
217
Ka1hv Wl'lllworln, 74,SOO 11·10 73·72 ,..
Peltv Sll..ellan IS,7SO 14-17·61·14 Serrdra Ha.nit IS. 7SO 11 10·14-rl
1tO
Kelnv Mer lln, 17 7SO 10 H -7J·72
191
Ju<lv Clark, 9.817 7J·73·71·14
Anne MM•• Pa111, 9,H7 69 1s-n -JS
Janet Colt " 9,187 16·13·7H1
Jo Ann Wunam 9,187 n -13-15-11 ,,,
Ho111, Stec •• 7.700 73·7J·7HS
Oeoolt Melllu lln, 1.100 71·73·74·74
293
Pel Broolev. 6.405 14-73· 73· 13
Mvre Ven Hoote 6,40S 19-12-10-77
\ 194
Donna CaPOnl. S,124 12-16-13-13
Laure Cole, S n4 17·11-73·71 llet1v King, s.124 73-17-76-71
Bein Solomo11. S.724 13· 75·1S· 71 1'S
C1111v Motte. 4,094 10 13-11·1• Donna Wnlle 4,094 17-74·7S·74
Jen Srt o'>tn1on. 4,094 76·11·12·76 ,,,
t.t nore Murao•a. l.S70 73·73·76 74
Jane Loe•, 3,SIO 73 13-76·7•
Kalllv Posllewal!, 3,S70 11 15·13·11 ,,,
Jene 810100. 3, no 16·13·17·16
VICkt Teoor. l no 11·12·11·11
2'1
Lellnn Ceoeoav, 2,66S 10-n -11-11 Katnv M<(lllulltn 2.66S 7S·14 14·7S
Pt1 Mever1, 7,66S 13·16·14-l S
Amv AICOll, 2,66S 7S· 74· 74·1S
Mrln Flvd·OArmn, 2,06S 7S·11·16·76
• -Plavoff winner
USFL CHAMPIONSHIP
M lchlNn 24, PhN•delllhl• n
Scere t>v Ou•~"
Mlclll11an 3 1 1 1-24
Pnlladelonla 0 3 0 19-12
MtCH-FG Bot0•IC ll PHIL-FG Trout )0
MICH-Hollowav 11 Pet\ trom
Ht Otrt ( 801ovlc k ICk I
MICH-Hollowev 14 D•H lrom
HtDlrt t 801ov1C kit~ I PHIL-FG Trout 21
PHIL-Collltr 21 oass from Fu•lna
IColl•tr oan lrom Fu11ne I
MICH-Ceroer 48 oan trom Htt>e<t
l Botov•c •l<k I PHIL-Parli.er 2 ou s from Fu1lna (FllrkH oau from Fu>tne l
A-46,S3~
lndMdual Stansnca
RUSHING-Mlcn111en, C Miiier
12·80 Lacv IS·S6 HtOtrl 1·20 P1'111-
ot1on1a Brvaf'\t t3·19, HtN•n o-11
Fuslno 4·7 PASSING-Mlcn1gan,
70 39· 1·3l4 Pllllodllollia. 7S•47·0· 192, H1r111n 1·1·0·44
llECEIVING-Mlclllgan. Cerler t· 179, Hollowev 1·39 Lacv 3·23. Miiiar
J-11 Coot> 1 37 McClain 1·19 P1111adt1-ohla , FltrkH 5· SI. Donovan S·J6.
Harvin 4·74, Brvent 4-lS, Cotlltr J -31,
Folsom J· 19. Parker 7·46
U.S. Pro CIMmPionshlps
(at atttlllille, Men .)
Semlllnal Slntle-JOH Luls·Cltrc !Argentina> otl
Eliot Telhcr.er IU S 1, 6·2, , ·l , Jlmmv
Ar las ( U S ) def Olt90 Perez ~Uruouav). 6·3, 6·3
Grend Prix tourna"*1t <•• SIVtteart, West G«menv> Slnlilts IF fNI
Jou Hl11ueras ISoelnl Gunlllerdl tSwllie•lanol.
tHloueres win' 570,000, 110,000)
dtl Htlnt •·I. 6·1 Gunlllerdl
Womtn'I tournamtt'lt
<•• Newoon, It.I.)
S""'91 FINI
Atvcta MOUiton (U s I Ciel Kim
SnHler IU S >. 6·3, 6·7 (Moulton win•
119.000. !>hatter st,SOOI.
Wffkend tr1ns.ct1on1
BASEBALL
Nati-I LM-
ATLANTA BRAVES-Purchased
Tonv Brlu olere ollcller, from Rich·
mond of lht lnternehonet Lae11ue Oo·
lloned Bob Walk . ollcr.er, 10 Rlc11mone1
CHICAGO CUBS-Purcllu-4 con· tract of ff'led Boslav, oullleldar, from
Iowa 01 Ille American Au ocletlon
Pl•Cto G trv Woodl, oullltlO••. on '"' IS·dev dl,el>led 11'1 •
LOS A N GEL E S
OODGERS-lltlnllt ltO Sltvt Howe,
oner.er. a lltr • ont ·dav •u•oan•lon
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M Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 19-, 1983
STOCKS
\41P\ ,_.f l \•I•\ N,.I
P E hd\ '-'D""' C "4 P [ "0' t to"' C l>Q
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
::C.~J~;~'f~i~sb~~~ fHI lf(WYO#lft MtOWUt, PA¢411C l'tlW 80610.-. OUl\UIT AHOClNc;INHAflllQCtl UICHANQU ANO
MONO \\·~ J 1 a.m. (PST) Prlctt
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'
Wholesale prices up;
cost of food declines
By tbe A11oclated P rell
WASHINGTON -Wholesale prices roee 0.6
percent in June, but fell at an annual rate of 1 percentJl
the first half of the year. the government says. The
Labor, Department said the latest increase w as the
biggest gain in seven months. but the White Howie
greeted the news as further evidence of moderating
in flation. Food prices were down 0.6 percen t, the biggest
tall again since June. A statement by Presiden t Reagan
released by the White House said the wholesale price
figures indicate "economic growth can continue withou t
triggering an outburst of new inflation."
•
Money supply up $5.8 billion
NEW YORK -The nation's basic money supply
climbed $5.8 billion in the week ended July 6, prompting
analysts to predict int..erest rates would continue to rise
in the weeks ahead, the Federal Reserve Board said
today.
TWA 's losses $108. 9 million
WASHING TON -Trans World Airlines, blaming
money-losing discount fares, says it lost $1 08.9 million in
the first-half of the year. compared with an $84. 7 million
loss In the first half of 1982. TWA's results followed
F.astem Airlines announcement of a $33.7 million loss in
the April-June period on top of a first quarter Jc.a of
$60.7 million, for a total first-half deficit of $94.4 million,
a record for the air]ne. Both airlines, citing the effects of
the air-fare wars. said they had no choice but to go along
with the cuts initiated by competitors to keep their share
of the market.
Industrial production increased
WASHI;NGTON -Industrial production at U.S .
factories and mines increased by 1.1 percent in June. the
seventh straight monthly gain. th e government says.
June's production gain matched the 1.1 percent advance
of May. Output had risen 1.4 percent in March and 1.9
percent in April. "It shows that the recovery l\85 a great
deal of momentum behind it," said Albert H. Cox Jr. of
Mer rill Lynch Economics Inc. "The economy is
continuing on a good. steady. strong recovery path," said
Robert Wescott of Wharton Econometrics.
Firm fin ed in tax evasion probe
NEW YORK -Marc Rich & Co. A.G .. has been
fined $1 million for its refusal to release documents to a
federal grand jury investigating an alleged tax evasion
scheme. The company. one of the world's largest
commodities trading firms has been ordered to pay the
$50,000-a-day fine, which has been accumulating since
late June. Judg~nard B. Sand impaled the fine on
June29 at U.S . trictCourtin New York's Manhattan.
At the request of eral prosecutors, Sand ordered that
the company pay the accumulated $1 million fine by4:30
p.m. today.
Dollar retreats; gold mixed
LONDON -The dollar fell against most major
currencies in early trading today, retreating from record
highs against the French franc and Italian lira. amid
confusion over the course of U.S . interest rates. Gold
prices were narrowly mixed. European currency dealers
said traders were looking for clues as to whether the
U.S . Federal Reserve Board would take further moves
to slow the growth of the money supply. Since May. a
slight tightening of Fed policy has pushed lnterest rates
up by more than a percentage point in the United States.
Gold
By tile A11ociated Pre11
Selected world gold pnces today:
London morning fixing $423.25, up $1.00
London afternoon fixing $422 40, up $0.15
P aris -markets $423.56 up $0.71.
Frankfurt fixing $424.00. up $0.03
Zarlcb late afternoon bid $421.80, up $0.45:
$422.30, asked
Handy & Harman (only daily quote) $422.40, up
$0.15
Engelbard (only daily quote) $422.40. up $0.15
Engelhard fabricated (only daily quote) $443.52, up
$0.16
Me tals
NEW YORK (AP) • Spot nonferrous metal prices
today:
Copper -80"-83 cents a pound. U.S. deltinations.
Copper -74.70 cents per pound, NY C.omex spot
month cloaed Fri.
Lead -19-23 cents a pound.
Zlnc -40 cents a pound, delivered.
TlD -$6.4883 Metals Week composite lb.
AJ•mlD1m -76 cents a pound, N. Y.
Mercary -$275.00-$285.00 per 76 lb flask, New
York ,
Platlaum . $427 .00-$434.00 domestic merchant troy
ounce. N.Y. 4
Silver
Stiver • $1 l.960 pe1 troy ounce. lbndy & Hannan
(only daily quote.)
Sliver -$11.865 pc_r troy ounce. NY Comex apot
month clqsed Fri.
SYMBOLS
Gi\Rt'lt:l.D
GAAFIEU~, I KNOW '1t>O'RE. IN
MV FERN. [ CAN SE.E. 'l'OUR TAIL
WMAf' POVOO
MAVE 10 SAY FOR VOORStLf ?
PARVON ME. SIR.
MAVE ~SEEN
A TAIL MOUN~ MERE?
by Jim Davis
THE
t',\'llL l'
Cl•Ct:8
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch /VIP.)
by 811 Keane
"I'm going ashore."
by Brad Anderson
-===11
"You'd better not take it to the shop. He
loves baseball and the game starts soon."
'(OU 60T A LETTER J:ROM
OlUCK. AND I DIDN'T! AND
I Wi\5 TME ONE WHO
J:ELT ~ F~ 'tO\J w.EN
l(()V WERE LONELY!
"I h1te Mond1y1."
Hank'Ketchum
{k)N'r 6L,4ME ME IF 1H£ WATER 81LL IS H16H .1 ONLY
ASK FOR Ctl LOOSY LITTLE GLASS AT NIGKr ~"
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Charles M. Schulz
WOVLD VOU LIKE
TO PV5M ME INTO
TME LAKE. s11n
("'"::.
Q.1 -Neilher vulnerable, u
South yo11 hold:
+119P 1::184 0 74 •KW
The bidding has pr0tteded:
Nri £ut S..&l Wett
ZNT Pua 3 + p.,. 4. , ... 1
What do you bid now'!
A .-Par~ner's cue bid in
clubs shows a maximum lViO
no trump opening bid wllh
good trump support.
Therefore, you need not be
ashamed or your hand. Since
you hive no firsl·round con
lrol lo cue bid. bid five clubll
lo show the king in lhat suit.
Q.2-A!! South, vulnerable.
you hold:
•J "1K87Sl OQI03 •9872
The bidding has proceeded:
Weat Nortli Eut S.•ll
I• P111 I NT PaM
2 + Obie PaM ?
Whu action do you lake'!
A. -If you elected lo take
any action al all. there is
something about takeout
doubles you don't under
stand. Had partner wanted
Jl'DGE P:\R9't:R
~ AAAIVING HOME, SHEILA STAATS lO
TAl'(E THE CHILDf'EN
lO THEIR BEDROOMS
0l/T RAYMOND INSISTS
THAT THEY HAVE A
FAMILY CONFERENCE!
SHOE
11r•0 '-'k. y,~\
BRABBLE
0rMgt COllt DAILY ,.,LOT /Monday, .MJ 11. 1813
GOif i 011 lllDGI
BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHAAIF
AN8WE18 TO lllOOE .. Ull
lo hrar your heil ault, be
would have doubled one
spade! Now he 11 makinit a
penally dou ble or two •padt!ll
and. since your hand include~
a trump honor he thinks lhc
enemy holds, you han an ex
cellcnl hand for him. l'asa.
Q.3-As South. vulnerable,
you hold:
+987532 V'J6 OAKI07 +A
The hiddinic ha:s proceeded:
S.•ll Wet&. Nertli Eut
I+ Pa• % Nt P ...
?
Whal do you bid now'/
A.-You cannot be sure how
useful your hand will be Lo
partner. but you do know
that you have al least an
eight<ud spade fit. and your
hand should produce more
tricks in a spade conlracl
than al no lrump. Jump to
four spades. That is a shut·
oul bid -had you wanted lo
investigate another contract.
you had • wide choice or fore:·
ing bids available.
Q.4-Bolh vu lnerable. as
South you hold:
~·~ '10'f NO'f~IN(, 'fo eE.
EM&ARW~E.0 Aeoi.>1' !
E.ve.R'i OV'fOOOR~MAN
E.Nc~t~~~ ~ ~l(uNK'.
NOW ~O 'f"E.N '·
+T OAlt OQlt7U •A&U
Your rl«hl·hand oppoM11t
opent the biddinit •ilh one
heart. What acUon do you
like'/
A. -Although 1ou prob1bly
have the best hand al LIM'
llble. there is no action you
can Lake that is not frau1thl
with daniccr. An ovcrcall or
one no trump a.sks for lroublt'
if partner is wtak; two
diamonds is 1400 territory;
and a doubl1• could lead lo an
unmanaiccahlr aU<'lion. l'us.
and scr what dt•vt'lopll.
Q.5-Hoth vulnrrablc. as
South you hold: .,.
•AK109s.4 1::193 0 6 +AKJJ
The biddnic has proceeck-d:
S..O. West Nri Eaet
I+ p.,. I NT PUI
' Whal do you bid now!'
A. -You are loo strong lo
just rebid two spades. In·
deed, spades may not even be
the right spot. which is why
we ditllke a jump lo three
spades. A bid or two clubs is
most rluible. If partner
lilE j\)~1' ~~IJ~ 10 R£.M~
\AIM 1\4A'f '°™E.fl.E.'!> No
~~ IN '1f ff1N6
~~~E.0 &'i
A ~K\JNK \
pauea, you att probably Jr
tile right 1pol. And Ir he doe
anything elae. you ean rel*
spades to show a 6·4 dillrik
Uon and a 1tood hand.
Q.a -Aa South, vulnrrabl~.
you hold:
•TJ2 "184 OA&Q74 +KQt
The biddinic has pr0tttdc•d:
Nerd! Eu& s..t• Wett
I• PUI I 0 Pua
2 NT P-?
What do you bid now'/
A.-This is simply :1 mallrr
or addil ion. l'ulnt•r hu
'hown a balant1•d I 9 :?O
points and you have J4 and a
good fivr tard suit. To bwt
lt>ss than six no trump would
be triminal negligc•nct•.
Hew de yer cai...t ta.
..... •pe•l111 leed? C...,_
Cerea liaa tit. uawer. f••
~1 el ~w--. Ope..U.
Lucia," aeacl 11.85 ••
"Gena·Leeda," eare ef tw.
eew.,.,er. P.O. lea %5 ••
NerwMcl, N.J. 07648. Make
$edi1 ,.yaWe t. New ..
,.pe~I.
by Jeff MacNell~
by Kevin Fagan
~ w"w 1\l. L.et
CAN l. COME. iOU KNOW, l~~lt>£ 1 ~11NK~~
FOR BETTE• OR t 'OR 1'0Rflit;
00-/,THOSE P~5 ~
SORE ARE 6'(;. IVL
ONE8!
' •
I
~IT~ ~TION ...
t t>y Tom Bat1 uk
by Geor e Lemon
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1983
PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
VOTE FOR A CANDIDATE
\WHO CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE
TOM WILLIAMS
FOR
SCHOOL BOARD
t ' A Candidate Who Will Listen To
Your Concerns On Public Education
..
HOW TOM WILLIAMS SEES THE
\
< :HALLENG ES FACING OUR SCHOOLS:
I oelieve that the decade of the eighties will be the most critical period in the last fifry ye•irs for
t : public school system in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
~ >nfronted with chronic dedining enrollments and drastically reduced state funding form.ulas. our
rF •ublic schools are facing nothing short of financial disaster.
l 1c this impending financial disaster can be averted if the citizens of this community and state rise
i: , under resolute leadership and demand chat drastic changes be made and made soon.
I oelieve that with my business and financial background, coupled with my demonstrated concern
f r the youth of chis community, I can be instrumental in helping initiate these critical changes
a d making then a reality for our children.
TOM WILLIAMS ' INVOLVEMENT
WITH NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOLS:
• Director for Parents for a Responsive Board of Education.
• Directo r of Citizens Action to Save Educatio n.
TOM WILLIAMS' CONCERN FOR THE
WELL BEING OF THE COMMUNITY
• Director and Founder of the Airport Coalition.
WHY TOM WILLIAMS IS QUALIFIED •Steering Committee Member of the Airport Working Group.
1 0 MAKE DECISIONS WHICH WILL
AFFECT O U R CHILDREN'S FUTURE:
• EDUCATION: Masters Degree in Finance, University of Southern Californi a,
B chelors Degree in Civil Engineering. University of Southern California.
• OCCUPATION: Presidenc and Founder of Sequoia Homes.
• COMMUNITY RESIDENT: 10 yea rs.
• FAMILY: Married 15 ;-ears. cwo sons ages 12 and 8 both attending Newport-Mesa
P bl ic Schools.
TOM W-ILLIAMS ' COMMITMfrNT TO
THE YOUTH OF THIS COMMUNITY
• Commissioner, A YSO Soccer, Region #97 past 3 years
• President, Newport Beach Junior All-American football Association past 2 years
• Soccer coach: 6 years • Football coach: 3 years • Li ttle League coach: l year
-CUT OFF HERE AND RETURN LOWER PORTION
.
·'
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(
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----------------------------------------··--------------------~ I I WOU LD LIKE TO HA VE YOUR THOUGHTS & IDEAS ON PU BLIC EDUCATION I ·
I I have listed below some aspects of public education that I believe are important or in need of more attention. I would appreciate it if you would send me I 1 I your thoughts on public education by numbering these items in order of their importance to you (a #1 being most important, a# 10 being relatively I . I unimportant) along with any of your own ideas. I •'·
I I ! o ~:;;~~·:I~~~~~;~~~~\·~;;~~.~~:' woll nor hand.cap D Return of classci and poograms previously cue 0 lmporrance of our junior high school syst<m I .,
I D Discipline in the schools I .,.
Ill D More emphasis on computer science D Athletic programs •
1
•. ,. . o Problems with teacher tenure as it pertains to the firing of
younger teachers solely because of their lack of seniority ;. •• D Better management of district resources D Music 1 I '.·
I I ~··
1
1
D D Excra-curricular activities I -.-~ Voluntary private financial support for the public schools D .. I A system of bet~er pay for better teachers I ·
I D Local neighborhood school concept I ~ ~ .I '" I I . ~ ...
I D A broade( based cu rriculum D Better maintenance of our campuses D Other I ! :
I I
I I
I Jam in support of your candidacy for the school board and want to make a financial VOTE FOR LEADERSHIP I I D contribution toward your campaign of S . I .
I Please make the check payable ro the Committee to Elect Tom Williams for School Board. THAT CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE I
I. D Yes, I will allow you co use my name as a campaign supporter in a testimonial N OVEM BER 8th I '
advertisement I ID I would like to work on you r campaign. Let me know what I can do to help I
•• NAME I . I I I ADDRESS Home Phone # / I
I ' I ,
I CITY /ZIP CODE Please return AS SOON AS POSS:~k ;~~ne # T 0 M w I L L I A Ms I 1
1
TQM WILLIAMS ••• r 2082 S.E. Bristol, Suire 203 -,. I Santa Ana, Cal ifornia 92707
Thank you for your consideration and support. I
..
PAID FOR BY THE COMMITTEE TO ELECT TOM WILLIAMS FOR SCHOOL BOARD• 2082 S.E. BRISTOL, STE. 203 •SANTA ANA 92707 ' I -------------------------------------------------------------· '
-
MONDAY, JULY 18, 1983 ClASSlfllD
Ill ClllT Ill TIE CllllY
ANN LANDERS
PARTY WRAP
TELEVISION
C2
C2
C3
R.ichard Stevens, during a nine-year ca reer, has
made over more than 25,000 faces, a record that
should land him in the Cosmetology Ha ll of
Fame, if ther e was such a thing. T he 36-year old
.............. .,a... ....
mak eup artist now has his own televisio n sh ow on
Orange County cable.
reaching makeup according to the gospel of Richard Stevens
To the women who apply blush to their temple. and copper gio. to
lips. to the ladiee who frequent po8h country clubs who wotildn 't be
ugbt dead without their makeup, Richard Stevens has been a savior of
For the Past two years, this sandy blond-haired, blue-eyed man haa
the doyen of Orange County cosmetologist.a. "a true artist who
pta faces like painters do portraita," aid Judith Mintz, an old
,.m111a• amociate of Stevena'.
In hia nine-year career, most of which was spent working back F.aat,
HeY'l!nS figures be haa made over 25,000 faces -a great American
that will undoubtedly land him a place in the Cosmetology Hall of
, if there is such a thing.
He haa appeared in more than 30 television shows, including "Eye
on LA'' and been the subject of a dozen magazine and newspaper bterviews. His clientel ranges from 8Chool te8chers to high IOdety folks b glamorous models. His most notable subjects include Mile California,
f§venport. and actrem Susan Lucci, who plays Erica in the daytime
p"All My Children."
During hiacollege days, he pci11e•ed a 90 mile per hour fastball and
of being a profemional bueball pitcher. Instead, he diacarded
~ horaehlde for a camel hair makeup brush and went on to become one
~the premier 008metologista in the country.
His specialty is taking the Lavern DeFazios of the world and. with
1 little mucara here and a little cont.our powder there, transforming
hem into head turners.
"Anyone can be beautiful," Stevens declared unhesitatingly during
recent interview.
A. he sat in a makeup chair in hia Corona del Mar shop, called \ndrea's Manicuring, there aeemed to be this impenetrable air of
W~ence swirling about the 36-year-old's medium-sized frame.
"From a technical standpoint, I'm the best in the busine9S," he said
.._buhedly. "And I'm alao out of character becauae I'm not a gay and
m a jock. My friends always ask me why I got into the business. I tell I got involved in it becau.e I like g.irla." Later, he confesaed that for
time he felt very i.n8ecure around women.
tevena moved out west two years ago, after reading a Town &
DUntry Magazine article that deecribed Newport as the "platinum 1-tllile," a place where the streeta were decked with Rolla Royces and
He sculpts faces llke
painters do portraits
Mercedes, where the airport was lined with Lear jets and Piper Cubs.
To Stevens, it seemed the perfect setting to make a name for
hlm9elf, not to mention a lot of money. "I wanted the elegance, the beach
and the sun," he said. "And it's a lot easier to make it iri California than
New York."
Stevens also wished to start a television career. He said he wants to
be to the makeup world what Richard Simmons is to the fitn~ busin~
-minus all the hype -and what Ralph Nader is to the automobile
industry. Stevens pictures himself as part consumer advocate, part
instructor, someone who can cut through the bundles of beauty advice
printed in fashion magazines and teach women simple, "middle of the
road" makeup techniques.
Well, he's got his television show. "Richard Stevens Presents the
Makeup Mystique," which has been running on a cable stations
throughout Orange County for about three months now. Still, he said he
would like more recognition for his work. For instance, when he talks of
his rnuch publicized contemporaries -Jerome Alexander, George
Masters and Way Bandy -a contemptuous tone creeps into his voice.
"I don't consider any of them better than me, but they're all
marketed better," he said. "Jerome Alexander -he's hip pocket
material. 1 forgot more last week than he'll ever know. None of them
havedoneasmanymakeupsasme. I'm the best, but I'm no where nearly
as compensated. Some charge $1,000 a face, I only charge $50 an hour."
He hopes his television show will be the great equaliz.er, the organ
by which to preach the makeup world according to Richard Stevens.
"A lot of women don't keep up with beauty help," Stevens said.
"They got their blush across their eyelids, their chins and their
foreheads, when they really only need it along the temples and the
cheekbones. The problem is women don't have the Ume to practice
correctly-so the makeup never stays on the way it should.
"I recently did Susan (Lucci) for the cover of Orange Coast
Magazine. Now here's a woman who has been pampered after for the
la.st 10 years and she kept saying, 'Oh, is that how you do it?' I was gjving
her infonnation that everyday people would ask for."
"A woman needs to know about seven things to do it right," he said.
His suggestions, dubbed "9 to 5 makeup," are as follows:
0 Use non-oiley eye remover to avoid smearing;
0 Eliminate dark circles underneath the eyes;
0 Curl your eye lashes;
0 Apply the mascara brush using the tip, not the sides;
0 Apply color around the eyes;
0 Identify your cheekbones and then apply blush there;
0 Learn to line the lips properly and how to blend it in tb avoid smearing -
later.
"Years ago, ydU had Cosmo (Ccsmopolitan Magazine) saying to do it
one way and then another fashion magazine saying 90mething elae.
Today, I think the makeup information is better, but women don't know
who to believe anymore." •
Then Stevens smiled, with all the glee of an entrepreneur who
thinks he's sitting on a gold mine. "That's where I come in," he said.
His show, he says, is in some ways a spoof on the cosmetics industry.
"They won't like what I have to say -I sort of fear for my life -we're
talking about a $20 million industry you know," he said half-jokingly.
"Each show is designed to cover one area at a time," he said. "1 uae
a model and teach the viewers how to become their own expert.
"We're looking to have the show syndicated across the country," he
said. "In the next couple of years, we expect to beautify two million
women." '
Stevens didn't get interested in cosmetology until he reached the
age of 25. Upon graduation from Ohio's Marietta College, hewasdraf~
into the army. He served a year in Vietnam and then was assigned to
Washington D.C. as a stenographer for then Army Chief of Stafl
General William Westmoreland.
"He never said much to me," Stevens said. "I just took notes."
After his stint in the military, he wanted to open a boutique with'
friend, but a visit to a salon during a trip to New York altered thoae plan&;
"I was With my girlfriend at this salon and.I kept watching the.M
women go from room to room with these happy look.a on their faces.
Before that, I had never paid much attention to makeup. But 1 liked
seeing those women happy. I decided cosmetics would be a good addition
to a clothing store (which never really got off the ground). I guet1S I had
a feel for what looked nice on a woman."
omance blooms In jall He's Sherlock Holmes fan
rison weddings becoming common place
~Rf.D~J'i!!_EISTER -.
<v DALLAS, Pa. -This is an unuaual love ~. wunatched by Bart:.ra Cartland or other
,Wrtten of romancee. <v It ls a story that begins in Da11aa -
.Pennsylvania, not Tex. -at the State Correc-
~ Imtitution. For the thlrd time in six months.
~-~ in Luzerne County was the ate of a ~t fact alone is not unusual -Dallu'
~ Warden Joeeph M . Ryan •Y. he 8MI at a-tone w~ at the pri8on every month. <v But when Carol Hoffman, 27, of Reading,
lnan1ed Albert G. Reppert recently, the bride wu
the thlrd m.cer from her family to tie the knot with
an bunate at Dalla. <v Her m.ter, Betty Warman, 21, married Roy
w~. Mo known -Frank J . Scathorelli Jr.,
an Nov. 22, 1982. And Carol's older Utel' married
Ul inmate two weelm after Betty Warman wu
ind. <v 1be three mten, who hail from a family of
le c:hildren, e.dl Mve a hmband who redcla in
c.J.l Block E. <v 'nwy met their hUlbanda dw1nc a s*:nk: at
Dl11M In June 1982. n.ey were tnvttecl to the e by their brother, who II ~ tame at
for an anon coavteUon. He and the oldMt
Mired not to be klentlfted.
• -....
••
vi After the pk:nk, the women made weekly
vlllta to the priloll and the romancee bio.omed.
vi Warman, who hal been aentenced for
recei~ ftOlen property, WAI the flnt CO propoee. <v "It w• a reel surprtle," Warman Mid. "It
..Uy WM. I aak.ed my mom and ahe Mid. 'You're
21 and old enoucli to make up your own mind.· So
Ieald ·v •. · ·· ~Twenty-five people attended the wedding,
held In the country club-like atmoephere of the
vtatt.on center at the pri80n. She wore a royal blue
even1"I dram; Wannan, a two-piece dark blue
au.lt .
•
It takes a certain breed to become a collector
By Dl.ANE SHINN ,,.. ........ ,.,_
IOWA CITY, Iowa -Although Sherlock
Holmes was a product of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's
imagination, the fictitious detective is alive and
well in the life of Bill Thinnes.
In the bedroom of his Iowa City home, some 30
deerstalker hats, made of houndatooth plaid wool
with front and back bills and earflape tied at the
top, adorn a hatrack. An ulster, the type of caped
raincoat worn by Hohnes in many illustrations,
hangs on the back of the door.
There ls even a notorious Sherlock Holmes
calabash pipe, with a large bowl and curved neck,
on the bureau, a package of tobacco lying nearby.
The items and other such memorabtlla
a.ociated with the famous aleuth have been
gathered by Thinnea out of hia lnterest ln
collecting -and his fascination with Sherlock
Holmes.
Thinnes, 29, an orderly at the Veterans
Administration Medical Center i:-ychiatric unit,
says he has collected different itema for years and
comes from a "collecting famUy."
Hls father collects bueball carda, aufOlrapha
of famous atllletes and old movies. Two brothen
are what he calls "super jocks," ,nd collect
"anything that has to do with sporta, moetly
basketball and golf,'' he says. A you.naer brother
collects comic books.
~a chUd, Thinnes a1IO collected comk book.I
and model dinosaurs. Several years ago, he says,
he was interested in Marx Brothen memorabilia.
"It takes a certain breed of penon to be a
collector. You have to be a little obeealive,"
Thinnes says. "It comes from the desire to gather
things around you and dote on them."
Thinnes ls particularly proud of hia collection,
he says, becauae it I.a unique and he haa worked
hard to find aome of the things he wanted.
''The hata and things were hard to find and
that's one reuon I got interested in collectina
them," Thinnee says.
Some of the hata he owns came originally
from Britain and Scotland and had to be ordered
out of New York or California, he Mys.
Many of the itenw in Thinnee' collection were
made famoua by Sidney Paget, who tint drew
illustrationa of S herlock Holmee that created the
chancter's lmage.
"Doyle never specifically deecrlbed Holmes'
clothing," nmme. says. "The deerstalker hat and
overcoat came from Paget."
Though he has been coll~tlng Holmes iteml
for about a year and a half, Thinnee elltimatee be
hu already apent around $2.~. "It all started
with one deentalker hat,'' he maya. •
"I have always abied •W•Y from popular
thinp and looked for the unique and un..-aal," he
aay.. "l like to thlnk I march co the beat of a
different drwnmer."
•
C2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1983
DEAR ANN LANDERS: (Or. Hey You, who
writes the adVlce column in the Herald
Palladium).
If the language fon'halist with two degrees in
English (one from Yale yet!) needs help with
salutations. why doesn't he get humorously
infonnal and start with "Hey You, Chairman of
General Motors," or "Hey You, Preside nt of
General Foods," or "Howdy There, Chairman of
CBS"? One thing is certain, it surely would get
their attention.
I'll bet those high-falutin' corporate guys
would enjoy a little down-to-earth talk after
having people bow and scrape to them all day long.
ln Oklahoma a frie ndly "Howdy" to the head of a
big oil company would go over big.
Yvonne Ke lley and Andreioo serve
up pa ta k> J ean Zimmerman.
C hairm a n
Kasabali
N an cy
Most people pay no heed to a salutation -
unless it's one they hate. Like Ms. Who thought up
that turke y? To Whom It May Concern is too
impersonal. Dear Sir or Madrun sounds like you
are talking to an English butler or a woman who-
runs a house of ill re pute. Actually, why do we
need a salutation at all? Why not start with
''Regarding that busted pipe in my home," then
get right to it?
.·Debut due ••• C~lebrities, men picked for fashion ramp
The lcs.s structured, the better. Relax and let it
all hang out. -A MICHIGANDER
DEAR GANDER: I don't recommend letting
too much bang out when dealing with executives.
They migbt take a dim view of sacb informality.
Of all tbe letters I received, tbe salutation most
people preferred was "Dear Mr. Jones," or Miss
or Mrs., wbetber tbat person was a ctually dear to
them or not. Broad hint to those who wish to
connect: Take the trouble to find out the name of
the person to whom you are writing and ase it
whenever possible.
•••
DEAR ANN LANDERS: We've all heard
plenty about the dangers of cigarette smoking.
Many former cigarette sm okers have turned to
cigars. Since they do not inhale, they claim they
are safe. What about us nonsmokers? Must we
spend the better part of our lives in a cloud of
stinking cigar smoke?
I have yet to see a single warning about the
hazards of cigar smoking. Are the tobacco
companies paying hush money, or what? I can't
understand how cigarette smoking can be so
harmful while nobody says boo about cigars. Will
you look into this mystery and inform the public?
-F.M.
DEAR F.M.: According to Lawrence Gar-
finkel, vice president for environmental studies
and director fo r the prevention of cancer at the
Amer ican Cancer Society, pipe and cigar smokers
have death ra tes for mouth cancer that Is about
the same as cigarette smokers. But most ciga r
smokers do not get · lung cancer in the large
numbers that cigarette smokers do because they
don't inhale.
My advice Is to stay away from ALL smoking
materials. It will increase your chances for a
longer life and decrease the possibiJity of lip, Jang
or mouth cancer as well as heart disease and
emphysema.
PG[-3. ~·~-~~~~~!ft;
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Ch1fd1tn Undet l2 FAl:E UnfPH Noten '
BY Vida Dean
CM"ille Dellr ....... l lAlfl
The patio turned m eeting hall Wednesday
evening and the rim of th e spa turned podium for
the Huntington Harbour Cancer League's get
together at Marcia and Tom Louglin's waterfront
home .
"We promise to keep it brief tonight," Nancy
Kasabali, chainnan, told members and guests at
the close of the designated social hour.
The important announcement was the cel-
ebrity models for the Oct. 8 Debut din-
ner/dance/fashion show and the five Huntington
Harbour male models. (More than 30 women and
teen models were announced in May.)
Georgie Rubin, balanced on the spa rim,
revealed that Susan Shaw , Channel 13 news
anchorwoman; Jackie O lden, KNX news radio
food editor; Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson
and Ne wport Beach Busines.9ll811 Robert Harris
would fill thecelebritycategory, while Pat Kelley,
George Maguire, Bernie J ones, Don Barnett and
husband Marc Rubin would fill male model roles.
When Karyn Stone had her turn on the spa
rim she told the group of all the fabulous auction
it.ems and prizes that will be available to help the
group make its $50,000 goal this year. The tw o
previous Debuts have brought in $21,000 and
$36,000
A.nrrouncements made, it was lime to get
down to the business of eating. Handsome
Andreino de Santos (Andreino's in San Clemente)
brought out the pasta dinner (the great garlicky
smells of which had been driving everybody crazy
for an hour and a half). The food was pleasing as
was his promise that he would also donate four
dinners to Debut.
Partygoers included Roger and Sally Fenton
(Debut was her idea), Tom Kasabali with Nancy.
Supervisor Harriett Wieder {a neighbor of the
Louglins who was in on early Cancer League
plans), Cla4dia Hiatt (she's with Nordstrom and
they'll be dOing the fashions), Morrie Stone with
Karyn, J ean and Lou ZUnrnerman and Yvonne
and Pat ..Kelley (Jean and Yvonne are Debut
chairpersons).
~~~
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"THE FUNNIEST AMERICAN MOVIE
COMEDY OF THE YEAR!'
-NEW YON! Tll8
DAN AYIRm EDDIE MURPHY
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Model8, from left, are Marc Rubin, Robe rt H ar ris a nd Don Barne tt.
<71.V\A 55 7-2 847
PEST CONTROL
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Phone 642·5678
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-8:00-I ONEWS
WOHOER WOMAN 8 ®J IASESAU G 8J I L080
Cf) TWILIGHT ZONE
G)S,W.A.T
«l)HAWAHFIV~
fl) OVER EASY
QI!) AMERICAN GOVERNr.!~NT
())CBS NEWS ~NBCNEWS fl' GABE KAPLAN AS GROUCHO
S MOVIE * * "Grease 2" (19821 Maxwell
CauJheld, M1cnelle Plellfer
GMOVIE
tt''1 '"lovers Uk.e Us" (1977)
C1thtflne 0en81JVe. Yves Mon land
-8:05-
.., ORANGE COVNTY TOOAY
-8:30-
• DICK CA VETI (R)
C!) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR
())NEWS
I AU IN THE FAMILY
FELONY SQUAD
AFI SHOWCASE
-7:00-
IJCBSNEWS
DHBCNEWS
D KUNG FU G POLICE WOMAN
(J) HEWS
G) THREE'S COMPANY «I> a .JOKER'S WILD 8ll BUSINESS REPORT Ui> INSIDE ORANGE COUNTY
()) P.M. MAGAZINE
QDORAGNET ~MOVIE • * * "Love's. Dark Ride·· (19781
Cliff Potts, Ckrrie Snodgress.
J) MOVIE
• *'h "Hanky Panlly" (19821 Gene
Wilder, Gilda Aadner
-7:30-IJ 2 ON THE TOWN 0 i.B FAMILY FEUD
G) ONE DAY AT A TIME
9) ()) llC TAC DOUGH ID MACHEJL I LEHRER REPORT G SNEAK PREVIEWS
QD MOVIE * • • "His Butler's Sister" (1943)
Deanna Durbin. Pat O'Brlell .E1 FRAGGLE ROCK
(2 MOVIE
• • • "The Oevll And Danoel Web·
sler" 119411 James Craig, Edward
Arnold
NIUC NOTICE
-8:00-
.. Cl) SQUARE PEGS
O QtMOVIE
• • • "Soohla Loreo Her Own Sto-
ry" (1980J Sophia LOttn. Armano
Auante,
0 MOVIE • * * "Duel In Tile Sun"' ( 1947) Jen-
nifer Jooes. Gr99ory Peck
UMOVIE * • '.1 "Desire Under The Elma•·
( 19681 Sophia LOfen. Anthony P8f-
k1ns
(!) TWILIGHT ZONE m P,M. MAGAZIHE
«l)MOVIE • * '"' "Sprtnglleld Fllne" ( 1952) Gary
Cooper, Phyllis Thal(!er. &i)~NE
'1:) GREAT PERFORMANCES
1H'lMOV1E
• • • "'Arthur" (1981) Dudley
Moore, Liza Mlnnelli. lS~E LONE ST AR BAR & QAILL
0MOV1E * * * "Outland" ( 1981) Sean Con. nery. Pe1er Boyte.
-8:30-e ())PRIVATE BENJAMIN C!J CHARLIE'S ANGELS
m ALL IN THE FAM!L Y
-9;00-IJ Cll TUCKER'S WITCH
DMOVlE • * * * 'The Frencn Connection"
(1971) Gene Hackman, Fernando
Rey. m veoAa
&i) GREAT PERFORMANCES ~ THE MAGIC OF DANCE
®)MOVIE * t V, "Mr. Maiestylt" t t974J Charles
BronSOfl. Linda Cristal,
(C)MOVIE • *' • '"Escape From New York"'
(19811 Kurt Russell. Adrienne Bar-
beau.
@ MOVIE * * • '"An American Werewoll In
London"' (1981) David Naughton,
Jenny Agutter
(%)MOVIE
'"Sile Dances Alone" ( 1982) Kyra
NljillSky, Bud Cort.
-9:30-
C!J MOVIE
• t •;, "Back S1ree1 (1961) Susan
Hayward, John Gavin
'1:) THE VIRGINIAN *~BIZARRE
-10;00-
IJ ()) CAGNE'~\& LACEY
DUm«l>NEWS
fli) THE MAGIC OF DANCE
'1:)FRONTI.INE
fffMOVIE * * "Grease 2" (1982) Max11re11
Ceultleld, Mlcneile Pfellfer (~MOVIE
• '"The Happy Hoo~er Goes Holly·
wood' (1978) Martine Besw1cke.
Adam West.
0MOVIE * • "Tile Pirate Movie'" ( 1982) Kristy
McN1cho1, Christopher Atkins.
NtUC NOTICE
"*JC NOTICE
-10:30-
CI) INOEPEHOENT NETWORK
NEWS
Ct ) MOVIE * *'·~ "Studef\I 6odl111" (1981) ~rlf·
Ian Rlte1. Matthew Goldsby
-11:00-
IJ D D ())OJ) !SJ NEWS D SA T\JAoA Y NIGHT G IN SEARCH OF ...
G) THE J£FFEASOH8
Cl) BENHY HILL Gil BUSINESS REPORT Ci> SPORTS AMERICA
'1:) 700CLU8 <CJ MOVIE * * "All The Ma1blef' (1981) Peter
Fal~. Bun Young.
10 JMOlllE
"!»* • ~ "Union Cny" t 1~80) OebOrall
H1rry, Dennis Lipscomb
-11:30-IJ ()) HART TO HART a a THE BEST OF CARSOH
D @) ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE U YOV ASl(ED FOR IT
mooocovPLE
Cl) HARRYO
fl) CONTEMPORARY HEAL n1
ISSUES
1$1MOVIE * * * "Body Heal" ( 1981) Wllllam
Hurt K81hleefl Turner. .
-12:00-u ENTERTAINMEHT TONIGHT
U MOVIE
t t * Solomon And Sheba" (1959)
Yul Brynner. Gina Lollobngoda.
(!) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
mMOVIE • * • "'The Man From TM Diners·
Club" (1963) Danny Kaye, Cara Wil-
liams.
JiJ GABE KAPLAN AS GROUCHO
0MOVIE • * '"Six Pack ' (1982) Kenny Rog-
ers, Diane Lane
(ZJMOVIE * • "Kn1gh1nders" (1981) Eo Harris, Gary lahll.
-12:30-D fB LA TE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN
UOOUPLES
D ®l ONE ON ONE
C!J ZANE GREY THEA TEA
-12:~
IJ CJJ COLUMBO
-1:<!0-• 0EH£ A\ITRY
DMOVIE • * * \~ "Tilt Heart 1, A lonely
Hunter" 11&6al Alan Arkin. Sonora
Loc~e.
(I'.) SERGEANT lllLKO Cl) MOVIE • * *'"' "The Nun's Story" (1959J Audrey Hepburn, Peter Fine/\.
(!DJ ENTERTAINMENT TOHIOHT
mGEHESCOTT fClMOVIE ** •.; "Beau Pere" (1981) Patric~ Oewwe, Ariel Besse
-1:30-0 '81 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
D GENE AUTRY
(!)MOVIE
• • "NeW$ Hounds" ( 194 7) Bowery
Boys. Chr1S11ne Mcintyre.
CHJTHE COMEDY STORE'S 11ftt
AHHIVERSARY
l$1MOVIE * * "Grease r ( 1982) Maxwell
Caullleld, Micnelle Pletrl8f.
-1:~-
0MOVIE • * "A Stranger Is Watching" (1982)
Rip Torn, ~ate Mulgrht.
-2:00-e ())CBS NEWS NIOHTWA1Clf
m TOM COTTLE: UP CLOSE
C01MOVIE * * "Attack Force Z" (1980) JOM
Phillip l aw. Mel G1b500
-2;30-
DG) HEWS
afMARY HARTMAN, MARY
l'IARTMAN
(HJ MOVIE
• ''1 "Death Wish H" ( 1982) Charles
Bronson, Jill Ireland
l l MOVIE ** "Lookln To Get Our· (1982J Jon
Voight. Ann-Margret. ,
-3:00-
(!) MORNING STRETCH
-3:10-
lCJMOVIE * * * •i; "Monty Python And The
Holy Grall" ( 1974) Graham Chap-
man, John Cleese.
-3:15-
«I) LOVE, A.MERICAN STYLE 0 MOVIE
'1:) ORANGE COVNTY TODAY * * '-' "Slreet Music" (1981) Eliza.
(0) MOVIE belh Daily, Larry'Bleedmg. * * "Little Orphan Dusly II" ( 1982) -3;25-
Rnonda Jo Petty I $J BIZARRE
SH complete ll1tlng In TV Log
CHANNEL LISTINGS
1J KNX T CBS1 Los A.nyt>lt'..., D KNBC 1r-isc 1 Lo, Anyelt''> u Kl LA !Ina I LOS Ange1e5 D MSC rv I ABC> LO'> AnQele"
tI "FM9 1C6Sf San D•ego 0 KHJ-TV ( lnU I Los. An ie•es
®' K.CST 1A8C1 San D•1•gu
Q) KTT\1 1 lpd \Los A'1gt'lt'~
• KCOP rv 1 lnu I L d S AngelPS
fD KCET f\ .PBS! l 1.•> Anynl<>5. ~ KOCE fV PBS1 Hun1•n41u n Be ,c.n
MUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF n.usTH'S IALE
i.-n No . .llNllN
T.I . No. 0-Glml
UNfTCOOE Q T.O. SERVICE COMPANY aa duly
appolnled Trustee under tne follow·
By: Rose A. Garcia
Assistant Secretary
Ona City Blvd West
Orenga. CA 92668
71 4-835-8288
PubllSl'led Orange CoHI Oelly
Pllol July 18. 25, ,.ugu1t 1. t983
4154-83
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1963 C'3
AdvertiS~
commercial
~.f~~OTHENBERG
NEW YORK -One frtes illJ buraers, the other
broils them , but the differences between McDonald's
and Burger King go much further, ext.ending even to
their marketing strategies on televialon commerdals.
All year .Slong, but particularly during the
sununeM:-enm doldrums, it can be more interesting to
watch the ads than th e shows. A show's sponsor says ~lot about that program's demographic audience and,
m tum, the time, day and season of the commercial
says a lot about an advertiser's sales strategy.
. For example, you can't tum on the TV Friday
rught or Saturday morning without seeing McDo~d's "golden arches" and its Eagle-scout
types singing and dancing the praises of Big Macs. "If
you haven't seen a McDonald's commercial early in
the .weekend, you haven't been• watf;:hing/' says
David Poltrack, CBS' vice president for research.
The McDonald's goal is to bombard kids with
visions of bµrgers and fries just before the family
outing to the shopping mall.
Burger King takes a different road. Its com-
~ercials aren't on Saturday morning's cornucopia of
kiddie shows. "Our campaign is targeted to adults,"
says Richard Kostyra, senior vice president, media
director for the J. Walter Thompson ad agency. "We
decided over a year ago that we co~'t compete on
all fronts, so we don't have a children's campaign."
Burger King and its Whopper are romanticized
in commercials by equally fresh-faced salespeople,
bu.t the m~ge ~designed to impress adults. Do you
think a kid looking for a fast-food fix is concerned
with the results of Burger King's broiling-vs.-frying
survey?
se some
rick
lotions. the winter, you'll see more cold remedies.
One ad executive requesting anonymity said he
attended-a meeting that greeted the news of a flu
epidemic in Boat.on with cheers.
Vitamins, on the other hand, don't have l'ruijor
sales fluctua tions. "The key is getUng them oft the
shelf and onto the breakfast table," says the ad exec.
"The target there is morning radio to remind
momma.''
Then there are the seasons within the seasons,
gift-giving time: before Mother's Day (perfumes),
Father's Day (alcohol) and Christmas (video games).
Hallmark sponsors a mushy lamily movie before
The McDonald's go~l is-to bombard
kids with visions of burgers and fries
just before the family outing to the
shopping mall.
Christmas and Valentine's Day to hype its cards.
Camera and film ads abound pre-Christmas, sum-
mertime and before Easter Sunday, "the biggest
single picture-taking day of the year." says the ad
exec.
If Americans love holidays, they also love TV
weddings. "Any product that has emotion, like
cam~as ... tries to get as close to the wedding BCene as
possible, says the ad exec. "You're buying am-
biance."
In contrast, advertisers on the nightly newscasts
-?ften the ~~rers of bad news -are buying
audiences, spec1f1cally older folks with reality on
their minds and elsewhere.
On a typical night, sponsors for the "CBS
Evening News" include an arthritis aspirin. a
headache remedy and ointment for hemorrhoids.
When Burger King launched this campaign, it
flooded Sunday night TV with commercials in every
half hour on all three networks. Dubbed "Super
Sunday" by J . Walter Thompson, the goal was to
focus on what is historically the most-watched TV
night. .-------------------
In 1982, Nielsen's research showed that an
average of 100.9 million people watched Sunday
night TV, compared to 91.6 million on Monday, 90.4 ~~on on Tuesday, 89.7 million on Wednesday, 88.8
million on Thursday, 87.3 million on Saturday and
86.3 million on F'riday.
This is one reason why the introduction of new
car models used to come Sunday nights on
"Bonanza." Another reason was that the car dealers
were home on Sunqay to see the commercials.
The nature of the car business has changed,
though, and its major TV campaigns now coincide
with pe~k ~uying seasons -in the spring and fall,
when, mc1dentally, the male National Football
League ran is a captive audience.
Good for you!
The summer product pushes are obvious.
There's frosty beer, cool soft drinks and sexy sun-tan
Daily Pilot
es11mata on whlcn the opening bid 1s son who hu heretofore submitted a
computed may be Oblllne<i by call-Ml.IC NOTICE wr11ten bid may tubmlt 1n oral blo Ing 714-937-0966 the-Oay before t11e ___ _..-..;;m.;....;.;.;;.;.;.;;.;;. ___ exceeding by al least five (S•l.J par-
sale NOTICE OF ADOPTION.. OF cent the highest wrlllan bid. Tile
Dated. JUiy 8. 1983 l'IEIOLUTION OF INTENT llighas1 responsible bidder shall be
T 0 Service Compeny TO LEASE IU"l'l.UI required to axacule Iha form ol
By· Rosa A Garcia DllTittCT MAL "'OPE"TV lease, such tormat 11aa heretofore .A1111tant Secretary lld No. 14-4 been approved by the Board of
Ona City Blvd West NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT Trustees,
c lassified ads
phone 642-5678
Ml.IC NOTICE
NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF
AEIOLUTION OF INTENT
TO LEAIE IUflftl.UI
DISTtttCT'"ftEAL "'OPl:flTV ltd No. 14-7
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ,,,., on June 20, 1883. the Cl1y Counctl of
Coate M-. Callfomle, ldopted the 1883-84 Budget wtllch in<;fuded the 1,....,. ...,, .. tlona of Fed8fal Ae\l8nUll Sl\arfng Entltlemerlt Fur>da • .A complele
IUmnwy regardlflil the Budget la avallebfe for public Inspection ~
lhe howt ol 8:00 A.~. 8Md 5:00 P.M., Monday through Friday. In Room 106. Clty Hiit. n Fair Drive, Coete M-. CelHornJa.
Ing deJIOrlbe<I deed of trust WILL a11n1 NO SELL .AT PUBLIC .AUCTION TO THE ___ ,._..-._1c __ n_c_E __ _
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
.ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR
CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECWIEO IN
CIVIL CODE SECTION 292411 tpay-
Orange, C.A 92668' THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL Trie Board of Trustees shall make
714-835-8288 DISTRICT has declered tha11ha fol-the da1arm1na11on as 10 whet11er to
Plibllahad Orange Coa11 Dally lowing real property Wiii not be lease said tacllllles with Ian( 10) days
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT
THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL
DISTRICT 11as declared ll18t 111e lol-
IOWlng real property will not be needaO lor classroom prupoHS
,,.._,ed below 11 a brief aummery comperteon of Iha adopted u-of Fed81'8l Revenue S111r1ng Fund• 10 edopted 1983-84 Fltcal Year Budget.
~-II Govarnmenl r ubllc Safety
PUbltc Works
Lel9ure Servlcet /Gott CourM
[CIPllot Improvement•
[Other
S-0-
-0-
-0-
-0-
-0-
2.612,000
155.000
$8.317.t90 11.937.120
5,728.710
2,712.495
1.090.820
3.4-43.755
732.515 TOTAL ~12.767.000 $33.962.605 $36,729.605
,.,.. .. '°' "--• lfwtng
CapltallMpf.._te
Street Maintenance Progaram 1gt13-114
COflllruct 19111 StrM t-Perk Avenue to
Fullerton .A venue
Construct Bike Traln-Herbor Bouleverd-Fatr
Drive to Eatancle HIQh Sct!ool
COflstrvct Sunflowat ,.venue. NC>f1htld&-P1rk Ce<)ter
Drive to 300 feet E.ul of Floww Street
Reme><lel-Flre Station No. 2
Aecon1truct COl'ICr*te Pld-Flra Stallon No. 4 Modify Corpor11lon Verd
Improve Otalnange.N11lonll Street, PrMl<Mn1
Street and Republlc Slreet
Underground Ulllillat, NC>f1hlld&-Sunno_. Avenue
Reoons1rUC1 Alley-Be~ Car1way Street end
Coriander Street
Underground Utlll11et.Perl( Avenu.-19111 Str•t to 18th Street
COflatruC1 Canyon P1rk-Phue II
Aeconstrvcl-Clvtc PleytlOYM
IU.-TOTAL
Soei1I Progr 1111 Supporl
Senior Citizen• Van
lue-TOTAL
TOTA&. Publllhed Orenge Coast Ollty Ptlol, July 18. 1983
$8,317.190
11,937.120
5,728,7t0
2,712,485
1,090,820
6,055,755
887,515
1200,000
S330,000
S50,ooo
S700,000
$58,000
S20.000
$130.000
S140,000
5160,000
s110.ooo
S114.000
$500,000
$100,000
S2,612,000
$1<30.000
$25.000
l t55,000
S2,767,000
4160·63
Classy Autos
Advertised
Ml.IC NOTICE
in the
Daily Pilat
FICTITlOUI IUSIHHI
NAME STATE•NT The tollowlllO persons are doing
business u :
NANCY L. WILSON INSURANCE
SALES & SERVICES t605 Stitll'·
lng1on Pl . Ste. 203, N-poM Beach.
CA 92663
NANCY L WILSON 1605 Sller-lnglon Pl, Ste, 203, Nawl>O(t Beach ~-CA 92663 lj;r.-----------~;:::-l Thlt bu•lnest la conducled by· 1n
HAllOtt LAW~MTi OLIVf 1ndMd1lel M I ,.. -Nancy L. Wilson or uary • .....,. IT'E' ler~ This tlafement waa filed with the
Cren1.11orv County Clerk of Orange County on
fb25 G1-;1er A.ve June 14. 1983
Cos.ca Me<,o:1 F21"7S
540·55.,4 P11btl111ed Orange Coast Dally
Piiot June 27, July 4. 11. t8. 1883
2936·83
llble at tl1a time ol sale In lawful
money of the United Stales) all right,
title end 1n1arest conveyed to and
now held by It under said 0..0 of
Trust In the propety harelnaher de-
scribed:
TRUSTOR: CARROLL B. JENSEN,
.ARDELL.A J. JENSEN
BENEFICIARY PAUL K
CARTIER. ETELKA CARTIER
RECOROEO March 31, 1980 aa Instr. No 37474 In BOOll 13555 page
t429 of Olliclal Records In the office °' the Recorder of Orange County:
s91e1 deed 01 1rust dHCrlbel 1he
loilowlng properly.
PARCEL 1. Unit 15, .. shown on
that Clf'laln Condominium Plan re-
corded In book 11949, p1ges 10'46
to 1073 Inclusive. Olllclal Raoorda, as defined In Iha ~lareUon of Re-
w1c11ons, raoorded In l>Ook 11971,
pages 1671 10 1722 Inclusive. Of-
llclal Records, In Iha City of Co11a
Mesa, County 01 Orange. Stlte 01
California and localed on 1h•1 oer-
taln real property dasartbed 19 Lot 1
91 Traci No. 8540. as per map r&-
corded In book 388, pages 9 and 10.
MlsceHaneoua Maps, In Ille office of
the counly recorder of said county.
P,_RCEL 2 An undivided 1/ 161h
Interest In and to all ol the real prop-
erty daSGrlbad Ill Lot 1 on the map
ol the above referenced tract
1ogelhar wllh all Improvements
thereon aJ1cepttng oierafrom Con-
dominium Units 1 to 16 Inclusive
loclllad thereon
PARCEL 3, An exciuslve ea-
ment appor1enan1 to such Unl1 for
Iha use and occupancy of tlloae p
ortlons ot the Reslrlcted "Common
Area" designated In the ~lmr•tlon
of RH1rlc110111 and shown on the
Condominium Plan for such Unit,
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNOER A
OEED OF TRUST DATED MARCH
27. 1960. UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-
TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-
ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO .AT A PUB-
LIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EX PL.A-
N.A TION OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU
SHOULD CONT.ACT A LAWYER
229 W. Wilson St .. Unit 15. Colla
~esa. CA 92627.
"(II a street address or commori
deslgna11ori ol property 11 shown
above, no w1rranty la given aa 10 It• comp1e1enass or correclnass)." The
beneficiary under said OMd ol
Trust, by raeson ot a breecl1 or de·
feul1 In 1he obllg1tlon1 HCured
1hereby, heretofore allecuted and
dtllvered to the undersigned 1 wr11-
ten Oaclaratfon of O.laul1 and Oe-
l'lllCI llOTHflS
llLL llOADW.A'f'
MOITUAIY
1--------------1 n1end tor Sale. and wrltlen notice .lf
breech and of tlectlon 10 c1uM th41
110 Broadw av
Coi.1.1 Mesa
6<12·9150
IAL Tl & IHGllO"
SMITH & TUTHILL
WHTCLI~ CHArll
427 t 17tn 51
Ct's1a Mesa
f>46-9 37l
'AClfllC VlfW
Mb4011AL ,di(
Cemetery M ortuary Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac111c View Orov(l
Newp0r1 Bnoc h
644·2700
Sell tdll· household undersigned to tell Hid prOl*ty to
. aa11sry said obllgatlona, and It••
1tt•ms in D<.111.\' Pilot 1tter the undersigned cauted Mid
"l u"'.·sifi".,cJ ·•('.". I notice ot breec11 end ol elflQlton lo ~ ,.,, ... u 1., be recorded April 7. 1983 at Instr
the O!llee Of 1h• Recorder Of Or•~ Dal.,, Piiat No. 63· 146550 of Offlcl11 Record• In
COYnty:
6 Said all• will be mede, but wl1hOU1 42-5678 covtnan1orwarran1y. tlllPr ... orlm• 11---------...;...----1 ptlM, r9garellng 1111• p0t-1ton, or
•"9.S'5 .t •T
lfWI If IW
er1C11rnbr1nc ... to p1y the rHmlnlng
principal .um of the note(a) MCurtd
by H id deed of Trull, with ln1t<te1
u tn u ld not• pro~. ec:tvenoet.11
1ny. under tilt t8fm• of "'d OMCI of tru11, !Mt, cherQ91, end e11pen-ot
tl\e T rvtl .. end 01 1he tru1t1 araatll(I
by H id Deed of Tru1t.
Said Nie wll be held on. Tuttc:ley,
Auqtilt 9, 1883, It 2:00 p,m 11 1118
Chapm1n Avenue enuence 10 the
Civic: CMl8f Building, 300 Eut
Cllepmtn /we , Orenge, CA
NOTICE Of T"UITH'I SALE
Loen No. JENHN T.9.No.0-4P73
UNIT CODI 0
T 0 SERVICE COMP.ANY as duly
appointed Trustee under the follow-
ing described Oaed of trust WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
ANOtOR-THE CASHIERS OR
CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN
CIVIL CODE SECTION 292411 (pay-
able al 1118 time of sale tn lawful
money ol the United Slltft) all r1gn1.
!Illa and lnterett conveyed 10 and
no11r held by It under said Deed of
Trus1 In the propety heralnefler d&-
scrlbed.
TRUST OR: CARROLL B JENSEN,
AROEI LA J JENSEN
BENEFICIARY, PAUL t<
CARTIER, ETELK.A CARTIER
RECOROEO March 3t, 1980 as
Instr. No 37475 tn Book t3555 page
1431 of Otflclal Records In the office
or Iha Recorder of Orange County.
Hid deed of 1ruS1 dHCrlbea the
lollowlng·
PARCEL 1: Unll t5, as shown on
tllat cettaln Condominium Plan re-
corded In book 11949, pegn 1048
to 1073 lnctualva. Otflclel Reciords,
as defined In 1he Oecler111on ol R•
strlctlons. recorded In book 11971,
pages 1671 to 1722 lnctuSllle, 01-
flclal Records, In the c11y of Coste
Mase. County ol Orange. Sl1te Of
California. and localed on lhei oer-
teln real property described u Loi 1
or Tr1101 No. 8540. 11 per map re·
corded In book 388. peges 9 and 10.
Mlaoellaneoua Maps. In tile office of
Ille county recorder of said cOYnty.
PARCEL 2· .An uridlvlded 1/161h
lnlernt In and 10 all of the reel prop-
erty dMOrlbed as Lot 1 on lhe mep
ol the 1bove reference trect togaltler
with alt ltnprovament1 thereon e11-
ceptlng therefrom Condominium
Un1111 I to 16 lncluslve locatad lher&-
on. PARCEL 3. An exoluslve aaM-
ment 11ppur1anant to suCh Unit for
the use end occupancy of 111oM
prtlona ot 1he Res1r1c18CI "'Common
Area"' designated Jn the OectaraUor>
ol Ras1rlc11ons and shown on the
Condominium Pt1n for such Unit.
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER .A
DEED OF TRUST OA TEO MARCH
28, 1980 UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-
TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-
ERTY. fT MAY BE SOLO AT A PUB-LIC SALE. IF YOU NEEO .AN EXPLA-
NATION OF THE NATURE OF THE.
PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU
SHOULD CONT ACT A LAWVER.
229 w Wilton No. 15, Cotta
Metll, C.A
'"(ti I 1lrH t eddttH or common destgn111on of pr099rty 11 tnOWf'I
abovt, no warranty Is given H 10 111
completeneea or eorrec1,_.1:· The
beneficiary un<ler 11ld Oeed of
Truat by reeeon ot a brHCh or Cl•
!lull In the obllgetlon• NCUred
thereby, hefetotore eHcuted 111d
dtllvere<I to the underllgntd 1 wr11-
ten Oeclar1Uon of Default tnd Oe-
m11nd lor Sele. and wrltlen nOlkle of
blHCll end Of efectlon to CIUN 1he
undersigned to Hit 11td propeny 10
aat11ty Hid obllg1t1001, and ther•
after 1he underllgMd c1uMd .. Id
no11ce of breach 1nd Of tteellOt\ 10
be recorded Aprll 7. 1983 ae lnttr.
No 83·1465-42 or OlllClll ~d1 In
the otttce ol 1he Aecorder of Orenge
County:
Said Nie wtll be made, but wttholit
coven int or w111ran1y. ••Pf•• or Im-plied, reglrdlng Otte PO .... t!On. or
1ncumbr•nota. 10 p1y th• reamlntng
prlt1Clp1I 1um Of the no18(1) NOUred
by H id deed of Tru1t, With lnter•t
u In said nota provided, adv1noet, It
1ny, under the terma of eafd 0..0 °'
11yst, f-, ChlfQ91, l l'!d 11111*\MJ of
1111 lt1.1•'" end Of 1he ltutl• C1'9118CI
by teld OMCI ot Tru1t.
1,_ • ""'"· .. .................. , ......... " ...... .,. ... ,.,... ._ , .......... aa.-1•-"-•'o.. ...... ,_ ........
Al the lime of Ille 1n1t111 l)\.lbll·
Cllllon of 1hl1 notkle, the tOtel
1111ount of 11111 unpllld btllll\ct Of tne
ot>llge11on MC,111<1 by the •bclve de-
terlbfd clMd 011ru1t 8f!d •tlmeted
Cott!_, eJCpef\MI. end 8CIV8noll It
&31.11•3.'ft.
81fd 111& wtl be held on. Mondty.
Augus1 8, 1983, 11 2.00 p.m 11 t~
Chepm1n Aveo~ en111nc• to 111e
Clvle Ctl\181' 8ulkllng, 300 EH 1
Otl1pm1n Ave .. Orenge, CA
Pilot July 18, 2.5, AuguSI 1 1983 needa<l for classroom pruposes· after receipt ot bids
4153-83 The Olllce Building located a1 lnformalfon concerning the
Ml.IC NOTICE
K 8137
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
EUGENE W. LIGHTNER,
AKA EUGENE WALLCE
LIGHTNER ANO OF PETI-
TION TO ADMINISTER ES-
T ATE NO. A 1190%0
Number One Llghthouaa Lane. proposal should be 1ddreased 10
Fountain Valley, Calllornla. Ttlr8tl FOUNTAIN V,_LLEV SCHOOL DIS·
Oaya Per Week: Fridays, Seturdaye, TRICT, 17210 Oak Street, Foun1a1n
& Sundays. Valley. Calllornla 92708, (7141
Tile Board of Trustees of the. 842-6651. Al1e1111on. C11ol Jones. Fountain Valley School Ole1rlc1 re-FOUNTAIN VALLEY
sol\'aa to lease the lacl111le1 so In-SCHOOL DISTRICT dlce1eo above under the terms and BOARD OF TRUSTEES
conditions Slale<I In Iha Raaolutlon Dated: July 7, 1983
of Iha Board, Rasotutlon No. 84-03 Published Orange Coast Da11y
Tna minimum lease paymem for Pilot July 11, 18, 25, 1983
each live-hour up to 300 people 4048-83
event shell not be less then lour hun. ------------
dred sixty dollara ($460.001 The nunllC NOTICE
minimum la1ee payment for larger ----~-"°--------
groups lo be mutually egraed upon. NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF
.A Security Oeposl1 will be required "EIOLUTION OF INTENT
prior to occupancy TO LEASE IU"PlUI
No Cornmlulon shall be paid any OllTAICT "EAL PAOPE"TV licensed real es1111e broker In this Bid No. 94.3
regard. and there ahall be no deduc-NOTICE 1:; HEREBY GIVEN THAT
lion from eny proposal In delarmln-THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL
Ing lhe hlgheat responllble bidder. DISTRICT has declared the I 1ne 1o1-
Se11lad proposals lo le11e said lowing real property will no1 be A petit1·on has "--n filed property must be rectved by the del· needed tor classroom pruposes: · ~ agaled ollicer al the Fountain Valley by Ralph S Lightner and School District Education canlar. The Office Building 1oceled at
To all heirs. beneficiaries,
creditors and contingen t
creditors of EUGENE W.
L IG HTNER. AKA EUGENE
WALLACE LIGHTNER a.nd
persons who may be other-
wise tnterested in the will
and/or estate:
S Number One Lfghlhousa Lane. Robert . Lightner in the Su-17210 Ook Street, Fountain Valley, Fountain Valley. California.
penor Court of Orange Coun· Callrorn\a, 92708, no l•l•r than 2.00 The Board of lru11ees of tile
t tJ• th t Ral h S Pm .• July 29· 1983 Fountain Valley School 01S1rlc1 re-Y reques ng a P · Before accapllng an• ~r111an
h R S , -solves to lease the lacllltlas so ln-Lig tner and obert . proposals. Iha delagllled officer dlcated above under the 1erms and
Lightner be appointed as shall call for oral bidding. ,.ny par· condlUons stated in Iha Resolullori
personal represent.ative to ton WhO has naretolora submltled 11 of the Boerd, Rasolu1lon No 84·02.
d . . h I wrlllan bid may submit 1n oral bid The minimum lease paymen1 tor a minister t e estate o a•ceedlng by at leas1 llva (S•;.) per-Ille term oflhe lease shall no1 be lass
Eugene W. Lightner (underlcent Ille highest wrluen bid. The lhan F111y-flve hundred dollars per
the Independent Ad.minis-hlgl'9St rt11pon1lble bidder shell be monlh (SS.500.00/month). The mlnl-
i f .,._ ) T h required to execute the lorm ot 1 t b trat ?" o ,,.,;tales Act : . e laese, such lormel has t•eralolore mum eaae payment or su sequanl
petition ls set for heanng tn.t>een approveo by the Boatd ol parlodamaybeadlustedbylheCon-sume.-Price INda~ annuel overage Dept. N o. 3 at 700 Civic rrustaes. reflected at Ille end ol th• lease
Center Dr West Santa An11 Tile Board of Trustees •hall make period. A security deposit will be
C A 92701 ., • 3 983 • the determtnallon as to whether to required prior 10 occupancy. on August • I at lease said lacllltlas wllh ta~ 10) d1ye No commlaslon shall be paid any
9:30 a.m attar receipt of bids licensed real es1ate bo oHar In thle
tnlormat lon concerning the regard, and there sh&ll be no daduc-IF YOU OBJEX::T to the propcsat should be addrened 10: lion 110111 any proposal In detarmln-
granting o f the petition you FOUNT-'IN VALLEY SCHOOL 01S-Ing \he highest responsible bidder
should either appear a~ the T~tCT. 17210 Oak Street, Foun111n Sealed l)roposals 10 ieue u ld
h . d . Valley. Calllornla 92708, (7 I'll property must be reclved by the d•I·
earm.g an !i\atA.' you obje<:-842-6651, Anentron· Carol Jones egaled officer at the Fouf'ltain Velley lions or file written objec-FOUNTAIN VALLEY School OlstrlC1 Education cen1er.
tions w ith th e c:ourt before SCHOOL DISTAICl 17210 Oak Street. FounteJn Valley,
BOARD OF TRUS'rEES Celllorn111. 92708, no la1er than 2:00 the h earing Your appear-Dated July 7, 1983
ance may be in person or by Published Orange CoaSI Dally P·7;91~~!Y 2!;c~~~ng any . written
your attorney. Piiot July 1 I, 18, 25, 1983 propoHls, the delegated officer IF YOU ARE A CREDI-4046-63 1na11 ce11 for 11re1 bidding Any par-
TOR or a contingent creditor son whO hes herecofore submitted 11 !'\a.IC NOTICE wtlltan bid may subml1 an oral bid oC the deceased. you must file ___ _..._...-... ...... _...-.. ___ e~cM<11ng by at 1e111 ttva (5%) p"r-
your claun with the court or NOTlCI cw ADOPTION Of' cenl the nighest written bid. Tne
present it to t he per.ional rep-"llOUITlOftOf JMTWNT hlghe91 responsible bidder '11811 be
I · ed h TO LIAICIUIO'\.UI required to execute the lorm 01 resent.at ve appoint · by l e OllTIUCT NAL "'°""TY IHM, such formal haa nerelolora
court w i thin four months ltd No..... been approved by th• Board of
Crom the date of first Issuance NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT Trustees
f I t te 'ded · "-THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL The Board ol Tru11ees shall make 0 e rs as proVl In ~-DISTRICT hu declared that the fol· tile determination as 10 whether to
tion 700 of th e Probate Code lowing reel propetty will not be la1ee said tacllltlas wltll tan( 101 deya of California. The time for needed for clauroom prupote1-1her receipt ot bids.
fillng claimJJ will n ot ex pire Tile Otflce Bulldlng located 11 lnfo1m1t1on concerning th•
Prior to four m onths from the Nvl'l'bllf Ona LlghthOuae Lena. proposal lhOYld be oddraaaed 10. Founleln Vllley. Cellforn11. for live FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL OIS· date o( the hearing noUoed (6) deys each week: Mond1y, Tues-TRICT, 11210 01tc S11'M1, Fwn1a1n
above. day. Wedneee11y. Thursday, end V1t1ey, Celllornle 92706. (714) YOU MA y EXAMINE the Sunday. 842-8051 • .A1t*011on; Cerol Jona• Tile Board Of Trustflff Of the FOUNTAIN VALLEY file kept by the (.'OUrt . If you Fou1"111ln VaHey School OIS1tlc1 re. SCHOOL OISTAICT
are interested '" thl' estate, aolllel to .... 11\8 l1c111ti.1 •O ln· BOARD OF TRUSTEES
you m&y aerve upon the ex-dlceted 1.bove under the term• end Oeted: July 7, 1883
ecutor or administrator, or Condition• 11a1ec1 In 1he AeloMIOn PubNah414 011nge Co11t 0811y of tl1a Board. A41aotutl0n No. 84•05 Pllo1 July 1 t, 18, 25. t993 upon th e attorney for the ex~ r1111 minimum lnH p1yrntn1 for 4049·83
ecu tor or adminiJtrator , and the 111m1ott!WI1~111oh•ll not b8'"•
(l}e Wi th tho court with proof than Th.lrly·n .... hundrtd doMlrt j)8f
of aervlce, a w ritten N>nUfft M011111 <S3500.001mont111. Tile mtnl· • ~, mum , .... payment for 10baequtlfll
1'4ltlng that y ou d eeire speci&I pertod• m•Y be adfu•ted by th4t Con· notice of the flllng of an in-1umet Prkle Index annul/ ref~ttd
ventory and appraisement of at 1htl and or 1h• leaM ptrlod A
-tale n-ts or ot ·h· pell-eeeurlly dtf)otl1 m•y be rqulrecl ~.. -• "' p1lor to ocounp1ny. tlon1 or accounts men tioned No Comm1111on lhlJI be plld 1ny In Section 1200 and 1200,:> of lloenHd reel B1t1111 t>rOIC., In lhlt
the Callft>mJa Probi.1\e Code. ,.gird, Ind thef• 111111 bt no deouc· Dlmel .. Rlm•I lion lrOM 1ny l)rOl)O .. I In d•tBfmln· II' • ~ ll'IQ the fliOheet rMPOflllitMtl bidder. By: Jac.k J. Rtmel l eeled propo..i. 10 .. e" ..,el 10$5 N Main Sa Sae tot propany mu11 t>e r«:lvtci by th& cit!·
!'\a.IC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI IUllNIH
NAMI tTA~MINT
Th• IOll6wtng per10r>1 ere d<Mng
busln•St 111:
HOME .AND RESTAURANT IN·
TERIORS. 109 Welcome l.1"41. Seal S.~11. CA, Q0140
Ot vl<I 0 . Aove1, 90~ &ou111 uni A~. Taml)B.AZ. 8&282
Michael Nlunue"-1, tOG w.ioome
Ln,Se1t 8eect1.C• 90140
Thlt bUtln•H It conducted by. a oeneiel l)trtnerltllp.
The 0111ce Butlolng located 11
Number One Llghll'IOYH Lene.
Fountain Vella)'. C1hlornia. Two
0 1ys Per Week Frld1ys & Saturdays
Tne Board 01 Trustees of tilt
Foun1e1n Valley Sctiooi Oftlrlct re-t01"8s 10 lease 11111 teclllllas so to.
dlce1e<1 aOove under the terms end
conditions atalad In the Resolullon
of the Board. Rasolutron No 84-08
The minimum lease payment lor
eacn live-hour up lo 300 P&<>flle
event shall not be leas than lour 11un-
dred sixty doll11s (~50 OOJ The
minimum lease payment ror 1argef
grOYps lo be mutuelty agreed upon
A Security Oepcst1 will be reQulred
'lrlor 10 occupeney.
No Commlu lon shall be P8ld any
ii ::ensed real estate broke< In this
•"ljard. and there s11a11 be no dedUc-
:1on from any proposal In detarmln·
1ng 1he highest raapons1bta bidder
Sealed proposals to lease U Jd
property must be recivad by the cel-
egaled officer 11 the Fountain Valley
School Otstrlcl Educallon ceriter,
17210 Oak Street Founlaln Valley,
Calllorn1a. 92708, no 1a18f lhen 2:00
pm., July 29. l 983
Before accepting any written
proposals. Iha delegared officer
shall coll for oral bidding. Any P8f·
son who has heretofore submllled e written bid may submit an 01a1 bid
exceeding by at least live t5V•J pe1-
cen1 lhe hlgl'last wr111en bid. The
highest responsible blddat shell De
required 10 exacuce Iha form Of
lease, such rormal has heretofore
been approved by tile Board of Trustees
The Boerd 01 Trust-shall make
the datermlna11on as 10 w11a1"8r to
leo.sa said lec1lllles with lane 101 deys
alter recetpt of bids
lnlormallon concerning tna
proposal ShOYld be addressed to. ~OUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL OIS·
TRICT. 17210 Oak Slreet. Fountain
Valley. Calllornla 92 708. t7 t 4!
842-6651 • .Allantlon Ca.rot Jones
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
SCHOOL DISTRICl
BOARD OF TRUSTEES Oaled July 7. 1983
Published Orange Coa11 Dally
PHOI July 11, 18, 25, 1983
•047-63
Ml.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI IUllHHI
NAME 8TATllMNT
lhe following peraons are doing
businesses:
lARNUTZER DEVELOPMENT
CO . 2915 Redhill. Sta. F-~00. Co111
Mesa. Ca 92626
T.ARNUTZER INVESTMENT CO ,
INC • 2916 Redhill, Sle F-200, Costt
Mau. C.i. 926211
Thia business Is conduct*<I by' 1
corpora II on -
Tarnutter tnveatmant Co.
8yrori Tlrnul.zer. Pr•fdent
This statemanl w111 flied with the
COYnty Clerk of Orange Co~mty on
July 6, 1963 "' ... ....._, Oet1Mr • llfOWll
<IMO c-..... Off¥9 Newport .._II, Ce. Dia
Publlahld Oran91 Co1t1 Oall>-
Pllol July 11, 10, a~ Au9 1. 1983
•926-<&3
Ml.IC NOTICE
l'ICTITlOUI 9UIMIS
NAMI ITA1WMl"T
The following ~•ona er• llOfng buarneu u
WOLFE & ASSOCIATES, 9550
Warner Ave, Foun111n Valley, C1
9270&
Mc.CO.MICI MOITUA•IH
L11a1.ma Beacn
4194 ·9415
L&Quna Hills
768-(1933
.............. 1-_,......, .............. The 10!11 lno.ott<INM o.inG In "'''"''•on whleh the opening bld 11 COnlP\118<1 ll'llly be Obtaloecl by 01111•
~1 the llma of tn. 1n11111 publi.
oallon of !hit nottoe, ttle lolal
1rnovn1 ol 1h1 unp•IO batanoe of 1he
01>1toe11<>o MCUted br 111e •oove ci.-acr1bed deed of 1ru1 tnd 1tll,.,tttd
!l0At1, ••!*"Ml. 111d edvtnoee 11 125,789.93
· • ·1 • -a11.o otllcet 1111'\t Fountain Valley Suaa Ana, CA 91701 Sch004 011trtct l duoetion oemw; (714 ) 147-7391 1'1'2t0 01111 &t,..t, F'ountatn Velie)',
OeYld 0. Aoue1
'fh11 1t1t.-nent w•• fllM '1¥1th ttie
Coun1y Cltl'lc of Or•~ CountY on J1,1t-r a. •H:>
Clarence E Wolle, 8~42 Crandell
Orlva, Hvn111101on Dttcl\, C• 92947
N•n Q Wollt. 8442 OrM<lell
Ortve. Hunt1f!ll10l1 Blacl\, Ca. 92947
Tt111 bu1lne11 Ill eonoucttcl by• 1n-
dlvldu111 (l'iutblncJ & Wll9)
CltrtnOt II WO!tt
Thia lt81""8nt WU fifed with 11'111
Counly Clefk Of 0r.,. Counly on.
July6, 19&3 S.ir> J u&n Cap1atranC1
495·1776 c ~
,...., ..... ,.,..,,.,. ..... :f.114·M '1-<>He the e11y btr!Ql'• tM
OatlO: JIMY e, IH3
T o S.tvle• Com1>1nv H Mid Truel•
Publithl'd Oranr Cout Ca111orn11, 927ot, no later than 2:00
"-It Pll J I l 8 o,,., · Juty 29, ll>t3
vt1 Y ot U Y • 12, 1 • 94'fore ec~1=1ny wrllten
1983 prOl)OMI•, the 1ted otttcer 4044 ·83 1111111 cell I« Ofll tlld Ing. Any per. Tll• 10111 llldeb18Clneu o.lng 1n
,.,_
Pubtl•l'ted Or•nge co .. 1 OalfV
P11ot Ju111 11, 1e. ao. Auo. 1. 1w
40H·83
,.,..
ltUl)lleht<I Orange COUI OiiltY
11111o1 Jul)' t 1. 11, 111, A119. '· tea Q~
) '
Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1983 -
Is California hurricane country?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Heavy rains
and winds near hurricane force may slam
Southern California and northern Mexico
this fall because of El Nino, the warm
ocean current that caused $7 billion In
global weather damage last year, scien-
tists say.
"If the warm water situation keeps
up as It has, Southern California should
be concerned with the posalblllty of one
or more somewhat weakened hu~
rlcane-force storms hitting here In Sep-
tember of October," said Forrest Miiier.
of the National Marine Fisheries Center
In La Jolla.
Rlmmon Fay, oceanographer and
owner of Pacific Bio Marine Laboratory
In suburban Venice called the warm El
Nino current "an event of the century,"
adding, "We certainly can expect a
severe storm to hit here In September."
Alan Strong, of the Natlonal
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Admin-
istration In Washington, D.C .. said the
chance of a full-force hurricane hitting
Southern Callfornla Is remote, but "this
El Nino Is stronger than any seen this
century, so It's more probable than
usual."
Warm Pacific waters off Baja Cali-
fornia could bring hurricanes Into Mex-
ico, but Southern California waters
would have to warm from their present
highs In the low 70s to at least 80 degrees
to sustain a hurricane, said Art Krueger,
a NOAA meteorologlst.
The scientists' comments on the
posslblllty of more harsh weather caused
by El Nino were published today by the
Los Angeles Herald Examiner.
El Nino de Navldad, Spanish for the
Christ child, Is the term given to the warm
ocean current that last winter gave rise to
one of Callfornle's harshest winters and
severe damage In South and Central
America. partlc .. ularly Peru.
El Nino, born off the coast of Peru at
Christmastime roughly every 10 years
and having a usual six-month lifespan,
typically is caused by slackening west-
erly trade winds near the equator and
weakened cold-water Pacific currents.
The last prolonged El Nino occurred In
1957 and lasted 21n veara.
NOAA has estimated that the prea-
ent El Nino directly or Indirectly con-
tributed to 800 deaths and more than 17
bllllon In property damage since It ruined
Peru's fishing Industry In the spring of
1982.
Miiier said El Nino fosters the eevere
weather partly because the warm cur-
rents help troplcal storms gather energy
over the ocean, whlle cold water di ..
slpates that eoergy.
But, he added, hurrlcanea have
"more to do with how the winds and
steering currents In the atmoephere are
working. Those conditions don't exist
now, but they wlll In September .and
October."
"With El Nino, you have more
troplcal storms brewing than usual and
the odds of severe storms and early
winter rains reaching Southern Call-
• fornla are quite good," Miiier said.
amantha sees circus, Soviet style
l
,.,_........,
MOSCOW (AP) -Samantha Smith, the
American schoolgirl who wrote the Soviet premdent
about her fears of nuclear war, traveled to the ancient
Russian city of Zagorsk Sunday and was preaented
with a foot-high Matryoshk.a doll.
Later in the day she attended the Moecow cireua
and told reporters she liked the animala be9t.
"My favorite? All of them," the 11-year-old girl
from Manchester. Maine, said. "I liked the dop and a
stubborn mule. the camel, the zebra, the bean, and
the llamas."
She made the trip to Zagorsk, 36 miles northeast
of Moscow, after telling reporters here ahe would
spend the entire day in Moscow resting.
"At the last minute, they (Soviet Foreign
Ministry officials) said they had a special gjf t waiting
and could we send a representative of the family to go
.and pick up the gift," Samantha's mother, Jane, told
The Associated Press in a telephone interview.
Samantha's mother said she and her daughter
made the trip without her husband, Arthur, and that
it lasted about two hours. "It was a real whirlwind
trip," she added.
A musuem attached to the Zagorsk toy factory
presented Samantha with a painted wooden doll with
six smaller dolls inside.
Samantha and her parents arrived in Mos:ow
July 8. She had written to President Yuri V.
Andropov expressing her fears about nuclear war
and the Soviet leader responded by offering her an
expenses paid trip to the Soviet Union.
'1CTITIOUI ..... MOT1CI 0/1 I.AU &MDU MAM1 ITATllmllT NCMa 0/1 ,.OMC&.OeuM
The lollc>Wlng ~ .,, dOif'O ~lfldae Cow. 910.
bullneM ~ Pl*nllff
LBS "PLINE CONTRACTORS VL
1e&74 Sequoia ST., 'ounlMI l/""'f, JOhn A, 0~. It 81.
CA 92708 o.Ml>dMI
LANNY BROCK COLLINS 1e&7• No. 38-33-00
Sequoia, Founlaln l/*'f, CA 92708 I, IM ~. lhO Oat•,
Thie bUllneM 11oonduoleclby:111 IMflff-<:orOMf. County of °'"'9'•
lndMduel State of CallfOfnle, do lleftbV C9ttlfy
L.aMy B. Colline that by Vlttul of Oect.e of '°'~ Thie 1ta1-1 -Ned with tM dolur"e and 8 ... In tfle ~
County Clltk of 0tenoe COunty on Couty of lhe County of °'""'· June 22. IH3 State of Callforni., tnllf~ on
112m• M•ch 1e. 1N3. and r.corded on
Publlllled Otanoe Coaet Dally Match 1e. 1"3In111e Mlo\Oeenutlad
Pllol June 27, July 4, 11, 1a, IN3 actJon. whefeln PentrldOI Cow
2927-83 H-1«a AlloclaUCln 8-lbM
·-----------~ plalntlfl(el. o«>telned a Jude--' -men1 and Otot .. of f~ and P18JC M>TIC( Nie 9Ge1Mt JOM R. G~ c»-1--PIC-""nnoua .............. ., ..... _ ...... _11--lendanl(•I. ror 1111 aum of EJohl Hun-
..._ ITATIMINT dred S.-Vy One Ind 02/100
Dollat9, lawful money of the unit.cl The lollowll\Q l*IOl'll are doing S11111 and by vlrl~ of a writ of
bUll,_. ": • enforc9m.nt In Mid ac:tJon IMI* on Al BALBOA BEAUTY B) LOCAL June 13 1983 I am ~ to
COLOR 701 E. Balboa Blvd, Belboa, Nit all the Pl'o9wtY In lhl COunty of c~:~~1ELIZABETH CAMPBELL ~-=·us:::.:: Callfomla, ..
317 Coronldo, Belbot, CA 92M1 Unit a2. LOI I and 2. Tract loe2t, 1~:~ le COl\duct.O by: an tlCO<dld In 800ll 4e6, Paet 23-29,
J C____.._.1 Offlclal A4M:«d• of 0tanoe County.
--·...-Calttornla. Thll 1111-1 WU ftled with the The Pl'OCllftY 11 more comtno111y
County Clerk of Otange County on known .. 755 Gteytlng Bay. No. a2. JIJne 22. 1N3 Coell Miia. CallfOrnla.
'2"111 Togelher with all and alngul• the Publllhed Orange C:O..t o.lfy 11n11n1n11 h«ldlt11m1nt1 and ap.
Piiot June 27. July•. I I, 1a. 1883 purt~ th«eunto belonging or
293 I ·83 In anywt11 •0Plf1alnlng,
----------PUBLIC NOTICE lS HEREBY f'tlll.IC NOTICE GIVEN 1ha1 on TUlldey. AUOUll 9,
1983. at 10:00 o'elOek a.m. of thal
'ICTTTIOUI .U-18 Clay 11 Mein Lobby, Courthowe, 700 NAm ITA,_NT Civic Cent11r Dflve w .. 1. City of
The following PlflDnl ara doing Santi Ant I wlll NII Ille above 0..
bu1lneu M: ecrlbed Pf'09"1Y. undlt Mid writ
FUN ZONE 305 Palm, ~ and decf11. or eo much ttlereOf M
Belch. CA 92M1 may be ~ to NtllfY Mid
LITE-LINE DESIGN OF CA,• Callf. juOgment with lnl11rwt1 and ooete,
Corp., 7ta W. Oceanfront, Newpof1 to the hlghMt blddlf, fOf c4lllh In ltMch. CA '2M1 lawful money of the Unlled'Slli.e.
Thi• l>U"'-' II conducted by. • Dated al S•nl• Ana, Celllornla.
00tl)Ofatlon July 1. t983.
Lll•Llnl Dellgn of CA BRAD G~TES
Raymond Cooper, Pree Shetllf·Coroner
Thll 1111-1 wu ftled wtlh the County of Otange, CetttOfnll
County Clerk of Orange County on By: K. Bl'own May 31, 19a3 S.oeant
"17tl0 LMdt!Nn Md ....
Publl•hld Orenr cout Deity 11111 !MM ...._
Pllol June 27, July . 11, 1a, 1983 T111tlft, CA ._
2933.as Publlehed Orange COMI Dally
----------Piiot July 11, 1a. 25. 1983
P18JC M>TICE
'1CTTTIOUI .,._ ..
NAmlTATUmNT
Thi tollowlng per-. a11 doing
~M:
SUNSET SPA 17772 E. 17th SI,
8ult1 105, Tvetln, CA 92ea0
B.J. YARBROUGH 2520 Park
Newpoft, Newporl BMcn, CA 92e80
Thie buel"-1 11 conducted by: an
tndMduel
B.J. YarbrOUgh Thie 111t1m1nt wa1 flied wtth 11141
County Clerk of Oranoe Co~inty on
June 22. 1983 •
'2111M
Publlelled Orange Cout o.lfy
Piiot June 27, July 4, 11. 1a. IN3
2929-83
'1CTTT10UI .,... ..
NAmlTATUmNT The followlng pereone .,. doing
bUll-• PASSION FOR FASHION 5105
Comwall Dr .. La Pllma, CA 90823
JANIS LEPIRE 5105 Cornwall Of.,
La Pllme. CA 90823
Thi• b01lnet1 I• conducted by: en Individual
Janie leptr•
4CM2-83
'1CTTT10UI .,... ..
MAim ITAftmNT Thi folk>Wlng P«90M .,, dOif'O l>U"'-'•: CALIFORNIA'S FINEST, 2245
Raleigh, Coell ....... Ca. 92128
Daniel Patrick O'TOOll, 3357 Ale-
bem• Cir .. Coll• ....... Ca. 92929
Thi• bullneu II eondue1ed by: an Individual.
Don O'Tooll
Thie 1111-t WM flied with IN
County Clerk of Otenge COunty on
July 5, 1883 nttan
Put>llllhld Orange Coa9t Delly
Piiot July 11. 1a. 25. Aug. 1. 1813
4031·93
PWLJC M>TICE
'1CTITIOUI -II MAmlTATDmNT
TM fOllQW!no peraon• -dOif'O bUllMMM:
ECONO LUBE N' TUNE. 1550 Old
~ Blvd .. Coell Mala. CL
92827 Robert P. Earl. 2M4 Cynthia Ct,
Cotti ..._., Ce. 92827
Thia bullneu le COl\ducled by: an
lndlvldual.
amantha Smith and her mother J ane (left ) meet
alentina Tereshkova, the first woman to rl y in space 20
years ago, during the American girl's visit to the Soviet
Union.
Thll ltll-t WU ftled Wllh the
County Clerk of Otanoe County on
June22, t883 There has been no indication whether Samantha n1•112 Robet1 P Eatt
Thie 1111-1 WU fllld with the
County Clerk of Orange County on will meet Andropov before she is sch~uled to leave Pl~~~~7• ~'T, 11~~\9~a11y
the Soviet Union Thursday. 2935-83 July 5, teas ,..,..,.
Vasectomies hard on the heart?
octor says 95 percent unaware of problems, risks of sterilization operation
t_ ~ T~~ 2!ENAUL T
OMAHA, Neb. -Many men who have
a.sectornies should change diet and exercise
bits because there is evidence the oper-
tion may aggravate heart and blood
p.rcuJation problems that plague American
tmaJes. a researcher says.
I_. __ , Gary Curtis, associate professor of
~bstetrics, gynecology and biochemistry at
he University of Nebraska Medical Center,
Ed doctors should use more care in
ning vasectomy patients, particularly
men who have a history of
ovascular problems.
1 However, two recent studies conducted !in England found that having a vaaectomy
:does not seem to increase the risk of heart
'disea8e
1
C~. some of whose work has been
published in the journal Fertility and
Sterility, also stressed that men should be
!tuny Wonned of the potential health risks
Lof the operation. t "I would bet that 95 percent of them
on't know of the problems or the risks," he
· d in an interview last week.
"Even though we haven't been able to
how that men have died of heart attacks
use of their vasectomies, enough is
known to be able to say some men shouldn't
ve it done. These men need to be told to
nsider other methods," he said.
&t.imates of the number of American
en who have vasectomies each year range
from 250,000 to 1 million. In the operation,
, which can be done in a doctor's office, a tiny
tube that carries sperm from the test.es ia cut.
Testa have shown that monkey. de-
elop atheroac.lerosia at a higher rate after
ing given vuectomies, Curtis said.
theroeclerosl.s causes deposits of fatty
bstances In the inner layer of the arteries,
training the heart and clogging veseela
leading to the brain. 1 The Briti.ah ~ts. however, perfonned
on men and not monkey., found "no
evidence of an elevated risk of
cardioVucular di8ea8e among vasectomlzed
men, as compared with men who had not
had a vuectomy."
Th.at nwearch waa done by Ora. M.J.
M.P. Vet111tey of Oxford and
Holford of Yale and was publ.l.sh-
the Aprt) 7 ll9Ue of the New England
of Medicine.
Al.lo, two yean ago, doctol"I from the
Boston Collaborative Drug SurveUlance
Program at Boston University reviewed the
nKlOrda of
6,092 men who Md the operations ln •
IJ'OUP hf?alth plan. When compared wt th the
the remainder of the men in the group'•
280,000 ~t.lentt. they tound no l~
rilkfrom~
"For years, we have known that about
half of all men who receive~ ftld
up produdns •penn andbodlel, and since
the &Ate 1970. we have known that
------
vasectomized monkeys have increased in-
cidence of atherosclerosis, ~ibly because
of these sperm antibodles," Curtis said.
"Those with heart problems, high
blood pressure or high cholesterol face the
greatest risk. And that list includes quite a
few American males.
''For them, a steady exercise routine
and a diet low in fat could be very important
after a vasectomy."
Curtis is directing research on about 30
men to test a drug he said haa been ahown to
prevent sperm antibodies from forming in
animals after a vuect.omy. Reeeerchera
expect to have results of the study in about
six months.
Eat your heart out, Kareem
Fat Albert, a bear with the Bentley Brothen International Circus,
plays hi8 own brand or basketball at Botton Uni•enlty'1
Nickerson Field. He only slightly r esemble eome NBA centers.
'1CT1T10UI 9UllNIH MAim ITATWmNT
The followlng peraone 11'1 doing
bull-U :
SUNSET FUNDING 17772 E. 17fh
St .. Suite 105, Tuetln. CA 92e80
RONALD ROSSI 171t Corlnthlen
Way, Newpof1 a.aen. CA 92NO
Thlt bullneM 11 conducted by: en
lndlvldull
Roneld RONI
Thie 1111-1 WU ftled with the
County Clltll of Or anoe County on
June 22. 1N3
"""' Publlllhld Oranoe eo..1 Delly
Piiot June 27. Jvty s. 1 t, ta. 1913
2928..-3
'1CTTT10UI ......
MAim ITATWMIWT
Thi followlng '*'°"' -doing
bullneM -THREE GUINEAS BOOKSTORE,
609 3111 St .. Newpof1 BNch, Ce, tiee3
Pamela K. Roberti, t307 E. OClln
BMI. Lono Bllcil, Ce 90802 Thie ~la conduel.O by: 11>
lndMdual.
Pamela Ao«>erte
Thie •ta•-· -fllld with the County Clllftl of Orange County on Jvlly5.1M3 ma.r Pubtllhed Otenge Cout Deify
Piiot July 11, 1a, 25, Aug. 1, 1883
F2199a7
Nil.IC NOTIC£
'1CTTTIOUI llU ... H
NAmlTATIMINT
Put>li.ned Orange CoM1 Delly
Piiot July 11. 1a. 25. Aug. I, 1883
4033-83
'1CTTTIOUI .,_ ..
NAm ITATnmNT Thi followlng Plfeonl .,. doln9
11ua1-.. :
GARDEN WORLD, 645 Plumer St.
8, Coell Meea. Ca. 92927
bcariue Bema1 Valdla, 645
Plumi' St., B. Cotti Mw1. Ca.
92e21
Tiiie bu9lneM .. oonduc:1eO by: a
llmlted partnetahlp.
Z-lul htnel Valdla
Thie Ital-I -fMld wllh the County Clerk of 0t"'Cll County on
July 5. 1983 ~
Publllhed Otenge eo.t Dally
Piiot July 11, 1a, 25, Aug. 1. IN3 .oa2-a
NI.JC NOTICl
P1CTITI0Ue ....... NAmlTA~
Thi ~ per--dOif'O bu"'-118: ..=;~~~2: e=r'1 &NG.
MARY ANN BAAUfol 3807 "'"'9y, ~ 8Mc:h. CA 9*3 Thia~ II oonduc:t9d by. an
lndMcNal
May Ann 8'MHI
Thlt 1111-1 WM fMld with IM
County Clerk Of Otenge COunty on
June fe. 1993 '11l'NO Publlllhld Orange Cout Delly
PllOt June 27. Jl//ly 4. 11. 1a. 1983 29~
Thi fo11ow1ng l*"IOnl .,.. dotng NI.JC M>TICE
~-------------W.S.A. RESEARCH GROUP, 1a10
E. 1eth St. (L·215), Newpof1 Beadl,
Ca. 92$8S
JeMnett• Yvonne Glenn. 1a10 e.
tettl St (L·215). Newpof1 Beec:tl. Ce.
t28e3
Thll bullnMI II conductlcf by: an
tndMdual.
.i.ennet1• Y Gienn Thie et1temenl WU flied wtth the
County Clerk of Or1nge County on
July 5, 1113 '111111
Publlehld Otenge CO&at Oalty PftOt July 11, 111. 25, Aug, 1, 1883
.05743
P1CTITIOU9 ...... MAim ITATDmNT
Thi lollowlng l)lf-.a ... dOil'O
bual-M: AGUIRRE/BROWN ASSOC. MOO
W11nw No. 164, Huntington &Moh,
CA 92647
ROBERT A, BROWN MOO Wll'f*
No. 1M. Huntington Beecft. CA
02647
Thi• 1>u11,_ 11 oonductltd by: en
lndlvlduet Robert A. Brown
Thia etlt-1 w .. fllld with 'he
Co\lnly Cllrit of Orange County on
June22. INS
----------1"1111a NI.IC NOTICE PublllMd Otanot C:O..t Oillty
Piiot "'-21. July •. 1 t. 1a. 1M3 ~
tN3. ano 1ecorded on Mardi 24,
Itta In the ~ ~ ectlOtl. ""'*"" WoodbtldQI tlt8'twey Maino '"""°' ~lion the •bov• '*'*' .,...,,. ••. oOtaiMd • JudO-
ment and decttil Of fOflCIOlurl and
.. ~ ANtl MlflOlr dlfen. dent(•!. for the Mim of One
ftlOwMIO FOUf' Hundled Forty· Two and 331100 Dollere. liewful mONy of
tn. Unit~ ltat11, and by Ylnue of •
writ of ..,,oroemenl In Mid ectlon
IMllld on .Nnt 14. 1N3. I am eom·
mended IO ... al the PfOCllftY In Iha
C<lunty of Otange. Ii.-of Cell· • fornla. Oeacnbld .. liOllowl:
Unit 12, lot 2, T1act 10S.t. r•
OOfded In loot! ..... P11g11 35 & M
of Mleclllanloul Mac>I. rtc«dl Of Of "IOI County, Callfornle
Property 11 more c:ommonly
known M 17 H ...... IWOOO. lrvlnl,
Cetlfornla
T Oglllhlf with al and linOl'6af Ille **"'"t•. -~ltamente and ap-~--th«_..IO belonglng or r~ Vcm~tia HEREBY GIVEN that or\,JUllday, ~II 9,
1983 at 10:30 6'cloclc a.m. of lllat
day al Mein lobbV. Coun~. 700
CMo Centlt Drive Wiit City of Santa Ana. I will NII Ille 11>4W1 CS.. ICflbed property, uncW .., writ
and dlc:t•. ot ao muctl lhlt.of M mey be ntClll&ly 10 Mtltfy Mid
judgment with lntarllle and c;oete,
to thl hlG'*t blOdlr. for eaah In
lawf\A money of the United Slalll.
Oei.o at Sant• Ana, CalttOfnla. July I. 1983
BrldOalM Shetlff-coronet
Count)' of Otange, Callforn11 " By: K. &town •,
Sargeant ~ ........
1nl1 IMM-.-. Twttft, CA-
. ..
Publlllhld Otange Cout Delly
Piiot July 11, 18, 25, 1983
4CM3-83
··-COtllMCTID "*'9C MOT'ICI IUNNOR COURT
CWCMJPOMIA
COUNTY °" OAAMM P.O .....
100ClwloC.....Dr.W ~ lafttaAM,CA.,. c... ....... •1'71 PLAINTIFF: ISABEL S. ROSE-
NBAUM DEFENDANT: 80LOAN G.
HOLMES . dtc:•H•d: end th• T111a11 end ln111tall 84~ of
SOLON G. HOLMES. LOUISE 11.
HOLMES . dec:•H•d: and th•
T11t1t1 and lntwt1t1 SUCCllllOr Of
LOUISE H. HOLMES. BRJAN M. MARTINEZ end ARLENE J.D.
MARTINEX, CAL-AMERICAN
FINANCIAL CORP, I Callfomle Cor·
poratlon, WESTERN HOME MOAT·
GAGE CORP, 1 Celllomla Corpor-
a11on, OLIVE M. ROBLINO, end
HAROLD L. McWILLIAMS, ZAIN
SIMONSON. and 1111 penon1 un·
kown clalmlng eny llg8I °' equltabll
rlgttt. tttll, 111111, Men or '"'""' In tM Pl'OCllftY Oeacnbecl .. followt:
LOTS 14 and 14 In BLOCK 11 of
Tract 795, In lhe City of San
CWnenl•. C&llfomla. County of Or·. anoe. M ._ on a map lhlreof
..-did In Boe* 24, at Paet 37 10·
40, lnclullw of MllOllaneou1 Mpea,
In "" OfllQe of "" County Rel;order or Mid Otanoe County, CallfOfnll.
(No COf!\mOfl ~).
and NICI Pl'OCllftY delc:ftbecl In Ille ~I adverM IO Dfalnllff'I title
or any c:loud on p1&1ntlff111111 therto.
and named u DOES l·XXX. ln-
Qullve.
14WCIM
MOTICll Yell MM.._.. lllld. TM COWt _, ........... JOU .............. ~ ..... ,_,......... ...... .,.. ....
................. Ml.w.
It you wW! IO ...a ttle ld'<icl of 111
1t1omey In thle ""''". you allould do ao ptornplly ao tllet yo.JI written·
rwponM. If any. me be flted on time. AV190t u.eM M .... .._.. --.11..._.. ...... ....
wtr9Ud.IM•lll1Mllla-.. Ud. , .. , ... .....,. ••
..._Llllr.....,•al1n .. ....-.
SI Utlld 0.... aollcltar 81 oonlljo
de un 1boQldo en -aeunto. de-11«11 hlOll'I lmmedletlmlntl. de
lltl manert 1U r~I eten111,
al hay tlgul'•. puoede -regiltrld1 a
llampo.
1. TO THE DEFENDANT: A c:lvlt
c:omplalnt Ilea blef'I fllld by thl
plalnllff egelnet you. It you with to
defend Ihle l--..tt, you must. within
30 deyt alltt thll eutnrnonl .. MtYld
on you, 1111 wl1h thle coun • -lt1en
reepon11 10 lhl c;ornpllllnt. Unllll
you do ao, your o.feutt w4ll bl
entered on appllcallon of tM pllln-
tltf, and Ihle court m&)I ant•• JWQ-ment egalnlt you tot tM ......., cs.
Mandld In 1fle ~. whlct'I
could r..-i In ~· ol Wllgea. t•lnO of money()( prOplt1y
or °""' rllfef ~ In ""oom· plaint. DATED: Nov. 30. 1M2
Lii A. •anc::h. Clerk
By: KetNlln A. HayiM. Deputy ............. ,.. .... .......
a.ic ........... CA.-n ~)~11
Publlafled Otenge Coaet Delly
Plot .'4Jt; 11, 1a. 25. Auguet 1. 1983
404$-83
NI.JC M)TIC(
ACTmOUa• ..... MAmlTA~NT The lollc>Wlng l*IOl\I .... doing
bu--M:
WU CONSUL TINO SERVICES.
45e2 Hell A¥e, Unit 7. Huntington
Bllcfl. Ca. 92649 Llltlf A. Wu, 45e2 Hall Ave. Unit•
7. Huntington 91ach, Ca. 92849 ;
Thie bu"'-i. conduc1ed by. 1111
lndMdual. •
LlllarA Wv
Thie '"'"'*" ... flted wltfl the Courtty Ollr'I Of Oreinge COunty on
Juty s. 1983 ,..,_
Publi.nld Otange Coal! Delly
PllOt Jl//ly 11, 1a, 25, AUQ. 1, 1993
4027-83
MOTICI TO CONT'RACT'Of'8 CAUJNO PCM_,.
Founteln l/ellly 8choot Ol9trltil
P.O Bo• 8510. 17210 Oek"'atraet,
Fountlfn V"'11ay. Ca. 92708
Project: Bid 84·2. Aabel10I En-
capaullllon 11 Vlf'toul toc.tionl l>laee Of Bid Aeoelpt: fduc11on
Centtt, Purehulno Oeclertment.
17210 Olk Sir .... ,ountaln l/"'11ay,
CL 92104I • Bid DNdllnl: Juty 28, IN3. 2-00
P.M.
For lhl ao-nir.o Board.
Jade Mahnken, Aaeletant aup.,.
lntendlnt
Pereonnell Admlniltr1llMI ~
Putllllhld Orange COllt OellY Plot July 11, 1a, 1183 .O~
------_....___ -----
,
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
\ l """·•v ,.,f, lJ• .. ~., H ti, • ._. '1161
1,_ 11LAm ,_, ... Hup lot, big dock(1), play
lawn & swim beach. Reduced 1170,000 • 10.~
1owner fin, for quick sa.le. 1795,000 (land mcl.). Open.
•Sat/Sun 11 -5. Owner 650-0202.
~------............... -wEUYlllE
ITWI
Great family home wllh
V.A. terms. Extra large
lot. Homes In ei1oellent
condition. 4 Bdrma, 2
batha. famlly room. ftr•
piece, bu111-ln 880 . many
other extras. Call to ...
00'# 548-2313
THE :REAL ;
ESTATERS
IEWNllTOllN
111,1001
You can't ellord not to
buy. WaJk to beach from
thl• prlvtte. guarded ' community which oller1
many amenltleL Enjoy
llvlng In thll lu1turlou1 Mt·
ting. Priced for quick
.... , 84$-7171
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
GE 759-QlOO
llPlll
llAIT
Exlr1 large 5 Bdrm, 3 bllh
home bullt for a lerge
f1mlly. Huge counlry
kitchen overlooking cov·
ered p1tlo and lerge
aperldlng pool. 11'1 bunt
for 1 large f1mily Only
S 172.500. CaJI lor 11'10w·
Ing, 546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
• llYUm, IA IOll
Channing 4 Bdrm poot
/Jn NICU
11AILI Y &
AC,C,U( IA Tf C,
nome on ftneel 1trMI. rr , ________ _
doora. oall c1blnet1.
entry kJtchen, 2 frplc1. l•--------1 S.-t 5,000. To place YOUt rneeMge
before Ille IJ.-eH.JlJt f1(._..I \ reeding pubffc,
Aeeltor•. '7~ phone
Deity Pllol
C!Mllfled, 142·5e78
COLDWeLL
BANl(eRa
....... .. ..
New York .ophl.at.icatlon! 3 BR
custom townhome featW'8 ex-
qui1lte architectural d e t.ail,
gourmet kitchen, colorful gar·
dena accenting wrap-ar~und
brick p11ti01, and much, much
more!! QUI tor private •howtn1.
IN NEWPORTCENT~R
644-9060
T he marketplace on the Orange Coast .642-5678
~ Macnab-Irvine
· HERITAGE
REALTO RS
•
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/M~. J1i1r ti,,. Cl '
N early half of all DaU11 Aloe rflOIUn
have uud the c"1Hf/Nd NCffoft to '*al
or .ell o produce.
•e•·•• ... JEii ......... ,...
18drm tl30
Frplc, Yallfted oeMlnfe,
double ... PoOI .... -.::.: ... ... ...
Beeutltul ..,.. apte,
P9"-dliall8. ..... No t::m,,... ..,. .. w. Wl9oft •1-aau WllTUll--.....
t66W. 11111.lt. ..... 1 If. , ... peao ..... .. PoOI • ..,., no.,... na. ....... ,n
llMhllli n• t:;e ::\ I ;: hit ~ bdl.MOO,
IU 1411
VIEW 28r, aa. ro:•· 2 dffke, It O mo. 7M-OMO, tfM 174
....... 2tle..,...
unit. ~. frille, .-, no
.... 11/lftb. llCMU1
ao. to Deed'!, 2 • 2 ...
eto.e, refr.... crpt•. dr~. deck. HIO.
~1
'7".Ar' n•· om Poot end facllltlH . 1571/mo. Atch.,d
21119'0-lm
PHU II( f'l ~l)Pl
APHll lilf ll l\
•
. ..
~·
:
'
ca Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1983
Hlaeu Ct•tat \;tacrtt• llltctrical Gar•••l•1 1••11• Cltaala1 ll••i•1 ••rrta1 PMl ltn /l•rain
ltrtict Cement·M1tonary·Block •tlec1rlcl1n NewtRepalr .IAPAllSl ••1ttlllll STARVING COL.HOE f?erthlng Interior bd]gn UOIWlH llLL'I execOTIVe SUPPORT Wells-Cull wOtk Lie All types Low prices Lie -Quality Houaekeepln~, IX· STUDENTS MOVING co HANGINOISTRIPPINO E•perl1nc1d & Pro· .~~-: .. ~9<1 =~~"'"~ Th~~·~l~ ~!fp~y3l, e Your oflloe Top 1klll1 Incl 11381057 Rob 547 2683 Free 111 831-2345 939•5035 p&(lenced. depeo •ble Lie '1' 124·438 ln1ured v•SA·MC Scoll 645-9325 •1 1 1 b 1 111 • --P11 494.0280 · leaalonel Very reuon• ,.. 10 un que a r c O • word processing Prot Rod's con_c_r_et_e_&_m_•_~n-ELECTRICIAN Pr Iced I Mow, edge, clean-up, trim --I fl• 1·8427 E•pert Wallcovering In-able rates tor all OI your Cerotyn 751-"584
30 day I d
In tlit
reterances 497· 290 ery, ll yeera ume to· right, free estimate on Free HI Reas ra1111 Jim . THE CLEAN MAKER . WATCH US~I atallauon Reas Consult· pool needa For el1Plr1 Tll Ca~lHt Jlalda1 cat ion Free est large or srnell Jobs lie: 646•1958 ___ 5 yra. exp Hometofll<:41 l t n iai ltrvicH ant Asstgnmt 581·8590 service Cell evening• t
-11 • 5•0 10s 396621 673--0359 IEID IOIE lllLPt rets avell 675-"853 Spm to 9 pm 11 no tilt ll'JsfXLLEo DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIEC TORY
'.&New cabinets, c:ebinet _ ..... • 1 -H--li-1 Laguna Nuralng Service "WE GALS SHOULD answer. PLEASE KEEP & Repaired. Ou1ranteed.
facing. bars & tormlca Ctatracttra, ELECTRICIAN l et me make your garden Hit II •t now ottering private duty HANO TOGETHER TRYING REFS JOHN 893-0487 co ntertopa 642 0881 Gd rates. Free est. Lie. grow & your greu green I\ Loving Cere, Wome/pets c are Comp an 1on1, 839-0730 anytime
u --· • Gtatral' 416449 Wayne 831-7530 rm fully Insured. apeak, Certified HouaeSlttera llve·lns, Aides, LVN'a, (l14) 4tl·llll f1ttrla1 ar~atry Remode1/Rep1lrs, comm. 0-D I l English, & you will find my since 1979 831· 1234 RN'• now available 24 Hr Platltr/ltt.air Rooflai Xii gredH and aubJecll,
Remide1-rep1lr. Unique & & resld Llc'd, bonded. ara1e HI tfa r work eiccellent. Call (7 t4) Service 714·494-7272 PLASTER PATCHlNG •
Unuauel work 1 speclelty Ina. For est. 552·9142. Sprlngs-Hlnges-Openera. 768-3773; II no answer.• Laa•1ca1ia1 -Resiuccos. lnttext :so yrs. Huber Roollng·ali types SS to $ t5 hr. 642-9033
20 yrs He bonded. R J, HUFFMAN & SON Repairs Lowes1 rateal please keep trying! Kevin OOUGHEAWBROTHERS Paiatla1 Neot. Paul 545·2977 New-Recover -Dec1<1 M&M 851·9604
P11omb0Con11962·8314 Remod/Add. ~306888 lie. Tom 557-4480 Biggs Landscape Main· TREES· LANDSCAPING FllE PAll Tlll Lit R41 t802 548·9734 ffPia~ met DOITNOWll
.. ,.. Ulllll tenence & lnatellatlon 11 21 YRS 642·3857 R h d 1 i;-• ED'S o 1 R d Ati"= --Rep1lrt sml lob•. Fences. 646·8586 645·4644 Springs. repair, door oper· your service. by le er nor. Lie. rJ 'J" PL'-SHR~ enn • aymon oo no Typing Word Prooetelng
ahelves partitions. Lo SEQUOIA CONST -ttc'd. ators See demonstration H Lttll Strticta 280644 14 yrs or happy $-r..-._:i ~···" .. NewtRepalrat Recovers Qulok, easy revlllon1 Your Delly Piiot
Service Directory
Rtpr-nt1t1v1
rates. Steve 731·8311 customremodellng, petlo Seeooatt, 2488 Newport •••1••• -local cu1tomers _ " •· lit 441488 859-4102 Reason1ble 851· 1041
6 2 Blvd, C M. 642·3490 llEP•lll * PAllTlll UllL DPllH Thank you, 963·4114 &4S-112!i8 FIREPROOF ROOFING I • I
'42·1111.tlt.122
Mair crattsmen. speclel· covrs/decks 9 6· 423 • , 11 Need en ~ttorney? Meybe , W a tW ltH II
111ng llnlah & remodellng Bred ar Hiii Etc Gery PTL 645-5277 not. We can •how you OHUn PAllTllll Class A Flberglesa ·{et the Sunshine In"
499·3105 S! G • b & pr 0 mp 1. n e 11 pr 0 • Home. Apts & Commercial FISH 11369713 · rMa1a1 Clean ups· Lendacaplng Ha•li•I how to e yovr attorney 646-2044 SUNSHINE WINDOW Remod/lacelllls wood -Hauling • Tree Trim save money. tlmt & tesslonals 838·7149 Piich work, He'd & oond· CLEANING 631·2026
l cctg for 1m1fl bus I·
MIMI: PR qlrUes, .. ,.I
tu, FIS Compl. set up &
Hrvlct . R111. Fran,
. II' essy d09sl Grooming Free Ht 642-9907 DUMP JOBS worry So lake The Legel CUSTOM EXTERIORS ~It ~0607 636-9412 Secretarial petio cvrs/dec 5 • schl.S10anysz. Teacher &Small Movlng Jobs Express Route Call Pl w1iite Wizar.a Window
dRr1ynwday116. 4 1~m0622rprs By 21 yrs eir.p. 546-2848 Exp Gardener Mein I, MIKE 646-1391 85 t-2252. 10% ott w/ed & INTER Reas rates Free I ••ltia1 Services Washing The only magic
Dt ti •-cleanups. tree trim, lree HAUL·MOVE·REMOVE es1. Stev,.;547-428_1__ 24ltrEl•141-llH , Word Prooeulng 11 qu111ty 831·2026
Repelr·Alteratlons •ta C npt&Cf es1 Cell Pete.,641·1096 Furniture, Trash, Trees Mattarr Cullom hH painting, re-WATER HEATER Special & letter compolllion ltatl Law
540-5834 elternoons
CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCT
Doors-Wlndows·C•blnets llHHllH,trl 110/w• l1r~Hllf, WHtt~ 963-5415 NORM Brickwork: Smail or lerge duced summer rates. '1 Pool heeters•Furnaces Reas P1ompt 642-8035 1'11!'!-.-"'!,,,__"""'l_"'!Pml!"'""!!
Panel-P1Uos·Fence1 35 Childcare. companions. •• ..• Ed T 1 Jobs & repelra. Local rafs Free est Dave 673·2031 •Faucets* Disposals• Secretetiiit service typing, Stall law r9Qulr• that au yrs exp Jerry 546-4413 couples we come to you. ...o ... ng. II ng w ce 8 light hauling, moving. gar-945.5512 ---contractors who per1orm
Personal Serv Tues
30 yrl 1.11per 640-2068
(213)54 5150 month $20 to $25 denlng • Odd Jobs. Jon • E Wllllem Giies Painting Drains cteered trom $5 & copy, ecc Fest aervlce work over 1200 lncludlng Carrt St"ict Low tees. 1• 546-9707 645-8192 •Masonry-Stucco: new/ Contractor: competitive $15 anytime Repairs 675•4456 760•8359 tebor and mater1111 must
Al£!!1y-Parklng Lot
Rtpal19-Sealcoet1ng
S&S Aaptlf1 631-4199llc
FiR§'T' cUss.auick dry DrJW•ll Generll garden m11n1en· -• repair All types. Quality rates. custom wol'll. lie 85 t·9604M&M642·9033 TYPINOIBOOKKEEPINO be llCenMd. UnllcenMd
results Free est & 111 DRYWALLlACOOsficAL ance. Cleanups, tree 1r1m Roa11 Cltaa&•J Lowest price. 63 t-2345 10 yrs exp. 75 t-7o9o ROLLIN' ROOTER For lndlv t1m1 buslnaas con1rec1or1 should 10
class service. 750·9075 All Phases & Repairs free est At>e 548-8519 ROBIN1S CLEANING Moria' , Int/ext. Competitive price Drains from $4 50 Hr/deytwk 640-0888 state In 1helr ad~ertlllng.
*WE INSTALL CARPET BUD 552·9582 Hauling, clean-ups, tree SERVICE • lhoroughly -~ C MOVING· tor •Int workl FHt aerv. Plumbing repair OC's -----Contractors and con·
5 s cieanhouae 540-0857 ,.. "" 30yr11~p 521·8012 lowest rates. 75l·6753 More famllles ere gettl aumers. contect Mary For$ l 7 q. Yd DRYWALL TAPING trimming, yard matnt, -Quick, Careful Service the camping "bug" tl'll Grondle 11 558-40M! with
Dan Hallberg Grading
& Paving Co. Res/comm
Uc. 3978804. 842·Jl20
Cell Pete 772·1722 All Textures & Acoustic tndscp Miiie 646-6502 EAperlenced Houaekeeper Lie. T138046 552·0410 Relph'• P11n1ng, tntle)(t, -Smith & Son Plumbing year If you heve 1 1ny qu11tlona. Contrac· C I • Free est Kevin 673·1503 Japanese gardener. & General Cleaning. Call reaa rates. free est, 24 Plumbing repairs & drains camper that'a not getting t or'• State Llcenee 1 )!"I Cleanup, malnlenance. Cella 646-6502 *A· 1 llOVlll* hrs 841-3588 cleared lie. 645-3426 uted, sell It now with a Board, 28 Cl\llc center COMPLETE CATERING The f11teat draw In the Be§lquallty.25yr.eicp. CfeuilledAd Pl R 690 S II Seit tlllnga lul wtlh Dally
Piiot Want Ad1.
Indoor/Outdoor Parties W111 ... a Dally Piiot sprinklers Free est. SELL Idle llama withe competitive rates. Speedy mitnt aerv, Make yovr •hopping eu-/.n8:'cA i~';'01 · en
12131391.3131 c1au1tted Ad. e.2-5878. 544•9o35 Delly Pilot c 1ua11ted Ad. uc T. 116.428 130. 1353 ~~~~;~90~omei & apts. ~~ ~r.:/~'~~~111y Pl· Fif1~1Y f,~1~: 61~1r.!i~ .. 1n · •
• HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OM ARA
Tuesday, July 19
ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Status quo is
shaken; focus now on creativity, change and travel.
SociaJ life accelerates, popularity increases and you
can successfully pursue educational project. You'll be
in contact with one who understands travel
procedures.
TAUR US (April 20-May 20): Practical matters
dominate in connection with financial requests,
invesunents and intensmed r..tationship. It is time
now to rebuild, remodel and to reinforce structure.
Check fiscal responsibility of one who w ould be a
partner.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Go slow, lie low.
defer to wishes of those close to you, including
partner or mate. Be analytical, piece together puzzle
and come up w ith complete story. You'U be in contact
with exciting, creative people who appreicate your
talents.
•
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Romantic involve-
ment adds spice, stimulates creative juices and
enables you to better relate to young person.
Domestic adjustment is highlighted, could feature
frank discus.sion involving possible change of
residence.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)· Avoid basing actions on
impulse. Give logic equal time. defin e temlS and be
aware of possible legal loopholes. Personal
'\8gnetism soars, member of opposite sex is drawn to
you and makes no secret of it. Pisces plays key role.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Sudden shift of
events brings you major business, career opportunily.
Accent on production , responsibility and chance to
increase income potential. Relationship grows
stronger and emouonal crisis is averted. Capricorn
plays key role.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22); Transaction is
completed. you make valuable new contacts which
could prove instrumental in inaugurating special
enterprise. Relative talks about relationship which
could be ending. Be sympathetic, a good listener but
don't get inextricably involved.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)· Be ready for ne w
start in new direction. Cycle h.igh, judgment and
timing wi.11 be on target. Focus on personal
possessions, income, ability to locate needed material
and personnel. Leo, Aquarius persons figure promi-
nently.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sense of
direction is restored -you'll know what to do, when
to do it and you'U be at right pla<.-e at crucial moment.
Judgment and intuition prove accurate. Make
penonal appearances, wear bright colors and don't
forget to smile.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan 19): You gather facts
that reveal story behind story. Press hard for
information -be speciric. get to sourc.-e material.
Reject superficial explanations. You'll be "in touch''
with lively, dynamic, restles.9 people. Gemini native
figures prominently
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): WtSh comes ln.le,
unorthodox approach bnngs best results. Member of
opposite sex is attracted, tells you so and is sincere.
What had been missing wiU be located -focus on
achievement. creativlty, abiUty to imprint your own
style.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Focus on achieve-
ment, career, lnvolvement in community or political
activity. Be ready for change, travel, variety and
communication from friend who talks abou t "emo-
tional involvement." Gemini, Virgo. Sagittarius
penons figure prominently. ........ , ...
1uc ....... 2111
2 it. UA. Yeerty, POOt. nr
beech, bu1. No Piii
498-8277
furniltled Sleeping room,
"'4lf9 belh, nr SC Plaza.
female non-wnllr pref
9270/rno. 556· 1737.
uoune S..Ch. tro home.
tpeCtacular white watet &
Catalina eun1et vi-•· 1421/mo. • ,,. u1il1
llHal ztOQlaaatr
'4a1 Fem. hU unturn. rm ltallll 2906
"°'pvt Be to rent to Bet l,1 fum 3br 1V. be &
non-smoking Fem 25.-. 2br 1bl, close to water.
546· 1307 111 3·30 wk t y or month I y
Room. $300 PV1 bl & erl· 7141476-1237
trence. Coolclng. wotklng 9eytront 3 Br, 2 81,
min Laguna 494-4459 $1800/mo. 21 Balboa
IUWlllTIL Wkly rent1l1 now avail
$128 & up Color TV.
PhOf\" In room 2274
N1wpor1 Blvd. C M
646-7445
Cove. 845·5135.
Beaulllu l oc ean ·
front -Emeral d 81y.
L•gune 494· 1084
Corona d.t Mer. fully !um
3 Br tiome /.llO lurn. 1 Br
I ... ··1-L • p l. IS '7 3 • 8 3 4 9 . sa.--15 /l.Vlll.7115·9/15 Wkly rentalt now avail. __ ..,,_....,,....,.,,.....,...,..,.,.,,,--
1128 & up Color TV ON THE. SAND
Ptl<>MS In room. 2274 SUMMER FIE!NTAL
Ne.,.port Blvd. CM, 3 Br 2 B1. unit. wtt bar.
84e·7445 lurnleh~. wa1her, dryer
tnctd Summer encl1d ltttlt,!!ttalt Hit gertQe. 5802 Seaahor• Wiii 111111 TSL Mgmt. 1142· 1803
_.... Vacatita
4144\12 I Wkly rtntelt, IOW tel•. a..tt)I 2t07
I.Ge """· llouM, bf a be. , COIOr TV,,, .. corr... txdONX Avail x~ '· i8. ~ n/ernkr. F pref. llNl9d POOi a••«>• to '30Qt rno • .>onn ~f.24117 oe.111 1<11ch'• ivelt. 2 l>d hOvM, 2 bllc1 o bell, 9111 N Coeet Hwy 1980. 714-494-2848
HLL Idle ltlf'nl with I L11g11na e..ctt. ··4-11294. Laguna°" the DMCfl, 2 Ir -...... ,..,. 1 B•. •leep• 4. /.VIII -r ..._, ... 111M'ed Ad. HIMt tometNng to Mft? Augu1t. UOOOt m o.
Ml;a71. Cl••lflecl llde Oo II..._ 494-5&37.
eatal1 to Olliee Reatalt 2914 AaatHctatal1 3002 Slaart 2908 . -------lulattt U~J· 4014
Bakery ior .8 9 In Newport
beach. 3,000 sq 11.
$t5.000 to $20,000 a mo,
can do more. Best lo·
cation In NB. Askln8 price
$75.000 673·204 , ask
for Mr Paul.
er 2ba hse, w/d, kllcfi. NO LEASE Preallgeous SCRAM-LETS
$240, I I Ill ottlce bulldfng, prime
$20dep, 646·8386 ,... ocet on. security, etc mo. nc u . C .. I I ANSWERS
parking 642· 7850
ondo to shr, non-amkr, DELUltt: OFFIC=-cE::--::S-U-IT,.,E=s Couple -Tryst
Npt Bch S225 Incl utll. call Baytront bldg 800•1107 Afoot. Quiver 64S·0554 sq fl avail from $ t .25 FAUCET
IF shr tg 2Br ept, Balboa BASEMENT $1.00 sq 11. Dldla know department· IRA•I llW PllOllOT
,.., bit\ lrom ocn. S375 mo 2500 sq ft Cell. Mon-Fri Your hearing Improves II New mulll·levet merllellng
• '" ulll 6!5·8255 9.5 642-4644 ntghl From 100 yards concept • earn big $$$ __ away you can hear the Cell tor Info esl( lor Dave
. to shr lrg comm house For leese. corporate office drip of a leaky FAUCET. Sachs, 978·6211
on Bel Pen Yrly lse $265 1pace, 1800 sq 11., ocean ----------------.Alt 6, 675-74t9 view Prestigious Dover A f • 3004 Distributor
trmmete wanted 10 share Or In Newpor1 Beech. Lttt IH *HOT PRODUCT*
2Br. 2Be c M twnhee near Co11t Hwy. $1 35 sq Uoo Reward. lost Old 280% Profit we train
5300 mo •• ,., utilities II Full service wtlh wet English Sheep dog. Dene $10K puts you' in business
Must ba resp, 30 ~, bar & ample perking. Call Pt area, 9 yrs old Call Oovg 847•5522 non-smoller. neet & llf\e Sylvia Pellc1n Propen1e1 Female, gray/white. Fem·
Cats c111642•4321, ui Inc 7141645-6501 lly h ea rtbroken Swimming Pool Chemical
661 O 170 Services Business New· 245 dys or 646-4073 For leas11 eaecut111e olflces • · port Beach area. no
eves Lido Peninsula, Newport FOUND: 10 speed bicycle. uper neceuery, wlll
Beach, 3122 sq It. High Call to Identify 979-4411 train, $55.000 full amount Prof M 10 Shr lge N B
home, p11t rm. many ex·
Ires, Incl. maid service.
$375Jmo 631 ·6313
Ammie. FV hm, S300 .. ·~
Ulll II $100 dep. StaGey
963· 1778 alt 6 pm
Roommate wanted to
share 2 bd 2 ba apt 1r
C M Pool, 1ac Before
Aug I, 751-3231 Leave
message
Shr 2 br Woodbridge
home, upgraded, spec
master wtpvt batn.
n/smkr, prof MI F, lull
prlv $525 559·6116
Shr Npt B 2Br dpht, F
$250 mo Nd LR & Br
furn Call Jim 675-7660
Gara111 lor ... , 2912
H B Clean storage garage
l or rent. S50 (213)
433-2435 eves
Sgl, centr1el Legune, nr
Mein bch. ~s only $64
494·3044
0 lice l t atalt 2914
1617 Westchi/. NB 275 10
3600 1q ft 2.435 sq It
Sulllble for medlcel or
dental Agen1 541-5032 * EllOITIVE *
*HITES* Full service, unique troor
plan, patio units Low-
r ates Mery, Brkr
7141850· 1236.
111SlbHlty otflpe space plus req. Wiii net $40,000 ...
1000 sq It private deck Call collect Mon-Fri
on Newport Blvd In Lend· FOUND ADS 9·6PM Ask for Tim (408) mark Cannery VIiiage 867·0111
Bldg Distinctive decorat· -~----,=---~,...,.
Ing wltri wood paneling & ARE fREE Hfl to LOH 4 24
wallpaper provides an EVIi IF Yll'lll llllllD xlnt atmosphere tor ex·1 C II ecuttve olllces All all for a : 11 llOllEPlYlllTS .
2·5 year term Asking No credit check s 1 20 sq It. 1r1p1e end 142-Hll Call Catllornla
Annual CPI. Call Sylvla Castles. 8kr Toll lree
Pelican Properties Inc ---------1·800·422·7375 7 14164 5·850 1 Broker Found temele l ab. grey 83·400
coopera11on collar Vic. F11rv1ew & M
N B upper office 643 sq W t I s on 6 • 3 0 • 8 3 ertga1-111
It. snower kllCh. nr P 0 Found male blk Shepherd __ T ... -·-'----4-0-2-1
$480 646-2947 w/CflOke Ch&ln, mall I.I. IAnUI
NEWPORT CENTER Full mixed Lab. blk Mile whl ••rt1ec• Ot .....
service Executive Su111s mixed Shepherd, female SpeclalTzlng In 111 & 2nd
S575·S625 a.0-5470 Siamese cat end male TD'sslnce 1949
--c1rS1rate<1 bllc cat. numer· R E Broker Bd R11tto11 Ott1ce space lor lease 747 ous kittens avell New· 842•2 t 7 1 545-0611
It, 1695/mo ullls Pd AIC, port Beacl1 /.nlmel
ground tlr 1055 El Shelter, 125 Mesa Dr. Hit c8ii us· AM FUNDING
Camino Dr. Costa Mese CM &U-3656 RES INC 952·9001
3 Btks E of Fa1rv1ew & -Authorized loan origin·
Adams F o u n d T • n / b I k atorfor S & l'•. Bank•
754· 1040, Mr Tracy Schneutzer. blind & deaf Competlve, low 1nteres1
--Fem 641·4351 & I 30 Ft d • $290 /up. carpets, rates ee1 yrs lie
drapes ale. reatro~ Found, Yng M Germ & ed)ustl ble 1st. 2nd &
17301 Beach Blvd. Hunt· Shepherd . 6 mos ? 3rd TD 's, Commercial
1ngton Beach 842·2834. 1 7 I h I T u s t In C M R E loens
642·2742. WIDOW HAS $$$ tor
• HEOITIVI llJTES • LOST 2 dogs, 10.13, T O's. $10.000 up. No
t MO FREE RENT Golden Retriever "la•. & credll check, no penally.
With short term tease. full Irish Setler "Hulk", vie Call Denison AHoc.
servlcesuites Keep your lSth 4 Senta Ane. CM 673·7311 overhead low & pro· 90
1essiono11mege high. 681 642•6436• 945•2 1 Htlr WHIM
Dover Dr. Suite t4 New· Lost Cat. needs dally **** port Beach 631·3651 medication. Sm. M. Grey
la' VIEW wlblk. Lrg green eyes 1111 llLLIVAI
Vic E 19th/Orange C.M 2571 Creal\llew Beautllul large office evell· 645-4285 R-•rd NB 92663
Sl
ltlr Waat.. S100 ,Help Waated 5100 Hilt WHIM 5101 =::;~::;:::;;;;;;;;;:;;:;~ Cool\ wented Wiii train. General office with varied
HVlllTISlll SALES $4-4 25/hr Apply be· duties In smelt but busy
Experience preterred, but twee~ 2-4PM II Re· office. good typlal/math
not required! All ages uben s 251 E Co11t skills required. buay
may apply! Our SERVICE Hwy, NB phonea1111es H rvlce.
Is so gooel II almost sells OISTOI oa111n xlnt benefits. llllry com· I Ill GOOD FUT RE & mensur1te with ex. tse u I FlllSll o••PEITEll 1>1rlence 645·7261 BENEFITS for right llft p e o p I e · • A 1 r po r t Sell-starter Eaperlericld
Advertising' , elated Own truck & hand tools
aetes Appt 631·4207 Work relerences Ferrell
A gooo opportunity to
ST I Y IN SHAPE
Warehouse work w/lood
company Whole Grain
Flour In 100 lb sacks
Good pay. advancement.
l 14-141-2444
Construcllon. 645·97 t 1
0111t••or ltnlot
Pleasant voice. telephone
experience. like 1urvey
(Insurance) Mon· Thur.
6-9 pm Nice HB olflce,
$4 75/hr to start
963-7457
ENERAL
250 00 t o $500 00
WEEKLY PAYCHECKS
(FULLY GUARANTEED)
working part or full time
11 home Weekly P•Y· checks malled dlrlcily to
you trom Home Office
every Wednelday Start
lmmedlllely. No IX·
per1ence nece1aary. Na· Oili - -ttonal Company. Do your
A 1 r cOiidl\'i'Oii 1 n g -& Appllc111on oe1ng ec-work right In the comfor1
Heating. experienced In-, cepted lor P/T help and security of your own
stalter/Servlce, Laguna Apply at Trie Cheesewlch home. Detalls ind eppll·
Niguel 831-0700 Dell. 16454 Boise Chlce cation malled. Send your
St. Hun1 Bch name end eddreu to ARE YOU MAKING DELIVERY KEYSTONE INDUSTRIES HIRING DEPT 33, 8480 WHAT YOU'RE Need entra income? Be an FREORICKSBURG RD .. WORTM'I lndepandeni cerrler torr ~:~9ANTONIO. TEXAS
1 am 31 years old 10 my tne Register Must have =----,,.,---,.---111 st year Into Health and Clependable economy Groomer will train Jn 111•
N I I d t 1 car lrvtne Newport criange tor kennel nelp ulr t on •n us ry • Beath, Corona dtl Mer 20301 Riverside Or, SAH mede $60,0001.J.b.Uflc· onel rear doubledll I drive Cell Vic~y 951·7 t 13 bet Hrs 8·6
a new Mercedes. I llave 11 AM Groomer XLNT OP •
two beauutul homes •n Delivery Person wanled. pon uniiy end greet pey
Calllornla end one in 30 • hrs/week tor Nower for Coste M1111tore EJC.
Hawell We have a shop. good drrvlng re-perlenfutd only.113 t·5995
ground floor opportunity cord req Apply In person
becked by company $4/hr 10 stl r1 845-0093 WI Hllllll
trelntng C all Gert I Ask lor Dla'1e ITlllt flYI
71 4·891· 1372 Dental Stilton IHN 1vall1ble,
Auto Oe1a11 Man11ger tor Oriho ofllce needs 1wo own clleritele neceuary
Leguna Beach locauon Clental assisllnts 1 e•· /.sk tor Judy 640·6443
e11per1ence & sales at>lllly perienced RDA and 1 19· I t /I t
a must 524-3100 sistant trainee Call H HI II
AUTO DETAIL SHOP 644·1405 Oatltltr --E11pertenced. lull time. openings tor 4pollsner DISTRICT MllHEll permenent, II Ben
exper ONLY 95-951 I To supervise newspepe< Brown's Re1t1u11nt .
Laguna Niguel carriers Selery com-Apply 1n person 31106
Banking mensura1e wte11per1ence Coes1 Hwy, So Leg
TELLER Company Denellts end
Donus oppty ~ generous Hotels
,E".a.l.T P/T mlleege ellowence Must Maid neeoed PIT. Engll1h
have van station wauon speaking Apply In pet· Position avallebte In our 01 amllpickup. l\pply In son: BAY SHORES INN.
South Coast Plaza Olflce. person weakdeya be· 1800 Well 8albo1 Blvd.
E•perlence preferred. •ween 3PM·SPM 81 330 Npl Bch
Call Joy Lohrke 81 Wesl Bay St . Costal --::S'""A..,..l'=E"'S __ _ 714·540-4066 Mesa ln11eS1ment company
0 'If I F "' I -----seeks top.notch ...... I trl 1 ••tra DrlYtr person. uperlenced In l1Yl111 I Lt11 Full Time Position .I deellng with 1ophl1tl· 695 Town Center Drive Mon-Fri. 8·5 Start II cited lnvettors Ouallfied
Costa Mesa, 92626 $4 00/hr Apply 11 Mas· leeds Jurnl1he<I Excel·
Equal Opply Employer ters Blueprint. 234 Fis· 1 1 8 n t co mm 1 s s t on 4100 1 Birch N B
440 sq II $450/mo
Agent 54 1·5032
able 642-4644, Mon·frl. You are the winner or 2 9.5 Lost cit, s1111er grey Per-tree tlcketa ($9 501 velue BEAUTICIAN w/cllentel, s1en mete. mluing since 10 the rent or commission Ftn
cher Ave, Colla Mese 673·5518 OMV Readout man· _ ----, JANl;:;T"'O"'R""1ex=P=-=E==R:-:-l::EN'"'"C:cE::D:-
Allorney has ore space 10
rent to protesslonal
MacArthur Square.
N B 752-0789 deyl
TAKE OVER LSE Beaut
olflce suite, recently
redec N-tpts & drps.
Suite cona1s11 of 4 airy
olflces, wei bar . 2
restrooms, conterence
room 20•20 end storege
room 20x20 appro"
t500 sq II 1n e.cepllonal
1ndus1rlal park MuSI see
to appreciate $490 mo
631-3296
~~~9~~~Hs NB Reward, H•E I UllH Velley. 847-3422
Lost Lrg Fem Celleo Cat. IHW IOOHHPEll
Dlklorg/wht, blk raccoon Anahel'TI Convention FILL CIAJllE
FOOI SIPEHISOR Bldg Maintenance ,
•or Convalescent Hospltet MIH lon v1e10 aree 14.25
In Cos1a Mesa Good hr 54 1 ·3311
mask. chubby wtbuahy center .luty 16-24 AP emphasis, EDP back·
1ail Eastahore & Sun· To claim t1cket1. call ground. 5 yrs expe<lence Otx office space, t>eautl·
fully lurn . wl pv1 patio
1600 sq It Incl l•nitorlal,
gas & 11ectr1c Must see
$ 1 65 SQ ft located 1n
Costa Mesa 979-4200
C1t1zen1 Bank. Paige
Simpson or Ken
Donahue
grove by No Lake tennis 642·4321. EJtt 352 I Newpor1 B. each Aelver11s·
cour 1 s 5 59 ·6983. * * * * Ing Agency Send resume 521·2881. and setary requirements
Lost M Yellow Lab, 19th &
Irvine. C M Aewerd.
540· 7904 642-8552
140,000+ IO J Baker, 3857 Birch
Health and Nulrlllon Co St, suite 540, NB. 92660
needs new represen·
talion 1n So Celllornle Bookkeeper. lull cnerge,
resume needed Call
498·051!; tor appolnl·
me'11 11nd 1n1ervlew
Salary end Good Ben· 1 JOhn Weyne Tennis Club Is
elits Write Ad No 973 accepting eppllcatlons
Dally Piiot, P 0 Box 1560, tor 1111 poallle>fl ol Club
Costa Mesi· C A Sacrelary Must be Ill· -~625·0560 perlen<:ld and haw pro-
FULL & PART-TIME Sand·1 feulonal appearance. wich help. 18 or over Good typing P iiis re-
8uds Subs 546-5237 quired. Olelaphone •·
WESTCLIFF BLOG.
perlence prel11Te<I. it.pp!)' FILL TIME PH In person. Tuel<lay. July
-£1Hmn HITES
IEWPOllT IUOll
Lux naw full service offices
t30·295eq It Some 2
olllce suites
Recept a Anag serv.
garden courtyord, lrg
windows. Call 752-64 8
NEWPORT BEACH
( 0-"•' W•\I, I fl N t• f.f'\" "., .... lte
1·203 sq It office
t·287 sq ft olllce
with turn for purchase If
desired.
LOST· Newport Crest 10 area t>eceuse of rapid
wk old rem gray/white growth We are looking
S I a m e s e k I 1 1 e n for tndlvlduela who have
760-6233. 63 t-4045. the potentlel lor lllgh
earnings. backed by Co ;.P.;.•.-rt-.•,.•,.a.-lt ..... __ ...., ... 1.-2 training Cell Mr Dove,
Chlld care, 15 mo old. my
hOme. 7-3, Mon-Fri. $85
per wk Non-smkr Start·
Ing Sept 7. HB 840-3969
PAllT-Tl•E WIH 26. 10 am • 2 pm 1111
Opportunlllea evellebtel Jamboree Roed, Npt
with the Loi Angal11 Bch $6/hr 10 111rt,
Times Clrculellon De· Lab Tech who would also
Par I m e n I In o u r like to do medlcel blcil
door·IO·door newspaper offlc.e. Cell between 6· 12.
soles program Guaran· 955.2022
Call Mr Howard
645· 6101 Gro-;;;id floor office wtadJ, _
parking. beyslde lo· c •• -.-,-,'"'ci:-a""l __ _
between 9am • 1pm. **** M·W, 7t4-1!91·t 372
ILICI ICOALU• Advertl1lng flrm seeks col·
1221 P Coast ~wy i""e students tor related NB92663 -•
You are lhe winner of 2 w 0 r k E a r n
tree tickets ($9.50) value $ IOO·S2oot wk PIT
COOi
Good Salary end Benefits Mase Verde Conva•es·
cent Hospital. 661 Cen1er, Cos1a Mesa
1eed llourly wage plus _ .::-::,-,---.,.-.,.,.--
comm1ss1on Hours llAM LINGERIE Adult Items:
cation. 285 liq. fl . 2 l l rooms, pvt Ba S3001mo tall I 2911
Incl. utll 2602 Newport CMlNB 17th i Newpor1.
Bl, 673·6606 Prime lnter11t Newer
10 the 645·5760 alter 3 pm
2PM. or 4PM • 9PM Exper Home PARTY
Training Is provided PLAN People BUY
Potential to earn S300 WHOLESALE. make up
plus per week ror en In-to 50.,,_ Incl. UPS del lo
IOME & IAJllH .... The 1111111 drew in the terv1ew, Cell (7 14) Hosten! C1111091, aup·
WANT ACTION? • Wes1. ..• Delly Piiot 957·2361. ext 1204 piles, 300 I Item• IVlll.
3300 sq fl. ample park· · IHtllsfH lt1olt tng, atr cond Owner
Fiil ltnlot Offloea . 675-6900
F•r•lthd w/t1th1H1 fa•aatrllf
Elegance 11 re11on11>le ltatala 2920 prices
Recepllonlst t260 • 2560 sq ft W. Irvine
Secretariat Services 11111 lnclds offices, trom
Telephone& Answt1lng S540tmo 5~8-1056
Conference Room 8500 eq ft. 3 froot offlcel, Kitchen Rent or Leaae 2 lar91 reer drive In
648·3138or963·l900 doora, xt11 eleelrlc po~ 32'..t a sq ft. 1779
'""" ltHll Whlltl., St Costa Mesa 1000 SQ 1<. welt melntelned 01y1 540-9352, Eves
bldg, quiet tltMt Al· 648-0681.
Anaheim Convent loo
Center July 18-24
To ct1tm tlck1t1, call
642-4321 , E•I 352
****
CIRCUS OF
MISSllE
719 NO. HARBOR 8l\/D
FULLERTON
llD-1112
.... H ... I
ATTRACTIVE
MASSUSSES
TO SERVE YOU signed parking, geragea New_po_r_1-=ee-1_c_h_·_C=-1-n_nery_
1v1tl. 84S·4800 or VIiiage 3250 sq ft. M1 ESOORTl/MllLI 8"15·3323 dey1 1pao1 Located In 111111
OCAfrport 111;,-otflce of Cannery VIiiage ar91 Outc;ell ONLY 83&-01118
1p1c1 tr om $225/mo. As le Mo to Mo or annual Dint UHllll
667·7010 11111. 75 IQ It NNN B ..., 18 .. _. It -Negotleble. Cell Sylvia, •ch.,.or ac;,,..ore •
Beytront Omcea lrom 300 Pelican Propertlll Inc. Office A Birthday Peni.1
IQ II 7 141846-6501 TIE LAST 1111111111
IU· 100J IFPIOl/WUll•ll 738-8538, 5&8·8538
.. , ... lffltH ••• ,.rt hHlt HLlll THtl IAllll V11W '700 eq It, 11¥911 malnt•ln~ .... L:lll ITllll
800, 107 aq 11 1va11 lrom bldg on quiet 1ttee1. BeautlflJI e11clt1ng glrll,
S 1.2& fl46 ... 800 OI 9411~323 Prlv1ta rooma
BASEMlNT S1 00 eq rt, •sn& up. 2288 It lndu•· Delly 10AM·2AM
2500 sq It Call Mon·rr1 trt11 OfllCI 18101 RldOn· 1885 P1tk Ayt, c M
11·5, 942--4e.4 do Circle, #T, Hunttnote>fl 83 l·H03 ,
Hew ~hlnQ Y°'-' Wini &Mell 842·2834. HEAVIN Ind how 10 get
to Mii? Claaalfted ad9 do i....,. 1CHM1t1ino 10 ..,., • thete Diet 7141831.ffae
II well. '42·8119 CllMlfled ada Cto 11 _., for dlfectlOl'lt.
Cluett.d Adi 842-5878 CIUllfled Ad. 542•5678. Cl•Hilled Ada 842_,. .. 18 Work solo or hire. Amy
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,..iii I 11 141 96S··9599
Newspeper llllllll TUllll
•
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN lf TO $75.00 PER WEEK
We now hav~ I !I opcntnJ' tor ynunc uaer
berntu to \ffUrt rud"' tor ltie o,.rl&t Coast
Dally P1tol Our tlt1t$ ~ldrl al 3.30 p rn •nd
work unlll 8 JO pm wcekdayl On Sa11trd1y, ww
WOik ~ t~w more houn You will ,31n m1ny
t11ps ~ric1 prt1u. nlona with nrn1ng vour own
monty ther, is no dtltmina or collection
111volv~ II vou ;re 111terultd, please call Mr
[111
MlA M
COO( (714) s4s.1bss
• •
$300·$800 Pl' ...
Part Ind Full Tima poe-
ltlona avail. No Ellpei
N1t1. We Train. Call Mr.
Htrr11. M2·5790
IUIULUl'T
Back otnc., uc.11. t>en·
eflta. Orange. 633·8012
Medic el
X·Ray potltlon avalleble.
PIT Limited permtl eo-
ceoteble with tllpetlenOe Dorothy Cotlln 1,
557·3242
MEDIC AL l'll!CIP·
TIONIST·Eicpel' Alk for
Key 75t·8t21
MORTU~RY ATTEND·
ENT. full·llme day1,
pl•••• ca ll Dean
Oeme>MY 840·5"4
Orange Coaal DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1983
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Bundles
6 Tool
10 Jazz fans
14 Catkin
15 Ms. Ferber
16 Succor
17 Slang
18 Duck
19 Angry
20 Flower·
2 wds.
22 Snapshot
24 Broker
26 Seasoned
27 -hoor
30 Metric unl1
31 Fondness
32 Glows
colorfully
37 Verse
38 Flavored
40 "Good
King -"
41 Vanish
43 Show
enthusiasm
44 Bite '
45 Wooded
48 Fairy
51 Ermine
52 Food
54 Garbed
58 M olten r~k
59 Time of day
81 Unorlglnal
62 Premed
subj.
63 Stage
Instruction
64 Frull
65 Take out
66 Excavates
67 Paradises
DOWN
1 Latvian
2 Lyons
• sweetie
3 USSR river
4 Impress
5 Underling
6 Able to
remember
7 Humorist
George -
8 Bakery item
9 Fence
10 Citadels
11 N early
12 -Haute
13 Charger
21 A sian coin
23 Worried
2 3 4 5
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
25 Gullets 43 Went to bed
27 Hypothetical 46 Bon -
force Witticism
28 Town In Italy 47 Confllct
29 Nights before 48 Lettuce dish
33 A nnoyances 49 Flat
34 Fish 50 Competitor
35 Root edge 53 Cab
36 Malamute's 55 Frost
tow 56 Famed
38 Enm11y school
39 Subjoined 57 Studies
42 Energize 60 Peruke
7 8 9 11 12 13
Sales and C<x.lnter perton.
Part or Full Time. Sales
E•per helpful Apply at
NOACK TROPHY & EN·
GRAVING CO, 170 East
17th St, Ste t 17, C.M.
Sales
Cl1ssif11d
T 111,h111 Sales
fhe Classllled Advertl1lng
Department of the Dally We need good people to
Pilot tias an opening for a I set up appointments
responslble, enthusiastic from our Co111a Mesa Of·
person. Typing easentlal. flee In the evenings, lor
Salary plus commission. Holiday Inn's new travel
32 houri a week. Ellcel· club. Salary ;. com·
lent company benefits, mission ~ bonua. Call
Including medlcal. dental, 751-4222 tiler. 1 pm
Ille Insurance, credit
union, etc. Oppty tor ad·
vancemenl. Call tor •P·
poln1ment tor Interview,
642·4321, £111 277.
Ora~tOt11t lal Pfftt
330 . Bay St.
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
Equal Oppty EmplYf
Sales/Hardware. Full
Time. Crown Hardware.
3107 East Coast Hwy.
CdM:
SALES MICRO COM·
TIUPlllEUUI MCI, the nation's long dis·
tance phone company, Is
hiring part/time Tele·
marketing Phone &K·
perlence required. Hours
5·9pm. S5.50/hour
Please call Biii Ward attar
3pm tor an Interview,
641-8434.
, ... , ....... it
..... 4
20 a.•ttt ... ,.., .. ,., .... ,
2 cablnell $15 ea, ot·
1oman S75. lamp S20, Ihle -k. 850·4133
Wallpaper, 8 roU1, $12: Mani g old nuggal
Hollywood bad, $5 . bracelet. 3 oz: 1111. coet
846·1251 al16. ~t~80
b;
111 n~·~~ ~~
**** 673·5619
Ullllm LIWll MiactlluH•• 1211 2518 Vl11a Of a oonna summer tkket• NB92860
You ere the winner of 2 $21 oo ea 546-8667
lree tlcketa (S9 50) value 7 r.lece Dining 1e1 lo the wl eaves 195. Solid wood 1101111 IUIEI Etagere a $75 ••• llOW Matching cottee 2 lamp
Anaheim Convention tables S85 & $65. GH
Center Jul~ 16-24 lawn M ower $25.
848·4019. To Claim tlcke11, call
6"2·4321. Elli 352 Answermate telephone re-
**** corder. 11111 under warn.
S 181 new, must sell tot "t *Perfect tor the beact\ S 100 ObO. 548·4455. ome. Cotton sole/love,
multi pillows Space nv· amtll FIRI 111111 Ing Oak wall units. FllHIT Gorgeous Oak/glau Busln111 advertisement. dinette set w/matchlng partlea, etc. 960·2514 coffee tbl HI. Unuaed qn
matl./box spring $175. 1Bah1a Corinthian Yacht
Brasa tamps. Oak Bdrm. , Club Mbahp. $1000, call
P.P. 972-4695 t·991·5353
7' Green Velour Couch BFIASS CEILING FAN
S250. Red Velour chr & 'Never uaed, oak blades, 3
ottoman $80 4 'l'i' Solld • apd reverslble, frosted
oek collee lbl $100. 2 tulip llghte, cost $300.
l •mp s $10-$25 . take $99. 552.0796
752·2870
~_..--+-~ , PUTERS, malure peraon
wllh buslnesa and com·
puter experi ence
754-6363
&~•rtf •l•a ,,.., 14·110 ,., ... .,
F .. t tihrt·TI•t
lll&cn••lt••
Antiqued yellow wood din.
China & glassware,
10¢·$20. Din Ml St20.
SALES PEFISON·Full
time. hrly comm & bonus.
Unique Wome n 's
clothlng boutique In
Laguna Bch looking for
outgolng career minded
lndlv w/mgml potential.
Retall & modelln11 exper
helpful. but wlll train.
Apply in per1011 Alexla
Natrual Fuhlon1, 260
Forest Ave .. Laguna Bch,
497-4777
,., ......... "
0111141-tlN
Telephone Work
Sl•SlHrltlr
No Selling. Salary. No Ell·
perlence necessary, wlll
traJn. Hours 5-9 pm. Call
662-.5844, Mr1 Garrett
rm table, 6 chairs & 3
leaves. S250 642-7876
l&IUlllM
Ull-llW
llllUU ...........
Plus 10-pc beige velvet
sectlooal $2100, plush 6'
brn loveseat S275, Lowry
Venle rtiylhm organ (any·
one can play) $1200,
chrome a glua dining
table w/6 chra. bm velvet
& chrome $1800, -Ing
mach. cab $85. baker's
Radio $50. 979-8277
Commerclal lawn Mo-.
lawn Vacuum. 3 wheel
adult bike. $100 eech.
646-5848.
Coors keg top. New $55,
mull Hll S35 obo.
546-4455.
Double Antique School
Desk S 100. 720· 1950 or
646-4648.
Ellclullve MAGIC ISLAND.
gold mbrehlp. 1800.
Make otter. 831-3611.
eves. _ _. _ _.._ ... _..__~SALESPERSON, mature
tor Hallmark Party Shop,
lull time, 40 hr ~. Ex.p.
pret. Sr. Citizens -I·
come 962·89 10
TOPS$.l
Females Pref ~odet• 6
Escorts. 1213) 686-1984 rack S25. paintings. glass JOHNNY MATH IS topped cottee table
Motel Maid. Apply ijO~
Watt Pac Cst Hwy, Npl
Bch
PAYllLL CUii
The Jolly Roge• Inc. an es·
tablls~d Restaurant •llTl/ULES chain, fias an opening tor •••ftl ...._1.TllITT an entry level Payroll/Ille -_.... clerk to work In a 4 per·
IEOIPTlllllT !tractive N.B. ottlce, air·
port area Medium
phones Ille typing and
clerlcaL E11perlenca
necessary. Salary negO·
11eble Call Laurie. WE OFFER son department Payroll
• $25.ooo~ Polen Income and tO key experience 1----------nelptul but will train an IEOEPTllllll T
752-1160
• Full Fact':~~nlng-No lndlvldual who llmlled ex· ,,. days $900 Typing
e11per nee. lperience San1 a desire 10 preferred Near Orange
• Manan.wnent training earn. 8 ary com· County Airport. Call Mra. -..~·.. mensurate w ith ex· •protected accounts perlence. Apply In person Fen n I e Io r a pp t.
• St:, ~~~i~::!~alnSI between 8am • 4pm or 7 I 4_15_4_9_·0_t _11 __ ---
m•nlmum proeluctloo. send ruume to l tctttiH lst/T,,llt
YOU PROVIDE 11042 Giiiette Ave person required for I THE JOll V ROGER INC Enthusiastic, de.pendable
• Retlable car lrvtne, 92714 Newpor1 Beach ottlce ot
• Wllllngnest \0 learn 7 l4·546--0331 1n1erna11onal computer
•Neat appearance Personal Secretary to software tirm Must be
• sJncere entheuslam Prealdent of Laguna sell starter & have gOOCI
Area man""ers tor the 11_.. Beach Business Please organtzallonal skills. velopme~i or our market· call 497-4868 EKtenslve phone cllenlele
Ing program In So. Call· Person Friday. Must work contact. typing. llllng. &
rornla will be appointed w'-nda Clerical ,kllls general ottlce duties " Pleesecall trom the auceuful can· Apply In person ACE 7 l4/493·9530.
dldates res.ponding to OLD FURNITURE. 23451
this ad. Ave de la Carlolla. RaceptlonlsttSecretary
Training wlll commenM Ofl Laguna Hiiis. 855-6465 with commercial A.E Oe-
Wednesday afternoon. ·-------velopmenl company In July 20, and Wiii encom-Photo Business Menage< Np1 Bch. Construction
p111 factory tamtllar· Duties: Personnel <•P· background helpful.
lnllon, saleaand market· prox 80 Employees). Pay· Good skills a muat.
Ing lndoc1rtnatlon, and able, Flecelvabtes, Pay· Non-smkr. $1100/mo.
actual field training. roll. AetaJI experience. Send Resume to· The
For Information and Inter· Must be personable Macklin Co. 4 UPPil'
View, Call Mr B. Ayers. Send Resume to Ad No Newpon Plaz:a. Ste IOI,
between 9am· 1 pm, 972 Dally Piiot P 0 Bo• Newport Beach, CA
Mooday tnru Wednes· 1560. Costa Mesa. Ca 92660
day 9262~0560 -------llCEPT /nPtl T
YHIWE
(714)261-1127. Irv
Need Fle ld Super-
1ntendan1 to work grad·
Ing and paving small and
large Jobs" 972--0977 or
send resume· P.O Box
15423. Santa Ana. 92705
•••111111 czew managers & can·
vas-s. S 100 per hr eu-
lly possible. 673·5187
NURSES
i---------INewporl Beach edvertls· -gNTV
~
HEED TO EARN 251( + YRLV
ltyou -edyee ..... ,"'
F0t °"' Oifec:l S.... T Nm
W ("71') 111-llH
Ing agency needs sharp,
energetic person tor troot
desk. Requlre1 good
pnone personallly & ac·
curate spelling" Mull
type 65wpm. Call be-
tween hrs or 9· 12 to Ml
app1 851·3066.
llEOPT /nPllT
Sales person wanted tor
busy NB ladies resale
boutique 831·8290.
Sales/PT. Sell eo.m.ttcs
and Color con1ul1 tor
your friend•. 645-6776
TUllll .......
IHl·tfftot·rtttll
............ 1.1"4
1ttft14t, '"' .... ,. ....
1200/wt ""'·'· 1-J .. 4'1142-1111.
IOTIJ/IOPT nPllT
TICKETS: Sept 9. Xlnt 3X5112'. ornate bottom
$225. 6<15· 1295 or Iv teats. 549·2642 for Info.
msg. John Wayne Tennis Club
Couch & love Seat. Membership 673·4243.
blue/natural bamboo $1000
print $425. Antique Mesa Verde C .C . Ar moire (wardrobe) IWlm/tennts membership $300. 760-8706 $1850/0BO. 540-4752 . Custom mirrored tables. Moving mu11se111 4 Hanel &ever al sizes. mlrrONKI loomed 100% wool Ohur· eredenza, more, mu1t sell rtes, never used, from nowl 536·0132 $1'\0·S<I00.978·7227
Obie bed & bo11 19<l~• 1MUST SELL SAVIN plaln w/lrame, $40 548-445 paper copier. Xlnt cond. 5
Din rm S900. Liv rm S650. Yr • n aw A s k Ing
lmmed opening tor •harp Accurate typist needed.
well organized Individual I hrs flexible, AM, PM &/or
with good typing a phone weel<enels Spffd • +
skllls to handle a variety Laguna Beach 497·1225
ot office dutlel for ho1pl· I W0tklng couples wno 1o11e
181 computer s11vlce1 • to travel, c<>Opef'allve.
llrm. In Hunt. Bch. Call I can follow 1n11rvc11ons., ·
Bdrm $450 838--0770 $1000/obo. 631·2242,
9.5 M·F 1aa1 Showcate 8'111'h
side. 37" hi. Cofwef'tad to 691-5556, 8 to 4:30 and need 10 make G
110.000 a month and up. ltortt1ry/hslttalt I Cralg 1-602-274-0539 trophI & gllnware dis-
Nllhau ahetl lei• for sale.
963·6664
play 125/olr. 546·6838 Ram Aries Golt Clubs
Heritage solld pecan Din· w/bag. S80. 646-2725.
Real Estate lnveatment Co ---------
seeks dependable MC· J1•1 Waate4 Sl S ·
retary with general offtce NMd help with loved one?
skills and dlctaphone eii· Mature L VN gives TLC as
perlence E11callent nurse companion. XJnl
typing a must. Varied cook driver shopper
du 11 as N P 1 B ch w111.c~ave1. 30 10 so hrs
549-2988 'lllkly, 499-5084
llClnlllY /HOllW w1111ake cere 01 older per·
Bay Es<:row, Corona del son, part lime, after.
Mar locatlon. E11ce1. OP· noons. 5<18-7246
Ing rm table w/leaYM a Rams 11c1ce11, 2 seuon custom pads. 2 cane pa ..... club levet, all or back arm c:tlrs, 6 cane par1 851·7720. 673-0353 bac:k side chra. tradlonal,
S2250 640-7257. IRed*OO<I play or tool hOUM, 6 X 7'. $100; 4' I llY flllfTIU 11atue of David, SM>.
lea 95Hl133 645-9515, Iv mMM08
KING·SIZE WATERBED 1sear1 swing & Slide Ml.
/wood 111e1 ...... healer, like new, S 145. 955·1144
massager, like Mw. S300 Sola 1250. desk 1125,
or best.oiler. 831-5084 stereo $100, call for
portunlty, benefits. C1ll ~ SSl w Lynn al 547·6626 l•-""""to'-. ____ ....,...,.
IEOlnUY AK Cocker Spenlei b, ,.
F . F butt, 3 mos old. good M 1nane1al lnve1tment Inn w/klds, s 150. 540.9444
tor Educators needsi---------
OVING TO FLORIO.Al phone msg. 650-7476
Conuints ol 3 bdrm CdM
houM, In & OUI 875-3589
augahlda Sleep Sora.
e ic p e r P e r s o n • Akltu AKC, Champ llnes.
nel/Admlnlstratlve E•· 3 lllters. all clr1, adorable ·N
like new. 861-8928. ecuUve Sec. w/e11eeOent 5250 up. 549·8e77
typlnglshorthend skllls. Greet Dane pupt to good New
Non-smkr please Call: home, 6 wk•. sso up. hand-c;raftad 4 pc
553-0940 898-7709 Andy solld wood llv. rm tablet.
dk ~Ina, $180. Also Deel! a c air, sso. 845-8462
lee 1011. love ... t, chair &
ottoman, never u .. d.
coll s~. M ii $255.
(213)402-1068
n az waterbed w/llnens.
bookc ase/hdbrd, 12
dra-s In baae. xlnt
cond, rarely uud
S300/0BO. 1131-3650
ueen sized waterbed
ltorlflFJ. Keeahound pup1, S75.
Part lime, Newporl Beach 897-4978. N
~~c~~I B~ok~rage ri~m. Male bluetgold Yorkle ex • rs or a ly w /papar1 S 200 operation. SS/hr to start.
II you enloy boall a are 963-1554
looklnfi for• a ta1t paced Aati5at1 IOlO multl· acetad job wl1h
gret potentlal tor growth Globe •tack oak bOOk·
& salary pleate aubmll caN, $265. Oak s1orage
your resume 10 P.O. BOI( cabinet. $135 548-6236
1062, Newport Beach,
a
0
Sturdy l bunkbed, $200.
McCo\.. surfboard. 6 rt,
$175 4·8041
Surfboard, 6 ft 6" Au1sell.
S85. 645·8001
Want 10 buy club member·
ship to ICC. BBC or bet·
l•r. 851·7720
i lac. i aate4 IUO
I will 6UY your top qualtty
~··"· _,,Int ' wad· ding ~owns lure. 640-83 7
Wanted: Tlckell (4 or 8)
for Pageant or Mallari.
oar: 838·2822. Evd.
76 8259.
.
842·8870
ltata ltaeral Ti t I
11\4 1&51 2 man lnhatab'
• canoe. $85 . Calf
642·3379.
17' Bay Boat red & white
canope, out~rd. Beat
otter 873· 7677.
18' CMtleld Electrlc Paclc· et, 3 yra old, xlnt cond,
118'80, hard lop, full COV·
er s . $13.500 .
714/640·4160.
19' Galv. Boat Traller, MW
a11el, auapenalon. tires, S350 4g4.6671
9· Dingy FG w/oara, teak
seats. w/tloatlon S235.
540.()153
'58 CENTURY RAVEN
Claaelc bay launch/Ha
lklll, w/traller. $3000
obo. Muat sell this week.
67!i· 1393 •.. ., ..... 70lZ
fr o;1 Quay Tri-hull.
2 0 HP Johnson,
w/11-lng, enl, needa
work . $650. 49-4834
dya, 675-4975 eves.
35 It boat, have NB Condo
10 a!lchange. 3 Br, 2'!. ba.
$67.500 equity. 951·93911
14 Fl Glasspar Sport lido
runabout. Trlr. utraa. 35
hip Evlnrude. $175-0obo.
873·6040
22' Baytlner, cuddy cabin,
all canvas, trlr. radio,
mull a ell $6500
979-8558
22'. center console, 225
HP. 307 Chevy, same aa
Harbor Patrol Boat
Bimini top, bait tank, perl
cood. 165 7 Beyalde Of,
CdM SBOOO 554.aee8
23' Seacraft turbo dal,
lowef & plank. 3 station
II-Ing, 2 radios, AOF,
Loran, OF, Loaded,
$23K. 879-2640. H
646-0930
24' bay party boet, hou ...
boat style. pontoons.
35hp Evlnrude. fully
aqulpped, Kini entettal-
manl boll S1 5.000.
642-8144
45' Sllp avall on Balboa
Island, sold my botl.
would Ilka ., partner on
late model •IOWef ~t.
Mike 675-8606 or
641 ·0360
50' Hill DSL TRAWLER
Monk Oellgn, US Bullt
Fty br1dge. att cabin lo~ range crulMr lu11ur OUI, tul~equpd
COfllldef trade 4-9829
'69 53' Hatteraa, load4ld,
try 1160.000. Motor
yacht. 642·1234
'77 SH Flay, 22 ft
w/traller. Cutty cabin,
lllPI 4, head, 1tove, Ice
bo11. 110,500. 562·9726
rumtOIAYNAT $5900 wllllp 645-2963
Erlcl(ton 35, Partnership.
Top condition. Equipped
ror race/crulH, Incl.
Avoo, auto pllot. omni.
etc. Sllp In Newport. Only
S6500, Leslie 97i..7843
Flelnell V·Bottom. 19W,
305 Chevy 110. Vaneon
trlr, Kint cond. Ski or flth.
$7000. 631· 7547
..... ,a.Ii HH
1681 la"'* 251 ~· 7.5Honda r;,:e. VH •
1tereo, gal S heed.
118,800. Evee 873-1154,
640-9013
27 ft fMltw: Fut. dry,
$2000, 675-7083
27 11 u llt>oel, muat aell.
19000. 873-8096
11/LYI
Openings for AN a LVN on
3-11or11·1 shlll Callfor
Interview. 494-8075 The
Garden• Convaleacen1
HOIPltll. 450 Glenneyre,
Laguna Beach.
PL.A TE ROOM PEFISO.N. 1
pan-time. Mon 3 30PM
10 approx 8·00PM Tue
1 30PM t o approx
8 OOP M No uper
necessary Apply Pen·
nysaver. 1660 Plscenlla
Ave , C.M.
Oualllled person needed
lor Interesting position
with Newport Beach
llnanclel firm. Previous
otc exper required De·
pendablllty. accuracy
and pleasant telephone
voice a musl Cell
7 t4/651-0855
Ca. 92663.
llOlnUY
•10' O'O•l:· idnt cond. frame w/~ head· •HlcaJ laat. IU4 $350.Trfr 250. 963·5272 board, $90/otr. Caah onfy DO you want to 11ar1 a Cal 20, 6 HP outbrd, tr1r,
I llJ APPLtllOll
Les 957.9133
855-1342•-
lverla 1leeper sofa,
queen1lze. t: walnut
lrame, prlnll pattern.
pert cond. $250 .
549·3788.
ln&tLULll
A
lmmac Jenning• suc.r Part/time, lor generel con· Chlel 11o1 machine, 4K tractor C M 631·2345 gold plated, comp r•
llOlnlllY stored One of kind. AP-
pralaed at $3500, tell tor "Person Fflday" needed $2500 obo. 539-3589, tor sporll shop. Typing, j_ Full time, hardware, 240
Bro adway. Laguna
Beach 497 -4403 Office, PI T help. Clerical
e11perlence nece11ary
Please call weekdays, IUL HTATI 1n&JL UUI
0-12 noon. 895-1222 UUI Gourmet cookware. lull
llHl IUI IUD Tt, OltMn 11• Trtl•· llme 240 Broadway,
Good math euenllel. Hr• I HI ...... 1...... lagune Beach. 497 .. 403
8·5, 5 day ~. Call ately. · , ---
5 49 · 1157. Pickwick we~allpe<lenced time To place your m.aage
Paper. share salespeople (We before the I
wilt also train llc'd bro· reading publlc,
ound table a 3 cag1.
chrs. Maple dlne1te d
cond. $85,631-6215
o~allly Game Table & bl naug chalr1 $225
Call 842-3379
aterbtd di• king
w /mlrror hd brd
bkk'g, phones. errt nd1, Rolltop deaka, S 1450.
Benefits ~ good salary. Panner's desk. $900.
~ply al U.P. Spor11. 430 Cont./OA tbl, 9', w/8
est Pac Cal Hwy, Npt chra. $3500. Orp II Ibis.
Seti $275. Hat rack. S325.
llOlnUYPLn Chrs, $95. 645-9850
Active rno'1gtge company Whit~ anamel 11ove.
r ulres sh r 1920 1. pert cond, ev.rv· mo.~ eq ar.p, eccu ate person 10 handle Ila thing working
, •• , Tilll kers). We have tons ol ph<>ne
T .-• leads and the hlghMt Dally Piiot IYll 1-1 commlulons In Southern ClaHltled, 542-5878
Wanted: Outgoing, depen· Calltornla. Our prolecl ts
dable and well groomed In a dynamite location
adutll who enjoy working and prectlcally lells lttell
with youth Mal<• 1oP S There are lmmed. open· Sell Idle Items 642·5e78
needs. Typing, word pro-.._83_1_·_1_13_8_· ____ _
cesaor. prof. phon• cov·
erage & flllnf, •lcllla are a ArtliHttl IOl l
muat Se ary com· d~'1561 a:;;; etee Range
menaurate w/e)lperr.nc.. S 125 19 cu ft Relr ....... •· A 1 k Io r St a v e •. '"'" '7 7'""""
714/545-1402, 474·0300. ator 200· -2• 8 "·
$550/new. Sacrifice
I 175. 546-0458
Yater Bed, wave i.e.. kl'!ft
Ilia, lrg headboatd, I
Iha 11traa. MW IBOO, llM·
Ing $350. 241..()854 tit 5.
y oung girt'• IQvwly 8 pc
bdrm eet, ••c.I COncl.
1275. l'tl 540-7311 ~:~~t• YC:::ir c:~~~~ =·::he~~~!~' t: I a·11y P1·1a1" ................... . llen.cfroutM AltO Off~ ir.e 800-482-4~31 or call '.
Manager poeltlon open. collect (714) 866-e808. : :..ta•na
HARBOR AREA
APPLIANCI! SERVICE
we tell recond .. ouar
iipp11ancea. 549.3077 1:1 1114 Ct111c• to tdvanoe. • ·
~-i~ J~C~. e:oo HAL llTATI F.. lllLY PILIT
-...., .. .,, 4141111 • .i 11•11n T111111
Pw1·Tlme
TILIPllmNI Ho 9J(f*lera ,__..,,,,
.. "' ........ weate4.., .. ..., I:. Now accepting applications .... ,,..., for District Manager to super-
I llY APft.111111 l.. 067-8133
K~rnor• hvy dty gaa d'Y9'
1100/080 840-7739
IUl&l111 ... XlNT CONO. 87!5· 1518
1rn1ue109 1trtPP9U aore a
lov .... t + end tibiae
$200. ax 10 Cltm rug S&O.
3 MWI~ mtctilnte Mii,
185. S2 . l~ tectl• s 10. OMk I 1 . 1 30 Roi-
tut bike $40. M• Pllrt• •
ctotne. .. mllc. 2373 wltl trllln. Salary, Ho Mil·
1no tioura 5·9pm
8'2·5843, Mr Otvll
Santa Ana Av..
>bl bad, m111 ...... lrwne a
.,...,..,•• I'. vise newspaper car tiers. "-lrlg 250. w .. nar, __.... t c: .. 1...... dtyef, danwsnr . trutt .. ,....,,.....,= .. • 1· ~, commensurate with oomp.St35 ... 64&-sua heldbrd $85. MatClttlng
beige b•d•~•da, 1nam1, & drpe . Blue
matbr. alnk 'T, 126 BoolccaMS u a 15. All·
uque 11>1 a ctv1 1175.
Lota of ml I C, 2932
---fir& Tr• : experienoe. Company ben-,._• •-........ I.. .... · Relr1Qer1tor, rune well -•• '!.~~ 1'1MTIO•• 1 • efi t8 plus bonus opportunity. Ho. 5'1_.998 ~ '* ~ CIW• -I; fiCtO rien Mttv rnomlnO -4.AM 1 ·. Must have Van, atatlon 8e1tt ......,epot troetleM ... .. ~ Space MHtef Aefrlg• ~AM~·.::;,? --~ r OI lhO Ad Wagon Or pick Up Wlth/shell. 175. 642·9021 day,
band? Need dn.1mmer1, S3000 673·2935 gultar1111. etc. for Into ·
call 548..0825 Catamaran 18'. P Cat
Elec1rio Guitar, Oean"V', . $850 compi.te. 647-1746
white. Olmanlo plckup1, E·34T, XLNT Ilg ht air
Schaller tunera, cue. Ex· racer/crul..,. SM L.B.
c:etlenl condition. $425. Boat •how, Set.Sun, Sllp
Ctll evenings. Rob 2-18. 714·5!51-2152
831.()505. FAST DUFFIELD SABOT
OIUn rualtart/ 673-7817
~,.... 1121 Flbefgl811 Selll~ SabOI.
xlnt cond. SS 5/0BO. T tar. never 6"fi Aleo a Dinette, St~ UMd. IBM Correcting conlOle a vertou• mite. Seteo1rle Ill, black, 1850, ltema. Celt 846-&887 Victor Electronic Cale\.!·
lator, new. print. dltPlay Must aell 30 ft Olton. In
& memory, 1 350. water 5 w1t1. Equlped for
646·3389. racing. FUii compllment flaaz• IHI or aalla. Loran 5,000 .
Owner trtnt, $34,500. ..... ... 840·8128 .
8112', Comp!. reflnlllhad, Sabot~ alt wood, l200/ofr.
$4000 213/923-4402 833· 232. 8-4:30.
Currier upright, ~tut. SAii.BOAT: 10'
con d ., a tone Shorewood,~ oond. 110001080. 645·2028 S<IOOlobO. 6-3481 aft 8.
NII WllTll ltata,
Wiit caeh ff:!-1889 ISJ:ftl ?Ill
PtlY "' a;;;; Bi typewriter, never !>Mn j l>Oet w/1911 115 ~
uM<I, IBM Correct~ Outboard. iclnt cond.
s.i.ctrlc Ill, bleek, S8 . 13750. 842-8146
Victor EltetronlC Ctlcu-61111 fish a Sid Bott, 111, lalor, nw, print, dltj:)ley a m emory. 13110. S!IHP ~· trtr, CfMtl.
84W389. 11076. 83 __...
-.... , IUI M• "tfl' t111
\aCJn ~. .... 91K1, 04)l'I . von, w ea. oer ..
btlQ'3C>.~. iHP JoMeon motor &
reotc. 1775. sa...a2t
tar O· ,
goodcond, mull Hll.
$250/0BO. 675-.2418.
·n l._. moped, $230, 10
ml, Kint cond. 4911-2470
MOPED. runs and tookl
grHI. Asking 11 90,
4911.5046
Motebec:8ne Moped, dbl
Maler. yellow, rMt mlt·
ror. $225. 548·8362,
Sharoo bef Spm.
lmmecultte tour dr91Md.
many extraa. A1klng
'2195. Bob.842·5484
1983 Honda ATC 70, UMd once. Perlect condltlorl.
M00/080. 631·5825 or
S4Q.478e. Scott.
305 Honda Dream Motor·
cyele. $300. C ati
842-3379.
'115 Honde 90, Olean, not
running. 1 125. 846-5351
'79 BMW R65. S 1700. '8 t
KZ550, S 1400. Bo1h lo
ml. Ilka ,_ w/many ex·
traa. 840-0838.
'79 Honda CX500, only
1480 ml. nke MW, rec:tl,
wind ICf~. 11500. A
STE.All 642..S 144
'80 KX-80 K-..kl, )llnl
cond.S450.97s.-05S4
'83 Honda 250FI (ATC)
$2000. Jim 845-4633
(Oam-7pm).
'83 Honda XA 600, new.
lelt than 5 ml S 1900. Jim
845-4633 (9-7pm).
t r.u.n
""''\ MU U8 Skamper 35'. P& :ndi.
$8775, 1142·07~4.
548-8823-.
Tralltn, :vix,LER5r
REMOVABLE BACK
Sl50.845-M30
IUP6AtXNt
NOTICE TO AEAOERS
AND
ADVERTISERS
.. _ ••
WINflW-.ul .. _ ... ......
NINl/ .... I
2480 HartlOt lf¥0. COITAMUA ....... ,.1
WllTlll
Good, dMrl ueed oera: ~ 1t7 .. 1N3 luloka,
Ja ouare. TR71 6 Poraohea but .-iy mod9I
conelder«I. T oP prtc.
peldf Call CINie ti ..,.,
Motor• t i (71 4)
910-2800.
cos11 •sa '!"I .. "mt
AMvy outy ROA Lr. :Ui Ht
all Toyota & Dat111n 4ll4.
• 100/080. 548-1455
Range Rover '75, AIC, xlnt
cond, • very rat• *· $13,000. 9t6/265·3251
or 265·9171
t n1b NH
114 Chevy 9. ton. 11&7-
obo Camp•r ahell
w/lumber rack, $600
obo. 497·2645.
'73 Datsun Pk* Up. con·
\1'111. top, new eng, tires &
paint. S2500. S52-4242
days. 64().2097 .......
'76 Dataun PICKUP
12500. 979· 1487 evea
'77 Chevy 1t~. xlnt
cond. iitrH . S2950.
845-3708 aft 5pm
'78 Data#l PU, 5 ape!
w/cmpr a boot. new tlr•,
run• great S2600.
846-9102
'79 GMC •,; ton pickup,
ladder racill. toot bOX, 3
apd, 45,000 ml, xlnt cond
13750. 117~2083
'82 Dataun d1I King
Cab,S.apel. xtra tu.I, 11lnt
tf\tipe. Pric.d to NII
640-9738 ,... ....
171 vw Vin, m . ri&l.
outalde, nds minor lnllde
wortl. xlnt rnech. cond.,
'2200. Dave Wllllam1
631.630()
•75· Dodge. B200, 80,000
orig mi. alt. aulo, pit ,
good cond $2500
673-2083
&ati .. ft,
Cw1k1 tMI
123 Model X. 4 60& Town
Sedan. reatorad 19.995
'46 F0<d Woodle. navy
bkHt, r•tM«I. I 12,995
PP 87M161
·34 Ford 3 wlnClo'llr ~. un·
r est or ed 19500
875-3175
'83 l • S.t>r•. lull pwr. 80+(
OflQ ml. Tiii 11-wfleel. Xl~T MECH. Mu1t dr1Ya.
11000. 942.9see
'72 Citroen SM MIMfatl 5 apd, fut.I pwr, air, leether,
V6. dual owrhM<I cams.
II'-lacquer. cottector
owned, mint. Proud to
show. a~ to dr1v.I
Movfng • mutt lell
.1 12,500/ofter
(61g)224.0731/425-4921 ...... ,.
112 h.p n.tnead V8. 3 'f)CI.
MW tudl 6 rol Int, MW
apt, ,_ ttr.L '2000 or
bea1 oner. teo-1221
Hor'Nbuggy. 2 _,,,top,
an perta, ndl paint. lthr
MOO. 642-1144
StucMbtik• 1963 Grand·
turlelmo, 1 1400/080
MU9t tell 548-8838
The price ot Item•
advertlMd by ,vetllcle
dMlara In tile vetilcle
cla11U1•d advertising eotumM doee not Include
any a.ppllcable taxea, ~ ••rW
Ileen... tran1fer IM1. ID tl ll
nnanoa c:haroea. fMI tor , -air pollutton c:ontrol d9-70 3201, ehowroom MW,
vice certlfleetlona or lo4t0ed, 51K, mus1 aeet
dealer documentary S8900/obo. 631~
preperetlon chargee ~ '82 320I BBS enrf, AIC,
Ian otherwlee apeclfled 5·1pd, can. I 13,500
by the ectvenlaer. 631·7270. 873-7711
Aate nt/ '83 BMW 833CSI. 16.000 Pam MIS mi. Arctic Blue, 5 ape1, 885 wtll1, loV lempe. lthr 4 11octl elum. Muat. IPOf1 Int. Mutt .... 135.000
rims w/5 MICMlln ti'" 845-472t ssoo. 651-0639 ·---------
'81 Ctlev/Bulck V·8 23 1 eng. Hloh Per1ormanc..
S.c S 13l>O 548-2089
COMPLETE '8 lluV
ENG. & TRANS. 1700.
54a..te01
Convenlently located
a ComJ)9t&V Pr~
s.i...s.mo.L..alog
LrrE BOOY WORK fl)(' CARVER
Up to 50% off your •t. Kll.S ~ S\<1W
Pln1trlplng. Bllt 9"·1221 &o11~i111>~oM1t
LITE BODYWORK ~fl)IC)o 11"1..o....,
Up to 50'% off )'our •I. ~~gt Plnltrlplng. Biil -..t221 ~ .. _... ..... ·-~ ... ~·-~---RIOt*t CMtl m . ior UllllT
your~. domelt1c"' •fllt•Y
foreign. 1151-1285 •. 75 aoc>2: 4 'f>CI., *
WI '" cond. (033NJL)
'Lira• •••a • '19 S20I; 4 apd .. IC* s.-..... mltee. ~OXIV)
111 llllll •1~~~Jxai 4 8'1d .. !Oeded.
COHNEl l
r ~FVROL J T
~4b-1 lOO
• '90 S204: 11 IPd.. WNOO/I.
(1ANW03) •
• 'IO TS31; euto .. IOeded.
(188T111)
• • • 1 528f: auto.. IUN'oo4.
(1001111)
------==;..1• '11 IS,_i II apd., WI Ill toeded. (1Cl.HU4)
UHDCAA8& T"VCK8 • ·u UOI; euto .. .unroot.
COMEINOACAl.LFOA (tFONMI) I ,_APPUlllL • ·ea u .. : auto., ~ ~o.&.Mo ,,..,(11JA474) " ---.n . '12 nll:. -.. lellded.
1U11 HAOtt IUD. (7SSH37I
Aadwooc:I, CM. Set/Sun W'1 CllllMt: 0.... I mom4n9L ~ Of .,,.. '*""" rOf A~1ION J. Mileage allowance included. 542-720S ......
Hourty -. ;. ~ C4ll t ' A 1 1n kda UHd rerrlgerator 50 w . '""· loeke. llqlde ,,~ • Appty In S*'IOfl .... Dell¥ Plot : pp y penon,. wee ya, l'lrm. 84&-6401 .,__,......~...,_ -~,...,,..,,,.. guna, lrg lo«*ed btm ..c.
oey.. 330 w. 8!1 It.. Al).Vl80A 3PM to 5PM at 33-0 w-t D-y MOVINO OUT OF STAT[ '200/obo &le..aett
HUNTINOTOH HACH 111411'
M1n1ll•td S1n1 Pottl• Mf .... 11 I• 1111 20t ~·=AN
'418,,,.... 170 ... 5.1»1 fh. , ....... , .. '" ,..; ----------
co.ta u-Ce. "'---..,...., .,., J;J9 .: H-..--~...,., --t ult aell thl• weelcend. 'T'.~-:--..,,.-~~C"'."'-:&'"""': -. ..,.._""" ... 2....... . St., ,..__._ M-·. .. .... -·-· .~ --· .. .._ .. rnl ' CIUOIM o·-eo-t Diiiy PllOt ~WI ..._ ; to NII? Cl Ida do .. urn , pl11nt1, ~· -ur t30. 5 .... ========~:;~~~$ . . .. . . . . ..... , ,. ............. ·:..·.;.· ·:.:·.:..· _· -c:"=.-==· =l4:-:2=.te=1=1.~-== ~_.ina:st. i=. ::.11aun •.uu . 54... 2
,... NAVt01 "°' rildiO. w ....... De lly ~llot ,.,.. ........... , ...... -M u11 aett 1 221 , OI•&_., M . c.11 T._ I'll'•,.,.. "9tlt In ....... 1.awne MMJl71. ttect. ~
.1
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1883
-·
.·
• .. .
'78 MIY9tlete, 8 Cyf 91110, •! PS, PB, 4 dr, ciMl'I,
$1850/ofr 8314964
ATLAS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 546-t934 3 bloclcs
south ot San Diego Freeway oll Harbor Blvd Complete
body st1op Sales Service Pans Service Depl open
Monday lhru Friday 7 30 A M to 5 30 P M and 8 A M 10 5
P M on Saturday
ORANGE COAST AMC/JEEP/RENAULT
2524 Harbor Blvd Cos1a Mesa
549-8023 645-7770 = 1 Jeep Dealer 1n the West• See us today for sales service
.. &. leasing Ttlere are reasons why we are = 1 Price and
seleclton• Also. the all-new Aenaull Alliance •S here•
THEODORE ltOllNS FORD
Modern sales, service. parts. body. paint & tire depts.
• ComP9tltive rates on tease & daily rentals 2060 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010 or 540-821 I
WHTWAGIN
A per90f\lll 8nd ~oud exclullve VW egeflC'f dedicated to
~ '9Mee. epwe perts. and a compeUtlve ..... ~nentetton of the unlQue Volkswagen-quallty vehtcte.. Bob
•CNilman't WESTWAGEN -e ECYrle Shlrtee Cofp.
" 7800 Weetmlneter Blvd/BMctt Phone 714/VW1-WEST.
Toe.I PwfonT1911C9 VW't "Are Yoo Hem' Any Fun?"
OAYID J. PHllll~S BUICK-PONTIAC ·MAZDA
Sales • Service • LeaSlng
24888 Alicia Parkway
837-2400
SOUTH COUNn VOUCSWAOIN/llUZU
(Formerly Jim Marino Votkawegenl
187 11 Beech Blvd .• Huntington 8-ch, (7 \A) 84~-2000
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE we Will NOT BE UNDEASOl Dlll
5 Veer Financing 0 .A.C. 6 Fleet Olacount1
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
LONG BEACH BMW
Large selec11on ot new & quality used BMW s and other ltne
cars• Sales sen11ce & leasmg Trade-ins welcome' Take 405
Freeway to North Cnerry oil-ramp. turn 11ghl & go 6 blocks
norfh lo 3670 N Cherry Ave Long Beach
f7141 636-5790 (213) 427 5494
• NAHRS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvtl Costa Mesa Tel 540-9 tOO Orange
County s Largest Cadillac dealer Sales Service Leasmg
fD SOUTH COAST DODGI
"Your Friendly Ne I ghborhood Dodge Dealership"
2888 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-0330
Sales. LeHlng & A Full Service Department
Including Body And Paint Shop
We specialize In custom van conversions In ell price ranges
AND WE PAY CASH FOR USED CARS TOOi • CHICK IVHSON PORSCHE·AUDl-VW
4 t5 E Coast Hwy Newport Beach 673-0900 The only
dealership in Orat'IQe County w11h these lhree great makes
under one roof'
• ALAN MAGNON PONTIAC-SUBARU
2480 H1vbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 549-<1300 Snles.
Service. Leasing Mr Goodwrench ·
CLASSIC AUTOMOllLIS
765 Newton Wey, Costa M .... Tel. 631·1383
"JAGUARS OUR SPECIAL TY"
XK 12o·a1t40's/150'a/)(J's/E· Types
Satea -Service -Aettorellona
PAINT AND BODY SHOP
Ott Pleoentle between 17th a 18th In Coate Mesa
BOI LONGPJIE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd Westminster Tel. 892-6651. Orange
County s otdest ano largest Ponuac dealership Sales.
Service Paris
• DICK MILLER FIAT /LANCIA
Probably me lowest pncecl Fiats 1n Southern Calllornia·
1Located 1 mile north or South Cocst Plaza
near Main SI and Warner Ave 1n Santa Ana)
120 w Wa·ner Santa Ana 557-2 tJ2
• SANT A ANA DATSUN
2001 E 17th Street. Santa Ana Tel 558-7811 Your
OriQ1nc11 Dedicated Datsun Dealer
MIRACLE MAZDA
We ve moved' Our new toca11on 1s 1425 Baker Street. Costa
Mesa Tel 545,3334 Slap by & visit our modf.rn showroom
and sec why we re the = 1 Mazda deall'r In Southern
Cal•lornia Sates Service. Parts and Leasing
0 COltMlll DellLLO CHIVltOLIT
(Formerly Groth Chevrolet)
182 11 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach
NPw • used • Sates • Leasing • Parts • Service
Come by and see our Huge Inventory!
847-$>17 549-3331
• HACH LINCOLN MllCUIY
"We're new and ·~ for your bualnen." Complete Hlft.
H rvlce and body 1hop lecllltlea. One of the largHt
lnventorle1 In Southern California of new Ltnco4n1 encs,
MerG,urys. Located 3 blocks 1outh of the Sen Dlago
Freeway on Beech Blvd. In Huntln{lton Beach. 16800 Beech Blvd ~t-n3e Of 6~ 1008
• HOLMIS TUnLI DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd., Coste Mesa. Tel. 540..e.410. Thie Det.un
locetlon has been serving Orange County fOf 18 )'MtW. 1
Mlle So. 405 Freeway. Stop by & vlllt ut today ... ,..
ownership pledges to beet eJt·comP9tltlon.
SUNSIT FORD, INC.
!Home ol w 111te !tie Wt1ale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd •
Wes1mms1er Tel 636-4010
ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO
10 120 Garden Grove Blvd , Gardel'I Grove
Tel 530-9190 E><clus1vet1 Volvo to cover all your Volvo
requtrements
New•Used•Sa1es•Leasmg•Parts•Serv1ce•Body Stlap
Fteeway close 1n the heart ot Orange County 11 Garden ,
Grove Blvd &. Brookhurs1
CONNELL CHIVltOLIT
2828 Harbor Blvd .. Coate M .... Ov.r 23 yeers serving
Orange Counly Sates. teasing, service. Cell 546-1200.
special parts line. 546 9400. body shop hne: 754·0400
0
ROY CARVllt ROLLS ROYCE·IMW I
1540 Jnmboree Road, Newport Beach. 640·6444 Sates,
Sar111ce Parts Ano Leasing
SHOW IVllYONI WHlll YOU All •••
on our Orange Coaat C8f Ouidt.. Mepl ~ you "9t 'f04IT
automotive bualnete (no new -~.,.._) In the
Delly Piiot, you r .. oh the prime Coutel Martce1 from
Huntington Beach to Sen etemente. c .. fOt ~
rat•• end more Information -8M tor s.ndr• LM. -'· 322.
New Cer Oealel'ahtp1 ... call your outllde ..... reip.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED
. ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT REP. ·642-5678
.
~
•,
:· • . . . ·
. ~·
I
• • :
THI DRAIBI GUiil
COAST IDITIDN
MONDAY, JULY 18, 1913 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Bergeson eyes ·Senate·hid
NB assemblywoman to challenge Speraw in primary
Marian Bergeson
By STEVE MARBLE Ol'\N 0.-, ,._ .....
Newport Bea c h As -
semblywoman Marian Bergeson
will formally announce next Mon-
day ~he will run for the state
Senate, taking on fellow Re-
publican Sen. Ollie Speraw in the
June 1984 primary.
The announcement from cam-
paign aides comes as little surprise.
Bergeson, a third-term lawmaker,
began campaigning for the Senate
seat late last year.
Speraw, who lost his Long
Beach Senate post through reap-
portionment, announced his plans
to run in the newly created 37th
district early this year. He current-
ly has district offices in Newport
Beach, where he also now lives.
The district which the two
Republicans are interested in in-
cludes the entire Orange County
coast and reaches to the Mexican
border on one side and to the
Colorado River on another.
Aides said Bergeson originally
intended to announce her can-
didacy this week, but that the
ongoing budget stalemate in Sac-
ramento delayed her plans.
The anticipated primary clash
be~een Speraw and Bergeson
has been a sore subject with
Republican boosters in recent
months who fear the contest will
be a drain on the party's war chest.
A group calling itself Respon-
sible Republicans for Common
Sense in Primaries has been
urging Bergeson to leave the
Senate seat to Speraw and again
seek re-election to the Assembly.
The group mailed letters to regis-
tered Republicans in four counties
asking for money to support its
cause.
Bergeson supporters charged
the mailer was "grossly mislead-
ing'! and asked the Orange County
District Attorney's Office to file aes against the Republican
gr p . Representatives for
eson said the group was
staging a fraudulent fund-raising
effort for the assemblywoman.
Orange County Deputy District
Attorney Wally Wade said today
his office has rejected the request
for prosecution from the Bergeson
camp because of lack of evidence
(See BERGESON, Page AZ
., .......
Semi-sexy poses like this one are featured in Loa
Angeles firefighters' beefcake calendar they're
elling for charity.
Firemen grin, bare it
to aid heart research
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A dozen city firemen decided to bare
at least some of themselves for a "beefcake" calendar to raise money
for researeh into heart problems among their colleagues.
But the 1984 calendar, dubbed Firefighters USA, is no rival for
those marketed yearly by Playboy and Playgirl magazines.
9 evacuated as HB home burnS
Its pinup men appear modestly enough to offend no one -
especially not city officials, although the most suggestive photo does
show a fireman reclining on .a fire station cot wearing only boxer
shorts.
Mr. January (Terry Manning) and Mr. June (Manning's
brother, Tim) are sons of city Fire Chief Donald 0 . Manning. By PHIL SNEIDERMAN otlMO.-,NMIUll
Nine members of a Huntington
Beach family were evacuated
safely early today after fire
engulfed their one-story home.
The blaze, which sent heavy
plumes of smoke into the early
morning sky, caused more than
$85,000 damage.
Fire officials credited an
off-duty Huntington Beach fire-
fighter and a passerby with help-
ing prevent injuries to family
members.
The blaze was reported at 8: 10
a.m. at 9402 Krepp Drive, the
home of Taifau Fuga, 50, an
electrician. Also residing at the
home were his wife, six sons and
an elderly grandmother.
Huntington Beach Fire Depart-
ment spokeswoman Martha
Werth said the family members
were all asleep early this morning
except for a son, Sam, 13, who
discovered the fire in the garage
and helped rouse the family.
At the same time, Werth said,
off-duty firefighter Ed Thompson
was on his way home from a shift
at the nearby Bushard Street
Canyon flood
damage sought
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol'lN 0.-,,... -
Forty Laguna Canyon residents
and business owners have filed
claims totaling $2.2 million against
the city of Laguna Beach, saying
negligence in the construction of a
flood control channel resulted in
flooding of their homes and busi-
nesses.
Attorney Jerrold Bloch, who
also is chairman of the city's Arts
Commission, said similar claims
have been filed against the coun-
ty, the county's Environmental
Management Agency, Caltrans,
and John A. Artukovich ~d Sons,
the Azusa firm which constructed
the $3.l-million project.
Laguna Beach council members
are expected to routinely deny the
40 claims and refer the personal
and property claims to the city's
adjuster.
C o n s tru c tion of a I 3,700-foot-long, reinforced con -
crete flood control channel along
Laguna Canyon Road was begun
last summer. with work expected
to be completed by last Christmas.
But the contractor, hired by the
county to construct the channel
between Big Bend and the Ge n -
eral Telephone property in the
canyon. suffered numerous set-
backs. Those delays were caused,
county officials say, by hard-
er-than-expected bedrock as well
as difficulty in moving utilities out
of the path of the channel.
The topper came March 1, when
the first of several heavy winter:
stonns washed out a 1,200-foot
sec'tion of base material for pave-
ment and flooded portions of the
concrete culvert.
The channel was about 65
percent completed at that ,point,
county officials said.
Dozens of canyon residents
were evacuated as a result of
storm runoff entering their homes
and businesses.
Bloch maintains the contractor
failed to safeguard private
properties adjacent to the channel
from flooding.
"By March 1 (the first day of
heavy rains) the project was two
and a half months behind sched-
ule," Bloch said. "At that time of
year they had to know that, even
with normal storms. unless
precautions were taken, it would
channel water into residences and
businesses.
"They protected their construc-
t See CANYON, Page AZ I
llDEX
Bridge C4 Movies C2
Bulletin Board A3 National News A3
Claalified C4-8 Pol.k:e Los A3
Comics B5 Public Notices C3-4
era.word C7 Spona Bl-3
Death Notices C3 Stock Marketa B4
Editorial Page A6 Television C3
Entertainment C2 Thea ten C2
Horoecope c.6 Weather A3
Ann Landen C2 World News
Eric Dickerson, the Rams' $2.2 mllllon
running back from Southern Methodist
University, made his training camp debut
Sunday. See B 1. •
A4
Whlle one frtea tt1 burgers and the other
broH1 them, the dtfferencea between
McDonald'• and Burger King go much
further, accordtng to research by TV
columnl1t Fred Rothenberg, who looks at
tricks of thecommerclal trade. Page 03.
For 'he past two yeara, Richard Stevena has
been the doyen of Orange County co ...
metofogtat1, "a true arttat who tculpta facet
llke paint•• do portrait•." Page C 1.
Call 842-4321 with new• tlpal
•
station when he spotted the fire.
Werth said Thompson and
another passerby, Carole File, of
19432 Bluegill Circle, carried the
grandmother, Lise Tufege, 79, to
safety across the street. She said
File ordered her daughter to
phone firefighters from a nearby
home, as Thompson helped evacu-
ate the remaining family mem-
bers.
Thompson and Mrs. File ''were
very helpful in getting everyone
out safe and unhurt," We rth said.
Neighbors used garden hoses on
the blaze until firefighters ar-
Irvine mudders
rived. The blaze was quickly
extinguished by the 16 fire-
fighters responding to the scene.
No firefighters were injured.
Cause of the blaze was under
investigation. The damage was
estimated at $70,000 to the struc-
ture, $15,000 to the contents.
Family members stood outside
the home this morning but declin-
ed to talk with a reporter.
Fire investigators confirmed the
blaze started in the garage but said
the exact cause is not immediately
known .•
Mustachioed Tim appears bare-chested holding a dalmation,
with fire station equipment in the background. The brothers were
photographed together for the back of the calendar;·stripped down
to their boxer shorts and passing a bucket of water in an
old-fashioned bucket brigade.
Chief Manning declined comment on the calendar, but Terry
Manning said his father "just kinda smiled about it, and that was
that.''
The $6.95 calendar was the brainchild of Fire Department
Battalion Chief Ed Allen and his two partners in an enterprise
called Face Facts International.
Besides making some money for themselves, Allen said, thf'
partners intend to share any profits with Dr. R. James Barnard, a
doctor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who studies
fire fighters' heart problems.
Ruling
• near1n
dentist's
hearing
A preliminary hearing to de-
termine if former Costa Mesa
dentist Tony Protopappas will
stand trial for murder in the
deaths of three patients went into
its fourtn and possibly last week
today.
A spokesman for the Orange
County District Attorney's Office
said the hearing in Harbor Mu-
nicipal Court, which supposedly
has brought as many as 100 people
to the witness stand, is expected to
be completed before Friday.
The press and the public have
been barred from the hearing and
lawyers have been ordered by
Harbor Court Judge Christopher
Strople not to discuss the con-
troversial case .•
Protopappas, free on $250,000
(See DENTIST'S, Page AZ
La.guna hit
by auto
burglaries
Laguna Beach police say a rash
of automobile break-ins over the
weekend are probably not related,
"except for the f~ ... that it's
summertime.''
The police log showed a half
dozen reports of vehicle break-ina,
with losses ranging from wetauita
to $3,203 taken from a pune left in
an unlocked car in the 200 block of
Broadway.
Three young Irvine residents train
for the upcoming official Mud
Olympics to be held Saturday a t
Adventure Playground in University
Community Park. Mud isn't just for
kids -adults are invited to compete
in the six events, too. Competition is
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Investigator Linda Parker aaid
police doubt there is an organir.ed
group breaking into can parked in
Laguna Beach, saying the increue
ls moat likely the result of sum-
mertime crowds in the Art Colony.
A wetsuit valued at $125 wu
stolen from a vehicle parked at
Thalia and South Coast Highway
(See AUTO, Pa1e AZ)
Orange County Fair attendance declines
Attendance at the 10-day Or-
ange County Fair in Coeta Mesa
dropped slightly this year, with
336,753 visitors passing through
the tumstyle at the carnival and
livestock exh!bitlon, which ended
Sunday.
One 15-year·old boy wu In-
jured Friday near a ride but WM
releued from the ho.pit.al.
AJllliatanl Fair Manager John
Burke aald scorching
temperatures probably kept 10rne
people away from the fairgrounds
last week. Attendance was down
2,903 from lut year.
"It picked up on the weekends
and ran very amoothly," aald
Burke. "It wu a aooct. clMn fair."
Law tnforcement offid.a.11 re-
'
ported few problems thls year.
Moet of the 435 citations handed
out by deputies lnvolved mtnon
drinkll)I alcohol or lntoxiated
adults, said Orange County
Sheriff's Capt. Dennis LaDucer.
"Moat people were cooperative
and were there to have a good
lime," aald LaDucer. "We didn't
corwJder It a problem."
'f .
A 15-year-old Costa Meea boy
was injured Friday afternoon
when a ballast from the SkydiY'f!I'
ferrta wheel hit hlm In the face and
shoulder. Ted Mayer w• taken'°
Coeta Meea Medk:al <Antu Hmp-
taJ with i.ce ... tlonl and • ..,,....
ated shoulder. He wu relellld
from tho ho.pit.al folJowinC plastic
sur~ry. • ~
' t '\, •
' I
Al * Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT /Monday, July 18, 1983
~\ -We asked:--------
what special thing do you do when the weather turns hot? Teen dies
in fall on
Catalina-
\\.t Continued stories
DENTIST 'S H E ARING ...
bail, is charged with sec-
ond-degree murder in the deaths
patients Patricfa Craven, 13,
Cathryn Jones, 31 ; and Minna
Kim Andreassen, 23. All died
following anesthesia for major
dent.al work, according to docu-
ments filed by the state Attorney
General's Office.
Protopappas surrendered to
authorities last April after a brief
search by law enforcement agen-
cies. He reportedly now is living
with friends in the Laguna Beach
area.
The former high-volume den-
tist, in addition to facing a
preliminary hearing to determine
if he stands trial in Superior
Court, also must defend himself
against civil lawsuits seeking more
than $65 million in damages.
BERGESON TO RUN ...
the group was raising' money for a
"Bergeson for Assembly" cam-
paign.
Wade said it would be hard to
gauge whether the mailer. with its
request for money, was close to
violating state election laws.
Loa Young, a resident of Vista
and , leader of the Republican
group, claime"tl the mailers
brought a strong endorsement for
keeping Bergeson in the Assembly
and Speraw in the Senate.
Bergeson supporters said their
field work shows otherwise.
CANYON FLOODS ...
lion site very well, but if they'd
· raised the bulkheads just four or
five inches, much of the damage
could have been prevented,"
Bloch said.
The flood channel, completed
just before this summer's art
festival season in Laguna Beach, is
expected to prevent flooding in
future vears.
AUTO BREAK-INS ...
over the weekend. Other auto
break-ins occured on Ocean Av-
enue, High Drive and Broadway.
Police suggest visitors and resi-
dents alike lock their cars and
leave valuables out of the car or
out Of sight -preferably in the
trunk.
Meadowlark crash probed
Flight safety investigators ar-
rived in Huntington Beach today
to find out what caused a
twin-engine Cessna 411 to make a
crash landing Sunday night at
Meadowlark Airport.
Officials said there were no
injuries and the plane sustained
only moderate
damage when the wheels failed
to come down and the plane came
sliding in on its belly.
Sunset silhoue ttes
The pilot was tentatively ident-
ified as Ronald C. Rafferty. He
reportedly told police at the scene
he was making a routine ap-
proach shortly after 9 p.m. He
said he didn't have an inkling
anything was wrong until he
heard met.al from the pla!ie hit
the pavement of the runway.
Police said Ra.fferty was the
only person aboard the
seven-seat plane.
Kelley Kuhel _,.,..;
Huntington Beach
"I go to the beach and
drink lots of lemonade.
Or I take a nap with the
fan on."
Carolln• Ch•••
Santa Ana
"Well, I go shopping. I
can go Into the air con-
ditioned shops and get a
breath of air. My family is
getting ready for a wed-
ding so I have to shop
anyway.''
For m a n y people, a day a t the beach
ends well before dark. They fight the
traffic back t o where they come from
and miss what, to many, is the best
pa rt of the day. Dusk. It's quiete r ,
cooler a nd certainly less congested,
as this photo, taken next to the
Balboa Pier a ttests.
40 aliens found craIDIDed into truck
When California Highway Pa-
trol officer Rich Soto opened the
door of a rent.al truck abandoned
on the Santa Ana Freeway ln
10Uth Orange County, he said,
"All I saw was faces and eyeballs
looking at me.
"I have never teen '° many
people in such limited 1.,.ce. They
were vtnually 1uffoca~. they
were packed ln IO tight, ' Soto
taid.
What p-eet.ed \he CHP oWcer'•
eyec when he opened the rear
door to the abandoned truck w.,
' . t
I
40 undocumented aliens crammed
inside after an illegal j<>rder
croesing.
"There was stand -
ing-room-only in there," Soto
said.
The CHP responded to the
teene near El Toro Friday after
bel.ng alerted to a mllee~lona
traffic jam on the northbound
freeway lanet.
Two vana reaponded from the
U.S. Border Patrol's checkpoint
along the freeway near San
Clemente and took the men back
'
to the station for processing and
the usual free bus ride back to
Mexico.
Soto, who speaks Spanish, said
many o{ the 40 men from the
Me~can sta~of Ouahajuawa~
peared to be suffering Crom de-
hydration u temperatures hov-
ered In the mld-808. U.S. Border
Patrol agents said no one was
hospltaUzed.
The truck driver left the keys in
the rental vehicle when he Oed,
apparently to avoid arrest for
smugglln~ Illegal aJJenit.
t
MlchHI Scott
CoataMeaa
'We jump In the pool
and play Marco Polo!"
M•ry StKey
S•nta An•
"I lay out In the sun
then I jump In my jacuzzi.
That really cools me
down."
Jania Purtex
Fountain Valley
"I sit in the bathtub
with a glass of wine. Try
it. It doesn't matter what
time of day It is.''
Chrla Bevlll
Fullerton
"I sit In my air con-
ditioned house or lay out
by the pool. Because I
llve In Fullerton t he
beach Is too far.''
llY ROBERT BARltER .,. . .,.., ........
A 16-year -old Huntington
Beach youth fell to his deatb
Sunday while climbing down an:
1,800-foot cliff on Santa Catalina
Island, authorities said. • ·
Loe Angeles County sheriff'i ·
deputy Robert Stoneman said t~
boy, Identified as Jeff Pigage, ~
9442 Greenwich Drive, was hikina
at about 1 p.m. Sunday with a
friend when he fell about 180 fee~
in the Palisades area of Catalina.::
Stoneman said he didn't kno..=
what caused young Pigage, .;
student at Wintersburg Higb
School, to fall. •
His 20-year-old, unidentified.
companion told investigators ~.
couldn't reach Pigage after the fall:
and climbed down the rest of the:
cliff to a beach, where he called ~ _
a small fishing boat which tool:
him to Avalon. :
A sheriff's helicopter was ~.
patched to the area, but Pigagie:
was pronounced dead upon th8.
arrival of paramedics. •
A friend of the dead boy,
Kenneth Anderson, 18, said in a
telephone interview today that be.
drove Pigage and a companion ,·
whom he knew only as Joe, to the
boat in Long Beach which' takes
passengers to Catalina 26 miles
away.
"Jeff did a lot of hiking and
camping and he wanted to take
lots of pictures and get away from
the city for a couple of days,"
Anderson said this morning.
"He was real happy the last time
I saw him Saturday. He spent his
last money on film and food. He
and Joe took backpacks and were
going to be camping out," he said.
Anden10n said he was infonned
of the death S unday by Jeff's
mother, who was attempting to
contact her son's hiking compa-
nion to aet details.
Badham praises
Reagan record
Shot fired
in Newport
love triangle
A man is accused of pulling out a
gun and opening fire early Sun-
day when he discovered his girl-
Criend with another man at a !IJ,~~1Y4 O~N DAVIES
"Nobody is mentioning Re-
aganomics in a derisive sense
today," according to Rep. Robert
Badham, R-Newport Beach.
Badham, who spoke at the
inaugural Republican Unity Din-
ner combining the Irvine Re-
publican Club and the Irvine Coast
Republican Women's Club in Cor-
ona del Mar, has been one of
President Reagan's strongest
boosters.
He showed why Friday night by
treating his affluent GOP au-
dience to a checkllst of economic
improvements Reagan w'll likely
lean upon if he decides to seek
re-election, 90mething the New-
port lawmaker is fairly certain of.
Bad ham said that in the last two
and a half years, "Inflation has
gone to practically uro; un-
employment is down. the stock
market, productivity and fore•gn
trade are up; the respect that our
Irvine girl select e d
to b e poste r child
Thirteen-year-old Teri Hartley
of Irvine has been selected by the•
Cerebral Palsey Foundation as
one of its three Orange County
poster children.
Teri, whv recently w"as one of
several winners in a Special
Olympics beauty pageant, also
performed a ballet dance last
week at the Orange County Fair.
Linda Hartley, Teri's mom, said
the exposure has given her daugh-
ter more ambition to improve
herself.
We're
Listening •••
642·6086
~ 19 OuerentMCI '°'°"°"Y t 11<11v n you oo
nOI h•v• )'OU' jllf,HH t)y !1 .IOpm eel tMll0t• r pm and you• 'oily ••1111 Ot O\'i.•9<""
country entertains ... ovel"'9eU la
higher than it has been almost
anytime since World War ll,
NATO is strong, ... and the only
thing stopping us is our deficit.
which is intolerable."
"We already have $1 trillion of
debt," he said, and a $200 billion
deficit each year is added to that.
"The debt serVice alone is almost
$100 million a year," he said.
"Until the Ccngress ot · the
United States has the ability and
the will and the national spirit to
say 'no' to new programs and to
deficit spending, the ~tuation will
only get worse," predicted
Bad ham.
Difficult days are ahead for
Republicans, the GOP lawmaker
said, because "the Democrats have
dug in hard and are opposing the
president at every turn."
More money, time and effort
must be spent to elect Republicans
to the House of Representatives,
said Badham. • In answer to a question about
action being considered to force
the United States to stay within it.'I
budget, Badh am said there are
two risks. If a constitutional con-
vention is called, the bylaws and
rules for its conduct could be
subject to no restraints, he said.
The eecond risk, he said, is "If an
amendment is propoeed to the
Constitution which says, 'the Unit-
ed States of America shall have a
balanced budget unless there is
some reason not to,' and If they .
throw that out to the states. a
battle royal would start."
· Newport Beach apartment, police
reported. No one was injured.
Cary Robert Ha.Non, 34, was
arrested on suspicion of attempted
murder after he allegedly fired
one round fron1 a .45-ca.liber
handgun at Richard Alan
Hartsfield, 30, police said. The
shot rnilaed.
Hanson, who listed himself as
\he director of an Anaheim secur-
ity business. was taken into
custody without incident outside
an apartment at 207 Orange St. He
is being held on $250,000 bail.
Poli~ reported Hanson showed
up at the residence at 2:20 a.m ..
confronted the second man in the
apartmen t bedroom and fired a
single shot. Police said the two
me n a lso e ngaged in a
push-and-shove match. Neigh-
bors called the police.
Han8on, police said, is a resident
of Michigan but has been living at
the Promontory Point apartments
in Newport Beach.
Nurse to handle
patient liaison
Marian Smith, a licensed voca-
tional nurse, has been appointed to
the newly created position of
patient liaison at Humana Hospi-=·
t.al Huntington Beach, formerly
Huntington lntercommunity Hos-
pital. h l s . h . . . ts Int is ro e, nut vwts patlen
dally, helping them solve prob-
lems that arise between admission
and release from the hospital. She
also assists visitors whoee loved
ones are undergoing surgery or .
are hos pl t.aliz.ed in the in tensive or
coronary care units.
What do you lake about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like'>
Call the number at left and your message will be recorded,
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The same 24·hour answering service may be used to n>cord let·
ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include
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calls. please • -
Tell us what's on your mind
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L. 8chwert1 Ill
Publlal'lef
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All other departm9nt9 Ma..Q21
MA .. M1'1CI
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Co(>ytlQ!ll 111113 O.•nge Coe•I ~ ~ NO
news alOrlH . lllu111111on1 eOllOrl•I mell•• 01
•OV..l_,,...,11 n.. .. n mev tMI •91>10Cluced ~ .......
~Of Copyligl\I ,_... S.iu•O•y 1no 8uno1r II ybv 00 llOI 1ece .. e yOU1
copy Dy 7 • m eel Detoo•
10 • In -, ..... '""y .... II"-~ Chea, Dowellby ReJmond Mecl,.n
EdltOt and Auistani Controller
C"cutetton T•llMMe
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MMIOt'
VOL.71.NO.• ,
.
' ' I
' I
' I ,
: i
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B ULLETIN BOARD
Sun, skin forum at hospital
A free community health forum on "Sun and the Skin" will be
conducted Wednesday at Fountain Valley Community Hospital.
The session begins at 7 p.m. in the auditorium at the hospital, 17100
Euclid St.
"Too many people are unaware of the damage to the skin
caused from radiation produced by the sun," said Craig Myers,
administrator of the hospital. "Problem.5, from early aging to
cancer, can be averted by learning about the different types of
radiation and how they interact with different types of skin."
Participating in the skin program will be local physicians who
specialize in skin care, cancer treatment and radiation therapy.
Kids' beach program starts Friday in CdM
A one-hour program for pre-schoolers to junior hlgh
youngsters begins Friday at Corona del Mar State Beach, sponsored
by the Children's Sand and Surf MissJon.
Two programs run daily Mondaysthrough Fridays from lO to
ll:l5a.m.andagain from l t.o2:15 p.m.atBigCorona. F.ach program
features drama, object lessons, games Bible quizzes and songs.
Parents are encouraged to observe the 'daily program,
sponsored by an interdenominational team of Christian high school,
college and prof~ional people.
Visiting artists to put works on display
The annual visiting artist program a t the Laguna Beach School
of Art begins July 25 with abstract expressionist artist Emerson
Woelffer hosting the five-day series of demonstrations and
discussions.
Woelffer's works are on display at the school gallery, 2222
Laguna Canyon Road. He will be guest of honor at a reception July
28 from 7 to 10 p.m. and is scheduled to give a slide lecture that
evening at 8 p.m . For infonnation, call 497-3309.
POLICE LOG
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 18, 1983 * _..
Just float your troubles away
Never mind 'Altered States' -flotation tanks can ease stress
!l,f!AJ?.~O~GSWORTH
It can help people learn a
foreign language In half the time,
I ta promoters claim. It can ald
students in memorizing achoo)
work. they say. Some people use it
to help themaelves learn a sport by
liaten..lng to instructional tapes.
Some try to eecape from the stress
of the day by simply relaxln,g.
"lt" is a flotation tank.
Paul Ryan, who sells flotation
tanks in Newport Beach, said a
tank can be used by anybotly who
wants to try and get away from
UCe's nonnal hassles and solve
their penJOnal problems without
any external pressure.
The tan.It is about eigh t feet long
and four feet wide and contains 12
lnches of ~ater with 800 pounds of
Epsom salts in it. The Epeom saJts
glv• the water a high buoyancy,
Model Dan Barger demonstrates
how one enters a flotation tank
(above left ) and relaxes away the
stress and strain of business and
Dell1fltlol ...... .., ...............
p e rsonal problems (above).
Though the therapy supposedly has
lots of beneficial effects, it's not
usually done fully dressed.
Ryan satd, and people can become
totally relaxed in an hour's time.
However, some people cannot
relax when they think about
flotation tanks. The movie "Alter-
ed States" depicted a man in a
flotation tank who reverted back
to a Neanderthal man. That and
being enclosed in an eight-foot
box • can give people that
claustrophobic feeling.
''Unlike the movie, people who
go into the tanks like animals come
out like human beings," Ryan
said. ''After people get into the
tanks, the claustrophobic feeling
goes away."
With seemingly more people
joining health clubs along the
Orange Coast, Ryan thinks the
tanks are a great supplement to
the health-rorucious.
"The fimess craze has helped
business." Ryan said. "The tanks
are not a replacement for exercise,
but they do add to a fitness
program. Number one, they help
relax muscles and number two,
the tanks take the stress off
Injuries and help them heal
faster." -
One hour in the notation tank is
equal to five to six hours of sleep,
and after three hours in the tank,
Ryan said he felt like he had had a
regular night's sleep and was
ready to go.
Each session costs $25. and a
flotation tank can be installed in
the home for about $3.500.
Professional football's Dallas
Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles
and baseball's Philadelphia
Phillies use the tanks for various
reasons.
Marine files__ may tab slaying victims
By tbe Associated Pre11
Long Belleh police say they're
checking military records against
photos of apparently lifeless
Marines that were found at the
home of a man charged with eight
homosexual murders.
The photos of the Marines were
among 2,000 pictures found at the
Long Beach home of Randy
Steven Kraft, said Doug Otto,
Kraft's attorney.
He said the snapshots were
confiscated from Kraft's home
during two searches following
Kraft's arrest May 14 in the death
of a Marine stationed at the El
Toro air station.
Investigators believe several of
those photos, being held by Or-
ange County Deputy District At-
torney Bryan Brown, were of
Marines primarily because of
their regulation recruit crewcuts.
Otherwise, they remain uniden-
tified.
Kraft. a 38-year-old computer
analyst, was arrested after Cali-
fornia Highway Patrol officers
found the body of El Toro Marine
Terry Lee Gambrel of Indiana in
the passenger seat of Kraft's car
on Interstate 5 in south Orange
County.
Kraft was charged with Gam-
brel's murder.
Four other bodies since have
been found near that location, and
Kraft has been charged with
murdering one of those victims,
Eric Church. 21, of Hartford.
Conn., whose body was found
there Jan. 26.
ln addition, Kraft has been
charged with murdering Rodger
James Devaul Jr., 20. of Buena
Park; Geoffrey Alan Nelson, 18, of
Buena Park; Wyatt Loggins. 19, of
Montclair; and Mark Howard
Hall, 22, whose nude. emasculated
body was found near San Juan
Capistrano on Jan. 3, 1976.
Boy, 8, drowns in Viejo
An 8-year-old boy visiting from
Utah drowned in Lake Mission
Viejo late Sunday alter he
wandered away from a group of
children he was playing with.
The youth, Glen R. Hurd. was
pronounced dead on arrival at
Mission Community Hospital at
6:20 p.m., an Orange County
coroner's deputy said .
Lifeguards on the scene search-
ed for about an hour before
finding Hurd floating within a
roped-off swimming area in the
lake. Efforts by Orange County
paramedics to revive him on the
scene failed.
The boy's family had come to
California to visit friends in
Mission viejo.
Muggers attack man ~Q Newport holdup try From the at-ease Private Label Collection ...
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STOCKS
\41tt\ N•t \•I•\ H•t P l "°'(lo"' t 1>4 P ( "0' {low C"9
~>---------
NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
QVOU.TtONl INCLUoe rMOH OH fHf N!W VOAK, MIOWUI. l>AOl,IC, ... w. tolrTOl'I. °'"'"Olr ANO CINC~NATI ITOCK llCC~ANOl.I ANO
lllf>OfltlO IV THf. HAID IN8'1NIT
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• 1
Dow Jones Final
Down 2.41
Cloelng 1, 111.IO
Wholesale prices up;
cost of food declines
By tbe A'11ociated Pre11
WASHINGTON -Wholesale prices roee 0.5
percent in June, but fell at an annual rate of 1 percent in
the first half of the year, the government says. The
Labor Department said the latest increue waa the
biggest gain in seven months, but the White HOUie
greeted the news as further evidence of moderatina
inflation. Food prices were down 0.6 percent, the biggest
fall again since June. A statement by President Re-ean
released by the White House said the wholesale price
J.igures indicate "economic growth can continue without
ltriggering an outburst of new inflation."
Money s upply up $5.8 billion
NEW YORK -The nation's basic money supply
climbed $5.8 billion in the week ended July 6, prompting
analysts to predict interest rates would continue to riae
in the weeks ahead, the Federal Reserve Board said
today.
TWA 's losses $108.9 million
WASHINGTON -Trans World Airlines, blaming
money-losing discount fares, says it lost $108.9 milllon In
the first-half of the year, compared with an SM. 7 million
lcm in the first half of 1982. TWA's resu118 followed
Eastern Airlines announcement of a $33. 7 million loa in
the April-June period on top of a first quart.er lam of
$60.7 million, for a total first-half deficit of $94.4 million,
a rerord for the airline. Both airllnea, citing the effecu of
the air-fare wars, said they had no choice but to go along
with the cuts initiated by competitors to keep their share
of the market.
Industrial production increased
WASHINGTON -Industrial production at U.S.
tactories and mines increased by l. l percent in June, the
seventh straight monthly gain, the government says.
June's production gain matched the 1.1 percent advance
of May. Output had risen 1.4 percent in March and 1.9
percent in April. "It shows that the recovery has a great
deal of momentum behind it," said Albert H. Cox Jr. of
Merrill Lynch Economics Inc. "The economy is
continuing on a good. steady. strong recovery path," said
Robert Wearott of Wharton Econometrics.
Firm fine d in lax evasion probe
NEW YORK -Marc Rich & Co. A.G., has been
fined $1 million for its refusal to release docwnenta to a
federal grand jury investigating an alleged t.ax evasion
scheme. The company, one of the world's largest
commodities trading firrlu has been ordered to pay the
$50,000-a-day fine, which has been accumulating since
late June. Judge Leonard B. Sand impoeed the fine on
June29at U.S . District Court in New York's Manhattan.
At the request of federal proeecutors, Sand ordered that
the company pay the accumulated $1 million fine by 4:30
p.m. today.
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW YOltll IAPI· S.lft, • P m Prla a nd net chant• of •~• te n motl ectlve A,,,...IC•" S•ot~ E•Cllanoe 11· 1uu . lrodlno n•llo"•fl ~ •• mot•"'"'" '1 lmpC'*'1 Ul,SOO t CypnnCo ltl,900 ~!\
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OomePtrt 1o.i ..... loo ''"' + 1-1• Pe!l.•w_wl_•~~~-'w~,300'--~~·~~+-'--'1.,.
UPS AHO DOWNS
NEW V()ltl( Cit.Pl -Tiie lollowlne 1111 •hO•• Ille New York Sloct< E•c-
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SYMBOLS ·
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GOLD QUOTATIONS
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