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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-08-08 - Orange Coast Pilot>1 ' Ma Bell's line busy Nationwide strike de/a.rs long distance calls; local use unaffected Prom staff and wlre reports A nationwide strike against American Telephone & Telegraph Co. reached out and touched only a few customers early today, but phone companies warned the real test of the strike's effect would come with the crush of weekday business calling. Pacific Telephone, a branch of the AT&T network, serves most qf. Orange C.Ounty. /\B picket lines went up around the country Sunday, officials of the companies making up the Bell system noted delays in directory lHf DRANGI COAST MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1983 assistance, repair service, tele- phone installation and long-distance operator assistance. Normal calling was largely un- affected, but both management and officials of the three striking unions said problems may worsen if the strike by 675,000 operators and technicians drags on. In Orange County, about 5,397 non-management employees walked off the job and began picketing telephone offices early today. Those striking include re- pair technicians, line repair per- sonnel and operators, said Nancy Harlow, assistant manager of press relations for Pacific Tele- phone. Harlow said callers can expect delays when dialing operators or directory assistance lines. "We want to stress to people that they should use the phone book as much as possible. Don't dial 411 unless you have to. And, in an emergency, dial 911 instead of 0, for the operator," Harlow said. Areas served by General Tele- phone, including Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach, will not be af- fected by the AT&T strike, said Hal C.Ompton, public affal.ra ad- ministrator for GTE. "We foresee no interruptions in service.'' Com- pton said. Around the nation, picketing began at hundreds of phone company facilities. Key issues in the strike are wages and job security. In Denver, strikers car- ried signs reading "Ma Bell abuses her kids." Demonstrations were generally peaceful, although police reported that a striking Southern Bell (See TELEPHONE, Pa1e A% COUNTY IDITIDN OR ANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Humid weather to stick around By PHIL SNE.IDERMAN OflMO.-, ......... Keep those cold drinks and beach towels handy. The hot and muggy weather that made life uncomfortable over the weekend will prevail through Friday, the National Weather Service predicted. The weekend weather caused power outages throughout the county and prompted thousands of inland residents to head for the beaches. Asked about the forecast for the co m i n g wee k 1, N W S meteorological technician Bill Hopper sighed, "Unfortunately. more of the same. more of the same.'' (See HUMID, Pa1e AZ> .,.., Not,._.., NcNnl ..... This was what Capistrano Beach house looked like today after being battered by high tides. Bottom drops out Tid es r uin Capo B each h o use kitchen By STEVE MITCHELL Of .... .,.., ........ The kitchen floor to Dr. Henry Austin's $1 million Beach Road home in Capistrano Beach is gone. So is the wooden deck that fronted on the ocean and so is a two-decades-old seawall that once protected the four-bed.room, three bathroom home. A combination of large surf and high tide wreaked havoc on the two-story house Sunday night. and Austin's 22-year-old son, Dan. swveyed the damage from a vacant lot next door this morning. "The surf took out the front wall and then started quartering the deck," he said. ''The decking went out and then it was time to bail out all the renters." (See HOUSE, Page AZ ) High tides, high anxiety Neighbors check palm tree on Highland Drive in Newport Beach that was struck by lightning Sun- day. Bolt broke scattered burning one was injured. 091y ............ .,,--. ........ window and branches. No Our area 's divorce capital County leads West, which tops nation in splits., survey shows 8y KAREN E. KLEIN Of .... Delly ....... llMf The divorce rate in the western bruted States is 59 percent higher than divorce rates in the rest of the United States, according to a new survey, while separate figures show Orange C.Ounty's divorce rate tops the California rate by almost 4 percent. A survey done jointly by the University of Chicago and the University of Texas revealed that divorces occur most often in California, Oregon and Washing- ton, said Norval Glenn, the Texas On the other hand ..• Sexy b edrooms can p ep up m arriages LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mtrron, puffy pUlowa and a fitting lblt tree 1n I.he bedroom can cure tniddle--ap marriage blah&, an l'adDo Interior deligner' says. Suzanne Faullcner says a well-designed, leXY bedroom can 4IYell be good for tleep&ng. Min tbe earlier~. the bedl"09M WM the 1-t room t.o do," ahe IDt. "It ... alway. the plaYJ'OOin, tbe chlldren'a room. the uvm, ftXlm -only the import.ant llvm, areas. "Now that thetr ch1ldNn a.re older, or have le.ft l'wme, \hey ~ ooupla) feel a oertaln freedam totpend more Ume in tbMr bedroom. watchJnc TV or1wbatever. They a1IO have J!\Ol"e Jlllure hours t.o tleep latet'. Or :;lbe they just want to make that IS*le a little more important.'' the !:ndno--aree delfcner. U money II no object, an eledtronk:aUy contrOIJed tkyu,ht can be a tfteth of freil'I air,~ wlttl a ,reen.houM-10lariwn and ape, l'auUmer -'cl. But for the mkklle~ °" buddlinc ~•he~ cbMper Wayt to 111deeonw llftlUAlly. lier recommendatbll tndW: -Ute colon to crte•. ~mood. ''Bwrytb1n1 done in wbtt.e .. imlUoW,'. lhe said. -Add miJT'On and lotl of.,., plllowt ln eJCdt.Jng ma1erl.ala, , ... SEXY ISDllOOMI, P.,. Al) sociologist who interpreted the survey data. Glenn's was a national survey, dealing with the geographic areas used by the Census Department. Orange C.Ounty's Research and Planning Division, meanwhile, found there were 52,513 divorced men in the county and 74,413 divorced women, said Al Davidson, administrative analyst. Those figures. obtained from 1980 census data, mean 16.7 percent of the county's adult population is divorced. The California average for 1980 showed only 13 percent of the adult population was divorced. The higher rate in Orange ·County is under&tandable, Glenn said in a telephone interview from his Texas office. People who live in urban or semi urban areas are more likely to be divorced than those who live in rural areas. "People tend to move to cities or suburbs after they get a divorce." he explained. The area in Glenn's study which reported the moat long-term marriages was the North Atlantlr region. C.Onvene- ly, the Mounl..un region, including Arizona. New Mexico, Utah. Wyoming, Idaho and Montana, showed a high divorce rate, leOOnd only to the Pacific region. He attributed the West's hi.ch Ike DIVORCE, Pase At Homes, streets and autos inundated along coast Sunday By LORENZO BENET Of .. Deir N'4 ..... For three hours Sunday night, high tide<: flooded dozens of Balboa Peninsula streets, homes and automobiles, according to police and city officials. And city crews are braced for the same destructive conditions tonight when high tide is expected at 9:38 p.m. When the tide hit its peak at about 9 p.m. Sunday. the Newport Beach police switchboard lit up with calls from residents seeking aid for flooded homes and auto- mobiles, officers said. The extent of damage to homes, however. was difficult to ascertain this morning. Two lifeguard towers on Newport Beach floated off their foun- dations. authorities said. Further north, high tides which flooded Pacific C.oast Highway in Seal Beach and Huntington Beach Sunday night were expected to return tonight as well. Police said they plan to close PCH in the Sunset Beach area and from Warner Avenue south at about 8 tonight. "A lot of people (beachgoers) got stuck behind the barricades last night," said Huntington Beach Lt. Tim Walker. He said officers would begin setting up the barricades at about 5 p.m. No damage was reported to local beachfront properties in the Hunt- ington and Su.met Beach areas. Newport's general services di- rector. Wade Beyeler, said the flooding conditions were much worse than in last March's devas- tating st.onns. The surf reached the edges of the beachfront side- walk, Beyeler said. "That's farther than anyone had seen it before," he said. Water started seeping onto the streets as early as 6:30 p.m .. Beyeler said. The tide peaked at 8:48 p.m . and was coming in on parts of 7th Street at midnight. Many beachgoers were leaving during the high tide's peak. caus- ing a massive traffic jam along Newport and Balboa boulevards, he said. (See FLOODED, Page A3) Major banks boos t prime to 11 p ercent NEW YORK (AP) -St>veral major commercial banks raised their prime lending rates by one-half percentage point to 11 percent today. the highest level in nearly six months. The banks raising their prime, or base, lending charge included Citibank in New York, the na- tion's second-largest commercial bank by deposits; No. 3 Chase Manhattan Bank in New York; sixth-ranked Chemical Bank in New York; No. 8 First National Bank in Chicago; No. 10 Bankers Trust, New York, and No. 13 Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh. The prime rate had stood at 10.5 percent since Feb. 28. when the industry lowered it from 11 per- cent. The 10.5 percent rate had been the lowest since Nov. 6, 1978. The last time a major bank raised its prime rate was when Chase Manhattan raised it to 12 percent from J 1.5 percent last Nov. 16. But that was after Chaae had undercut the rest of the industry by going to l 1.5 percent on Oct. 22. 1982, and no other major banks followed. The last time all the major banks raised their prime rates was Feb. 17. 1982, when they lifted the charge to 17 percent from 16.5 percent. The gradual decline in the prime rate from early 1981 until last February had followed de- clines in open-market interest rates, which in tum lowered (See PRIME, Pa1e A%) I Some of t hell1"9lng...,eatlonaof • generation llQO-people Ilk• Joan Baez - are back In the mU9fcal fold, aome reunited with the vocal partnera they climbed to fame with. Page 83. -~----• --·--A --· I I t , A2 Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Monday, Aug. 8, 1983 . CONTINUED STORIES --~~-WE ASKED:~--~~----~------~; From Page A1 • PRIME ... banks' cost of obtatrung funds for lending. But market interest rates have been rising since May to their highest levels in a year. Since that has squeezed banks' "spreads" - the price they pay for funds and the interest they charge !or loan- ing money-many credit analysts in the past few w eeks had forecast a prime-rate increase. The prime rate is the base that banks use to calculate interest charges on loans to companies with top-grade credit, although some banks make loans at rat.es below their stated prime rate. While not having a direct rela- tionship with consumer loans, the prime reflects general movements in other bank lending rates. The prime rate hit a record 21.5 percent in late-pecember 1980. DIVORCE CAPITAL ... divoree rate to increased mobility. "The rate of population move is great.er," he said. "With a higher population turnover, you get more tenuous social ties." In the F.ast, more stable social bonds exist and more couples tend to live near extended family members. "If troubles arise, the couples are more motJvated to work it out rather than gave up," Glenn said. And, in more traditional, stable circles, people are more likely to marry some<>ne lake themselves- someone who Cits in wath their ethnic background and shares their vaJue system. Thus, mar- riages made in that setting are more likely to succeed. SEXY BEDROOMS ... such as silk. Burlap is out. -Chuck the old furniture and the "old !lower bedspread with the matching cutesy draperies." "It's hard to get a sexy or sensuous feeling with heavy wood furniture in a room. Chrome and glass furniture gives a much more open and airy look." A skin or down comforter will suffice for the bed, Faulkner added. -Plan on plants. "One large ficus tree, with the proper lighting, will proVlde a glamorous atmosphere, especially if reflected in mirrors," she said. "Flowers are sensuous, even on ix>Sters." Fawkner also recommended getting a new bed, perhaps a round one. "Waterbeds are still very in, but they can look raunchy if not done right," she cautioned. Lighting showd be "annospheric," with recessed or hanging lamps and three-way bwbs. "EnvironrnentaJ music" is also intnguing. ··You can go to sleep with the sound of the surf." Faulkner saad. TELEPHONE STRIKE.:. employee and his son were ar- rested for vandalizing a u·lephone box in Gainesville, Fla. The men, charged with felony criminal mischief and grand theft. pulled the wires out of a connec- tion box, interrupting service to hundreds of residents for several hours, police said In New York City. about 50 workers rallied at noon outside New York Telephone's hPad- quarters in Manhattan, shouting, ''Ma Bell, go to hell," in English and Spanish. Mary Saulsbury, a striking clerk for Ohio Bell, said manage- ment workers at switchboards appeared to be having problems "You wait until you get ill least 20 rings before they answer, and then half of them can't find the number you want," she said. 'Out of all the different jobs you've had, which occupation was your favorite?' Jim Steele, Diamond Bar, aalea "Sales I guess. It allows one the freedom to be self-motivated.'' l1aac Gonzalea, Rlveralde, 1hlpplng "I guess working In construction. You work In different atmospheres; you know different places. all the time. And you do something dif- ferent everyday." Lori Jacob1on, Yorba Linda, Interior dealgner "The one I have now. Interior design. It is quite a challenge, quite, quite challenging.'· Suaan Johnaon, Santa Ana, admlnlatratlve •••latent "A night auditor at Hol- iday Inn. It didn't pay real well but it was lots of fun. I liked working nights and sleeping days." Richard Hauck, El Toro, •hipping •'Being a carpenter. But now the lousy bums don'twantyoutowork. I liked it because I got to work outside all the time In shorts -seemed like there was more free- dom." MaryGaaca, Long Beach, receptlonlat ·'I really like the job I have now as a recep- tionist. I get to greet all the clients. I like dealing with the public to that degree." Dani Leigh, SantaAne, en1werlng Mrvlce oper- •tor "The job I have now. I like the people I work with and I like dealing with the public, unless they are suicidal. We answer for a lot of psychlatrlstsand we deal with their patients and crisis." Henry Toma•, Rivera Ide, exJHMtlllng "Civil engineer, be-, cause I was making draw-: lngs In the office then I l would go out In the field. : So I was always in and • J out" /, Phone strike may drag on HUMID WEATHER ... . . I ·, i Managem ent, labor reported widely split on many issu es WASHINGTO~ (AP) -Man- agement and labor are far apart on wages and other issues as Ameri- can Telephone & Telegraph Co.'s 675,000 operators and te<:hnicians are striking the company for the second time in 12 years. Only minor service disruptions were reported Sunday, the first day of the walkout, as managers and supervisors worked in place of the striking em ployees. "Management people are hand- ling the jobs very capably and efficiently," AT&T spokesman PicWagner said Sunday. "I expect that the same will be true when the need for equipment service arises,'' However. Wagner acknowl- edged that the real test of the system wowd start today. when business calls flood the lines. Across the country, picket lines were set up outside Bell System offices, where striking workers predicted the company would be unable to keep up with the crush of service requests. Glenn E. Watts, the president of the Communications Workers of America, joined chanting em- ployees of the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. and walked a picket line here this morning. After walking the line for a few minutes for the benefit of tele- vision cameras, Watts told re- porters that "unfortunately, I can't report any progress." Watts said he had a "very brief We're Listening ••• 642•6086 DD'lw~ le 0-•nteed MUtlotr r •o<1•r 11 rov oo ~Ot n•ve flJ\I' V•I>•• by & )() D m UM bolor• / p "' ~~U' cnpy tWIU btl' CWA's Glenn Watts walks picke t line encounter'' with AT&T manage- ment Sunday, after the strike began. "But nothing developed.'' he added. The CWA president said he still expected talks to resume later today, but said no fonnal bargain- ing sessions had been scheduJed. "At the moment, I can't see an end to (the strike)," Watts said. "The members of our union insist on a fair settlement." Besides the CW A, which rep- resents 525.000 Bell System em- ployees, the striking workers are represented by the International Brotherhood of El ectrical Workers and the Telf'- com mun 1ca t 1ons In te rna t 1o nal Union Wages and )Ob set•unty were at issue in the talks, which were ad.)Oumed as the old pact expired at midnight Saturday. local time. ''I would not expect a settle- ment m the next day or two.'' Walts said Sunday on the ABC television program "This Week With David Brinkley." Appearing Later on the same program, AT&T Chairman Charles Brown said that although the two sides differ widely on a new wage package, other un- specified bargairung issues related to the scheduled divestiture of the huge telecommunications com- pany remain unresolved. "There are a lot more issues than economics, I assure you." Brown saad. "The divestiture has caused some complexities in bargairung." The CWA had been stressing employment security in the nego- tiations. seelung guarantees that AT&T and the Bell companies will retrain e mployees for new jobs as each moves separate ly into dif- ferent segments of the tele- communications industry. The company's last money ofCer would have limited wage gains for experienced workers to 3.5 per- cent per year for the next three years. It also would have retained cost-of-living protection that has provided percentage' raises equal to three-quarters of the annual Consumer Price Inde x increase. What do you lake about the Oa1ly Pilot" What don'I you hke" Cnll the number at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropr iate editor. The same 24 hour answenng ser vice may be used to record let t<'rs lo the t:d1tor on any topic Mallbox contrlhutors mus t include the ir name and telephon(• number for verahcat1on No circulation <'alls. please TE.'11 us what's on your mind ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. 8chw•rtz Ill PubllGher c 1 .. 11fi.d edvertleln9 714/942·M1t All ottlet depertment• 942-4321 MAIN O,FICI! l'l(l w.,, fl•· St c "''O M-C.A Mao tOl)IO\ Ill>• t~{j() (,,ti. M-C.A 926?6 C"llY'IO"' t9&1 l~MQ<I C.0Ht l'ublt"'"'9 Compeny No ,,.w, \tQrt•t llhJtUAllOnt flll'JflOtU~t tn•lt,., or "dVIMfll'!tNW'\I" n11ttt'1n IT\e'f t>t rt PU'°'i(t0 •ttt~ tP'(.Hll M''"'''Mt'1 nt Cl')flyrt@hl Ow"'f1 S•ll"O.V •no $11t10tr 11 yOU Ot\ f\Qf t..Ce•v• yOV. ""'1'I by , • " ...... i.1&• IQ • m .. ., yCM <00\I ,., Oil~.O Chazy Dow .. lby Raymond Macl••n EdilOf end Alt411tnt ConHoller StHloflO •'~•• '""''"~ P*'<l 11 C.ooto ~.. C..••100"'41 !UP', ,., 6001 SttU.C:,.phon by ca11,.. ,. I~ '"°"'""" lly "'"' ~ ~ """''"'' C"c:Wtlon Tel1p9'onee ~ 0o*"09Coun4• A•-~ _,,_ 10 ltle Publllher ltetllMl'I '· c.,uo ,.._ion M- ...,,,."lg'Ofl .,..,..,. ,, .... _ ... ,.. lllQUnll~ ........ Oletle I.. ~et• ""'"' ...... _ M•~ ~ L. wtllle"'' '•t.ua.tlbt· .... ..,.~ VOL. 78, NO. 220 From Page A1 High temperatures will range Crom the 80s along the beaches to 100 in inland Orange County. And residents who nonnaUy brag about the region's dry. com- fortable heat w ill have toconunue enduring high, Midwest-style hu- rrudaty. Hopper said a high pressure system over Nebraska and Okla- homa is sweeping warm, moist air from the GuJf of Mexico into the Western states, causing the muggy weather. In adclit.aon to the continuing heat and humidity, there is a 10 percent chance tonight and Tuesday of occasional th understorms. Lightning from spotty week- end storms was the main culprit in power outages reported around Orange County Bill Compton, area manager for Southern California Edison, said 99.000 customers lost power over the weekend -half of them for an extended period lasting from 30 minutes to more than a day. The power failures. coming at a time when residents anxiously sought electricity for rur con- ditioners and refrigerators, prompted 10,000 calls to Edl9on, Compton said. Countywide. the utility com- Aliens short in smuggling fee, abducted Police are continuing their search for two illegal aliens from Mexico who w ere kidnapped at gunpoint in Huntington Beach Saturday by two men who al- legedly had smuggled them across the border, a u thorities said. The missing victims, two teen- agers from Puelva, Mexico, could not come up with the $550 each needed to pay the amugg.lers, said Huntington Beach Lt. Tim Walker. The smugglers and the victims -a 19-year.old boy and a 17-year-old girl -arrived at Koledo Park. on the 17300 block of Koledo Lane, shortly before 9 p.m. where several people were w Ji ting for them. When the teen-agers came up S:>O short In their payment. an argument ensued. during w hich the smugglen forced the pair boc:k into a van, poll~ Maid. A warning shot w.a Clrt'tt. Walker laid. Waiting frlen~ •nd rclatlvee called pollt'('. OHiccra aaid thla mom Ing lh<'y at1U do not know th wh<'reabouts of th(' two v1C'l1'Y\S or lht'lr •• lxiuC'loni pany replaced 109 transfonners, most d amaged by lightning. By early today, pow er had been restored to all but about 375 customers in cen tral and northern Orange County, Compton said. Because residents w ere return- ing to work, the Ediaon official predicted today wowd be the peak electrical damand day of the year. Compton said he believed the company wow d be able to meet all the power needs, but he ad vised reiddents to do some chores such as laundry and dishwashing during the off-peak hours, before 1 p.m . and aft.er 6 p.m. Local beach officials were alao gearing up for another busy day. About half a million people swarmed to the sands over the weekend , and many plunged into the warm 70-<iegree water . At H untington City Beach, where 140,000 people converged over the weekend, lifeguards made 212 rescues. Superviser Mike Gifford said two lifeguards suffered oock injuries when they were pitched by an in.side wave. At Newport Beach, 230,00o visitors were reported over the I weekend, with 300 rescues ie- quired on Sunday alone. : I At Laguna Beach, 65,000 peoele converged on the sands over fie weekend, requiring 300 re&c'fes total on Saturday and Sunday.• High tides contributed to '1e high wave action, lifeguards ~d­ At Laguna, the tides moved safld and threw seaweed up on itte beach as well. Metals firm burglarized • • • • About $42,576 worth of valu- ables were taken late Sat~y night from a Newport Beach g~ld and silver firm after the sto~'s owner apparently brushed bff warnings from his alarm com~y that someone had turned off his survei.llence system, police said; Burglars gained e ntry .•to MODOC Trading Corp., 3471 Tia Lido. by using a power saw HOUSE RUINED... I From Page A 1 ~ Dan's parents rent out their home at 35685 Beach Road, abo 1 halfway down the gated community which is located on the beac between Dana Point and San Clemente. Occupants of the ho were evacuated shortly before the structure sustained ma· damage, Austin said. ~ The Austins, who are full-time residents of Arcadia, received call from their real estate agent Sunday afternoon, telling the huge surf and high tides were threatening the stucco structure._ i "l came down at about 4 p.m . (Sunday). but it was really ~ late by then to do much good," the shlrtl~ resident said. j "The waves were really powerful," he said, shaking hia head . "The~ w ere breaking abo~t 6 to 10 feet, and the tide (7.3 feet at 1J> p.m .) JUSt really did us in. ; He said a pair of aeawalls fronting the property "just werjt down like dominoe, and then the floor to the kitchen fell at.raigtSt ouL" . I The family, has owned the beach houae lince 1967 and Dltl Awitin said it's worth a bout $1 million now. : He figures replacl.ng the seawall wUJ ooet aboul $150,000 uf:I it'll be about the aame amount to repair structural darnlge. Artt that's only if there'• no more~ from h urricane-fed wave. artf hlgh tides. : "We've gol lnaurance for the atruc:ture, but the 1eawall ~t insured," he said. ' Meanwhile, firefighters from the Oranae County nk Oepanment and three hand crewe from Orange CoWlty Jail ~ fW.tng aandbap on the frontage road In preparat.ion for a 7.2'fo6t t.lde expected at about 9:30 tonitrht. l County tire information otflcer Jet( Taylor said h~ * either lido of the Austina sustained deck damage, and another h C dosen at.ructures were thl'ff~ned by S unday night's surf-ti combination. • He Mid •bout 6~ retruen worked thtvugh the rua~h Capiatrano Beach , lnclud.I ~bcin oC the hand ere , flreffshten, and county ~dour operatc>rs and dwnp drtv~rs. The fl~ 1pok~msm•n 11Jd cout.y cnvn will rema.1n on ha.rjd through tonfa ht ln an effort to prevent furtMr ~ to lht hnm('ll. ---- I I' Saddlehack college ~orientation slated An orientation day for student$ attending Saddleback College's Mission Viejo campus for the first time this fall, will be held Tueeday in the Fine Arta Theater quad. A brief presentation by college officials begins at 9 a.m ., and will include a slide program and campus tours conducted by members of the student body government and college pep squad. 1l\e program ends at 1 p.m. and includes a hot dog and soft drink lunch. For information, call the counseling office at 831-4570. Noon art sessions set for Laguna "Art Sandwiched In," a noon-hour gallery talk ~on at the Lquna Beach Museum of Art, continues in August with programs on Wednesdays. The informal program is designed for business people, professionals and shoppers who find it convenient to visit the museum during their noon break. Complimentary coffee and iced tea will be served at noon and visitors ate encouraged to bring a lunch. Talks begin promptly at 12:15 p.m. The museum is located at 307 Cliff Drive. For information, call 4M-a531. Irvine club to receive its charter The Sunrise Exchange Club of Irvine will receive its national charter at a meeting Aug. 14 at the Irvine Marl'iott on Von Karman Avenue and Michelson Drive. The 11 a.m . ceremonies will be followed by a brunch. Members of other Exchange elubs and their wives are invited to attend. Flea market hook, art sale in Laguna A flea market style book and art sale will be held Saturday on the Laguna Beach Museum of Art patio from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Among it.ems to be marked down for sale are att books, posters. carda, calendars, exhibition catalogues, art periodicals, post cards, lithographs and some copper plate art pieces. The museum is located at the corner of Cliff Drive and North Coast Highway. For inlonnation, call 494-6531. Valley burglars get $24,400 loot A weekend bul'glwy WU reported In a home on the 18400 blodc of Santa Car1otta Street. The reported loae Included $20.400 worth of jew- elty, $3,000 worth of dothlng and S 1,400 worth ot eudulo end vie*> equipment. Entry WU apparently INlde by removing a ICfeen end forcing open a IUcllng glaaa window. A llgh1 blue 19M Dodge van wa1 the twget of a bul'glwy on the 900 ~ of Gardenia Avenue. The tou, ..m&ted at $763, lnauded stereo equipment and clgaratt ... A reeldent of the 10000 b6oc:tt of Sen Juan Court reported vandalism ltl her home over the ..-enci. An Intruder poured wax Into her oolof ~ eet end broke the head of her vtdeo recorder, eeutlng $650 dM'\ege. Huntington Beach The P9tco G .. atatlon at 15045 GotcMr\ Wast Street wu the target of a butgtary Sunday. Intruder• b<oke Into a tloof safe, steeling a~t '2.300. The bwglaty of a blue 1973 Dodge ven parked at Brookhurst Street end Pectfk: Coat Highway waa reported Sunday afternoon. The loae lnciuded S300 In CMh, $200 In )ewelry and $50 ln~11tam1. A bufgl., app8'ently UMd • 1erew- d'1Yer to forced entry Into a home on the 1700 b6oc:tt Of Pwtl Street OV9I' the ... end. The !oat WU a .. fe oon..iNng S8.000 In jewelry end s1.ooocuti. Irvine Sevefel Oriental rugs were swiped from a home on the 4000 block of Perslmmon Lane sometime Sunday. Burglars forced entrance to a home on the 4000 block of Wyngate Clrcte Saturday. stealing St.720 worth or veluabfea. A te!evlalon 1et and soma camera equipment was Included on the flat of missing ltem1. Pollce wefe called to a residence on the 100 block of Plnestone Friday to try and persuade a wayward bet which had flown Into the home to leave. Construction equipment totaling $4',245 was stolen from the 16000 b6oc:tt of ConatT\Jcilon Circle Eut eometlme Saturday. A car parked on the 18000 block of Dewb«ry Wey had Its tires slashed Saturday afternoon. PoUce assisted animal control of- floers In quarantining a coyote foond Friday morning on the 5000 bl<>Ck of Altoona Lene. Laguna Beach Laguna Beach police asked • woman who was spotted letting air out of the tires of a car parked on Cllfl Of1ve to stop. No reason was given for the woman's actions. A woman aald a burglar attempted to enter her Aster Street apartment et about 4 e.m. Sunday through a rNr door. but waa frlohtened off by her screams for help.Police weJe unable to find • auapect. A total of $350 In calh was stolen from a guest'• room at a South Coast Highway hotel. A resident In the 400 block of Los Robles reported hearing strange noises early Sunday morning. Police cheeked end round a large rabbit In the backyard . Costa Mesa Three Santa Ana men -• er- rnted on 14.lsptcion of grand theft early today In connecilot\ with the thett or stereo receiver• from cars perked at the Miii C<eelc apwtments, 555 Peularlno Ave. Officer Bob Mlchnlctt said he arre9ted Benjamin Zaragoza. 23. Raf ... Perez, 22 and Enrique Ramirez, 23. a they drove north on the Newport-Colta Mesa Freeway near Oyer Roed. Officers In the police helicopter spotted the MJapects after • resident In the apartment complex notified police. Otllcer1 foond roor radios end aa- sorted 10011 In the auapect1' car. An employee In e record store on Harbor Boulevard told police Sunday two young men tried to Mii him 10 albums checked 001 from a publtc llbrary. He refuNd \0 buy them and called the oop1. A Coate Mesa woman reported she w• beaten by two men during an argument after a wedding reception at her hOUM on Monrovia Avenue. She MJttered a broken nOM, feclel bn.il ... • loose tooth and • sore abdomen. Offioera arrested Clyde Lopez. 28, and Raul Lopez., 25. both of FoontaJn Valley. on sulpiclon of asaeult and battery. Hot, huIDid weather Inay bring • rain Coastal .. a It ,._. T a111P9 17 n '° • &tlMMetle .. • ., 70 lelluu .. 75 • 71 ..,~ 14 Tl '°' .. .., Ollec> 17 76 M 72 ..,,_ 17 M 107 a ...... IO 13 .. .. =.,.-,.: 14 71 .. .. M .. .. 16 ---• 70 .. 7() 11¥f-15 "' IO 17 Tooell• t3 13 .. .. r-too 72 ti .. TWIM .. 71 Ill .. :=o10ll t3 76 II fl » .. Cllow*ton.s c et 13 ~.w.v 119 81 Clwlttone,H C lM 70 ~ IM S6 v ..... dolidl lfWOUQtl l-.YMlll ="91l ~ ~ • ....,. -114 •• 9llernoon end c-.i 11 ee ................ --· --r-~a c 92 71 ----1141..oe"""'~~· NIM ..... ~Qi.ite-...-1-*1 -............ 16t_tNC>OMlend ~IWortll 16 71 .... _.._"-.. I071 = :: :; o-... ---..·-........ ~ 95 70 ..... ~..,.., ...,_ llillnd, --- .............. 1010 t•--210 = = : E.f =:.'':::.%_ "::; ~-" 17 --. -... to ~--76 58 .. 1•--tl02.toM-=-1: ~ ~.::: tW: ::.-:..": .... ,... t2 .. ~.10_ .. _ _._ ~ • a ___ ............. 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M lelr a.a "* 2-4 ,.., M ,.,, w ,.., ... ----..... ::::::: FLOODED ... From PageA1 Tides registering eight feet, a foot higher than normal, coupled with rough surf combined to cause what Beyeler described as a "mess" along the Peninsula. He said the parking lot at the Balboa Pier was completely under water, which was flowing down Palm Avenue to Balboa Boulevard "like a river," he said. Other hard-hit areas were Bay Avenue and side streets adjacent to Balboa Boule vard, which was flooded curb-to-curb from 22nd Street down to A Street, he said. "It covered the center island the whole ~ay," he said. Balboa Boulevard between 47th Street and 32nd Street also was washed out. "We're expecting at least an eight footer tonight," Beyeler said. "If we get showers today, conditions could be worse." City workers closed drainage valves Sunday at 6 p.m . in an attempt to keep seawater from seeping into the streets. Beyeler said he plans to add additional men tonight. "The cause of all this ls still a mystery -maybe its the El Nino CU.ITent," Beyeler said in referen- ce to the warmer ocean cUJTents reported off the coast this year. ''The flooding could be due to the big surge (beavy surf) in the ocean. When you get that kind of surf combined with the high-tide cycle, you don't know what's going to happen." ). Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /MC>nday, Aug 8. 1983 1'3 ------- "fT-··--------- O.ilf l'llol phol.,. ., ~A.3A~J>~ Ii . ... l' ... \ Crowd~ i,warmed to th~ hcac·h<'!ii for relief f rom wN·kc·nJ heat (a hove ), l h<'n !'ome ran into high water on the way homf' after tide" washl'd over Ba lboa Houlc,·ard rn Newport Beach. O•llJ Piiot i>f'olo by lllcl\etel IC ........ Costa Mesa brothers Matt Carreon (left), 5, and Bryan, 2, fin~ a way to beat thr heat without leaving home. traditional tav01 1tAZ£ p.·r tu.ct cx:m1pl mH:1.t'" th<Z.Ql \(~l f,.1\ I~) \VllJdU \Vdl'.1. I lll.l \. m LhQ fnw .t, u o • 1 .. · . fX>pl ll i ~\ lil.:.'l' ... : 1· nau ... u .. ~l Li1 11.,10\. t ... 11 •• navy dt)(.1 t 1...·d and 0u1 ) d m e ~o:Q<Z gh czLkJr-d en.'\>. t' <l~K, madll m 5 oLlemd ond C'IVti 1 l.-, b\Q rn cz1ghtQQ n ~rt'·l' ·olr·n· 44 Fushlon 18/on<I • N<'Wf>Or1 lkm h • ?14 h..,4·5070 IOOI Wt•atwol'><I Blvd • Wt•~fwoorl V11/11!W • :ll:I WH-327.'I l I ~ t I l i .t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Mon'1ay, Aug. 8, 1983 TOP OF THE NEWS NATION Poll: Reagan in 'tight race' By tbe AABoclated Pre111 WASHINGTON -Two new national polls say President Reagan would be locked in a tight race with either of two potential Democratic opponents if the 1984 presidential contest were held today. One survey, by ABC News and the Washington Post, said most of the registered voters who would back former Vice President Walter Mondale or Ohio Sen. J ohn Glenn would do so more because they dislike Reagan than because they Uke the two Democratic hopefuls. Five perish in home fire TOLONO, Ill. -Fire swept through a two-story house today, killing a couple and three children, authorities said. Champaign County Coroner Tom Henderson said the five died of smoke inhalation. Their bodies were found in second-floor bedrooms of the house, in this east-central Illinois farming community. The victims were identified as Lawrence Bleichner, 44; his wife, Anna, 39: his stepson, James Miller, 14; a son. Eugene, 12; and daughter Kimberly. 9. STATE 2,000 protest Khomeini LOS ANGELES -About 2,000 demon- strators shouting "Death to Khomeini" protested the Iranian government of the AyatoUah Khomeini on the 77th anniversary Sunday of the establishment of constitutional monarchy, leaders said. The supporters of the late Iranian Shah · }!eza Pahlavi's regime rallied on the Federal Building lawn in the Westwood area near UCLA, and police said there were no arrests or violence. Two men die in shootout CARSON -Two men were killed, one shot six times and the other once, in barrage of gunfire in the parking lot of La Escondida bar on South San Pedro Street, sheriff's deputies said. The two Los Angeles men, ages 22 and 26, were identified, but their families had not been told by early today so their names were not released, Los Angeles County coroner's in- vestigator Paul Willis said_ 500 flee pesticide spill • MOO RP ARK -A load of pesticide spilled from a derailed frieght train, forcing the evacuation of more than 500 people from a mobile home park. but those people have been allowed to return to their homes today. officials said. Man missing in ferry fall LONG BEACH -A 23-year-old man who feU off a ferry returning to Long Beach Harbor from a chartered harbor cruise could not be found by rescue crews. Coast Guard officials said. WORLD Chad captures Libyan pilot N'DJAMENA, Chad -Chadian authorities today put on display before a large crowd a man they claimed was the pilot of a Libyan plane shot down over the weekend at the desert town of Faya-Largeau. The man was identified as Abdassalam Charfadine, pilot of a Soviet-built Sukhoi fighter. Charfadine told the crowd today he was shot down Saturday and that there were 12 Soviet Sukhois based in the Aouzou strip, a region in northern Chad that Libya occupied in 1973. Earthquake jolts Japan TOK YO -An earthquakP, measuririg 5.8, jolted Japan today. knocking out electricity for several hours, halting railroad service in some areas and damaging a dozen buildings, police said. One woman was killed and 28 people were injured. Police nab five kidnappers DUBLIN, Ireland -Police captured five of seven would-be kidnappers in a bloody gunbattle as they neared the mansion of their int.ended victim. a millionaire businessman who was in England playing polo with Prince Charles at the time. The intended victim was Galen Weston, 42, president of a Canadian-based supennarket empire and vice president of the excluaive Fortum and Mason gourmet food store in London, police said. 'Streak er' shocks tourists BUDAPEST. Hungary -A naked man shocked a tour group and several residents on the main s~t of Debrecen, the government newspaper Magyar Hirlap reported tn Its weekend editions. It was the first known report of a ••streaker." The unidentified man, about 60 years old, disrobed just before arrival of the tourist group at a major hotel. "MOBIL TELEPHONES" A NOW AVAILABLE wRACOM CAll CA THY MclNTYRE (213) 551-0300 Protesting warfare Crippled· airlirier. . ., lands in Vegas ' LAS VEGAS (AP) -A tire blew out on a Republic Airlines DC-9carrylng 102 people Sunday, forcing ita crew to shut down one engine and ci.rcle an airport dump- ing fuel for more than an hour before landing safely, authorities said. It was the fifth incident involv- ing a Republic OC-9 since April. Pasaengers said the crew had them sit in emergency "brace" positiona as the plane, Flight 552 out of Eureka, Calif., landed safely about 4: 15 p.m . at McCar- ran International Airport. Fire trucks and ambulances stood by, but there were no Ceiling crashes at rail station · Injuries, authortties said , and pass· engers departed the plane 1~ normal fashion at a gate. Republic spokesman Redmond Tyler in Minneapolis said piet.e of the blown tire went in to one oC (he aircraft's two engines, which he termed "normal" in such in· stances. ''That is a normal thing, and you shut down the engine to avoi4 further damage," Tyler said. He emphasized that there was no fire in the engine. "No fire, no emergency, no damage, no news," Tyler said. Republic spokesman Bob Gib- bons, also in Minneapolis, said the plane, which carried 97 passen- gers and five crew members, had made a "precautionary" landing. But passengers Pat and Sid Woodard of Memphis, who were sitting next to the wing, said while the plane was circling, they saw a piece of the wing flapping, and after a while it appearffi to blow off. _, Anti-missile demonstrators conducted a die-in Sunday at Ramstein Air Force Base in West Germany during massive protests during a military air show that attracted 500,000 visitors. More than 100 demonstrators were arrested during the melee. JERSEY CITY, N .J . (AP) -A concrete ceiling overhang fell 30 feet and crashed on the main concourse at a commuter train station this momirtg, killing at least one person and injuring about 10 others, officials said. Police at the scene said one person had died. But Fred Boyd, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the PATH commuter line, said two people were killed. Sgt. Allen Maza.lewsld of the Jersey City police said three people were removed from under the U-shaped slab, which was several hundred feet long, and that it was believed one more peraon still was trapped. At that point the pilot an- nounced he was shutting down the right engine, woop.ard said. After the landing there was a hole in the wing. "You could look straight through the wing to the ground," Mrs. Woodard said. ''There wasn't a hole in the wing," Tyler said. "If there was a ho)e there probably was a hole in the trailing edge, the outside rim, of the engine. But I don't know that, but that is not an unusual thing when you blow a tire." Sea World whale hunt draws fire Trunian letters reveal opinions LOS. ANGELES. (AP) -President Harry S Truman believed Russia's entrance into World War 11 against Japan would shorten the war by a year, and he was surprised by the rapid development of the Cold War, his letters indicate. The late president admired his successor. Dwight Eisenhower, but didn't think much of his predecessor, Franklin D. Rooeevelt, of whom be wrote: "There never was a greater egotist unlea it was Franklin D. '' Truman's thoughts on those and many other subjects are contained in more than 500 letters to his wife Bess. The letters, recenUy made public, were described Sunday in a Los Angeles Herald Examiner article by Rice University professor Francis L . Loewenheim, who is working on a study of foreign affairs during the Truman administration. The letters, written between December 1910 and J anuary 1957 when the Trumans agreed to write one another every day they were separated, are at the Harry S Truman Library in Independence, Mo. Truman began writing even before his 1919 marriage to his wife. Truman diacUS!IE!d White House and political matters at length with his wife in the letters. The letters revealed his difficulty and distrust of the Rooeevelt loyalists when he became president upon Rooeevelt's death April 12, 1945. "It teems the late president had a positive genius for picking inefficient administrators," Truman wrote his wife in mid-1946. "His court appointment. are aomewhat diagraceful too. "I've about come to the conclusion that he wanted to do everything himaeU and get all the acclaim for aucceeaful aocompllahmenta, and then have a dumb cluck to take the blame for what failed," Truman wrote. Jesse Jackson forins • • • campaign c0Inni1ttee I • How to arrive at a happy medium. It's easy with our Level Pay Plan. If you've been going through the ups and downs of paying your monthly gas bills we have a way to help balance things out. With our optional Level Pay Plan. It'll spread the costs of your higher winter gas bills over the entire year. So you lace approximately the same· size gas bill every month. Summer and winter. Here's how it works: we'll estimate your total gas bill for the upcoming vear based on the history of gas used in your home and our current rates. Then we'll divide the amount by twelve to establish your monthly Level Pay Plan amount. On the twelfth month your bill will be adjusted to reflect any underpayment or overpayment based on your total actual gas usage compared to your estimated usage. Throughout the year we'll continue to read your meter and review your bills. And your Level Pay Plan amount will be adjusted whenever your aver· age usage decreases or increases sub· stantially or the month following anv rate change. That will help keep the· final month's adjustmen t to a minimum. To participate in th e Level Pay Plan just pay the Level Pay Plan amount on your August gas bill. And if you decidf' to drop the plan at any time. simplv notify us. It doesn't cost you a thing. For more information call your local Gas ComP.any office. You'll like the convenience or our Level Pay Plan. And you'll find it's an easy way to get even with your high winter gas bills. rn .... SOUTHERN CALlf'ORNIA ~ COMAlNV . .. ,. \ ~ I l j r I Rites set for Judy Canova LOS ANG ELES (AP) -Judy Canova, the "hillbilly queen" of radio, stage and movies during the 1930s and 1940s with her comic, down-home singing and acting, has died at 69. Canova died Friday afternoon a t Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital, where she had been hos- pitalized with cancer, her family said. Born Juliette Canova in Starke, Fla., she sang in clubs and on radio while in high school before striking out for New York City with her sister Anne and brother Zeke. • The trio sang their .hillbilly songs at the Village Barn in Green- wich Village before Canova w~ signfl<l to bandleader Paul WI 11 lc- man's national radio show. She stayed with Whiteman for a decade. S he was a regular on the Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy radio show, performed on th e "Woodbury Soap Half Hour" radio show, then hosted her own radio show, "The Judy Canova Show," for 12 years. Canova signed a film contract in 1940 with Republic Pictures and her cornball humor was featured in such movies as "Scatterbrain," "Sis Hopkins" and "Joan of Ozark." Slaying blamed on loud radio GARDENA (AP) -A garment w orker has al- legedly been shot to . death in a dispute over a radio that was playing too loud to suit a neigh- bor. Gardena police saJd Edward G . Elwell, 27, was booked for in- vestigation of murder following the shooting Friday of Emiliano Flores, 37, at Tno Cut- ting Service on West 134th Street in Gardena. Workers at the factory across the street from Elwell's home would not reduce the radio volume, and gunfire flared after a confrontation in which a door was kicked down, Lt. James Peck said Sun- day. Births HOAO MEllllON,AL HOM>IT AL .....,, Mr. and Mrs. Oouglu Com11ock Coe1•11AeN,boy Mr 8nd Mrs. Jeffrey Rulledoe. HUfltlng1on BMch. girt Mr 8nd Mrs. Edw8td o.beuer. W•1mlnfter. gl(t Mr and Mrs ~I Muller•. Hun1· lng1on BMch, girl Mr. and Mra Dougtu Fotter Cotl•M-.boy Mr. and Mr• Gregory Schroeder, Coe1• M-. glr1 Mr. and ~rt. Aobert Poller Cott• l\AeN,boy Mr. •nd Mra. Wllllam Harmon, eo.111\Aeu.boy .My2 Mr. 8nd Mrt. Robert Hoyt. N-· po<1 Beach, glrl Mr. •nd Mra David Giron. Hunt· lnglon Beecll, girl Mr. and Mr1. Joee Gutierrez. eo.1. M .... glrl .MyS Mr. and Mra John Lane, Fount11ln V llltey • girl Mr and Mra Loul• Mazzocc:hlo. Huntington Beecll. girl .....,. Mr. 8nd Mra J.,,_ MacMllt9", Coe18 Meu, boy Mr. and Mra 8r8d1ord Sttiph. N9wpor1 8Mct!, glrl Mr. 8nd Mra JOfln 0811y, IMne, boy .....,. Mr. 8lld Mrs Reymond S811111da, Fountain V8'19y, glr1 Mr. end Mra. ~du 8411.nl, We.tmln8t•. t:, I Mt. end Mra. Aonllld Ao8erlb11UQh, Founteln V~, boy ""11tr1 Mr. 8nd Mrs. Thofnu Hitt•, UigUne 8eectl, glr1 Mr. 8nd Mra M8'tl O'Connell, Huntington 8eech, otrt Mr. end MB. Joiln Mur•1ore, Cote• ...... boy Mr. end Mr•. AGO« 81.nfOl'd. co.. ...... glrf 'SAVI MONIY ON,., YOUR INSURANCI & ll ::: .. , MC)fllfNl' 'AfMl!IT If, ......... RMBTT INUMCE •• , ow .... ,....., ... Hew,...~.C.. 6Jt-7740 . l Mountain Dew, Rambling Rudy a t National Conve ntioa in Britt, Iowa, talk of o ld, better times. AP ....... Hobo Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/M onday, Aug. 8, 1983 ~I Hobos an endangered species? Last of dying breed gather for conve ntion, bemoan changes BRITT, Iowa (AP) Hobos, those L'Olorful characters who ride the r;uls and live by their wits. may soon go the way of the steam engine and the Pullman sleeper, faded from the American land- scape, say vagabonds at the National Hobo Conven - tion. · • Only a dozen hobos or "bos,'• as they call themselves -showed up for their annual gathering here over the weekend. "Stearntrain" Maury Graham, a five-time past National King of the Hobos, said there are hardly any honest-to-goodness hobos left. "There's a few still riding in the West, but hobos, they're a dying breed," he said sadly. In the last few years, s uch venerable hobo IPgPnrlci 11<: "th" H arcftock K irl" ;incl "Hobo Bill" --- Mainer have "caught the Westbound," hobo parlance for death, Graham said. Most others, like ''Connecti- cut Slim" and "Alabama Tom," have become too old and infirm to make the trip to the convention. Part of the reason for the disappearance of the hobo is the changing nature of the railfoad. "It used to be that a hobo had to be a good naturalist -he had to know all the roots, berries, grasses and weeds that are edible, and how to catch small game without weapons and how to be a good fishe rman,'' Grahahm said. "But to survive as a hobo today, you practically have to be a pharmacist. They're hauling things in freight trains, like chemicals and pesticides, that weren't even inve nted five years ago." Introducing Taste that delivers Warning : The Surgeon General Ha s Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Oa~gerous to Your Health. pack LIGHTS. 10 mg "tar". 0 9 mg mcot1ne. FILTER 16 mg "tar". 11 mg mcotme. av par cigare~e by nc method ·~-l \1 ( .• I f I I I • "• Orange Coast DAIL v PILOT/Monday. Aug 8, 1983 MAILBOX Plain fac ts on Newp ort parks Tu the Editor: Stop Polluting Our Newport (SPON) has developed a publi- cation called "The Newport News." On the front page they have stated that they want facts and information on which they can rely. Yet, on pages 6 and 7. in a SPON interview with a Dr. Rich- ard Nichols, President of the Corona del Mar Community As- sociation, there are so many mis- trut.hs that the artJcle bears com- ment. was sold, the area left to the city would be used up by the library and fire station. The fact is, the city owns 8 acres at Mariners Park, wluch includes the fire station, library, 2 tennis courts, the play equipment, the ball diamond. and most of the outfield. The S(:hool has approximately 4 acres of turf next to the city's 8 acres. ---. ..... . .. . . . ~ . . . . First, Dr Nichols states that almost all of the parks in Newport Beach are owned by the school district. At the present tim~. there are slightly more than 90 acres of parks in the city, all owned by the city. In three instances, the school district, in cooperative planning with the city, has developed turf areas adjacent to the city parks. These are Mariners, F.ast Bluff and Buffalo Hills. Next. Dr. Nichols states that the school district owns most of Grant Howald Park with the exception of 2 acres owned by the city. Actually, that park encompasses 5 ~ acres, 4 of which are owned by the city, and 1 ~ owned by the school district. Dr Nichols states that the two chief t'Oncerns of Corona del Mar residents an.· traffic and parks. This 1s particula rly interesting in hght 1>f the fact that the city held two park bond election issues in the 1970s, when land for parks was affordable. The residents of Corona del Mar voted decisively against each of those two bond issues. It is fair to state. however, that many citizens who were then, or are now members of SPON, wholeheartedly supported the ci ty's position that more parks were needed, and worked hard to pass those bonds. But to no avail, they were defeated. Invisible bomb shakes CIA Regarding Mariners Park, Dr. Nichols states that the city owns 2 acres and the school owns the rest. He says that if Manners School Although more parks would be desirable. the article makes it appear that the city has done little to provide parks over the years. This is just not the case. C.C. STEW ART Former director of Parks and Recreation. City of Newport Beach H elp soug h t to b alance budget To the F.ditor: The United States is on the brink of financial disaster caused by years of careless spending and taxing by the Washington estab- lishment. In 48 of the last 55 years, our coun.try has operated in the red. creating a nearly $1 '~ trilHon national debt and mortgaging the future of our children and grand- children. We must end this reign of fiscal insanity and put this nation on the road to econom1c health and prosperity. The only certain method of doing thts as through a constitutional amendment reqwr- ing a balanced federal budget annually. The U.S . Senate last year passed such an amendment, 69-31, but the measure was killed in the House of Representatives. h is now up to the states to pressure Congress mto Luruting their trucing and spending ability. Thirty-two states have passed resolutions calling on Congress to either pass such an amendment or convene a oonstitutional conven- tion to consider such a measure. OnJy two more states are needed before Congress, under Article V of the U.S. Constitutior., Will be forced to act. An 1mllallve campaign is underway aimed at makmg Cali- fornia one of those last two states. Peutions are being circulated throughout Orange County, as well as across the state. To qualify the measure for the Jun<' 1984 ballot, 393,835 signa- tures are needed The help of every c.'Oncemed c1t1~n IS needed IMMEDlATEL Y if we are ever going to put this nation's fiscal house in order. Sign a petition today and en- courage others to do the same. And if you can, make a donation. so others across the state can be told of this vital effort. Please contact Vera Manning at 837-6152 for infonnauon and peti- tions. T ogether. we can make a dif- ference VERA MANNING Laguna Hills Some honie work habits WASHINGTON A hair-raising new development has occurred in the subterranean world of international terrorism. The CIA has learned of the invention of an "invisible bomb" -that is, a secret, sophisticated explosive undetectable by slan- dard bomb-searching techniques. At least a dozen are believed to be in the hands of terrorists. The disturbing details are known to only a few Wes<em intelligence agencies. Sources with access to top-secret CIA files on the "invisible bomb" told my associate Dale Van Alta how it was detected. Here's what happened: La.st spring. an Arab courier visited a Geneva hotel that is partly owned by Jewish interests but which is also frequented by Arabs. H e left behind a portable radio and an innocent-lookmg suitcase. But tbe last minute, the courier -who was linked to a radical Palestinian guerrilla group -got cold feet. He contacted U.S. of- ficials and was steered to the CIA. The terrorist warned that he had left a bomb in the hotel. Though the CIA 0Cfic1als were skeptical, they notified the Swiss authorities who sent a bomb squad to the hotel. The sui tease and radio were picked up. The Swiss reported back to the CIA that the two items had been sniffed ,repeatedly by their bomb-detecting dogs and there wu no explosive in either The tip must be a hoax. The CIA's turncoat Arab source was questioned again. He insisted Q -JA-Cl-Al-1-11-11-1 -.-~ the suitcase was indeed a bomb. With some reluctance, the CIA asked the Swiss to check again. Tbey did. This time they dis- covered that the Arab courier was right. The suit.case was a powerful bomb. "It sea.red the . .. out of the Swiss." one source said. "It was so sophisticated that no one ever found one before." The explosive was molded into the cardboard of the suitcase. Though the material did have a distinctive smell, it was not any that bomb dogs are trained to detect. The explosive power of the suitcase material was judged to be greater than C-4. the "plastique" that 1s a favorite of terrorist groups. One source sajd the Gen- eva hot.el bomb packed enough wallop to blow up a seven-story building. With 11ew respect. the CIA gave their Arab tipster an e>C"tensive interrogation. They learned that the bomb-maker was an Arab living in Baghdad who had made at least a doz.en of his "invisible bombs." Some sources thought it possible one of them was used for the bombing of the U.S . Embassy an Beirut. Tlae pott>ntial of this new ter- rorist weapon is so alarming. my sources said, that none of the Western intelligence agencies privy to the secret raised objection when one agency set out to find the bomb maker ana eunu.nate him and his lethal products "with extreme prejudice.·• D IPLOMATIC DIGEST: Protocol-roQScious State Depart- ment officials have been amused by a habit of Sen. Rudy Bos- chwiu, R -Minn. His letters to Secretary of State George Shulu aiways bear a little doodle of a smiling face next to the signature. The senator's aides said Shulu isn't singled out for this attention: Boschwiu has been putting the smile cartoon on all h 1s personal mail for years. -Foggy Bottom and the Pen- tagon are echoing with praise for Reginald Bartholomew, the U.S. negotiator who is credited with talking a reluctant Greek govern- ment into renewing the lease on American military bases in Greec.-e. OHicials say that without Bartholomew's skillful handling, there would have been no agree- ment. Described by a fellow diplomat as a colorful figure with great charm and a "huge ego," Bartholomew succeeded by matching the Greeks' histrionics with h is own. One Bartholomew habit that may have disarmed the Greeks was his habitual reference to h.imsel f in the third person -Better late than never, the hard-eyed cost-cutters in the Of- fice of Management and Budget are finally going to check into the Agency for International De- velopment. The agency disburses billions of dollars a year in grants. oontracts and low-interest loana to• underdeveloped countries, mid AID insiders have known lot years that a lot of the money a. wasted. Careless o!ficials approve impractical public works projec:U and give 8Cant supervision even to the worthwhile programs. Thit cavalier openhandednes wu bad enough in the old days; it ii unacceptable in a time of $200 billion budget deficits. ~ at AID say the tree-spending of.: ficials are anticipating lean timee ahead as a result of the OMB scrutiny. CHEESE IT, TUE FEDS!: Some of the fancy. "New Yon style" aged cheddar cheese you find m the supermarket may have come from govenunent ware-- houses, where it has been aging at the taxpayers' expense for as l0Jl8 as thref years. Desperate to rut down on ita nearly 1 billion pound supply of surplus cheese purchased under price-support programs, the Ag1f culture Department has aold 8 million pounds of aged cheddar back to the cheese induauy at about $1.55 per pound -10 percent above the federal support level. Most if it. my reporter Susan Benesch was told. haa gone to small companies. and another 2 million pounds will be aold th.is. year. When the stored cheese starts to rot, the mold is cut off and It's ~with new cheese to taM the tang out of it for the ~­ ment's school lunch progn.ma. "Kids like it bland," a USDA source explained. · ~~!.!!.~~~~for a life time Getting in from the acid rain childood we never outgrow. no ·~ matter how long we may ltve . I -~ ~ By THOMAS D. ELIAS CAllf DRNIA f OCUS was no prov"'.n link be twee!" smog actually discovered was thinking of this a few mor.. hs IYllfY 111111 ~ and aci.d ram, now admits the acid rain problems. ago, when I trotted down to North ~Ji The most acidic precipitation connection. Carolina to lead a humaniues ever measured-a pH level of The acid begins with burning of seminar sponsored by a college. period prior to the assignment, I t.69, rrudway battery acid and fossil fuels like coal, oil. gasoline I had four texts to read for the knocked off a dozen dally vine~urred in 8 fog last even the readings in New England and natural gas. Sulfur oxide and weekend, none of them particu-columns, composed a commence-December in the Orange County and Quebec \hat have made acid nitrogen oxide from smokes1acks larly har-d or lengthy, indeed. I ment speech for a medical school. city of Corona del Mar. rain the biggest bone of contention and exhaust pipes react in the had taught all of them before, gathered notes for a symposium Fog in some San Francisco between Canada and the United atmosphere to create sulfuric acid many years ago. It was mostly a on aging, and did a book review Peninsula suburbs last May was States. and nitric acid. In the Northeast, case of refreshing my mind, and for a journal of semantics. None of measured at 2. the same as lemon the major problem is sulfuric acid jotting down the questions to be these had to be done in that juice (the tower the pH level. the Even tbe Reagan Adminis-from coal-burning industries; in asked and the issues to be followed time-span, but were aU plausible greater the acidity). tration. which claimed for California. it's nitric acid from cars . up. excuses for putting off my "home-These acid levels far exceed three-and-a-half years that there and oil-fired power plants. Yet I waited unlll literally the last day to crack the books, even though I had plenty of time the previous two weeks. What is weird is that during those two weeks. I dug into other books that were much knottier and denser than the texts I was obligated to read. The reason is obvious. The books I had to read for the seminar were "homework." They were a burden imposed upon me by external obligations. And. like the )c.ld I was, I put off t.aclding them until it was unavoidable -· even thou&h what I was reading in the interim was far more formidable. WUt coald be allier than thJt? But habit.a and frames of mind persi.t ln the uncorucious long after we have presumably matured, and the resiatance we felt to doing uafgned homework cont.lnues to work wllhln us tar beyond it.a realJ.ttlc term Within that same two-week ORANGE CO~l Daly Pilat work " The problem is getting serious That attitude is a pure product enough in the western portion of of juvenile conditioning. Home-the Sierra Nevada to jeopardize work is generally regarded, by both trees and fish in many lakes, American puplls at least. as the scientists report. The acid grows most unpleasant part of theeduca-ft.._,... more intense every year. No one is tional process. • 1rVll'dl quite sure of the impact on human It also, more o(ten than it should. conveys a disciplinary character. because it may be used as a fonn of academic punishment for inattention during class, and so the duty becomes doubly burdensome. In addition, of course, parent& tend to nag their chlldren about homework. Fifty ye.ani later. I still briaUe at the notJon of having to lit down and do work that tomcbody elee has ordered, regardJess of my interest.a or wishes. There hu to be a better way to get young people to )earn what they ousht to, without converting their natu· raJ curiosity to a dull headache, which recurs all the way into aemlity H.L lchW-11 IH ~ Diil " L.A. ,.,,... lylld • - - -... "Cheer up, Wendefl. Sooner or leter we all come ecrou aomethlng that doetn't cause cancer." lungs. Bat tbe pollllcal response to the problem has never been more tepid. California cannot blame the Reagan Administration's lengthy equivocating for Its share of the problem either. Thia siate makes it.a air pollution standard.au tough u it wanta. uai.na a 1pedal federal · waiver that ~ am<>s aa • more .ievere problem for Cali- fomla tN.n. for others. Under ex-Gov. Jerry Brown, attempt.a to clamp down on powe?r plant em1aiona were fought at.eedfutly by utJlltlet and thelr lt!gialaUve allies. Another coaU· tion prevented the aiat.e from adopUng a plan to inspect all car 1'mog controls ye-arly. lna~4ld. they'll be checked only every two years, atar\lni next spring. At the same time, Oov. ~ Oeukmejian hu carried out a cwnpalan pl~ to reduce aov- t>mment reauJ.atJon of buafNll by Nttln1 about one-(ourt!i of the suite Air ~.U'C.'ft Board en- forcement staff and even more from It.a reaearch prottram. wttlch His reasoning was outlined in• January speech. "The develiop. ment of our resource1 and ~ vironmental protection are com- patible goals," Deukmejian said. ''But the marriage of lhOlle ,,,,., public interests must be pn:sWed over by people of reuon and realism. not by 90cia.l engineers in search of Utopia.°' Deukmejian's notion of balance has had these conaequencm: While the new Republican-and business-dominated Air Re- sources Board has not lllCtUlll)' rescinded the tough rulel ~ Brown's old envlrorunen\al.isWild board. it has puaed no new I responding to the most r'flC.'enl rain findings. And it hat enforcement largely up to~ pollution control di.a~ ~ dominated by local polJUdijlll whoee principal financial ~ comes from busi.neaee that mflbt be affected by tough f'tl\lla DeumeJlaa alM rewarded.- laywer with a record of ~ rules against toxic alr can~ nant.a by appointl.na her d~ of the state Of(ke of ~ tnUve Law and named anotbl!r attorney who baa ledsp don to tough regulation of. t mmN- tacturera to tbe Loe · wea smog control board. ' The aovemor'a appolnieee. HU Reaaan'a, have t>ecun to wtny pubUcly about add rain an-t fell, But hand-wriJ\linc won•t eotve the prob~. To do duit. they'll need '° ~ to\.llh ectlona that may ll'WI counter to DeukmeJlaa'1 phlloeophle. and may a1'o thr.t.- en 9CXne of hJa ~. Wblch n.eana there•• no rMaon to expect any p~ IOOn on \)\la Mw front ln the anll·.-not war. 6--,4, ----~----"----------- (. . . .. ..... MONDAY, AUG. 8, 1983 COMICS TELEVISION STOCKS 84 85 86 Tom Jory says it's a half-hour of hot air and some laughs as h e re¥iews CBS' new comedy special, "Diner ," which opens at 8:30 p.m. tonight. Page BS. o I u BJ LORENZO BENET Of ... ~ ........ 113%: Soup Jdtchens. Prohibition, 25-ct!nt movies, Lee Tracy, Fay Wray, "Doctor X ," nickel Cakes, nickel hamburgers, $600 cars, dime-a-gallon gasoline. Jimmy Foxx led Che American League with 58 homers. Lefty O'Doul hit .368 for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Burgoo King won the Kentucky Derby. Katharine H epburn and Charles Laughton won a.cars. Amelia Earhart made her second intercontinental flight. Charles Lindbergh Jr. was Jddnapped. Japan invaded Chl.na, an event chat eventually led to World Warn. Sherman Smith of Newport Beach turned 16 that year. He was j\.&stan ordinary American kid living in Salt Lake City, Utah. He spent his mornings in school and his afternoons working as a drugstore delivery boy. He took home a quarter a day. For all of '31 aDd half of '32, Smith saved his money. Had to. You see, he and his buddy, also named Shennan·(his laat rwne was Slade), had a dream to drive 700 or so miles to Long Beach -easy commuting distance to Los Angeles, especially in thoee days. Slade's aunt and uncle would put them up and and the two teen~ would -and did -spend eight days in August cruising back and forth to the 10th Olympiad. "We didn't know for sure that weweregoingtodoituntil a few months before the Games when the tickets arrived," Smith said in a folksy, grandfatherly tone. He has lived in Newport Beach since 1961 and is much older and grayer now, but his boyhood dream lives on. Next August -18,617 days, 10 presidents and three American wars after he first stepped into the Los Angeles Memorial C.Oli.seum -he hopes to attend the openina ceremonies of the 23rd Olympiad, ju.st as he was at the 10th. The repeat perfonnance depends on whether he la among the lucky 100,000 who are aelected in the Aug. 15 lottery for that event. "The Olympics are the experience of. a lifetime," Smith said. "Seeing our flag go up, hearing the "Star Spangled Banner" play as the athletes accept their medala is an experience I wish everyone could have." He pat.med for a moment. "It's aoing to be quite a thrill to aee it all over again," he added with a chummy smile. And it will be quite a bit more expensive. For Smith and bJa wife to att,end three events-opening ceremonies, a day of gymnutD a'nd track and field -he said he doled out more than $600. Six decades ago, Hia $11-for-clilldren season ticket pass for track & field ' from 1932 is tucked in the lower right~hand corner of a framed • pbotqp'aph showing a packed Los Angeles Coliseum. It hangs in his Newport Beach real estate office. "Eleven doll.an was a lot of money in those days -we were in the midst of a Depremion, you know," Smith said. "But this event is the best in the world. Everyone who can poesibly arrange to go, should." A!J he talked of the 1932 Olympics, of the athlete9 who later became movie stars, of the effortless, smog-free commute9 from Long Beach to Olympic Park in Los Angeles, there seemed to be a hint of revery in his voice. Prices Then ... and now Then: 1132 Now: 1114 Evient &Ingle a.non &Ingle 8Neon Opening Ceremony S3 $50-$200 Boxing $1-$2 $12 $10-$95 $85()..$2,200 Cyctlng $1 $10-$30 $75-$125 Equestrian •2 $5-$50 $125-$500 Fencing $1 $10 $5-$20 $130-$210 Flekj H()ci(ey $2 $3-$15 $50-$100 Gymnast lea $1-$2 $15-$95 $900-.$2,000 Modem Pentathlon $1 $1<4 S50 Rowing $1-$3 $1'4 $5-$10 $854120 Swtmml~ $1-$2 $15 $15-$95 $650-$1,500 Trac:k en Aeld $2-S3 $22 $8-$60 $<400-$950 Welghtllftlng $1 $8-$25 $275-$475 Wr..tll~ $1-$2 $9 $5-$25 $18~50 Cloefng emony $2 . $50-$200 A . ,.• /. ... J~ j i . .. "One thing I remember most ia the total friendlinesa; everyone in the stands cheered for the winner no matter what country he or she wu &un." Smith recalled. ''It teemed the Olympic spirit aupeneded any nationalistic feelinp." On August 6, 1932, from his 11eat in the· C.Olileum, clutching hiJa 10-cent prosram, chewing on a hiJa five-cent hot dog, Smith saw James Bau.ch of the United States 900re 8,462.23 points to break the ~rld decathlon record. He at.o wilnel9ed javelin thrower ahd hurdler Mildred .. Babe" Did.ribon set two of 16 world records establiahed during the Games. · Next door at the swimming stadium, he watched Ta.nan, er, Clarence "Buster" Crabbe set an Olympic record in the 400-meter freestyle. "They even had a football eXh.lbltion." Smith Mid. He piclced up one of his ei8)lt programs -oollectors it.ems today -and read off the six football teams that participated. "Southern Cal, Stanford (coached by Pop Warner), Cali- fornia, Yale, Harvard and Princeton. That waa fa.:inating for 90llle0ne had never 8eel1 the game." His programs are jammed with other interesting facts and figure9. For instance: The C.Oliaeum, the site for track and field in the 'S2 Games-'-was the most colo.al structure in the world at that time. 1ne stadlum sPanneci 17 acres and towered 106 feet above the playing field. Total COS\ for conatruction: $1.7 million. The Olympic Auditorium was home for weightlifting, boxing and wrestling; cycling wu be1d at the It.OR Bowl; I ~ j I ... Olympic Park facilities hOUled swimming, gymnaatica and fencing; the Long Beach Marine Stadium was the site of the rowing competition. Thoae events will be held el!lewhere next year. The 2000athletes from 40 countries were all bouaed in an Olympic Village located in Baldwin Hilla. 'The United States fielded the largest ie.m, 300 competitors strong. Ru811a was not repreeentea and Eut Germany. an Olympic power today, did not even exiat u an independent state. And then thett are the ticket prices. Comparing the figun!s listed in Smith's 1984 and 1932 Olympic prosrame unooven 90fDe glaring. if not outragt!ICMa, differenos. At Olympic time next year, a journey to the North Pole will probably take Jees time than commuting from Lone Beech t.o Los Angeles. In 1932, the trip took i... than 30 minutes, Smith taid. Then a sullen look fell over his face. "A!J I reflect back on the daya. the one thing that stands out most in my mind wu thelacko.f need foraecurity," he aaid. "In '32, it waa there, but not obvious. And it wu more for the privacy of the athletes than for leCW'ity. Sherm and I u9ed t.o walk right up to the gates of the Olympic Village t.o look inside." 1181: Soup kitchens, '5 movies, "Return of the J«li," 50-<:entCakes, $1."hotdop. $1',000cars. $1.50•gallon for pa. Cecil Cooper leads Che American League in homers. Ken Landreaux la bitting .298 lor the Los Anples Dodgen. Sunny'• IWo won the Kentucky Derby. Ben Kin6sJey and Meryl Streep won Olaus. &Uy Ride became the lirst American woman t.o Dy In outer apace. An American 90JdJer died In Nicaragua. Sherman SmJth is 67 and pn¥1dent of hi.a own~ estate~-> Art affair ... Sculptor Noguchi deltghts musuem party Fifteen limited edition worka of Isamu Noguchi are on an extended loan to the Newport Harbor Art Museum. The galvanized steel multiple sculptures have been installed in the Ben C. Deane Sculpture Garden, in the museum entrance and the lrvine Gallery. Deane and Henry Segeratrom, along with the Fine Arts Patrons, hosted an opening night reception with Noguchi in attendance. The works have been deecrlbed u retembllng the upward looming, lntenaely-geologic mountains painted by Emperor Hui-ttung. The dimenalon of thf' large1t "Wind- catcher" ii 120~ by 17~ by 17 ~. The 78-year.old Noguchi completed hia 1.6 acre ''Callfo~ Scenario" ICUlpture 1arden in Co.ta Meu In 1982. Other work.I are repret1ented om collec:Uona at the Metropolitan Mu- aeum, Whlt.ney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modem Art, New York; and the Academy of Art, 'Honolulu. Tanya and Tom Casey (he's presi- dent of the Mental Health ABsociation), Pal and Henn Roesti, Michael Lawler Jr. and fiancee, Cathleen Rogers, (Herm and Mike were chairmen) Pam and Bob Trinen of Frost. Spence and Trinen (party sponsor), Senator Oliver Speraw and wife, Carolyn, and Tom and Emma Jane Riley were among the guests attending the Summer Settn- ade in the Jewel C.Ourt of South Coast Plaza. Others were Jean and Jim Liechty, Nadine and Bob Hall, Gloria and Len C.Onnier, Kent and Barbara Freundt, Charles Kema (director of OC Health Care Agency) and Chria Flnch. Guestl dined on a cocktail buffet provided by the Westin South Coe.st Plaza and viewed fuhiona from Laura Aahley, Cache, Jaeger, Lillie Rubin, Intimate Collectlons, Duck.sand Com- pany, Charles Jourdan-Xavier Danaud, Robert Philipa and Alex Sebastian. The event which will benefit Mental Health Aaeoclation of OC concluded with the crowd dancina to the music of the Orange Coast C.Ollege Big Band. • • • Former DP Photot Pat O'DoMeU hu won more than 100 awards for hfa phOtOlftphy. Come September he'll be Pam and, Roh Trinen Nadine Hall, Len Cormier .,.., ............ ., .,,.... 0...... :. Renee Segenlrom, Noguchi view tculpture Thia recent collection of ICUlptures Is dedicated by Nosuchl to endow hla mu.euma In Long lsland City and Skikoku, Japan. "Both places are equally a part of me," Noguchi aaid," and are intended M llnka to the two landa from where I bei41l·" He wu bom in Los ~-of an American mother and • Japanete fa~her . • • • teaching atudenta at C.l Stei. Full· ,,,_...,.~ erton IOme of hia prtze-winntn1 tech- niques. I. -· . L ~. 'i r. I .... ,J J . .. : r • ·"" Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. Aug. 8, 1983 Does )!Our doctor care? Woman feels like she being taken care of MR front In Peoria Reader says good manners go both ways .. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm not asking a question, but making a statement. It ia this: I think the be.t doctol-is the one who shows he "cares." The one who makes you feel "you'll be taken care of." I am thankful that 1 have a doctor like that. But from what I hear from my friends, they walk out of their doctora' officee wondering if they're juat numbers on a chart. rm IOl'1')' for them. MRS. V. DEAR MRS. V.: I tlalnk tlaat you and otlaer readen wtU be Interested la dae foUowlng abstract &all:ea from u article ID tlae JAMA (HU) written by Nonnu Coadu: 'UJ'ltere are qaallde1 beyond pare me41eal competence tlaat patients need and look for la daetr 1-'yalclu1. Tiiey want rea11vance. Tiley wut to be looked after uct not jHt looked over. Tiiiey wut to be ll1teaed to. Tiiey wut to feel tlaat It makes a cllffereoce to tl1e pbyalcian, a very big dlffereace, wlaedter tlaey live or die. Tiley wut to feel tbt dtey are lo tlae pby1lclan11 tboaglat1. In IM11, patient• are a vast collection of emotional Me41. Yea, p1yclaological cou1elon are very laelpf91 ta tla11 couectlon, ud 10 are the family and clup, bat tlae patient tarns moat of all and flnt of all to die pby1lciu. It 11 tlae phy1iclan'1 station that U1 most to offer ID term• of tlaose emotional aeed1. ,, l\ Mn. Roy W. Loots Padilla -Loots The Newport Beach home of the bride's parents .· was the setting for the July 16 wedding of Lorraine Marie Padilla and Roy W. Loots of Sacramento. The bride, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Padilla, is employed by Newport Datsun. She is a graduate of Kennedy High School in Cypress. The groom. the son of Audrey Loots of Sacramento, is j,n the U.S. Marine Corps. The couple plans to reside in Oceanside folowing a honeymoon in Northern California. Wheeler-W olsh Redlands First United Methodist Church was the aetting for the July 2 marriage of Lori Walsh and William Wheeler, son of Bob and Lois Wheeler of Newport Beach. The bride, daughter of Jim and Bea Walsh of Redlands. and her new husband traveled to Mazatlan for their honeymoon. They will reside in Crestline. She is employed by Butler Adv~rtising of Riverside and he ia associated with Ludwig F.ngineering in San Bernardino. Both are gradu- ates of OU Poly Pomona.Their high schools are • Redlands and Newport Harbor. ... ... Byers -Burbank Mr. and Mrs. Charles Byers of Corona del Mar announce the engagement of their daughter, Melinda Sue Byera, to Roland Kent Burbank, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kent Burbank of Lone Pine. The wedding will be an Oct. 22 event in Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, Newport Beach. M..iae Byers i.s a graduate of S~. Lucy's High School in Glendora and Cal Poly Pomona. She received her" doctorate o1 veterinary medicine at UC Davis. The future bridegroom graduated from Lone Pine High School, UC Davia where he earned his bachelon degree in wildlife biology and doctorate of veterinary medicine and Colorado State University where he received his masters in wildlife biology. 631-0770 -~ttP' for reservations $,.- ~~-c ff I fl\tlG ,~!~,~~ d ,..1' ~f(;,Sf(;, Gr .)~~~ OPEN 7 DAYS 5 PM to MOIGHT 369 E. Seventeenth St. (In WMt POf1 8t'tOpPjng CAnter)) Costa Mesa Early Bird Dinner Specials 16. 95 Prime Rib or Fresh Fish • Complt!tl! Dlnnl!r with cholc~ of soup or salad and d~ss~rr 4 to 6 PM 1 • .,. , WHkl 801 E. BALBOA I& ii the peraon and the presence of the pbyaician just aa mucb a 1, and frequently more than, what the phy1iclan does that creates an environment for heallDg. Tbe pby1lciao represents restoration. Tbe physician bolds tbe lifeline. The pby1iclan'1 words and not lust 1111 prescriptions are attached to that llfellne.' I cen understand your tbankfulae111, Mrs. V. in bavlag a doctor like that. MEDICALETTES (Replies to and from read· era): DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: When a person has a severe attack of indigestion -nausea, vomiting and stomach pain-and gets over it, why is it necessary to take all kinds of x-rays and laboratory tests? I feel all right now. MR. C. DEAR MR. C.: Much depends upoo the judgment of the doctor and psychological and emotional 1tatu1 of the patient. Some get over an attack of "indigestion," attributing U to drinking and eating too much, and forget It. Tbey may be right, but wrong, too. For lndlgestion may be the first lndJcation of serious illness. Wbere is the location of the trouble? It may be in the stomach, intestines, or esophagus, but also In the heart, lo which the first IDdJcatlon of heart failure is sometimes indigestion. Other Investigation is important in tbe liver and pancreas. Laboratory tests are essential here. And bow'• the gall bladder? You can understand wby x-rays are necessary, too. If you have no other attacks of indigestion, Mr. C., you may be all right without extensive teats. But if symptoms recur, I think you'll agree studies wlll be necessary. . FOR MRS. U.: If you're tired of dieting you make a mistake ID thinking that having a gastric 1tapl1Dg operation ls the certain answer to your problem. In some cases it helps, but ID others, weight gala recurs. Patients overeat enough to stretch the stomach after operation. FOR MRS. K.: Acetaminophen Is often as effective as aspirin in overcoming headache. But It does not help as much in arthritis, for Instance, DEAR ANN LANDERS: I wonder if your Georgia "Sou them Belle Transplanted" ls sufficient- ly appr~dative of male good manners to say "Thank You" to a gentleman when he allows her to go ahead of him or ext.ends some other courtesy such as holding a door. Women should be reminded that good manners can and should work both waya. I make i\ a point to bellow an unusually loud "YOU'RE WELCOME" when 1 extend a courtesy and it ls ignored. This has provided me with a lot of satisfaction. Some women utter a belated "Thank You" out of a distinctly red face. I am -UP FRO NT lN PIDRIA DEAR UP : Your approach plays not only ln Peoria, but everywhere. I recommend U. In fact, I laave used It myself and can tell yoa that lt 11 mighty effective. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a gay male. For this reason I have taken special interest in finding out all I can about AIDS. I know most of my gay friends (and the gay community at large) are petrified at the thought of gelling this sickness. Many, including myself, are becoming more selective and less casual about sex. However . because of the increased media coverage. the general population views t his as the Gay Plague 1 don't want th is thing hushed up. The more awareness the better. My problem is that my family knows I'm gay. Most of them have accepted it without prejudice -until now. My brother a nd his wife have two preschool gir ls whom I love as if they were my own. I adore children, and since I wiU never be able to 'have any, I have directed my paternaJ instincts toward my nieces. I make myself available as a free baby-sitter and often spend my day off taking the girls places. My brother and his wile seemed pleaied that I enjoy such a close friendship w ith my nieces, since it has benefited all concerned. Q ANNU#DllS Last week my brother told me as gently as be could that he t.hought lt best that I don't come c1oee to the children until more is known about AIDS. I am DO longer welcome in their home. , I wouldn't want anything to happen to the girla, even if it means never seeing them again. However, I think their parents are overreacting. What do your experts say? -DIST RESSED UNCLE DEAR UNCLE: l poruce can be a terriltle tblag. Your brotber u d bit wife need to be edacated. AIDS ia not a "silent" diHHe. Tlaere are 1ymptom1 -rapid weigbt 1011, coaglalng, llaortaeu of breatb, nigbt sweats, swollen glands oder dae armpits, on the neck and groin, chronic dlamea. u4 purple spots on the skin. It is tru1mltted ~roqll sexual contact, blood tru1fu1lon1 or coatamlaate4 hypodermic needles. Not a 1lngle bealtb profe11laeal wbo bas treated AIDS patlent1, nor a laboratory researcher anywhere, baa acqnlred tbe disease. Children born wltb AIDS get It from their motlten before birth. Share &bis column with your brother ud kl1 wife. I bope It helps. Tbey are being uafaJr to yoa aad to their children. · Cw drugs be a friend in time of stress? If you k eep your h ead together can they be of help? Ann 1 Landers' all-new booklet, "The Lowdown on Dope, n 1 separates the fact from the fiction. Get it today. For each booklet ordered, send $2, plus a long, self-addressed, '!Stamped en velope (37 rents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995 Chicago, m. 60611 . wbere inflammation i1 a problem. r-========;r--------------------------- Emphysema rarely atracks suddenly . There is usually a history of several colds and a cough that has been hanging on for years, says Dr. S teincrohn in h is booklet. "Emphysema: How To L ive With It." For a copy write him at t.his newspaper enclosing 50 cen ts and a STAMPED, SELF-A DDRESSED RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTHY, INC. ......... ,_-4 ..,,. 1922 HARBOR 81 VD COSTA MESA -548· 1156 ENVELOPE. Mimi lrvlng JOHN ROBERT POWERS OF ORANGE COUNTY S"ICIALIJ:IS IN "IHONAll" DIVILO"MINT "IOGIAMS FOi TUNS •DIET •MODELING e GROOMING e COMMERCIAL WORKSHOP CALL ltOW AMO STARl rm1•c emu ABOUf YOURSELF TOMORROW JOH~ ROBERT POWERS ~~~e~; ANO COUNT ~y 54 7-8228 YYIYIIYY "Now There's More Easy Listening Music on KOCM" KDCM 1DB.1 FM STEREO Teriyaki Through August 28th Brochettes ~fBeef S5ss -...... ---Alcohol and drug ~. She depend on them to gt>t through the <lay. Beca use she feels all alone. And think shes quietly going <'razy in id r. ~h<' ran"t imagine living without them. But they"re de.stroying her life and could eventually kilJ her. llnles shf' ~rt~ help .. Professional mediC'al help. One place to find that ht'lp i~ at CareUnit CareU nit i. a medi ca ll y . upervised al coholism and dn1 g treatment pro~am av ail able onl y in selc ·t community hospitals. CareU nit surc~ssfully tn•ats more' peopl e for alcoholi m and dru~ prohlr m · than any other pri vate program avai lable. With personal in ight into the spe<'ial kjnd of suffering the fcmal<' alroholi<· endures, th<' mcdi"al proft·ss ionall" at CarelJnit ha v~ created a warm •. upportive atmosphere where women ran conquer their chemical dependency. If you or a woman you love has a problem with alcohol or drugs, call Ca re Unit ~can help. To talk personally with ·a CllreUnit counselor, plwne your local CareUnit or call w ~al BflO.l/54-0318. ClREUNIT A .ervl<-e of Comprelwlnelve C....-Corponadon. (714) 499-2295 soum COASf MEDICAL CENTER 31872 COAS't RIGH'WAY.,sc>tn'H LACUNA. f.A 92677 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Aug. 8, 1983 at Oldies but goodies ••• Vocalpiedpipersof '60s and '70s making a comeback Sy DOLORES 8At\l'LA Y Ot th• A. .. ocl1tff ,,,._,. NEW YUhK Tl1t·y wt·rl..' vocal pl<'d pipers of the '60s and earlv '70s -a time when a hard rain fell p upon the sounds. of silence. But for thP legio11 of fans nurtured to adult.hood l>y their music, they never lost that lovin' feeling. Some singing sensations of c. generation ago who had slid awny to early retirements or self-imposed siestas a re back in thl· rnusical fold, often reunited with the voca l pa rtner'S they climbed to fame with. Th{' Everly Brothers, Phil and Don, whose fusion of rock and country-western in such sengs as "Bye Bye Lovt•" and ''Wake Up Little Susie" made · them stars, are together again, 10 years after I• breaking up on stage al K.nott's Berry Farm. They : plan a <..'Oncerl i11 London in September. Paul Sim11n and Art Garfunkel have reunited aftt•r 13 years Twci British imports, the Animals and the 1 Hollit>s, am 011 the l'omeback trail, galloping along •with Three Dog Night. the Righteous Brothers and ' Mitch Hyder. I Joan &t•1., who hasn't made an album in the I -United States since 1!:179, wiU tour the country this 1 4faU. A new song she wrote and recordf'd in Europe is I ' calle<l "Children of the 80s," which echoes sentiments 1 of an earlier age: ··We're the children of the '80s, r .• haven't we grown? we·re te nder as a lotus and we're 1 toµgher than' stone .. " :1 Simon and Garfunkel quit as a performing duo in 1970 at a concert in Queens. the New York City borough where th£>y"d met as fourth graders. They became solo aet..c: and made a few films. They gave a reunion L'tll1~t·r t in 1981 in Central Park and have been touring sitil'f" in Europe, Japan, Australia and New Zc'~uanct Betwee11 thl•m. they have 13 Grammy Awards and 19 gold re<:ords Their last LP was "Bridge Over Troubled WaH•r " in 1970 Theirs wu e w istful anthems of a troubled time. "Scar·bornugll Fair ," a 1966 hit, spoke of "war bellows blazing in scarlet battalions." The alienated ~and uncertain youth of the day soaked up ··Sounds of Silence.'' Last month, they launched their first U.S. tour in 13 ye-.1-s, hacked by a slick, 11 -piece band. "They like us, .. G.1rfunkel said before leaving for the tour. "But if WP don't come through that night. they'can walk away disappointed .... We've got to be potent in the prPsP.ri1 te nsP." ThH't' Dog Night sold almost twice as many records as Simon and Garfunkel and had eight gold singles in five years. "We stopped working in 1976and I thought we'd never oo this again," says the group's Danny Hutton. They're Nil with a new album called "It's a J ung It,"· amt are touring with their updated '80s S01;L11d, tanging from the repetitive reggae beat to classic r t>ek In the last seven years. Hutton has traveled to Central America, AustralJa. Japan and his native Ireland and marriPd. His once-long hair is now short and he wC'af'i blal'k and white checkered tennis shoes. <;h ul'k Negron and Cory Wells took their familil:son tours across the country. Wells later tested (ishrng equipment for Scientific Angler Products. Hutton says the> group is taking the tour calmly. instead of at th<' frenzied pace that formerly .. THE TERROR CONTINUES IN 3-0. fOUN"JN VAllCY 04WIGI •• '/f'"' Ji.VI' l)f'°''-1"' ~.I , .. ~ QI &J• m.&C ru~u 111111 I.A ~All\A OMNGI WHTMlllSTl~ ... . ' A\tf ,~· ... ,.\-.~ Px:•"' Y..•·,i.r.Dt\• !• f~asCnt,..,.WC\I • I • ~)A~lll' ll!l )93S ll lOM • .. ' '' · • ~· °' Ollfl 111 Mn ,.UCllltD 1• J 0 ~.......,. •• (.frtf0'0fll'otft.lffO~lMt"'1 \t>tJ l/\.01.t believe what goes on in ... NOW PLAYING UtAHflM fl !ORO L.OIAl~A WlSTMJllSTf~ "' ,, 'K•'+ \"'* 1¥-'y It .,. •I (t ,. 11 !S9' J6~J '""~' OllANG! W!STMlll8l!~ •11 ,,,, .. 4 111\ •.tj ~,· Jr "'' ::is•o tOllA MIU tOllA M!SA OllUO! ,; " ..... f\i:: '. •• ·~' ··-·..-::.c,.., ... MR.MOM l~J~",) / -~. .. .. •• "'. t \S" VIEaCINIMA ··ct"''"·d .. "'"'ct'"" c, IAlllllllltJ 1111 Ill CU ill •we m.06~~ "A CLASSIC AMERICAN COMEDY." -S tephen Schaefer, US Magazine t<.;~13~ ~ .. cwn .. c-.-..-IRJ --. ·--·--·. --···· ·---.. ·---- ., threatened their well-being. "This time around, we said, 'our happiness comt>l> first."' Unlike Three Dog Night, BiU Medley and Bobby Hatfield are deliberately doing the oldies and glowing in the glory of the golden discs they cut as the Righte0us Brothers. Medley and Hatfield, who are neither brothers nor particularly righteous, tirst split in 1968 after captivating teen-age fans with their rhythm and blues bag of tricks: ''You 've Lost That Lovin' Feeling," "Soul and Inspiration" and "Unchained Melody." They were at the height of their popularity. "I had never had an opportunity to follow up on my solo career," Medley says. "Also, we both had families and young children growing up without us really seeing them and knowing them." AB they tour the nation, the two 42-ycar-old singers are luring new followers to their classic hits. "About 90 percent are old fans," says Medley, whose deep baritone is as rich as it was two decades ago. "There are younger kids showing up. I guess it's because of the '60s kind of music going on.'' T he driving rock of Mitch R yder and the Qetroit Wheels were party standards for some of the same fans who had grown funky with the Righteous Brothers. "Sock It to Me Baby" and "Devil With the Blue Dress On" 1:1howcased Ryder 's raw. high-energy amalgamation of hard rock and soul. The Hollies -Bobby Elliott, left, Graham Nash, Allan Clarke and Tony Hicks -have gone through several "'~o incarnations in the past 20 years, but now the English rock-pop group has been r eincarnated in its original form. -=-,..........=====================================-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~.--- Exclu•lv• Orange Co. Engagement edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA llllUOl AT SUMR.OWH 546-2711 COSTA.MESA. Mon.-Thura. 4:30, 8:15 9th SMASH WEEK OF AMERICA'S #1 COMEDY! DAN AYKRm EDDIE MURPHY ~~~~ .. .._,__"f'~ IREA UA Movot~ 990 40Z2 IRV1NE ORANGE #el;ICJIJ#;i ~Sr.att [ ow~ros WoodO•IOQC C111edome 6J.4 2553 COSTAMUA fd1Nards Soulh Coasl Plau 546 2711 Cinema 5SI 0655 WESTMINSTER LAGUNA IUCH Edwards Eowaros Soulh Conl C•nema Wes1 494 1514 891 3935 ANAHEIM PacrhG s Allilhe•m Dove In 879 9850 WESTMINSTER Paoflc $ H1 W•v il9 Onve In 891 3693 El TORO £dwarGs 5.l<IOleoaci. 581 ~HO PASSES ACCEPTED FOR THIS lHOAoOlUEHT IPGI!@»,. ~·~ ....... ~~~~~1ft: fll .................. ·.: .• -4th RECORD BREAKING WEEK!- • fRIA MtSSIOll Vtl:JO • WUTMINIT!A ~M 8ff'<l J>l.4/~ r <}#llfO\ Mil\\.M v .,, [Ot1urd1 C•ntff\f Wn1 ~ ~JJ<! M•• 1191 '.1935 • COSTA MESA •9', t>.•.•r 1mmJ ldA1ar4ilO'N"tt"ll"' NEWPOATl£Atttm:::J c-.N._ -!.l",f\ • 751'18• Ed•"°'''•wl>O'I C••rn.o IUfflA'Alll IL IOllU t;A• Olli(l POC:if« s I ncoln £ llworOs ~""""OK\ OllANllt m::::J Drow ., '.>el S880 , ...... 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N A Shows At 12:15 2:4S 5:U :00 10:30 Tls.AfJll l!l ShOwl at 1:00 3:10 S :2S 7:45 .. 9:50 NATIONAL Al'AJiDn LAM!'eeN'6 l'C/• 0 CHEVY CHASE l!l Show1 II I :40 3:50 6:00 :1 .. 10:20 ~AAir=~!s ''ACAfillt !<~ R YI "7::>~ o CHEVY CHASE l!l ~ Ptut BEST FR IEN 05 ..:..IPG_..:...l~_....;P_l..:..u1..:..N;..;.;..IG..:..H_T_S_H_l_F_l_l_R_I l~~--~'Jjp~) IQ] And The Senn Ow•rfl :i1,u1;i;rc~ Jr.~ •d --Ptu 1 FIREFOX (PG) ~t.~~t lRI J~~@ Plu1 BLUE IHU ... OER (R) Orlv•·ln1 Ooen 1 :00 Weeknltht• / 7:30 Weekend• Ch<ld•~n Und~1 12 FRE:E Uni~'' Note<1 AH Ptr101111.nc" lof.,1 5·00 l'M IE • S,.C. E...,.,,,.,.u a Hehl IQliiltU6l'1;;) LA MtftADA AT RRUCRA!IS "IUM.L" (PG) 12.30. 2'55. 5·20. 7:45, 10:15 "RISKY BUSKSS" (R) 12:45, 2·50. 4.55, 7·00. 9:05, 11 :05 "Tl£ STAR CHAMIO'' ~) t·OO. 3:20. 5:40, 8:00. 10:20 "Cl.ASS" (II) llJO,HO flO "GET CMZY" ~) C 1 JO. ' :io. 10 '° "SlAYRi ALM" (K) 12 JO. l ~ 140 6 4S, I 5S II 00 "lt£Tl.llll. ~ M Ell" (P'C) .. 10-0.., Sle<eo 11.JO. JOO, SJ0.105. IOIO "STAYltG ALM" (K) '"1°""" llol!ly Stet.., ll JO. 2 JS. uo. 6 IS, 8 ~ 10 SS "M ma ClllD" <R> 11 0Cl.IYST£MO l ~HO ~•O. 100 1010 "FlAHMCE" (R) 100. lOO. S00.100. 900, II 00 "l(Nl" (P'C) ll .JO, l ~. ~. 7'S. 10 15 "OCTOPUSSY" (PG) lllO. IOS. SIO, llS 104S "WMWD" (K) 11JO.300, S JO. 100. 10 lO ''NIVATt setml" (R) II JO. ?·JO, I JO, 6 JO, 115. 10 40 * PACIFIC DRtVE -IN THEATRES * • ·uw" <"'> "" "SPACl tUfT'EJ: ~ .. Mr~ DR'' CK) H~~~.~ [;)~ .. :! ~.,·::~~~ "-f\MD-(l) v Miio .. (I) ' ..... ll SCMDOl t (l) "" •'fllU.(Ya." (I) "Q.ASS" (I) ...... "WATIUSS" (I) .... ,~"(l) .... .. .,.., .. 00 ~ ORAMGEMAU .._., 6 TKUTRES ,., .. ,,. SovO' ot ltne_.n O••-• 637·0340 ... "11.::;:~..;..,..--,o-... ~,-n-.•-Ooit>--,~~-.. ~~1 'f5ih-COifER •'flf.MMU' (I) 0..,100100100 100 too 100 ' ... "m'llS Al.M" (~l S.D ,...,_ Oo<ly I 15 la 5 I~ II -115. 9 15 751-4114 tOMi ctifflj u.,.,...., .. -751-4114 ~Stetl< '1Ul'M Al.M" ("l °"'' l 15 l l~ S II 115 91~ 1100 111<,._w• ·---~I Oorr1 ll IS l 15 I IS "~ 115 1011 SOUTM COAST u tiu .. ~· ... .., ... ~. -''f-• alDAllO" (I) ~l711 130 II~ l&lfA coiST --~u .... 1~1009l0 CllMA WESl -12.JO, no. •·:io, ...... -8•30, 1:30. 10:>0, ~ &1'J1,S.Ll21$a.m !!! WEST ·s1•11C =-sit?s) --Cl<llYIOOlOO,SOO 19l·ltl$ '11!1· 900. 11-00 ...... C181A MST 1• ••P"• .-2 ........ "!WM IUCtl" (I) -· ...... -Oorly t JO l 4S. 600 fWili "Wf .-:st'' (I) El·3'3S llS.1010 -I lllootn 00, IJO JOJO · _ Mst ....... mt -SATIUI 1uo.1JO. •JO -*-'l'llllf' Ill i;m.M~iAil~ll ____ ..:..u_o.'-1_.JO._. _1o_:io - -o.ty I l 0 . l'IS. 115 HUlill TWlf "JMIS J.r ~l l·Jl35lllll!'-il"'IP.9!1f6!Jlll•.,s. U5. lct4S -/ .,. t11 100 900 tOSO -s.t 5•• LOO JOO SOO 53l·JSOI 100 900 10!>0 I - I j I . Or1flOt ~ DAILY PtLOT /Mondly, Aug. I, 1113 by Gua Amola 1 ......... -. · e1,\•t·1t:1.o by Jim Davis ~ 5HRINKIN&f e ,. . . I • THE t'i\•IL l' Cl•Ct.:H ''We hafta put the food up there to keep it owoy from bean, squirrels, raccoons and Jeffy!" by Brad Anderson .. -''"I' "Must you bring home discarded treasures from the nelghbOr's trash?" WOO' Wl'LLl~N IN <500t> SM.APE ... . iMIS FORM IS ® FOR L,ADY P ... ~ ~ PU~l'TI IT HAPf'EN5 JUST 8V LOO(IN6 AT '(OU Bl6GEORGE by Virgrl Partch (VIP) "I h1t1 Mondi JI." DIE,,IS THIE ,_IE,ACIE Hank.Ketchum I . by Ferd & Tom Johnson I LIKE MY~ J , JUST THE Wf. {~ IT/$, TH.ANK ~ ·ft )b<.J... t I I .• by Charlea M. Schu l z I CAN FEEL A CRITICISM COMIN6 OM -l I ··~ . ~~· GOlfN ON lllDGf , Ill~-' ------------------------------------------- _AA. BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF C,l.l -N1•1thn vulnnohh" •~ South you holcl: H S '/JIW OAI06 •4.l91fS2 Your f!artncr opcM lh,. hit! dinl( wilh lwo h1·:irl~. Whut du you rcs1wnd'/ A. -There IN n11 11111nL Lu 1n lrodurinl( your duh l!Ull Your joh i~ to s(•l lht· Lrum11 11ult 11s ~oon aH possiblt·. and lhrtic lrumps Lu un honor 1~ excellent support for a de• mand hid. Start off by hid dinl( three he•url\ partner miKht want to 1n1l1at1• 11 ru1• biddinl( \l'•tu,·nce Q.2-A' South, vulm•rdbll'. you hold +95 IAQ87S2 'd063 •S4 Tht h1dtlinl( ha' prOCl'l'dcd North t11t South Wut J NT l-'111 2 ·. 1'111 3 . ... ... ? What .sctwn d11 you lak.-1 A.-ll y r.m1nK heart\ p4rl ntr has shown ll good fit and a maximum no trump o~ner. i.e .. 17 IH points. You want lo be tn game. hut you rt-a lly don't want lhe lead com1n1e FuRIOVS WHEN HE DISCOVERS THAT SHEILA HAS NOT MAOE RESERVATIONS AT THE CLUB FOR THEIR DINNER ~RTY, RAYMO N D INSISTS SHE 00 so IMMEDIATEL "(I SHOE BRABBLE ANSWt:1uo1 TO IUtUHa: 4.llll7. thrnuich 1111rtnd" hnnd lhd thr1·1· nu trump lhnt will 1111 .. 1n thnt th1· h•:id 1·nm1·1t up tu pnrtn.-r. Your hancl 11h11uld produr1• ,,.11 lr1rks. ond 11nrl n1·r mi)(hl hncl 11 1·a~wr lo m~k1· lhrl'I mon· for 1e:1011· th11n th1• four you woulll n1•1•d hud you fontrnrll'd for l1·n lrirk!I in hl•art!I. Q.3-/\~ South, vulnm1hlt•, you hold: •Al092 '';1765 OK8S2 t 96 l'urlnl·r opt·n~ lhe h1dd1nl( ont· d ub Whal do you n•,1>ond'' A. -With four c:ird wits 11 1s cu~tomary to bid you r ~u•t~ UP. t h1• hnc ll1d ont• diamond If partne•r h4\ a four card ,pad1• ~u1l. ho• ran still in tr11dur1· 11 into th,· aurl1on C,l.4-A' !'ioulh. vulnerable. you hold. +Al0952 "76 OKQ852 t 6 l'utncr op€'ns the bidding THAT'S RIC:*·ff• IT WILL 6E FOR FIFTY PEOPLE ANO 1·LL STOP 9 '( TOMORROW TO DISCUSS OETAILS1 1 CAN'f ~otR51ANO ~'i ~ l'E.oPl.E. A~f. AL\. OJ(R f"f. VL.•C.E., 6\>f NO ONE. st.EMS INff.~5~0\ with one• rl11h. Whnl du you rl'~IHlnll'f A. -llnldinl( I wu f1v1• ,·11rd 111111~. you ui111ully w11nt to 1(1'1 both 1111it11 1nt11 lh1• nu rt ion. 'l'h1•rt•fur1· it i111'om •rl ll• llr11l r1·1111ond in your hitchi•r rnnkinic riv,, rard "ult -in t hi~ ('il~I', !llJlldt•ll, C,l.5-lloth vulnt•rahh·. 1u !-.out h you holtl: •812 V'J762 OKJMIS t3 Thi• hiddin1e has prof,·1•d1•d: North •:Ht So•lh Wttt I t 1-'111 I O l'au I• 1-'a11 ? A.-You hJ v1· 1•nouich for unly un,• hid. and you h.1 v1• takl'n that. Ht• thankful that .vou have found a n ·asonable.· fit -pass Q.6-Hoth vulni•rJblc·. as FOR BETTER QR t 'OR •ORNE L!OK,MJM !-I CAN R IDE.A ~SE.!1 ·-., ___ . _ __. .......... ,_ S111ll II yuu hohl +117% ~·KJ71 OKJl!e5 t3 Thi· h11hll11j( h11s 1mH·1•1•1h•cl: N•rt• t;11l t;eulh Wt1C I t t-•11 I 0 l-'•N I • l'a" 7 Wh11t 11rti11n do you t11k1•/ 1ll'rond forw1mt l(otnic hid, you don't h1tv1• lo ~1'1111· Cur 11 runtrnrt out or frll(hl. you ran try f11r I he· lw~I ~pol. Bid 0111• nu trump A. -'l'hn• llnw y11ur hand 1• a bit stronic1·r Whil1• you ~••II don't h11v1• e•nou l(h fur a Ho• do you (hoo~ the ~tt opui111 Ind~ fharlu Goren h11 d1f an1wn. t·or • copy of "Wi11nl11 Opt'nioa Luch." end $ 1.85 to "Goru·Ltada," cart' ol thi1 ltWtpapt'r. r.o. Boa 259. Nlf'wood, N.J. 07648. Makf (heckt pa7ablt to Newt· papt'rbook•. by Harold Le Doux by Jeff MacNe11y YIU. t t>NICW ™~ ro~~~~ ~'lWE~ &11).9(~; by Kevin Fagan HAvt '10\J CONSIQERf.V. PERAAf'~, A 01ff'f.l<t;N T 6AL.E-5 PtlGl-4'? • by Lynn Johnston by Tom Bat1uk by George Lemon J. l I I I I I I .1 1 ~ I I ,. Sta rring in the new CBS com ed y Binder, James S pader, Paul Reiser , "Diner " are, cloc kwise from le ft, Mike Max Can tor and Michael Ma dsen. Hot Air ••• Fells Point 'Diner' opens for business on CBS By TOM JORY -i.1ed ...,_., Wrller NE W YORK -Eddie's due back from his honeymoon in Cuba, and Modell wan ts to bet Boogie $50 that the newlywed will leave his bride at home to join the guys at the diner. They wail, and talk. "When girls think of a guy as sexy ... I don't understand the whole concept," Modell says. ''When you got a girl. you got something to look at." Finally. Eddie arrives, and grabs some fries and gravy off of Fenwick's plate. "Elyse," he tells his buddies, "feels it's time for me to grow u p." In other words. she doesn't w ant Eddie to spend his spare time at the diner. The next half-hour is like that -a lot of hot air, and some laug hs -as ''Diner." a comedy special tonight on CBS. picks up where the critically acclaimed movie of the same name left off. It's called a "special," presumably because CBS has no plans, for now, to make a series of the show. CBS apparently once considered "Diner" for its fall schedule. Most of the action takes place at the Fells Point Diner. in Baltimore, and the characters are the same as those in the motion picture. The actors. except for P aul Reiser, who plays Modell. are new. The cast includes James Spader as Fenwick. Mike Binder as Eddie. Max Cantor as Shrevie, Michael Madsen as Boogie and Mady Kaplan as Beth. Alison La.Placa plays Elyse. who was mentioned frequently in the motion picture, but did not appear. It's 1960, a simpler time by almost any measure, and Elyse and her friend Beth, Shrevie's wife, still Trouble is, t h e a tt rac t ion presum ably the camrade r ie, the man -or boy-talk - never seems that a ppealing . But maybe that's t he point. can't figure out what attracts the fellows to the diner. "Can you believe how obsessed guys get at things?" Elyse says. "Eddie, he talks about batting averages .... Batting averages." Beth decides Shrevie ough t to stay home, too. "What? Are you crazy?'' he shouts when she breaks the news to him. "This 1s the most insane dinner con versation I've ever had" "Why do you have to go to the diner?" she asks. ''Because ... " says Shrevie. who take-s off for the place anyway. Trouble 1s, the attraction -presumably the camraderie, the man-or boy-talk -never sc-ems that appealing. But maybe that's the point. Maybe the diner is a place to spend that uneasy ume between adolescence and adulthood. "He dropped out of collegf• to find himself," Eddie tells h is mother when she asks 1:1bout Fenwick, clearly the most intelligent kid tn the crowd, ''Find himself?" she re plies "Why don't he· find himself somewhere near a job'?" The guys decide to have a party for Eddie. complete with cake and a silly dance on the counter "How many hours you think we're aU here since we started?" Boogie asks. "Actual booth hours . ?" Fenwick says. Have you ever had a hidden desire to write a comic strip? Are you the type who makes people cringe with the rotten puns you make up? Well, here's your chance to put those talents to good use! This week on our comics pages, FUNKY WINKERBEAN is presenting the Jedi Jokes ... and he's inviting you t~ send In yours! Simply send your Jedi Jokes to Funky Wlnkerbean c/o this paper. The best ones will be used in the strip along with your name and city and you'll receive the original cartoon featuring your Idea when F~nky Winkerbean presents (what else?) "The Readers Strike Back!" So join the fun and maybe we'll see you in the funny papers! Frn m ~our own opinions on mat lt•rs 111 lon1l. !'>t all' arid natwnal In I NC'!'>I Ii~ n•ad1ni.: tlH' I houi.!htfu~ C'Ol u.n11!'> and L·d1ton~li. 1n tht• Daily I tlol Daily Pilat TONIGHT'S TV EVENIHG -4:00- fJG HEWS 0 WOt«>ER WOMAH D ®l BASEBALL 0 BJ /L080 CJ) lWIUGHT ZONE e s.WAT e HAWAII FM~ fll) OVER EASY (l)C8SNEWS OtN8CNEWS IC}MOVIE • • • "The Real Glory" ( 1939) Gary Cooper, David N1veo. (HJ HANK WILLIAMS: nt£ SHOW HE NEVER GAVE COJMOVIE • • "Challenge To Be Free" ( 1975) Mike Mazurlli, Jimmy Kane. O MOVIE • • "Who Hes Seen The Wind?" ( 1977) Gordon P1nsent, Jose Ferrer -4:05-m ORANGE COUNTY TOOAY -4:30-m OICK CAV£TT(R) m> SUM CUISINE @ NEWS ~ALL IN mE FAMILY ID FELONY SQUAD -4:45- 1 Z) CHARL£S CHAMPLIN OH THE FILM SCENE -7:00-6 CBSNEWS 0 NBC NEWS OKUNGFU 0 POUCE WOMAN (!)HEWS 0) m RE.E'S COMPANY m ~JOKER'S WILD El]) BUSINESS REPORT m> INSIDE ORANGE COUNTY (I) P.M. MAGAZINE ID DRAGNET {Sl WHAr s UP AMERICA! l ?JMOVIE • • • • "The Last Me1ro" ( 1980) O MOVIE • • ··, ··ca111iery Row ( 19821 Nic~ NOHll, Oellra Winger -8:30- t)t810tNER 0 U<il FAMILY TIES (91 CHARLIE'S ANGELS 0) ALL IN THEFAMILY -9:00-6 (81 TUCKER'S WITCH 0 ()91 MOV1E • • * .. Wall ·1111 Your Mother Gels Home .. ( 1983) Paul Michffl Glaser Dee Wallace D MOVIE • * • "Marlowe ( 1969) James Garner, Gayle HunnicuH 0 THE MA5CUUNE MYSTIOUE &)VEGA$ El]) GREAT PERFORMANCES m> THE MAGIC OF DANCE ([OJ MOVIE -• • '" "Save The Tiger" 119731 Jack I emmon Laurie Heineman -9:30- (91 MOVIE * • • .. Love With The Proper Strange!'' i 19641 Natahe Wood 5teve McOueer1 m AOAM-12 ID THE VIRGINIAN IC1MOVIE • • •., Moonshine County E.press ( 1977) John Sa.on Susan Howard IOtMOVIE • "Homework ( 19821 Joan Collins. Mlchaet Moigan IZJMOVIE .. The Nine Lives 01 Fr11z The Car· (No Date) Animated -10:00-6 @ CAGNEY & LACEY oommNews El]) THE MAGIC OF DANCE m> SURVIVAL ( H l STEVIE NICKS IN CONCERT OMOVIE * • • "They Got Me Covered" ( 19431 Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour -10:15- ( SI THAT'S STUPID! • -12:00- 0 EHTEAT AINMENf TONIGHT O MOVIE • • • • ~ "Stage Dool'" ( 1937) Kotha- rine Hepburn, Ginger Rogeis. ! 9 1 INOEPEHDENT NETWORK NEWS &)MOVIE • • "Emergeoc;y Room" ( 1983) Sar· ah Purcell, Levar Burton. -12:30-u Qt TRACK ANO AELD O COUPLES D MOVIE • • "Thunder Alley" ( 1967) Fabian, Annelle Funicetlo 1 ~ 1 ZANE GREY THEATRE (I) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE ~l CHARLIE'S ANGELS IHI MOVIE • • * "Cat People · ( 1981) Nastassia Kmsk1, Maleolm McDowell -12:35-m ORANGE COUNTY TODAY -12:40- t) 181 MOVIE • • •, ·Happily Evei Af1er" (1978) Suza1111e Somers. Bru<:e Boxletlner -12:45- S MOVIE * • '·: TM Last Amencan V1rg1n .. ( 19821 Lawrence Monoson, Diane Fra:ikhn Z1MOVIE • * * Wlloopeel"' ( 19301 Eddie Cantor Belly Grable -1:00- 0 GENE AUTRY l"J J THE PROTECTORS «!)MOVIE • • • .. The Family Way" ( 1967) Hay- ley Mills, John Mills. ID GEHESCOTT I0 1MOVtE t * "Summer Camp" ( 1979) John C. Mclaughhn, Matt Mlchaets -1:05-• c ,MOVIE ••"Enter The Ninja .. (1981) Franco Nero. Susan Geo<ge~ -~ ··. I)()) C88 NEWS NICiKlWATCH- 1 :8 COTTlf: UP Cl.OM -2:20- ( SJ WHAr S UP AMENCN -2:30- &)HEWS (H)MOVIE ... "Outland" (1981) 8-1 ~ nery. Peter eo,te. ( 0) IN8IOE ON (ZJMOVIE * t 'n "The 8"* Uttle WlloNhoW In Te.ea" ( 1982) Burl Aeynoldl. o.ii, P8flon. -2:46- O MOVIE i "Homewof11" ( 1982) Join Colk1I, MichMI MOfgln. -2:50- (CJMOVIE * t t "Monty Python LM At The Hollywood Bowl" ( 1982) John Cleele. Mlehael Pllin. -a.-C!l MOAJMG STflETa4 (Q)MOVIE • "Homewort!'' ( 1982) Join Co!IWle. Michael Morgen. -3:20- ISJMOVIE • * "Double Ellpotute" ( 1982) Mlehael Callan, Joenna Pettet -3:30-C!l FNTH 20 ti) MARY HARTMAN. MARY HARTMAN -4:00- (!l TOP O' TIE MOANNI -4:15- 1 Cl CIHEMAX SHORT FEATURE 0 MOVIE H 'h "Steeping Dogs" (1982) 5em Neill, Wl/Tflll Oetll. -4:20- (11) P.T. BNIUa AMO .. HUMAN OOOOES -4:30- (!) BUUWINKlE , :·~ '. . ,• -7:30-. l'J 2 ON mE TOWN 0 Qt FAMILY FEUD 0) ONE DAY AT A TIME m CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH El]) MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT m> SNEAK PREVIEWS IDMOVIE -10:30- m INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS 0MOV1E -1:15- fO)MOVIE . · •. .. • ''The Sipper And The ~­ The Stcwy Of Cindlrlll" ( 1975) ~ : • ard Cllamberieln, Gernrna Crewln. · •• IS I BIZARRE -11:00-60 D !U@~NEWS 0 SATURDAY NIGHT * .... Jekyll And Hyde. Together Again .. (1982) Mark 81ankhetd, Bess Armstrong <ZJMOVIE ~ * * "Trouble In The Glen" ( 1954) Forresl T ucl\er. Orson Welles (HJFRAGGLEROCK • "Sgt Pepper't Lonely Hewtl CW> ~ Band" (1978) Peter Frwnpton, 8M • 0 IN SEARCH OF ... (O)MOVIE Ol Tt!~JEFfERSONS -1:30-0 (l<ll NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT O GENEAUTRY Gees. 1 -4i0-(~I MOVIE (CIMOVIE • • "All The Marbles" (1981) Peler FaJk, Sort YOUl'IQ. -8:00-6 (I) SQUARE PEGS 0 Qt LOVE, SIDNEY Q MOVIE (I) BENNY HILL fZ!) BUSINESS REPORT m> SPOflTS AMERICA ID 700 CLUB * • "Jail Busiers • ( 1955) Leo GOf· cey. Huntz Hall H • "The AMI Oby'' (1939) CMr, Cooper, David Hhren. ;-.• (HI HAHK WILLIAMS: THE SHOW HE NEVER GAVE • • * • "Forty-Se<:ond Stree1" ( 1933) Ruby Keeler. Dtck Powell IOllZIMOVIE • • "Heartaches" (1981) Margot Kidder. Annie Potts CHANNEL LISTINGS 0 me WAR WITHIN: KILLER CUlTS (SIJ.40VIE •·~ "Body Md Soul" (1981) Leon Isaac Kennedy, Jayne Kennedy <O On-TV (!) TWILIGHT ZONE '9 P.M. MAGAZJNE m MOVIE 0 KNXT !CBS> (i) KNBC (NBC) 0 KTLA (Ind.) 1. Z·TV 111. HBO • • "Death Race" ( 1973) Lloyd Bridges, Doug McClure. -11:30-6 C fl HART TO HART 0 ~ m E BEST OF CARSON 0 (lo) ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE 0 YOU ASKED FOR IT O)OOO COUPLE m HARRVO ID l<ABC (ABC) 0 l<FMB (CBS! c (Cinema11l J) !WORl NY .• N.V m HEllE COME me PUPPETS m> GAEA T PERFOAMAHCES fCl MOVIE 0 KHJ·TV (lnd l U!> KCST !ABCl (!!1 !WTBSl ( t ESPNI • • • "Monty Python Uve Al The Hollywood Bowl'" ( 1982) John C•eese. MIChaef PaJm El]) CONTEMPORARY HEAL TH ISSUES ID KTTV (Ind) ..... ID l<COP TV (Ind) S• !Showtlme) 0 Spot11gnt IHtMOVIE C1MOVIE €Ill l<CFT IPBS) 8 (Cable News Netwwkl • • • "Outland" 11981) Sean Con· nery, Peter Boyle • • "Baby Blue Marone" ( 1976) Jan- Michael Vincent. Glynnis O'Connoi @ MOVIE m KOCE IPBS> S MOVIE ••'it "Mommie Deares1 ( 198 tt * • .. I ne Salamander ( 1981) Fran- co Nero. Anthony Quinn Faye Dunaway. Otana ScafWld .. The scars of an abused child can stay with us all tits life. In any way you can think of, victims of l·hild abuse. the dfects of d11ld abuse arc Yet child abuse can and must devastating. be prcven(cd. Each year. m ·c·r o nl' miUio n 111c: National Comn>ittce for American children suffer from , Prevention of Child Abuse ls a c hild abuse private, chanu1ble organization Qvc:r 2,000 of tho~ :abused that knows how to prevent child children die. ahuse. Arld. for manr of thoS<: w ho nut we need your help to do It. "''c, the d fc.·c ts of an abusive.-We need money. We need more child hood ma)' lntluc:nce thC'lr volunteers. Send us your chedc entire lives. And our!>. today. or write for our booklet. Mitny teenage.· drug addicr:s :ind And. remembt'.r . ifwc don't all teenage prostitutes report hcing swt ~mcwhcrc. we won't llCl ahu1ied children. So do juvenile anywhere. delinquents and adult criminal:-.. ft lkcauS<" we pay to respor)d ru lltlonal COMllllttH fir thoS<' pm hkms. we are aJI the , Prnentlott of CIOld AIMlll . -· . : . .... . ... ~ . ~ ; .... •: .... ~·-' .. : ... ... , .. ·:·· . ~ .. ... ~ ... . ·! .•. ·:: .. :· :· ·~ .. • . . .. .. :· , I : 1 I I I ' I I I ' l I ,1 ' l ' I I t Orange Coas t DAIL V PILOT /Mand av Aug 8. 1983 :s1oc1s '• f"\ ,..,. .. , \.tit' 114•d ~ l ,,Q, \. • .,w '"" II l f\{I\ !, f~\,,. I "U ..------ NYSE COMPO ITE TRAN A TIO NS CVOIAllON3 IN(;l VOC lf\AC>£S OH THE 14EW VORI(. ~1owu1 PAClrK. llUW llOS10h ottll()" AN0Gll<CtHHArt 110CI( tXCHAHOU AHO AEPORTf O &Y IHl NA!IO IHSlll'lfT M11ndia7'• 11 a.m. (POT) l"rir,.• ..,,.,.. Nwl '-"lr'li t-~, I \""'' N"'t ,.,.,, ,., .. , ')•Ir \ N•t P f ""' C lu\1 t "~ t• 1 hth • lu\ti • •1v 1• t ttch c 1u+.. .. c r.o µ r ruh L141,, t h" µ t hf'J\ (10\ff t P\Q ~ ---·----------- •llll llllfl Soviet Union wins right To Olympic telecasting By tbe AHoclated Preu LOS ANGELES Tht• Sovie\ Union and moet ot Its allies have won t.elev151on r1ghl!I to the 1984 aummer Olympic Games for $3 tmluon. the Los Angeles Times said today The contract LO buy the nghls to the world slgna! to be t.elecaat by A.BC will not be signed until Sept. 26, the paper said T he agreement was reached with the Organization of International Ra.dlo and Television, which includes the USSR, East Germany, Poland, Mongolia, Laos, North Korea. Afghanistan, Vietnam and Cambodia as well as Cuba. Interest rates show little change NEW YORK -Some private analysts have concluded Crom the Federal Reserve's latest batch of monewy data that the central bank made no moves in the past week to tight.en credit condiuons and push up interest rates. The Fed reported that the nation's money supply rose $1.2 billion in late July. Despite the higher than expected rise, interest rates were little changed after the report was released. Economic index hits high level NEW YORK -An economic mdex based on a survey of purchasing managers in July rose to 67.1 percent -the highest level since November 1973, a trade association says. The National Association of Purchasing Managers said every indicator of business activity measured in the survey was up from the previous month. especially incoming new orders. production and employment levels, and the speed of delivery from suppliers. Unemployment rate I alls again WASHINGTON A 10-month string of double-digit jobless rates has been broken. The Labor Department said the unemployment rate fell to 9.5 percent of the civilian labor force in July from 10 percent in June. The rate peaked at 10.8 percent last December President Reagan called the figures "new and dramatic evidences of the on-going economic recovery. great news for all Americans." AT&T breakup in final s tages WASHINGTON -A federal judge has signed the final order authorizing the breakup of American Telephone"& Telegraph Co , setting the stage for a new era of telephone competition that should lower long-distance rates -but not loca1 bills. "ln 10 years. most residential consumers will see significant benefits from the breakup," said Robert W . Nichols, the legislative and regulatory counsel to the Consumers Uruon of the U.S. Western to beef up services LOS ANGELES -Western Airlines will build a hub-and-spoke operation at Los Angeles thLS fall. adding new nonstop service to five cilles and increasing its daily Los Angeles departures from 58 to 70. Harry T Chandis. Westem's senior vice president-marketing, announced today. Starting Sept. 7 West.em will begin three daily nonstop {Lights each to Albuquerque and Tucson, two druly nonstops to Reno and one daily nonstop to Edmonton. Alberta. On Oct. 1 the airlrne also will inaugurate Los Angeles-Palm Springs nonstops. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JON£S AV£RAG£S NEW YOfll( CAP) -T ... -wino I• e hi ol "" mo•I actl•• ''°'"' ,,.,.., on l1W 004le< .olutN for Tnunclev The Iota! '' be..o on llW "'9Chn orlce Of the llOO. Ir•-mulllPlled bV ll>t "'-'" .. _ H.,,,. Am« Tl.T llM =l1ee1 I Gen MOion Clvvller lntfa.T StdOtllnd E••on FordMOI AmEt Pw Clllco a<IJJf WHAT NYSE DID HEW VOflK IAPI Auo S Too .. '" 6IJ 421 "" 16 II WHAT AME X DID HEW YORI( IAPI "Uil· c Toda~ ~ ,MHALS 1r.J t2Q I ' Prt • do 41) "" >ti lt14 .. " HEW YORI< (AP) Sollt rionl••ou• ""''"' ~lodty c..,. . 8•·82 <*lie • poutl<I us O..ltntltoo•. C-• 15 40 _,,.""' POuml. lolY Com•• N>OI mooth c-Fri Lud • 20·23 -.to • POVnd ZlnO • 43 c.ntt a pouno. Oltll...-tld T"' • S4I ••93 ~'"'• w"" comoo•"• 111 A~· 78 <*Ill c pound.H Y ...,...,., s21!> oo.u eo oo flet 16 ton .... -YOik .....,,_ 1440 00·'40 00 d-••llC ,,..,cNni llOV ....,_ "' Y SIL VER SYMBOLS 0 -, ... ., 11'9 " -••••• , "'9" \Jr'M\ ~· AO'td '•'" o• ~ •'• _,O't411it_l•De.wd ""'"' .. ''-'"''I> Of ..,,.. ~ o.tAlfAtO'I "..O-C•t llf ettt•t ~ °' Plll'Yfl"'e"""' ""'ljNlf<J .. 199 -... -· 'lltd .. llW ~ "'°"'°'" I AlllO •11lte 0 IPOM t> .. ,........, IAft .,_ .. ttOC.• _,,.., c l .-1 ... -OM ... H oo !><Md"' P'.C-...0 11 ITIO'llllt Oo<1 .. .a 00 o..d aft• \1(10 Oo-00 tilllll ul> t 1'..ci ,,,.. 1M< ~ Ol'l\o!IH Olt'"''9'1 oo ltU a(;lt\11' l .. t'l Cl .. ., _,.., "-'"'O .. 0oc: ....... ,,. .. -, ... ~ .U-1-._ .. 111 ........... .... NEW YOfllt (AP) -Ffnal Oo-•.i- •Y11L for Frlclev. Auo S STOCKS lOlncl 20Trn lSUll 6SSla Indus Tr..- l)llh .SSlk 111'Uf 11'1 ti 117151 1 l&Ut+0.20 S«l.'3 S4U7 SJS.M S.U o+ t.ll'l IH.16 l:PU1 11'.Cll 12' OH 0. 1' .. ,.21 41) 19 .. SJI .. t.'1+ OM AMERICAN LEA0£RS '"°'·''° 1,HUOO '""·'°° ..... NEW YOfllt (API -$ain, ,_, orlcl •ncl Ml ~ Of ,... i... ,,,_, K llve Am«laul Slod< E•C'N-folwal. Ired I no nelfon•ll• e l "'or e "'"'"" Wan111 ... •b&• DomePtr1 M idi c;..,. Ttlli>n•• n OvnlOP c...., ... co AmcleN t 1moC,.,.,,, Aei.runi w1 Tube>~" 11'~100 u ',IOO 61.500 ..... Sol.JOO Sl.<IOO l1,1'00 )t,100 34,fOO UPS AND DOWNS JI'--._ .... _,.,. ,._ u-. -._ I l ''< ,,.., .... 11~ 2 Pct U• 11 t Ut 1S Vo " Uo 6 > Uo \.0 Uo •6 VO CS U11 n Uo U VP Ci Uo c 1 UD CI Uo co UP l I U• JI Uo l .S Up J I u. u Uo l 1 Vo l 0 Ull ) 0 Uo ?f U• 1 t u. 21 Uo 2 S l l 1 I l1ily Pilat MONDAY, AUG. 8, 1983 ClASSIFllD.c. Oellr .... ,......,,_c......... Connors plays as if stakes ·are high, wins By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS 0t ..,. o.n, ,_ ltaff During a weekend which_ fea- tured some good tennis and some not-so-good tennis, Jimmy Con - nors proved to be a gem of con- sistency i11 sweeping all seven sets at the High S takes exhibition. Connors capped it off by steam- rolling Tim Mayotte Sunday in the final round, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2, to pocket the $100,000 first prize be fore an estimated 6,500 sun-drenched fans at the New- port Beach Tennis Club. In an earlier best-of-three set consolation, Ivan LendJ quickly disposed of Sweden's Mats Wilander, 6-4, 6-2, in a session that took less than an hour to complete. Lendl won $45,000; Wilander , $35,000. Connots neutralized Mayotte's best weapon -the serve -en route to the easy victory. In the previous match between the two, Connors had routed Mayotte, 6-0, 6-0, causing Mayotte to sigh after Sunday's match, "Well, at least it was closer today." Mayotte was troubled by his inability to make his first serve effective. Knowing Connors' prowess at jumping on the second serve, Mayotte tried to put a little more juice on it and the result was five double-faults, three in the 9eCOnd set. out his first aerve if I have to. That's my game." Connors first service break was in the sixth game, helped by Mayotte's first double-fault on the second point. At 30-30, Con- non; returned a serve for a win- ner, then hit another effective service return to set up the point which gave him the break. Mayotte broke at love in the first game of the aecond set, only to have Connors retailiate in the next game. Connors broke through twice more in the second set, and without an effecient ser- vice, Mayotte w as never a factor. "Jimmy IB almost as effective at returning a aerve as he is when he is serving," said Mayotte. "It's hard psychologically to be ag- gressive against the kind of play- ers I've been playing." When Mayotte decided to try charging the net, he was frus- trated by C.onnors' pinpoint loba. He had about as much suroesa when he attempted a buellne game against Connors. "Yes, I had a few good lobs today," said Connon. "He (May- otte) really comes pretty cloee to the net and I had a good feel of the shot today." Jimmy Connors shows form which helped him wi n High Stakes tennis title Sunday over T im Mayotte. "I'm going to try to make an effective return (of service) no matter if it's the first or second serve," COnnors noted. "I'll grind Mayotte, who surprised Yan- nick Noah and Ivan Lendl earlier this weekend, did have a profit- able weekend despite Sunday's setback, collecting the runner-up share of $65,000. "My biggest payday," he said proudly. Angels may have found some relief as Kison delivers From AP dJspatcbe1 victory over the Seattle Mariners. Almost by accident, Angel Manager John McNamara may have found the extra arm he's been seeking for h is bullpen. And it's not bad timing considering the Angels return home tonight to open a six-game stand against the Mmnesota Twins and Seattle Mariners. Kison began the season as a starter. After spending a month on the disabled list because of a lower back injury, he resumed starting but th en was shifted to the bullpen. In three relief appearances. he has recorded tw o victories and a save. In short relief, however, the problem apparently is min.imiz.ed. "So we decided to use him in short relief," McNamara said. "It's helped him and helped us, too." Kison preserved the victory for Ken Forsch, now 10-7. On several occasions, the Mariners' appeared on the verge of 8COring, but Forsch escaped. Bryan Clark, 5-4, took the loss. The Angel victory prevented the Mariners from scoring their first four-game series sweep in their seven-year history. , Jackson's ground ball, that forced Grich at second, scored Fred Lynn from third. Lynn opened with a single to right and went to third after Grich's liner glanced off the glove of shortstop Domingo Ramos into abort leftfield. Tonight at Anaheim Stadium the Angels will send Tommy John (8-8) against the Twins' Ken Schrom (8-4). "Since he came back off the disabled list, he's had problems going five or six innings," McNamara said. "We had some chances," Seattle Manager Del Crandall said. ··w e didn't 900re as many runs as we could have. We just didn't execute." Jack.son's RBI gave him a career total of 1,428, moving him one ahead of Charlie Gehringer and into 28th-place on the all-time list. ''Bruce Kison's done a great job since he went down there." McNamara said Sunday after Kison picked up h is first save of the ~ason in the Angels' 4-3 Kison relies on his legs for much of his pitching strength and the continuous stress on his lower back causes tightening as the game progresses. Reggie Jack.son's sixth-inning RBI-grounder mapped a 3-3 tie and Bobby Grich cracked a two-run double to lead the Angels. Tim Foli of the Angels and Bernaz.ard and Seattle Manager Del Crandall were all ejected from the game for arguing with the umpires. Sutton, Nicklaus prove their points Moses wins heat, goes I or 82nd win in 400 hurdles PACIFIC PALISADF.S (AP) -In dramatic and ~!ctacular fashion, Hal Sutton and Jack Nicklaus each proved their critics wrong. The young Sutton demon- strated that he can play solid golf under intense pressure as he thwarted Nicklaus' late charge Sltnday and won the PGA Cham- pionship by a single stroke. Nicklaus, 43, showed he can still play the game superbly, com- ing from six shots off the pace with a closinlr66 that almost car- ried him to his first major victory since 1980. After struggling to a demoraliz- ing three bogeys in a row on the b9ck nine and realizing Nicklaus had moved tO within one shot, Sutton cooly parred the final holes to win his .first major pionship. • m relieved to cure that label hoking that's been put on me," said Sutton, 25, refe rring to his having blown a six-stroke lead on the final day of the recent Anheuser-Busch tournament. Nicklaus, whose declining auc- ce. on the tour raised speculation that he was finished as a first-rate player, showed his old brilliance as he came cloee to oollec:Ung a record sixth PGA Champk>nehlp. I BlllBDARD TONIGHT 1TV-RAOIO: See P11g9 C2. "When I'm playing well, rm playing as well as I ever have," said Nicklaus, who had to settle for pars on the final two holes. "It was fun, coming down 18 and knowing that a major cham- pionship was on the line." Nicklaus, who had played in the threesome just ahead of Sut- ton, watched as his approach on the final hole fell within 25 feet of the hole. Sutton putted to within a foot, then tapped in for victory. Sutton, who led all the way in the tournament at Riviera Coun- try Club, shot a closing par 71 to finish at 10-unde r-par 274 for the tou.rnament. Peter Jacobsen came from back in the pack with a closing 65 that gave him the third spot, a stroke back of Nicklaus. Another stroke behind was Pat McGowan, who shot 69. John Fought, with a 71 for a 278 total, was fifth. Nicklaus said he was pleased with his comeback after an open- ing 73 and added that he was not overly disappointed by not win- ning. "I congratulated Hal and told him that will be the first of many major titles for him." Nick.laus aid. I# ........ HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -World record holders Edwin Moses of the United States, Sergey Litvinov and Anna Ambrollene of the Soviet Union and Jarmi la Krat.ochvilova of Czechoalo- vakia led the advance through the heats today in the World Track and Field Cham- pionships. While heats, qualifying and aernifinals predominated the program, finals also were scheduled in the men's and women's 100-meter dashes, and in the men's triple jwnp. The smooth-stridirig Moees, the 1976 Olympic champion and world record holder ln the men's 400-meter intermediate hurdles, easily reached Tues- day's final by winning his eemifina1 heatinaawlft48.11 seconds. In the final, he wW be teeking his 82nd comecutive victory in the event. Americana placed 9eCOnd in both hea\a, with Andre Pbil- li pe finiahing eeoorMi behind Moees in 48.99 and David Lee a step in beck of Schmid in 48.63. Litvinov, the world reoonl holder ln the hammer throw at 278 feet, led qual.i.fiera in his specialty with a heave of 258 feet. Ambroeene, the world re- cord-holder in the women's 400-meter intermediate hur- dles. a relatively new event in international competition, won her second-round heat in 66.30 seconds. She established the world mark of 54.02 last June ln Moecow. Ambroeene'a time wM t.M f•tett ln the four see-, ond-round heata leeding up to Tueeday'a aemW.nala. Sutton set a rookie tour earn- illgJ record of $237,734 last year and leads the earnings list this year with $397,684 Hal Sutton reacts to e ig hth hole putt en route to PGA title. Moeea has not lost l1nce August 1977, w hen he WU beaten by Harald Schmid of West Gennany. Schmid al.lo made the final, winnina the other aemlfinal ln 48.57. Marla P1nlQlna of the Soviet Union, the World Univenity Gamee champk>o, posted the faa1elt time, 51.05, follow*I by Irina Buakova of the Soviet Union (51.07) and Ta&ana Kocembova of c.chmlovalda . (51.88). Braves put Dodgers' comeback attempt on hold;5-2 LOS ANGELF.S (AP) --The Loe An- geles Dodgers' restored momentum was slowed 10mewhat Sunday, and If any- one's got a surge going now It's the Atlanta Braves, even after loaing the first two garnea of a three-aame 11er1e1 with the Dodgen. The Braves erued any thoughta the Dodgen m.laht have had of rweeptna the eertes With a thfoee.run third innl.ni. aided by an error, and Atlanta went on to a 6-2 victory on a hot, mugy Sunday after- noon . That got the Braves' lead In the National League West beck up to 6 YI games, which la a game better th.an it wu when they left on a two-week trip. "Anytime you're away for awhile and you gain aome ground, you've got to be happy about It," ea.Id Atlanta Man.ager Joe Torre. "The only way you're io'nc to loee a lot of ground ia pt swept." 1be Dodlen won the ftnt two camea of the weekend eerie., provok1nc thouahta of laltyeer, when t.Mycharpd fron\ lOYJ garnet behlnd into flnt pi.ce in ie. than two weeka. It w11 about thJa aame time of the aeuon, too. Torre was asked about that. "All I remember about last year," he said, "ls that we won." The Braves are a better team thll year than they were in 1982, a far more confident team, and lt showed Sunday. 'Ibey didn't appMr to be the leut bit nu.tered about loeing the fll"lt two garnet to the Dodgera. '"that'• characteriaUc ot thia club," Torte uid ... Loee a coupfo of lamft, then come b9ck the next game. We've been dolnl lh•l all year." Sunday'1 loa took some of the~ out of the I>odawt' comeblck hopes. but lt didn't dlm1nlah them altotether. "'The Bravee are detinitely ln the driver's 1eat," aaJd Dodier outf.Celd« Mike Manhall. "But we've tot nine more pmes With them, so there'• atill Ume. Not a lot or time, but time ... The Dodnn had one bid lnnlna on Sunday,~ they never recovered bun it. It WM the~ lnnlfte,and the BraYel had alreedy ecored once apl.nlt a.- Alejandro Pena, e-e. on a anate by Diile Murphy, double by JflfTY 1'oystel' and another ainlle by Bruce BeMclk:\. , .1 l I I . l 1 I ' C2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. Aug. 8, 1983 SPORTS BRIAK Vilas vows to meet Pro Tennis Council in court (of law) From AP di1pacche11 NASHVlLLE. Tenn. Guillermo Vilas says he and the Men's .,., lntemationaJ Professional Tennis ~ Council could wind up in court before a satisfactory decision is reached <:,'Onc.-eming his alleged taking of "appearance money" to play in a recent Holland tournament. "They (the council) say they have enough evidence to show l took money," said Vilas, who was in Nashville for a Satur- day night exhibition bout with John McEnroe. "I denjed it, but I had to pay the fine ($20,000) before I appealed. I was declared guilty quickly ... before I was shown anything about it." Vilas defeated McEnroe, 6-3, 3-6, 7-6. in the Saturday exhibition. Vilas won the final VILAS two matches of a six-day, six match-tour for the two players. If his appeal fails, Argentina's top tennis player, who is ranked fourth in the world in 1982, faces a year's suspension from Grand Prix and Davis Cup events. The appeal process involves a three-man panel, with one member picked by Vilas, one by the tennis council and the third by the first two members. The rub, as far as Vilas is concerned, is that all panel members must come from a list provided by the tennis council. Quote of the day ''What's a home run? If you hlt one, they are going to want you to hlt two." -former Angel Mick Kelleher, who is homerless in his 12-year major league career. Brunner, Giants top Jets EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . - Scott Brunner broke a third-quarter tie [!] with a perfectly executed 10-yard 4 • bootleg run, then passed 27 yards to Danny Pittman for a fourth-quarter touchdown Sunday night as the New York Giants defeated the New York Jets 23-16 in a National Football League exhlbition game. Brunner completed nine of 16 passes for 124 yards. Two plays after a ~ by Pat Ryan was intercepted by Giants' cornerback Brian Carpenter and returned four yards to the Jets 16, <Stunner took the snap and faked a handoff t.0 running back Joe Morris. With the Giants' line moving to the r1ght and the Jets' defense taking the fake, Brunner hld the ball on his left hip and swept untouched -and almost unnoticed -into the left comer of the end zone. breaking a 9-9 tie with 1:04 remaining in the thlrd period. Navratilova wins Inatch, $35,000 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Martina Navratilova, who beat Andrea Jaeger in the Wimbledon singles finaJ last month, defeated Jaeger again Sunday. 7-6, 6-2 in exhibition tennis at Rancho Bernardo. Navratilova won $35,000 and Jaeger collected $20,000 before a sellout crowd at the Imperial Savings Showdown. Jaeger lost the first three games, then broke Navratilova twice in the first set to force a tie-breaker. Jaeger, 19, won the first point but Navratilova scored six straight points to win the tie-breaker 7 -3. Navratilova broke Jaeger to open the second set and easily finished her off for her 12th victory in 16 matches against Jaeger. Hu Na faces Hallquist tonight MANHATTAN BEACH (AP) -Hu Na, the tennis player who defected from China at the Federation Cup matches last year. makes her first appearance in a major women's tennis tournament at the Virginia Slims event tonight. Hu faces Barbara Hallquist at 7 o'clock at the Manhattan Country Club. Top-seeded Martina Navratilova and second seed Chris Evert Lloyd are scheduled to play Tuesday. Hough helps Rangers split Charlie Hougb allowed three runs in six innings of work and Victor Cra1 Ii worked the final three innings for the save as Texas handed Cleveland its fifth straight loss, 4-3. Sunday in the first game of a doubleheader. The Indians rebounded for a split, 7-0, as Cbrls Bando hit a two-run homer and Tom Brennan threw a seven-hitter ... Elsewhe re in the American League, Charlie Moore had three RBI and Ted Simmons and Jim Gantner each knocked in two runs to lead Milwaukee to a 9-6 decision over Toronto, giving the Brewers a sweep of the ~-game series. Mike Caldwell, 9-8, allowed two runs in five innings before leaving with a blister on the pitching hand .... Lance Parrish, Lou Whitaker and Larry Hemdoo combined for seven RBI as Detroit downed the New York Yankees, 8-5, saddling former Corona del Mar High product Matt Keough with his sixth loss in 10 decisions ... Chris Codiroll and Keith Atherton combined on a six-hitter as Oakland blanked Minnesota, 6-0 ... Gaylord Perry handcuffed Boston on two hits through seven innings and got a home run from Pat Sheridan to lead K.an.sa.s City to a 1-0 verdict over the Red Sox. Ex-Costa Mesa High and Orange ~t College star Dan Quisenberry collected his 28th save of the season for the Royals ... Greg Lutlnsld hit his third homer in three games and LaMarr Hoyt won his fourth straight dec~ion as the Chlcago White Sox edged Baltunore, 4-3. LUZinski hlt his 23rd homer in the first inning off Mike Flanagan. Pastore puts down Padres Frank Pastore pitched a six-hltter Ii and cracked a two-run homer and hot-hitting Ron Oester also con- tributed a two-run blast as Cincinnati downed San Diego, 5-3, Sunday in the National League. Pastore, 5-10, registered his first victory since July 17, retiring 11 in a row at one stretch before giving up two Padre runs in the eighth inni . . . Hard-throwing Nolan Ryan, who pitched a one-hltter against San Diego in his previous start. tossed a three-hitter and Hous- ton broke a tie with an un- earned run in the ninth inning for a 2-1 victory over San Francisco. R yan struck out eight .. Hubie Brooks' third hit. a tie-breaking two-run single in the 10th inning. led the New York Mets to a 6-4 PASTORE triumph over the Chlcago Cubs ... Ivan DeJesus bunted home Joe Lefebvre with the tie-breaking run in the seventh inning and Mike Schmidt later added a two-run homer as Philadelphia grabbed a 5-2 decision over SL Louis ... Tim Raines cracked his second grand slam of the season to back Steve Rogers' two-hit pitching to help MontreaJ blank Pittsburgh. 6-0. Rogers, becoming the NL's first 14-game winner, didn't aJlow a hit until Mike Easler slapped a grounder into left field with two outs in the filth. • Rizzo posts first LPGA win DANVERS, Ma. -Patti Rrzw. the 1982 LPGA Rookie of the Year, !I went on an early birdie spree as she charged from behind for her first victory on the women's pro golf tour Sunday In the Boston Five Classic. Rizzo, starting the final round three strokes behind Australian Jane Lock. fired a 4-under-par 68 for a 72-hole total of 277, 11 under regulation at Radisson Fremcroft Country Club. Th.at gave the 32-yeu-old former University of Miami All-Ame.rican a two-stroke victory over Lock, a 28.-year-old former Australian amateur champion just starting her second year on the U.S. tour. Lock, who had got down in par or better for 53 consecutive holes after a double bogey on the first green Thursday, ran into trouble for the first time on the 6,008-yard course, taking a 1-over 73 for total of 279. Pat Bradley, the 1982 U.S . Women's Open champion. who grew up just a few miles from here, finished with a 3-under-par 69 for a 282 and a tie for third place with Vicki Tabor, who had a 73. Tabor started the final round tied with Rizw at 209. Ruiz gives U.S. gold medal LOS ANGELES -Canada cap-a tured the gold medal in team finals Sun~y night to win the L~83 Sunkist Amencan Cup Il Synchroruzed Swim- ming Championship at the Olympic swimming stadium. Canada toppe<l the standings with 98 points, followed by the United States' 94. Japan was third with 82 points. Points were based on the countries' finishes in duet, solo and team competitions. Earlier, Tracy Ruiz brought the United States its second gold medaJ with a victory in the solo finals. Ruiz, of Bothell. Wash., and Candy C.OStie of Seattle.had won the gold medal in the duet finals Satorday. Switzerland finished fourth overall, followed by Great Britain, Mexico, Netherlands, Austria, Aruba, West Germany, Australia and Uruguay. Camacho gains WBC crown Hector "Macho" Camacho won the vacant and disputed World Boxing ""'-I Council super featherweight title Sun-- day whe n he stopped Rafael "Bazooka" Limon in the filth round at San Juan. Puerto Rico. Alter Camacho floored Limon twice in the fifth, referee Richard Steele stopped the fight at 2:52 of the round and awarded the bout to Camacho, a native of Puerto Rico ... Jimmy Arias . boosted by a crowd rooting for the first American men's champion in four years, scored a comeback 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 triumph over Andres Gomez of Ecuador in the title mat.ch of the 74th U.S . Open Clay Court tennis championships in Indianapolis . . . Paul Asmuth, the 1983 world swimming marathon champion and an acountant from San Jose, set a record for the fastest swim around Manhatten. completing the circuit in six hours. 47 minutes and 58 seconds. Television, radio TV: Baseball-Pittsburgh at Philadelphia. 6:30 p.m .. Channel 7 (delayed). World Track and Field Championships-The men's triple jump and the men's and women's 100 meters at Helsinki, Finland (taped), 12:30 a.m., Channel 4. RADIO: Baseball-Minnesota at Angels, 7:25 p.m .. K.MPC (710). Rookie Hibbs takes Pepsi Trans-aHJ title Delly ""4 -o bf a-C...... Poised Tim Mayotte a waits sho1 in Sunday's High Stakes tourney. BRAINERD, Minn. (AP) - Blue smoke was pouring from the right rear of his Chevrolet Camaro, but Willy T. Ribbs had no intention of slowing down. "I wasn't gonna stop until the car broke or flew off the road," Ribbs said Sunday alter wrap- ping up a wire-to-wire victory in the Pepri Trans-Am at Brainerd International Raceway. It turned out the smoke was caused by a fender rubbing against the right rear tire. But, instead of the tire bursting, the fender flew off two laps from the end of the 99-mile event. "Thank God it broke off," Ribbs said. "That could have been a real problem." Ribbs beat DeAtley Enterprises teammate David Hobbs, driving an identically prepared Z28, across the finish line by 1.8 sec- onds, averaging 100.719 mph. The margin probably woUld have been bigger if not for a full-oourse caution flag late in the race be- cause of oil on the 3-mile, 10-tum circuit. The yellow flag and the pace car came out on the 24th of 33 laps, bunching up the field and putting Hobbs, who had trailed by about nine seconds, and Jerry Hanaen just behind Ribb&. When the green flag was dis- played again, on lap 27, Ribbs moved away from Hobbs, who had to battle Hansen's Pontiac Trans-Am from that point until two laps from the end of the race. Johnson, Chargers still negotiating SAN Diroo (AP) -Nego- tiations between holdout de- fensive lineman Gary Johnson and the San Diego Chargers are at an impasse, Johnson's agent says. Scott Simpson. who represents the four-time Pro Bowl player, says Johnson is demanding to have his contract "restructured." Star witness for Martin? ADIATOR SPECIAL NEW YORK (AP) -Butch Wynegar could be Billy Martin's "star witness" in his appeal of a two-day suspension for calling umpire DaJe Ford a liar. Whether Martin will call his catcher to testify in American League Presi- dent Lee MacPhail's hearing room remalna to be seen. First, Martin must decide whether to challenge the auapension for rem.arks made about umpire Dale Ford following his ejec- tion {rom a game in Chicago last Sunday. Martin. who told The Aaaor.iated Press Sunday he ls "pretty sure" he will appeal. was suspended for this week's games on Tuesday and Wednes- day against Toronto. He has until game time Tuesday to inform the AL whether he will go through with the appeal. Martin said Wynegar and umpire Ken Kaiser would be able to verify hla version of the run-in with Ford and also ea.Id he would pretent MacPhall with an article from a Johnson City, Tenn.. newspaper two years ago in w hich Ford was quoted as making disparaging remarks about him. Rick Cerone, the Yankees' star~ catcher in tut Sunday's game, was ejected when he bumped Morrison while arguing a call at the plate. TH\NGS .r-__:1=..,:0::::...0:::..0.:;..--_ l. car -- =2.read,l - --~·-'3 BUZZ ~W()?Q CUT m'l 111111 ml.1111... ................................... 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By 3:15 p.m. Sunday only 10 boats had finished First boat to finish was Ted Kerr's Tementy from BCYC. Temerity was an e ntry in the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet Class A and the overall corrected ume winner. Second overall was Fijght, skippered by Fred Hammett, San Diego Yacht Club, and third was Anthem. Roger MaLCregor, Lido Isle Yacht Club. There were no ocean racing catamarans in the race. Trophy winners in class: CRUISING -1. Lilli Sohex. Jack Johnson, BCYC; 2. Sporran, John Chessell, Voyagers YC; 3. Incomunicado, John Densmore, Voyagers YC. IOR -1. Cracker Jack. BNHP Syndicate, San Diego YC; 2. Crescendo, William Banash. SDYC; 3. Pacemakeer. Steve Prornisloff, Southwestern YC.1 PHRF-A -1. Temerity, Ted Kerr, BCYC; 2. Flight, Fred Hammett. SDYC; 3. Anthem, Roger MacGregor; Lido Isle YC. PHRF-8 -1. Bustin' Loose. Tim Hahne, Cor<_>~do Y<;; 2. Nuee Ardente, David Huntley, Cru1smg Racmg Assn.; 3. Cats Pajamas, Carl and Marcia Last. BCYC. PHRF-C -1. Comedienne, Cal Burgart, Southwestern YC; 2. Firecrest, Pat Glazier, Voyagers YC; 3. Aphrodite, Jim GruenwaJd, San Diego YC. Linderinan wins BYC 66 Series Jim Linderman's Ericson-46 Raider was the International Offshore Rule Class A winner Satur- day in the sixth race of Balboa Yacht Club's 66 Series. The race was sailed over a 27-mile course around the oil islands between Balboa and Long Beach. IOR Class B winner was Bigwig. skippered by Ron Melville. BYC. Second was ~ Enterprise sailed by Dick Ettinger. Newport Harbor Yacht Club. In IOR-C the winner was California Gold, sailed by Fred O 'Conner, Dana West Yacht Club; second was Big Apple. Gene Williams. BYC. and third was Crackers, John Tigat, Cap1Strano Bay Yacht Club. Trophy winners in the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet; CLASS A -I RUt41. LC"lev Hl•on 8 VC, 1 Fu t Brea,, Jim ~eMev BVC. 3 Compulsion, ROd ROdhe1m, Bahia C0<tnlh1nl•n VC CLASS 8 -I lmi>etuovs, Prill Glos11ow. SVC ? NU11ie Too Jtm Nuoent, BVC, J E Tlc~et. G Cliol'dlt!r, Vove~rs VC CLASS c-I Punvcet, John S1elev, VVC, 7 SvmPllon• Tom Moore. South Shore VC, J Lillie Orlller. Jim S•anit!V BVC Rastello captures match race Doug Rastello of Newport Harbor Yacht Club Sunday won the Area G (California) finals for the Prince of Wales Bowl, U.S . match racing cham- pionship. The win qualifies the NHYC team for the Prince of Wales Bowl finals at Newport, RL Other Area G clubs competing in the finals at Newport Beach were Del Rey Yacht Club of Manna del Rey, and Capistrano Bay Yacht Club, Dana Point. In the cool white bottle. Ask fur It at vour favorite store or restaurant. AvaUable through Sh-nub Dlstrlbutlng Co., lnc:. (714) 898-0758 C114) 788-3475 -(?"U}.Q74':J.33. 1t11pt1rt•~t '"" t111U11111l tr11111"'l•J 1\1~111111. (~'\lll(l<t . . .. . .. . ; ~ t I • • MAJOR LEAGUE STAHDIHGS Amtrlan LHIJUt WEST DIVISION W L PC! Gii SI SO SJ7 Ch•C•OO Kens .. Cltv ruu Aneets Oeklano SI SJ 490 5 53 S6 •14 5, 53 SI 411 6' 1 53 S9 41l 1 .... tnn .. 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MNCollllO Cl> IP H ll Elt Bii SO CaHfomle Fo"c" W 10·1 Klwn S,1 Satnle BCtark L.S·4 RThOme• WP-BC•ar~ 71 J 9 J ) J J A.-t.712 I 2·J 0 0 s 7 J • J 1·) 0 0 RThOm•• Amenc.n LH9Ut Ra~ 4, Indian• l FlntGeme 0 I 2 ) 0 2 l T-243 Teut 201 010 00<>-4 9 7 c .. ••••nd o:io ooo 000-3 9 o HougPI Crur (7) end Sundt>erll Btvteven Solffner <SI and Hauev W-Houon 9 10 L-Soillner 1·7 ~n• 7, lte~ 0 S.C-G•,,_ re,., ooo ooo 000-0 1 o C~vtl•nO 00? 400 Oht-7 IS 0 Matten Schmidt UJ Jo,,.. II> and Jonnton. Brenr>en and Bendo w-e reM en. 7 I L-Mafleck 7 3 HR-Ctevtter>d 8anoo 141 White Se• 4, °'"' .... l Cn1caoo 700 010 000-• 9 o lletllmore 000 001 002-J 9 O Hovt A;o>to 11) Lamo (9) end Hiii, Ftenaoan. Sltwert (SI ano Nolan, OtmO>fV (9) W-HOVI, 14·10 L-F1ena11en, 6·1 HR-Chtcaoo. Lutln>kl <73) Belll,,,ore S1n11leton C 171 A's 6, Twins 0 Oaklen11 030 001 071>-6 10 0 Ml~so•o 000 000 000-0 6 1 Codl•otl Atherton 11) •nd Kearney, Viole Lnondar <II. Fllwn (9) eno Laudner W-COdlroll, 8·1. L-Vlora S·9 HR-Oakland, Kternev (I) • Tltlen I, YenkM\ S Ottrolt 014 001 20C>-I 14 O New York 000 000 2'1-S 10 0 Perrv. Lopez (I) a nd Parrl\h, Keough, Keufman (3), Murrey 16) end Wy,,.gtr W-Pttrv, 12·7. L-Ke®i!ll, 4·6. HR-Detroit, Pa rrl\h (171 llrawen t, tMve Jav\ 6 Toronto 001 010 101-6 IS O Mliweul.ee 003 300 21a-9 12 0 Lu i, Jenwn (4), Gtl"I 171. MCLeu11nhn (71 ono Merllnu. Whitt (6), Caldwell. Tell,,,.n (6), AU9u\llM (I ), Ladd 19) e nd Simmons W-Celdwttt, 9·1 L-t..ee1, 10·10 HR-Toronto. JOl'lnson (18) Revel' I. Red s.x o Bo•ton 000 000 000-0 3 O Kens .. Clfv 000 100 OOx-1 6 I Bova end Allen>on, Ptrrv, QulHnt>errv <91 and Slauont w -Perry, 5·12 L-Bovo, 7·? HR-.CaM .. Cltv. Sl'ttrloan (6) HATIOHAL LEAGUE Br•ve1 S, oocteen 2 ATLANTA LOS ANGELES Butter II ARmn-u Wsh111n rt Horner lb Hubl>rO 21> Chmbt' lb Jorgnsn lb Murohy cf Ronler 2b 8 e,,.,.,lct c PPerei o Badrosn P ebrhbf ebrllbf Jl21 SSe x21> 40 00 • O 1 O Br0<:k lb 4 I 2 I 4 0 0 0 Bektr If 4 I 1 0 4 O 1 t Guerrer lb • o 1 O 0 0 0 0 l and•• cf 3 O 1 I I 0 0 0 Meri.ha! rt 4 0 1 0 3 0 I 0 Runell u 3 O 1 O 3 2 I 0 Flmolt c l O o O 4 1 2 0 AP1ne p I 0 I 0 4 I I I Mondy oh I 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 lltckwth o 0 0 0 0 I O o O Tnorm Ph I o o O Stewert p 0 0 0 0 34 S t l T...it 32 2 I 2 Sc-bY ""'** ..... nta 03CI 011 000-s LOl A ...... I 000 00'2 000-l Game·Wlnnlno RBI -Benedict (4) E-FlmPle, Wnhlnoton OP-Attan10 1, Lo' AnotlH I L08 -Al1en1• 4, LO• .4noetn 5. 2B-Rontar. Guerreto HR-Broctt ( 14) SB-Murohv ( 11) SF-auller. LandrH ua IP H II ER 1111 SO A- PPtrtr W.13·3 s 2·3 7 Bedro•lan S, 16 l 1·3 0 Lft 4""'" APena L,9•6 s I • Beckwith 2 I 1 Stewart 2 0 0 T-N2 A-46,594 N•"-1 LHgue Ell~l 6, ~lnlft 0 2 0 ) 0 1 J 2 0 0 I 1 1 0 0 , Mon•r••I 041 010 OOC>-6 II o Plllsburon 000 000 000-0 2 I Rooe" ano Carter, McWllltam•. Blbl>v (7). Tekulve (11) end Pane. W-ROQtrs . 14·6. L-MCWllHem" 11·6 HR•-MontrHI. Reine• (7). Wellecn (14) ..,,..._. S, Cerdlnell 2 Plllleoetonlo 020 000 120-S 9 O St. Loul> 01 I 000 000-2 I 2 Bv•trom, Reeo (1) end Vlroll, Allen, Ruc•ar (I), Lahti (9), Von Ohlen (9), Andular (9) and Porter W-Bystrom, 4·1 L-Allen. 1· I l HR-Pnlledelonla Schmidt (24) Men 6, Culn 4 New York 00? 020 000 2-. 11 O Cnlcego 101 200 000 O-• I 2 ( I 0 "'"'"9l l Swen, Holmen (SI. Olu 161, SIU. Ill. Oro1co (101 end Ortiz. Nolt\, ~Ith t9l end Lake, Devi• (9) W-Sl•k, 5·l L- Smllh. •·7 HR-Cn1c100, Hall 111 A•~ 1. Giant\ I Hou••on ooo ooo 101-1 S I Sen Frencl>co 001 000 OC»-1 ) 2 Rven a~d A.t.hOv, Krullow, Minton <91 end Mrf W-Rven. ll·S. L-Mtnton, 5·1 HR-Houston, Cruz 171 ltad'l 5, ~·*'" ) Ctnclnnell 000 023 OC»-5 I O Sen Oleoo 100 000 020--3 6 2 Pnrore and llilardel10; Whll1on, SoM (7). Lucas (9) •nd Ktnnac:tv W-Patlore, S·IO. L-Whll>on, 1·1 HR\-Clnclnnatl, PH tore (I), Ofllet 191 MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Amertun LfflllUt BA. TTING ll6S el belll' Carew, A"991s, .J70, Boo11" llo,ton, .369, llren, Kanl6S Cttv •. 344. McRH , Kentet Cllv. 329; Whitaker, O.trolf, .m RUNS: E.Murrey, Balllmora, 11, R.Hender1on. Oekte nd. 73, Rloto.en. Bel· llmort, 73, Molttor, MllweukH, 11, Cooper, MllweukH, 11, Uothew, Tor· onto. 11. Yount, MllwaukM, 71 Riii Cooper, MltweullH , 93, Win· lltld, New Yor ... II, L N Parrl\h, Oe· troll. 7S. Simmon•. MltweulcH. 1•. E Murrev, llentmore. 73 HITS llo9os. Bo.,on, 141, Whllaller. Oetroll, 142. McRH, K•n•at Cltv. l~I. Werd, Minnesota, 130, Simmon•, M•· waullH, 129 DOUBLES llollils. 8osron, JS, McRae, KanM• Clfv, 34, Hr-. Minnesota, 31, L N P...9rrl•h, Oetrolr, 31, Rh>llen. Belllmore. 29. Yount, Mii· weul<ff, 29 TRIPLES Griffin. T0ton10, I, Win· l•tld, New Yor ... I. Herndon. Oetroll, I, 6 are tied with 6. HOME RUNS Coooer. Mllweul!M. 2•. Arme" Botton, 13, Klflta. Chlceoo. 13, Lurln\kt, Chlceoo, 13, Rica, lloston, l3 STOLEN BASES R HeooerM>l'I, Oakland. 10, R.Letv, Chlcaoo, 52, J Cruz, Clllceoo .... W Wiison. Kente1 City, cs. Sample, Tu ... l• PITCHING ( 10 oecl1lonS) Heat, Mii NaukH, 9·2, 3.79, Rloh1111. New York. 12•l, 3 3'. Rouma, Detroit, 1·2, l 17, McGre110r, Balllmor1, 14·4, l 13, Goua11t, New York, 9·3. 2.2•. Slaton. Miiwaukee, 9·3, •JO STRIKEOUTS Morrll, Ot)rolt, 142, Stieb, Toronto. 130, Rloh41111, New York. 119, B1vle v1n, c1ev1tend, 1 It, F .Bennl•l•r, Chlcapo, IOI. SAVES· Qultenberrv, Ken'•' Cltv. 21; Ct udlll, SHllle, 71; Slantev. Bo\ton, 71, R Devi,, Minnesota, 19; Looe1, Detroit, 16. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Aug. 8, 1983 Cl SCOREBOARD N•ttenal L.Heue BATTING (26S al bell): HelldrlCll, SI Lout•. 331; Medtock, P1tt1buron. 321, Oewton, Montreat, .323, Harr, St Loult, .JU, KnlOllt. Houllon, l?l, Lo.Smith, SI Lout\, .llJ. RUNS MurOlly, Atlanta, 97; Reine•, MontrH I. l l. Garvev, Sen OltGo. 76, Evan1, San Frenctw:o, 73, OawM>l'I, MonlrHI, '9, H0<ner, Atlanta, 6t RBI· Dawson. MontrNI, 16, MurPllv. Atlanta, 74, Schmidt, Phtlade!Pllla. 74, G'""'8A, LM ~ '91 Cl'lam!MIU, Atlanta, 61, H9ftdrldl, SILOUI\, 61 HITS Dawson, Monlrfft, ll9, 00· •er. MolllrH I, 133, TllClll, HOUllon, 131, Buckner, Chlcaoo. 116, R.Ramlru . At· lanta, 12' • DOUBLES Buckner. Chlcaoo. 21, Ollvar, MonfrNI, 21, Hendrick, St Loult, 26, Knl9h1, HOuilon, 24; Walladl, MontrHI. 25. TRIPLES Butler, Atlanta, I I, Mortno. HOY\lon, ll, Cru1, HOYilCUI, 1, DI W\on. Montrtal. 1, Raines. MonlrHI, 1 HOME RUNS. Dawson, Monlrtal, 25, Schmtdl, Pllllade!Phla , 24, Murotiv, Atlanta, 23; Evant, San Franctico, 21; Glltn'#a, LAI ......... 21. STOLEN BASES: Reines, MonlrH I, 41; WllllOll, New Y0<k, 37, LeMaater, San Franclaco, 34; I.Sall, LM ~. M1 llh.lttar, Atlanta, 30; Mor•oo. HOY•· ton, >O; Rac:lut, Cincinnati, 30. PITCHING (10 d•chlon•): MontefU\CO, San Otaoo, 9·2, JM, P.Pare1. Atlanta, 1l·3, l .02; Denny, PllllacMIPlll•. 12·5, 2.61; Rooers. Mon· lrH t, 14·6, 2.16; Rven, Hou•ton, ll·S, 2.16 STRIKEOUTS· Carlton. Plll~la. 112; Soto. Clnclnnall, 110; McWtlllam•. PllfsburOll, 145; Rnn, HOU•lon, 120, V~Lft~,llf. SAVES· Le-Smith, Chlceoo, 11, Bac:tro•lan, AtlMte , 16; RNrcton, Mon· 1reat. 16; Minton. San Frencltco, 1); HOllenel, PllUacletpttle, 12, S.H-., LM -...... 12' Levetlt. San Fra.ncl.co, 12. Sutler, St Lout,, 12, Tetlulv•. Pll· libur!Jh, 12. Dtl Mir SUNDAY'S ltESUL TS (11111 ef 4J·MY .._....,.M ,,_..,.., "llUT RACE. 6 fUttonot. Ke o e tue '' Na li ve I D lo ll 5.60 l.60 l.00 Love Comoenv <Blee•> Bldedoon (Otlverft) "''° racac:t: Patriot J~. Henrv. Ro .. walf<, Sal10r Jen"""' Prince, Ceoteln Al Time. 1 12 It 5. 1.10 S.20 HO Wl\fftln Moflty, SECOND ltACE. 1 1116 ml!H Alrrollno (Fernandeil 11.80 6.l'O t.40 Pirate ISlt>llte) 7 00 • 90 Treollan (Hewtevl 4.40 Al•o racac:t Envov·• tnlrt11ue, Der.· cvn Tim, Gela Clrcte, Prince ot Note . w.,, Coe•• Na11v•. F0ttv Elllhl FacetL Time I 45 llS 12 DAIL y DOUBLE (l • I) Palo »2 40 THlllD ltACE. One mile on turt Evenlno M'Lord (Vtnll 140 UO 160 Taol ... ch !Lion.ml S.00 J.60 woer Diamond (Meal ) 60 AIMI rauG Fleet Sere,.,,,_, FIHI Netkre. Andrew 'N ,.,., Huie Blazt Time 1.37 llS IJ EXACT A (4·71 Peld In 00. ,.OU.TH llACE. One mite. Accountablv (Plncevl 4 60 > 60 l 20 Ple(itv Con~ <BIKlll 11 40 910 Sl>«lal Kinda Guv (SIDltte) 5 00 AbO r9C9d. 8-Jln. A-•· Tri· umollent ea-. Roman OIOIOmaf, Footl\h Chalr,,,.n, PeriaolM>O, Chi• E Prince Time t;Jt 3/5 l"lffTH ltACE. 6 furlOnOl Cnlt l Corn •t e t k (M cGnl IUO U O S.60 Stwel Music (Hawtev> ll.60 1.00 Tiit EUia Lord IBtackl l.60 AIMI ••c.d: w.c . Slltck'f, Mete Aelaoler, lnloxleelor. EchO GranOt, Ullt*<nown•I lo Me, Exctu,lve Kid. Time: 1:10 4/S. U EXACTA <6·41 paid "'6HO. SIXTH ltACE. I 1116 mllft. Swa p Tne Gt au ISnmk r) ... 20 30.00 9.80 lltlcUtt Freet (Plncev> ll.IO 7.oo Countv s .. 1 IMcCerronl l .20 Also racac:t No Hnt, A RllJlll Idea, Oerll Accent, Ughlfhtwayllolme, WhO'' Got 1 Nlc .. et, l!Mtom. JoM· oteble. Garno Jan Gin Time l·U l/S SEVENTH ltACI.. 6 tu<tonot Civic LNder (Otf>sy) 6.20 4 00 2 IO ~,....., <Vatanzu.le) J.80 290 First Chi.i (Pinc.av) 7 60 Atw r9C9d Can't k Bet, s.n-. RoYel Dream. Gr9f'CIOll, Ot1tant Prince. Trlornc>he Time. 1;09 4/S. IJ EXACTA 11·71 e>elO M2 SO 12 l"ICK MX 0 ·4·6·6·7·11 e>eld '3.J 14 60 with 30 wlnntno ticket• (live ,_. .. ,, Carryover DOOi 1'9,4'9 SI EIGHTH ltACE. 1 1/14 ml~ Be let Motet ILIOflaml 4.l'O l 00 UO Tiit WOf\Oef' lsr-naaerl 3 40 2.IO R~w•v Groom (Valen1uefa) l.IO A"o raced Flohtl1111 Flt, POW.. Ma nan lie I. Time. 1·41 u •XACTA <4·S) oalo '39 so. NIN'TH ltACE. One mite on 1ur1 Ansuen (McCerronl 10.60 3.40 2.60 OH·Recoro Catch (Shoemaker> 2.40 l,00 OH·N••u<•ll•llC (Plncevl 3.00 • 00 0 H-0HOllHI ler MCond Allo recac:t. Concltroe. sw .. 1 Men, S.Crtt, Wt" srrereov. Neootlete. Time: l:J1 llS. SJ EXACTA (1·6) oeld M1.00. IJ eXACTA (7·31 Paid US.SO. Attendance: 15,111. PGA (•f ~•<Hie ~ ........ , 274 Piel Sunon.1100.000 0 ·66·11·7 t vs Jaco. Ntckteu" 60,000 73·6S·7 t ·66 276 Peler Jecot>"n. 40,000 1J·70·61·6S 211 Pat MCGowen, 30,000 ... ,7.n -69 211 John FOUlllll, ZS,000 67·69·7t·7t Vt Fuuv lo.tier, 19.000 72·71·61·69 Bruce Llet1ke, 19,000 67·71·70·71 ao Oen POl'll, 16,000 72·70·69·'9 212 Miki Reid, 10,ltO 69· 71-72· 70 Douo Tewell, 10,llO 74·72·69·67 Jav Han, 10,llO ..-n-69·73 Scott SlmPWn, 10.MO 66· 73· 70· 13 Ben Cranthew, 10,llO 61·66·71-77 2ll Kelltl Ferou•. 6.750 61·70·12·7l Hate trwln, 6,7SO 72·70·13·61 Jim ThO<'oe, ,,7SO 61·72·7•·69 R-Malll>l1. 6,7SO 71-11-71-70 David Grahem, 6,7SO 70·69·74·70 LM Trevino, 6,7SO 70-61·7•·71 .. JO/In COOi<, 4,7SO 74·71·61·71 Ravmond FIOvd, 4,7SO '9·75·71·69 Oannv Edward,, 4,7SO '7·76·71-70 as Frac:t CDYoltt, 3,912 71-70·13·71 Don Pooley, 3,'12 72·61·74·71 Chlo &eek, 3.912 12·71·10-11 J«rv Pell, l ,912 69·12·70-74 * llooc>v WaOllln•, 3,200 73·12·74·67 BUOCIV Whitten, 3,200 66·70-n·n S.va 9ellestero•, J,200 71-76·11·67 217 Ancrv a.en, 2,6SO 71-73·71·72 Merli PteN, 2,6.SO 73·71·70·73 Tom W1bkoof, 2 ,6SO 1.-10-69·12 eoo llovd. 2.6SO 10-n-12-61 JOl'lnnv Miier, 2.6SO 12·7S·13·67 Jim Simon., 2,6.SO 69·75·12·71 -8oO Sllaarer, 2,0l7 73-67·76·12 Larrv NtlMWI, 2,097 72·61·61·80 CeMn f>Mte. 2,017 69·71-76·72 Jim C04t>lf"t, l,097 73·66-16·73 Tim SlmPllOll, 2,0l7 16·70-70·72 8ot>t>v Nlcholi, 2.097 75·69·7•·70 .. Gery Hallt>tr11, l,17S 71-7S-71 ·12 8errv Jeec11.r. 1,175 73·74·67·75 Greo Norman, 1,115 12·72·70·75 Lou Graham, 1,175 n-1•-10-m Garv Plever, I ,115 74·61·73·74 2tO Larrv Mlie. 1.730 70-70·75·75 Peter Oo•fafhUI,, t,730 7S-71·11·1J Morrl• Hatellkv, l,7l0 '9·1S·n ·1J Glt>bv Gt11>er1. 1.7l0 70-66·80·7• Mika NtcOlellt, 1,730 72·71·13·74 Lon Hlnlr.te. 1.730 10·75·74·71 Vet'ICt HHlner, 1,730 13·74·72·71 Tom Walson 1,no 1•·61 ·11·10 ltl Git Moroan, 1,610 n ·n -1•-n Georllt llurn" I ,610 11·61·12·13 Cherie• COOdv. 1,610 73·72·10-76 Jee .. Renner, 1,610 1•·71· 13·13 Eo Florl. 1.tlO 7S·6t·n ·74 JoM Aelarn" 1,610 15·11 ·11·1l lt'2 Jim Nllfo<d, l,S6S n ·n ·1t·n Sco41 HOc:h, l.S6S n ·n ·14·1J ltl Bruce Fleflhe<. I, SJS 74·73·7•·71 llot> GI-, 1,SlS 71·6'·16·77 Crelo SleC!ler, 1,SJS 72·73·76·11 Maril LYI, 1,535 1S·61·15·16 lt4 Mlf<e Donald, 1,506 71-71-76·7' Tom Kitt , 1,506 12·15·13·14 Arnold Palmer, 1,506 7•·7l·7•·n N !ck P,.f<» • I• S06 72·74·74·7• G«>r Ill Ar char, I, S06 70-17·1~·13 ltS T.C Chen, 1.SOO 12-1~·1'·'9 2" Larrv G•lberl. 1,SOO 7H4·7 .. 7S ,., Pal Unci.ev, t,500 14·12·80·11 Ru Celdwetl, 1,SOO 74·73·75-7S ,.. Ron Srreco., 1,500 11-n ·n ·76 -Jim Looue, t,SOO 13·7•·17·76 lllM Britton, l,SOO 14·11·17·16 Bot>t>v Hein\, l,SOO 73-74·75·71 )01 LM E-. •.soo 16·11·71·17 E o Snoeac:t. I. SOO 1•·13·15·19 ., Atten Miiier, l,SOO 69·11·77·11 800 Ee.,wOOd. l,SOO 76·70·11·7' lOl R_.t Hoyt, l,SOO 71·72·80·80 Leonard ThOmO,n, l,SOO 73·7•·7S-l l .. Curll• Slr•-.l,500 71-7•·1S·7• -Jim Kine 1,SOO, 73·1l·11·M &es'9n f"lw OHM< (et~.~IL) rn Pelll Rtu o, llt,2SO 66·7C>-13·61 m Jana Lock, 117, ISO 11·67·61·1J 212 Vicki Tabor, SIO,SOO 70·6'·70·73 113 P•m Gietzen, 56,s.J 49· 7C>-72· n SUI Ertl, U.s.J 71·66-71·73 ... Donne Ceoonl, IS, Ill StftJt\enta Ferwle. IS, ll) S.ndr• P•tmer, IS, 133 ., llec~v PNrllOll, 14,025 Pellv Sheehan, M,025 Jan SllC>Mnton, 14.025 -Carol CherDoMlr, IJ,325 ., Allee Miii«, 12 .-C. Monlll<lfT*''f, 12 ,Ill Mlndv Moore~l2.lll 71 ·10-11-1• 72·73·10·71 1•·11·69·12 74·66-73·7• 72·71-71·11 15·61·70·7• 12·7'·69 11 14·73·70·72 6t· 13· 76· 11 n·73·71·n no S. L vnn Gram•, $2, 144 17·70·7H2 Hotlv Hertltv, 12, 1 .. 72·69·11·71 Lauren Howe. 12.144 14·76·10·10 Betn Klno, n .1u 1S·7C>-70·1S Keren Pwmezl, S2, lU 7S·71-12·12 Nencv Ruotn, 12.1u 10-14· 15· 11 ltl OtOl>le Austin, s l.6"45 71·77·11-72 Jene Ct attar, 11,6"45 11·71·12·11 M FIOvd·OArmn, s l,6"4S 71·12·15·12 Date E1111etlno. s l ."45 11-69·12·69 Brende Goldtmlh, SI ,6"4S 11·71·11-12 ,., $ Cunn1111111em. Sl.299 14·72·12·1• 5\11Fooltmen,i.1,299 7l·76· 7J· 70 Gell Hirata, 11,299 71-71·76·74 ROH J-. 11,299 1•·1S·10-73 Pia Nlln on, Sl,299 7S·17·74 11 lt3 Merv Owver.11.0IS 73·16·69·7S Llnoa Hunt, 11,0IS 69· 14·15·7S Joan Jovce, 'l,01 S 72·11-76·74 Cindy Hiii, 11,0IS 77·69·12·75 •· Sellv Quinlan 12·74·12·7S Cetllv Silerio., 11,0lS 16· 13· 71·73 lt4 Marl MCOo\Joalt, 16'0 7S·73·73·73 Jutte Pvne, '840 15·16·10-73 Lauri Peter •on. S840 79·10-73·1J Judv Clark, Sl40 19·10·73·7l 295 M. Spencer-0.vlln, S711 71 • 7 1-70· 71 Lori Hu•hold, 1719 77·73·73·72 OHOM Lasker, S711 18·7l·73·11 296 ll•••rtv Devis, 1591 72·74·7•·76 Judv Elll\, SS91 14·75·7S·12 Marlane Ha1111a, 5S91 73·71·12·12 Terri Ludlhur.,, SS91 71·74·16·7S 2'1 Lvnn Adam•, ISOI 74·77·11·75 Katnv Hiie, 1soe 11-n-11-11 Bonnie Lt utr. SSOI 72·76·76·73 Pennv Pulz, 1soe 69·15·1•·19 M.J. ~Ith, ISOI 12·71·71·76 191 Laure HurttM.tl, M3t 71·16·13·71 Celhtrlne Penlon, S43I 77·13·75·13 Mertv Oldlerson. 1438 1S·71·13·19 ,., LMI Garoacz. 139• n ·73-n-11; Colleen WaNler. S394 70-76·7S·11 300 Jov"9 Kermltrskl, 1361 JOI n -11-1s-n A. Rtlnl'larOI , $117 7S·74·76·76 Cerolvn HIM, s 117 72·76·7S·11 LvnnStronev. Sill n ·n·n·n Nf'L exfllbmen NATIONAL CONFERENCE West w L T ~ct. Pl" PA Allente 1 g 0 1.000 13 10 ltama I 0 0 1.000 l4 20 !>en Fran 0 I 0 .000 7l 26 New Orlns 0 1 0 000 ll ., Eell Oellat I 0 0 1.000 20 11 Plllladelf>f\ 1 0 0 1.000 21 11 NY Glanh I 0 0 1.000 23 " . SI LOYis 0 I 0 000 10 2' Wathlno 0 1 0 000 10 13 C-et c111caoo I 0 0 1000 21 11 Ml~11 I 0 0 I 000 2' 10 Tempe Bev I 0 0 1.000 20 10 Oetroll 0 I 0 .000 11 21 Grn Bev 0 I 0 000 20 21 AMaltlCAN CON,.Elt&NCE Wftt Denver 1 0 0 I 000 10 01 Ken' CHY I 0 0 I 000 24 01 lt•k19n I 0 0 LOOO 26 23 Sen OltQo 0 I 0 .000 20 34 Saefllt 0 I 0 000 07 10 ... , Benlmore I 0 0 1.000 IS 00 9utfel0 0 I 0 000 11 27 Miami 0 I 0 000 11 20 N Enolenel 0 1 0 000 16 77 NY Je1' 0 1 0 000 16 73 Cenlr81 Plllsburoh 2 0 0 1.000 54 30 Cleveland I 0 0 1.000 21 20 Cincinnati 0 I 0 .000 07 2• Hou•ton 0 I 0 .000 00 ts ~Y'• Sc-NY Glanfl 71, NY Jet• 16 "ridlY'• o.m.. Ctncln!lllll et Weshln11ron, n GrMll BeY al Seattle, n NY Glanls et Pltltl>urllh, n S."'"91Y'' Genws lllelden at NY Jets, Glenl• SlaOlum, n Atlanle al Denver. n BallllTIOfa at Ml<lnewte, " Chlceoo ., St. LOUlt, n Cltvetenel e t Buffalo, n Ottroll el Ken• .. Cllv, n New Orleans el Miami, n Phfladttl>hl• et Sen 014too. n T•mpe 9ev 11 HOYslon, n S4IMIY'• 0-~ Enolend et San Frenclsco MeftcllY'I G- Dallas •I Items, 1 P.tn $\~ IWlmmlne AMJlltlCAN CUP II (II L81 Ant111M J ~ -1. Tracie Ruh (U.S.), 190.113, 2 She ron Hemrock <C•n•Clal. 117.433, l . Mlweko Motovoshl (Japen), 119,966 . •. Car04vn WllMWI IBrlllen>. 176.333; 5 Merllkl El!Olltn (Nalhtrlandll, 113.733, 6, Kerin Sllllltf' (Swltzerland), 171.641; 1 Alexandre Worlsch <Austria), 170.SSO, I Plier Ramirez (Mextco), 165.293. • Teem i.tenelln111 (llna11 -I Ceneda. 11U2S, 2. United Slett'-114.291; 3 Japan, 119."'4; 4.. 8rttl1n, 170.2S6, S Swllzertend, 166.297; 6. Mexico, IM.767, 1. Arl.ll>t. 124.148. Camel Lights 9 mg "tar". 0.8 mg. nicotine ev. per cigarette by FTC method. Warning : The Surgeon General Hes Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health . Hltll\ Stak9s Ill Ntw-1 a.aChl SlntM• FINI Jimmy Connor• IU S 1 def f1m Mevo11t IU s I. 4·l , 6·4 6·1 !Connors win• SI00,000. Mevo11e wins ~tOOOI Tillrd ,...<• 1 .. n Ltndl ICttch<»IOvoktel <let Mah Wltancltr (Sweoen). 6 4. 6·7 (Ltndl win• 14S,OOO, Wllender •In• IJS,000) Cl•V Court dl•mplonsJllt» lef lndlanelltlhl Slnerlet F lnal Jimmy llrlH (US) cltt Andre• Gomt1 <Ecueoor>. 6·4, 2·4, 6·4 (Ari" •Ins $51,000, Gomer Win• 17S,SOC)) D~ Ftnet Me rk Edmonoson (Austrt t la )·Sherwood Stewerl (US ) del Ceulo Mone·CarlO• Klrmavar 1Brultl. 6·3, 6-2. Exhlblflon tournament l•f San 0 .... ) Slntrle• Final Merlina Navratilova IU.S > def An· <tree Ju 11er (U $ ), 7·6. 6·2 (Navra tilova win• US,000, JetOtr 120,000). °"""" fl'lnal Ja-·Peula Smith <US l Otl Ro•I• c .. a"·LMlle Allen (U 6.1. 6·2. 6·1 °"" ... ""'" ART'S LANDING (Mlw-1 ... dll -117 •nole<,. 201 t>eu. l e>.rrecuoe . 141 bonito, 615 mackerel, 10 roe~ ti.,,, 74 VlllOwlaU, 134 U.lolack, I doraOO, 64 vtllowfln tuna DAYIY'S LOCKER (New-1 e..dl)--on I enoler' 71 e>.rracuoe , 20I t>onlto. 21 cellco e>.u. 1.015 maoeret. 37 roc:k "'"• Sl Mnd e>.u, SI yetlOwlell, O vettowfln tuna, 15 sklolack H&M LANDING (San °'"9>-W eno5ar1. 266 vet!Owlell, 1 ban, 41 t>onllo, 11 t>trracude. 26 ml,cetlaneou' IL- Dt1'9ncit>-7l• enoler• 1.791 vettowfln tune, 1,SOI vetlOwteM, 2 .. dOredo, l,OtS 'klolecli. 2 bloeve lune. 7 bll.ll'fln rune WOf1d CM""*'"~ let """'*I, "1rlland) MEN Sh01 out -1 S•rul IPola~d) 10·1114, 2 Tlmmermenn IE•tt Ge< menYI, 6t·51/4, 3 Me<huro IC1ach0110· ve~lal. 61·10. • Leu• IU S 1.61·7. 5 11<>1¥• (USSR), 66·1 6 Btvet IE ast Ge rma n•>. 65·11. 7 Anore 1 (ltatvl.6S-10114, I A•onnlemt (France), 6S·ll/2, 9 Miiie (YU90slavle ), 64·1, 10 Leflmenn (US I. 64·111• 20-kll walk -I Canton (Meatco), 1.20.4', 2 Prlt>ltnK <C1echOslO••klel. 1:20.5', l Ev•tullov (USSR). I 71 OI, 4 Merln ISe>eln), 1 21 71, 5 L .. ltvre (Fr•nc•I. 1'21 37. 6 111a1e11 <C1echO•IO· vakla), 1:21 5', 1 De Miiano (Italy). l:2U7, I LtBlanc (Caneelal. 1 72 04, 9 Gonzetai (MeJtlcol. 1:n 06. 10 wie-(EHt Germenv), 1·22 u WMl!end tr•nHctlons 8AH8ALL A~n LMeu• BALTIMORE OR · IOLES-RHcll•eted Mike Fte11419an, oltchtr Oottonac:t Oen MorooletlO of teller, to Rochestaf ol the lnler ' nellonal LHOut CHICAGO WHnE SO>C-Rtcelltd Al .ion.., olfcner, trom Denver Of the Amtrlc•n AUOC:latlon Ootlont<! Chrl• Nvman, ""' be\ernen, to Denver MILWAUKEE 8REWERS-Canac:t uo Tom C•ndlolll, oltehef. from Ven· cou"" of the Pacific Coett LtHut Moved Ned Voll, catchtr from Ille IS•Clay dl"bted 11•1 IO the 71 Oe• dl .. l>ltd "" IASKETllALL NatleMI lla\11""811 A 15.c lafltfl NEW JERSEY NET~Hlred JoM Klllltee H an enlilenl coach FOOTBALL Ne-"""*' laa-HOUSTON OILERS-Cut Ooneld Martin. offenilve linemen end JOMol'I Otdlno, defensive llnemen ' HOCKEY Netllnal Hech'4 LM- S T LOUIS BUJES'-Namac:t J eek Quinn director or l>u•lntu o~r••lon• end execullYe vice ort1l0tn1 ---•.A C'4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Aug. 8, 1983 NILIC NOTICE NOTICE OF' DEATH OF CUFFORD A. RIJHUNG, au CLIFFORD ARTHUR REllLINC AND OF PETI· TJON TO AOMINlSTER ES· TATE NO. A·llHU T o all heln. ~~Clcwies. c reditors and t'Ontlngent l't ed1lul"ll of CU Hord A Rehl- '"" uka Chfford Arthur Rehl. mg und persons who may be otherwi:se intt!r~ted in the will and/ur est.ate: A petillon has been filed by James C Rehling & Donald W Rehling an the Su· penor Coun of Orange Coun· ty requesting that James C R ehling & Donald W Rehl· Ing be appointed as person.al represent.alive to administer the estate of Clifford A Rehl· mg aksCl1fford Arthur Rehl- ing (under the Independent Administration or Est.ales At't) The pellt1on 1s set f or heanng in Dept N o . 3 at 700 C1v1t' Center Dr . West, Santa Ana. C A 92701 on August 24, 1983 al 9:30 A.M IF YOU OBJF.X:T to the granting of the petttt0n, you sh ould either appear al the hearing and statA: you obiec· uons or me written obiec- u ons wi1h the c:ourt before the hearmg. Y our appear- ance may be tn person or by your attorney. lF YOU ARE A CREDI· TOR or a contingent creditor of the deceased, you must file yuur cl.aim with the court or present it to the personal rep. resent.ative appointed by the court within four· months Crom the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Se<:- tion 700 of the Probat.e COOe or California. The ume for C11tng claims will not expire pnor to four months Crom the date of the hearmg nout'ed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the hie kept by the rourt. Ir you are interested tn Vie estate, you may serve upon the ex- e<'Utor or admirustrator, or upon the attorney for the ex· ecut.or or admmistrat.or, and file with the court with proof o f service, a wntten requesl st.aung that you desire special nouce of the filing of an in· vcntory and appral.sement of estate assets or of the peti· twns or accounts men tioned m Section 1200 and 1200.5 of the California Probate COOe. MARK MEYERS, OF CUMMING, KEMP & MEYERS 701 Parkcenter Dr. Suite 100 Santa Ana, Ca. 835-8858 Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot August 2. 8, 9, 1983 4409-83 P\BltC NOTICE MUC NOTIC! Pl8llC NOTICC NIUC NOnc£ rt8JC tr>11Cl NOTtCI Of' TllUITH I ALI 1you AM IN OIPAUU UNO ... A ,.OUMTAIN VAU..IY ,OUNTAIN VALi.SY NOTIO• °' TRU8Tal •At.i Trll•IM ........ n11 OHO Of'""'" OATID HPTIIM· ICHOOL OllTfllCT ecHOOl DeeTillCT "-.... 1te00171 On Auoutt 16, 1ta3. It 10:00 1.m Hll 11. , ... UNI.Ill YOU TAKI NOTICE OF ADOPTION or FIES· NOTICI Of'~ T.I. .... ... ltwyet fitla lneuranotCOtp .ta duly ACTION TO PflOTICT YOUll OLUTION OF INTEN1 rO leASE M QIOI.~ Of' COMMONWEALTH 8ANK. lormarry appolnlld Tru11 .. under and llll'flOH,.TY.IT MAY H eOUI AT A SURPLUS DISTRICT Fl!AL PROP· INTIMT TOLIAU 9UN'1.UI EQUAUT'Y SAVINGS ANO LOAN ~avant 10 Deed ol Truat axecut.CS ~IC •Au ... YOU NllD AN EFfTY OteTNCT MAL ~TY AISOCIA TION .. duly IPl>Olnled b)' PattlC!I• De Prlffl. an•UMILlfMIO 1111"\.ANATION Of' TH8 NATIMI 810 NO 64·6 NOTICE 18 HEREIY Q1v~ THAT T~-unlMr ,,... followlng ~ "'°"'an and Sony• Slwyet, en Ul'I• °" TMI PttOCUOINO AOAtN•T NOTICE ISHEFIE8VOIVl:NTHAT net FOUNTAIN VALLEY 8Ctt00l eclflbeeldaedoflruetWILLSAlLAT m1111ad womll'I .. TtuSIO< for Iha YOU, YOU 8"0Ul.D CONTACT A f}IE FOUNATAIN VAU.IY SCHOOL OtSTRICf l\U d«llated 11\al the fOI-,.ueuc AVT\0+4 TO THE HIGHEST ban41111 end aecurlly ot ltwll W LAWYI". DISTRICT Illa Cleclerad \lllt the lot• towtno rMI Pf~ will l'O' be BIOOER FOR CASH 8t)eylb .. al $GhUttz ~ M11tlhl A Sc:huttz. hua NOTICI Of' TflUtTH'a IALI lowing '"' prop9rty wlll not be nMdecl lot cl-OOM J)Ufl)OMe: tlrM ot Nie In lawful 1"0MY of lhe band and wife 11 B-llelaty, dlled T.e. No. ?D7AI needed for cl11aroom pu<po-ROOM 0-13 of 11'9 R08ERT 0 . lJnttad Stal•) all right, title and Jenuary 8, 1982. Ind recordeo .. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that Bulldtnga A. c. D II Anhui D. WAAOLOW SCHOOL localed at lnt.,-•t conwy9d to and now held 1t1a1tument No. 62·012839 on Jlnu· on Auguat i9, 1983 et 9:00 A.M. 1 m. NlttblH s~noot localed at 9300 G•r· 919 I Pion-Orlv•. Huntington by 11 unci.r Mid DMd of Trull In vy 13 1982. 01 Olllclll Recoro1 In of Hid day, tn lhe room "' utda lot oanla Avenue, Fountain Valley, C•ll· Beach. C1lllornl1. P4WetlY twelnallat O..Ulbad: 1111 Office ol tna County Recorder of conducting TrualM"• Salff, wllhln lo.nla The Boerd of Trull-Of llWI TRUSTOR JERRY J. JONES. en Orange County. State ol C1lllornl1 lhl oll1ofl ol REAL ESTATE SE· The Board or Trulleea ol Iha Fountlln "8Jley 8cllool Otttrl<:I 1• 111\m.,rled ~ Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION CURITIES SERVICE. tocatacl 112020 Founletn Valley SChe>ol Otitrtct 1•· aol~ to leUe Ille llCIHllN '° In• BEEFICIARY EQUALl'TY SAV• TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER FOR NOtth Broldway. Suite 206. In thl aotve1 to'"" the laelllllM '° In· dlelled ll>Ova under the terma and INOS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION. a CASH CASHIER'S CHECK OR Clly of Senll Anl. County ol Orange. dlelled 1bo11e UndlW lhe t1tma and CC)n(Jjtlon• at•leCS In the Aeaokltlon COll>Oflllon Recofded o.c;.mt>et CERTIFIED CHECK (plyll>le at llm• tlal1 ol Clltlomt1. TRANSAMERICA condlllonl allllld In lhe Aeaolullon of the Bowd. Aeaolutlon No. 8'.07 21, 198 t .. I.NII No. 28085 In book of .. le In lawful money of Ille United TITLE INS CO as duty appoint.CS of In Iha RNOtullon of Iha Boatd, The minimum monthly ..... .,_y. 1030 P-oe 985 or Offlcill Aec0<da StalH). •I In Iha 101>1>y 01 CllllfOfnla Tru11ea under and purauan110 Oeed AesOl\lllon No 84.()9 "*'' f0< the term ol 1119 leMe ah .. In lhe otno. ol the Recor~ of Ot- land Tiiie com~ny -1010 N Main 01 Trull, record41d on Septamt>e• 22. The minimum montnly teue pay-not be lffa than t 288.00 pe< month. .,IOI County Street, Santa An1. Calllom11 1980. " Document no 29198 In menl 101 classroom and other types p1yabla monthly, In edYlll<ll. The PARCEL I Unll 88 .. tnown and YOUR ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER Book t3752 Page 1488 Ot Olllctel ol spece 101 th• term ol 11149 leate minimum monthly p1yment 101 deKrlbed In the Cndomlnlum Plan A DEED OF TRUST OR MORTGAGE Record• of setd County, C1Jllorn11, ahall not !>ti IHI lhan 58c per square tubMq~I perlod1 mtly be I d· fecofci.d on Augual 18, 1977, In DATED JANUARY 8. t982. UNLESS executod by Jamee r Fihey & Linda 1001. The minimum monthly laaae juttac:t by the Conaum.r Prlet lndall book l2339, p~ 872 to 709 In· vou TAKE ACTION TO PROTFCT Falley paymanl ror WbMQuenl pettodt lnnYIJ aYetage ra11ected 11 lha and clulive of Ofllclll Reco<d• ot aatd VOU PROPERTY. IT MAY BE SOLO Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION may t>e adjulled l>y the actual Ola· of the teue !*lod A Security 0.-Courtty AT A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU NEED ro THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR trlel C:OSI A eecurtty deposit will be posit al\111 be required prl0< lo OC:· PARCEL 2· An undivided one AN EXPLANATION OF THE CASH. 11wtul money ot tne UnlllO required prior lo °""pancy cupanc:y elgllty-nlnth (1189) lnterMl aa at..,._ NATURE OF HTE PROCEEDINGS Stales. at inside the maln lronl en· No commlaston alllff be paid any lnto1m111on concerning the ant In common In tn. IM lnt.,.•t In AGAINST YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· !ranee lobby of T1ansam1rtca Tiiie ocenlld rM I Hllll broker In '"'' l)topoaaJ ahoYld be addrMMd 10: and IOI he Common ArN ol Lot 1 of TACT A LAWYER Ins Co . 930 N Main SllMI, Santa regerd, I nd there ttiall t>e no deduc· FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL OIS. TrlC1 9643, H pet map flied In book All rlgnl 11t1e and tntllfeat con-An•, Call! 00000 all rlgnt, Ulla end lion ltom any propo .. l In oetermln· TRICT. 17210 0811 Slleet. Fountlln 4oe. pegn 13 and l4, Mtaoettaneous veyea lo and now held t>y 11 under inierett conveyed 10 6nd now held Ing the hlgn111 111pon111>1e t>ldder Valley, C1llloml1, 92708. Telephone Map• record ol Nld County. as aucll &aid Deed or Trust in the properw by 11 unoe1 said OeeO or T'ual 1n the Sealed propo•ala lo lease said (714) 842-6651 Allenllon· Cerol term'' dellend tn the Arttcte entitled situated 1n Hid County and State property situated In salll County property mull be received by tne Jon" FOUNTAIN VALLEY "Oellnlllon" of the Oecleretton ol describe<! 11 Lot 8, Trect 2344, In Celllornta, dascttbtng the land there~ delegated office' at the Foun111n Val-SCHOOL DISTRICT CoYenanll, Condllltoni and Reatrlc- the Clly ot Costa Mesa. County of in lot 45, ol Tract no 5005 as tey School Ols111c1 Education Center, BOARD OF TRUSTEES Ilona recorded In bool( 12339, pege Orange Slate ol C•lllornt1. •s sriown on a map 1ne1eol record~ 1n 17210 Oak Stre~ll. Founllon Velley. Suzanne M00te 610 of Oltlcial Record• (the .. Oeclar- sllowf\ on a map 1nereo1recorded1n t>ook t83 pages t!I and t6 Of mis· Cahl()fnla. 9?708. no Ille< than 4 00 Clerll ol the Boetd atlon"). and any amendments or an- Bool\ 90. Page 11. MISGe!ranoous ~llaneous maps, •&Cords of said P M . Auguat 9. 1983 Publlah6<1 Orange Coast Dally Pilot neutlona tttereto Maps. recCHds ol Slid Orange Coun-:ounty Before accepting any w1111en Augull 8. 1983 EXCEPT THEREFROM 111 ou. gas. ty The 111ee1 aCldreu and 011111 proposals, tne delegated olllcar 4550-83 mlnar1ls and 01ne1 hydroc;erbors Trie street ado1ess and 01ner :ommon des1gnatton. tr any. ot the shall call tor oral t>tddlng Any per· t>elow a depth of 500 feet, without common des1gnallon. 11 1ny. ol the real property described abOve Is son who has ne•etolo•e sut>mltled 8 PUBLIC NOT'ICE tlle right ot aurlaoe entry, ea re• 111at properly descrlt>ed above is purported 10 be 3129 Boston Way. written t>id may sut>mll an oral l>ld a«ved. In tnalrumenta ot records purported lo l>e' 2218 Avalon St .. Costa Mesa. Ce 92626 exceeding by al least nve (5%) per· 0 E p ART MEN T 0 F TH E EXCEPT THEREFROM ell oll. gaa, Colla Melll, Ca, BENEFICIARY TRANSAMERICA cent the highest wr11ten l>ld The TREASURY/INTERNAL REVENUE mlnerlls 1nd other hydrocarbons, THE UNDERSIGNED TRUSTEE F I N A N C 1 A l S E Fl V t C E S , highest 1 eaponslble blddet shell ~ SERVICE below a depth ol 500 leet, without DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY FOR IN· '.J t4)832·93 l4 requlreo lo eAICUll! lhe form ot NOTICE OF SEALED BIO SALE. lhl rlgl1t of turllOt entry, as ,._ co RR E c T 1 NF o R MAT 1 o N Tile undersigned heret>y dtsclilms tease such formal has neretolo•• unde< the 1uthor1ty In lnte'"'' FleY· ~. In lnatrurnanta of recOfd. by FURNISHED all llat>lllty lor any lnco..,ectness tn t>een approveo I>)' tile Board 01 enue Coda Mellon 633t, tne prop-reason or a breach°' That said sate Is made wttt•out said st•eel address or olllllf com-Trustees lt1y dacrlbed !*ow hu ~ Mlz· PARCEL 3. Eatament• u Ml lortll covenant or warrinty regarding 1111a, mon deslQnatlon The Board ol Trust-shall make ea for nonpayment ot lnternll rtY· In the S«rtlons anll\leO "Certain posseulon or encumbranoe1, °' u Satd sate Wiii t>e made without the detMmln111on as 10 whetner to enue tuea due lrom Sano & SyMa E.-nenta for Ownen .. , "Suppo<t, 1o lnsurablllty ol tllle c.ovenent or warranty, exprn• 0, Im· -ase said lacllllles as 10 wnetnllf 10 B1boll. 2201 Prt11et1 ~. NewpOl1 Settlement and Encrolci\ment'" and The total 1moun1 ol hie unp1ld plied, regarding !Ille. pouesalon or tease said t1cllltlea wlln ten ( 10) days Be.ch, Ca. 92&eo. The property wlll "Montgomety Street E•Mments" ol t>alance of said obltgatlons together encumbrances, to 11tlsly tna prl~ci: oiler receipt ot bids be told 11 pybtlc NI• Under Maled the Artlele entitled .. E1aements" of Wllh advances. end etllmat.cl coats pal balance of Ille Nole or other tntormallon concerning the bid u provided by lnt.,n1I ~enue fha Oeclaretlon. and expense• 11 s103.398.91. ot>tlgatlon secured by said Deed of proposal should bl addretsaed 10. Code aectlon 6335 llfld ral11ecl regu· PARCEL 4: ~t• •• setlorth Thal Notice ol l>ruch ol aald obit-Trust. with lntMesl Ind other aumal FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DIS· lallonf. Date Bids will be opened. In the Sectlont entltleO "Certiln gallon and election 10 sen seld real u provided therein, plu• advancea TRICT, 17210 Olk Street, Fountain Augual 18. 1983. Tlme bid• wlU be io-ta lor Owner•" and "Sup- property was recorded as tnsltu· 11 eny. unde< the terms Deed 0j Valley. Calllornta, 92708. (714) opened. 11:00 AM. Pl-of ~: pOtl, seulamant Ind Encroach· ment No 83· 145244 on Aprll 7. Trull, 1-. charges end eapen-of 8-42-6651. Alltlflllon. Ca•ot Jones 24000 Avila Ad., l.Jigun• Ntouaf, Ca. mant" of the At1lcla entitled ··E- 1983. or Ollletll Records In the 01· 1"6 Tru11ee and of the trusll creeted FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL 92877, 4111 lloor. Tiiie on.rees: Only mant.1" of of lhe OeelaJallon ot !Ice of the County Recorder ol O<· by said Deed ol Trust. 1o wtt: DISTRICT BOAFIO OF lhe 119111, Ihle end lnt8f'•I of Sano A CoYenanta. Condition• end Aaatrlc- ange County, Stile of Caltl0tnl1 l32.045 96 TRUSTEES SyMa Baboff In and to Iha proper1y ltona recorded In book 12324, page Trustee °' party condUC11ng ule· The beneltclary under Hid Deed Date· July 21 1983 Wiii be ottered for Nie. 11 req~ed. 1 100 of Ofllclll ~d• (the'Mu1.,- Callfornla land Comp1ny of Trust her11olo1e execu1ed 1nd de-Put>llshlO Orange Coast Dally the lntarnll AeYerlue Servkle wlll Daclatlllon'), and 1ny 1me11dments 1010 Nor1h Main S11ee1, Sulle 400 llvered to the undersigned 1 wrlllen Pllo1 July 25. Augull 1 8. 1983 lurnlal'I lnl0<m1tlon 1boul poulbla book 12324, paoe 1100 of Official Santa Ana. Caltl 92702 Oecl11a1oln of Oelaull end Demand 4246-83 encumbrl.l'IOM, which may be useful ~da (the "Muter Oeclat1tlon .. 1. (714)835-5575 tor Sala, end a wrllten Notice ol De-In det.,-mlnlng the vllue 01 the and any amendmarita or 1nnexe- Attn: Foreclosure Department rautt and Election to Sell Tiie und«· Ml.IC NOTICE lnter•t being aolO. DMorlptlon °1 lion• lht.,-eto. Oalecl Juty 18. 1963 !Mgnad caused said Notice ot Oellull ptoperty: Lot 1 or Tract 25 l3. u per "You we In deleull under e Deed LAWYERS TITLE and Etec;tton to Sell to be recofci.d In FOUNT AIM VALLEY map recorded In Book l IO Pegee 11 of Tn.mt d1ted Oeollmber 11, 1981, INSURANCE CORPORATION lie county wtle<e lhe rffl property 11 8CHOOl OllTfllCT & 12 Of Mtaoallaneoua MIPt. In the unleaa you lake IC11on to protect By. Calllomle Land Tille outed Tr1nsamarlc1 Ttt11 In· NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF RES· otnc. of lhe c;ounty record« of uld your property, II ~ be IOI<! al 1 Tiiie COIT'lpany urance Company, 8-487 Weal Tlllfd OLUTION OF INTENT TO LEASE Orange County. Commonly llnown put>llC Nie, II you "Md en eapla• Donni J ThOmu. Fcl Meneger lrNI, LO• Angella. Ca 90048 SURPLUS DISTRICT REAL PROP· al 220l Private Rold, N9wpot1 nation of the nature of the prooaed· Publlahed Orange Cout Oalty Pf IOI 2 t3)65S·3000 OATEO· July 29. 1983 ERTY Beach. Ce. 92680. A bride, wood and Ing 11Qllnl1 yoy, you ahoold contlCtl Jul)! 25 AUQUll 1,8 1983 TRANSAMERICA TITLE 810 NO 8-4·9 •IUOC:O alngla !amity dwe!llnO wllh II· 1ewyer··. 4250·83 INSURANCE COMPANY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAl leci'led gaJlgl. Property may be In 20 Herttage, lrvlna, Ca. 92714 "(II ------------II Trustee THE FOUNA TAIN VALLEY SCHOOL speG1ed at l bo'tt lddreaa lfom ax· I llraat lddrau or com. Lola Liddell, DISTRICT nu declared that the lol· tarl<>r only. Submlllllon of 111 bid• mondtllgnetlon 11 tllown above. no Aul Sacret1ry lowtng r1al propefty wlll not be mull be aubmlttecl on F0<m 2222, w1nanty 11 given u lo Ila complel• PtalC NOTICE OAANOI! COUNTY Put>lllhed Orange Cout Oalty needed for otn"oom purpoMt· Sealed Bid '°' Purch-p l Seaed nen or co11ectnau)'". The aUftt"'°" COutlT ltot August 8. 15. 22.1963 The ClaUToom No 25 In Building Property Contact the otnc. In-benefldary undef Niki Deed ot 700 Cl'ttc Cenl9t Dr. w .. 1 O !he Olll<le 1nd Stage Area In ButlO• dlealed belOw IOI F0trna 2222 and Trwt, by reuon of a breecfl Of ~ 1#11 A-. CA. t2'701 PtaJC NOTICt inQ A 11 Bu•llaJd Schoot loaled al lnl0<mallon •bout Iha pr~y llUlt In the obflOatlona aecured Plllntlfl LAURA KAUFMAN 19699 EdUClltlon l ane. Huntlngtong Submit blda lo the pereon named th..tJy, h8f'elol0te tiacutecl and ~ Oelendanl. JESSE COLBURN aka NOnc. M TllUa~·· aAU: BalCh • Callforn11 '*°"" bef0<a lhe time ~· wMI be llYefecl lo the u~ • wrlUen JIM JUTRIS T.a. No. OilOt011711 The Board of T1u11ees of the opened Peyment TMms. Bid• must notlcle of bf'ellcn and ol Cllee11on to Case No 0094750 YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A Fountain Valley Scnool Dltlrlcl ,.,. be eccompenled by the f\.lll imount cauM the undaralgned to Mil Mid IUMMONt EEO OF TRUST, DATED NOVEM· solves to laese the f11c1httes so tn-of the bid II n total• S200. °' le9S. II property to Nllafy Mid Obllgellon, NOTICl!I You ha" be9n aued. ER 30. 1981. UNLESS YOU TAKE dtcate<I 11>011e under the terms and the IOtaJ bid 11 more thin 1200• aul>-and th1real11t the underalgned The c:ourt mer decide ...,nal JIM! CTION TO PROTECT YOUR condition• slated In the Flesolutton mll 20 per~I of the amount bid°' caueed said notice of breech ol efee· without fCMlr being llaerd unMel FIOPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT A of 1n tne ReaoMlon ol tne Boa•d. $2<>:>. wh~n!'h:!~~·~:; I~~ llon to be R41CO<ci.d Septembe< 22, f'OU , .. pond within '° daya. llMd UBLIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN Resolution No 84· 10 CIP ance o ... • I 1982, u Instr No 82·333820 In Of- t ... lnlOl'mallon below. PLANATION OF THE NATURE The minimum monthl)i tease pay· .,_due. ti eny. wlH be Required n llclal Aecorda Said Nie wlll be 11 you wt.ah to seek ll>e •d.YtC41 ol In F THE PROCEEDING AGAINST menl fOf the term ot the lease stllll lull Form of payment Ill payrnenta made, but wtlhOul oo...nan1 or war- 0111 H NDTICIS attOfney In thll matter. you ~ould OU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A not t>e leas than S535 00/Month mull ~ l>y caah, ~llleO di«k rtill)'. expr ... Of Implied, regerdlng do so promptly so thll your wruten WYER Classroom No 25 S5S2 00/Montn cash-' °' treasurer • Cheek or t>y 1111a, ~. or encumb<anoet. responM 11 any may t>e 11111<1 on On August 24, 1983, 11 10:00 Ottlce Spece. end $63200/Montn •Unit.CS Stiles postel. bank. •JI 1opaylhe1emalnlngprtnetparaumot .. -----------11me .M • SUNKIST SERVICE COM· Stage Arel! Tt>e minimum monthly pr-. or telegraph money order the notlll(a) aecured by Hid Deed ol AVt80rua11<1 n1 atdo dem1nd1d1. PANY 11 duty appointed T•u1tee tease payment 101 11.11>sequen1 ~·,~ '=n':i ':i!~ere~•b~ Trust, With lnte<•t u tn said Deed ol KING El trlbuma. leda decldlf conlr1 Ud. nder 1nd purauant lo Deed ol Trull pertods m•y oe adjusted by the Con· 0 ozco Revenue Oltk:ef Trldt, •-. ohargH an<! expen-of JAY D KING, resident of •In audtancl1 • menoa q111 Ud. , .. ac;orded on Deoember 10. 1981. u sumer P11ce tnah annual aver•oe 2~000 Avlle Rd, Laguna N1Que4, Ce tne Truatee end ol lhe lrutll crNllO Yucaipa. Ca Passed away aponda dentro de JO dlu. LN le Document no. 13073 8ool< 14318. tellected 11 1ne end ol tne 1 .... 17 14..,31_..0?0 1 by said Deed of Trual S1ljj Sile wlll 983 H lnlOf'f'nacton qva •It"'· 193 of Oftlclal Records In the par•exl A s«urily <1eooa11 may De ,., • Oite July 25 1963 b4I held on TIM.lrtc11y August 25. o n August 5, 1 · e If '°""" to -ei the ad'wtce of of the County Aaco<de< ot Or· required D'10t 10 occ;up1ncy .......... ~ .. ,,.,8,..... ,.. ___ 1 oa11y' PUo 1983 11 2·00 PM., II the Ch1$>man o wned Ki.ng Rooting Com· en att-J' In tllta matt«, 1CMI County. Sllte of C.llfCHni. &-No comm11110n 111111 be paid 1ny .-uun••-.. "' .. .,.. ....,... 1 A...-nue anttence lo lhe CMc Cenlllf" T .. ~•na Beach Ca ltloutd do ae ptompltf M tllal ,_ ted by: Rlehatd H Adame. a flOensed real es1a1e t>toker 1n 1hll AUQl.ll t 8. 1983 •• 1 ... Building. 300 Eut Chapman AYll . pany 11l -~-• • wr1tten ~. H .. ,, ..._, be le men Will SELL AT PUBLIC ragerd, end 1hete 1n111 t>e no <Secloc:· ~~ 2-....., Orange. C.\ (or 40 years. He I& IWVlVed i-.d on tMN. TION TO HIGHEST BIDDER tton lrOIT'I any propolll 1n delerm1n. Notloe: At t"8 lime of Nie. bid• by his wife Nita King of tf U.ted .... NUcltatel-OR CASH lpay11>1e •I lime ot aala tng ttwl ntghllll responSlble bidder P\ellC NOTICC m1y bamad91ncalh Ind orcuhlenl Yuciapa. Ca. llOn ~rald todollft~en Ml•-to, nlawMm0119YottheUnlladSllt .. ) Seeled propoaals to teue Hid CHC'«ltlledc:hlcit1 tP&ClltedlnCMI Km f Satellite Be h dob9fla ~ lftmodtet.-to, at the NOfth Iron! antrence to the property mull be received t>y 1n1 ,.OUNTAIN VALLEY , Coda Sec11o'1 292 .. 11 g 0 ac ' de .. ta -.. 111 """"'"'• 1y courtho<JM Ill rfOht, 11111, end delegated otttoer at tie Fountain Val· ICHOOL DlaT1UCT At the lime of Iha lnlll•I pybll· Florida, his step-mother -"'"at hOf atgu-. pwdl "' nt-1conYeyOCI1o and now held teySchoolOlstrlctEduclltonCent.,. NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF RES cation of thl• noltoe, the 10111 Louise King of Neosho regletrllde 1 ttompo. by It under Mid o..d ol Trull In the 17210 0111 Street. Fountain Vllley. OLUTION OF INTENT TO LEASE amount of the unpaid bal1nce of the F~. Kansas, brothers w.o. \·TO TH« DIFINDANT: A d't1I oper1y .itu•led In Mid Counly and CallfO<nla 92708 no Iller tl\an 2 00 SURPLUS 01STRICT FIEAl PROP obligation a«:uted by the •boYe de- K t B k "d ::::=':' 11ao bMfl ftled :t,;tt1e fomll doleflbed the land 1'-• pm, A•.,.:•at 9. 1963 EBROTYNO •• 5 tc:rlbad dead ol trutl end oettmalacl ing o rec t'nn ge, i::'° " t ,.7 7 ~,.., -.. -1 -__ .. •A .. Tex.as, Oran King of Ban· ......, laweult, rou -t. Coalt Maaa. u lhown on • m11> ptopoaata. the •led offlcw '20.9? 1.85. I JiM!. JOU o In. Lot 9 of TrlC1 HQ,." 8 , In h .. '-"lY Before a~pl=n any wtltlen NOTICE i's HEREBY GIVEN THAT coeta. lllpet\-.• .., .....,vltlOell .. rung, Ca., C .B . King of wflhln • dlyt 1her tnlt aummona Is acorOecl In t>ook 456, pagaa 33, $4, alll ll call IOI orll Ing. Any per· THE FOUNATAI"! VALLEY SCHOOL To determine the opening bid, yoy AJb N M xi MtV1c1 on yoy. Illa With this court a and 35 of Mlaoallanooul Map1. , .. eon wt\O has hetatol0<e aubmllled a DISTRICT llH de<;laJtld that the tot ~call (819)584-8333 uquerque, ew e co, written raeponae to the oomptllnt cord• o4 Orange County. Cllllomla. written bid may aubmlt an Ofel t>ld !Owing reel P<CIPIW1Y wfll not be Dated: July 28, 1983 Grady King of Parker, Ari· Unteaa yoy do, your default wlll be EXCEPT THEREFROM an un· alloaedlng by 11 laall 11'18 (S~) p.,--needed 10< cl...,oom pur~ Pubtlthed Orange Coo.et Delly wna, Ira King of Cf't'9C!ent entered on 8Pc>liea110n ol the pletn-40 l*'OWl1 lntar•t In and to cont the hlg'-• written bid Thi The Double Classroom In Bulldlng Ptlot August 5, 10, 17. 1983 ~1H3 City, Ca~ Carl King of llfl, and thla cour1 may tlfllll' a Judge-Ill oil and mlnerll rlghll, but without '11gllell resoon1lble t>idder shsll be D II Wardlow SchOOI ioe.ted 11 M~naft'e1d, Misaou.ri, listen menl agalnll you for lhe reflaf de-right of entry 10 the eurl-Of 10 the required 10 execute the form or 9 t91 Plonee< Orlve, Huntington •-tr Mt\'hl't -~ minded In the c:omp1alnt, which eubeurl-ol Mid lend 10 •~th ot laUe wch tormat nu lleratofOfe S.ecll. C•llfoml1 ~ nu•"4 Thelma Fish and Lucy Ball-could r11ull tn gernlshmanl ol 500 fMI, u gBnled to Paoplaa In· bMtl. apptoYWd by tne Boerd ol The Bolrd 01 Tru1t-ot the NOTICa CW TIIUenFe •ALE ingt'r both of YUCll.lpa, Ca., wages. taking ol money or P'<>i>IW1Y ..,..tmanl Cofpora11on, • Calllomla Trust-Founllln Valley Scllool Otatrlct ,.. On Augu•t 24. 1N3 et 9:30 A.M n...;~ Mitchell of Nemho °' oth« retie! requ•ted In the corn-cori>«atlon. by deed reoo<dod Feb-The Board ol Trull-•hall meka to!"" to lease the lac:lltli.s so In-FORECLOSURE CONSUL TAN TS. ,._..,,J plllnt ruwy 14, 1~. tn boOll 4197. page 11111 deletmlnetlon u 1 wneti-to dlc•led 1bo11e undw the term• and Falla, Kansas. Edna Johnson Dated June 10. 1983 173 ol Ofnelal Flecofda. tease tald llC•lllt" 1110 Whither 10 eondlllon• 11a11a in 11" AaaoluUon INC., 1 Callfomll OOfPO'•llon u ~fmo~~ ~·~ ~~:~ iw~~.Flg.~~N. Clerk u~ e:;::~~~~=1o~ a: ~~;':!:!~~:·:.~;ilh 1an1101 daya ~~:,. ~~~ of tne Boltd Th':'!:f.: ~~ruI.':~t!! Ca El.z.oria de Haan of Oil Put>llahed Orange CoHI Delly Piiot to all olt and mineral rlghll, bul lnl ormetlon concerning the Thll mlnlnlUrtl monthly le8M pay ~.:O~IH:~~AF~:r;i'l~ Juty 1. 8. 15. 22. 1983 wtthoul right ol entry 10 the aurlaoe proposal should 1>e odd,essea to menl tor Ille term of the leaM sh•I. 1983 u lnatrument No a3-082e12• Field, Miseouri and Aznanda 4410·63 or 10 the IUblUrflOt ot tald land 10. FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DIS· 1101 be .. ,. than FIYe hundred thlr In Ofllci•I AeGord• or Nld County. M older o f LeRoy, Kansas, ~thol!iOOfeet.ugrentedtoPatm TRICT. 11no 0111. Street, Fountain 'l·••~ dollars per mont h •------------1n ..... 1ment Corporation. 1 Calltornl• Valley, Calllornla, 92708, (7 l4) 1 536 00/Month) Tiie minimum CeNtomla. and pureu1nl to ll\1t cer· alao 2 grandchildren Brett P'\mllC NOTICE Cofpof"etton, by OMd t9Corded Fel>-842-6651 A11an1lon C1ro4 Jonas montnly le1se payment for aub... lain Notlcle ol Dafaull t'-9undar r• King o{ Satellite Beech, ruaty 14, t958, In boot! 4 197 POQ41 FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL quent pertoas may be •dlull.CS l>y corded Aprll 2G, t9S3 u lnttrumatn f1onda and Jerle Kmo of MUNICIPAL. COUtfT 177 ()( Oltlclll AlcO<d• DISTRICT BOARD OF the Conau'™" Price Index annual No 83-162341 ol Offlciall Record• " Of' OflAMGI COUNTY nected t the aod ol the of Mid County. wtll und8f and Fort Worth, Tex.as Funeral HAMOfl JUDICIAL. otSTlltCT Thi.,,... lddrMa end othe com· TRUSTEES IYetllQI re • "'-·ant to Mid Deed ol Trust .... al services will be held on *1 ~ .. Dr •• P.O. 2110 mon daa19natlon. 11 any. °' IM rOll 09111 Juty 2 I, 1983 teaae paorlod A MCUrlly cMc>ollt mi y ;;;;'bik: llOCtlon lor cun. law1u1 .........._. 9Ncll Cellf '28i6-'M1 properly dH crlbad abo11a I• Pul>llahed Oran~ COHI 01lty be required pdOf 10 occu~ morwy 01 the United Statea ol Tue9day, August 9, 1983 at ·-p;;i;;,ri HERITAGE BANK, a Clll· purpOtleO to be: 2330 Lltlleton Cir· Piiot July 25, Augu1t t 8, t983 No commls&ton ahllt t>a pa any Amenea, a calhler'• chock payebl• 11.00AM at the Emmel"IOfl t0<n1e corooretton (SUGCe11or In c:le, Cotti Mala, CL 92828 4248-83 llQen...., real •1•1• b«>I<« :.c;hta to Mid Tn.tll• drawn on e elate °' & Bartlett Calimesa Chapel. lntere1t of IRVINE NATIONAL The unda,..tonad Truttee dla-rega•d. end the<• Shall be no uc n111orla1 1>ank, a •lit• or led9rel Interment at PacHlc View BANK. a Nattonal Banking A•soef•· clatm1 any HabHlt)' for any Incorrect· lion from any proposal in determln creCSlt uolon, °' I •1111 or ledt!ll lion) ,_of 11'1 •Ir• eddrn1 end otl'let P\a.IC NOTICE Ing the hlgllest responalble blddef. Nvl~ ll'd loan ueoc:iauon doml· Memorial Park at 2:00PM , oommon .._._,lion 11 1ny ahown Sealed Pfoposel• to la•M uld Oal1naenl NA THAN SCOTT .,_,,,, · . oll'let ,.OUNTAIN VAU.EY oro~ny mull be received by Iha cJleO this at1te, al the COUr1y1td on Tuesday, August 9, 1983. SPIERING, end DOES ONE lf'lrough herein. II the atr•l lddr-or SCHOOL DttTlllCT delegated onicer el the Founllln Val-atU bet'<ll'IMn the two llllr~ ol Emmerson & Ba rt I et t TEN lnGlvstve common dealgnallon of the pr09"1)' NOTICE Of' M>Ofl"TI<* OF .... s .......... Ol1t11Ct Educatton Canter lhe ALLEN BUILDING, toe.led at MO"''"'"" directors Cue No 51117 It not Indicated hefeon, dlr1C11ont lo AE80LUTION Of' .. Tl!NT TO lf21o'Oak Stree1. Fountaff' Velfey 14081 YOtt>a StrMI, In lhe City ol ' -J aUMMONa the properly may be obtained 1'°"' Lr••r a&Jlll'1.UI DtlTlllCT ,,. 2 00 Tul11n. Coun"'of ~-. C1llfornla. , -~ . NOTICE! You .. 1we .. __ •. -... the 1>1na1tc1ary lleratn nemed ~-C1lrtorn11, 927.,.., no l1111t than ., -...--" • ......., -t I wrttl I/ell\ aub-MAL "OHllTY p m Augull g 1983 all lh«1 rlgl11. tnla and Int-I con· TM COWi Illa) decide .. alftat ,IMI purauan o 1 an req n ten NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN THAT Before accepu~ any wrlnen \l'IYod to and now held by tt under •ltt.ouf ,_ b9lftg "-'d ""'"' mtlled to Nkl benaflclary Wllhl I thll THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL ~...,,,,...,.. lh• 0 Anlted omca uld ()Md of Truat In the pr~y __.. .. 1 &A .. _ ._ ...... days from the tint publlc111on o ~· ...,,-·~ v -· ..... 1 Id ,.,~. d 1 1 .., f'l~l~a.,.tlon•l~-w-. ,..,,, ..._ nolloa. BENEFICIARY· Slate SIY· DISTRICT n11 deellled lllat the IOI· Jhl!lll c11f for oral t>tddtng Any par lltu11_, n 811 ....,..n1y an I e ,..,. """"' .,.... 1 _ .. l A I tlo lowing real properly wtll not be 10n who r>o• here101ore tubmltllld a deocr1bed u ; II you wtah 10 aeelc the 1dvM;e o11n no•''"' oan MOC 1 n --A d 1 ta oo poses 1 1 bid Lot 69 of T1ae1 2954, " Ptl! m&~ PACIFIC YlfW MIMOllAL l'AJlll Cemetery M ortuarv Cf'lapel·C•ematO•Y J500 Pat1l1c V11•w Orovn NewpC11t !il-a1 '' 644 ''00 MeCC>eMICJI MOITUAllU L aQuna Beach 494·94 1!:> l.aouna H•llc, 768·09J:l San Juan Cao1s1rano 495· 1 ''ft H.AaaOI UW,.._Mf. OLIVIE M ortuoi"' • Cr1TW>1rry Cr~'na1orv 1625 G1 ... 1er Avn C~ta Me':l.J >40 5!:>'"14 f'tHCI H OTHIU llil .. OAOWAT I MOITU••Y , 1 !O Broadwav \ Costa M11u 642 9!M> IALnl•CH•OH SWfTM & fUTHlll. .llorney In l"la m111e• vou ahould 22 N. El Oorl!ldo. Stockton C1 n...,..e or c sar m pur . written bid mll) aubm I an or1 I 0 P 2'"2 .. • , .. 95202 . • BUILDING 'B' OI lne ARTiiUFI D exceeding by al leut 11119 (5") per raGOtded n Book 1 •. llgM .,. do so ptomplly IO that your wr .. lttn Pflooo• (209) G46-l I 16 NIE8LAS SCHOOL tocetlld al 9300 cent the lllgl\esl wrlllen t>ld The of MlllCOltaneoua MIPI In the Ollklo ~~nae. ti any. may be flied on Sllid.MlewMI be made, but without Qardent1 Avenue. Fountain Valley, lltgl\est r""JX)nl•ble l>lddar a11111 oe of the County Roc:ordef of Hid A YlaotUsled hi aldo demendldo. CQYltllnt °' warrenty, ••PtM• °'Im· Cef1~om: d t T '"' of the required to execute 1ha f0tm1 ol C~tyltrwt ado-... Ot other COl'll· El Ulbum•. lede Mc:ldtt e-'r• Ud. pt!N. regetdlng lltla, poe ... tlon, °' e oat o rus lelM, sucll format hu hentlo 0<• -"' audlonell • ~%! Ud ,. aneumbrenc ... tnc;ludlng feH Fountain Valley School Olllrtel r• 0-1 IPPrOved by the Bo1td of ~'t;,.!!. '~~~~ _ I. · ,_ chargol and·~ of the Trvttae 90IVes to 1eaM tne 1ac1111as 90 1". Trull-r-~ dentro do -•· .... and of the tru.ita Cf .. ted by Mid dleated at>ova under the term• Ind The BoaJd ol Trullett $natl mtlta , llomlL lnfor"'oolon 11¥1 ... ue. Dlld Ot Trual 10 P•Y the remaining condition• 111111<1 tn the Fleaotutlon lne datermll'ltlon 11 1 whet,... to Said eale Wiii be midi without "JCMI wtell to Niii tllo lldVkle of ....,,.,,,11 • 11119 Otll( )MClired ot 1he Bo11d, Fleaolutton No. 8<'·08 l•H• Hid 1act111lff 81 to whether lo wl'ftnty.e~pr ... orlmplled,reg1rd· 11n att_, In tllta maltot, JCMI P'~-.,, tuml 0 n 1 wit The minimum monthly lalle pay· la•M Mid IKlllllH with tent 10) day1 Ing 1111e. potMallon, or encum-ttlcMltd do ae PfOfftptty ae thal ,_ by Mid o..d 01 T'utt 10 "°" meot for tne term ot the ,..,. 1h1H •Iler r1Cetp1 of bid• br-. to aatl1fy lhe unpaid ~· w1ttteft ~ " .., lfteJ M 1 155•731·21 with lnt.,.wt t':'75~ not be leeN 11111 $3,000.00 per lnlorrn11lon concerning the enoe duo on lhe not• or notea.., lllld Oft ""'9 ' ' from Nowmber 1• 1982 1 ·Hid month. payable quar1eny. In Id· P<OC>OMI thould be adOfelttd to CUl'od by Hid Dead al Trwt. to Wit: tlU.t.d._..etoltw .. _ =ac:r=: o:.OYldod~dllt:. and 'llllCO, The minimum monlhly ..... FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DIS t1 .. ,164.81, Plue the foltowlng •ti- .. do lift ....... Oft Mte -"· ....,. .. -~ 4115.1,. ~ p1yment for the tarma of the ..... TRtCT, 17~10 OM St,..,. Fount1ln m11*S CO.ti. ••!**II ~ 116-deMrla Moorte lnm alll1falM11 ... ~ ..,...,,,._ ' • ltlllll not be i.ta 1111m 13,000.00 per "'allay, CaHlornla, 92708, (7 14) ~ •t 11111irn. of Illa lnltlll pubD- 111 •1o -a. "' ,..._.. Thi~ under Mid 'Deed month, peytblt Q'*1art)t. In acl· '42.eMI, Attention Carol Jonas cation of lllla Notice ot hie: Me"'8, II=· puMt -otTrvalheratoloreaxacModandO.-••ncie T'1e minimum monthly pty· FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL 115,877.90 NOTICE TO P"OPEATY ,....t,... llwred to tlla undaulonad • wrtltan mttnl f()f 1ubMQuant period• m1y be DISTRICT BOARD OF OWNERS l ·TO THll DI NDAMTI A ..... Dact.,lllon of ~IUlf and Demllld •dlutled by lhe Conaumer Pr!Ge TRUSTEES YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A _...i.tnt NI IMell fllod ltr tM I SI'-IOd lltatl NOllCI f 0. lndell annual evt1t11041 rellaclled 11 Oita· July 21, 1983 0£EO OF TAUST, DATED FEBFIU· polntttl .. ..,..t ,.u. H reu 1tlell to or ' 1 ..,, a.I 0 un· lhe end of th• te•ae period. A Secur. PubllthlO Or1nga Cout OeHy ARV 17. 11113 UNLESS YOU TAI<!; lllfOftd tMe lewlUlt. you mue1t, ::'~ ='.:' .:i No~~': 0.. lly Oepotlt ah1ll be raqulttd pr!Ot 10 Piiot July 25. Auoust t, 8, 1983 ACTION TO PROTECT YOU fl wtttlln IO d•yt •11er 1hl• tummona • feuft and Election to 8all to t>e , .. ~cupancy 4246-84 PROPERTY, IT MAY BE 80\.0 AT A -~on )'OU. fife wltr'I thl• eourt •corded 111 lhe counw......,. lhe real 1n101m1lron connrnlng the PUBLIC &ALE. IF YOU NE.tO AN written rftC)OnM to 11'19 complaint. __... 11 touted proposal llhould be addrffeed to f'talC NOTICE GXPLANATION OF TME NATURE UnleN you do. your d«Mlll wlM be Pf...,...., FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DIS· OF THE PAOC!EOIN<l AGAINST antlfed on 1Ppllcetfon of the ptlln· Del .. Ju~ 15• 1983 TRtCT, 11210 0 ... Str .. t, Founllln 'ICnTtOUI IU..... YOU. YOU SHOUl.O CONTACT A till and thlt coun may entlf •Ju~ SUNKIST EAVICE COMPANY Valley. CalllOfnla, 92708 T~. NA• I TAft•MT LAWYER. 0.tod. ~ 28, 1983 ~ ao•:•,~ :omor !..":in':"~~ ~=:Bandlf. 1714) 8 .. 2-6851 Allenllon C"ol The lollowlng peraon ta doing FORECLOSURE C N8ULTANfS. '"''"ued ,..I "" ... · I Trutt•Sata Ofllcet Jonu FOUNTAIN V ALLEY bUt.nattll INC. ooul<I r..ull n g11n1 .. ,ment o 234 Nol1h El Dorado St "' SCHOOL DISTRICT (A) COAST FLORAL. (9) COAST H TtuttM "'1111"· lllllng of money or propeny 1 SUZANNE MOORE FlOA.AL SCHOOL. 2•08 Carlton Pl 1•0ll 1 YOtbl StrMI. Suitt 210 0< other reli.f raquetlfd In tile c;orn· Stoc;tcton. Ca. 95201 Clark of the 8011d Coal• M .... CA. 921127 Tualln. CaMtoml• 9H80 pl~~~td "IO 0 1982 <~J:i~ 180t1nge Co••• Dally Publl11\ed Or•'ir. CoHI 011~/llot lNy JN nna (Cowtfll BrlQO•. 2408 ~ \~~~llftlll J PETER•ON, c' •-~ PtlOt AuQutl 4. I 1, lO. 1963 Auguat 8, t , 22 1983 4 1·t3 CllllOf'I Pl . Co•11 M .... ~A 926~7 .............. "'ange C...,.I OoltY P!IOI By C p,.;., o.p.ity"' •415·63 ~1:U~atnaea 11 ~ueltld by an '""""A:;,~. 10, 1?:1"3 ~'2·ttl Pvl>llaneo 0r•noe eo ... D111y PllOlr -ln••x•pen••lv• • Lily cowen 8,IQGI "'f:" t, e. t5. n 1983 '(In lk apen llY) not 111911 Thi• a11t-f w1t IUld w1111 thl i-11·"3 Morw llllTllMee .,. oei1tlng 111 p11c1. t e .. onabl•. County Qw11 of OflllOI Countr on the CM1')lng "bug" tl'lli CJl~ttli.d ..., .... Juty $ 1M> ( C•ll ui-5671. year. II ~Ou hav• 1 1d11art11l"11 m- Put • •••word• oem,., '"1"1 "°' oentng Ctasslfled Ad\rert111ng i-1t:;:~~-:-:. ,r,;r,...~ DaHJ ...... __________ •r-·~ to w ork lor ou ~:!..:' fd.now with • 642·!56711 4~29.13 WHlCUH CHA'll 4'n E 17th St Cos1aMeu 6 4E'·9371 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 ·7 8 ...... f11 •••• , ............ . Gn.W ltl2 Gntol lOH * llllllOR RIDIE * Come visit the moet fabulous view N ew custom home In Newpol"t. Nothing to compare w ith this '1 bdrm, fam rm. 5 bath, formal dlrun~. 3 Crpks, 6 car garage. Large pool & ;acuz.u Come to the gate and ask for 3 Yorkshire, 759-1931. IPfl IAILY 1·1 HELEN B. DOWD RULTOll, 110. J 1111111 IHCM SPYIWllllLL CH .. llELIH ltlltr II •tflHtd. l1i.•lt 111 effert. lllok ll4erett• llltr 731-4444 Sll,000 11 Yt% Assumable this VA loan w11n total payments of $895 Cu1e older 3 Bdrm nome on a large 101 Pnce only $93.000 and cwner says sell Call now 546·2313 THE REAL ESTATERS N••• •port• •411fpment 1 •u .1. for Cta.J r lf'd Ad ACTION Call A DAIL l "LOT AD·YISOll '41·567• * ~ • , f 00 • • • • p l 144-1134 IHCH IAR&Allll Bike to 11te 1>fu1ch from this 3 Bdrm,? beth home that nas a large hvlng a'ea New patnt, carpa1s & drapes Short distance to t>each Prtced now al only SIOS.900 Call tor show· 1ng 5,.6-23 13 THE REAL ESTATERS IHICHYOI TDWllllOllE Tetallr 11•••4•114 3 Bdrms !l batna, pool and spa Eteganl $350 000 assumable l1nanctng FuM price $550.000 +Cute Realty ll.. In'°""°' m•·nl 110·1100 fi)\~eadl ~ Rea Estate . NEWPORT IHCH Spacious and cheerful lamlly home Four bedrooms Two t>atns. Forman dining room Re· cently remodeled kitchen with skylight Lovely hrdwood floors thrOUQh· out Large IOI N()W $250,000 &31-7300 WTIUFF $210,0001! lignt and 11ry 3 Br 2•., Ba 1am1ly hom e . Open-leel1ng kitchen ano dining area Wood par, quet lloo11no 1n entry, 1111• 1ng roorn and dlntnd roo m $210 oo t5 Leasehold Ask for Mary Oent15 644· 7020 LIHO llUL ESTATE ElSTSIDf -- ADULT COIDO toeal tocation near West· cliff shopp1rig 11ea Only a stroll 10 neighborhood stores, shops & transpor· 1a11on Lovely 3 BO•m. 2 bath end unit wllh 2 car garage Under prioed al $125 000 Hurry' 646-7 171 THE REAL ESTATERS USTSIDE CHARMER 3 BOtm. 2 baln home WIU'I open belrn oe•hngs Ind cozy brick ll1epl1ce In llv- tng room Features mOd· ern kitchen, remoel baths & large lot wlallay access 10, RV Just reduced to $137.500 646-7171 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS ITPHOILI Tnplex With 2 Bdr 1112 units income $18,600 ix yr Loen p1yment1 S1 7,400pr yr Price $161.000 631-7370 TfUDI T 10" \l. RF.ALTY llHAmll W1<1e enedey streets wttl'I 11111e lf8fflC IS whll qu1ll1y 11111ng ts tll about Tiiis horne nas 11 1111 and mora 3 Bdrm 2 Be wtlh large rooms and lhlclt new ce1pe11ng Priced to .ell now Don t m•u •I Only $146 900 751·3191 •11n 1k •II"'' .,, I Oul I C:SElECT h111:l11n pt1•'•' 1•·1"''" ,..,..PROPERTIES oblr• C'O•I t l11•'lht•tf ndvl'fll'lflit Daily Pilat tl•Uffft'O 4d\ p,,..,,..o ~" Lillia Miu Muffot N I on a Tullet. along cam e a spider and ree<i In th• 011ty Piiot CIUllfled aectlon about MIM M~­ let"a Tuffet and bougtit It !or S9 es You can Mfl your 1ull11 anO 1011 of other tlllng1 11trouett Dally Piiot Ctaullltd Ada. Call '42·517 8 ·-Of-_._ .. ._ COLDWC!LL BAN~eRO ••rrrw.MMlllWB_.... 111 ILIPFI tHt,MO Room for your large family ln thll 4 bd. plut bonus room "Z" plAn. Etijoy th care(N't' Uv1nt of the BJuffa. Cloee to pool, ston!s, achool and Boy's Club. Lovely prden patios. IN 11.wPOllT C«llTER 644.g()6() Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Aug. 8, 1983 Cl .-l-.••;;.;• ... •-.•..;.l• .. •~S-•-l•..,_ __ 1;;B;;.;;•.;;• .... ;.;;•...;l..;;.t1;...;;.;S.;.;l..;;.• __ 1-..--.. ....... --...;..;;.;..._ __ 1.,.....,_.... __ .....,, __ lac••• Prer 1350 l111n UaJa1allllt4 Aertantt, UaJ. Aprtatat1, UaJ. Vacalin '9atra1 1002 Gutul 1069 OISTA llEU Hta lltH 2224 Newport IHc• 2261 Cttta llna 2724 HHt. ltacll 2740 ltalali ===------~-S MlnulH from ocean. n--: --.;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;; ..... '"LI.at laiffrtlt Mt•tl 3·2 Br low Interest 5875 Incl gardener, 3 Br 2 ~'1.1 Canyon Twnhse J Br 2 • :1oee to beaetl, 2 Br 2 B1. -" • 6n assum toan Ba. Mas!l Verde. no pe11. Ba lrplc, wet bl!, all 2Br, tv.Ba, lam rm, new 11ove, dahwshr. car1>411'. Be1ut1ful Wheler Condo, LIDO ISLE Bayfront l>tnglt' '>tory 3 Br 2 Ba bt-am c·e1hngs, spacwu:. krr<ll't'. p111r & sltp $I ,:.!50,000 Tarbell, Lovely 6 r wlroom for Pis do not dlsturd tenants refs req d Vicent 3253 amenities. on golf course, CPllldrpslpalnt, lg p111o drapes, declk, garage °" Kaan..,.il ~. 1 Br. 120 yacht Cui., 3 Br 1828 Fullerton Ave W ash Ing Ion Ag I 101111 view from each No 1)4119, nice location 1550/mo 636-4837 2 Bi. lebuloua view, OJJt•n llous..-S;oliSun I 5 REAtIOKS w:5';~:~P6~~;~~~1 OwneitAgent642·5552 559-8221 room.garage (Thlllathe 2195MlnerST $650mo Lg Bach, w/yd, lull kit, nr ~:C1~11~~t•1 ~n::;: or 841-1884 Eaatslde 2 Br, 1 Ba, enclsd best house In the com· • dep. To see call 213•38.,6•78. ---1 1 0 munlty) Days call 645·9604 ch, quiet person, no _ .. _., ____ _ DOYER SHORES HCELLHT UPllDE ~::.gs·!J~j~;g r•r, ·,;:~ 714/955· 1400, Wknda 1--------g::i~ts~·S,.,,kr 1390 mo. E•panstve cus1om homt1 po1enl1al and tax sheller sec deposit. 548-5442 01 7 141760-3670 LOI Via L1d11 Souil lt•t•I• •• &yfr<>nl 6 bn 7', lxlrm, V1llu ur1 wtdl· lot, pool, spa, d<>1:k fur 120' yat·h1 $-1,1150,000 Remudt>led ;l bdrm, '2 balh + l..i.rgl' rC'(' rnl • beam ct'tlings, [umished, patlOS $420.000 247 Full Page Ads Each Month! llYSIDE PUCE llYFROllT ,0,11,., "lir1ti1treok" SpecUtt·ular bayfront dplx 2 brtL :! lKJ up. 2 b1. Freshly prunted and clean• 2 ba dn 2 boat spalVS Rl-"duu'<.I $1 ,500,UOO .; Bedroom~ t 75 balhs PElllllSUU HOIE OCElMFROllT Ol-ean & jt>lly views. M,1rllll' 100111, -I bdrm, ;i bath, 3700 sq. ft, Xtra p..1rk1ng $ l ,:ill!>,000 d1111ng1tam1ly rooms lrrtt ptac& L dl<Je court II y ~11cnen Assume loan $ t59 000 Ocean lttHH on a huge lot 5 Br•'~ be, for tndlVldusl Investor 770-5629 EASTBLUFF-home, 4 Br, 2 new spa & pocl Most ex-wllh investmen1 group -b 6 I A I 1 Br. uni urn, pool, laundry lac From $404 Ullls paid 548-0336. ctus1ve showcase home $10 000 each 4 units E.aSlslde 2 Br I Ba. lrg s:p1 1m7os6~o!a7 va1 on 8 commanding view Easts1<1e Costa Mesa yard Washer/Dryer 2 Bdrm 1 Bath SS90. gar· age. large pauo. no 1>4111. laundry hook up avail 534 Bernard 642-4905 tol $935.000 lsehld Mon-Fri. 9.5 Bkr Incl<! S650 557-1247 S 131 500 land quote A & 133-1112 E's1de quiet cul de sac, 4Br H Investments 751·5989 Newpon ocean fronts 2ba. lncd yard. h.tds ok. II you lrke ctean air & ocean duple>. & t11ple>. Spec· ~~5P;~~9 $750 1 yr Isa oreezes. peace & qu1e1. tacuatr 673-7873 • lennts the beach socur L f S I 1400 M E S A V E A 0 E 11y · a111ne amen111es or a Oii Or a e NORTH-Spark ting 4Br, luAury condo. Nowpo11 OCEHFllOIT LOTS 3Ba. ttv din & lam rm, Harbor View Hms 4Br fir, 3ba Comm pool Avail Sept I al S 16001mo tnct gardener Agl 673· t 181 Sea wind 5 Br, 3ba, view, gdnr tenn1s1poo1 $1800/mo 559.9539 2 Br 1 Ba lowe• unll In 4·p1e•. lrg rooms, lndry tac no pets $470/mo 27t 11 A E 16th Pl 644-0452 St10rec111ts. lg J Br, 4 be, tam rm. trptc's, grl ocean 2Br lba, patio, trprc gar. vu. walk to pvt bell age, nr Fadco $525/rno $2200/mo 675-9526 Call 551-6130 Lovely 2 bdrm. 2 ba apt. J blocks trom ocean A 2 story unit w/enct patio, 1 car gar 1650/mo. Con· lact 536· 1435 Near Adams & Beech, up- stairs ept, single car gar· age. pallo. dswshr. small pel Ok, I Br I Ba lndry lac $450/mo S300 de- pos11 Agent no lee 863-1500 SEAWlllD VILLAGE Sia art IHI ·~ blk 10 bch on 881 Penn. MIF to atir 3 bdrm, 2 bt houat1 $250/rno 850-2099, 842-8700 lBr hM lo 1'1r with OM other pauon (mate) Westside CM S325 mo. • '631·5898 ------Beau11ful pvt NB home, un- turn lg bdrm • kit prlv. $250 • ulll. 645-9515, 5 m111 drove to beach' UP· Flf RllllKS RANCH HILLTOP N b 1 o..... F h N I graded "Wes111oge· 3 ew ol r • 4 , ui.I, l'UStom rl•nc ormonc y bedroom w•lh 1 75 bath:;. Cresl has ti 27 lnia Loa 2 magnificent edi .. lee many "'res llrg yd. oar Courl also nas a fabulous Three Arcn Bay. So Lag dner tncl Avl1 Sept I view of me coast ltne & Sec gale area. (Tennis '1200 mo lse 549-3301 Ca1a11ne from master ) bdrm suite 3 B 3 Ba ens beach ctbttse Raret hs w/all utils paid 2 ~ St, 100 000 & S t,400 000 Br format dlr kids wel· Updated decor accents 2 Br 2 Ba.Bluff vi8v. Child New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury this 5 rm abode near Ok 631·6107 ap1s tn 14 plans I Bdrm Female, non-emllr, 2fi .. to sttr hse on B•I la. $400/mo. 673-5087-. Estate I 2 prime at're htlhup $1 ,2!>0.00U tdm1ty room two lira· As:.urne loans $. t5.000 t or both Cash or sull· come $550 et BEST Alty T S L Pr o Per 11 es able terms Courtesy 10 539-6 t90 tee be h $595 th 1 1 1rom $545, 2 Bdrm lrom ac wor 0 s S450 2B~ cplsldrps, new $630 TownflO\lse from F=em1111 pror non·•mkr rmmle to ahr CM Twnhse, w/pool, Jee & tennta 1350 • 01\ utll. Must like dogs 846-IM 19 more S39·6190 BEST lee paint tstltast , sec. t80 CORONADO Cl YS ll YFROllT places Many lrull trees $ t25.000 Musi see this beauty• 642-1603 Bkrs Ownr Fr t·Mon. 499-3070 Tues· Thurs Westside 2 Br 1 Ba. 2131799-1159 enclsd garage patio, lrg $695 • pools, tennis, Su Jaaa elf. 2271 E Rochester 546-0194, wat11rlalls,ponds Gasior 2 Br 1 Ba condo, avail 911 ~75•6527 __ cooking & neatrng P•ld 1st r sec. $4751mo Call 2 Br w/gar crpts, water From San Diego Frwy UR&ELOT yard, no pets $53Stmo Coronado Island cust b:lvfmnl lot 85' boat deck . Plans avail Now $370.000 w/trndf'. rresti&• Condo In beaultful Sycamore 90• 178 with older home S225 000 Out of Coaaty • 1 mo sec deposit Prorrtr 1525 549.5442 or 110-5629 645-5378 pa1<1 636-4120 1·5PM drive North on Beach to -------2176 "E" Placentia $460 McFadden and west on Incredible ec.an View 2 br, 3 be S. Lagun• condo Frplc. 2 cladta, garage, pool 499-e009 ARROWHEAD HOME Gten Short jaunt to Near new -I bdrm. 4 bath, lake view :~500 sq. beach 3 bedrooms, 2' r Ct. $440,000 W1U trade for a local property batns. brrck fireplace 1101 McCar41t ftltr. TilllH lllVEllS Daaa Ptiat 2226 Spacious JBr, 2Ba Condo, 2 192 "C" Placentia $450 McFadden to SEAW1NO nr town, pool. goll --V I L L A G E SEQUOIA PAH Flat $566 2 Br near Marina Custom home on 1;, rtver also 3 Br 2 Ba ocean view Ul-1121 course, no pets $750 2 Br I Ba. 571 W. Joann, (71<1)8!Y.l·5198. mo 496-4226, 496·6232 downstairs, nopet s. Ma or le for na bMd'I hOUM. Yrly $317/mo + test, dep. 873-2726, 1·800·824-7888, ext 2158. DOEAll FROllT lllCOllE UlllTS Many upgrades $140,000 You'll feel r1gh1 at home! LEASE/SALE· Front Row Bluffs 3 Br 2 •., Ba, Trr, New Carpets & Drapes $1475 MO Avalf tmm No fron1 acres, 2400 sq fl 3 $675 1 others avail. Br. 2 Ba BEST R1ty 539·6190 lee $455. Sierra Mgm1 LIJHI ltacll 2741 SHtla L11aa• 2216 641·31'24 1 Br N end. nr beach. Outstanding ocean view 2 2 Br , ea. 1981 Maple parllal kllch $550. utlls Br 2 Ba spa lurn or unlurn Ave, relrlge. downstalts. incl yrly 494-3044. Pnme 2 Br. 2 Ba & 2 Br I Ba. Duplex on xln t hol lub, decking & guaranteed swiryuning beach good income $725,000 fttd11ced $15,0001 Quiel executt~e neigh· Best view. t.alJesl ocean front bldg tri·plPx borhood 4 bedrooms. 3 wilh spacious 4 Br. 2 Ba. ea(•h level $1.?110,000 balhs. formal d1nrng, fam- Pets OWNER 644-06341535-7266 numerous •tras. 4 hrs. Ftaataia lrom OC, sklng within minutes. Vall•f 2234 S 1500. 499·S30'1 no pals, 2 persons $435. Cute & coey 1 Br, kitchen· T .. till f290 Sierra Mgml 641· 1324 ette, w/d $450/mo • tst M/F 2h 10 8"r ~ 3 br duplex, toe eundeek, Jae, prkg CfOM 10 beieictl. S325/mo 709'.4 PolnNt· Ila Ln, CdM 640-7933 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ily room llreplace I Unique 11001 plan Wet1-appo1nted About 2600 sq feet $235.000 Corne :>ee' LIDOISU SPHISM IUCIEIDA boatong. fishing & beck Cool pool w/lmpresslve 4 packing Country llvlng at ,. Br hs rotsa 1tlras S800'1 it's best• $325,000 Wont last ph 539-6190 ~-8259___ BEST Alty lee Freshly painted unit 4.5 Br 3 Br 2 Ba upper, near & last 497 ·6490 11111 pool mod kll family rm schools, close to trwys. mess S.700. at BEST Riiy s575tmo ~ deposit lftW)!rl ltacla 27'9 MIF lo ll'lr 2 bd tum -i>t. ~ mile 10 bet\. 1275 Ind 1.11111. Rell 831·90e7 341 Boy~od .. Dr•v.-N B 67S 6161 Outel end of Island on 85' tot Huge cenler covr1· yard with fountain. 6 HHHI Farai1lat4 Exec .......-er 3 Ba • huge 539-6190 lee 540-2245 - S•901 2 B 1, B 1 bdrm, nr bell, reason· l>edrooms, lamlly room, La1aH lfi,Hl 2152 bonus room, commty clubhouse & poot. clean & neal. S t295 Celt Terry A\jent 546-23 13 days, Aert.tat1 Farai1llt4 Balltta bla.. 2106 .. mo ' V• a car able rent to responsible por1, lower unit, lndry rm single person West Npt N B 3 Br 1275/mo. C .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&I loan Take over large GI loan. low interest Mesa North 3 bedrooms, 1 75 baths, dining room, tlreplace Cul·de-sac loca1ton tdea1 101 young 1am1ty S 129.900 Ca111oday1 enormous living room ,_,._....,.....,_,..._.,... __ _ Spanish Ille thr uout Furnished 2 r 2ba. Den, ctose to stores p o 1176. Newport 527 W Wilson Beach CA 92663 Ron Wkdyt 971~78, E11e/Wknd• 873-7570 -------Coreaa del Mu 1022 NEW CONDOS OCUl I JEm VIEW $798 000 N I g u e I s h 0 , e s LIDO REALTY Town home, securit y gated comm , ocean 549-9823 eves iiiiii. Btlela 2240 2 Br, 1 Ba, 1 blk to So Bay, 9 mo Avail Sepl 15 $775/mo. 673·9224. TSL M1•t l'1· 1I03 1 bd, st.epa to beach, gar· Pro I F 30' • w1nt1 -ch out & 1hr togthr 2bfl2ba wtreep. F. & llYe chtc on moderete Income C.M.I Prime Westside loctlon. 200 blk 40' lot. 3br • oen, convenient to shopping 3ha, yard, compl relurb end 1ransportatton De· $575 000 Open daily 1·5 luxe 2 Bdrm. 2' •bath end (Call ·~lrsti 217 Jasmine un11 wllh ftreplace. all Owner/agt 673-555 t i,111ns, carpels end drapes An excellent buy S P Y G L A S S 4 B R 171-2310 3101 S. lri1tol St. 113-1300 view Club house, pool, MISSED THE AUCTION? Identical 4 Br Harbor R1oge Model wrocean 1ennis & beach prlv. no pelS S 1,000mo Call 496-7448 2Br, 2Ba, frplc, ground fir, $700 mo Avail Sept 1 No pet 848-7838 eves Newrrtlelea. 2669 Et side duplex, 2 Br, 1 Ba. gar. yd, wld hkup. Cpl prel. $595/mo. 850-2077 HHH VISTA APTS at$129.0001 TRADEWINDS Un·--------• view Assum 10~.~. 30 yr Newport Beacll 2i69 4 a;-2 Ba leisure pallo dbl llJ1.ed mtg Owner -gar frpc cool fncd yd EvetWkn 7 14f640-1169, Winter 1 Br Oen, garage, $650 -lee 539-6190 Like new deluxe, 3 Br & 2 Br w/gar Face water Avail Sepl thru June From $750 832·6000 S485 I Br. 1 Ba Apl SS85-S595 2 Br, 2 Ba Townhouse. Frptc, sky· lights, patio, all bulll·lns 171 41 613.4400 surpassed ocean views Danae Corp 851·9135 or l l 1 JI ue.2121 644-420 I HARBOR Costa Mesa I 024 s 11 otooo a 111 21a 2223AVALON Broker 640-9019 HWPOllT IAYFllOIT POOL MOllE E•travagant 2 story cus-Ou1e1 location 3 BR 2 Be, tom home with p1er/shp ftreptace RV access for 60ft yacht Luxury S 148 000 fmancong lly decor open qualtly de· owner sign and detarls for the lloy lllcCar41t llltr, perlectoon1s1 4 lldrms -541· 1121 lamrly 01ning atrium and gourmet 1o.11c nen l•--------$1,795000 631·1400 - -''-AP.' r tJ.J ,\t,-i AA "'"fl<ll<\1,1 It< .t,.IN •n\t •'"' 1111'11 "" Inc. o~lr ~·· oo< t.1 . ~t. REAL ESTA,TE l•--------131·1400 IHI FORECLOSURE • --------Local bank has loreclosed on 2 oeauulul condos, SPAlllllll rDOll 1-3Br, 2' 1Ba and I -4Br 2' 1Ba The units are 3 years new. spacious end l u ll )' appointed WELL Ill IL T Clll ~ bath home Attached gar I workshop 60 x 120 corner lot. RV perking Priced at S99 500 646-8386 Hut. Beacll 1040 3 br, 2 ba, lrplc Noods TLC $ 109.500 or best offer (213JS30-5 t59 OCEAMFllOllT COHO Stock co-op 2 Bdrm Best bargain s 130.000 owe Wllh $30 000 dn R&H lnvstmt 751·5989 Irvine 1044 HLF COURSE HOME 3 bd 2 1 ba. great view Thousands lletow markel $220K own/bh.r 752-8870 lftVllE lllOVES TOWIMOUSE 2 Br 2 Ba. lleau11ful1y up· graded, assumable low ml roan $ 127 500 Agt, Jerry 640 -5234 , 752-1414 856-6771 wkdy yard. no pals $500/mo. BEST Luxurious 1Br Condo, Ullls lncld 642·2097 Attordable 3 Br redone poo4, jac, gOOCI toe, close 366Avocado w int er Ren1aT_2_8r decorated 2 Ba 01, lrptc to Hoag Hospital MEW HOME-LIDO ISLE 1urntshed. washer, dryer. dshwshr 81181 5595 ~ lee $800/mo 946-7893 TSL Mgmt 642·9412 Owner wants action• Re· $6001mo 673-3039 539.6190 BEST Presllglous bacheiOr, Easlslde 2 Br. 2 Ba. car duced S 100,000 This ts a 1 porl, mature persons. no cuslom home wtlh • L 2116 Bike iO sand & surf top water Iron!, pr vale peis $575 548-6795 Bdrms 4 oaths, vaulted Soal .. •1••• nolch 111 bungalow pool beach. pool, lully ce1llngs and 4 rireplaoes . Ga1ed1Comm 4Br Newry gar at $400 ~ sm tee equtpped 11ilch8n. secur· -~a11-cB69U quullly everywl'leret Furn, Bch, Ten Sauna, 539·6l90 BEST lly, private parking ~ 1IU rm 642.1::200 Near Schools No Pet $ 1100/mo. 642-1802 APAllTllEliTS u 661 -7712 Eitec 4 Br 3 Ba -nuge bonus room. commty A,.rtatall, Ual. Beau1tfutty landscaped J PETE ' BARRETr •,. REALTY Ho .. 11 Uaf sraitllH General 2202 Newport Crest 2 Bdrm w/new carpet end many comm exlras $1 tOO --------• Seashore 3Bdrm wtocean OCUI VIEWlll Brighi 2Br, 2Ba corner unit on top floor Luxury am· mentlres, owner an~rous BYCO 645-225 I VIiia Balboa Penlhouse 28r 2ba Huge deck ocean vtew Owner/Bkr 953-6610 vu 3 car gar mo to mo 1ease only S1200 Newpon Townhome Love· ly 3 Ddrm end unit Spacious and tm· mocu1a1e 23 tt slip In· eluded S 1250 yrly WATERFRONT HOMES 631-1400 1 Br condo on the baylront 1950/rno. clubhouse & pool, clean & -garden apt, pool & spa neat $1295 Call Terry litatral 2702 Pa1ros. decks No pets Agent 546-23 13 days b soo #lo Fabulous 28r. t Bdrm S500·S505 549-9823 eves 2')Ba Penthouse. 3000 2 Bdrm 1''• Be $590 --sq It new cpts, uhts pd 2250 Vanguard Way lrTilt 2244 Valet parking, 24 hr se· 540-9626 -- 2 10 5 Bdrms $856.$2606 cur 11 y West woo <I Large t bd new car pats Towers. 10717 Wlttsttire arod paint. pool, adults, ~lsor ·Realty 651·1177 Blvd , (2131474.3575 no pets. 1385. 673-0884 BalMa --Large 2BR 2Ba, w 1w. Ptaianla 2707 Fireplace, Balcony Enclosed Ger $550 Mo 2 BA 1 Ba. 'h Block to 1s1. last. Sec. 642-0433 Beac~a~~sgh~~I~ Paid MESA PINES 2650 Harle 646-71711646-5743 BEAUTIFUL 1 Br $525 '450, 2 Br, uttl pd, 410 H11dlng, BalbOa Ph6PM·9PM 547-1 155 _ PAV patio, pool, spa TOP area, quiet. no pets 549-2447 3 Bdrm, 2 Ila home Plush carpets, '/ llreplaces bonus (oom Only $135.950 "" modern rea1ures PRIVACY Creatove frnancong avatl Molti le Hoael 1100 UHIAMILU Beau111u1 241t60 2Br 2Ba home Corner lot Island k11chen Fam rm llght In· tenor enclosed porch air cond Young adults welcome $34,500 Agl 5•0·5937 S11••tr I wl1ttr lltat1t1 JAOtHllULTY PlllP llAIUEMHT 11C·lll-11U 3Br. 2 Ba. 2 s1ry Condo with patio, pool etc $775 979· 19•2 or 662-2866 CllECI HT TIE IUOI Newly decorated Eastst<le 2 Br 1 Ba. No pets $500/mo 631-6t55. FREE NllE WAHAITY Submit all ollers Agent ABOUMDS 3 Bdrm 2 ba home With 642-4623 n .,.. Lerge 1 br "' Garage wlGOO v Washer/Dryer v No 1>41IS fireplace cov d patio and !•--------•n I hos 3 Bd1m 2 ba E .. eter Rancho San Joaquin Condo 2 Od, <!1.11 be, den w l wet bar , l rp1 S 1100/mo. 640·8559 garden w/waterlall OM•lllllll Model 1n Park II Lerge $132,500 • family room, central lalltta Illa.. 2206 ssB pays the rent On thlsllner 2 Bdrm house w elkloocean hurry 539·6190 BEST lee "' Steps 10 beach "' $625/yrly lCllllEll flULTY 2 Ir. t la. ht••· atrium L1Ige lot on tee tll·HlO HS,000. land s199 500 Rent/LeaM $975 Mo. 2BR 2Ba TWNHM. Fr/pie, A/Cond, Pool/Jae. 2 C11r Gar 833·24 791553-1696 .,.. 873·9327 OPEN TILL 8 PM Ul-IHO. SPECTACULAR OllllllOMll FOllEClOSUftE OCUll VIEW $250.000 under appraisees En1oy breathtaking Harbor value Located 1n prime & City views trorn lh1s Costa Mesa location pres1191ous Spyglass 62 500 st 011and • 2000 residence Beaut1lul s I of buildings Owne1 CO\lrlyerd wotn custom will help finance trade or pool and spa Motovated e~change 10''• 1tnanc1nq 'e II er Ca ti Ma" a available P1eas-i call now Bercovttz or Biii Kroger for e1e1a1ls Roy Kendall GE 159.910 0 .r to' ....... r-. '' .. • ... '\N• 63t-t266 Ag1 Easts1de 3 Br 2 Ba pool $140,000 Devin Real Es· late, 642-6368 rGOl NOME --------• Tn1s 3 Bdrm 2 Ba home 1s located on College Pari.- • Nei!ds 'TLC out hU loads o f poten11al Asking S 133 000 Woll consider o!lers 631 7370 TRADI T IONAI. ~isor ·Realty 651·1177 lllO MICHEL.ION OlllYl MIVINE TUllTLEROCI VISTA 3 Bd 2 Ba. spa expan· dat>le to 4 Bdr. 247K lull price 20K dwn Agt, Jerry 640 -5234 752-1414 Neody new, 12' wide. rir Npl Bch, walk to grocery, $26,000 646-2573 Skyline 12 X 55. Unique Oellghtfull 3 Br 2 Ba Col· ---1 l A Ad 1 Super 3 Br, lrg bonus rm, Pan, ow ent u t toga 2 patios. frplt 1n Cortaa dtl Mar 2722 2 Br. walk to bch In nice COM Close to tenlor cit club lnq al 618 Narcissus or call 213-445-7676 Perk nr Ocean $19,900 garage very near lrplc, prestigious colony. 548 8837 S695/mo 556-6576 -------~ · a y I r o n t Y ear I y Nlee, clean 1 Br 1 Ba, Coamercia) $925/mo Avail 9·20 Upgraded 3 Br 2 Ba ale, pauo. enclsd garage Call 675-0614 lrptc 1acuu1, poo4 lef\I & $600/mo ISi last • sec. Prorerty 1250 oardnr S 1200 551-4654 603''1 Mangold rear unit GAS STATIONtCoM High Balk• ---548-2778 volume. sell sence 1nde· Peaianla 2207 W(HI ltac.. 2241 pendenat operauon. Sale Steps 10 beach Bachellor 1 ar Cottage. walk 10 WAU '"Jot TO IEACM Includes land, butl<llng S 50 p · beach, town $480/mo Large 1 Br and bustness $950.000 6j3.·]g~r~y ultl pd· kg Utrls pd 494-7675 before Large 2 Br '!¥11rp1c wl:h $300,000 down Cor-"_ ~-6PM, •97·5168 eves Family & Adult Pools ona dat Mar tocatton Agt cor.011 ••1 Mar 2222 L---B'll 2 so TennlS Court 675-6700 11••• I I Parll llke selling CLEAN 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 FP, 2 HOME FOA RENT Coadtmiaiaal -1175 c gar, nw pnt, nr Hbr, Un111 Pk Terrace 3 Br beam nw cptg olrd no Leguna Hills. 3-4 Bdrm. Dover model. 2 Ba •Int pets St 100 640-0619 $7]5 Fenced yards S THE SHORES Corona del Mar 714/644-2611 loc.atton walking dis· lftAlll IEW I garages Kids& pets lance to comm pool Fee arr•tflfll 3 Br 2 Ba & lrptc So ol wetcome,883· 1500 S 9 500 ~ PCH Avail 8114 111 Agent, no lee a1no t3 Jean Special builder financing s1oso1mo 675-2500 - Laten 752· 1414 available on these spec· Spii;h spl19h1 2 Br hs dbl 5495/mo 2 Br 1 Ba pool. LIJllDI Btac.. 1041 tacvler e•tra large 2 Newly redecoraled 2 Br gar 1acuul pool much laundry room close 10 _ Bdrm plus den 2',llalh So of PCH $1200 more $650 • l ee 9 E B s lillHT VIEW townhomes Massive hre· 760-1210 or 675-5825 539-6190 BEST shopping 14 8 Y t S 1200 lllOITM place magnrlrcent mas· SlyliSh 3 Br 2''• be dplx L N' I 2251 HL .,... u2-11oa Costa fllna 2724 Oii TME llllff S Quiel 1Br, close lo beach, fireplace, patio, dshwshr. dtn rm, encl garage $500 mo. 2163 Pacilio. CM Jell Mgr. It 17. call 548-4530 2 Br 2 Ba bullt·lns. 2 car garage wlopener. pool, spa $795/mo 545.3 I 15 Pentrldge Cove. Sharp & clean 2 Br garden apt with prrvate patio $460/mo 546-9950 S1unn1ng large 1 Br gar· den apt, pool & rec area $425/mo 710 w 18lh 2 Br 1 ''> Ba. w/gar crpts, drapes, stove. tncd yard w/pottn, water pd 636·4 120 1·5PM 667 "L" Victoria $525 2619 "O" Santa Ana SS40 VILUMHEllA 2 Br. 2 Ba. qulel lamlly compt e• Dshwr /dlsposal, In dry lac. encl gar. no pets $560/mo. Incl gas & waler $300 dep 2324 Elden 548-4 tot7 Laguna Beach. otl Park ter sunewllh wtndowsea1 Skylr1es spa lub, lrplc in lfDDI lfDt $565/mo 2 Br 2Ba apt, Ave 3 Br 2 Ba taneo and dramaltc arcfie<I win· mslr suite Many other 1Br Condo community enclsd yard, car port, WESTUIE VILLAIE' Walk 10 town a lleoch dow Welbar Pr1va1e amenities 2100 sit. Isl pool, nr shopping S500 tndry rm. sm pat Ok APTS. Rf.ALTY FAITASTIC PlllCEI 3 Bdrm Condo In Hernage Park Sharp and ctean end untl wllh new carpet Near sohool pool Only Monlh to month only Un· yard Only 3 left lime to lse S 1400/mo. mo 492·6700 2195 Maple St 955 w 19th. St. $460. 1 -------·I lurnlshed Credit relorM· IAHH REAL ESTATE 557-5475 aft s Mi11ita Vl•i• 2267 nL llllllT. 142-1IOI Br I Ba. petlo. bll·lns. ' ..... ,. 1 1 1 ,, ....,1 \ 6 Pll1 IZECATCMI ce reQutred Mary Lou 850-9778,eves645-8075 Costa flleaa fm HOMESFORRENT 55 95 2 Br. 2 Ba pool.spa,no peta. $99,950 ~ • • ~ een I shin for iust tnal Marlon 644·6200 lle1l1or1 675-6000 roghl home? This 3 Bdrm ----2 Br 1 ea gar bllln range Mission Viejo 3 Bdrm 3 Townhouse. patio. lrplc, TIL 111•• ICl-1122 IAHAIH! C\ts1om & luxury homes Bank hqu1<1a11ons Agt Jerry 640 5234 . 752· 1<11• Mesa Verde Beauty IS & oven open beam cell Ba $7SO/mo Fenced sm pet OK. carport. all • v E worth hooktng onto•• lllLIEll OFFERS ,,,0 ga~d Cet 01< l62S yard, kids/pets welcome bll·tns WIOIUI ILUI Super sharp outstand-llllELS . $500 dep Avail Aug 1 Agent, no lee 883· 1500 940 w 18th Street I&. 2 Br Apia a111ll. Pool, ing neighbor hood • NEWPORT HEIGHTS 1982 A Meyer. 549.3454 I rt ltacL 269 TSL 6•2·622 t. 642-1603 spa, garage avail leundry ~ . ~~~~~ beeutofully landscaped 2 slunlng floor plans 10 3 Br 1,~ ba duplex Santa 21)('.2 b end it N S595/mo. 2 Br. 1'"' Be 2 Br 11/. Ba $595-$610 You caught your trophy ----370 choose 1rom 3 Bdrms, Ana Hghll Ger, l~cd yd. ~.· ..... ~Simo u~5 Bi!! Townhouse, n-carpel, 1 Br 1 BA 5515 al $162,500 540-1151 o:!~tal~U~DB~ Y WOOCI 2' 1 balhs. llreplace. sky· alee & water Included. C>lcp,,..Couri 650_7737.._ new dr1.pe1, laundry llghts, stained glass 1685/mo , s500 eec. ,.._. __ room. encioMd garage TIL nllT llC-0011 H1Ye something you want shingle, spolless house Thou11nds below m•r· 2 0 2 0 3 8 B 1 r ch s 1. 3 bd collage, oompi.1e1y 1923 Pomone 111 Ptilt 10 Mil? Claaalfoed 11d1 do wtlegal unit, view, 1 block kel. 833• 1927 remodeled, huge newly TSL Mgmt 642-1603 lioiiiOiiiw.--. ___ __ II we II I C •It N 0 W . lo beach $210,000 IAHEll llUL ESTATE ard 2 Br 1 fui. ve<y clean. Qlr· &42·5678. Newell, 497-5411 850-9778. eves 962·9639 3 Br. 2 ea, Montecello ~~~1~'i:~~~~ i:i~r:=: 8 AY¥UILI HW ar· aml deck. s5oo Call ' .. ' .. ,., ., . --r --. . -. 011 Newrrt ltacll 10'9 --------• Twnhae 2 oar gar pool eacurlt y. No pet a 1 r. re rlge, range, 11un-4 3-6538 ••••-1•'• c. -~ n ~I~' -,/. c: ~Ne.. ,, .. , * fl•EOLttl•r * no pet~. S725 'sterre 2 13·380·H80 day a, dry, pool. cerport, no Bacti.tor, all utlls paid, ;::>_ \'<l't.J N } ._ L~ ~ n "" FORECLOSURE Mgml 641 1324 7 14-549·8533 eves pelt. $<150lmo 931 W 1 1 be h 1350/ ..... •·cu•• •Oo••• (llt4•ot4 H0,000) COSTA MESA: 3 Bdrm. · • · !Sith. St. 548-0492 ~::.~1~2 ac · mo 0;.~ • ''•r :·. 4Br 3ba, apprx 2700 s/I, 21) bll view, 1650 sq It 3 J Ill 2 U---J hr, 2 bl, frple, S&OO/mo Brighton Sl)flnQI 1'8r -' •r-' ocean vu Far below mkt yrs old Priced S30K YsrO frplC. wHher/d~r :~:v e!~46~2,~~t" poo4 1oca11on, w1terlall Lg 3Br 2ba. frpto, new opt, I F p I f.I I ., r I f I I eppr ol $450,0001 below original u1u hook-up Norits --_ off of dining rm, micro levetora. gar S675. call UH 11.E.O'S wp1AtcyebelF111owancCultr1g,ean111ar1.1albel,e S775/m72o3~•t l~r~ Da-J~:d~~ 21; d.:~~c:n·~~ waved. frplc, marry up-s-4 .. T9_3-a-=-o....,o5=-3_8_/""0C'='·,.-·-E· Apprx 20125% below IP ' ...... ,. g r a ea · g 1 11 g e U I W ..,.N VI W, Agt s 162.500 Call 497-~287, Eves Ho'"u 'r'rly 1 1200 $850/mo 545·3115. Cerpe11. Drapes $275. prat&als Mutt act now• 261•5910 496-4792 494-4524 061-1192 N"d S20KIS69K on Dacorators model unit, 2 J<>hn Z11rvos Vtk1ng RE tOHI YIEWlll 3Br bultdera CUliOii\ 4--e;-21"1 81 hOfM In Br. 2 Ba. for din rm, ll'"a·-.-,-..... .--,cll.---~ .... 4,,.. 640·5583. hm 760•9669 Blight 2Br, 2Btcornar unit ~~~1~~ ~·;1 1~0 ~~IS~;; ~=~~1~1~1iint:'.t 8 c;,~:i ~~0• m;71•;1'"051~ 2 Br 21, Be TownhouM. --------• on top floor Luxury am· mo 859.2930. 1i m1ty home gerdener 540..Q702 lrg 1111 rm, dtn rm. bltlne. IUfllOIT mt1n111ea. owner lln~lous -lncld 12500/mo, For Info gar, frPIC. yerd & patio 0, .. ltttt J-I BYCO 845-2251 l•SO M8kH II yourt pte11M write p 0 Bo• DnlrN ble e .. i.rde ier 1 area. new carpet 9-PECTACULAA c;lu11c; c:rptd 2 BOrm 1029, Larchmont N y be, gar, decllt A11111 I /15. te!IO/mo &42-7803. 10241. l1U1t1 llY•. houM " tam hm newer '0"'"'" 1550/mo M2·0937 OCEAN VIEW Oltne 539-8190 BEST ' ""o •SA60tmo up. 1 & 2 Br l'Hll Pt 11, 111,000 15.000 OOWN Riiy ,.. Bio Canyon c onoo 30r HSTSIDE unlurn & lurn pool. •P• 2Br l"B" luxury OC.Hn ,,\ t>t $l17S/mo Avell 18992 Flortd• 842-2834, Wl\f I Ml 1(11'11 T 111 1M I ... t•c, RlAl fS1Al( 131-1400 vtew PenthOUN In u C .. 16~/mo < fir 1'~ 81 .. ~, 3172 C...,,111~ 10 ,.._ ,....,.1 lmmed Ill 417o·2252 T .. d/b IC o•u ciustvtt Vitia Otll><>8 Re-.... -~-• ".. .. 3 wn .. H . yer 11 on,- duced to $265 000 S11411 Wh•I~ tne 'ICI 0 Y • 0 ' • "v • 0 " 1 sm pet otl. c11rl)Ofl lndry by owner permits Low Roi 'etn off tllol rnarlltt ev/wttndt rm all t>IHl\t Low S'5.000 down $2000 With a Cl-lfleO Ad WANT ACTION? 2536St1n111 Ane Ave me> 11 I~• 540· 755g Cell Nowt 142-6178 Claulfed Adi '42·S67t TSI MGM' 642 ltl03 --- _ ..... -..... .. Bettl4110r 3 bllta lo b<:h, tlOve & 1•lrlg, utll pd 422'\ 9l11 St Cell 988·0020 1lt 6PM age perking , yrl)' $495/mo. 675-3218 eves, 731-5446 days PARK NEWPORT AP ARTMENTS COUNTRY CLUB LIVING IN NEWPORT BEACH Single• 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart- ments & TownhO\lses Some are ela\antly lurnlshed From 630 On Jamboree Rd al San JoaQuln Hills Rd. IU-1100 BAYFRONT 1 Br. I ba, retrtg, upstalr!I $62$/mo . 1st. 1as1 & $100 dep. 644-0126, Sandy -lllOAIYllUST 3 Br 2 Ba 2 c.r garage. lull security. on fairway No 1>41ts 644-0509 n C M , lg, 2 Br 2 Ba. 2 pat1os. gar. di•. mod avbl9/1,S600. 640-9408 1..ove1y 2Br 2Ba yrly, steps/bch 2 gar sp. No pets. $775mo 650-1706 a11.6pm . Lovely 2Br 2Ba yrly. steps/bch. gar no 1>41t1. 775mo 650-1706 aft/6pm N--everyihlno 1 er. 2 blocks olf sa nd, $600/yrty 760-8862 TllE IEWPHT IWUU Spacious 2 Br. Water1r0<1I ap1s. beaulllut gardens, private sandy t>each, close to shopping. bOal slip av all, no pets. For appt. 760-0919 ver11llles· Lux Jr 1Br condo Relrlg, view. pool, spa, gar , security gates. $525/mo, 545·7754 VIEW Of IAY EASTBLUFF Stunning 2 Br 2 Ba frplc, townhouse fir pin, 1rg patio, poo4, non-smokers. mature persons No 1>4111. $750 & $675 640-0349 Nwpt pref. 84s-4157 ex (24 hra) 875-6351 Prof Met. Fem. need9 same to ll'lr B.i Ill tlOfne Pv1 rm. b• & en1ry. l.ndry lecll $400. Ans Ad 1184 call 642-4300 24 "r1. Rmm•te to lhr ec>t nr So. Cat Plaza. 1275 mo .. cerpon. 549-8289..,,. lt1l1lt WaatH Dll Student wanting to rent 1 room garage or apl w/bath or svrrogata wlfa duties In e>tchenge lex rent redue11on 650-2 18' ;."'" ... Ital ltll SSO/mo 2864 Las&. Coste Mell C.ii •fl SPM 957·2740 WANTED shop IP-or large g11age lex minor aulo body repW<, wlll pay up to 1200/mo, Costa Mesa or Huntington Beach Biii 969·1221 Offic. lealal• 1114 1617 w.1e1IH. N.l 275to 3600 aq. tt 2,435 eq. "· Sull1b48 for rMdlcel or dental. Agenl . S..1·5032 250 sq '1 Suite S20Ql mo. 779 "L" W 19th St Costa M ... 851-8928 280 I Q ,, w/p"one an-1ng 3400 ll'Vlne Ave. Ste 214, NB l•OOtmo 660-14&4 Beylront OHloea, pellot, parkln8, lanllortat. 673-100 EXECUTIVE OFFICE •OO sq ft, w/pvt bttl'I & lho-·°ta, Bal Penln. S300/mo 2-423 mmmllfTU llWNITllMI Lux,_ tull l«vioe otnoee 130-295 aq n. Some 2 office tult.._ Rec.pl & Aneg ewv, s .. ca...... 2776 garw. oovrr:~ 2 9R 1'X Ba. Aeh'lg. stove. wtndowe. ean s2 3 Blocks to Beach. S510. ~or leue exeaittve offloel 66 1 • 1 192 Udo 1>9nlnaula, Newport Beech, 3122 aq tt 2 Br $485, or lurn $520 vtllb1111 office ICe Pool.. year round, nr I '~ ~ n :i beach, buses. No pets. on ~ tn 498-6277 mark Cennety looal 2900 Bldg Dlt tlncilve t· ~~ .... "'l"'"-~~~-1 lng wUhwood & ; blk from beach. wall~ l>'O'Y "' $275/mo • ut11. avall xlnt at~ for U • tmmed Sue alt 5 30 ecutlYI offtoe.. Avell fOf 650-5296 2·5 v-ar term ~ Ba1b0a Pen Pt, lge rm, pV1 !~·~ettP~· d~s~ en1, no smoking or cook· Peflc.n Propenlew lno. Ing S225. ~91 7141645-8501 Broker Fvrnl&hed Steeping room, cooper1t1on share bath, nr SC Plaze. -------- lemale non-amkr pref Newport Beach Lido c.,,.. $270/mO 556-1737 nery VIiiage arM 3250 eq Furn room In Coale Mesa It M 1 or oommerc:tel u-. hOme, S230tmo Call ground ttoor. lftra wide Chris. 645-2435 all 4 door plua 2 lo1dlng docks. ample oft .,,.... ocean Front 2BR, 2 car parking. 11 i. t SO • eq garage, Righi on Sand, II NNN CA t, Slyvia, fully Carpet ed. fully Plflcan Propen• Inc.. Furnished w /Antlqua 7141845--6501 Furniture $ 1,000 week ---------lor summer maid ~lee Fex IMM edQltl'llot ~ Incl d~.. c' It M P I Lido P9nlnNe, Newport u ...... a ' au Beectl, 3122 aq tt. High a.5-&927 vlelblllty otnoe tpece 1)11'9 Room, 1300. Pvt b• & en· 1000 sq tt pnvate dedl tr•n<le. Cooldno. working on N9wPQf1 8hd tn ~ man. 1.a9un1 •94-4459. merk CtnMtY VIII• R S C C BldQ. Olstlno11W deoor9t· oom for r. ltlnn. .M. Ing with wood ~ & Non-smkr. mti. or fem. wallptPlf prolltdM en 1250-+ 548-7499. xlnl II~ tlw .... ecutiv. offlCM. Avail fOf 2·5 YMI' term ....-1n1 11.20 aq ft, NHN. AMUli ..:--'T'"'r---.--,.,.~ I CPI Call SyMe. PelcM Pro p.,tl•• tno . 714/84!·e501. Broller eooc>eratlon. ____ ,oc Airport ., ... *-' fol •••tr dH lgnlf'I l"OWIOOll', Ital ala IHI ::'at1 ~ aq~.,:.:; B1yfront 5 Br, i Ba., bldg w/gl .... U..O..t $1800/mo. 21 Batt>oa btwn 1 0 ·6. (I U) Covt 845-5135 004 307 ~nca ON THE $A~ !>ffloa 19ace 1V9llolblt "' SUMMER A!NT AL Old downtown Hunl· ) er 2 e. unit wel btt, lnoton IHC:tl. Wt*~ lurnlehad, welhtlf, dryer dlatlll'I08 to bllnll-. lncld Sumlt\tlf encllld Ole & utll co 400-. aQ garaot 5802 Sea.nor• " 'Jtttllng 11 ._,flO/rno. I SL Mgmt 842-1003 Contt1e1 SSl· 1435 C• Or ange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Aug. 8, 1983 11u ler11l11e llre111•r1m ~n UHrtlala1 late1 11~111111 Carratry Electd cal ,_a_.,_._ .. _1,..a1 ____ 1.H-.eaP!l• ... •""'C"'l•~•..,al.a4111~-iiiiiiiiiiiii==iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii My home. b.a yn. Npt ·~R-.... p.al"!'r1""11-m6a .. ll"!'jo_b_1_. '!"lf'e-(1()41--•• Jteiectrlcllln: New/Repair JlptneseGerdener MaJn· MeiN's cLEXAINd $1 84 e day Hg1s area Loving care shelves. paf1111on11 Low All ly~• Low prices Uc tenance clean-up free SERVICE. a thoroughly , P r (o 645-6783 Joyce rates Slev, 731·8311 Free es1 631·2345 est 557 2210 :1een r1ooae 540--0857 That"I ALL you P•Y 01 • Will babysit <ny l'IOme. 1yr Ca?tt Stnlct -ELECTRICIAN Priced Lawn/garden mamt res•o CLEAi HOUSEi 301:~~ .. d ~~~7 ;z;dys Nwp1 Hll •Wl INSTALL CARPET right. free est1me1e on comml, Indus Yd cln up Rose Haekpg 973-0564 DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY ---For Sl 75 SQ yd Call lar9a or smell jobs Uc Low ratet 846·4947 evs I 'll p i St i 3S.,C2 I 673·03S9 House. carpe1 window a . I~ a1 . n Ct Mel or Pete. 772-1722 -• -Mow, tldge. clean-up. 1rim -· Q Dto l C I e 11 n t n g W a d o PERSO AL ' aUsrNESS Ctatat Coaerttt .,.,. r •r•u Free est Reas rates Jim lhrorough work Reliable Bill paying Nora Higgins, .. --""""----.""!• Springs. repair. door oper· 646 l9S8 and REFS With complele Cement·Masonary-Blocll 999-71 IS 499-1&01 a1ors See demonsvauon Haady•aa carpel and hou1e· Walls-Cust. work Lie Seacoast, 2488 Newport ----------cleaning. windows done ... ,,, ••iat./ ltn . 11381057 Rob 673-8094 Blvd. c M 642-34190 All phases ol cons1r & re· free CALL TOOAYI petr Xlnl v.ork. com-540-5654 Concrete. masonry. 11111--u,.A•R•IN"'e_W_,o.,o•o•w"'· .. o .. A'"'k-work. loundallon• Block, Teak cablnelS 10 dry tot brick. Llc'd S36-5013. Springs-Hinges-Openers Repairs. Lowes1 ra1es1 Llc'd Tom 557-4480 pe1111ve prices Jo~s lge or small 7S1-0870 Jon JOAN S CLEANING Cook -errand•·all wifely HANDYMAN Rooting, dulles 540-1287 M_t1._l..,a1.__~--Palatl•t ,_P_l•_•_a._11 .. 1 ____ Trrla1 ltnict .l!e b oVING· lnlftlll Competlltve price or1ln1 cleared from J!> " Typjl\gM ord Proc•Hlng Oulek, Car•lul Service tor •lnl wo1kt Fast terv S25 anytime Repairs Quick auy rev111on1 Uc T 138046 5S2--0410 30 yrs •KP S21-8012 8$1-9604M&M432·0SOO Reasonal>ltt 851· 1041 *1-1 MOYlll• RALPH'S PAINTING ROLLIN ROOTER Seti quelity 2S yr a1Cp lmfe,,;1 Reas ralea Drains lru"' $4 SO Wi 1dt w Clt1ala1 CompeU1111er11ea Free nt 24 hr 841 -3588 Plumoing repair OC's 1-.~.L·a·t~lh!""a-S"'u-n·a'!'hl"lne....,ln-..I!". - Loe 1·116 428 730-1353 Speedy m111nt aerv. lowe11 ratH 7S1·6753 SUNSHINE WINDOW STARVING COLLEGE ln11ex1 homes & apta Smllh & Son Plumbing CLEANING 642-1549 STUDENTS MOVING CO 842-3890 Plumbing repairs & drains WHITE WIZARD Lie T 124-436 Insured cleared Lie 6<1S-3426 WINDOW WASHING 641-8427 PaJtriai I Ii "The 011ly me3:1' 11 WATCH us GROWi 1 .. F .. ar"!'tl"!hf"!'n•g""ln~1-er"'lo·r .. D~e-1'!'1g·n-1• ... : .. u .. b-e~ .. 1R.,.o""o.,l""ln-g--a'"'ll""1-yp-e-s-QUALITY" 31·2026 PalatiDI HANOINGISTRIPPINO New-Recover·Oecks S L 12 Years exper. Nwpl VISA-MC Scol1 845-9325 Lie 1141 1802 545.9734 tatt aw area rm small-My prices Exper1 Wallcoverlng In-State law requires lh111 all OO IT NOWll &llFllllllU Y~r Dally Piiot Sel'Vlce Olreclory Representative repair. Free ast Local C----refs Dick (213)333·9S24 oatracton, . 1 --General laaaatll t n i et RemodaltRepalrs comm Gart1eai a1 cu11om dog houses ALL REPAIRS flM 631-9977 ate small. 650-6477 Ron stallauon Reas. Con!lull· Secretarial con1rac1ors who perform P 111 C 1 Cl an1 Ass1gnm1 S81·8590 StrvicH work over $200 Including ac c oes Geaning •PAINTING• __ ___ labor ano ma1er1a11 muSI H2-Hlltat.H2 End paper work nlOht· & res1d Llc'd. bonded, m a r e s C 8 I I ins For es1 SS2·9142 PAPER-TALK Associates a. i & organize lndlvidual & FRAMIN·G--CONCRETE • rKCtall af business. 760· 1988 MASONRY • SPA IN· ClATIFIED PUBLIC ACCf ST ALA TION 675-8690 Peraonal Serv TtllCas • --30 yrs exper 640-2068 luldtn Credit CoH1tlia1 ffveway-Park1ng Loi Repelrs-Sealcoallng S&S Asphll 631-4 t99L1c Remodels or any invest· BAD CREDIT? Clear up menl, qlty 1mprovemen1s I neg TRW profile Money , ,It.I.I.£. Ct Hf Co. back guar 645-5840 (11's Not Jus1 a Name) 545.33os Lie .,320135 009 Groo•ia1 Attor1171 Cabiatt N1ki11 ..... -,.-,-.... -,-.·,1·a·1-l•t•wt-l -l*New cabinets. cabinet 1 ~M'!'e.s""s_y _d.og·s~, .. "!IG!"'r·oa·m-rn-o scnl. $10 any sz Teacher 21 yrs exp 546-2848 TREES Topped/removed Clean up new lawns 7S 1-3476 CLEAN UP MASTERS All sizes Prof reas Ask ebou1 our 2S.OOO lawn special Call anytime 646-6684 (M1cttae1t Clean ups • Landscaping Hauling -Tree Trim Free esl 642-9907 Clean-ups shrub & tree lrim mo mainl Prompl & reas Chuck 642-2 J73 NEED HELP? CALL JEFFI Jee~ of all 1rades csrpen- lry. painting gardentng, clean ups, e1c No job 100 large Of small S40-03S4 RE,AIH * PAIHIH EiC Garv 64S·S277 PTL WE 00 IT RI HT• Eicterior . lntenor WILLPIPH llJl8ll8 Secre1erial 1ervlce typing, be licensed Unl~nsed Est Brochure 768-7694 Res1den1 • Commer1ca1 $8 prtoll 67S· 7702 copy ale Fast service con1r11c1ors should so Hoaaellol d Services Free es1 S36-9801 675·-4456 760·8359 s1a1e in lttelr adver1111ng WALLPAPERING EEP G C I t Cl SERVICES UNLIMITED FllE p•11Tll" TYPINGIBOOKK IN on rac ors an con-" • S 15 Single Roll For lndlv tsml business aumers coniact Mary Marke11ng errands Ors by Richard Sinor l11. NANCV 966-1338 Hf/day/wk 640-0888 Grondte al S58·4086 wllh spp1s. church. e1c Re-280644 14 yrs ol happy WE GALS SHOULD any questions Contrac- hable driver ac11ve 81-local cuslomers llANG TOGETHER" EXECUTIVE SUPPORT !Ors S1a1e License 1rac11ve oldef woman. Than~ you 963-4114 '!'our olllce Top skills incl Board 28 CMc Center own co1 646·9734 839-0730 anyllme word processing Prol p R 690 S H I • QUALITY ,.llTEllS raze oom , an1a -•-u .. 1~a.,1"!"P_._. ___ H S'tt' " ref111ences 497-6290 Ana. CA 92701 DUMP JOSS& oaae I &DI Promp1 , nest pro Pl uter/Reiair SMALL MOVING JOBS ""-!P!'!'la·n-1s""··pe-,-,.•w"'!'h·a""1e·v-er-tess1ona1s 636 7149 -P""L~A•s~t'!!!E'!!!Rli!!P""A"!!T""c""H""1N·G-Spriakltn MIKE 646-1391 Local ref Live mfoul Cus1om hse painllng, re· Resluccos Intl.ext 30 yrs l~n .. s1""a'!!'ll"!&""r_e_p_a""1r·, m-an·u·a"!'l-or 1 ... -------- HAUL·MOVE·REMOVE Furniture. Trash. Trees 963-54 IS NORM Very reas Belly 83 l·095S duced summer rates Neat Paul 545.2977 au10, 6 yrs exper Ron att F l O 673 2031 SPM 645·2S37 or Pete ree es ave EO S PLAS'"ERING 979-2821 Free Esl lnl/eAI Pa1ch1ng/textures Laadacaria1 Don't Plea! Free analyslS facing. bars & for mica of your case over phone countef1ops 642·0881 GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS Ooaeatie A1eacy ~ HAULING No 1ob too DOUGHERTY BROTHERS TREES · LANDSCAPING 21 YRS 642-3657 ..... ,,., ,.1.1111 Lie r 42S9:24 964-20' 17 E W1ll1am Giles Pa1n11ng Conltactor compet1f1ve rates, cus1om work, lu .. 10 yrs exp 7S1-7080 Restuccos 64S-82S8 Trff Stnict J c TREE SERVICE E•lotitaa l•JllfJl bto1 Werk rtl1 lukrt•t•J MaJ Mtl•I Big blllsl Forectosures'l Law suits? Judgements? FREE CONSULATION Scott Gentilly 110-0142 Remo et-repair unique & Unusual work a specialty. 20 yrs lie bonded. Palombo Const 962·8314 Mstr craftsman. special· !zing finish & remodeling. 499-310S. ll11111htpers HO/wk 8art1t1l11 W11ttt1 s•na11 893·0106 Childcare, companions. Mowing Eogl ng Twice a HAULING SMALL JOBS Nasoar~ 'ouples We come 10 you month $20 10 S2S Trash & Furnllure --..-.11------Low fees (213)541-S lSO 546-9707 MATT 645-S089 BR16Rw RK Small !obs Newport. Costa Mesa, Drrwall Hauling clean-ups, 1ree LT HAULING • MOVING Irvine Refs 67S-3 l75 'P.!!-~'!"!""!'~'!"1~--!"!"" trimming, yaro ma1nl, GARDENING · 000 JOBS ORYWALLIACOUSTICAL lndscp Mike 646-6S02 JON 64S·8192 •M-asonry·Slucco newt Small jobs & Repairs -------repair All types. Quallly. BUD SS2-9582 Want Ads Call 6'12-S678 Wan1 Ads Call 6'12-5678 Lowes1 price 63 1-234S lntenor · Exterior Courtes1')1 es1ima1es Don 644·4798 INT !EXT CALL JIM 131-lllO Pla•bi•I 24 llr ED • 141· llH WATER HEATER Special Pool heaters* Furnaces •Faucets•D11posels• ..... ,.,,., " ...... , .. BIG OR SMALL WE 00 IT ALL! S49·9770 T•1mm1ng removal yard clean.ups etc 642·2914 s LOW RATES$ I ree trim ano removal, gan·1 cleanups SS4-70 17 Have 11ome1hlng you wan1 10 sell? Classilled ads do 11 well. 6<12·S678. l.IU A DAILY PILOT AD·YISOtl M2-'47t • ladutrial Penoaalt 3012 Help Waattd lttatala 2920 A successful l>usinessman banking !1100 Htlp Waattd SlOO Htlp Waattd 5100 Htlp Waattd 5100 Btlp Wuttd 5100 HOIOSCOPf 1260-2560 sq 11.('ll otfk:e) sks lrlm lady Travel. sall· LtH ltJt Clerk Wesl lrvtne area From Ing dllmg 9S3-9964 lmmedlala openln~lor 2 BY SIDNEY OMARA $504/mo. Tom 8S1-8928 1 k 1 L hliHH o,.. 4014 c er s n oan pert· T UESDAY, Aug. 9, 1983 ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Sense of humor prnves valuable asset. You'll attract allies, co-worker becomes friend and helps you get major points across. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons figure promi- nently. Long distance call helps clarify pos&bletravel plan. T AURUS (April 20-May 20): Status quo is shaken; member of opposite sex provtdes excitement, lends spice to Life. You could be engaged m speculative venture and you might win a contest by sticking with number 4. Scorpio and another Taurus figure prominen tly_ GEMINI (May 21..June 20): Self-expression 1s highlighted. Long-standing transaction can be com· pleted and you'U be 1.11 mood to celebrate Restrictions are removed. you'U have chance to put ideas into production. Sagittarius and another Gemini play import.ant roles. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Fanuly members contribute ideas concenung decoration. remodeling and other possibiJi11es involving residence_ Be receptive. diplomatic and also realue that your budget is not unlimited Libra native plays significant role. LEO (July 23-Aug 22): Conquer tendency to reach too far. too soon. You will be rewarded for efforts, payments will be made and it is bet ter now to consolidate than to spread too thin. Pisces. Virgo individuals figure in exciting, unusual scenario. VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Lunar cycle high - your position is strong. you can dance to your own tune and insist on quahty material. Timing. judgment and 1.ntuition are on target. Make appeals, personal appearances and realiz..e that you can win friends and influence people. LmRA (Sept 23-Ckt; 22): Look behind scenes for answers, refuse to be restricted, realize that others do respect your views and you'U soon become more aware of it. Burden will be removed, you'll be given additional administrative duties and financial picture will improve. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'U get to heart of matters where romance is concerned. Creative julces n ow, charisma is very much in evidence. member of opposite sex LS attracted and makes no secret of it. Leo, Aries, Aquarius persons play dominant roles. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-De<:. 21): Recent emo- tional bruise is healed. Family member makes major concession and your views are vtndicated. Focus on prestige. career, participation in community project wh ich involves charity or political drive. Aquarian plays key role. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Good lunar aspect highlights commurucatton, travel. removal of restrictions and chance to •·spread your wings.'' You'll be given opportunity to pursue higher education Avoid scattering your forces. Gemini plays key role. AQUARIUS (Ja n 20-Feb 18): What had been hidden will become available -you·u gain greater insight mto facts. figures. Don't skip essentials! Puz.z.le pieces will be put together, they will fit. you'U perceive picture in its entirety Scorpio native 1s Involved. PISCE S (Feb J 9-March 20). Do more planning, make inquiries and be a good listener. Ch ock legal rights, pennmions. Steer clear of individual who is a misanthrope. Be ready for change, travel. variety and necessity for expressing self vta written word . 2,660 sq 11 3975 Biren, Newport Beach $1330 MIA zoning Agenl S41 ·5032 SSOO SQ It. 3 tronl offices. 2 large rear orlve In doors, >1lra electric power .32';, a sq II 1779 Whtrner S1 Costa Mesa Days 540·93S2, Eves 6416-0681 "lewpof1 Beach Udo Cen· nery VIiiage area 3250 sq It M 1 or commercial user. ground floor. 111ra wide door plus 2 loading docks, ample 011 s1ree1 pari\mg. ilS IS s so II SQ 11 NNN Call Slyvia. Pelican Properues Inc 7 14/645·6S01 •$775 up 2265 II mClus 1na1 otllce 1810 1 Redon· do Circle : T. Hun11ng1on Beach 842·2834 .VANTEO shop .,ace Of large garage lor minor aulo body repair will pay up lo S200tmo Cosla Mesa or Hun11ng1on Beach Bill 969-1221 29 22 ingle garage Vic Fair- view & Baker $4S Cell SS2· 7855 Aaao11eeaeat1 3002 LDIE WEllllT Permsnenlly Food 1as11ng & consultation, W&d PM, new Marnou Aeserva- llons 662-11S6 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Infirm -Blanlt Rocky · Dismay CRIMINAL I had 10 spend 1he week· end In jail for unpaid 1r&I· lie 11cka1s II was no fun Everywhere I look NI I saw a CRIMINAL Lost ITo1Di 3004 M UND 2 Golden Re· lrtevers, I male. I lem Have collars 646-1944 FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 142-Hll Found prescription of Cyproheltadlne lor Kroger CdM_ 6<14-1169 Found rad~Newpon Beach area 675-3070 Found S1be11an Husky. v1c l!vlne Blvd/Del M ai 642·8557 Found. Vng M Germ Shepherd . 6mo11? 171h/Tus11n C M 642-2742 11 you·ve lost a pe1 we can help you Call 1-800·824-779 7 LOST Female cat. all gray, vie Clay & St Andrews, NB Rewardl 863-6649 842-8204 Otflct ltatall lfi4 Ofliet lt1tal1 -------~~---2114 Ofliet ....... 2914 LOST: REWAROI Red toy OC Alrpan erM. ottice 1pec. from S225tmo 551-7010 ~ ..,ect tor ..... : 741 It. lff5lrno utllt pd, AIC, groul'd fir. t 056 El Cemlno Or. Co.,• Mna 3 Biiia E of Feltvlew & Adllm9 754· 1040, Mr Tracy WESTCLIFF BLOG 1111 WPOR I Of Al H . . .. ' ... ' ..... 1·203 eq.11. ottlee 1-2e1 aq. tt. ottlee with turn tor purch•M If <IMlte<I ( 4'11 Mr ••n•••d f,4~ 6101 DELUXE OFFICE SUITES UY Y11W 8ayfront bldg llOO· I 107 BHulllul larga omc. avail· aq n evall rrom 11 25. able 8'?·1944 Mon-Fri BASEMENT I 1 00 tel 11 9.5 . ' 2500 tq It Call Mon·f'r1 -----0·5 Furnlthed olflce. Ban11 01 842-46... Co1tt Maaa Plaza NEWPORT CENTER Full S 175 /mo, no 11• NfVIOe bacutlve Sull.. S5e·3900 1675-1625 940°5470 Fiiffli91*1 ONI041 IPllC• Prlm. COfont <I-Mlf Secy aerv1ce1 All Ott Hwy Ul80 Ml It amenltlll Good lo· Per1ec1 '°' arcflllectur•I. cation 17th tnd Np1 d"lon ... c S 111t Incl luU Bhid 842~&8 _ ~ Agt 973-8-409 NO LEASE Prnt~I0\11 ol· :ttiOtup, c arp el a, ~~y.pnu'm. ~.:: drapea. •lo, r9'1rooms. From 1155 842-78$0 17301 8Mch 81vd Hunt· •noton Beech "'2·2834 Oleeelfled Adi 842·64178 •EXECUTIVE SUITES• Full tervloe, high qualfty, low price. Newpon Blvd at Bay St. /A•fY, Broker e~2-399e poOdle vie Temple Hiiis Laguna 494·4685 l~SHEL TV'" male Dog. Name. Dewnlee. a1 Fairview & Sunflower. CM. 8pm 8/2 540· 1031 Ct•atrelal 3478 San Raleel. CM_ ltalala 2111 Ptr1taal1 3012 400 Sq II Bldg wlyard C-2 EIOOllTS/IODEU Rear of 2~70 Ntwp<>n Ou1call ONLY 835-91119 Blvd C M $360 646-3192 :::MtNB 1Tth & Ntwl)01t Newer 3300 ,q 11, amplt p11rklng. air cond Owner 875-8900 EHTIO lllOlltl BachelorfB&cttelore11e Olfice & Birthday Ptttiel THE UST HURRAH 7311·8538. 5118-8538 :>FFICE SP.4CE FOR Ledl•• Onlyf Relax1no1Uii LEASE 0 C Airport art1. body massage 111 your 10-~w 2 810ry wood and gla cation 1142· 994 bldg• FrM tllndlng 3 ----l>fdg c:;ot1'lpiell With rrwy SPIRITUAL READINGS vltlblllly llOO to &eoo•lf ~dvtce In 111 mellefl t.ovt . Wiii complett Inferior Im· merr••o• & bu1rne11 provemon11 to tull ten· Al10 coun11l1ng 1815 1n1 Ideal corport•t So El Camino Rtal. San hHdquertara or pro-Clem LIC'd 492-7298 IH1lona1 taclllly Okr C0·09 R & H Pro~l)' Hav• ~lll"G to Mii? Mgmt Inc 7 141751·5980 Ct..itled edl do II well __ mt n1 No Eiperlence GAS ST A TION CdM High necessary Typing and volume sell service tnde· business skllls required penden1 opara11on Sate cat 1 LI n d 11 She a . includes land. t>ldg and 7S4-180 1 o c S.L . 1700 business $950.000 with Adams Ave. C M. E O.E S300,000 dn Corona del - M ar 1oca11on Ag1 BeautySelonStallon.New 675 6700 York New york Salon Illness forces sale of EA· 2131592-1004 Cell Pietra elusive wood & metal beauty - business $8S.OOO takeg Loo111ng for several ae11s· all Terms 968-6187 1ants exit 1ra1nlng pro- S1ora on Foresl Ave, Lag gram Richard Oueuen Bell 2400 sq 11 Syr Isa Salon. 200 Newport Call Jack 497.s4s2 Cen1er Or NB 92660 Swimming Pool Chemical UHTY STYLIST Services Business New· Wf toltowlng Top Pay port Beach area. no Beaut NB Salon exper necessary. wtll 644 0661 lra1n, SSS 000 lull amoun1 Cleaning Personna1 wanl· req Will net $40.000 · ed pan 11me mus1 be ra. Call collscl Mon-Fri liable honesl & well 9-6PM Ask for Tim (408 1 groomed Call tor intur- 867 ·O 111 view 966· 1300 Mone~ to Loaa 4024 CLHICIL-OFFICE SM NEY TO LENDS Ma1ure person w/otl1ce lsl 2nd 3rd Trusl deeds BAper & qen i.nowledge Jorin Kord1cn 751-1 IS5 or bllkpg 10 key by M 1ouc11 lype SO 60 wpm. ortf11.H , I Burrougns L-4000 uper T.D. a 4028 1 helpful Call 8·5 wkdys 8.M. SATTLER 54S· 1060 or 54S·40SO M1rtu11 Ct. 1110. 1 CL£111 Spec1alfzlng m 1st & 2nd Cle11cal support pos111on TO's since 1949 10 Cuslomer Serv1ee R E Broker Bd Reallors Answer phone, exp1dl1 642-2171 54S-0611 1n 9 misc du11es 1 Scnwaber E1ectron1cs. WIDOW HAS $$$ tor I Barbera 863-0200 E•I T o·s $10,000 up No 3SO · credll cneck. no penalty Also buy 1umbo TO Counter help tor local pie $300K up o Denison shop mus1 ~ neat and "ssoc 673· 7311 personable Permanen1 ,.,.A lull lime day shill and Heir Waattd Slvv evening shift eve11 Call UOO WEHU ~3.:!.437 Proceulng mall lull or Counter r arson w1n1ed parllllme No axpeflenoe lor dry Cleaners. POHlt>le neceasary Send sell ad· managemen1 training. dressed. stamped env-Call 49<1·4044 or apply fn elope to Century Pub-person Hop·Slng's. 1000 llsllers, PO Bo• 48. N Coasi Hwy, Lagune Wakefield, MA 01880 Beach. AotMty lsslat. OUSTOll&I Full time Bristol Care n eed e Cl . I u 11 I 11 ma Center S46· 1966 (8am0 4 30pm Mon -Fro ). A.d Agency seeking bngh1 1nd1v1dual 10 work 1n lulltllman1 program Typing a mus1 631-7645 M·F 673-2207 wknds ARE YOU IHl•I WHAT YOU'RE WORTH? 1n Corona def Mar Ei.· perienced person pre· tarred Only sell Slarters with good relerences neea apply Call 8 30am 10 4 30pm, Mon -Fri 673-2268 lteeratl11 I Art Salts Need flair tor color & car PTIFT Terrific career I am 31 years old, 1n my opp Wiii Hein 826-5185 11,,1 year in10 Heal1h and OELIYEllf l•IYE• Nu1r111on inoustry · I n n made S60.000• The sec-Good driving record Over ond year doubledll 1 drive 20 Bring MVR Cos1s a new Mercedes I have Mesa Blueprint. 1690 1wo ~au11lul names 1n Pl1cen11a •F S48-SS71 Cellforn1a and one In oe11veryts1oc11 Full Time Hawaii We have D Musi be 18 see Herold grounCl floor OPPorlunily 495 Eas1 171h S1 C M t>acked by company 1ra1n1ng Call Gert IHTIL llSllTHTI 714·891·1372 NP• Bch plea11n1 group T IT prac11ce n"i18dl 2 chair ISSIS I side persons 2 e111111ng MIR·R£TAIL emoloyees relurnlng 10 3 4 days/wk Lingerie school. ROA wt 1 yrs S1ore, Flamingo CdM e11per pref 640· 1 122 573•59H den1e1 AUTO MECHANIC. brake. Second ch•ir ess111an1: lronl end 1unevp Exper, X·Ray license re q own 10011 50% comm 6<12-7999 Hunl Auto, 1825 Laguna Canyon Rd. Leg Bch 833-89116. <194-8600 HTOllECIWllO Wheel alignment 4 brahes Own hand loot• Newport Tire Center, 3000 E. Coatl Hwy. CdM. &ITD TIRI IHYIOE and llghl rep11r1 NewPorl Tire Canter, 3000 E Co111 Hwy. CdM Banking SAVINGS ACCOUNT COUNSELOR PIT po•lllon avall1ble 1n our South CoHt Plus Olfloe ieller •11per prel. c11ah h&ndllng oxptr. re- qul,.d Conlaot Joan l!lMr al 714-1:140·4086 California Federal Savings and Loan Sovlh Co••I PIN• EOE' M/FIH lllTlllOT •WIER To •upetvfM f\8WIPIP9f carrl•rt Salary com• men1urata wt experience Company benet111 and bonus opp1y + gener~• mlleeo• allowance Mu11 havt van, 11a1lon wagon ol tmltplckup Apply In per1on weekday• b•· twaen 3PM·llPM at 330 Wes• Bay SI . Colla Mesa DOCK A ITTNoANT- A&cepllng 11pp1tcat1on1 Call tor appolnlm•nt. Mon-Fri, 0-6 842-4644 Do-nut thop, counter ••••• PIT. no ••P ~ Applr. In Pef'On Olpplly Do ',ul1 1654 Newport 81. •;M DRIYIR Oellvefy, lull lime Mon-Fri, 8 em • 5 pm $4/hr to alert Apply 81 MHt11r Olueprlnl 234 Flecher. Co•tt M•H People .t\O need ~ That'• what the DAIL 'I ftll.Ol SV.VICE D4AECTORY .... aboutl llUYER Hotel Senior prelerred, 11 pick up Fron! office personnel & delivery Thompson needed a1 lu1Cury Laguna Blueprint. 3186-E Airway Beach Hotel Preler some Ave . C M S49-9233 experience Call Margie Neeoed :>nampoo as.sis-PISTE ., &llTIIT tanl tor busy salon Experienced Full •or Dry Cleaning. Help.Full Time. 6 Days Wiii Train Bergslrom Cleaners, COM. Experienced Floral De· signer wanled FIT Apply In-person el THE BLACK IRIS, 2950 So Coast Hwy L aguna Beach. or phone 10· 12 dally, 497-2282 FOREMH-HIEllL Y Working foreman to 1ake cherge of small alee· tro-mechanical machine assembly dep11rtmen1 Must be fully experienced 1n prectslon mechanical assembly machine shop prac11ces, and mu111 have elec111cal knowleoge 10 follow wlnng schema11cs Producls cons1s1 ol ma- chinery lor lhe Prinllng industry No amo,1ng Mus1 have own 100IS Ea ce11en1 1>enel11s ano wage s R I MA ENTERPRISES 1539S Cnem1cal Lane Hun1· mg1on Beach 893 453.t Four supervisory openings tor Health Or1en1edtsell mo11valed ind1v1ou111s High earning po1an11a1. No experience requtreo We Train In Npt Otte 6S0-2148 FULL TIME PAY PART-TIM£ Wllll Opporlunllles svellable with the Los Angelea Tomes Circuletton Oe- pa r1men1 In our door ·lo-door newspaper sales progn1m Guaren· leed hourly wage plus commission Hours. 9AM • 2PM, or •PM • 9PM Training IS provided Potential 10 earn S300 plus pet week_ For an In· 1ervlew Call (7 14) 9S7-236 I. elCI 1204 Ga.rage Door Operator In· st a lier. sales service $ 10001mo 10 start plus ~. 642-3492 GENERAL OFFICE-FIT Typing. llllng, heavy phones Some weekenCl work 1n1ervtew by ap- Polntmenl only. Tueedey • Frld8)' 141-lCC I . LLOYl'I IHIEllY NAiil HHHH with some following tor new beauty salon 1n Nwpt Bch Joyce 646· 167S u1R snun MAllOllllST Aegis Ha1rs1y1111s 1n 1no MISSlon Viejo Mall ar- noviices outstanding JOb opp for a•perlenced. Qualllled lull service halr- s1y11st & m11n1curl1t II you are ou1 to m11ke top dolle1 and don·1 mind working hard w1lh a great altllutle come wllh us Guaren· leed salar')I. commission, paid va'8llon1 and olher lncen11ve bonus po1n1 programs Call Chatlo11e Clark 49S-200S Hardwart lsales Full Time E,cpefiflOoed ptef Crown Hardware, 3107 East Coaa1 Hwy. CdM Help Wanted In ~r Book Pas1e-up ere1 Mon, 2 pm lo approK 6:30 pm Tuea. 10·30 em 10 appro• 6.30 pm. No experience neceuery Thia 11 a per mer'lent part·llme pot· ltlon, Apply Penny .. ver, 1660 Placent11 Avo, CoataMesa HOM E C ARE RN'S, L VN"S, All Shttlt Homa Cara Aulgnmenll Av1il· able Immediately Full limo & Pan Tim• Aex lbllll)' & Schedulif\g PROFESSIONAi. N URS~ S BUREAU 841·6699 Hot•• Boll Desk Peraoonel tor luxury rosort halal Eli per1ence prel•rr•u P1e1M &pj>ty In perton. SURF ANO S ANO HOl!L. 1Mll So CoHI Hwy. t.Aqun11 Buch SN M1rgl0 M•rmot110 M• 'fOAJf ahOpplnQ .... let by ullng ltMI Delly Pl. I<>' Cl .... fled Adi Ll~nae required New· p/tlme Call 493. 7648 • POrt Beach 631.1390 MarmollJo, 4197-4477 Housecleaners needed Good hours, good pay Call Rabbles Rag end Mop 141--0lll Office life/Health Agency Gen- eral office. typing and bookkeeping. customer 1er111ce E11per1ence Necessary Excellen1 Benefits 64.S-1S1 S Person -.. Friday". 30-<IO hra/wk S3 7S/hr Honesl. Prompt, R .. allab1e. Neal ONLY Need apply Good Trena a musl STARVING A.C· TORS MOVING CO 650-1366 LO&• llOlln&llf I PROOHIOll PART-TlllE/ OUlllCAL ,.tto Prl1ttr 10·5 3 days weekly, SS Nights and Wknds MuS1 wpm. Corona del Mar. be a11per'd on Norlisu SS SO/hr, 714-675--0638 equip Apply In P8f50n Jim between 12 and 5 pm. WI Newly formed Mongage banking division of Sou1hern California Bank n eeds experie nced FNMA personnel Call 714-8S5-6978 Part time desk clerk wanl· and Oul PhOlo 10052 ed. s1ert $4 oo per hr Adams Ave. Hnl Ben • Sal/Sun morning sh11t Plllm~ - Call 646-744S Counter person. e.11;pe1 llACllllllT (IHHll) Openings exist for Machin· 1st and Shop Trainee 10 work in small machine shop Shorl run pro· d1,c11on-no1 a fob shop No Smoking Must have own tools E~cellenl ben- efits and wages RIMA ENTERPRISES 1S39S Cnemrcal Lane. Hunl· 1ng1on Beacn 893·4S341 PUT TIME prel or will lraln Orange LIMO DRIVER & TELE· Counly Airport Area Mr. PHONE ANSWERING for Emmons Newport Sta· Peclllt View Memorial 11oners, Inc 863-1200 Park, NB. 644-2700 for PRIVATE DAY SCHOOL 1n1er111aw needs creden11a1 teacher llClllllST Mill 1a1he & grinder "''n 6 yrs exper 11231 Young River Foun1eln Valley SS7-3380 llllTHAllGE SUPHYllOlt Local retired person tor lull ume maintenance ol small shopping cen1er Npl Bch Call Mr AbbOll 673-7130 lllllH TUIHE S300-S600 per week Part and Full Time pos- ntons avail No E11per Ness Wa Train Call Mr Harris 662-S790 MARl£Tlll OOIMHIOATIOll CUil Lllera1ure malling lo ad In· qulrtes. Address typing Organize salee lead data Call Micro General Corp, Irvine 5S7·37U Ms1ure ••P book· keepertrecp11typ1111 101 sml firm (lrvlne areal 8-S Mon-F" S49-1083 ,.RT-Tiil OFFICECUH Very busy circulalion OI· lice needs a part•tome clerk for answering phones ano d1spatcn1ng messages 17 hrs per wet!ll Fri-Mon early mornings on weellends. early eves on weekdays Apply In per$on Oatly Piiot Newspeper 330 Weal Bay Stree1. C.M be1ween 2&4PM . Mon· T hurl Ask for Catherine tl'll-TIME tfFIOEOUH Very busy clr,ulatlor> ol· lie. needs a part-time. re- llabr&, mature and re- eponslble person for answering phones & despatching me1Sages. 2S Houara per week. Tues·Sat. Early evening & Sat morn. '4.00 per hr Apply In person 1>e1ween 2·4PM. Mon· Thurs Ask tor Catherine UOW.llYIT. OOSTI MHA, EOE. Meal Slicer and porllon PART-TIME control person to operate OFFIOI OWi Hobard Slicer Ex-The Dally Pilot clrculallon perienoe pref l>ut wm dept has en opening for train 9 30 am 10 6 pm. answering phones. dis· Mon-Thurs. 6 AM · 1 PM patching messages & It Sunoey Apply 10· 12 or lltlng Pleasant environ· 2-4. lorl"s Kitchen. 3077 menl Two shills 2S or 17 So Harbor Blvd, (et Car hrs per week Tue-Sat & riage) Santa Ana Fri • Mon. early eves on .Ealll.lo&L weekdays, early morn· " lngs on Wffl\ends $4 00 &llEMILH/ per hr Apply In person TEOll.10111 b e I w e e n 2 • 4 P M M on Thurs Ask tor Eacellan1 growth op· Catharine potl unlty tor young sharp mechantC:ally In· now. llY ST. chned 1ndlvldual Job re· Otttl Mtta1 HE quires neat, clean wo1k -habits wllh an aggressive Perl-lime position o~ In desire 10 move up addressing MonClsy. Non-Smkr we will train 4 30 pm lo finish, Tues- righl person Security day 6.30 pm lo llnlth background check will be Apply PENNVSAVER. required 1660 Placenlla Ave. TllE HIX OO. Co11a Meaa. (n&11r Hoag Hospllal) PART TIME _ 650 ~ Rlln llllYEH MECHANICIV W. Own Deliver aulo newapaper 10011, SO/SO 534-4577 route In Laguna Beach Expertenoed only apply area, M on-Fri (after- MHIEllER Attraclfve. retlal>le per-1on with dependable insured car lor PI T work 1-S PM dally 640-6040, ask tor Oevld MIDILI lOTtH AOTIIHlll noon), Sa1 & Sun (early morn ) Mull Have re- ila ble Ir 1n1por1allon Some collectlng re- qulrtd. mo1tly paid In 1d• vanct GOOd profit•. Call Fo1ter for dt~• Delly Piiot • &.42·4321 !xi 342. PUT TIMI WllllllS 646-1444 PI T auernoon secra1wy Laguna Baech Oooo typing Lome .cg 7 -5481 PI T lyp1st Lido Village area 673-9389 OHUTY ctlTllDL lllllH lor 'omputer manufac· 1urer Ea.per nee Pref tn computer related lteld Send resume 10 Siar Technologies Inc Alln Personnel Dep1 3180 Pullman Ave. Co&1a Mesa. CA 92626 Real Eslete Sates CAREER OPEN HOUSE Thia It 11 t,,.rttaal ty ftr JHl ltt 11 t1 .. t 1rtHt1 flHr. Otll•tll ..... , 11 .. 1 ... u.1 .... Ett1t1 •• , .... .. tf tilt Ot.,..... tf ttlt Start Fl11Hl 1I lttwtn, 1111 1 .... ,. 1t1 op11lqa fer sales 111toiat tt la th IHtlartH ..... - Wttt•l11ttr artts. ltMfltt feoldtl • Tiii SUJll l•E llYEll lllOlllT PRllRAll •PllllllUIYI Oll•lll111 SPLIT •IHIUTE IATillWlll llYUTillll •OHTIIHll TUHllH •FRIE HE OWIH •IW'I nlOUll lllGlllT Tl All. l .. EPfltEIT OHTlllOTtll It all 14•• 1p It rt1r ........ "" ... a •t1la JHr rttl411ti.I 11lot urttr with Otlntll latter. Otatllt11tlltt1tftll1 4ttalh 11 ltlTlllTMIUllt Wlllllt&Yzlll. 1' 11MP9 ;, 1411 DIHU AY;. HIT. 11111 H"f Oall '9111 la1tt1i lt4-ll21 - - • .:_ ___ ., IMAGE ~AOAZINE, lhe SuperviH MWIP9'* car- only nmall<W\11 magazine rltrt Hrly morl'llng ~•AM devoted 10 the modelll'g • 8AM Sat and Sun. • and 9nler1alnmenl lndu1-mutt hava van. •llllon try need1 moo.ta. aclor1, wegon or •mall plotlup. & tctr•aaet lor ~r tell Hovrly ..,ege • ml!Mge. 111ua FrM aemlnert Avg Apply In ~ ~· 11. 12 and 13, con daya. 330 W 8ay St., dvc•td •vt<y tlOur. Or'I th• Co•tt Mell. Ca Orano- hour trom hm to & pm Coa11 Dally Pilot E I I ... .. ... No appotnlmenl naceu-----4'11 "'1 •-, . 111y. Miit and F•m11e. all Trad• your old llutl lor ~~~~~~~~~ agH. Somlnert et tha new goodle a with 1 = sourn COAST PLAZA c1 ... 1ri.cs ed. 842-5871 HOTtL. sea Anton OIY<I. Co111 M"e Mlal • Wonderluf WOfld of Shopping, rlg llt at yOur flnoel11p• Oll9fYCl•YI Dally P"Hot Clau lfled Ad1 To plec. ~ td, cell 942~6'78 •nd ,.. e CllllllfleO A6-VllOf help you. ---- HOIPMMIT • •--:::::;:--1v•r•tc1 cMlet, ty1141 awam. ..... ~ 10·k•y a<ld•r . Ifie· 111\0Clil often wt1en you Pilon... ••P roc(d, UM rMUll-99ttlno Delly f) " •• m It , • I . I Ny Piiot Olaatllled Ad• to 1811141175 CPA tion. reecn 1"8 Ofenge Coe.I Cotte M..a Call Ul'dl m.nt9t 754-1040 PN>ne 942-M1t ~ SILL Idle lt•m• wltO • Delly Piiot CteH med ~ . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Au . 8, 1983 ltlt Waat.. llM ltlt Waattd SlOG Dop SS IO hralttrt I025 ltata, Gtatrtl 7011 Meter l ilt1 I01t 1w ........... ..,.._......,_ lllll/111111 Ttlt,liltH lollolttra MUSl ::Ot:.LL Prtttt<l A11 Na1erbed Quatln tize de 13 h boat ..,/1ralier 1 175 MoPed "Free Spjrlt" Very TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Exciting career oppty for w ork from home In· duG80 Purebrao Gero11n tuxe ca<1oeo lram•. • 71111•4377 to M1tee. good cond. creative. em1>lllooe . ._.11 eurance 676· 1076 Sheppard Pups La1gt1 1.01r11or1er $350 Peul •man 1n11a111ble boat Oul· nMd• lgn ewuhch only groomed lndlviduat Boned P11rent:11 Im 26 t 2020 or 675·9206 board attechment New S 160 obo 714-095~205 XLNf comn1 Manage Ttlt,hHtlolloltl11 porteo Champion Blood Nooo dnullQ i.at Sl!>O s1i5obo714-995·8205 MOPED run• ano iooka 720.tpuw/cmpr S1200 men1 opoty Training lor lnturarn:e company Line $150-S300 01n1111e $86 Oolo. coflH hwtt ltatl 7 l" great Asking $190 ObO 846-4684 ava.1 to right pe<son Top dollars Won. from 240·2268 tllble $95 Oreue1/mlrro1 £ 499-5048 74 Ford Courtier Pick up ACROSS !Jl S peeo PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 499 1•81 home Sco1t 540-t005 SheflfS Poodle puppy $65 Much misc lurn f6f101Brd.w/Evlnrude35 4 1pd, $9601080 TELIPllOH sare teacup-toy min· 645 9177 C M hp Lark Fbrgts/wood •otercydtl/ 645-1916 1 Censure 55 B11sll~l1l<f' 59 The gate Sales Interior Decorator Fashion Island line hOme rurnl1hlng1 retallor need l.lyly Woll" ature S250 up 546-2848 w1111r S550. 971-0313 Scttltra 1011 - -" Xlnl tSpc living rm,., $500 79 Chevy PU, muat see 10 Have 3 poiltton• to 1111 Im Peta 5535 5•6-3533 17 Mako w1trlr. l 40hp 1078 Suzuki GS '750 E eppiec V-8. au•IU1ry Mil 5 vestment 10 The CIOSt!I 14 Behind 11me 15 Ultra - 6 I Small 91 ovp 62 H011t!SI HO\/ER lORA SC AMP I AMAH Is T 0 p URGE bp SalH Per1on Must k,now drapery meuure Hrly/Comm Mr Bruce 644-8860 Nettle Creek mediately No e•p nee . 'COCKATIELS" S 15 EVvlnfru&de w1tpower trim Blk. mega. &K mt. 6petf tanlf.i. alldlng rear wln- company wlll train No Coil& Miii 6124 H . bat tank. many $1500/obo, 751 ·054 dow, racing wheel• a 63 Juo11.ite O NETO TRAN 'Pe~l 'THe'N •o S P I R £ setrtng, nlary Call each/OBO 546•6'77 •HIS $6SOO 24 i-9o43 1979 Otrt bike, Suzuki llre1. AT. PS. PB. AC. Tuea·Wed 10AM-4PM DWARF Bunny Rat>blll s.-.TISUN 9·'4 Brownplald 18' t973 Trlaonlc~ 1265 RM80 $295 Cell aller 6 Stockland Shell. $5850 16 Santa - 64 W1th111 prl•f 6" Rt>SOl IS ~PEAN •TY AP PE R NE-SALES MICRO COM· PUTERS, mature person with business and corn- p u 1 er experience 754-6363. Mr Brown 662-5844 752 6 06 cotner unlttbeds, bed o 7 B t 546 t273 _ __ $4each • 1 stands c;hra,lotsolmlac HP II , good buy at 49 -1360, Laguna yapp • 17 Sinful 06 V11..tor1d Nile falls A A I ANDER • ~u N 0 • R OA E A A T 0 R •P ox TME WlllUl HD STILL Mini lop Bunnies, popars 414 Bucknell, CM ~~i~~30 Call OCC Beactl 80 Chevy•,;, ton PU. Sil· U 'I PAY TY S25 499· 1997 roys. clotnea, metal desk. 70 Honda Trail 90. gd v er ado. b I u e / w ht 18 Some time 20 Regrets 6 7 Nl'l:t'S!>llV R I 0 s N IO -~ 0 A E • L E N S 0 s •O A L I •P A I R E 0 CHlll,10. r • 6010 kit utensils, much more. 20 Ft Fishing Boat. Buick cond S250 546·6773 $6500/olr. 760·1516 ,., nhsaea Sat only 8 30-3 1213 Engine, OMC Outdtlve, 70 HONDA W/Ferrlng. 2 80 Longbed Mtiid& Like 22 Pray speeches 23 Formerly 24 Stagge1 25 Card gumt.> 28 In return 32 Thrash 33 Sun p1el 35 -Cou1)( •I 36 Sh1lle 38 Subdued 40 Coasted 'I 1 Knocked for - - 43 Bach s forte 45 Comp pt 46 Hectic routines 48 UAR president 50 Arouse 51 M odify 2 3 14 4 DOWN 1 DecJmpt!d 2 Cl1>anse 3 On llptoe 4 Shouter 5 Supervise!:. 6 Fastent.-r 1 Be111gi>rt>11t god 8 OB Oawsu11 M E R G E • C E L E B A~ -A ALE • ACRE E l 0 I s E • !!. .!L T !. I !.!. ..!. MAPLEWOOO I OALLY I TES l lOLE E LDER JE NE SEEO STOii\£ ..,..._ --- 1..umµnse1 ..'t:. K111c1 or 111y ':!; It -. 42 P1a1e 44 Judge ut (lltl 4i Clinker 49 Relent 9 For lunt• 111l•s11on 5 t Page side 52 W itches 10 BO>lt!I'> iJlt1*"'> 2H N T b oot.. I I R11t J1t1 12 Kt.'y 1J U lters t9 Am>gatt.' 21 Strd1gt11 pre I 24 Chases aw.iv 25 British 6 7 ;.>q HJ11d toors JO Sheel)llke 1 1 Goll s - t.l•P J il Debusc;y w orl.. 17 Fdllrn.!> 19 XIX B 9 53 Prepos1t1on 54 PorltCu 55 Break 56 French river 5i Harass 58 Temper tiO Mulltlmmad 10 11 12 13 16 -IALHPEHH 1or exctualve ahlldren·s boullQue In S C Plaza LeMaguln 549-6585 SALES Person, tac:iie·s Sportsware Buyer ror Gull Shop. Prlva1e Club 30-35hrs weekly. lnclud· Ing some weekends Hoorly wage plus Com· mission 496-5767 ror In· tervlew Salesperson PIT ror Fine Jewelry Store Exper Pref Cell tor appl. 548-3403 Salesperson. part time home furnishing store 1n Irvine 857-8840 SANDWICH SHOP ,eeds responsible person Irvine area 955-1247 or 971-1739 SECRITAIUH 3 nice. neat secretaries needed. part/time. air cond office. Call Wayne Johnson,530·4140(9-11) SEOllETAllY /£1to. ONTV os now hiring direct sales represen1111ves through·out the 11reater Los Angeles area •Company paid sales tr lining •Best comm1ss1on/bonus plan in the business •Group 11te/meo1ca1 benefits •Dental insurance coverage •Supervisor/ manage· ment growth po1en11a1 Coma. Investigate the e•· citing opportunities avall· able to you at the World's largest pay TV sys• tam ON TVI For interview arrange- ments -call nowl 114-151-3550 EOE M/F American Oak desk and Donegal Place (Fairview Bale Tank, Outriggers He1me1s. $750 OBO new, low m1, $3700/or swlvel chair $9 50, & Baker) 555.2174 sleeps 4-head $4.500 645•1688 bit. 761·7716 642-7658 * 646-6205 * ------75 Honda 75'> V English AntlQue Oak ROLL TOP DESK Circe 1890 Sacrifice $750 Come see 2·6 Sat/Sun al 233 16th Place or call 675-4333 MUST SELL 35· Siamese Bronze Figure Asking $3600/obo 640-8688 Oak Roll Top Desk 1n graat Foanl1in Valley 6134 BIG BARGAINS-Tlres, rims. bikes m1n1-mo1or O•ke sports eQu1p misc t0478 Ploce1 River Cir (Green or oo k Home5 Wa•d & Ell1s1 Sal/Sun 6-4 24' Sk1pj11ck '72, F/B, '82 Eng, 0/0 • trtr S 13.000 646-2317 56 Classic Cnris Crall 26 ft cabin cruiser Beautiful man09any Need• some engine repair Full cov- ers $2995, call 552-3757 or 261·5921 Semi-chopped. runs 1<tn1. 111 9040 new lire, cheln S battery ·13 Dodge Dual ball S 1095 673-6687 systm, partial convara. 7 7 BMW R 100-6 Mint am/Im cas1 star runs gd, cond Lo ml wltuggage S2000 obo. 645-8465 $3500 964·9316 76 Show Car Van,L~ 77 Yamana 250. OT cher- ry cond $700/0BO 841·367 t Black, Too Many Ex1ras to List 661-4808 cond c11ca 1900 , $800/0BO 675 2578 Appliances 6011 70 Boston Whaler 17. 60 lrviat 6144 np Martner eng only 18 78 Honda CX500 Fa1r1ng. G ... ,G .. A-N'"'T""1 .. C.....,S .. A-L""E""--M-u_s_1 nrs · 4 • Mere under 50 new 11res $900/obo 81 Ford E 150 custom wndw convers;on, auto, V8 ps, pb cru111e cont burglar alarm. cap' chra 24 000 ml i<lnt cond s 10. 900 759-8027 sell 1t~e11ew1t11111grmset hrs $7400 Like new 540-2947 c.nrome y1a~!. 01n.r1g rm Oceanside 619· 757-4017 79 Honoa Odyssey s75o 17 cu II upright 11ee2er runs g ood $ 1 SO 548-3096 ~!'I ktng bdrm set bunt. 71 Classic, 18 Tri-hull. 4 962-9946 beds w/2 Oressers cyl Volvo 110, open bow 1am1>~ r.itrig new wash $JOOO OBO 850 o 35 REFRIG S35 Whirlpool ertoryer 551-8758 / -4 gas dryr works s 100 55 1 32~16 I' IOSTOll WMALEll Both worl\ 645 6192 Jewelr• 6214 SQuall-type, oars. sail & HARBOR AREA !.. dolly $700 673· 77 70 APPLIANCE SERVICE Beautiful Cubic Zirconla we sell recond . guar Stones Only S2 ea & uo Dulloeld Edison 18 electric appliances 549-3077 640 8688 bay launch. double endeo. surrey top. lull Gas stove 6mo old M1claintry 6216 covers, $7200 548-3558 harvest gold pd S550, --· --·---sell s450 979.9621 all 3 Wood Furniture Manulac-Jelfrles 24 It llybrl<lge. tu ring Machinery anO head. galley, 389 Pontiac. 80 Suzuki RM 12s, $400, must sell Xlnt shape. "tr as & gear 499·25 7 4 82 HONDA 75oF 1om1, like new Saddle bags. cover $2149 964-9480 home 964-8645 wk '82 VESPA P200E $1000 or lrade 63 t -4027 Aali,at1, Cl111ic1 9045 29 Modal A, 4 Door Town Sedan, restored $9,995 46 Ford Woodle, navy blue. restored S 12.995 pp 675-6161 '58 Volks Bug Perteet condition New paint His· torlcat. $2900 See to ap- preciate 714-751-9039 19 E)(cellenl skills required. Appraisal reports. stellstlcal, ablllty to man- age ortlce. Excellent starting salary Send re· sume Alln: Pat The Newporl Economics Group 1600 Dove St. Ste 425. Newport Beech. Ca 92660 I IUY APPLIANCES Supplies "Fac,ory eidl lhru OUI $7500 TOP $$$ Les 957·8133 C714t_4o93s_2e07., o u I '' 673-4705 Females Pre! Models & , Escor1s (213) 866· 1984 Kenmore 2 or relrig, 5 yrs • 80111, S.il 7014 Go Raclng-1982 HONDA CR250R Plus Spare Frame. Parts. 011 S 1400 962-6196 Yamaha YZ 2SO drtbk. exit 64Vr Mustang Con- varltble Fully restored. Blue & Wht $9000 Open to Oiiers 7 14· 751-9039 cond. extras S350 631 -8048. IOPLESS MODELS old, au10 defrost, $ tOO M11cellaneou1 6218 24. Swedish Trad Sloop S750AY PAIDOAILY 645-t446 20tt Yardman Mower, FG on wood. xlnt cond. No Exp Nee 826-2583 Relr1garator. Gibson di• Power Trlll'l Edger 100. 90o/. res1ore<1, Volvo ln- • ...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia. frost-tree S 195 759-0986 good con d $ 2 SO brd head, ta tho, tandem Motor Hoaea 8020 ~!~~t~ugs'1 ~· ~g~ 31 ----+----+---+---!Secretary. NewpOii Center olf1ce. lull lime Typing skllts & a pleasant attitude a must Call tor app1 760-6215 HOIETHY/llOPT For Orange Coonty motion 1---+--+--4 picture producllon com- pany located In beach area Musi be person· able, xlnl typist, & witting to accept Interesting pos· tlon & responslbllltes. Pleese Mnd rewme to Dept P.F.P . PO Box 205, So. Laguna. Ca. 92677 ~:-+--+-+--i Security guard, reg only Newport Bch area. S4.00 hr. Call Tues· Thurs bel 5PM-6AM, 675-2575 TUlllllS MOW TO SELL Help give them a head star1. Earn top $$$ parl lime evenings Only positive, dependable. outgoing adults need apply Phone 646-7021 2·30 to 6 p m Monday thru Friday Typetetter. experienced CompugraphlC 7700 Full time days 0 C a1rpor1 area 241-9238 nPin 1110En. E•pandlng engineering consulting co -ks de- pendable. well-organ- ized lndlvldual Excellent typing, phones, eage< to learn Salary $1100· 1200 mo depending on ex- Service "iiiiion attendant, pertence 730-5990 _____________________ :_:_:_~:_:_:_":_:_:_~':_:_-:.._"" lull time. Chevron station wanted Live 1;; For Elderly ltlt WHIM 5100 •••• WHIM 5100 ltlt WHIM .,. 5100 3000 Fairview, C.M Lady Good Pay Peggy SR. SECRETARY 962' 1643 flecep1lonlst needed, Rest1ur1nt Sal/Sun 9.5 ror busy real Well groomed service per- asta141 office in Newpor1 son and bus person Beacll'. ~-7020 Bruce needed tor break IHI and RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST PART· TIME weekend re- cept1on1S1 -part-lime typing during the week, Jtlnt parl-llme work !or college Sludent Call weekdys only 9-5 Clarie Johnson 644 ·9060 COLDWELL BANKER Newport Center RE Ole HOEnlHllT luncn snlhs al elegant Laguna Beach Res· taurant Contact Finn. before 1 I am 497.4477 THE TOWERS RES· TAURANT Restaurant Energetic people 10 ai.- tablllh luncn nr ca1er1ng routes In Costa Mesa & John Wayne Airport areu Prime tocauons - good 1ncom~ potential 64 1·8209. 633· 7551 all 3PM Restaurant • Sandwich and Selad Febrtcator. Must be neat clean and dependable Mon-Fri, 5 am · 1.30 pm Restaurants IEW FREIOll HIEIY I •&•IWIOll lllTIOI"' Major Newport Beech real -s: estate development firm s hiring lull and flt counter ollers cnallenglng oos· sales personnel We ere 111on tor take-charge 1n<11- 1ook 1ng for friendly vldual who can handle di· cheer I u I. qua 1111 e d verse responslb11t1y and a people Please cell for test pace Excellent sec- appt Mon-Sat. 10·5. retarlal & communtcalion U IAlilETIE skills 11 mutt We require 751·1266 at least 5 yrs exp end Restauran-1 ----real estale or related background typing WAJTER/WAITHSS 70wpm dtctapt10ne & Nllh car for wicker baSket SIH or last notes II you lunch service 9 am • 1 take pride In your work, pm. Mon-Fri Earn ap· please call Su&1n at proxrma1a1y $150-$170 714/833-8680, ext 24 wkly Must be neat. per -E.O E sonable and energetic --C Call alter 10 am Lon's S1atlonery Store In orona Kitchen. 3077 'south del Mar needs FIT ex- Harbor. Santa Ana (at perlenced salesperson. Carriage). 979-0747 675·lOlO X·RAYTEOM tor medical orllce Min 3 yrs e•p PI T 546-9319 Jo~• WHte4 SlOS Mature Cerllhed NA now available tor h11e-1n pos- 11ton or lull tome hve-001 pos111on xlnt ref's 645-1062 Physician s widow seeks employment companion hsekpr Reis 776·8033 Cat•-5505 KITTENS. PERSl ... N, PEDIGREED. GOOD HOME i100 536-1692 Dot!• 5510 it.ustrallen Shep pups, trt-c hamp tines 575·S 175 549·3984 Reslaurant Design Firm located near the trvlne In· duatrtat Complex hes an Immediate opening for a dependable, sharp per· son with typing ability Should be able 10 handle lront ottlOe, phones, cor- respondence, Wing. add· Ing machine end errands for fast Paced olfloe. Ex· cellent medlcal/dental package Orange County Restaurant Services '2601 Oalmler Street. .Santa Ana. Ca. 92705 641-5750 • Ideal Part-time job for college student. Various * food preparallon and baking duties Mon • Thurs, 1•00 • 6.00 pm. Sunday. 6 am · 12 noon * DIALING FOR DOLLARS Telephone Operator PBX experience. some typing. * Contact Mrs. Baltazar, Hotel Lagune 425 S. Coaat Hwy, Laguna Beech,494·t151 r elephone .-.-,e-,-p-eo_p_1.-. Bull Cocker Spaniel pup- pies, 6 wks. AKC. Shots. S150 661-7919 Golden Retriever puppies. AKC. $150. 642-7984 Golden Retriever Puppies. 5 females. 7 wee~• AKC chemplon line. $200 850·0435 it.pply between 10-12 2-4 dally LHl'l IROllH IEOE"1111rlT 3077 So Harbor, at Car· Mature sensauve person r I age Sant a An a for Optometrists front 979-0747 olhce duties P/tlme Restaurant CdM Ole 673-2335 IU. llO'Y Mii YOU'LL NEYER BE FIR Earn big money for short hours. 30 hr work week with potential to earn $500 + per week •6AM-NOON •NO EXPER NECESS •WEEKLY PAY GU.-.R •HIGHEST COMM ~ BONUSES •PLEASANT WORKING CONDITIONS Rear estate firm nee<!s exp secretary for 111 Costa Mesa oHloe Must FROM HOME ii you re bright and pos-have excellent typing sess a pleasant voice call skills, 60• Shorthand Mr Thomas at not req'd but helpful IBM Carl a Jr n11 Immediate 613 Q l l I word processor In olftce full or per1 11me days/ • Earn up to $15 pr hr Salary • comm Join the l11test irowlng private Telco In ;,o Cal ContaC1 Mary 859·7200 eit 212 s.lt thing• fU1 with Deity Piiot Want Adi ~aily Pilat · .. · training available Will as-nights/ graveyard pos- StSI manager with oper· 1t1ons available lo• -... Position available for edi- torial writer with strong conservative p oli tical philosophy. Salary nego- tiable. Send resume to : atlon ol office Real es- tate llcente desirable OOlml HLP Cell Craig 631· 1266 tor AHllTAIT MAIAIEll t Rettaurant ~attresa/Walter E•• perlenced Food/Food and Cocktails Also Bus . Persons nee<!ed ror d•Y • IJ.hrft Ben Brown s Res-1 taurent, 31106 Coast Hwy. Sooth Laguna $ell tntnos taa1 w11h Dell) Piiot Went Adi. Newspaper Excellent benefits and pleasant working con- ditions Please apply In person Tuesday through Friday, 2 PM 10 5 PM at 34312 Pacific Coast Hwy Dana Point CA or 3929 S El Camino Real San Clemente, CA EQual Oppty Employer M/F Sales llALIH FOi HLWI Ye.s, we do and yoo can too l Join our entheuSiastlc team sell· tng the Wes1's finest newspaper We're the Orange County edition of tne Los Angeles Times. Hourly wage • com- mission 2 Shifts avall· able. 9 am· 2 pm or 4 pm 9 pm. Oral us now ol 540·0301 You don't M9<I 1 gun to "draw raet" when you pl.ca an Id tn the Deity Piiot W1111 A<l1I Call now I 842·5e71. KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! AGE.S 11-14 URN lF TO $75.00 P£R WEEK We nuw hhe 15 opemnc' lor younl Hltr bl!nm lo wcu" 11116ers for 111, Orane~ C<>•~I Dally P1lol Our m w' 1tut at J JO pm •nd wor• unhl R JO om wff•O~o On $3l~1day. *f *Or• a ''" mo•t f\OUI~ Vou '"" urn m1oy lttP• •fld Plllf' ak>~& with et1n101 your own mor1ty th,, r I\ no dthvenni or toll•, lion inwo4nd If you ii" 1n"r"11fd plu\f c~ll Mi (art (714) 548·7058 Editor, Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA. 92626. Paily Pilai · City editor needed for mid-sized daily Must have enthusiasm and strength to direct news staff. Several years copy desk experience required. Salary nego- tiable. Send resume to: Edi- tor, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. ... ' ..... . ~aily Pilat · IAILY PILIT IWIAlll Tllllll Now accepting applications for District Manager to super- vise newspaper carriers. Salary commensurate with experience. Company ben- cfi"' plus bon us opportunity. Must have Van, station wagon or pick up w(th/sheU. Mileage allowance included. Apply in pel'IOn1 weekdays. 3PM to ~PM at 330 West Bey St .. Costa Mesa. ·. 645-6125 lrlr Sall/low away Refrigerator. like new, S5500 496-7696 •73 26 It Eldorado 3&5 eng 497 -1673/ Full SIC Xtnt cond 'IO_f_l _ll_l _2-1-11--lrost·frae 2·dr $165 it.1 cade video game _____ _ 893-9060 Pac Man • $1000 27' ERICKSON '71 l/B, Loa<led 46K m l, Tempest $445, Zaxxon Xlnt Cond 5 Salls. Nu Retrlg, Frtg1dare. S100 $745 others 540-8914. Main. ROF/VHF $18,500 75 Titan, 20 It, 18,000 ml S8500obo 645-8252 Brand new Int, runs very good. new tires. $1500 consloer trade 989-1221 548-6704 ext 662 OBO p p 494-7927 nice $8500 642-0795. eves 548-8823 Reing, frost-free family ~ AT ARI' 8/Cart Work es 73 SABOT· Fiberglass, 5175. Maytag wash· Per1ectly S 100 644-7183 Aluminum Mesi. Race RENT $195/wk up all alzes Aaln, laprtH G~~~i:;~;: ~W-~1~~~~,.,8g BINGO letter T need6d Rig S375 842-l833 *150-1&001'r ~la loaM 9115 all pllotless 1gnlllon $225 Albertons Mkl game K50 "MUST SELL" Price T ·1--76. 5•.000 miles. n-r-"' · 552 9431 REWARD Reduced 642-1234 Ill tfl, " ""' All are sparkllng Clean • T 1 8024 pain t n ew 11res 891-2545 Brass Celling Fan with 4 $82•500IBKR llYI $4200/0BO 548-1531 Bid M · l 6014 Tullp lights, never used LANCER 28' w/lrlr, hke WANTED Pvt Pty wanta to I · · attul 1 oak blades. 3 speed & re-new. loaded with lactory by reasonable Travel Trlr. Aaalia 9109 c~~~o·:1n~, ~fu~ot~~;:i $;~s1~~2-~~~1ss290. take ,;s,op~~~2s~::r ~~hr~~ ~~~-6~:6 cash (2131 'HAllTllllEllOA case. base, crown. etc placement Financing w/rebultt motor, $400 s 15 to 30 a tt 545.5357 OEIAllO llOllE: $28.ooo 545.3977 Biil 969-1221 Patio or outdoor 111e 6' ltautlful h11tlpah1ld LaMir 5550 Aato Jloticea 9005 BMW 9112 Hex Mocha, 1100 Ht , ohtotlatt ~row11 675-4646. IMPORT ANT 50clt. 493-9678 oolor hor10, MILtl Ill NOTICE TO READERS 76 2002. Super ctean. Sn "' • Lido 14. day seller. trlr. ANO Al. See to appreciate IAILIOlD TIES HotllHI sift for I cover exit cond $1750 ADVERTISERS ~3~-~:~~ eE~es& ~~~dss 8' 1or $10 891·6735. hone lover. Werth obo 751-9181 fhe price ot items 661•1636 66 l-8762 S 110. Stll for HIJ 'Aorgan 3012. beaut!M. advertised by veh•cle C I 6018 over $10,000 relll, new dealers 1n tne vehicle f7 BMW R 100·6 Mini cond Lo ml w/luggage $3500~4·9318 oar• en Ill. l•0-1701 ovos. dsl eng. galley, 18811 & ctass1!1e<1 adver1111ng Regional Rep will 1ns1a11 Louise. rorm1ca • mucn more columns does nor include new computer •n your ~ S32 900 552-7143 any oppl1cable tu.es home and train ~ prtce 1•tures 3 Mllnnekins license. transfer lees. 80 3201 Henna Red all extras 510 500Jobo 546·2264 675-3876 Brano New S 1795 9nose nt1eks 2 rounders "aples Sabat. Kini cond finance cnarges tees tor Harvey 542.4 2&6 4 ~hells Cab1ne1 w1h1es $275 7 141673 1003 atr pollulton conirol de· baker~ rack Musi sell Frff to You 6022 &75 5396 from i0-6pm '.)1ymp1c Class Finn vice cert11tcallons or 722 3 Norin Salls deafer documentary Harken Updates race preparation charges un- reody eKll con<! witrlr 1ass otne1w1se spec1l1ed S 1 SOO Jonn Lyles w by the advertiser 81 3201 XLNT Cond, Low Miles AIC Sun RI 5 spd, AM /FM Cass Many .tires $11 950 -W11· ranty 645-9353 eves 2 rem a I e dogs 'OUND se1 01 KEYS Red Queensland Heaters Hiii & Main 642-0422 (Auslrahanl Hao all • snois spayeO Neeo •u1n plents washer gooo hOme.s 351 1089 dryer & 16 9 •2E Musi eves/wk.nds s e II' Cos I e Mes a 642-3877 .:age APorOA 4 • 2 able for rabbits 673·2138 'utt etc ::ii ass Greennouse 12x 15 you n11ul !>2 00 644°7 440.640-414' -iandsome Male Beagle 6 mos 811 shots house· rian<I maoe wool ri•gs broken ,o loving noma from Chrne1 3 II by 6 II wlln tge yard only Pref Only S 150, 640·8668 children 979-0594 1 Lost 20 lbs & J'>" In 3 F • &02S wl<s No drugs. no araalue nunger Call for tree 2 Couches. 1 vinyl, brochure 775·8380 be1ge/pa1s1ey. $175 Brusned velv•t celery w/brwn flowers $175 559.5179 .0ECORATOR'S OWN• Jacobs Surfboard, 9' 10" )(Int cond S70 Clmattl Moped. nds work $75 673-8511 Days John Wayne Tennie Mam· Cotton, sofa love Space bershlp, $900 Incl Iran .. saving oak twall units ter lee 644-5003 eves Gorgeoos oak din set _ w /matchlng coffee tbl John W1yne Tennis Club set lJnusecs Qn mattress mbrshp for sale $1000 & bo• springs S 175 Cart t0-3 M·F 760-6113 Brus lamps Oak bdrm,._ _______ _ set PP 9n·'695 1• 2 Twin t>eOs s60 88 lotli1• ltar 1•11 1111 Xlnt cond Tom 548-09 ft) Washer & Dryer Ill•• new l•--------$350 set 675-904 1 --Meg1c Island Unllmlled 4 rattan arm chairs table Membership Paid lhru 4 snall stendlng arch all Dec $950 7 14-995-8205 S495 760-9387 _ !16.. 1 h • 150 •8 .. Newoort Beach club family rus couc ., ., membership $700 d•a rnd walnut burl din 96' 1962 pm table, $75 957· 1834 coron1a1 Bdrm 1e1S 121 POOL THU SSOO & S25\I 19 c 1 retrig Needs some work, slate gd $255 675-3569 cond S 150 760-1716 Es1a1e Sale All must go! SUITUIA TIOlnl King sz Bdrm set (5 piece) Sat Oct 8 concert. Pacific $350 Dinette set w/6 Amp 2 reserved sears cna11s S 100 Burgundy $40 bolh 969-1221 art 6 Naugh Recliner $200 Beau 7 Sota S250 Plus lllnyt hrde-a-bed. $75 II.I misc. from S5·S25 It sallboal $195 477 N Sat/Sun 10-3 544·8152 Newport Blvd, NB 1 IUY FUIUUTHI Miac. Wanted 6220 Les 957 -8 133 HI, 011'\t$1 Going otl to col· King bed S65. solabed tege., Bring all your good s t25 sull ol armoor $50 unwanted clothes 10 end t'able S25. iew mach CHARLIE'S CLOSEl w/cab S50. Medll chen· 2052 Newport Blvd. C M deller $125 73 t-44 13 631-34 73 King Si mattress springs NEED BRASS POLISHER & new 1reme S50 tor 82 It yecht Call 540-8308 548·4923 NEWT ComPI. llv. rm din M .. lctl l .. t. lffi rm & bdrm 1et1, lamps Cnlcl\8'1ng piano. am•li $700 obo 642·0548 grand wht wtgold trim, On u Maureu xtnt cond almo1t new, $6500 obo. w/box 1prtng/fr1me Sony Hp-189 etereo $200 962-5717 mu1lc 1y11em, tum ttbl•, cass recorder. 211pkr1, Riviere Sol• Neu gehyde S.0-8308 8. <I . S95 640· 1192 $100 Seers k ing 1oam mat1/1prtngs $300. ling cherry DkcHe/hdbrd $150. 2 7ft decor IOll.8 $350••· 19" RCA ctr 1150, gaa dryer Sl!.O, morell 894·8026 Walnut COHN Table $75 2 Night Stand• S 15 H 900k Shelf Ce bln&I S 120 Tr1ringut11r Chlntee C11rved Bench $900 An 11Qu1 Oetk. Sw1vel Chllr. Side Chttr I 1 TOO .-.n. tlque Side Bolfd wllh QOl<llaal mirror & 2 can die ttlcke 1280 Antique Orelllng Ttble S 140 An- llque Cry.tel Chandeti.t 1180 Antique 11143 Bh~I Weve Hem RadlO (NI· llon•ll w/40' antenna $200 AnllQua O•k Ptc. tVfa Freme1 from !4-$ 15 Peavey 8ec11e1ige 30 amp, Ilk• new $75. 644-7183 SHO·BUO.-pe<l&I 11ee1 gutter, Ilk• new. S226. 848·89H f:~•·/°'d!:' o~ Pt11no S 1000 obo. 873-898.4 Januen-ConllOle p1eno. Itel Prov, trultw<I tlnlth, • gd cond $ t 50Q 645·3781 rv, •••'•r ,.,.. nu ei!Auttfot 2e· Acx COIOf rv 2 "ff wrnty 11•9 Fret d"llVtfV 01*' Sun TV J0 t1N 'S 9,9 1788 85t·1494 _ n 241..0644 Aato SerTICH/ SABOTS $275 & S375 PHii 9015 962"8068 61 MSZ 220 hOOd trunk, Sabo I 11 k e ne w other parts $75 ea VW $350/0BO 494-7875 Bus rear bench l/agabond 12 ft fiber gla.ss 661 ·2220 661-2220 w/access. ult cond Parting oul 1965 Mustang $350 Eves 559-7417 2090 Federal. CM ..... , 645-9673 Steed l Ski 7016 Van or motor home. roam H Formula 20, 302 cushions. all sizes. two seats (one dble). blue, No V 8 S 6 O O O ' 0 B 0 reasonable oller refused. 496-0798 714-751·9039 82 528E, au1oma11c loaded. take over ieese ol S.426/mo Eve 964-1260. Days 848-5800 Conveniently Located & Compet111vely Priced .& Sales-Servtce-Leas1ng ROY CARVER R. l J:> I(. lrt. r ·I\.\ 1\ \ ·~ .. ~ ...... it/\•' •.i,1t,\• •• "·-... u. MUIU ~,ap.-70 l 141 BOAT RAILER s 156 or best offer 675· 75 7 4 A1101 HIN tHO ~.,.. .nl:l\11•.R Highest cash lmmed lbr ~ Y IL your vehicle, domestic or foreign. 551·8285 35 Johnson Electric Out- SaJes-Servlc;e-Leaslng board, long shalt. har· ___ W_E_l_U_Y __ _ ness & controls. Call URIEST lllYEllTORY &42-5800. CLEAi OARS • ·75 2002: 4 spd., air cond (033NJL) MAYE TOOLS· WI LL TIAYEL Olesertgas engine repairs & me lnt. at your dock-also sell & mstall all marine elec1ronlcs at disc prices Call lor free est Trust Me Marine Co. 9S.-4600 ------Seagull Outboard 2HP leatherwelght $175 552-7143 SH(lr-="Doc-..-Jr1--==1=02= CHOICE MOORING & 401 Boat S 16,500 673·6022 30' power boat side lie, Balboa coves. S200/mo. 650-7737 35 Power-Boal Slip S350/mo 2 I Bat boa Cove Owner 645-5135. 673-1464 50.60:-SAILBOAT SLIP N B restau1 ant loc Minney 548-f725 AM LARGE CENTER SLIP Up to 46' 233 19th SI " C. Newport Beach, 675-0236 Mooring "NPi"" Harbor w /30' yawl, can llveaboard , clote to dock 856-7 1' 1 Newpor1_M __ a-rl-na_/_1r-1p_1_ day. week. month 646-0551 1111 Til IP Tl ti' s tOO/mo. 850-8146 Slips Ava/table 26', 30', 35'. and Uve aboard can 9.5, Mon-Fri, 642-4644 IUPW&ITll 53' HATT!RAS Sparkling Condltl<wl N&woort U..cih only 120-0&47 &ID TllUCIS COMMELL CHEVROLET .~'4ll.1rl••I 111,,I t I'°' I \ \1 ~-.., \ 546-1200 • '77 530. auto. sn rf. \606 RXL) • '78 3201. 4 spd, AIC (045 UXO) • ·79 3201, 4 spd sunroof (889 XMK) • 80 3201. auto . sn rl (963 ZEA) WI HY • '80 3201. auto.. AIC USED CARS & TRUCKS ( 1AHY239J COME IN OR CALL FOR • '80 3201, Auto. Sun Fiii APPRAISAL .Rfo15~3~~,~~~d. Lr Ml Cotmlef-OeLIUO 5555493 OllrYIOLlT • · 81 3201, 5 1pd. Sun 18211 BEACH BLVD Roof. (1CRS207) HUNTINGTON BEACH • '82 7331, 5 lpd. loaded Hl-IHlr 141.au 1 <7355637> IH·l1l1 WI PH TOP ltLUI 208 w Isl, Santa Ana FOi 1111 OAH c1ose<1 Sunday AUi llAHH LARGE SELECTION OF POITlAO/SHAH NEW ~ ~I 0 BMW'S! 2480 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 141-4100 141-Hll LOii 1081 llW WA"TEDI VOLUME SALES SERVICE & LE ... SING 3ood. cteen used c1trs. 3870 N Cherry Ave prefer 1976-1983 Bulcka. LONG BEACH Jag u a re. T R 7 • & (No Cherry eidt-405) Pora<:hlll but eny model J ll") a•t lllO considered Top prlcea ,. • • pel<ll Call c1111e at B1uer 1 __ ra_d_e_-r_n_1 _w_e1c_ome_~ M 0 I 0 r s I I ( 7 1 4 l Utl Mil. New '83 320I 979-21100 Immaculate condition. lu11u• peckag1. fM cauette. eun root, log llght1, alloya. Mint ~ dlllon 111.000 mllea $14 ,100 firm 2 1~·3110 -9680 day•. 714·5'411·8533 ev.- 71 2801, cleln, lllle new IHSO/b1t Oft 54M810 ·'ii Toyota Pickup, AC. 78 Peugol 670 ml AM/FM CHtelle, new Lo11ded l<lnt cono 1315 ,,,.. & wheett, roH oer. 4 7~ l 2•2 Xlnt cond I owner. ST200/obo. 49•·1735.~TOO 8•4· 10 t8 ~~~<I :!r.':14 ~·~11•"1 cr~rt•d ld;;;. "" SCHOOL nUS'Mc;;v, lnlwef to • 9'.l~talut UM IOf Trvcll or MOtff' Dl'aot Of yer<I .-! lt'I I Home S 1800 WI" ••*4 ti.II• way to tell more p1r1tat trnd• In Antl<au. 2 ·toe>. IS eocs, ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.l_~~~~~~~~_:_::.:.:.:·~ .. ~·~·~·~·~·~"-1 54~7086 f.i A Sytltm Yamaha PWI ml~l'r $400 J D l tQkrl s 700 4'lf 6114 1 peoptet ~38 t21816•8-5184 ~ !111ended eeMoe .,.,,, ,,.... lllCllef Asking S 11 t0010bo. mvtt ...... 151< m1 4ti-.-22 1 9177 0 TllE HIT" LITTLE CAR HOUSE IN COST A MESA Many priced t>etow wholesale Dealers wetcome. '89 Chrysler S970 Naw Yorker YXZ705 '72 Ford 4 dr $1190 Gran Torino 445FLB '73 Pinto H/back $1 290 Auto 997JET 455 E CoaSI Hwy NewpOfl 83ach 673-0900 AalM, Dnanllc C .. illac t3ot 'H coNVtRtrete 74 Chevy Malibu 77 GRANADA V8. ntw l7001ofr 5411-7253 paint. alt a111/1n1 Aini '78 MALIBU CLASSIC cond $2300 ~6 8132 4 dr. S3350 644-5450 711 Fiesta 4·tP. nu ures, 79 Camero Z28, nu paint, beaut Otlg red paint. auto. air. elec IOCka 011 runt greet S 1695 windows, crulte cont. 1111 970-0548 wheel, mag wheels, '81·'82 c11a11on1, all Ntve am/Im can. e~ll cond V6, 1u10, 1tereo. air. S5llOO 642-8318 cruise etc low H 80-Camaro Z28, 1 ownr. $470 0 553-9633 air, automatic. •Int 559-5958 S5700/btl 675-1277 83 Mustang, 3,000 mt, IEE IS FIRST! "lwaya garaged, many new par11 but needs work. $550 831·8027 We have a good aelec;tlon f7 Coupe de VIiie, elilt or NEW & uaed Chev· cond, new llr111, 70,000 roletsl See us today! ()(lg $9000 •ell $7000 firm, 11111 under warn 499.5535 •10 FOlll 2 Ill Brand new lnl, runs very good, new tires. 11500. consider trade 969-1221 ml, loaded S4800 obo. 951·8511. COMMlLL CHEVROLET 70 VW Bug, rblt eng, auto. .•;•,WEST WAG f N ,,;,, 75 Pinto wgn S 1290 Auto Squire 492MWO '72 Audt 4 dr. $1290 100LS. 854ZOO ·71 Dodge Dari $1390 80COUpe de viiie, Elccel- lent Cond delset. 56,000 ml Sacrlllee, Make Otter 540-9550 'X.'X 11.trl••• 111, <I I • ·1 " I \ \11-.~ \ Liacola 9323 Uark m. 176 Classic, new •ln1 cond $2000 831-5848 70 VW Convt needs work $2500 OBO 842-114 t '7 l Bug Runs Looks great StTOO 0~6-6645 dys 63 I 1279 av/wknds A personal and proud ex- c1us1ve VW agency dedl· cared 10 quallry service. spare parts, end a com- pe111lve sales presen- 1a11on or rhe unique Volkswagen quality ve- hicles BOB CHALLMAN S Pwr, air 142DTS '72 Mere Cougar S 1390 XR7,pwr,alr 290FNA ·74 Chev Nova $1390 Pwr. &11. auto 246ZIC '73 Mere Hdtop $1490 THE LARliEST SELECTION of late model, low mileage Cadillacs In Southern Calilorn1a1 See us today• HIERS CADILLAC 546-1200 burgundy paint. •Int C cond. $2500 673-33 13 67 loo. very clean, runs lfercary 9325 good. No dents S400 72 Cougar eng needs obo 644-8053 work $500 641-8000 74 Chrysler Newport Reduced ·75 Mere MarQ $450tolr 548-7253 Broug 4/Dr LOADED 1·.·1 •1 .d f..1.4.d 7 t Super Beatie conv nu paint 1op good cond Must sell $3800 ooo 760-9662 .•:•,WESTWAGEN .•:•. Auto. pwr a11 220GNM '73 Mere Hdtop S 1400 Montego alf 048GNN ·73 Ply Duster S 1490 Hdtop, pwr, eor 787HSW '76 Mere Wgn $1590 Montego MX. 763NXC '71 Ford Pickup S 1690 F 100, auto. M0749 2600 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA For• 9319 1 s1.150 6H-4024 ~ 65 Mustang. 6 cyl, auto Ol•aaoltilt 9327 $1500 obo 644-4522 67 Olds Cutlass Holiday 79 HONDA C1v1c 5 Ask abour the money we can save you thru our purchase & lease plans Toyota 9169 74 Ce1tca AM/l'M cass. S2000 Call 898-4951 74 CORONA SR S 1100 646-8624 all 4pm 7 I Super Beelle •lnl colld $2100 675-1267 72 VW . clean new 1rres1brakes re-011 en· 91ne. am/Im cass. bra. Musi sell $2450 , 14-851-2222 days, 5 '•9-0626 eves & wknds 73 Super Bealle, am/rm, Ecurre Shirlee Corp. 7600 Westminster Blvd Phone 714/VW 1-WEST Total Perlormance VW's ·Are You Hav1n Any Fun? 77 vw A&bD•t. snrr. ctean. nu brks, nu bat\ $2800 pp 548-3289 '70 VW Bus S 1990 540-1860 Claevrolet 9313 201 DONZI 110 3SO Chey Ocean & Harbor Cruise, hke new cond 548-029 I 68 Chevy • Runs Good - $1000 551-4193 65 Mustang, runs good. needs some work $800 obo Ed 645-8258 C M 66 MUSTANG. V8 289. auto. ps, 80,000 m1 orig owner xlnr cond $3300 979-0273 Coupe like new, lo m1, orig owner Sacr1llce $1250.650-6130 74 Culless Salon, runs well. $ t650tbst ofr. 645-0251 631-7299 Speed. lo/m1, stereo 70 Jaguar XKE Conv. Cass new llres, GAEA T showrm cond, s11ver/blk ' Cond. S3100/0BO $13.500totr 673-3887 840-1969/840-7952 II -GL ' 9132 Jiii SLEllHS IMPORTS 80 Supra 1mmac cond , 46K mt. loaded A/C, PIS Ill whl cruise, lthr 1nt bele>": retail $8500 Dys 556 8940. eves 720-1855 nu paint & uphols. orig 78 Dasher. auto, alr. 2 dr. ownr $3000 675-1739 am/Im cass, to m1 11aw- 10 passenger. 023BTO ·79 Buick Skyhawk $2190 4 spd, pwr IDMF709 '80 Chev Chevette $2570 4 spd, air. 308YSO '81 Toyota Tercel $2590 5spd 1CNM761 66 Mustang, X-cond :-PI S SELL Idle 1tem1 with a P/B, A/trans $2500 OBO Delly Piiot Clualfled Ad. Must See Jim 673-54 t6 80 Cutlass Brghm V II Company car going off lse Loaded Full pwr $4999, 759-9219 '80 Honda Aceord 4 dr, atrmtnn ull 1301 Oua11 Streer NEWPORT BEACH Marc1e less $2450. 546-3869 1-;;;;84;;2;;·;;56;;;;;7 8;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; · 6BFa1con gd eng nd s bd y 80 Omega. Low Miies. XLNT condlllon. loaded. Musi Sell $4600. 559-11968 50,000 m1. 5 spd, loaded. 69 Ghia. Xlnl S26SO or pop .top , s 5 5 o o bst otr New paint 1600 642-1028 eng 645-8252 133-1300 8 1 Ctvlc I 500DX, am/Im Muell 9141 cass, silver $3900 .__.,... _____ _ 759--0280 or 759-8025 79 RX7 GS. Sspd, sn/rf. MG 9149 MB ·77 300D. mint I owner PP $1 2,300 714/640-4062 '82'.lt Accord Htchbk ac, am/Im stereo, 77 MGB Convt plus hard 80 Turcel Lili bk.ale, 74 Super Beetle. exit orrg am/Im cass Aini cond cond lo ml $2250 S3950tobo. 969-2528 642·87 !7 81 SAS Pickup. good COlld 3 1 000 ml $5700/bSI Olr 540-5353 74 Super Bug. 43K orig mites eiceptlonany clean thruout $2900 646-1929 78 Rabbit dst. snr1, 2dr, 4spd, AM/FM Runs & looks great $2350 548·8451 79 dsl Rabb•t. to ml. t ownr, 4-sp A/C, mint orig cond • 50mpg, $3175 970-0548 '73 VW Camper $3290 Safari bubbletop. 51043. '78 Ply Vol. Wgn $2490 Premier. air tCBK578 78 Olds C/Sup Br $3790 Full pwr, air. 404ULA '79 Buick Reg. l TD $3990 Full pwr, air. BJK267. 11 wrk $500cash 646-8210 ·5g Mustang, new Ores. $ 1700 545-1097 e\IS 70 Maverick. 6 cyl, eutO, mags, runs gd $495 Atck 892-1326, 645-6840 Pip..... 29 n Fury, runs gOOd, n-lires. $500/ofr 540-8308 Dolby cass ster, xlnl sheepskin st "tovers. top. amt lm $2750tooo Cond $6300 551·5010 ev computer. 10 ml, extra Car must go 548-6477 clean. $6000 675-4021, 675-0812. Opel 9151 Volkawa1ea 9173 '62 VW Sunrf Bug Runs. 74 Super Bug. exit $2595 79 Rabbit Diesel, 4 dr, 4 obo 675-3589 spd. 50 mpg, 1mmac · 80 Ford Conver1 $8250 Mod. "A" rep. 1ADL461 ALL W/CALIF. SMOG USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY 1-'or Ht'sult Ser vice Call 71 Mustang, runs great, 302 2-brl, all mags, AM/F M stere o $750/0BO 492-9774 82 Sapporo. All Power. 4 Wheal disc bra)Cas, seooo ObO. 839-9099 PHtiac --=-9=5 $3200 499-1997 77 B210 hlchbck, runs good, hes some body damage, nu clutch $1250 obo 675-4415 80 626, 4 dr, 5sp, sliver, '69 Opel Kadel Minor spec. paint. Am/Fm. body work Xlnl cond Good body, nds work $650. 661-2220. 76 RabDll. 62.000-mlles. Blaupunkt, service re· 79 VW Ost Rabbit, dli':8ir. 11llHALE/IALH" 443 W. Bay, CM 645-2983 cords, original owner 4spd, 4dr, stereo, xlnt. $1,995 ltrm 536·4162. 24K ml $4700. 851-3922 Claulfled Ads 642-5678 642-5678 ht. >22 79 Grand Prix, leather seats, I/top, pwr BCG8$5. $5950 963-1761 $4750, 760-8516 PP $650/llrm 831·9322 ATLAS CHR't'SLER·PLYMOUTH 29:?<> H,,,, or Blvd Costa Mesa Tel !>46-19)4 J t t1>ek'i soutll o r SM O•"QO I' '"'"N.:l, olf HJ• bor 011,tJ C. nmp1e1e bod, S"OD 5d es Snv (t! Parts St>r ·•CP Dt>pl Ofh'tl Monoav rruu FrrrJa1 • 10 AM to S 30 PM a11d 8 AM '" '> P M 011 Satl1rdoiy ORANGE COAST AMC/JEEP/RENAULT <"''" Ha11>rir At.,•I C.osr 1 M>'\ 1 54" RO;>r 11.sc; n;n 1 Jeeti Oeater " llw W""'' ':.Pe us h•0.1v lor ~Jlt•!> <.r••vtle 8 IPa<;1nq Tt11>11 "'" r,. '"' ni. wl•y ""e •flt> I P11c1> .1110 o;elp1 h(ln' Al<.O th• 111 ''"" R~nault Allt,11"" " II<'"'' THEODORE ROllNS FORD Modern sates service parts body pa1n1 & tire dep1s Compet•t•ve rates on lease & daily rentals 2060 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa 64? 0010 or 540-8211 WISTWAGEN A peraonal and proud e•clu11ve VW agency dedicated to Quality MrVIC41. spare parts, and a competitive sales presen- latlon of lhe unique Volkswagen quality vehtctea Bob Challman's WESTWAGEN -a Ecurle Shlrlee Corp 7600 W•tmln11er Blvd/Beech Phone 714/VWl·WEST Total Performane. l/W'1 "Are You Havln' Any Fun7" DAVID J . PHILLIPS BUICK-PONTIAC ·MAIDA I olQ11n,1 Htlh, Silll'~ • Service • l easing :>4888 Ahc•a Parkway 837-2400 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGIN/ISUZU (f'.ormerly Jtm Merrno Volk5wagenl 18711 Beach Blvd. Hunllngton Beech. (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE WE Will NOT BE UNOERSOLDllt 5 Year Financing 0 A c & FIMI DllCOUnts MAP MATCH THE NUMBERS OH THE WITH THE NUMBERS IM THE BOXES LONG BEACH BMW I " 11• ·"'"'I• 111 ol t1l'w ~ qualtly usPd BMW" illlr.l C'lhPr l111e c.iro;• S,11,,., St>•v•r"" 1t•<1s1no T1,1d1>-ins Nelc.nmP' Ta~·· 405 r "'""' 1, 10 Nr.r111 c n1·rry 011 ranw lurn 1111h1 A qo 6 blO«:lo.<. • r,1111 It• ·11,;o r1 ~tt.•rrv AvP Lcmq E11•;ltti I; lolJ Ii H• -.7~U 0 NABERS CADILLAC ,...r,oo H 11t·nr Blvtl < 0 .. 1.1 Mesa Tel 'i40ri100 Clranqr ( 11111>1.,."' 110» 1 '.,.1'1111.11 ctl'.ll»r Sale'> SP1\11e t1>a<.111q f) SOUTH COAST DODGE 'Your Friendly Ne 1 ghborhood Dodge Dealership" 2888 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa 540-0330 Sales. leasing & A Full Service Department lncludtng Body And Paint Shop We specialize In custom van conversions In all price ranges ANO WE PAY CASH FOR USED CARS TOOt CHICK IVUSON PORSCHE·AUDl-VW If t•, f C.O<"I llwv N••wp1ir1 Beac.n 61.1 0!100 tr. .. or1lv c1t .. 11t.,'lh1p 111 Or"'"" Cnunly w1111 lht'.,f' 11111>1• qrPal makes 1111<1or <1t1P rr>of' • ALAN MAGNON PONTIAC·SUIARU (>4110 11url10r !31vr1 t ORl,l MP<IH ft\I 5'10 '1'.300 S,1les 5,., vu •J L '"'"" 111 Mr (\ooc1w11,nc It CLASSIC AUTOMOllLIS 765 Newton Way, Colle Mesa Tel 631-1393 'JAGUARS OUR SPECIAL TY" XK 120's/ 140's/ 150's/XJ'11/i · Typea Sales -Service -Restorations PAINT AND BODY SHOP Off Placenua between 17th & t81h In Coata Mesa 808 LONGPRE PONTIAC IJl',00 (~eac.h Blvd Wes1m1ns1er Tel 892-665 t Orange C<;u1•I~ s nloest ano t;irqest Ponltac. dealership Sales S•'" IC• P,;11~ DICK MILUR FIAT/LANCIA Pr1 l>,1!1lv rhe loweSI p11cl'd Fiats rn Southern Ca1t101n1a lot lied I mrt(' nortn or Soulh Coast Pla1a '""~r Mam SI and warner Ave 1n San11 Ana) lo'O w w.irner S.tnla Ana 557 2132 • SANTA ANA DATSUN :'001 17 th StreE'I Santa AncJ Tel 558 781 t Your 0110111.11 n,.01c.11ed Dcltsun OecJler 0 MIRACLE MAZDA Wr> vp moved' Our new l0<:a11on is 1<125 Baker Street. Costa Mr·~., TPI 545 3334 Stop by 8 visit our modern showroom 011d v•P why we re the I Mazda dealer 1n Southern C.111tlo111r .. Sates Service Parts and Leasing 0 CORMIH DeLILLO CHIVROUT (Formerly GrOlll Cnevrolet) 182 I\ Beach Blvd Huntington Beach N,.w • Usf~ct • Sales • Leasing • Parts • Service Come tJy and see ou1 Huge lnventorvt 847-8067 549 3331 llACH LINCOLN MIRCUIT "We re new and eager tor your buslnese " Complete Hies. •nrYlce and body ahop ractlltles One ot the largest 1r.ventor1es In Southern Calllornla ol new Lincolns and Mercurys. Located J block• south o f the San Dlego Freeway on Beach Dlvd In Huntington 8e11Clh 16800 8eoch Blvd 848·1739 Of !1!16·1008 HOLMIS Tunu DATSUN 2845 Harbor BMl .. Cotta Mesa Tel S.0·-6410 This Datsun tocatlon has beef\ serving Orange Coonty for 16 years. 1 Mlle So 405 Freeway. Stop by & vlalt us today new ownership pledges to beat all competition SUNSET FORD, INC. tt•umf> o • w1111e the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd Wt><;1m111s1er Tel 636-40 tO ORANGE COUNTY VOL VO 10120 GardAn Grove Blvd Garden Grovf> Tri 530 9190 e,.c1us1vely Volvo 10 cover all yovr Volvo requorrments New•Used•Sales•Leas1ng•Par1s•Serv1ce•Body Shop Fr .. eway <IOse 1n the heart ol Orange County at Gardeo OrovP Blvd 8 Brookhurst 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd .. Coste Mesa Over 23 years s8nllng Orange County Sates, leasing service Coll 546-1200 ~pcc1a1 ports line 546-9400 body shop hne 754 0400 0 ltOY CARVIR ROLLS ROYCl-IMW 1540 Jamboree Road. Newport Beach 640 6444 S11les Service Parts And Lee81ng SHOW IVIRYONI WHIH YOU All ••• on our Orange Cout Car Gulde Map! When yoo Ust your automotive bull~• (no new car dNterahlpa DINN ) In the Dally Piiot. you reach the prim• Coastal Market from Huntlng1on Beach to San Clemenle. Call tor reaaonat>t- ralu and more lnformallon -at!< fOf Sandra Lee. nl J.22. New Car O..lerehlpa . call your outll aalea rep FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED ·ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT REP. 642-5678. • .~ -·'Mk c .. II 11 Ma Bell's line busy Nation wide strike delays long distan ce calls; local use una ffected FrGm ataff and wire reports A nationwide strike against American Telephone & Telegraph C.o. reached out and touched only a few customers early today, but phone companies warned the real test of the strike's effect would come with the crush of weekday business calling. Pacific Telephone, a branch of the AT&T network, serves most of Orange County. AB picket lines went up around the country Sunday, officials of the companies making up the Bell system noted delays in directory THI DRANGf COAST MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1983 assistance, repair service, tele - phone ins t allation and long-distance operator assistance. Normal calling was largely un- affected, but both management and officials of the three striking unions said problems may worsen if the strike by 675,000 operators and technicians drags on. In Orange County, about 5,397 non-manageme nt employees walked off ·the job and began picketing telephone offices early today. Those striking include re- pair technicians, line repair per- sonnel and operators, said Nancy Harlow, assistant manager of press relations for Pacific Tele- phone. Harlow said callers can expect delays when dialing operators or directory assistance lines. "We want to stress to people that they should use the phone book as much as possible. Don't dial 411 unless you have to. And, in an emergency, dial 911 instead of 0, for the operator," Harlow said. Areas served by General Tele- phone, including Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach, will not be af- fected by the AT&T strike, said Hal Compton, public affairs ad- ministrator for GTE. "We foresee no interruptions in service," Com- pton said. Around the nation, picketing began at hundreds of phone company facilities. Key issues in the strike are wages and job security. In Denver, strikers car- ried signs reading "Ma Bell abuses her kids." Demonstrations were generally peaceful, although police reporl.ed that a striking Southern &>11 (See TELEPHONE, Page AZ COAST f DITIDN ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS i Whew-midity here for week I I'. By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of lMDellfl"lleCIWI Keep th06e cold drinks and beach towels handy. The hot and muggy weather that made life uncomfortable over the weekend will prevail through Friday, the National Weather Service predicted. The weekend weather caused power outages throughout the county and prompted thousands of inland residents to h~ad for the beaches. Asked about the forecast for the coming week , NWS meteorological technician Bill Hopper sighed, "Unfortunately, more of the same, more of the same." High temperatures will range from the 80s along the beaches to 100 in inland Orange County. And residen ts who normally brag about the region's dry. com- fortable heat will have to continue enduring high, Midwest-style hu- midity. tree in a Newport Beach residen- tial neighborhood Sunday, ignit- ing a fire and shattering windows in two homes. Fronds from the burning tree blew onto a home at 1900 High- land Drive in the Harbor High- land area. Fortunately, the occu- pant was off-duty fire Capt. Steve Russell of the Los Angeles County Fire Department, who climbed on to the roof with neighbors' garden hoses and doused the flames. City firefighters arrived to put out the fire in the tree. Noone was hurt but the loud boomat3:21 a.m. awakened most neighbors and blew out several windows in Russell's house and in another next door, according to neighbors. Bill Compton, area manager for Southern California F.dison, said 99,000 customers lost power over the weekend -half of them for an extended period lasting from 30 minutes to more than a day. The power failures, coming at a time when residents anxiously sought electricity for air con - (Sff HUMID, Page AZ) O..., Pllol ,._.., ............... T h is was wha t Capistrano Beach house looked like today a fter be ing ba tter ed by high tides. Bottom drops out T i des ruin Capo B e ach house kitch en By STEVE MITCHELL Of.,,. 0...., -11811 The kitchen floor to Dr. Henry Austin's $1 million Beach Road home in Capistrano Beach is gone. So is the wooden deck that fronted on the ocean and so is a two-decades-old seawall that once protected the four-bedroom, three bathroom home. A combination of large surf and high tide wreaked havoc on the two-story house Sunday night, and Austin·s 22-year-old son. Dan, surveyed the damage from a vacant lot next door this morning. "The surf took out the front wall and then started quartering the deck," he said. "The decking went out and then it was time to bail out all the renters." (See HOUSE, Page AZ) Hopper said a high pressure system over Nebraska and Okla- homa is sweeping warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico into the West.em states, causing the muggy weather. In addition to the continuing heat and humidity, there is a 10 percent chance tonight and Tuesday of occasional thunderstonns. High tides, high anxiety • I I I• pellr l'tlot~bf ~ ..... Neighbors check palm tree o n Highla n d Drive in Newport Beach tha t was hit by lightning. Bolt broke window a nd scattered burning bra nch es. Lightning from spotty week- end stonns was the main culprit in power outages reported around Orange C.ounty. A lightning bolt struck a palm 'He just freaked out' Costa M esa teen h eld after t wo ex-schoolmates crush ed b y car By GLENN SCOTT Of .... DeltJ ...... ..,. A usually quiet and friendly 17-year-old Costa Mesa youth apparently became infuriated at a party early Sunday, allegedly backing his car over two of his former high school friends. seriously injuring them, police said. The youth. an Explorer Scout. was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. One of the victims, Austin Smith, 18, hovering in and out of consciousness, recounted what happened to Officer Bob Michnick, the first to reach the chaotic scene on Dublin Street. Michnick said Smith claimed the driver, Brian Thomas Freund, had "freaked out." Smith was listed in serious condition this morning at Foun- tain Valley Community Hospital with head injuries, a lacerated liver and a badly injured arm and leg. His condition was improved Crom Sunday. when his physicians had given him only a 50-50 chance of survival. Todd Anderson, 20, was in fair (See TEEN HELD, Page A%) Our area's divorce capital County leads West , wh ich to p s natio n in s plits, su rvey shows By KAREN E . KLEIN Of -Dellr -It.ti The divorce rate in the western United States is 59 percent higher than divorce rates in the rest of the . l' .Ltr! United States, according to a new survey, while separate figures show Orange County's divorce rate tops the California rate by almost 4 percent. ( ... A survey done jointly by the University of Chicago and the University of Texas revealed that divorces occur most often in California, Oregon and Washing- ton, said Norval Glenn, the Texas sociologist who interpreted the survey data. Glenn's was a national survey. dealing with the geographic areas used by the Census Department. Orange County's Research and Planning Division, meanwhile, found there were 52,513 divorced men In the county and 74,413 divorced women , said Al Davidson , administrative analyst. ·Thoee figures, obtained from 1980 censua data, mean 16.7 percent of the county's adult population Is divorced. The CallfomJa average for 1980 showed only 13 percen t of the adult population was divorced. The higher rate in Orange County la understandable, Glenn said in a telephone ln~rvtew from hill Texas office. People who live in urban or aemi-urban areas are more likely to be divorced th.an thoee who live in rural areas. "People tend to move to cllies or suburbs alter they get a divorce," he explained. The area in Glenn's study (SH DIVORCE, P11e At H om es, streets and a utos inunda ted along coast S unday By WRENZO BENET OflMDellf ..... I WI For three hours Sunday night, high tide-: flooded dozens of Balboa Peninsula street.a. homes and automobiles, according to police and city officials. And city crews are braced for the same destructive conditions tonight when high tide is expected at 9:38 p.m. When the tide hit its peak at about 9 p.m. Sunday. the Newport Beach police switchboard lit up with calls from residents seeking aid for flooded homes and auto- mobiles, officers said. The extent of damage to homes, however, was difficult to ascertain this morning. Two lifeguard towers on Newport Beach floated off their foun- dations. authorities said. Further north, high tides which flooded Pacific Coast Highway in Seal Beach and Huntington Beach Sunday night were expected to return tonight as well. Police said they plan to cl06e PCH in the Sunset Beach area and from Warner Avenue south at about 8 tonight. "A lot of people (beachgoers) got stuck behind the barricades last night," said Huntington Beach Lt. Tim Walker. He said officers would begin setting up the barricades at about 5 p.m . No damage was reported to local beach front properties in the Hunt- ington and Sunset Beach areas. t Newport's general services di- rector, Wade Beyeler, said the flooding conditions were much worse than in last March's devas- tating storms. The surf reached the edges of the beachfront side- walk, Beyeler said. "That's farther than anyone had seen it before," he said. Water started seeping onto the streets as early as 6:30 p.m .. Beyeler said. The tide peaked at 8:48 p.m. and was coming in on parts of 7th Street at midnight. Many beachgoers were leaving during the high tide's peak, caus- ing a massive traffic jam along Newport and Balboa boulevards, he said. (See FLOODED, Page A3) Major banks boost prime to 11 percent NEW YORK (AP) -Sfoveral major commercial banks raised their prime lending rates by one-half percentage point to 11 percent today, the highest level in nearly six months. The banks raising their prime, or base, lending charge included Citibank in New York, the na- tion's second-largest commercial bank by deposits: No. 3 Chase Manhattan Bank in New York; sixth -ranked Chemical Bank in New York; No. 8 First National Bank in Chicago; No. 10 Bankers Trust, New York, and No. 13 Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh. The prime rate had stood at 10.5 percent since Feb. 28, when the industry lowered it from 11 per- cent. T he 10.5 percent rate had been the lowest since Nov. 6, 1978. The last time a major bank raised its prime rate was when Chase Manhattan raised it to 12 percent from 11.5 percent last Nov. 16. But that was after Chase had undercut the rest of the industry by going to 11.5 percent on Oct. 22. 1982, and no other major banks followed. The last time all the major banks naised their prime rates was Fe b. 17, 1982. when they lifted the charge to 17 from 16.5 percent. The gradual decline in the prime rate from early 1981 until last February had followed de- clines in open-market interest rates, which in tum lowered banks' cost of obtaining funds for lending. Some of the llnglng aenaatlone of a generation ago·-peopl• Ilk• Joan Baez- are back In the muatoat fold, some reunited with the vocal partners they climbed to fame with. Page 83. l' Al * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, All\a. 8, 1983 CONTINUED STORIES From Page A1 TEEN HELD ••• condition with a broken eelvis and a fractured shoulder. The incident occurred about 4 a.m. Sunday during a party at Anderson's home , 3130 Dublin St. But its beginnings actually go back several months, according to partygoers who made statements to police. It involved a less serious event: a clever but innocuous prank two months ago at Costa Mesa High School. The group of friends had want- ed to leave their mark but didn't want to deface school buildings. So one night, as a graduation gag. they built a five-by-six-foot brick wall in front of the gymnasium. Then they painted their names on it. Later the next day. the wall was gone. "There was never any problem, as far as I know," Principal Don Champlin said today. But among the friends, who believed Freund had knocked down the wall, the incident ap- parently was never forgotten. So when he arrived at the party, witnesses said group members began to razz him. At first, witnesses told police, they locked Freund out. Then DIVORCE ... which reported the most long-term marriages was the North Atlantic region. Converse- ly, the Mountain region , including Ariz.ona, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming. Idaho and Montana, showed a high divorce rate, second only to the Pacific region. He attributed the West's high divorce rate to increased mobility. "The rate of population move is greater," he said. "With a higher population turnover , you get more tenuous social ties." In the East, .more stable social bonds exist and more couples tend to live near extended family mem bers. "If troubles arise, the couples are more motivated to wO£k it out rather than give up," Glenn said. they verbally harassed him. Fi- nally, someone poured a bottle of what was believed to be urine on the 5-foot-8, 138-pound youth. An angered Freund announced, ''I'm going to get all of you" and left, witnesses said. He returned in his Chevrolet Camaro 30 minutes later. The partygoers immediately spotted a rifle in his car and approached the vehicle to settle him down, wit- nesses told police. Freund threw M-80 firecrackers as they ap- proached, but they eventually reached him, wrestled the gun away through the car window and hid it in a trash can, police were told. Meanwhile, witnesses said, Anderson was "face-to-face" try- ing to calm Freund, who remained in his car. Several others were leaning on the car. Suddenly, Freund lurched his car forward about 30 feet, causfng some of the youths, including Smith , to lose their balance, witnesses said. As Andea son and another man, Steven Williamson. 21. of Costa Mesa, helped Smith up, Freund threw his car into reverse and allegedly ran over Smith and Anderson, according to the group. One of the youths told police Freund "punched it," causing the tires to squeal. Smith was caught beneath the car as Freund lurched forward and then back again, striking a car parked at the curb. Several partiers then pulled Freund from his car. Officers said Freund was roughed up a little but wasn't hurt. Eric Anderson. Todd's 18-year-old brother, told police Freund was still agitated about the harassment. Freund was later booked into Orange County Juv- enile Hall. A breath test indicated Freund's blood-alcohol level was 0.07. The legal measurement used to determine drunken driving is 0.10. Freund was a member of the Explorer Scout unit associated wtth the Police Department. Lt. Tom Durham said officers were surprised to learn the usually mild-mannered youth was ar- rested. Freund's scout identifi- cation card was confiscated. Durham said. ----WE ASKED: 'Out of all the different jobs you've had, which occupation was your favorite?' Jim Steele, Diamond Bar, •ale• ''Sales I guess. It allows one the freedom to be self-motivated." laaac Gonzale•, Rlveralde, •hipping "I guess working in construction. You work In different atmospheres; you know different places, all the time. And you do something dif- ferent everyday.'' Lori Jacob•on, Yorba Linda, Interior dealgner ''Theone I have now, interior design. It is quite a challenge, quite, quite challenglng.'' Suaan John•on, Santa Ana, admlnlatratlve aa•l•tant "A night auditor at Hol- iday Inn. It didn't pay real well but it was lots of fun. I liked working nights and sleeping days.·· Richard Hauck, El Toro, •hipping "Being a carpenter. But now the lousy bums don'twantyoutowork. I liked it because I got to work outside all the time In shorts -seemed like there was more free- dom." M•ryG•aca, Long Beach, receptlonl•t ''I really llke the job I have now as a recep- tionist. I get to greet all the clients. I like dealing ·With the public to that degree." Deni Leigh, Senta Ana, enawerlng ••rvlce oper- ator "The job I have now. I like the people I work with and I like dealing with the public, unless they are suicidal. We answer for a lot of psychlatristsand we deal with their patients and crisis.'' HenryTomaa, Rlveralde, expediting "Civil engineer. be- cause I was making draw- ings In the office then I would go out in the field. So I was always in and out.'' And, in more traditional. stable circles, people are more likely to marry someone like themselves - someone who fits In with their ethnic background and shares their value system. Thus, mar- riages made in that setting are more likely to succeed. Freund graduated from Costa Mesa High in June. Champlin said he played one year on the school footbal l team and was well-behaved. SEXY BEDROOMS ... TELEPHONE From Page A 1 employee and his son were ar- rested for vandalizing a telephone box in Gainesville, Fla. Phone workers, brass gird for long strike Aliens short in smuggling fee, abducted such as silk. Burlap is ou t. • -Chuck the old furniture and the "old flower bedspread with the matching cutesy draperies." "It's hard to get a sexy or sensuous feeling with heavy wood furniture in a room. Chrome and glass fun\iture gives a much more open and airy look." A skin or down comforter will suffice for the bed, Faulkner added. -Plan on plan ts. "One large ficus tree, with the proper lighting, will provide a glamorous atmosphere, especially if reflected in mirrors," she said. ''F1owers are sensuous, even on posters.'' Faulkner also recommended getting a new bed, perhaps a round one. "Waterbeds are still very in. but they can look raunchy if not done right," she cautioned. Lighting should be "atmospheric," with recessed or hanging lamps and three-way bulbs. "Environmental music" is also intriguing. "You can go to sleep with the sound of the surf," Faulkner said. The men, charged with felony criminal mischief and grand theft. pulled the wires out of a connec- tion box, interrupting service to hundreds of residents for several hours, police said. ln New York City, about 50 workers rallied at noon outside New York Telephone's head- quarters in Manhattan, shouting, "Ma Bell, go to hell," in English and Spanish. Mary Saulsbury, a striking clerk for Ohio Bell, said manage- ment workers at switchboards appeared to be having problems. "You wait until you get at least 20 rings before they answer, and the n hal1 of them can't find the number you want," she said. HUMID WEA TUER CONTINUES ... ditio ne rs and refrigerators, prompted 10,000 calls to F.<lison, Compton said. Countywide. the u tility com · pany replaced 109 transformers, most damaged by lightning. By early today. power had been restored to all but about 375 customers in central and northern Orange County, Compton said_ Because residents were return· ing to work, the &ii.son official predicted today would be the peak electrical damand day o( the year. Compton said he believed the company would be able to meet all We're Listening ••• ' 642·6086 D•ll)' Piiot o.ttvwy I• Qu.rentMCt M0"1•y 'llO•v " '°"' "° no• "••• yOvt O•P•' t)y S lO O lfl ~•• De•tw• 1 p m 1"0 yOvt COf)y llWtH Dt ~Id the power needs, but h e advised residents to do some chores such as laundry and dishwashin.g during the off-peak hours, before l p.m . and after 6 p.m. Local beach officials were also gearing up for another busy day . About half a million people swarmed to the sands over the weekend, and many plunged into the warm 70-degree water. At Huntington City Beach, where 140,000 people converged over the weekend, lifeguards made 212 rescues. Superviser Mike Gifford said two lifeguards suffered neck injuries when they were pitched by an inside wave. At Newport Beach. 230,000 visitors were reported over the weekend, with 300 rescues re- quired on Sunday alone. At Laguna Beach, 65.000 people converged on the sands over the weekend, requiring 300 rescues total on Saturday and Sunday. High tides contributed to the high wave action, lifeguards said. At Laguna, the tides moved sand and threw seaweed up on the beach as well. What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you hke" Call the number at left a nd your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour answering service may be used to record let· ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include their name and telephone number for verification No circulation calls . please. Tell us what·s on your mind . ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Publl"1et Claettn9d tdHftltlnt 114/M2·5t11 All oth•r depttlment• M:t~1 MAIN OFFICE 3:1() w .. t Bay St Cnoto M.,.. CA M••I •de)<-Bo• 166() Cot•• Mtte. CA 9('0,6 Cot:)y•'V!ll 1963 0•~ CO.II Pu~ ~~ No t1•·•n •HHI•' 1llu'11•llOf'\t t CJtlon•I ,,,.,,., Ut •tll1tP1l""'"""'I> ""'"'" m1y !Ml •<IP<OOucld Nllllou1 llj)<K: .. I Pf'""l'li<l<• Qt Cf>l'IYllQlll ilWnet 'l•h.Hd•Y and Av"d•Y tt you dO nnt '.C•rv• 1'<'1\f' copy ov 7 •.,. clll o.•not •O • "' 11'(1 '""' coor -De-e<tcl Clrc ul•tJon T.a.phonee Chazy Dowellby EdltOt tlnd A1&1stan1 to the PubOaner R•rmond MeoLeen Con1roller 6«.0l'd Glet4 p()t!IOf l)&i<I II Cotti l,ot-. C.~~"'41 (UPS 1•• 8001 ~Otc"l)loOn 0.,. Cl ot .. , ... 76 tnOl'llhly by ,,,.i u so mot'llNy ,,..,., 0o ef\(IO c;ovt\I Y Attt._. Hottn-1 H,rMtl'QllVI {ln(I ~· A w""'riww•• ..,...,.,. LllQVl'I II~ - atepMn '· C.ue r'1ncM:IHln M•""9"' Olof1a A ... _.,, fttit•·· ~rt¥fltff1M"Q ._.,.r\ __ O"'f 00!\.icf l.1 WllllM'I• C•t""''""' ~'"'"l.r' ' VOL. 78, NO. 210 t WASHlNGTON (AP) -Man- agement and labor are far aparton wages and other issues as Ameri- can Telephone & Telegraph Co.'s 675,000 opera tors and technicians are s triking the company for the second time in 12 years. Across the country, picket lines were set up outside Bell System offices, where striking workers predicted the company would be unable to keep up with the crush of service requests. GlennE. Watts, thepresidentof the Communications Workers of America, joined chanting em- ployees of the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. and walked a picket line here this morning. After walking the line for a few minutes for the benefit of tele- vision cameras. Watts told re- porters that "unfortunately, I Metals firm burglarized in Newport About $42,576 worth of valu- ables were taken late Saturday night from a Newport Beach gold and silver firm after the store's owner apparently brushed off w~gs from his alarm company that someone had turned off his surveillence system, police said. Burglars gained entry to MOIX>C Trading Corp., 3471 Via Lido, by using a power saw to carve a hole in th e door and forcing a dead bolt lock open , police aaid. They apparently then tu med off the burglar alarm using the proper code, dismantled the surveillance camera, ransacked inner offices and then removed a sate containing $42,~76 in gold and silver items, including 56 silver ban, and hundreds of valuable coins, police said. Police said AEI Technologies Alarm Corp. contacted MOOCX: Presld('nt Dan Shlre of Newport Beach at 11:30 p.rn. Saturday at home tO teU him someone had en tered his offlce!t and turned off his alarm. According to police, Shire telephoned h1a busin"8 and -after receiving no Al\8Wer - decided not to contact pollce Saturday nliht. Police were eventually notified Sundey 0Uicer8 tlr&~Llll tnvt"'SUg9\.lnfC. can't report any progress." Watts said he had a "very brief encounter" with AT&T manage- ment Sunday. after the strike began. "But nothing developed," he added. The CW A president said he still expected talks to reswne later today, but said no fonnal bargain- ing sessions had been scheduled. "At the moment, I can't see an end to (the strike)," Watts said. "The members of our union insist on a fair settlement." Besides the CW A, which re~ resents 525,000 Bell System em- ployees, the striking workers are represented by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and t h e Tele- communications International Union. Wages and job security were at issue in the talks, which were adjourned 3S the old pact expired at midnight Saturday, local time. Police are continuing their search for two illegal aliens from Mexico who were kidnapped at gunpoint in Huntington Beach Saturday by two men w ho al- legedly had smuggled the m across the border, authorities said. The missing victims, two teen - agers from Puelva, Mexico, could not come up with the $550 each needed to pay the smugglers, said Huntington Beach Lt. Tim Walker. The smugglers and the victims -a 19-year-0ld boy and a 17-year-old girl -arrived at Koledo Park, on the 17300 block of Koledo Lane, shortly before 9 p.m. where several people were waiting for them. When the teen-agers came up $50 short in their payment, an argument ensued. during which the smugglers forced the pair back into a van, police said. A warning shot was fired. Walker said. HOUSE RUINED ... From PageA1 Dan's paren ts rent out their home al 35685 Beach Road, about halfway down the gated community w hich is located on the beach between Dana Point and San Clemente. Occupants of the home. were evacuated shortly before the structure sustained major damage, AUstin said. The Austins, who are full-time residents of Arcadia, received a call from their real est.ate agent Sunday afternoon, telling them huge surf and high tides were threatening the st ucco structure. "I came down at about 4 p.m. (Sunday), but it waa really too late by then to do much good," the shirtless resident said. "The wavt!ft were really powerful," he said , aha.king his head. ''They were breaking about 6 to 10 feet, and the tide (7 .3 feet at 10 p.m.) just really did us ln ." He said a pair of seawall.a fronting the property "just went down like dominoe, and then the floor to the kitchen fell straight out." The family has owned the beach houae since 1967 and Dan Austin said it's worth about $1 million now. He,flgures replacing the .eawall will C011t about $1~.ooo and it'll be about the aame amount to repair structural damage. And th3t'tonly If there'• no more damage from hurricane-fed wavet and high tides. ''We've got insurance for the structure, but the 1eawall lan't iJ\aun!d, '' he IA.id. Meanwhile, fireflghtera from the Orange County Fire Department and three hand crews from Orange County JaU were filling aandbaga on the froni.ge road in preparation for a 7.2.foot tide expected at about 9:30 tonight. County fire lnfonnatJon officer J eff Taylor IA.id homeo on oithe:r aide of the hustint sustained deck da.ma,e. and another half dozen at.ructures wtte threatened by Sunday ntgbt'1 surf-tide combination. He Nld about 66 re9C'Uera worked through the nl.ght ln Capistrano Beach, tncludlna members of the hand crews. flref11htera, and county bufidmer operators and dump truck drtvera. The fire 1pokemsman aald cou\y crew. will remain on hand through tonight in a.n ~flort to prevent fu.rtheor ~ to the homes. • 4 t Saddlehack college orientation slated An orientation day for students attending Saddleback College's Mi.s&on Viejo campus for the first time this fall, will be held Tuesday in the Fine Arts Theater quad. A brief presentation by college officials begins at 9 a.m., and will include a slide program and campus tours conducted by members of the student body government and college pep squad. The program ends at l p.m. and includes a hot dog and soft drink Jun.ch. For infonnauon, call the counseling office at 831-4570. Noon art sessions set for Laguna "Art Sandwiched In," a noon-hour gallery talk session at the Laguna Beach Museum of Art, continues in August with programs on Wednesdays. The informaJ program is 'designed Cor business people, professionals and shoppers who find it convenient to visit the museum during their noon break. Complimentary coffee and iced tea will be served at noon and visitors are e ncouraged to bring a lunch. TaJks begin promptly at 12:15 p.m. The museum 1s located at 307 Ch ff Drive. For infonnation, call 494-6531. Irvine c lub to receive its c harter The Sunrise Exchange Club of Irvine will receive its nationaJ charter at a meeting Aug. 14 at the Irvine Marriott on Von Karman Avenue and Michelson Drive. The 11 a.m. ceremonies will be followed by a brunch. Members of other Exchange Clubs and their wives are invited to attend. Flea market book, art sale in Laguna A flea market style book and art sale will be held Saturday on the Laguna Beach Museum of Art patio from 11 :30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Among items to be marked down for sale are art books, posters, cards, calendars, exhibition cataJogues, art periodicals, post cards, lithographs and some copper plate art pieces. The museum is located at the comer of Cliff Drive and North Coast Highway. For information, call 494-6531. ·--I -, I, ·.'· • . . • • 1"' ..... ,,,,. .,. -. . Tires taken from car in Newport Two tires and rims valued at $500 were taken off a car parked near the 400 bloci< of Catalina at about 7 p.m. Saturday. A man was arrested tor carrying a conoealed weapon In his car on E. Ooeanfront.& Palm on Sunday after- noon. A residence on the 126 East C>Ceanfront was burglarized of $615 worth of camera equipment early Sunday. Fountain Va lley A weel<end burglary was reported In a home on the 18400 block of Santa Carlotta Street The reported loss Included $20,400 wMh of jew- elry, $3,000 wMh of clothing and $1,400 worth of audulo and Video equipment. Entry was apparently made by removlllQ a screen and forclllQ <>99f1 a slldlllQ glass window Huntington Beach The Petco Gas station at 15045 aa.den West Street was the target of a burglary Sunday. Intruders broke Into a llOOf sale. stealing about S2,300. The burglary of a blue 1973 Dodge van parked at Brool<hurat Street and Pacific Cout Highway was reported Sunday afternoon. The loss Included $300 In cash, S200 In jewelry and $50 In miscellaneous Items A burglar apparently used a screw- driver to forced entry Into a home on the 1700 block of Park Street over the weekend. The loss was a sale contalnlllQ $8.000 In jewelry and s 1,000 cash. .\ .. •.;,•: .. . ' ! I ; Irvine Several Oriental rugs were swiped from a home on the 4000 block of Pe<slmmon Lane sometime Sunday. Burglars forced entrance to a home on the 4000 block of Wyllgate Circle Saturday, stealing $1,720 worth of valuables. A television set and some camera equipment was Included on the llst of missing Items Police we<e called to a residence on the 100 block of Plnestone Friday to try and persuade a wayward bat which had flown Into the home to leave. Construction equipment totallllQ $4,2<45 was stolen from the 16000 block of Construction Circle East sometime Saturday. A car par11ed on the 18000 block of Dewberry Way had Its tires slashed Saturday afternoon. Police assisted animal control of- ficers In quarantining a coyote found Friday morning on the 5000 block 01 Altoona Lane. Laguna Beach Laguna Beach police asked a woman who was spotted letting air out ol the tires of a car parked on Cliff Drive to atop. No reason was given for the woman's actions. A woman said a burglar attempted to enter her Aste< Street apartment at about <4 a.m. Sunday through a rear . ·.,. ~ .' .;_ ... . ~I n~. • .i1 {,,~'\-... • , · door. but was frightened off by her screams for help.Police were unable to find a suspect. A total of $350 In cash was ttolen from a guest's room at a South Coast Highway hotel. A resident In the <400 block of Los Robles reported hearing strange noises early Sunday morning. Police checked and found a large rabbit In the backyard. Costa Mesa Three San1a Ana men were ar- rested on suspicion of grand theft aarly today In connection with the theft of stereo reoelver1 from cars parked at the Miii Creek apartments. 555 Peularlno Ave. Officer Bob Mlchnlci< said he arrested Benjamin Zaregoz.a, 23, Rafael Perez, 22 and Enrique Ramirez. 23, as they drove nMh on the Newport-Costa Mesa Freeway near Dy9f Road. Officers In the police helicopter spotted the suspects after a resident In the apartment complex notified pollce. Ottloer9 found lour radios and as- sorted tools In the 1uapect1' car. An employee In a reco<d store on Harbor Boulevard told police Sunday two young men tried to sell him 10 albums checked out from a public library. He refused to buy them and called the cops. A Costa Mesa woman reported she was beaten by two men durlllQ an argument after a weddillQ reception at her house on Monrovia Avenue. She suffered a broken nose, lacial brulees, a looM tooth and a SOl'e abdomen. Officers arrested Clyde Lopez, 28,and RaulLopez,25,both of Fountain Valley, on auaplclon of assault and battery. Hot, humid weather may bring • rain SnowCJ cnar ... 1on,s c &a 13 Cllat ... ton,w v ea 67 Cllatlon•.N C 9~ 70 ~M ~ ~ v..w.i. clou<I• "''OUOll T...aoy wttn Cllc iceoo 92 12 t llllQh1 -01 late eft.,,,_, tln(I tnctnnall 92 6~ n1gnn1m1 t"""'*"'-' ,..., 1,.,. c ...... .,.., a1 66 ,,_tlllno -end eoutll o1 Lo. An. ~1>11.S C 92 71 ,_ Contlnuln9 quit• wwm end hUmlcl ~bu• ea ~ -~In Ille llC)e,..., Ille -I end Oelt ... f'I Worth 85 78 M to t06 -Lowe ee 10 1e Oeyton 89 64 O.. Ille ouw ~II wet•• lfom !?!':'-H 63 Point Conoeptloft 10 8en -. ..._ .,_ M-95 70 -.-tOto 11knot1"""11210 o.t•Olt ea 82 4-loot-ttwOUgtiT-.y ~. 0Utu111 92 63 llghl --W. -nag111 end EIPeeo t9 17 ~ "°"'' ~ eouti.-t to ,_, 75 M -I IO 1$ knoc....., I to 2-loot wind l'wgo 100 $7 -""-'--~ ~ "'°9'1111 &2 S4 ~ ..... 2to4teM...,,IOCal a..tf-t2 et ~ 10 10 .... °" -'°"'" -tWttorCI " 12 .....,_i-.~ l--...... 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T.d , ~ 5 i: 1 es Tod& ; ~ ..., _ ·~ _. . to 70 hcondtow --y.2&pm .. 73 '-'cl.. t :37 p"' t1 74 TW80AY ~--t t4 12 Fnttow 4,'Cle,m ·1.4 •.i-liiiil••--•------------102 73 '1rll Natl t 11>6 • m 4.1 LOCATION t4 12 '-'cl''°"' 4·11 P"' 1 a """'w.ot°" • 104 11 8-NI NQll tO :It p m t t &en!• AN ..,., Jetty IOI 73 ..... NII loOty ti 1 41 pm, ,_ AOlll 11 , Mewpott 13 10 ,__,., et e 10 • m end •• 89""1 .. 22nd a1 • Hewpol1 t4 71 1 .. Pm ...,.,_ Wqe 11 n Moon .... 1t • t4 P"' ·~· ,_.. ~~ llMcll I 1 I 1 7'03 • m T....Oey end Ml• eo-<• II a.n CltlMfli. 11 M I Mi om Wat• t_,,.,.,ltl.,,• 10 SURf REPORT -~ ~ , FLOODED ... From PageA1 Tides registering eight feet, a foot higher than normal, coupled with rough surf combined to cause what Beyeler described as a "mess" along the Peninsula. He said the parking lot at the Balboa Pier was completely under water, which was flowing down Palm Avenue to Balboa BouJevard "like a river," he said. •Other hard-hit areas were Bay Avenue and side streets adjacent to Balboa BouJevard, which was flooded curb-to-curb from 22nd Street down to A Street; he said. ''It covered the center island the whole v.ay," he said. Balboa Boulevard betw~n 47th Street and 32nd Street also was washed out. "We're expecting at least an eight footer. tomght," Beyeler said. "U we get showers today, conditions couJd be worse." City workers dosed drainage valves Sunday at 6 p.m. in an attempt to keep seawater from seeping into the streets. Beyeler said he plans to add additional men tonight. "The cause o{ all this is still a mystery -maybe Its the El Nino current," Beyeler said in referen- ce to the wanner ocean currents reported off the coast this year. "The flooding couJd be due to the big surge (heavy surf) in the ocean. When you get that kind of surf combined with the high-tide cycle, you don't know what's going to happen." Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Aug. 8, 1983 * ~I -------I fl IT-.. ------_,-;---: Crowds swarmed to the beaches for re lief from weekend heat (above), the n some ran into high water on the way home after tides washe d over Balboa Boulevard in ~ ... Newport Beach. Delly--- ') 1:. ~,...,..__,....._.I( .... Costa Mesa brothers Matt Carreon (left), 5, and Bryan, 2, find a way to beat the h eat without leaving home. tradit1onal favont<z.5 . pz.rflzct oomphm<z.nt~, thcz on~1nol G·9 wmdbrizoKtz.r n1&:i.a. m tm f'lncz.st ~n cotton p:>phn . evailob\Q.. m noturol,bnti~h tan. navy and rad ond our J d me .9'l0rga ~hcz.Ll.and. cnz.wncz.c~, model. m scotland.. ondovo1kib\Q. m rz.1ghtmin ~nzot co\orn 44 Foshl'm 11/ond • N~wport lko<'h • 7141644 ·5070 1001 Wftsrwood Blod. • Westwood VI/toge • 2131208·3273 M NB Oritnge Coast DAILY PILOTfMondny, Aug. 8, 1983 STOCKS NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTION ~~.?t!f~:~~".i",'~~~u~s:,11,~~~ .. i~ II<( Nfw ;QAll ~+l)wt-$1 f'Al.111(. ''11\l't btl!>ION or IRO•I ANO 1.IN(..INN/dl blOC" r ~(toANM ANO llO"I) \\'"' l l.U..,f'\(; t'Klt. ....... ~.. ~·· ,.,,, ,...... ,.,.,, ., .. ,."" ,,r.fl .• ,. ..... ..4... .. •• 1 4 •• 1i.1 •I'd ..,,. ··~ •I nJ ''"' d••B• :~,;· .~'"" "" 'I •·J• '~ "" 1 '""' ij •_": ~nlrn :.',:"l~f·";:. "'l,H~ ;1~;·; lJ~ :~ ~t ,1J~-AU-H'4 :-·! 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Of '11 -It-~ ttlG I f 1 -~ ~~ 1111 l '•-• Mtttr• ts. ~ _, l•lt• 'I ' 'i-°" DfTl'G Jl "' '-.,. ••Hitt t " Hou 1 ~ 1•1• £ '' Meoir~ »If ~ ~ -. , 1 I ""'Cl 4l;-• '" I .-', tKOd r l -·~ H 7 1· 11•, " M~ 2. 1 I 'o-Iii n~ • · ,..,,. 11• l """"° 'lot I I~ ~ ·1:rn 1 • • • Mow tl ,.. ·~ ~Oft Ml • II'· j i: 11n 01' \'OfOll I It i l.-~ ~.1 \.,11 1 • "'~ .. ~11 .\~., Jf~ • .:=~:.i.01 n 1~':"'..,\'!:1 ,Bm s .... 1 • :~~""o 14U :~:.~ fJ111 1 : • , -----------------.. .--- Dow Jones Final Down 20.23 Cloalng 1, 1&3.08 BUSINISS BRllfS So vi e t Union wins right To Olympic t e leca sting By tbe Associated Press LOS ANGELES -The Soviet Union and most of Its alli~ have won telev1s1Un right.a to the 1984 summer Olympic Games for $3 million, the Los Angeles Times saJd today. The contract lo buy the rights l.O the world signal w l:>t' te lecast by ABC will not be signed until Sept. 26, the pd per said. The agreemt>nt was reached with the Orgam~1uon uf ln1.t-rnat10nal Radio and Telev1S1on, which mcludt>S tbe USSH. East Germany, Poland, Mongolia, Lai~. North Kor('a, Afghamstan, Vietnam and Camboch.i ru. Wl'll as Cuba /111 ere.i;;t rates h ow little ch ange NEW YORK Soml· private analysts have 1:undudt-<l (rum tht· F1.'Cit·r&I Hcserve's latest batch of monetary da~ th<it the central ~nk made no moves in the past w<.--ck to ughtc•n tT<.'CJ1t condiuons and push up mtcr<•st rau:s. Thl' f ed reported I hat the nation's money supply rose $1.2 b11l1on m law July Despite the higher than expcct.e<l nsc. lnterl'St ratt.--s were little changed after the report was rele<ised. Econ omi<· inde." hits high le vel NEW YOHK -An economl<' index based on a survey of purchasing managers in July rose to 67 .1 percent -the highest level sine~ Nuvember 1973, a trade assoc1auon says. The, National Assoc1at1on of Purchasing Managers said every mdu.:awr o( business act1v1ty measured in the survey was up from the previous month. especially incoming new orders, production and employment levels, and the speed of delivery from suppliers. Un e1nployn1 e11t ra te {alls again WASHINGTON A 10-month string of double-d igit jobless rat.es has been broken. The Labor Department said the unemployment rate fell to 9 5 percent of thec1vihan labor force in July from 10 percent LO June. The rate peaked at 10.8 percent last December. Presidenl Reagan called the figures "new and dramatic evidences of the on-gomg ec.'Onom1c recovery, gre.a t news for all Americans " AT&T breakup in fin al stages WASHINGTON A fodc>ra l Judge has signed the final ordC'r authorizing the breakup of American Telephone & Telegraph C:o . selling the stage for a new era of tl!lcphonc rompc.'lJ Lion that should lower long-dast..'lnt'C' ralt•s but nf)t local bills "ln 10 years, most restd<mual consumers w1U see s1gmficant benefits from the br~akup," ~ad Robert W Nichols. the leg1slat1ve and reguJato ry t•ounsel to the C-Onsumers Umon of the U S. STOCK S IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JON£S AVERAGES NEW YORI' 1.t.PI ~ .. , MotHlev or.ce e nd net cnonoe of lhe IS mo>I ac!lve New VO<' SIOCi.. E>Cllet'lll' IU ""· lr•dlno na llon•llv o f mor• t ha n t l E uon l.173.cOO JI • F..SNa1M1g 1,350 100 201• -1'4 Amctr T& l 1.116,900 63... I '-Gen MOIOr\ 1,034,900 66 -J'. C11rv•1tr 9'1 700 "'" -1"• Schl1JmDtO 9SJ,SOO SI I Vo SetrtRo.b 93A,100 38 .. -1 .. AllmonHI' 719,400 7<\lo -1 ~ Jofln•Jn 6'10.cOO cll4. -'' Ta"Clv 647,700 40>o -n• Gen Food SI 1,800 44 -'" MerllLvn I Sii, 100 (II) 1 .. Peo•ICo S§l,900 J4'. • IBM SC9.JOO 119 -"' WHAT NYSE DID Aavenoo OecllntO uncnonci"" To••l l\\ue• New f'llOP'lt ,.,,.w low' TOdev ))$ IJU J7S 1'7~ 16 ,. WHAT AMEX DID NEW YORK 1.t.PI Auo. Ao-wane.a Otcll!>t'd Uncl\6-TotaJ ,,,..,.., P*wnio"'' New~,., METALS TOClo Ill. SJO ,,. 13& • • Prev dov 11? 6IJ 470 1975 16 17 Prtt-. Oev )c() us 19] 791 • ~ NE\N VORl't (AP' :'ts>nt nonhtuoua me1•• PllU~ today Coppet 8f fll <;w>I• • l>"''"U US OetllnlllOn• c..,,.. 1!> •u l.ttot• a~.,~ Vt."''1'1 NV Gome• too• montt\ ch.>1c.d f" l-20 :1,, t~n11 • 1101Jnd Zinc <4.:l cttots n riov11d dehvtN*CJ Tlrt ~ '6 •8PJ Mtttll W""I C<)mlKllll• IU •J11mlnurn . 76 cen11 e "°"""·NV _..,.,ufy S77~ 00 l?AO l10 fl•' 1~ "' ""'"· N-Yllt .. l'l•llnum Sc.W 00 t•~~ ()(1 OOl!lttl+C m9fr,hAnt bny muwtt N '° Sil V£R .GOLD QUOTATIONS SYMBOLS f1 ~ YtHtlf'y l(lW u Nii• pf'•rlp "'Qfl Uf'\ilftM ()tfW, Wi~-tk)fltd t .tl-t 11t ()+Wl('Mfo1'4. •t~ 11"1"" .. ' lfl'\l\Jl~llt h•P111"11\ ·~·~··Cl\.,.,, .. .,. •~ Vm••t1,"1u•I ,,,_di'"''"' 'i\t*lfll '• t •h•'i l)vK>et"-" ttit 1~iy~mne" '"'' ~>f~t1"t.,J •• '"V &IJ"ti .,. ~1\t1fHWt 1n lh# hi91'"'"V flt\lt,'Ut•• 1 Altd "'"' tJf ••ttt\ t: •n.r-10•• •111 a'*Vt •hx.• (~"4-1 C ~ •Q01(Jth•'(f dt•W'.CS 0.. l•tN .1't P•"1 ~1 O'"ffHltf)tt\U '' 'tX~lt'lt "9c-ta1.U ,,. C'\AiO •h• '''"-• Otv!JP1·.,,, IV '4 ·.t "'\ I,-.tte t.,._ ~_.. ~,~\"'•tf••1 ..Nt•Htt.j('ltt"'1j ,....,f.O,wtl\ ,.., tJ--..O "'"'"9 'tw.l&l••I • M <t I"" .. t\t ..,, ~-"""" .. '""* -.. . ..-... ,., • .,.,,... ~ NEW YORI( (APJ -Fl,...1 Oo•·Jon.\ avo' tOt MOndav Auo I STOCKS 0-.M._,~ 301nd lO frn IS Utt 6§ SI~ lndu• Tron UIH• 65 Slk 117• le 1110 1' 11 SI SS 1143 0.-10 13 S4211 S4-C 01 SJO JI D1 so-. tl 111.61 17' 19 121 76 17160-1.4' "' 17 "' 67 460 °' 4670S-7 17 AMERIC AN L[AOERS • • ...i-'>OQ 1.911 JOO 1.Jst 40CJ 11,133.300 NEW YORK (AP)· ~le>, -·• .,.Ice and no1 c nenot ol fllt 10 mo'1 ac•I•• AmerlC•n Sloe., E •ct>e.,..... t•-• v u lr•Ol no nellona llv •I muro 111an .i wano1.•bB' Tel\onr•n OomtPfrl Ml<flGenl Me<rOd Ind c • ..,.,,c u TIE Comm ' 0 1Jnloo Cn.'TIDHO lmoChtm UPS A Ne mt I ENHAR 7 Ron1on l E S.t••m ' c Lenllollno s Oontlh \ o &o•E 1 'M>rl 1 Huflvf'o I Penootnct • AmAg10 10 En•Ou1ce II FtPt 1 ?0l>I 12 FtOP•oBd IJ F•ll••lln Co IA AIOAlt• IS OMC. 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