HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-08-11 - Orange Coast PilotJhe rich-get rlch•r
IRS finds more millionaires today
WASHINGTON (~) -The tYJ)kal rich American woman Is
richer and older than the typical rich .Amerbn man.
But th~re are two rich men for ~ry rich woman, the In~rnaJ
Revenue Semce concludet after atudytna a .ample of estate tax
retuma. Of tbe 4.6 million people with ...eta of $300,000 or more ln
1981, 6& percent were men.
The average net worth of the wealthy women was $637,000;
for men. $471,000. The ms found that 28 percent of the women
were widowt: 4 percen( of the men were widowers. Fifty-two
percent of the rich men were 50 or older, compared wt th 71 pen:ent
of the women.
The study estimated that the number of U.S. millionaires
increued from 180,000 in 1976 to as many u 500,000 in 1981, due in
peat part to inflation; $1 million just doesn't go aa far as it uaed to.
-The$1millionin1981 wouldbuywhat$677,121 wouldhavebouaht
1n 1976.
THf ORANGE COAST
Ro bin George
Krishna suit cut
to $9. 7 million
By JEFF ADLER
OI .... De11J Net I i.fl
A $32 million jury settlement for a 23-year-old Orange County
woman and her mother -both of whom sued the Hare Krishna
movement claiming the girl had been kidnapped nine years ago -
was reduced by an Orange County judge Wednesday to $9. 7 million.
Superior Court Judge James Jackman called the jury's award
"excessive" and ordered it reduced by about three-quarters. He said
the amount given to Cypress resident Robin George and her
mother, Marcia, "exceeds the bounda of justice."
In a nine-page written decision, Jackman said, "The primary
reason ... for reducing the award of punitive damages is this court's
view that such award is excessive. The amount of punitive damages
exceeds that which is needed to punish the defendants or is
(See KRISHNA, Pa1e Al)
COUNTY IDITIDN
'THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY , CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Murder
• • v1ct1m
found
in Mesa
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol .... DelJ,... .....
A man's body was discovered
outside a boarded-up house on
Hamilton Street this morning by
C.OSta Mesa police who, hours
earlier, were called out to a
beerparty at a house less than a
block away in which a stabbing
may have taken place.
Police Lt. Jack Calnon said
officers found the body of a man
described only as Hispanic, lying
beside a flowering bush at an
abandoned house at 522 Hamilton
Street shortly after 9 this morn-
ing. It is the fourth homicide in
C.OSta Mesa since early July.
The body was found by Officer
Jim Taylor, who was one of six
police officers searching the
neighborhood following a 3 a.m.
dispute at a house at 577 Hamilton,
where police were told a stabbing
had occured.
"We responded to a house at 577
Hamilton where about 20 people
were drinking beer in a patio
area," Calnon said this morning.
"Two of the participants got
into a verbal altercation which
resulted. we think, in a fight. One
subject may have been stabbed
two or three times."
Witnesses told police the victim
was pulled into a red "full-sired"
car by the suspect and driven off
toward nearby Harbor Boulevard.
Police were unable to locate the
car or the suspect, described as
Hispanic, standing 5-feet-5 tall
and weighing about 150 pounds.
A p a use that refreshes
Just as this bee enjoys the bounty of
a tropical water lily, so can Or a nge
Coast area residents and visitors
e njoy a brief respite from the hustl e
and bustle of the ever yday world
am id the beauty and serenity of
Sh erman Gardens, a secluded oasis
in Corona del Mar. For a brief
glimpse of a ll Sh e rman Gar dens has
to offer, see Page Cl .
No love lost
in Newport
tennis flap
By GLE NN SCOTT
and KAREN E. KLEIN °' ... .,..,. ..........
Tennis promoter Bill Stamps,
the man who organized last week-
end's High Stakes tournament at
the Newport Beach Tennis Club,
initially hoped the event would be
the first of five in the city.
Stamps said during a telephone
interview Wednesday that New-
port Beach is the capital of tennis
in Southern California and the
perfect spot for an annual tour-
nament.
But the embattled Stamps, who
week managed to make enemies
among many of the people he
dealt with at the tournament this
week, said he never wants to run
anotber event in the city.
"Not in Newport Beach," he
said. "Poaaibly over on the Irvine
~.t .not in Newport Beach.
' . feeling seems to be mutual.
SQ far this week , the promoter
..._1iad b':15ineu difficulties with
t.Wlfollowing groups:
•lf'l'he tennis club: Club officials
filed a lawsuit Tuesday claiming
StamJ» owes them an additional
$13,700 for services and expenses,
but the promoter said Wednesday
hedoesn'tlntend to pay. In fact, he
said he may go to court to reclaim a
$10,000 check he paid in advance.
•The city: A crime report was
taken after Licensing Supervisor
Dave Lanon, the man in charge of
ensuring that city conditions were
met, alleged Wednesday morning
Bill Stamps
that Stamps threatened him over
the telephone. Stamps also has
refused to pay a $2.140 check to
cover wages for city workers at
the event.
•The security firm: The owner
of Signal Hill-based Shaw In-
vestigations and Security has filed
suit alleging Stamps stopped pay-
ment on a $3,000 retainer check.
Owner Victor Stringer said
Stamps also has refused to pay the
remainder o{ his bill for "several
thousands of dollars." Stamps said
the company did a lousy job and
(See TENNIS, Page A!)
Midwife confesses,
faces terlll in prison
Fighting together, separately
By the A11oclated Press
An Orange County woman who
says she has delivered at least 600
babies pleaded guilty Wednesday
to one count of practicing mid-
wifery without a license in a
negotiated plea bargain.
Kelly Lou Staker, 34, of Garden
Grove. "will face up to three years
in state prison for the one guilty
count," said Deputy District At-
torney Chris K.ralick.
This was "a clear-cut case of an
individual engaging in the prac-
tice of medicine without a
license," Kralick said.
West Orange County Municpa.I
Court Judge Kathleen O'Leary
accepted the plea and sent the case
' , .
to Superior Court Judge James L.
Smith, who will sentence Staker
after ordering a probation report
later this month.
Staker, who had been released
from jail in May pending trial on
eight felony counts of practicing
without a license, was arrested
last Thursday for investigation of
the same charge after a Pomona
woman was hospitalired in critical
condition after giving birth at
Staker's home.
As part of the plea bargain,
Kralick insisted that Smith re-
view all eight counts against her
before sentencing.
"We know she delivered 600
(See MIDWIFE, Pa1e A!) Ke lly Lou Sta ker
The Rama and holdout tight end Mike Barber
have come to term• and Barber la already In
camp preparing for Monday nlgM•aexhlbltlon
gamewtth the Dalla Cowboya. P-oe 81.
S pe r aw sh elves campaign to push re vamp-Be r geson doesn't
By L.P. BENET °' .... .,..,. ...... .,,
Not surprisingly, six Orange
County Republican legislators and
candidates expressed support
Wednesday for a GOP-backed
redistricting measure designed to
reduce the number of Democrats
in the Legislature.
Somewhat surprisingly,
though, especially for State Sen.
Ollie Speraw, R-Newport Beach,
and Assemblyman John Lewis,
R-Orange. none of the other
politicians at a press conference
said they would suspend their
individual 1984 election cam-
paigns until after this December's
balloting on reapportionment,
known as the Sebaatian.i initlative.
Only Speraw and Lewis said they
would cease their campaigns.
A news releqe i.aaued by
Speraw Tuesday said Lewis, ~
aemblyman Nolan Frizzelle,
R-Fountain Valley, and ~
eemblywoman Marian Berge90n,
R-Newport Beach, had joined him "
to suspend all campaign activities
to devote their full attention to the
GOP-backed reapportionment
campaign.
The Sebaatiani plan would alter
the boundaries of congJ'e9lional
and state legislative districts,
w hich are now bounded by lines
recently redrawn by Democratic
lawmakers. Don Sebastlan l.
R-Sonorna,andotherRepubUcana
say the current boundaries unfair-
ly aid Democratic incumbents.
Berge90n said Wednetday ~he
will moblliu her volunteen and
actively campaign on behalf of the
~pportionment propoeal but
that ahe "owed it to her conati·
tuenta" to continue campalgnlf\IC
--
for the newly created state senate
seat in the 37th district. "I do not
see my campaign as supplanting
the Sebastiani campaign, but sup-
plementing it," she added.
Bergeson is running against
Speraw for the Senate aeat. U the
redistricting initiative ia pasaed by
voters in December, aeparate Sen-
ate district.a would be formed for
Bergeson and Speraw, mak.in${
their primary battle unnecE'Ssar}'.
Bergeson, who attended the
press conference at the Irvine
Coast Country Club in Newport
Beach, said that "at no time did I
indicate to Senator Speraw that I
would cease my campaign ef-
forts.''
Speraw said that a "mis·
understanding" on the part his
staff led them to assume Bergeson
was ceasing her campaign because
she said she was going to attend
Speraw's press conference.
Frizzelle did not attend the
press conference but sent word to
Speraw that he backed the Sebas-
tiani proposal and would suspend
his campaign activities. Friuelle,
like Lewis, has no announced
opposition.
Irvine businessman Ken
Carpenter and Newport Beach
(See GOP FIGHT, Pase A!)
Warmer, drier air
to chase humidity
f
A.I Or•nge Coast DAILY PILOT IThuraday, Aug. 11, 1983
CONTINUED SIORlll
From Page A1
MIDWIFE GUILTY ...
babies by her own admission We
just don't want her to do this
anymore," Kralick said.
Had she gone to lrlal and been
convicted on all eight counts,
Staker faced a maximum prison
sentence of seven years and eight
months.
Kralick may recommend jail
time or probation, but said he
would not decide on that rec-
ommendation unul he sees a
probation report.
Staker, who was released Mon-
day on $10,000 bond, said she
pleaded guilty because ''the way
the law is he (K.ralick) is holding
all the aces I really had no choice
but to fold."
She vowed to continue to fight
for the right of lay midwives to
deliver babies. Under California
law, only regiatered nurses can
qualify for a midwife's license.
Women ''should have the right
to go where they want and be able
to have their babies they way they
want to have their babies,'' Staker
said after her guilty plea. ''That
should be a constitutional right.
That is not something that should
be dictated to them by a district
attorney or by a doctor or by
anybody else."
GOP FIGHT DIVIDED ...
psychologist Stanford Green,
both seeking the Republican
nomination for Bergeson's 70th
assembly district seat in the June
1984 election, said they support
the Sebastiani plan but would not
commit to suspending their cam-
paigns. A thU"d Republican run-
ning for the 70th district seat,
Robert Hopkins, also said he backs
Sebastiani, but would not hold off
his own campaign.
Only four of the 13 GOP
candidates and legislators invited
by Speraw showed up to his press
conference.
HUMIDITY FADING ...
But something else is moving into the weather plc:ture -a
hurricane named Ishmael, with winds of 85 knots and gusts of up to
100 knots. Ishmael is currently about 500 miles south of San Diego
moving toward California at about 8 knots per hour. '
Forecasters say it is too early to determine whether the
hurricane will bring rain to Orange County, but it most assuredly
will mean a return of big surf to the coast -possibly by Saturday.
How large the surf gets depends on how Ishmael intensifies,
Mentzer said. He said waves will be in the 2-to-4 foot range Friday
and possibly Saturday morning. •
County fire oHicials say the smaller surf and lower tides puts
an end -at least for now -to five days of sandbagging and rescue
work at several south Orange County beach communities.
Chuck Murphy, a spokesman for the Orange County Fire
Department, said work crews packed up and left the ocean-ravaged
Capistrano Beach community at about 1 a.m today, after standing
b~ t~ugh an~th~r nig~t of ~u~h s~f ai:'d high tides. Wednesday ru~dht s pre-rrudnight ude did little additional damage, Murphy
Sal .
He said damage figures tabulated in the aftermath of the
battering sustained by beachfront homes since Sunday night total
$1.2 million, with two homes declared unsafe and 16 others
sustaining damage ranging from decks ripped from their pilings to
broken windows.
Fw:he~ north, residents in the private Blue Lagoon
commuruty in South Laguna began cleaning up after a pummeling
Tuesday that resulted in ~roken windows on seven of 16
townhouses facing a breakwater.
And residents on the ocean side of Coast Highway at El Morro
Mobile Home Park, an area usually the m06t affected by a
co_mbinauon of ude and surf. fended for themselves Wednesday.
wt th only one mobile home sustaining damage to its foundation.
KRISHNA SUIT ...
reasonable by way of punishment of the defendants for their wrongful conduct."
But the Judge also concluded the jury did have sufficient
evidence on which to base its verdJct favoring the Georges. He said
it was hls view that the defendanta' conduct toward the Georges
was "outrageous," even though Robin was treated no differently
than others who had joined the religjous sect.
Jackman also said he "was struck and strongly suspects the
jury was struck by the almost universal lack of candor and probable
perjury committed by many witnesses" for the Hare Krishna sect.
The decision allows the Georges until Aug 24 to decide
whether to accept the reduced award. U they reject the $9.7-million
figure, the case will have to be retried.
Attorney Milton Silvennan, who represented the mother and
daughter, said he was unhappy with the judge'sdecision, but didn't
know whether he would seek a new trial or accept the reduced
award.
Spokesmen for the Hare Krlsh.nas have indicated the case will
be appealed.
In a related decision, Jackman also ruled that the Georges are
entitled to earn 10 percent interest annually on the $9.7 million,
dating back to Jan. 3. 1983.
The two women sued the aect claiming Robin was enticed from
their home by members of the group living in Laguna Beach during
the mid-1970s. The then 14-year-old girl was subsequently spirited
away to other Krishna temples in the United States and Canada,
while her family followed her trail, according to testimony. The
family cl.aimed that Robin's father, Jim George, died in 1976 as a
result of the strain of the search.
In reducing the award, Jackman struck $1 1 ml.Won from the
jury's $1.5 million award for compensatory damages as they related
to emotional distress. The balance of the reductions were taken
Crom the Jury's award of punitive damages, which are asaesaed as
punishment for the actions alleged.
Robert Humphreys
College
trustee
calls it
a career
Robert L. Humphreys, a
long-time Coast Community Col-
lege District trustee who was
targeted recently in an unsuc-
cessful recall drive, announced
Wednesday night he will not seek
re-election in November.
Humphreys, 56, has served 20
years on the district board, which
oversees Orange Coast, Golden
West and Coastine colleges, plus
KOCE Channel 50 in Huntington
Beach.
Announcing his plans at
Wednesday's board meeting,
Humphreys said his decision was
baaed on family and business
responsibilities. He said the recent
recall campaign, which targeted
Humphreys and three other board
members, was not a factor in his
decision.
The recall campaign, which fell
short of the required signatures,
was launched last spring after the
di.strict board I.aid off more than
100 teachers and administrators to
offset a loss of state funds.
Humphreys said he will serve
the remainder of his current tenn,
which expires in November.
"This community college dis-
trict is one of the finest in the
nation, in large part due to the
trusteeship of Mr. Humphreys,"
said Dr. Norman Watson,
chancellor of the di.strict. ''We will
all miss his leadership, his
crea Uvi ty, hJ.a advice and his
constant support."
"There has never been a more
dedicated trustee serving this
district," said fellow trustee
George Rodda Jr
"This has been a most painful
decision," Humphreys said. "Ser-
ving (on the college board) has
been one of the great experiences
of my life ... Corrunmunitycolleges
are one of the signficant develop-
men ts in this century. I'm proud to
have been a sm.Ul part of their
evolution."
Santa Anan
hurt in crash
in Newport
A 23-year-old Santa Ana man
was in serious condition early
today al Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hospital after his vehicle
hit a traffic signal near
MacArthur Boulevard and Ford
Road in Newport Beach at about
4:30 a.m., police said.
Richard S. Alonso, 1109 W.
Curry St .. apparently was driving
northbound on MacArthur when
his car crossed the center divider
and struck the traffic signal.
Newport Beach firefighters re-
sponded to the scene and freed
Alonso from the wreckage with
the "jaws of life." He was treated
at the scene by paramedics and
transported to the hospital.
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VOL n . NO. 223
t.
Teen hero in Huntington fire
Youth, 17, quells apai;tment blaze, leads his mother to safety
Fire fighters are crediung a
qu1ck-thmking Huntington Beach
teen-ager for minimizing damage
from a fire in his family's apart·
ment Wednesday night.
Huntington Beach fire infor-
mation officer Martha Werth said
Christopher Nervo, 17, heard
fireworks being set off outside
while he was watching television
In the family's two-floor apart-
ment at 318 19th St.
Minutes later, he smelled smoke
and ran upstairs to find his
sister'sbedroom on fire. The room
was uncx.'Cupied at the time.
According to Werth, the
teen-ager properly shut the
bedroom door to keep the fire
from spreading, then woke his
mother, the only other person
home at the time.
The two fled the house. While
his mother, Barbara Nervo, called
firefighters from a neighbor's
house, Christopher began spray-
ing water on the fire with a garden
hose, Werth said.
The blaz.e was quickly ext-
inguished alter firefighters ar·
rived. Damage was estimated at
$2,000 to the building, $1.000 to its
contents. Werth said the hrecould
easily have done more damage if
the k"t'n-ager had not shut t})e
door to the burtling room.
investigators determined th.at
the blaze was started by an illepl
bottle rocket that apparently flew
in an open window and igru t.ed the
draperies.
PoUce and fire officials are
invesUgatmg.
Irvine weighs new tax,
mayor election change
The Irvine City Council will
hold a special meeting Friday
morning to discuss a citywide tax
for landacape maintenance and a
proposal to revamp the mayoral
election process.
Four members of the council
rlPArllnrkP<I 2-2 at Tuesday's rejt-
ular meeung on the issues. At
Friday's meeting, the fifth council
member, Bill Vardoulis, who was
absent from Tuesday's meetini.
will attend, said City Clerk Nancy
Lacey.
The meeung begins at 6:45 a.m.
Tight fit on Summit
0.-,,..._.., __
Laguna Beach's hillside roads are
difficult e nough to maneuver in a
convenlional vehicle, but when
Jim Brown of Oroville attempte d
to round Van Dyke Drive onto
Summit Way in a moving van, he
got hung up -literally. Police
dive rted traffic while a king-size
tow truck straightened out the
m ess.
TENNIS TOURNAMENT TUSSLE ...
From Page A 1.
cases of beer and aJcohol were
stolen.
•The parking company: J im
O'Shaunecy, owner of Southland
Parking Service of Newport
Beach, claimed StamP6 has not
paid hl.i $3,000 bill and told him he
doesn't intend to.
•The Explorer Scouts: Stamps
stopped payment this week on a
$300 "donation'' to the police
scouts. who were to provide traffic
control during the tournament.
Stamps alleged they never show-
ed up.
To add mjury to insult, the
promoter said Wednesday his
profit during the three-day event
-with an official attendance
mark surpassing 21.000 -was
"not enough to spit at."
"It certainly was not what we
could have made with a tour-
nament of this magnitude," he
said.
Stamps didn't offer any figures.
Tickets sold for $50 a session for
courtside seats. Others ranged
from $25 to $12.50. lf the average
ticket price was $20. the gross
ticket revenue would come out at
$420,000. Al $25 per seat. it
reaches $525,000.
Those figures don't include
money made from COnceMiona nor
do they include the $300,000 in
priz.e money given to the players.
How did everything go so
wrong?
Stamps denied responsibility
for m06t of the problems and said
he was caught In the middle of a
political tussle between the tennis
club and the city that took all his
time and left him in "total duress''
during the event.
Stamps claimed the tennis club
had promised to obtain necessary
permits in advance for the tour-
nament but failed to do so. "They
were not, in fact, my permits to
get," he said. "They were sup-
posed to be already there."
Larson had a different reading
of the activities If not for the city
and tennis club, he said, the event
would have been a fiasco for the
city, and especially for the neigh-
bors living near the club.
He said Wednesday that
Stamps doesn't have to worry
about returning to Newport
Beach. The city wouldn't let him.
Stamps said he stopped pay-
ment on the city's $2,140 check
because he was angered by the
last-minute requirements im-
posed on him and he claimed
Larson forced him to deliver 50
free tickets to City Hall as a
rond1tton for receiving the per-
rruts.
Larson said he suggested
Stamps provide some tickets to
neighbors as a goodwill gestUN>
but d1dn 't requJre any for the city
Stamps admitted he doesn"t like
Larson but he said he didn't
threaten him du.ring the phone
conversation Wednesday. Larson
had said Stamps called him a
"punk" and said something like.
"One punch from me and you're
dead."
Stamps, who is 5-10 and weighs
170 pounds, said he told Larson
he'd like to meet him alone
sometime "and we'd see who the
better m.an was."
Mesa developer
Sydney Sher dies
Sydney Sher, whme Harbor
Center in Costa Mesa was one of
the first shopping centers in
Orange County, died Tuesday in
Los Angeles after a long illness.
He was 75.
!)her built Harbor Center, the
commerciaJ development at Fair
Drive across from Fairview State
Hospital, In 1957. He and his
brother, Saul. also developed sev-
eral other shopping centers in
Huntington Beach and helped in
coordinating the planning and
division of properties for the
Huntlngto_!l Beach Regional
Shopping ~" ~' .
Sher died at Cedars-Sinai Hos-
pital after a long illness. He lived
in West Los Angeles.
He i.s survived by his wife,
Sylvia; two sons, Merrill Sher of
San Francisco and Ron S her of
Bellvue Wash.; a daughter, Abb,Y
Sher of Los Angeles; his brother,
Saul; sister Dr. Francis
Sher-Sharpe of Philadelphia, Pa.,
and six grandchildren.
Services will be at 2 p.m.,
Friday, Aug.12 at the Hillside
Memorial Park, 6001 Centin4flla
Ave., in Los Angeles. The faJllily
requests flowers be omitted.
Featuring Mannings Beef
B.B.Q. BEEF SPARERIBS
GROUID BEEF
$129 ..
........... RAICHO MARKET .. l .".
2411 IEWNIT ILYl.•OllTI 1111•(114) 111-1111 . •
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday. Aug. 11, 1983 Al
BULLETIN BOARD Mesa projects: A Bear of an issue
Free movies offered at
Laguna arts f estival
Councilm en st u d y commercial e ncr oachment plans as neighbors ho ld their ground
Viaiton to the Festival of Ana in Laauna Beaich can ~joy a free
Alfred Hitchcock movie thriller in the Forum Theater every n!aht
through Aug. 28.
''The Lady Vanishes," a 1935 espionage film starring Margaret
Lockwood, Michael Redgrave and Bull Rad.ford will be ahown at
8:45 p.m. every night throU1h the festival run.
In addition, the festival often comedy aborts starring Abbott
and Costello aJ'¥i Laurel and Hardy at both 3 and 5 p.m. daily. The
films are free but admiaaion to the festival grounds ia $1 foe adults.
The festival grounds are open from 10 a.m . to 11:30 p.m . daily.
Talk planned o n aging, ma lignancy
How does the high incidence of malignancy occurrin8 as we
age relate to the decreasing efficiency of our immune system? What
can we do to stregthen ounelves now against theee disorders aa we
grow older?
Dr. Amelia Globenon, a leading cancer reeeacher for l.arael's
Weitzmann Institute will address these iasues Sunday at 1 p.m. ln
Leisure World's Clubhouae 2 in Laguna Hills.
For information call Evan Fruithandler at 640-8900.
Countr y concer t set at I rvine park
A country-western band will provide entertainment at
Heritage Park in Irvine Sunday beginning at 6 p.m. Lawn .eating ia
available on a first,..(X)O)e baaia. There ia no charge for admiaion .
At 8 p.m., the High Society Band will play dance music in the
youth aervioee cent.er at the park. Admission is $5 for couples, $3
general admission. Heritage Park ia located at 4601 Walnut Ave.
OCC performance passes on sale
Seaaon paases to Orange Cout College performing arts events
during the upcoming achool year are on sale through Sept. 15.
The puees, which cost $100, will allow admialion to more than
70 events, including performances by Carloe Montoya, Up With
People, the Roger Wagner Chorale, the All-American Boya'
Chorus, Woody Hennan, the Civic Ballet of Southern Callfomia
and the Five Penny Opera c.ompany.
Pa.e. are on sale in the OCC Ticket Office in the Student
Center Building. It ia open Monday through Thuraday from 8 a.m. to
7 p.m. and Ftidaya from 8 a.m.to 6 p.m.
POLICE LOG
By GLENN 8COTI'
Ot .. Olllr .........
Positioning was the key when
Costa Mesa City Council members
met this week to go over two
propoeala to develop commercial
property west of Bear Street
across from South Coast Plaza.
Positioning: 1n diplomatic cir-
cles, it covers everything from
where to sit to what to say.
It was working on various levels
when about 45 people crammed
into a fifth-floor meeting room at
City Hall Monday for a aesaion to
study the proposals from plaza
developer CJ Segerstrom & Sons
and from Amel Development Co.
The council made no decisions
at the session, which was int.ended
to offer background before the
council's public hearing Monday
at 7:30 p.m.. when action is
expected to be taken.
But council members heard
plenty of, well, positioning. It all
started with the easy stuff. The
first five minutes involved a lot of
hand shaking and introductions.
The council members settled
into seats around a table in the
middle of the meeting room while
such well-heeled applicants as
Henry Segerstrom, George
Argyros, and Mike Gould, chair-
man of Robinson's department
stores, ringed the council in chairs
set against the walls.
All of the top business people
seemed to be wearing suits with
crisply starched white ool.lars and
oonservative ties, The jackets
came off, but only after Mayor
Donn Hall invited the thankful
group to take them off in the hot
and stuffy room.
Then the real positioning took
place. CJ Segerstrom & Sons is
Huntington Porsche de-wheeled
A reeldent of the 16900 blocic of
Blue Weter Lane In Huntington Beech
reported that four tires and rlma were
atolen Wednesday morning from hla
1983 red Porsche. par1<ed In hie carport. The lose was 9911m•ted at
$1,500.
A S600 atamp cotlecilon wu r•
ported at<*ln from a home on tl'le
8800 block of Leudef Clrcle. No signs
or forced entry-• dllCO'oler'ed.
A r991dent of the 21100 bloek of
Sheph«d Lane rtpOned the theft
Wednesdey of his 1975 orange
Dataun plcttup truck with cemper
shell, which had been patlited on
Beech Boulevard. The toes WU
eatlmated at $3,000.
A man 1tay1ng at a motel on the
21000 block of Pacific Coast Highway
!Old pollee a cet burglar atrud<
overnight wtllle he WU uleep. The
lou. eatlmated et $1.570. lnciuded
money and jewelry.
A resident ol the 4'000 block 01
Morning Star Drive reported
Wedneaday that hi• ntn9-foot blue
and wtilt1 Bo.ton Wheler dinghy had
been atolen from his boet dOci<. The
loss wu estimated at$ 1,500.
Irvine
Al least 20 llcenae pletea were
swiped from cars In the Unlverllty
Park arN Wednesday night and thla
morning. The lloenM platea atollrl
were moatly peraonallzed,
out-of-atate or '-· wtllte Cellfotnl•
plates, poltce said. The thefts oc-
curred between 10 p.m. WednMdey
and 8 a.m. today.
Two men wet"e arrMted Mrly thla
morning In the Turtle Rock arM on
auaplclon or poNeallng burglary
tooi.. The pair, Rodrigo M. RJWl'a,
20. and Reynoldo 0 . SaneM:z. 18,
... ellegedly apotted by polloa
cru191ng through nelghbortlooda and
checking out cars and homee.
A mallbox on the 18000 blOci< of
O.Wb«ry Wey WU blown up •bOut 8
a.m. Wedneeday. Po41ee .. Id an
Illegal flrecrec:ker was apparently ,
uaed.
Jewelry and a gun W'8re reported
at<*ln from a home on Hunter
Wedneaday abOut 5 p.m.
fountain Valley
Ten WO<>den pallets worth $130
wet"e reported stolen Wedneeday at
the Hughe9 Market, 9091 Oerlleld
Ave. Wltneuee aew a man toed the
pallets onto a 1982 white Toyota
pickup truck at the rear of the atore
and drive off.
An overnight burglary wu ,...
ported WednMday morning at the
Shell gu 1t1tlon at 18979 BrookhUrat
St. The burgler ellegedly uaed a key
to entar the stetlon office after
ct611ng and opened 1 .. f• to ateel
S88.
A resldent of the 17200 blOci< of
Sen Meteo Street reported Tuelday
night that his orange ChevrOlet van
had been burglerlzed. The burglar
pried open • wind wing to enter end
atote ~ worth of toola.
A Glendele woman rtpOned her
purM ml181ng after lhe i.tt II on a
... t In the Edward• ThMter. 18149
Brookhurat St The lou Included the
$200 pul'M and S 115 cuh lntlde.
Newport Beach
Two men ..,. arr•ted for
poneak>n of cocelne at 2111 Street
and W•t Oc:Mnfront Bout.verd
WednMdey et •bout 2:40 p.m. Ball
Mt at $10,000.
A.a the victim alept on hie blenket, •
auapect ltOle $908 In jewelry, mon.y
and mullc equipment at the 211t
Street beech at 3 p.m. Wedneedey.
A UC lrvlne proteuor had hi•
bettety et<*ln from hit Yetllc'-et
1700 16th St. aometlme during the
puttwoweekl
A ~ atOle looll and a ,..._
vtalOn vell*f at ssoa from • vetilcie
perked at 21155 Vitt• Bey aometlme
Monday night.
Laguna Beach
Laguna Beech polloe ere ln-
veatlga11ng thrM vetilc'-break-Ina
that ooc:urred Wedneedey. A purae
contelnlng S 110 wu 11<>Mn from • car perlted In the 20000 blodc of
Laguna Cenyon Roed 11 about 5 p.m .
A MCOnd Yetllcie break-In occ:ured
•short time letar In the 1000 bkldl ol
L.eguna Canyon Road. The tou,
according to the owner. wu $120 In
cuh.
TODAY'S WIAIHER
Surprise: Cooler weather coming
Coastal CoUftl>4&.S C 17 74
Colum-$4 10
~Wortll IM 74
FM llltougfl Thut9dtr( Pelefly IOw = IM 10
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fll S-"'-"' -.d. _,,_..,.I -on .. " IO 15 ll-""" 2 to ._foot -Low ~._ Ill alt 93 14
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, ·.
seeking to amend the city's gen-
eral plan to change the desig-
nation for 18 acres on Bear from
medium density residential to
commercial so a new
650,000-square-foot mall can be
developed.
The mall would include a
Robinson's department store at
the southern end and a Broadway
at the northern end. Parking
would be under the mall and in a
three-level, mostly subterranean
garage behind it.
On 50 acres next door -in an
area roughly bordered by South ..
Coast Drive and the San Diego
Freeway -Amel is asking for a
general plan change to allow a
mixed use including two 21-story
offices, smaller commercial build-
ings and residential uses.
Nothing so crucial is easily
decided, however, which was why
so many people were spending an
afternoon sitting around a table in
an airless meeting room.
The city's Development Ser-
vices Director, Doug Clark, was
the first to set the agenda. He
indicated the council's past pos-
ition has been to draw the line on
commercial development west of
Bear. The council must decide
whether to change it, he said.
Henry Segerstrom, however,
suggested property facing Bear
might be considered separately
from the rest because homes
would be out of place on the busy
street.
He introduced Gould, who told
the council Robinson's wants to
build a headquarters store with
HB man jailed
alter two die
in auto crash
A Hunt.ington Beach man has
been jailed on suspicion of man-
slaughter and felony drunken
driving ln oonnectfon With a
traffic accident that claimed two
lives.
Westminster Police Officer Roy
Freeman said Marc J. Ellington,
23, of 6011 Kendrick Circle, was
westbound on Garden Grove
Boulevard in his 1981 Datsun
pickup truck at 11:51 p.m. Monday
when the accident occurred.
Freeman said Elli.ngton turned
left onto Edwards Street, alleged-
ly in front of a motorcycle driven
by Brian Louis Bonn, 29, of
Westminster. Bonn's motorcycle
struck the pasaenger side of the
truck, causing it to roll onto its
side.
Ellington's passenger, Lesley
Pet.enon, 37, of the same Ken-
drick Circle address, was pro-
nounced dead at the scene. Bonn
was taken to the trauma center at
Fountain Valley Community Hos-
pital, where he died early Tues-
day' Freeman said.
Ellington, who was not injured.
was booked into Orange County
Jail.
_,,... ...... ..,-....NhtMw
Proposed shopping mall (above) would include
remodeled Broadway store (below) in South Coast
P laza expansion.
the kind of ambiance shoppers
find in Beverly Hills.
Segerstrom wanted the council
to view his project aside from
Amel's and was careful to stress
its separateness. "I can't spe.ak for
the Amel project," he said at one
point when the discussion began
merging the two.
A model of the completed mall
was positioned on the council's
table. It was propped up on
plexiglas stands to be at eye level.
Meanwhile, Argyros, a partner
in Amel, tried to make an opposite
point. Noting that Segerstrom's
project is extremely specific while
his remains conceptual, he said the
city would be ill-advised ·to ap-
prove one without judging the
other, especially because street
improvements should relate to
both .
"Quite frankly. in fairness to
whoever owns this land, you can't
approve one without considering
our piece," he said.
That left Dan Gott, a neighbor
whose home is adjacent to the
Amel property, to carry the
banner against considering any
changes to the general plan. He
reminded the council that neigh-
bors oppose both proposals.
"If we cross Bear Street and we
give one inch to commercial, we
are opening the Ooodgates," he
said in a carefully measured,
fonnal voice.
.Argyros offered a different
interpretation of the general plan:
"It's always a fluid plan," he said.
1n fact, Argyroe said Amel
wants to change its proposal again
to reflect recent changes to the
commercial corridor along the San
Diego Freeway.
"We'd like to go back to the
Planning Cornmisaion with a
specific plan and a new general
plan amendment," he said. He said
Amel shouldn't be penalized for
presenting a less detailed proposal
than Segerstrom.
All this left the council mem-
bers in a tough spot. Councilman
F.ci McFarland said he doesn't
want to look at Segerstrom's
proposal separately becauae the
council should judge cumulative
impacts on issues such aa traf •
ficflow and air pollution.
But Mayor Hall noted the
difficulty of making wi9e de-
cisions on proposals that still may
change.
The council found itaelf in the
same position as in the meeting
room: Right in the middle with
little breathing room.
SherHJan Gardens plans
3rd fund-raising party
By CHRIS CRAWFORD
Delr' .... c.. • .,. .......
Sherman Library and Gardens
in Corona del Mar is holding its
third annual fund-raising party,
for both members and the general
public, on Saturday, Aug. 27.
"The Spur and the Rose,'' an
everung with an early Cali-
fornia/West.em theme, will begin
at 6:30 in the upper garden with
cocktails and hors d'oeuvres, fol-
lowed by dining under the stars.
Informal, country-western attire
is encouraged.
Special enterta.inment, includ-
ing mariachis and music for danc-
ing, will be included in the
festivities. F.ntertainers featured
will include Shelia Marrical,
Mickey Rooney Jr.. and Willie
Warwick.
Donations a.re $100 per penon.
All funds raised through the
benefit party will be u.ed to
support the library and gardens,
including their educationaJ ~
grams in history, horticulture,
docent tours.. botanical educations
for Orange County school chil-
dren, and gardening cta.es for
special-needs people.
For further infonnation. call
673-1880.
r:
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A .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. Aug 11, 1983
TOP OF THE NEWS
Soviet nuclear sub sunk
By tbt A11oclated Preu
Reagan promises
to support Chad
';N ASHlNGTON -A Soviet nudear sub-
marine carrying 90 crewmen sank in the North
Pacific in June, almost certainly causing a
"substantial loss of life,'' according to a report by
CBS News. Vigorous rescue efforts drew the
attention of U.S. defense officials who learned that
a submarine had sunk but have not yet determined
what caused the accident, the network reported
Wednesday night. There was no evidence of
radioactive contamination, th e network said.
NATION
Arn1s-control funds slated
WASHING TON -President Reagan is
putt.ing more money and manpower into the
government's arms control agency, which was
recently criticized for being in a "a shambles.
largely incapable of performing the tasks assigned
to it."
Reagan said the stef)5 will strengthen the
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in its role
of supporting negotiations to reduce strategic
nuclear arms and medium-range nuclear missiles
in Europe.
Libyan students jmprisoned
MIAMI -lmmigration officials said nine
Libyan students were imprisoned because they
are "detrimental to national security," but school
officials were "confused" by the arrests since they
thought the students' visas were in order. The
students, five from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University in Bunnell, were detained at the
request of Secretary of State George Shultz, who
asked the Immigration and Naturalization Service
not to renew student visas of Libyans. or third
parties "acting on behalf of Libyan entities,"
enrolled in aviation or nuclear studies.
STATE
Duke offered strait jack et
LOS ANGELES -Leaders of three state
hospital unions who want Gov. George Deu-
kmejian to restore salary increases he cut from the
state budget last month offered the Republican
governor a straitjacket Wednesday. The strait-
jacket was intended as a symbol of their feeling
that Deukmejian has hamstrung health workers
with his budget cuts that reduced their salary and
beneCits increases to about 5 percent.
Man hit with Taser dart dies
LOS ANGELES -An autof)5y may show if a
27-year-old man shot by an electronic police Taser
dart is the first in Los Angeles to die from th\.•
purportedly non-lethal weapon. authorities said.
Vmc.•ent Alvarez of El Monte died of a n~ive
heart attack Wednesday at County-USC Medical
Center after ~ing shot with the 50,000-volt dart
during a scuUle with police. Cmdr William Booth
said. O!fic.-ers believe Alvarez was under the
influence of the drug PCP.
Judge 'intimidate d ' officer
SAN BERNARDINO -Court re<.'Ords show
that Municipal Court Judge James Cramer, who
pleaded guilty to drunken driving three months
ago, tried to 1nt1midate the police offit•er who
arrestt'd him April 5. ''Have you ever arrested a
judge or distnd attorney before? Do you know
how much trouble you are in?" Cramer asked
Montclair pohc.oe Officer David B. Gray, according
toa police report included in the<.'Ourt file. Cramer,
51, a former county district attorney and state
assemblyman. refused to comment Wednesday on
the polt<.-e reports.
WORLD
U.S.-China policy flayed
MOSCOW -The Soviet Union. which in the
last year has ~ught to defuse its long-standing
quarrel with China. charged today that the United
States has a "two-faced'' attitude toward China
that "runscounterto the aspirations of the Chinese
people." The Communist Party daily Pravda
contrasted the forthcoming visit of Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger to Peking and
American permlSSion for China to buy computers
in the United States with continued American
arms sales to Taiwan and what it said were U.S.
restrictions on trade with China.
Lei tis ts release ministers
BEIRUT. Lebanon -Leftist Druse gunners
renewed their barrage on Beirut's airport and
shelled a mountain army post today, but the
rebellious sect freed three ~binet ministers seized
in an attempt to force the Cabinet to resign.
Government sources said the three ministers,
seized Wednesday night. were unharmed and in
good condition arter intensive negotiations to gain
their release.
Irish rjots in fourth day
BELFAST. Northern Ireland -Catholic
rioters hurled gasoline bombs onto the roof of a
Londonderry police station and set it aflame in the
fourth s traight night of sectarian violence in the
British province. Firemen swiftly extingllished
the blaze Wednesday night on the roof of the police
station on the edge of the staunchly Catholic
CreRgan quarter.
Cap itul of (~had
rqmrlt'cl cupturc'cl.
Six rescued
from river;
another lost
KERNVILLE (AP) -S ix
people survived a tossing in the
Kern River's white-water rapids,
but a Bakersfield man is mi.ssing
and presumed drowned after two
incidents reported within
one-half hour of C'ach other.
Three fishermen tried to cross
the river Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.
at Limestone Campground, said
Tulare County Sheriffs Deputy
Allen Montgomery.
Their small three-man raft
Clipped in rapids, spilling the trio
into the water. Paul Kowbel, 35,
of Bakersfield and Torben Ulrich,
16, of Yorba City swam to shore.
Jimmy Doyle Barnes. 42. of
Bakersfield was last seen sinking
beneath the surface.
ln the other river mishap. four
Orange County residents on an
Explorer Scout tnp were stranded
on the campground·s opposite
shore Wednesday at 6 p.m. when
they were tossed off inflatable air
mattresses in the rapids.
U.S. Forest Service rangers
David Peeler and Patrick Schef-
fler reached the group at 10:30
p.m. Kim Aube, 17. Pam Paulson.
17, and Kevin Criddle, 21, all of
Yorba Linda. and Russell Read.
23, of Fullerton returned safely to
the group from Post 520.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Re -
agan admlnlstrauon oHlcials say
the battle to defend Chad from
"blatant military intervention" by
Libya will continue despite re-
port$ that Libyan-backed rebels
have captured the strategic oasis
of Foye-Largeau.
U.S . officials have made clear.
however, that they believe the
task of defending Chad would
become far easier if the govern-
ment of France takes the lead by
committing combat forces to the
struggle.
"If the town has fallen. that 1s
certainly not good news," said
John Hughes, the State Depart-
ment's chief spokesman . on
Wednesday.
"But there are other towns 1n
that area and if the town has
'alien. certainly that does not
mean that the battle for Chad 1s
$12 million
malpractice
award OK'd
WEST PALM BEACH. Fla.
(AP) -Appeals judges. ruling
that a brain-damaged woman ls
suffering more than "all the
tortures of the damned." have
upheld the largest malpractice
award in Florida history -$12.47
million.
A three-judge panel of the 4th
District Court of Appeal on
Wednesday ruled the damages
awarded to Susan Ann Von
Stetina, 29, of Fort Lauderdale.
were not excessive.
Talbot D'Alemberte, attorney
for the Florida Patients Fund. a
state-created malpractice in-
surance fund that would have to
pay the sum, said an appeal to the
Florida Supreme Court was
"highly likely." o· Alemberte said if the verdict
st.ands, the results will be in-
creased insurance rates for doctors
and hospitals.
Von Stetina was in Florida
Medical Center in Lauderdale
Lakes on Dec. 3. 1980, recovering
from a severe auto accident when
a respirator failed and cut off
oxygen to her brain.
A Rob1nsms Sae
1 0 0 Y E A R S 0 F S T Y l E
SAVE 50°/o
over" ht! said
We-swrn m11Jtary iwurc:es m
Chad said today that about :!,OUO
Libyan regular troops and 3,00ll
Chadian rebel forces waged a
fierce six-hour battle to captun
Faye-Largeau, 500 m.Jles north or
the capital of N'O)llmena
Tht! full -seal~ Libyan attack
involved bombings by Sov
iet-built war planes and the use of
heavy artillery. the sources said
Chadian President Hissent'
Habre's 2.500 troops. out
numbered 2-to-I, c.-eased their
resistance. the sources said
Habre's troops had re<:aptured lht·
town from insurgents on July 30
The possibility of a more activ<·
French role m Chad was raJSt>d
Wednesday m an Oval Offa:t•
meeting at the White Ho~
between President Reagan and
Senegalese President Abdou
D1ouf Senegal was described a..'
fearing the pre<.:edent that wouJd
beset in northern Africa if Libya·~
leader. Moammar Khadary. wi11~
effective control of Chad.
"The United States docs nut
consider itself to be the policeman
of Africa,'' said Hughes, noting
that Washington has neither en
gaged in major arms shipments tu
Africa nor established military
bases there
State's phone
service slashed
by vandalism·
By Tbe Auodated Press
Statewide vandalism has inter-
rupted telephone service for 3, 7511
Cahforn1ans and left one stnkmg
phone worker m custody as Pac1f1c
Telephone resumed talks with thec
Communications Workers of
America, the company said
J
PacTel. the largest AT&T oper
aling company affected by th1· 1
four-day-old nauonw1de walkoul.
also planned to contact its thret-
other stnk.ing uruons m an at
tempt to resume formal taJks.
spokesman Roger Orr sa1d in San
Francisco
Informal negollallons havt
been held at the national levl'I
bet ween oH 1c1als of the CW A and
AT&T
GATHER ALL YOUR FAVORITE FLOWERS IN A COUNTRY
WICKER BASKET, YOUR GIFT WITH s25 DELDAN FLOWER
PURCHASE. 3 DAYS ONLY.
RPg $2 25 $18 50 per stem
Sale S1.13·S9.25 Come v1ck the s1tj(y
polyes1ei blooms so perfeclly lormed
vou 11 wan I to touch lt'em to be sure
And even more beautiful is a 1ong
lasting bouquet vou c..in create w111i 1he
~ Y') ol ou• o•ol•<>•ono lloweo
A ROBINSON'S
arrange1s on hand 1oe1av through
Salurday Our assor1ment of
po.yes1er/s1lk !lowers varies by store
And hurry sale ofle1 m eflecl Thursc<1y
Friday and Sa1urday only For
iovehness lhat lingers discover
Robinsons G111s 59
THE QUICKEST WAY: JUST PERSONALLY PRE SENT AN AMERICAN EXPRESS, VISA. MASTER CHARGE. DINERS CLUB . OR CARTE 8lANCHE CARO TO ON E OF OUR
SALESPERSONS AND WE LL OPEN AN ACCOUNT YOU CAN USE THAT VERY OAY THE EASIEST WAY PHONE US TOLL FREE 1·800·422·4241 FROM 7 AM·10 PM
ANO OUR OPERATORS WILL TAKE YOUR APPLICATI ON INFORMATION
-------------------,· •
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I
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983 Al
Mysterious heart ailment plagues Los Angeles family
LOS ANGELF.s (AP) -A
family's mysterious heart ailment
has killed a 21 -year-old son,
turned a 20-year-old son into a
near-lnvalid and appears to have
hit three other siblings as well as
their father, doctors say.
Dr. Linda Kocsis of Coun-
ty-USC Medical Center says that
only a heart transplant can save
the life of Derrick Gordon, 20, a
former Venice High School
basketball player in otherwise
excellent physical condition.
However, the family, supported
by welCare. cannot pay for the
operation that costs $125,000 at
Stanford Medical Cent.er , one of
the few facilities performing such
transplants.
Medi-Cal, for which the family
is eligible, does not pay for he~rt
transplants, and the National In-
stitutes of Health has stopped
paying for such surgery.
"(Derrick) can walk now, short
distances,'' Ms. Kocsis said.
But she said he cannot exert
himself and must rest several
times each day.
"Lt.old him I thought he ought to
try to live as normal a life as
possible until the time comes
"They told me I had an enlarged
heart and did I know? I told them
I didn't ... "
when he can't do that anymore,"
she said.
Derrick's 21 -year-old brother,
Frederick, died last October from
an enlarged and weakened heart,
a problem that hit when he was
19.
Last May, the disease struck
Derrick when he was 19.
"I had shortness of breath,
weakness and dizziness, chest
pains," Derrick said. "I came down
to emergency. They told me I had
an enlarged heart and did 1 know?
I told them I didn't."
Just six months before, the
physician who had checked him
before he could play with the
school basketball team had found
nothing wrong.
"It was the same way (with
Frederick)," Derrick said. "He
had a cold for at least about a
month or so. He came to the
How llot was it this past July?
(Average Fahrenheit temperatures for month o f July)
Uneinployinent top fear
Union m embers fa ult R eagan in AFL-CIO p oll .._,on lostDll
doctor. They said he had hear\.
trouble."
Three more of the Gordon
children, Loreru.o Jr., 25, La-
Toynia, 21, and Crystal, 17, plus
their father, Lorenzo Sr., 44, show
signs of what could be the same
ailment, Dr. Kocsis said, adding
that there is no way of telling
whether their cases will remain
s~ble or grow worse.
The three other Gordon chil·
dren, Philip, 23; Dana, 16. and
Miesha, 3, do not have any
symptoms, she said.
The disease is one of many
called idiopathic cardiomyopathy,
a term that refers to many
little-understood ailments that de-
stroy the heart. Such ailments are
not unusual in older people but
rarely hat the young.
"ldJopathic is a garbage-pail
word meaning we don't know,"
Ms. Kocsis said.
Derrick's heart is growing in-
creasingly fibrous, bagging out
like an overstretched balloon, she
3aid.
"We don't know why it turned
in to this fibrous mess and is no
longer functioning well .... Except
for this big bag of a heart, he's got
a normal everything," she said.
Thunderstorms
haunt Midwes t
BOSTON (AP) -Sixty-one percent
of local union leaders across the
country fear that a family member will
become unemployed in 1984, and the
overwhelming majority do not think
President Reagan is doing a good job,
according to a survey released Wednes-
day by the AFL-CIO.
roughly 1,880 respondents disagreed
with the statement: "President Reagan
is doing a good job."
eo .-----...... .---------eo ------------
The survey was undertaken by the
federation's leadership during a series
of regional conferences between April
and June.
It showed that 96 percent of the
Guard skunk
does h er job
ins tinktivel y
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) -
Pepe, who is 19Cked up during the
day and roams around a storeroom
here at night, "really intimidates
people," said Tim Kelley, ware-
house manager at Royale Manu-
facturing Co .. a radiator manufac-
turer.
Whenever people see her they
react with shock and fear, he said.
That's what makes her such a
good guard skunk.
In the year since shl''s been
working at Royale, there hasn't
been a single burglary, Kelley
said.
The report was delivered to the
federation's executive council during
the concluding session of its three-day
meeting here.
"The front-line leadership of our
unions in the field .. . shares a re-
markable degree of unanimity on
issues," the report said, adding:
"These findings would seem to
indicate that there is an ideological
solidarity at the grass-roots level that
bodes well for the labor movement and
runs contrary to the perceptions of
those who seek to divide us by
exploiting imagined differences be-
tween skills and occupations."
The report was released one day
after the federation's top policymaking
body voted to speed up the AFL-CIO's
timetable for e ndorsing a presidential
candidate.
Thomas R. Donahue, the AFL-CIO's
secretary-treasurer and No. 2 official,
reiterated the leadership's position that
moving the endorsement date from
December to Oct. 1 does not clinch the
labor nod for former Vice President
Walter F . Mondale.
"I saw this mornirlg's papers, and the
comments by other candidates that this
favored one or another, and I think
that's nonsense," Donahue said in an
interview on NBC's ''Today" show.
79...., ...... --. ....
78.._.~--..
77
76
75
74t----...----is---•
73 t----~---=.:.:.~.:..;:.:::..__,
12 ..... ~"T"'"' ..... ...,..._..-..__, __ _...
1974 75 76 17 78 79 80 81 82 83
Los._les
78 •• ....... ~~~~~~-
77
76
75
74Qp._...;;;;~ .... r----t,_~~
73
72 ...... ..;:==;__-__;: ... _~----.I
79
78
77
76
75 ~,.r---.... r--~~--lllllll:::m .. ~
74 .. ~._,~ ..... _.~~--~-f
73 ----..... ~ .... ~------I 72J--.-....... --..-lg... ..... _______ ~
1974 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 8 2 83
71 71 ,._ _________ ._. __________ __..
1974 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 8 2 83 1974 75 76 11 18 79 80 81 82 83
Kansas City
86 .---------------------85
84
83
82
81
80
79
78 11--~~~--l--j~~ .... --_.
7 7 t---~~ ........ ~ 76 ..__... ___ ...I
Dallas
92 -------------4.1>----
91
90
By The Associated Press
Showers and thunderstorms lingered over
sections of the Upper Mad west from Iowa to northern
Ohio early today after lightning from a system of
storms that rumbled across Illinois killed one child
and injured a half-dozen others, ofhcaals said.
Scattered thunderstorms accompanied by high
winds also blew through areas of the Rockies, while
heavy rain caused flash flooding that sent up to three
feet of water rushing down streets in Las Vegas.
Authorities said they were looking for two
people reported missing after their car was swept
away by the fast-moving waters that also forced the
evacuation of gamblers at the Imperial Palace on the
Las Vegas Strip.
Most gamblers kept playing but some waded out
to snap photographs as roiling runoff from mountain
rains roared through the Strip, sending away dc>zens
of cars and turning some streets into 10-foot-deep
rivers.
The intersection of Flamingo Boulevard and the
Strip, where Caesars Palace and the Dunes and
Flamingo hotels are located. looked like a lake and
helicopters plucked some pedestrians to safety.
The floodwaters contained palm fronds, railroad
ties and driftwood from mountains 10 miJes away.
Elsewhere, wands gusted to 62 mph at Racine.
Wis., while trees and power lines were reported
d owned near Monroe and Brodhead. Wis.
In Illinois, a thunderstorm with winds clocked at
71 mph flattened a barn near Woodstock, while
lightning killed a 9-year-old child and injured six
others at a playground in Mt. Prospect, officials said.
Freak P)cific storms threatened portions of the
Southern California Coast with high, pounding surf.
while extensive droughts were parching farmland in
Texas and Pennsylvania.
Pepe has a secret, but most
people don't get close enough to
find out.
"There's a two-month campaign
(leading up to the endorsement) to be
gone through and our unions are still
making judgments, still talking to th,eir
members, trying to assess where the
endorsement ought to go," he said. "I
don't think it's locked up at all.''
7'-. H 1 -,
Although the huge Pacific waves that damaged
dozens of coastal homes earlier this week were
subsiding, National Weather Service officials cau-
tioned that Hurricane Ismael -currently centered
off Baja California -would bring them back by
Friday.
"They don't know she's been
defumed," Kelley said.
1974 75 76 17 78 79 80 81 8 2 83 1974 75 76 17 78 79 80 8 1 82 83
A Robr\SOtls Sae
1 0 0 Y E A R S 0 F S T Y L E
SAVE 50°/o
' ('
' I ..... ... ~
RIGHT NOW EVERY
SWIMSUIT FROM OUR '83
COLLECTION IS ON SALE
I I
I
Orig $24-$225 Sale S11.99-$110.t8. Hurry-every bikini. maillo~t.~~~~~==:;::~-~--.L
bandeau, sheath and tunic from Gottex, Jantzen, Cole. Catalina. Sirena
Elisabeth Stewart, Petllcord and more can be found at hall pricer' Come
In early and catch the best selection before the sun goes down. In JWR
Poolside. 23, where the sun and style always shine the brightest
SHOP MOllDAY-RHDAY 10-9.
NEWPORT FASHION Ill.AND• WEITMINITEA MALL
I
-
I
l
' I
i ' I
-,
Ae Orenge Coe.at DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
Pot purveyors probed
Oregon marijuana growers moving indoors to avoid detection
GRANTS PASS, Ore. I (AP) -Marijuana
growers ln the Oregon woods are being watched this
awnmer from hilh and from low.
Aa the feathery plants grow tall, cameras will be = in high altitude U-2 spy planes. On the
authorities are enlisting the aid of hikers to
help spot the hidden fields where the illicit drug ia
grown.
But officials say some Oregon pot growers are
reepondlna by moving their crops indoors to avoid
detecdon.
Dougl• County Sheriff Norm Neal said three
recent raids on rented homes ln that southwe.stem
~ county turned up rooms full of plants
6ow1ah1ng under lights .
.. Indoor operations are even more difficult to
diamver, and present a growing direction for illicit
drug culUvators," Attorney General Dave
• Frohnln.-yer said in a recent letter to a congressional oomml"'-' studying marijuana trafficking in the Unitect..._
ICiallJlalna growing, Frohnmayer concluded, ''is
at • <!l'ttil stage in this state.•·
CuJUvation of marijuana has become big
bulinem in Oregon. Law enforcement authorities
acknowledp that the 50,000 plants seiz.ed last year
acmunt for no more than 10 percent of what was
ral9ed.
The National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws, or NORML, estimates the value of
the state's 1982 marijuana crop at $500 million,
makiD41 Oreaon one of five states where pot is the
mast valuable agricultural commodity.
The 1983 marijuana aeaaon is just beginning
here. So far, only a few thousnd plants have been
.ued. laid Major Doyle Wataon, who heads the 0reace State Police criminal division. ~t P>lice agencies are gearing up to beat
growers to a crop at least as large as last year's.
"My perception is that we've had a vigorous
enforcement program in Josephine County for
leYef'8l years," said county Undenheriff Jim Carlton.
"In spite of that. we still seem to find about the same
number of gardens, the same number of plan ta."
& the marijuana industry has burgeoned, pot
farmers have become more sophisticated, both in the
art of gardening and the craft of staying one step
ahead of the sheriff.
Over the years, many marijuana growers have
shifted their fanns from backyards to remote public
landll, .,.ruany improving fertilization and irriga-
tion tecbmquee to maxi.mi2e production in t4e
mMl""!t pomible areas.
Strike violence .
poisons kids
11JCSON, Ariz. (AP) -The 3-year-old daugh-
ter ol a non-striking copper worker lies in a hospital,
shot in the brain. Other children vandal.iz.e property
or stand at picket lines jeering anyone who crosses.
'!be strike against Phelps Dodge Corp. has
grown incn!asi.ngly tense since the copper mining
oompany began trying for the first time to get union
memt.rs to croBS picket lines, and children are being
~Jn the violence and bitterness.
·~png to happen when.cboc>l startB Aug.
29r' .-..S ltiiking copper miner Raul Rios, who is
pert of~ that has begun COUNeling children of strikdlrllnd non-strikers alike.
~ ... roma to be the effect on the kids that
were Oli ibe picket lines toward the children of the peope who maed the picket lines?"
&rtke9 have bit Ariz.ona's copper mining
communit* eveiy three years since 1959, but in all
put ltrtbs, Phelps Dodge had shut down, said Rios.
who worb at the Morenci mining operation. Thia
time the company continued to operate until Tuelday
and bU1'.ldred8 of union-repreeented workers in Ajo,
Bilbee, Douglas and Morenci cromed the picket l.inell
that went up July 1.
"What it's done is divide the community right i.n
half," Riouaid in a telephone interview.
He and others fear the strike by unions
aepe1e11ting 2,400 employees at mines, amelten and procemng facilities in the four communities will
leave emotional 9C8rs on the c.hildren.
"l'm ooncemed that there are going to be
eHec1a," said the Rev. J.B. Bardon of the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Clllton, a town neighboring
Morenci. "My suspicion is that we probably won't see
their full eHect3 until the kids are in school and forced
to ~te with one another.''
Becau.e of conoem for the children's problems,
Shirley J . ()1trien. a human development specia11st
with the University of Arizona extension service in
1\.K:mJn. bM begun writing articles on the issue for
weekly newspapers in the area.
"Any time you have children who feel a climate
of bllh, lnteme emotional outpouring," she said,
"dtlre are feel.inga of fear, uncertainty, anxiety, and
~'"I on the kid, they can be long-lasting."
She Mid children who jeer workers aa they cross
p6cket lines need special attention, as do children of
the non«rikerl.
1bere has been no violence on the picket lines,
but on July 27, Chandra Tallant was wounded by sun.fire 1pnyed through the walla of her family's
home lD A.Jo aa she slept. Her father, Keith, 24, waa
UDaQ& the tint workers at the Phel119 Dodge mine in
Ajl) to°'* picket lines.
Noone has been arrested in the shooting, despite
a $100,000 reward offered by Phelps Dodge ..
The children hear their parents hurl insults at
~ and "haven't been able to ventilate
what'• &o'na on." Rios said.
"A lot of the vandalism has been caU8ed not by
ltribn but by kids. There'• nothing to do, and it'•
the4r way to thow their eupport."
Teens available
for jobs in Mesa
Re.ldenta and local bualnels people in Costa
Me.a are invited to contact the c.o.ta Meea Teen
Cent« If they are looking for youth.a to perform odd
jobs aach • lawn movtna or beby idttini.
Vera Piper, director of the otnter, Mid job
u.tinel will be potted on a bulletin board lnalde the
fdity and removed once pomd.ont are filled.
''Thia would be IUCh a tremendoul 8lt'Yice to the
younc people. and rve got them, " Mid Piper, who
ltart.ed the center at the former the Rea School. 601
H•nlhoo St.. in July 1982.
Inten!Sted ~le can call the center at 631~9-t&.
After' dnaa enforcement agents started using
planet to look for Wepl cultivation, arowers began
dividing their marijuana f.anna into smaller plota that
are harder to detect from the air, Wataon u.ld. Others
have moved their planw into p-eenhou9el, garagee
and houeea. wtJen, • chance lightfna ii unlikely and
..... 0
the growtng ~ii ~round.
But if the growen have become trickier in their Mary Reese of Ontario
efforts to hkle the4r produce, police agencie9 have ·i d T d countered with• few innovationa of their own. was reum e ues ay
Although DEA offidall refUBe to confirm the with her adopted
reports, county sheriffs and state police say Oregon is Taiwanese daughter, partldpatfna with the federal agency in an ex-pertmerrtal .urve1llanoe program using U-2 spy Omara Marie, 2 , on TV's
planet. "'Fantasy." But Carolyn In addition. Bureau of Land Management and bo
U.S. Forest Service officiala are po11t1ng signs in Pomerene, a ve,
public areas that aak hWlten and hi.ken to call a couldn't meet
toll-freestatepolioenumberlftheyaeesignsofillegal ha lf-brother, Lance Cpl. marijuana growth on public land.
8i..UKeU,aBLMapokmrnaninPortland,said the John Terry, for the first
federal aaencY has also prepared slide shows for its time. He was J 3 pounds employees that warn of the dangers of stumbling
upon a marijuana patch. overweight and denied
"Our main concern is for the safety of the public leave to appear on the
~ere: :i~r becauae there are booby traps out show because he ''didn't
Nationwide, the DEA will spend $2 million this fit the Marine image."
yearonita marijuana ~tio~~am~.~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-. .
Save*20
on 12 or 20-gauge
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vent rib barrel.
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wearing COIT'tort end easy machine washtng
and dryt11g Zoppeted front. coated game
bag and 2 large pockets for ammu111ttt0n
Camouflage COiors Sizes S.M ·L XL
Adve<1ised pnces ooocs through Sntvro;iy August 13
EBsuPER·X
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h!Qh powef Die cast metal receovcr <)llO
tul·lenoltl molded stock and toreaim
Stturcl•r t:>o 1111 to 1' '""· lundlr to '"'tot""' 9ARG ET 01*! ~''"'°""''ride• 10 ""'°' ""·
Auto hnlc1 Cent.ft Cit*' ~y t"'°"lt' 'rtcl.., 7 :IO '"' to I INft, lltvnl1y t :io 1m IO t pm, lunuw 10 If'! to I IN!'
AMMtM; Uncort Ave . at Cr~t w.-,.1u11wt11 01
Ille Senti Me f rHwty o..fell ~ 8f()()l(huf$t et w .. tmrt.ier A.,. • IUll aoulh of OlrOtn Orove ,_..,
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~ --. ------
I, i
II
I .
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Aug. 11, 1983 ~'1
California wine growers: Their cup runneth over
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Still weeb away
ftom the 1983 grape harvest, California's $5 billion
wtne lnduatry la huna over from a aurplua of wine in
11onip, a aharp drop in expected sales and prices. and
a flood of European competition .
"We're being clobbered," said Phil Hiaring Jr ..
executive editor and publiaher of Wines & Vines, an
tndustry publication.
H1arlng aays "l 0 percent of the American people
A hot spell
S crabble champ letter p er( ect
ClllCAGO (AP) -The defending national
Scrabble champion says his 9eCl"et is learning to
recognize garble.
Show him "aciprruu," and Joseph Edley of
San Franciaco knows instantly there's a word in
there he can uae: plrarucu.
It doesn't matter that he doesn't know what
pirarucu means. What matters is he can spell it.
When he plays Scrabble, Edley arranges his
letters alphabetically on his tile rack. By uaing
fluhcarda. he has t;ra.ined h.irn8elf to recognize
when the letters can be rearranged to spell arcane
words.
"It's easy," he said. "The beauty of it is that
after a while, you start learning quickly. If people
knew that, there would be a lot of experts."
Edley and 31 other players are squaring off in
Chicago this week for the 1983 North American
Scrabble Championship. The finalists, who have
survived more than two years in a series of
preliminary rounds, include a nurse, a truck
driver, a teacher, a ta.xi driver, an artist, a
bookkeeper and a computer special.i.st.
"Words cannot deecribe the amount of
commitment theee players give the game," said
James Houle, president of Scrabble Crossword
Game Players Inc.
A pirarucu, by the way, is a South American
fiah.
drink 80 percent of the wine" 80ld in the United
States. About 70 percent of the wine corwumed In the
United States comes from California.
Other wine authorities, including veteran wine
buaine.. analyst and CONultant Lou Ganberg, aay
only "4 to 5 percent" of Americana drink wine
regularly.
''Something," declared Gomberg, "has to be
done about that."
The troubles developed as growers, vintners,
distributors and retail outlets began facing the fact
that California has almoet 5M million gal.Ions.of wine
in storage -about 90 mtllion pllona more than was
being stored at the same time last year.
Vintners concede that lf thb year's grape crop
comes close to 1982'a h uge harvest, there won 't be
enough room to store lhe 1983 vin~. Current
indications are that the crop will be at least 10 percent
under last year's.
Europe's major wine prodUL'ers -Italy, France,
Spain and Portugal -a1ao have a storage problem.
Wineries in thoee countries are reported to have aome
400 million gallons in storage this year over what was
being held Wt year, althou&h the total figure was not
available.
And much of that wine la heading to the United
States, in what some industry eources call a
"Eurowine offensive."
SHIRTS
collar 'n cuff 1)1~ ~. o .............. ~
Costa Meaa 142-8788
why pay rent?
Own Your Office/
Warehouse
According to the industry-supported Wine
lnaUtute, California'• 1982 grape crop was an
enormous 5.9 million tons -49.2 percent over the
previous year. That record crop came as Califonua
wine ahipmenta climbed only one-tenth of 1 percent
over 1981 shipments.
Ed Everett, publlaher of "The Win e Trade"
newsletter, aaid the result will be gra pes hitting the
ground rather than the crusher.and "a depression" in
prices offered for grapes and charged for bottled
wine.
Prices for wines rated from jug to good or very
good quality are dropping, although the coet of the
finest wines is not expected to decline.
In June, premium wine producer Robert
Mondavi dropped the price of his $11 fume blanc at
the winery to between $5 and $6. The retail price at
diacount stores dropped to the $4 range, said
Gomberg.
And recently, some jug wines bearing the Carlo
Roeai label fell to near 1939 prices in some stores, with
eight liters of jug wine going for $7, a cut of more than
50 percent, Gomberg added.
But wilh a strong dollar, prices have also fallen
for foreign wines, making them cheaper here and
American wines expensive in other countries.
In June, Clare L . Berryhill, director of the
California Department of Food and Agriculture
predicted that Italy and France would gam a larger
share of the American wine market if the dollar
remained strong
Industry statlStu:s lndicate California's share of
the total U.S . w ine marke t af ter World War 11 was
90.6 percent. Last year, the figure was 68.2 percent.
D e adline Friday
for Irvine groups
Commuruty non -profit associations in lrvine
must submit their applications for financial assistance
to the community services department by Friday.
Members of the community services department
will review all the applications for fundi.ng for fiscal
year 1983-84 and will hold public hearings and
recommend action to the City Council.
Final decisions as to allocation of funds are
scheduled lo be made by the council by th e end of
October.
ApplicatJons, available at the civic center, 17200
Jamboree Road, lrvme, must be submitted to the
community services department. also at the civic
cen ter, by 5 p.m. Friday.
For infonnation, call Rose Anderson a t 660-3929.
ShOp Target Automoh11e Cenlers '°'
everyday low pnces on auto s.,.,,ce
• CrJO'Olt''•j r1•d t'• ,.~,vir f
• Wtu•PI .J~<,punPllt trcu\t ••rHI ,,.,,., 1
• Monrn~ .hr)( k' Mc f>t 1"''"''• tt •'
• Mufti._., ''"'j (:•hol\J\1 "'"', •C •'
• Au t ont.M10,m11J o.,1•t .u •
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All wo•k 01>1fo1m..,l llv """''''"'' , .. ,1.11!1·•·
.-1110 ll\4't..hill1H '>
Targ•t's guarani" We wen1 yoo to be
satisfied. It you ate not satisfied wr1h
~hlng you bought at Ta1get. please
return It. We will fix r1. exchange •1. make
an adjustmenl Of wolhngly return your
money. We wan1 you to be utoshed
2 area students
win scholarships
Blake Smith of Costa Mesa and Joe Gallegos of
Santa Ana have received two $400 grants from the
Elsie May Deeter Hearing Impaired College Scholar-
ship fund.
Smith attended Saddleback High School where
he was a three-sport letterman. He plans to enroll at
Cal State Northrid,e to study physical education.
Hu~ sa"1ngs ptr ~ ft Office
condo Dramatic u.x savinp Fast
apprectallon. T ommg never bc11rr
F1nanc1ng to fit YOUR needs.
Act fast
Magnificent early California dccOf
Prn11g1ous addrcu 8cau11ful
grounds Excellent ~rking On<
minute 10 fr~y 1.400 to 20.000
sq ft Cu,1om11~ to YOUR nttds
Dn•e b) call wme for informa·
lion 9 10 5. 7 days Miry W1hon
AIRPORT BUSINESS PARK
245 F1~hc:r AH Cosui Mc'>& 9262t
(714) 751-2752
Toyo steel
belted radials
Gallegos, who graduated from Costa Mesa High
School. plans to study computer programming repair
at Orange Coast College.
The 9Cholarahip was established in 1978 when
Deeter retired from teaching the hearing impaired
program in the Newport-Mesa School District after
29 years.
"FAST
RESULT"
SERVICE
DlltECTOIY
For Res ult
Service Call
642-5671
bt. 122
"60 Years Of Tradition"
1923-1983
I
HAWAIIAN GET-A-WAY
THE MONTH OF AUGUST, WE'RE CELEBRATING
PHELPS 60th YEAR IN BUSINESS!
AND WE'RE GOING TO SEND SOMEONE TO
HAWAlll
IT COULD BE YOU
AND YOUR GUEST.
A PRIVATE LIMO TO THE AIRPORT, FIRST
CLASS AIRFARE, AND A FANTASTIC WEEK AT
THE MAUI MARRIOTI.
REGISTER ALL THIS MONTH IN OUR STORE
FOR YOUR HAWAIIAN GET-A-WAY.
Promouon. PrcMded ey:
SUNDANCE TRAVEL AOEHCY -
UNl'TEO AIRU~ES. MARRIOTT HOTELS.
8 FASHION ISLAND,
NEWPORT BEACH
1983
Addreee ~-----------------~
City __________ S1ate ----------
Phone (Work) ______ (Home) _________ _
I
Purchase Not Neceseary. Must Be 18 Or Older. j -~~:::.:.~.e:.::::t~~::.~-~,~~-:~~~~:::.~·:: ..
Rugged Mohawk truck tires
at everyday low prices.
46 99 Each 7 00x15 lut>e ryoe
e P\Js2 81 FET
Mohewtt Frontier XL or XL T trudi tns roa11e strong
alf·nyton constructl()(I and high load carrying
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deep lug deSlgn t~ excellent otf.the 1000 lraclion
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Ply l -Pnce 5,,. Ty1>9 lhHn9 Uch
1 00• ·~ (l fUO(· lype 6 4tH
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" needed rree of charge
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No adcllllOnal crwge tor cars wtth IOfSIOO tws
Of M condftlOfW'IQ R~ement P#lS extra •f
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When you buy tifes at Target. e\19f\ at our low
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• Puncture repetr for as long as
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Steel muffler -installed
24.99 Every<Jaylowprl(.e
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pertormance Sizes IC>f mos1 u S ¥1<' im00ti
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C'lamos e~lra '' necde<I
~---.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------~~~~----~~~~~~~~--~~~~~--r~-~
~---
#•
Aa Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. Aug. 11, 1983
NAMES IN THE NEWS
Natalie Cole is singing a happier tune today
By Tbe Associated Press
LOS ANGELFS -Having overcome a drug
problem and fear of losing her voice, smger
Natalie Cole is back in business with a new album,
control of her financial affairs and a fresh outlook
on life.
The singer. the daughter of the late Nat King
Cole, gave her mother control of her finances last
year in a court-sancUoned conservatorship, and
quietly checked into a rehabilitation center for
three weeks. She then underwent surgery to
remove throat polype that had put her in fear of
losing her voice.
The conservatorshlp gave her lime to put her
life back together, she said Monday during an
interview at the sprawling Benedict Canyon home
she shares with her 5-year-old son, Robbie.
"I was a very tired lady." she said. "I've been
working for 10 years now with very little
vacation."
• • •
NEW YORK -Actor Paul Ne wman. 58,
narrates an anu-nuclear television special that
sponsors say will be shown in 30citiesby the end of
the month.
The half-hour program, ··war Without Win-
A clue to eye
kids • cancer 1n
If chromosomes g et scrambled,
result can b e r etinoblastoma
BAR HARBOR, Maine (AP) -A finding that an
abnormal rearrangement of chromosomes can trigger
an inherited eye cam.<er wh ich causes blindness or
death has made it possible to identify some children
likely to get the disease, researchers say.
Ray White. a geneticist at the University of Utah,
said Monday he has discovered one way that a
previously identified gene can cause the disease
called retinoblastoma.
People carrying the retinoblastoma gene gener-
ally have inherited it from only one paren t, White
said. F.ach cell in their bodies carries a retmoblastoma
gene from the one paren t paired w ith a nonnal gene
inherited from the other parent.
According to classical genetics, such a person
should not get the disease, because retinoblastoma is a
r~ve gene -not becoming active unless a pair of
the cancer genes is present.
White found, however, that the disease c.an be
caused by improper cell division. When a cell carrying
a retinoblastoma gene paired with a normal gene
divides, it should produce two cells, each with one
retinoblastoma gene.
But what sometimes happens. White said, is that
the cell's chromosomes -microscopic strands that
ca.cry genes -get scrambled, so that after the cell
splits in two, one cell contains no retinoblastoma gene
and the other cell contains two. That latter cell will
grow into a retinoblastoma tumor, White said.
Speaking at a genetics symposium at the Jackson
Laboratory in Bar Harbor. White speculated tliat a
previously unknown category of carcinogens is
responsible for causing the chromosome rearrange-
ment.
Mostchenucalsand toxtns known to cause cancer
do so by sparking mutations in genes. The new
chromosomal carcinogens referred to by White do not
directly affect genes. rather they cause changes onJy
in the chromosomes.
Dr. Thaddeus Dryja. an ophthalmologist at the
Harvard MedicaJ School who has been collaborating
with White, said in a telephone interview from
Boston that the dl9COvery already is giving doctors
more informatwn about who will or will not get the
disease.
ln a family where one child hrut retinoblastoma.
it now will be possible to determine whether
succeeding children are at risk for or are protected
from the disease, Dryja said.
ln other words, doctors will be able to tell which
chudren are carrying the retinoblastoma gene.
The ailment, which strikes 200 to 300 Amencan
children a year, is cured 85 percent of the time in this
country, Dryja said.
But 1t frequently 1s fatal in other areas where it
often Is not diagnosed until it is too Late, he said.
MoID and dad are
really spaced out
HOUSTON (AP) -Astronaut Anna Fisher lB
the mother of a girl, born late last month, NASA
announced Wednesday.
Mrs. Fisher. whose husband Bill Fisher is also an
astronaut, gave birth July 29 to a daughter, Kristin
Anne Fisher.
Johnson Space Cent.er spokesman Steve Nesbitt
said the child was born on a Friday and that the
mother was back at work the following Monday.
Both parents a.re physicians. Neither has been
named to a light crew but are active m supporting
preparations for upcoming missions.
Mrs. Fisher is the second of the nation's eight
women astronauts to give birth. Margaret Rhea
Seddon Gibson. al.so married to an astronaut, became
the mother of a son a year ago.
Paul Seddon Gibson was born July 26, 1982. The
father is astronaut Robert L . Gibson.
Another woman astronaut had children prior to
being selected.
Painter burned as
• • • stove 1gn1tes paint
A commercial paint.er spraying kJtchen cabineta
in a Fountain Valley home suffered aeoond-degree
burns to his face, anna and legs when the paint was
Ignited by pilot on a gas stove, firefight.era sajd.
Barry Johnson, 31. of Fountain Valley. waa
working at 10331 Calle lndependencia about 1 0:1~
Wednelday when the paint caught and lnatantly
turned lnto Oames, said Fountain Valley battallJon
chief John Bolstad
Johnson was taken to the bum unit of the UC
lrvint-MedJcaJ Cent.er. Bolstad said No other injurtee
were r~port.ed.
ners," was filmed by cinematographer HaskeU
Wexler, whose other credits include the movies
"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" and "Coming
Home."
Viewers are asked to call a toll-free number to
pledge donations.
~a talie Cole Pa ul Ne wma n
.99 Eacl"I .99 Each
Arthur Kanegia, spokesman for the Center
for Defense l nformation, a Washington
anti-nuclear "think-tank," said Tuesday that the
money will be used tO pay for the television ume
and present testimony to Congress about nuclear
issues
• • •
LONDON French President Fra.acoil
Mitterrand on Wedneeday sent a ''get well"
bouquet of orchids and roses to Prime Minister
Margaret Tbatcber, back at work aft.er an eye
operation a week ago.
A spokeswoman at Thatcher's office said the
British leader al.so had received a good will
message from President Ronald Reagan after her
surgery to repair a detached retina.
Mitterrand's large bouquet was delivered in
an embassy car to Downing Street where Thatcher
was working, the spokeswoman said.
Thatcher, 57, returned to work Tuesday aft.er
four days in the hospital, followed by recuperation
at Chequers, the rural residence of Bntish prime
ministers.
• • •
HONOLULU -No charges will be filed
against the 15-year-old stepson of actor Tom
50°/o off
Mitte rrand T h a tcher
SeUeck, who was driving when a jeep plunged
three stories, injuring father and son, police say.
Because the accident occurred en tirely on
private property, no charges can be brought under
state law, even though the younger Selleck did not
have a driver's pennit or license, said police Maj.
Paul White.
Selleck, who was in the passenger seat of the
jeep when the accident occurred Sunday, told
police he was teaching tus stepson Kevin to drive
when the youth 10&t control of the vehicle.
.99 P,1 •
1S·OL Sltlloence sh•mpoo or condlllol14lf
.111tumitl•Cdlly CIP<I"" II I C.l••HNir,ns "'nt''P ,o.,, lldw "eeo., 1 rr. '' Rt>·J111d• ... ,, , t>0<h
8-oL JhirmKk shampoo or conditioner,..,
pH balanced ChOO!.e E F A or Gek!JP
formula<>
An N1ture Mtde •ll1mlns and supplements
tor vou• •;vndy
Soon famtty n1ptons '" t--, '". t. ..-.. ' 100 n;uM-fl\ Sto ,., ..... ::-.;' ,, ...., • ,r ,. , ,
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11 ·oz. Giiiette Foemv shave cream ''" 1
<,moolh 1mt()(lable '>II.iv .. R1•y11lil•
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Scan p.p.r 1owets n l>•l tl4 <,tJ •1 • '"
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1.led01ng s.ive• ni oo•r.eld•n dPO JOr1z nq
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80-ct Soon Baby Fresh Wipes d" "'' mo,.,,,.,,.,eo towt>telle'> l(J( ,c,p 1• "'""I
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or J 01 ombrP<,
18-01. Scotc:h91n' l•bric: protec10< ,,,.~, ...
•eoet lt0\KI spoils l l~e •I on vour rou• ,.,
Cat .Jotlolstery '""' OUIPrwl'dl
All,_! ctr su1 r1.1" ''"•"""""II h.11nP"S
•ear tac:inq lor 1'11Rnl'i lw11 lu1w,11oJ tar•"•l
POS.hons fOf toodle• c; Ill" coordtnlttng bar SIOOI •• l '~ • sale 1 99
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lrOftt•r~ cartriOg"'> m,111uats HAndsomt•
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10" We«! Eater .iec:trlc string 11,,,_
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rocks an<J barh"" Q•a~ out Bl.le 11
Ht~ Sul)l'9m• IOW -40 motor °'' 1
ket-tu \'llh' J fl"t( t•"<J•f'h toHn 1 '"' .,
Commerce WtMn>et Blvd east ot AllllntlC Avr
Soult! 01te: Ftre1!0M Blvd et the lonQ 8f'..Ch r re-11y
M111fle1U11 ... ctt: ~lledl Blvd II MMNl!IM Beech Blvll
Torrence: SeoulvtOll Siva one bloCll out OI HllWlhO<M 8tv0
Long 1 .. e11: Atl8nhc Avo south of O"lt Amo 81vd
long INch: Btlflowoi lllY<l \OUth or the S1111 Oieou r wy
Lont h•cfl; South St oorwoon c11orry Avt 111'\d 11111-000 Qlvn Huntington INcll: Ael8Mt Allt! 11 BrOOMh\ifst
20' ~t edginQ. rc•q "> 99 ule 3 49 S10t ~ ••r '"" "'"' t1 .• ''<•t"' t ,,
TARGET Open Mond1y 1hrough F rtdl y 1 O am tot pm,
Seturdey t')O am lo 7 pm, Sundey 10 em tot pm
Auto Se!'flce Ctfltttt open Mond1y through' 1td1y 1 30 em tot pm,
S1turd1y I 30 em to I pm Sund1y 1 O 1m 10 $ pm
An1llelm· Lincoln A.... el CrMGent Wty "'''wit t Of the Stn111 Ant FIM*ty
Oll'cMn O,_· Broolltll.ol Ill WHllll~~ttr Avt f\1'11 '°''"" ot 0.0tn Otovt Fr.-wav
0 lltdell 0,_ HlrbQt 8'vd 81 C "80ll'l#I A lftll\llC! Al~e: MlllO SI 11 Pllm Avenue
CoW!e: A1uM Blvlt t0\1111 ()I Arrow HIQ11WllV
Ont., lo: North Mounl11n Ave iust teulll QI
$lwl Bt<Mr OtnO r retw11y
------------=----
Horthrlefte l:talbQa QMJ ftl NO<Uholl
P1cOl!!\1 l1V•et C.i.,,on 9tvo at"'" 0 '111•111• c .. ,
or thfl Qololon St•t• F'1e&w11y
01n1rd V<nf'yNd Avto "" thl> l/f'f\flffH rr"""""V ...... r
10 1h11 i; tPllOl'I&<* Snoooono C4'nuw
l 1n le!nardfno Norm 7 t" !\t nl H~1"''""' 11..,.
Sin lern11dl110 Olilllll'' &low Rona ,., .. , ., .. ~' "' 1 1 •,{
I
I
J
J.
Jim Cornwe ll holds
H tuffed sausageH
ug li4'Sl dog contest.
-A'1 WHploolo
Woodrow~ the
who won the
'Ugly all over'
Woodrow is a real eyesore
PETALUMA.Calif. (AP)-Lu Lu's no mutt,
and she stunned pageant judges with her unusual,
eye-catching body -utterly hairless, except for
her eyelashes.
The Chinese crested took on some real dogs
Monday to win the purebred division of the World
Champion Ugly Dog Contest.
But Lu Lu didn't go on to compete for the
overaU ugliest title, won by Woodrow , an
honest-to-goodness mutt wh06e admirers have to
admit looks a bit like a stuffed sausage.
The 30 canine contestants from around the
state were judged by the ungainly appearance of
their rumps and the scruffiness of their coats. The
more rrusproportioned their bodies. the more
unappealing their snouts, the better.
The triumphant Woodrow, a terrier-corgi
mix. is "really ugly," said William Wright, one of
three judges at the Sonoma-Marin Fairgrounds on
Sunday. "The body is ugly -it's just ugly all
over"
After taking the title, the black-and-gray
mutt waddled off panting, leaving his master Jim
Cornwell of Petaluma with a troph y and a
25-pound bag of dog food.
Death penalty
action lagging
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Unresolved legal and
procedural concerns about California's death penalty
are sull delaying disposition of capital cases six years
after tht• Legislature enacted the law. authorities say
On ly ltl death cases have been decided by the
c:ourt-wllh 14 sent back for retria l...-and an
exe<ut1on. 1f 1t occurs, is unlikely at least until 1984.
With d1•ath sentences being imposed at the rate
or Ont.' a WC'Ck . the state Supreme Court finds itself
fal·1ng a ba,•klog of 133 capital cases
Steps have been taken to speed tht! review
prcx..-ess. but some legal authorities fear tht! problem
wiU gN wotse before it gets better.
"We've almost come to the point where it's
beyond the capal'aty of the curre nt system to handle."
Deputy State AtlOmey General W1lliam D. Stein
said "Wemayhavetostar1 thmkingaboutsome morc
dr ast1<: steps "
State Public Defender Quin Denv1r says cases
are not only more numerous but more complex.
"Briefs are vo luminous. trial records huge and
the cases ra1se hard. novel issues." he told the Los
Angeles T1mc.'S. "The problem JUSt has to get w orse."
Critics often accuse the high court of foot
d ragging and preventing use of a law they only
reluc:t.antly have upheld But de fenders say the
backlog 1s the resuh of other factors,
Chief Justice Rose Elizabeth Bird says capital
backlogs have arisen before and she has vowed to
expc.'<i1te the review of current cases.
"I do not intend, nor does the court. to aUow the
situation to an se, as 1t did in 1972. where people are
s1 tt1 ng on Dea th Row for 11 years or more." Btrd said
m an interview published today "I am determined
that the cour t w1U not permit decade-lo ng cases ll>
build up as they dad in previous years."
Toy box sa J~ety
stan dards readied
WASHINGTON <AP> -The Consumer Prod·
uct Safety Commission appears ready to adopt a
mandatory safety standard for toy boxes that have
been blamed for the reported deaths of 21 children
over the last decade.
A vote on the proposed mandawry standard is
not scheduled until next week, but it appears that a
majority of the five-member commiMion supports the
st.arr n.'<.'Ommendation
The deaths and two cases of brain damage
resulted from strangulauon when open lids fell on
children who were leaning into the toy boxes, Elaine
T yrrell or the commission's orficc of program
management said Wednesday
T yrrell presented the staffs proposed require·
menl that hinged box lids drop no more than a
half ·Inc h from an open position
The mandator y 8tandard ls needed because only
nine of the 23 companies that make the product are
members of a trade assocla\lon that has sought to
dt·vclop a voluntary standard. 'ryrrell said.
Th(' Toy Mnnuh1cturers As3oclation has ob·
tamed voluntary compliance agra·menla from 18
firm., thnt make 89 percent of the 700.000 toy boxes
produ<.'f'd each yt"tlr. she said But the association
would have trouble en.surin.g towl compliance with
th1• voluntary st.nndard, 11he said
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, Aug 11, 1983 "'
Extra attention helps curb dog jealousy
WEST LAFAYETTE. Ind. (Al') -Don't let
jealoua dogJ> lie. an animal behavior expert advises.
Pamper them, praise them, shower them with
attention and if that fails, psyche them out.
A ne w Jove or a new baby In the family can make
dogs feel left out and many pet owners mishandle the
situauon. says Dr. John Stump, a professor m Purdue
Umverstty's School o! Veterinary Medicine.
The same approal'h a1ao works w hen a dos I.a
jealous o! a new boyfriend or girlfriend. the expert
says.
The dog's owners and the guest can it.age a
scenario tn which the owners withdraw from the
animal on a day they know the guest will appear,
then have the guest as the focua of attention for the
dog.
"YouCAn l.iias the system a little bit by having the
guest give the dog a food treat," said Stump. "The dog
will have a hard time being resentful or upset when
it's eating eomethlng It likes, so that just manipulates
the situation a little more and probably speeds up the
dog's acceptance of the 'intruder."'
"When someone new, especially a baby, arrives
on the family scene, the dog finds ttselC giving up
center stage to a new 'pet,"' S tump said. "The dog
begins viewing the intruder as an adversary. and its
anxiety may escalate into snarling and even more
aggressive displaya."
Death sentence for noisy barker
Execution stayed as lawyer appeals for Virginia muu's life
Whenadogseemsputout by a new arrival, don't
put the animal out, Stump said Monday. "This makes
the animal all the more anxious and insecure."
Try to understand your dog's psyche, he said.
"People will often sense that the dog's hostility
stems from jealousy, so they'll give it more attention,
but only when the baby is not around. This only
reinforces the idea that the baby t.S, in fact, a real
threat to the dog's social interaction with the rest of
the family."
Instead, the dog should be pampered when the
"rival" is around.
"Lavish attention 9n the dog, yes, but only when
the baby is present, and essentially ignore the dog
when the baby is not present," Stump said. That way,
the dog learns that when it comes near the new
arrival, it will also get its share of attention."
NORFOLK. Va. (AP) -Max, a 3-year-old
mixed-breed dog, has been sente nced to death for
barking too much.
Neighbors here testified that the dog often
barks for up to 90 minutes when his owner,
policeman Thomas M. Atkinson, is away.
General District Court Judge Joseph A.
Jordan Jr. ruled T uesday that Max was a nuisance
and suggested Atkinson give his pet to someone
else. When the oCficer refused, Jordan ordered the
animal destroyed.
Atkinson's lawyer, Joseph A. Pennington,
appealed the order, so Max has a reprieve until a
circuit court judge reviews the case. Pennington
said he probably would seek a jury trial.
"We're not here executing dogs," J ordan said
after the hearing. "We're here trying to administer
the law and do it as fairly as we can. When there
has to be a choice between animals and people, we
have to choose people. It's that simple."
Atkinson srud his neighbors have pets that
bark more than Max, and he thinks Max tS being
singled out unfairly.
Some contended that "the dog was bemg
punished for the master's actions." It was
suggested that Atkinson be fined until he found a
way to keep the dog quiet, but the judge said the
law did not allow that remedy.
Atkinson characterized his dog as a gentle
animal that likes to play with children.
''The only time he barks is when there's a
stranger ~ound there," he said . "There's nothing
[can do about the met.er man coming around or the
mailman.''
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Ate Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
.MAllBDX
A tribute to Alicia
1 would like to make a tribute to a little girl of 16 that had no
family, at least no immediate family, but made a family out of the staff
of Back Bay High School. She was buried August 4, a victim of
diabetes. We all loved this little girl and l would like for someone else
to know what kind of a special pel"80n she was.
Alicia is nobody the world knew. she wasn't from high society or
attepded the debutante ball or even the Senior Prom. Alicia was a tittle
girl at Back Bay High School, the C.Ontinuation High School. Alicia
lived At New Alternatives, a group home.
Alicia was fair of skin, big, brown eyes, and a ready smile for
everyone.
Alicia excelled. She racked up 70 credits in one semester and
graduated an all-A student. This accomplishment at the contemporary
high school would be impoeaible, but Alicia tackled everything with
her whole being and everything she did w as the best.
Alicia suffered from diabetes, and despite the wonderful attempt
she made to lead a fruitful life, thediaeaae killed her. Alicia wanted to
be a nurse. She was awarded one of the highest 9Chola.rahips given at
Back Bay lllgh School as well as accolades from all of her teachen.
Alicia was a very special girl. She waa soft, sweet, and a beautiful
person. Alicia had a lot more goodness to contribute to the world, but
we at Back Bay were so lucky to be a part of the life of Alicia Helen
Linder.
SANDRA LINDQUIST
AND THE BACK BAY lllGH SCHOOL STAFF
Costa Mesa
City needs its ears cleaned
To the F.ditor;
U the sounds emitting Crom the
new Pacific Amphitheater Friday
were ''within the legal limits set
by the city of Costa Mesa," then
the city of Costa Mesa should
re-evaluate their standing.
We have complained to no avail
regarding the outrageous noise
created by the motorcycle races
every Friday night during the
sununer months, now, we in Mesa
del Mar are further subjected to
cacophony of ear shattering noise
coming from two directions on
Fridays and more of the same for
an additional three nights.
To add insult to injury. we are
also expected to contend with the
obst.ructive surge of traffic as
18-20,000 people make their way
to and from thia abomination on
roads that are hard presaed to
handle the OCC and Costa Mesa
High traffic during the 9Chool
year.
Our complaints regarding the
motorcycle races produced no
measurable results, they are still
there and they're still noisy. We
are being fed the same story all
over again in the hope that we
will become as tolerant of this
new venture as we have been
over the last. l say no way! I feel
the time has come for action.
Since no one will shoulder the
blame, I suggest that we unite in a
class action suit against the State
of California. the city of Costa
Mesa, its police department for not
enforcing the laws of the city, the
Fair Board, the Pacific
Amphitheater and the performers
(not necessarily in that order,) in
order to protect the value of our
collective properties and our indi-
vidual sanity.
VERONICA GRAMS
Costa Mesa
Keep the trash off the beach
To the Edi tor:
I. too, am repulsed by the
inexplicable layer of vile rubbish
which blankets our beaches.
I, too, sincerely uphold the right
of all to enjoy the comforting
beauty of the coastline.
I do not, however, leave my
refuse and debris in others' neigh-
borhoods and backyards, as they
do in mine.
I submit, therefore, that people,
and nothing more, be allowed on
the beaches. No bags. no food, no
picnics. Well, exoeptions could be
made for bathing !uits, towels,
and Frisbees.
ELMER WOODY
Balboa
l. M. Boyd /Saucy tidbit
There is no record that any A. Because it'acloee tothe upper
native of Tat.ary -any Tartar -arm bone known as the
ever invented a sauce. "humerus," probably.
Q. How many would-be at~
tomey9 take the bar ex.am ~ery
year? How many pass?
A. In 1982, 63,339 took it,
nationwide; 62.5 percent passed
on the first try. 34 percent on the
second. It's said 30 percent of th0&e
who pass can't find jobs as
lawyers.
San Antonio is that Texas town
most oft.en named by Texans
them.selves aa their "favorite
city."
Moequit.oes prefer to fly up-
wind.
Why anybody would want to
put a bumper sticker on a Rolla
Royce I do not know. but such has
been witneseed. It read: "My
Other Car."
Understand old-style braaa
bedsteads still are much in de-
mand in Africa. But correspon-
dents say the once-lively market
there for barber chairs is shot.
Two out of three new products
fall. So always launch three at a
time, r say. Simple.
Here ifs writ that three out of
four people who wie sign language
have no hearing defects, and that
20 percent of the.e don't even
work with the deaf! Could that be
right?
World's oldest surn.ame ia said
to be Katz.
Say this one swifUy: "Flesh of
freshly dried flying fish."
U it'a a stocking without a foot,
When you are a guest in call it a "hUlhion."
Arabi.an Janda. do not aak about
the well-being of your host'• wife.
That's bad fonn.
A moequito has muacles, too.
But they tighten up when the
temperature drops below 60
degrees. F. So they can't generate
the 300 wingbeat.s a teCOnd needed
to keep the little ruca.l ln the air.
Q. Whyiathataensitivenervein
your arm c.al1ed the "funny
bone"?
ORANGE COAST '-
Daily Pilat
Lawrunowen kill 30 people a
year and maim 60,000. In the
tender partku1ar, th.la ia tragic.
But to a cal.lowed fellow. it'•
compmMUng to mull the dull
generality 10met.ime9. AA he puta
h1a feet up and tuma on the game.
Q. What's a "zone"?
A. A cram between a zebra and•
hone. Zorle9 are gray with l•lnt
atri pee on the hindquarters.
LISTEN, MAlaiN, I
WENT AlONG WITM V0U
ON M PINE T~, BUT lMrnE:s NcJ A D\MNED
lHING I <AN ~ ABaJ1"
SEA <1ULLS TAKJNC, \'olJR
OUTFIELDER?!
Don't underestimate Fidel
WASHINGTON Fidel
Castro, the unruly ruler of Cuba
and the godfather of Marxist
revolutions in the Americas, has
been undergoing long-distance
psychoanalysi.s by U.S . in·
tell.igence experts for almost a
quarter of a century. Along with
the gray hain that are overtaking
his beard, he has displayed certain
changes in behavior. For instance:
-Once a boozer and woman-
izer, Castro has now become
something of an ascetic. Vodka
and rum no longer aeem to give
him the same stimulation. He has
even cut down on his beloved
cigars. And the women who once
shared his private life have died.
His work has become his true
mistress, the psychological
analysts have concluded.
-On July 26, 1953, Castro led a
group of students in a dangerous.
almost suicidal attack on a govern-
ment barracks. The failed attempt
resulted in death for most of the
rebels and imprisonment for
Castro. To the analysts, the
auiddal nature .of the attack
demonstrated his willingness to
take desperate risks. But he has
now become more canny and
cautloua. At the masaing of U.S .
military power in Central Ameri-
ca, for ex.ample, he began sending
up conciliatory smoke sign.a.ls.
-ID tlae 19501, Castro bunt
into the conununist world still an
untanned entity, a flamboyant
figure among drab, almost
anonymoua Manciat leaders, an
unguided m.isaile apt to veer off in
any trajectory. He chafed over the
rigidity of communist dogma and
Q
-JIC_l_l_ll-11-11-1 -.jd
bristled when the Kremlin tried to
tell him what to do. But today, he
is a hard-bitten. calculating com·
munist who is regarded by the
Kremlin as a most dependable
puppet.
The grim communist ex-
perienoe, however, has not putout
the fire in Castro. He remains a
looming presence on the inter-
national scene by virtue of a
dramatic flair and a genius for
propaganda. He has a tendency to
pre9ellt himself to the world in a
series of triumphal speeches. with
rhetoric that raises the hair on the
back of the neck.
The psychoanalysts admire his
incredible memory for detail. He
rumbles and roars for hours at a
time, artfully composing his
speeches as he goes, without not.es
or teleprompter. He has the or·
atorical artillery, the brains and
the guile to create a great deal of
m.i8chief whenever a fortuitous
conjunction of events arise.
Ca1tro's personal life fascinates
the analysts. He was born through
a union of his middle-cl.asa father
and the Castro family maid. He
wenl to a Catholic school, then to
university and law school, where
he reportedly carried a gun and
was a campus bully.
Hewasalsosomethingof a rake.
He drank heavily, smoked great
quantities of cigars and had many
transient love affairs. Though he
never married, he did father a aon
by an unidentified mistress.
Castro had at least one laating,
intimate relationship -with
Celia Sanchez. She was cloee to
him in the earliest days of the
revolution, and over the years
bec.ame both lover and confidante.
He trusted her completely; in {act,
she waa the one who _shoee where
he would sleep-a d.l1ferent pl.ace
every night.
Sanchez died in 1980, and there
are reports that Castro has never
completely recovered from her
death. Not only was she a hwnan-
izing influence on him, but he now
has few people he can trust the
way he trusted Sanchez.
Tile ollly otlaer woman known
to be close to Castro, named Santa
Maria, committed suicide the same
year -reportedly in despair over
the direction the revolution had
taken,
Two thing$ have dominated
Castro's life -his overwhelming
ambition and his hatred of the
United States. Ironically, more
than two decades of hostility and
plotting by U.S . presidents have
helped to give Castro an exalted
status among Yankee-hating na·
tions that he would not otherwise
have. So while he hates us, he
depends on Washington's enmity
to further his d.reama of bigger
things.
TURF TUSSLE: A former con-
gressman and a former news-
paperman are rattllng the teacups
m Foggy Bottom, where both
want to play a.leading role in U.S.
policy toward East.em Europe.
The two turf battlen are F.d
Home of the Tsetse fly
A cousin of mine was given the /:...',
name "Charles" at birth but ·~ j
everyone called him "Chad." --------~··.;.1
On the strength of the few brief AllY lllllY times I a pent with this distant .
cousin, I've been thinking of -----------
applying to the State Department
for a job as an expert on the
African nation of that name. The
State Department needs he.Ip.
The United States has dis-
patched two Awacs apy planes,
~rted by F15 fighter planes, to
Chad becauae its northern border
ia under attack by rebels under the
direction of the intematJonal bad
guy, Col Muammarel.Qaddafi, of
Libya. U he's such a big ahot, why
doesn't he make himlelf general?
Tbl1 could lead toa serious war,
ao it behooves all of us to learn
more about this little country.
Because of my cousin 1 feel I'm
better informed about. it than most
Americans and today I'm golng to
share that information.
To begin with, Chad is bigger
than two football fields. Much of
the specific information I have of
Chad, the country, not Chad, my
coWlin, comes from a map of the
world I have hanging in front of
my office window becauae I don't
Uke the sunlight coming in. I can
see from here that Chad ia smack
dab in the middle of Africa and
has no ocean on any aide of it.
I've read a little about Chad and
I believe that lf all the people in
the world took a vote on whJch
country other than their own
they'd like to live in, Chad would
finish last.
There are many good reaaona
why people wouldn't want to live
in Chad. In addition to not having
an ocean, Chad doesn't have much
fresh water or even a national
Quota system is not justice
By SEYMOUR ROSEN
Af(irmative Action and the
Quota System, in my opinion, are
unjultand riddled with Inequities.
Here are eome of my ~uona:
On the 1Ubjec\ of "mlnority" ... in
this country, women oonatitute 52
percent of the population. Ia that a
"minority?" Aaia.N att conlidered
a "minority", yet when we UM! the
criteria of pay differential. the
Aaiana' per t"Alpita i.noome la on a
par (and al.1l'pll-.lng at timel) the
Caucuian male-<:e>NJdered the
"majority" 1 b that ju.t1Jce?
AA I lllid, the Cauculans are the
~ty-yet the Hlspankla, who
belonl to the Cauculan nee, are c:omtdered a minority. Are you
confulll!d by now? Well, that 1a
what you call Afflnnatlve Act.Ion
by the U.S. Oovemnwntl
Let ua now touch on the
inequity of the Quota System.
.Becawe of the tnju.stJces of the
put ~ or 100 ye•rs, thOIC born in
thia UfetJme ~ being punish·
ed ... those who are working
diligently to further and better
their c.areera. A1J an example: A
police officer strives for a promo-
tion to a police lieutenant's poa~
ltlon. applying himself with dedi-
cation and achieves it by attaining
the highest acott. But ... he is
pamed over by a Wonwl .. a
black ... an HJ.apank with a le.er
ICO~. ls that justice?
Try thla scenario: An Ulegal
allencomea tothtacountry. A child
la born wbo aueomatically becom·
es a U S. dliun ... the child becom-
es an adult and hu uplratlona to
be • polioeman, • flttma.n, •
doctor ... what.ever. Slmply be-
c.aLUe of th~ Quo\a System, that
individual will pt preference
over your child, when you wen
born ln thla oountry ... your f•ther
wu born ln thll country .. .and h1a
father before him. who came to
the United Stat.ea lea•l-
ly ... oftenttmes waJ\lng anywhere
from two to flvt y~ars before
beln,r admit~. ta tMt just.fee?
The AlflnnatJve ActJon and the
Quota System should be ended. It
la the will of the people, u
recently proved by a poll taken
showing that 70 percent of the
people in th1a country are apinlt
Affirmative Action! Yet ... the gov-
ernment perallUI! Is that justice?
Allow me to quote H.1a Honor,
Supreme Court Juatloe Wllllam
Rehnqullt, who IWDI ti up mo.t
eloquently (United S\ata Steel
Workers, veraua Weber, June 28,
1979):
"There 1" perlJ.ps, DO devloe
~ cH.tructive to tM notion of
«1u.lity t.hAn the 'numerua
dau.t1.11'-theQuoi.. Whetherde-
acrlbed .. 'ben'6J> clJarlmJMUon.
"' 'alflrrMtl~ action', lbe tWda1
quota II nonet.Mhm • m!lldon ol
CMtel, • two-«fp 6wortJ tJaaC muat demean OM Jn Of'd!r ro
pf'f'f ~r anorher".
Gutwc coJumru.c Rolen » a
Newport UN rwidene.
Derwinsk.i, counselor to the St.ate
Department, and Richard Burt,
assistant secretary of state for
European affairs.
In his 22 years as a Republican
congressman from Illinois,
Derwinski was deeply involved in
F.astem European matters: he
hoped to have some influence in
that area at the State Depart-
ment. But Burt, a fonner New
York Times reporter. ia guarding
his authority and reportedly cuts
Derwinski out of the de·
ciaion-making process whenever
he can.
Part of the feud may be the
generation gap: Derwinsk.i is f>6;
Burt. 35. A World War Il infan-
tryman, Derwinski was first
elected to Congress when Burt
was 10 years old. There's also a
penonality clash: Derwinsk.i is af-
fable and outspoken. u.ted to the
freewheeling atmosphere of
Capitol Hill: Burt is polished and
cool.
WA'M' GETS THE BIRD:
James Boren, the tongue-in-cheek
president of the International
Aaociation of Profemional Bu·
reaucrats, ha.a bestowed the gadf-
ly group's "Order of the Bird" on
Interior Secretary James Watt for
his "idiotoxic" policies. Boren
defines "idiotoxic" as "any policy
that ia toxic or dangerous because
of the idiocy on which it ia bued."
Boren'• bird is a plaatic statuette
that "looks like a buzzard but is
really a turkey <th.at frequently
laya eggs in public." Llke many
previous recipients, Watt declined
the honor. So Boren gave it to the
Sierra Club to keep for Watt.
anthem to si.n8 before a big game.
Rhinoceroses and hip·
popotamuaee are the big game
they have there.
Lake Chad occupies a large
section in the eouthem part of the
country but It tuma out t..ke
Chad la only two or three feet deep
in most placet and oertainly
couldn't support an America '1 Cup
Race.
In addition to being dry, Chad is
hot. In the northern part, the
temperature average. 90 degrees
during the day, and thia la only
during the cool month.a. Durinc
the hot months, which outnumber
the cool ones, th.e temperature
averages 130 degrees during the
day and drops to freezing at night.
U you were plannll\g a trip to
Chad, th.la would make i\ very
difficult to peck.
Some of JM will probably want
to go to Child to see how your tax
dollan are being 1pent. f'd fO
myself for tomethlng important
Uke this but I don't want to mill
the firat GlanUI home pme.
To pt a line on what a trip
would COit. I called an old friend of
mine at Pan Am. You can book•
epecial exc:union flilht throuch
Pan Am for N ·I>Jamena for •
round t.rlp rate of $1900.22. Better
hurry before all the non-lll'nOldnc
INta &re pw. ,
Go fONWamed lhouch Ql8d ia
the home of the taetR fly, which
period.lc.a11y wt.,_ out moet of lta
aattle herda. U they h.-d a ~
like "Garden Siate" or "Famoua
Potatoea" on thtlr Uc:etwe pla._ ln
Chad, at would no doubt reed
"Home of the 1-IM fiy,"
The four mWJon nlllldenta of
Q\..t ...., MoUem. An1mAlt Of
Chriltlan. An Animllt beU.W.
that all animate and lnanlmale
objectl Wee rocb haw IOWI.
Th.ii la about •ll l ll:now of a..d.
-----------------1
--&~•.....-=<~•-·__,,~ .................. ~----.... ._....__,,_.,_....~.l"""!"'!T"T"-"!r-!'""-::-~---~·~~--~~--------~~~----~~~~----~~ ·-------
Boys of summer
While their heroes on the Dodgers and
Angels may he having their difficulties,
the Reds of Mariners Park in New port
Beach keep the spirit of baseball a live.
The 7 -to 9-year-olds play in a summer
league run by the Harbor Area Baseball
Program where some innings, at left, go
better than others.
han OU Think!
l ' , 1S C lf.41...t TO COSTA MESA ••• IN ADDITION TO
TOP QUALITY PHARMACEUTICALS, WE WOULD LIKE TO
ACQUAINT YOU WITH SOME OF OUR OTHER FINE DEPARTMENTS
INCLUDING: CAMERA DEPARTMENT, COSMETICS, HOUSEWARES,
SPORTING GOODS, UQUOR DEPARTMENT, CANDY, SNACKS AND
THOUSANDS OF OTHER GOOD THINGS FOR YOU AND YOUR
FAMILY ••• AND ALL AT PRICES YOU CAN APPRECIATEI
17th IT.
I YONI
175 E. 17th COSTA MESA
175 E. 17th COSTA MESA
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11 , 1983 ~ 11
Men's corduroy
The same genuine,
first quality Levi 's corduroys
you've seen regularly priced
in other stores for $19 to $20 .
• Reg 17 99
Levis teams up a legendary fit with sof1 m1dwalt-
corduroy for a pant that s right for any sporty
occasion Conon-polyester for machine wdsh1ng dnO
drying Bootcut Style with 5 pockets Navy light
blue brown tan or grey Waist sizes 28 to ~8
Advertised price good throuqh Saturda 1 Au..Ju::.1 1J
®TARGET
. . '
4( • • •
~I I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thursdav. Aug. 11. 1983
I
~
Big fight over
sex change paid
for b y welfare
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -Sinoe he waa 5 years
old, McKin.zie Hill has lived with a secret: the desire
to be a woman. But it's no secret anymore, mainly
because taxpayers' dollars a.re involved.
In January. the city's Welfare Appeals Commit-
tee agreed to pay for Hill's sex change operation. His
request spawned legal and bureaucratic battles that
have produced legal bills larger than the cost of the
surgery itself and a public outcry over the use of
taxpayer dol.la.rs.
Hill feels the operation is necessary.
Life as a male is like "living a disguise. It's like
Halloween every day," without a costwne, the
35-year-old wellare recipient has said.
So far the city has spent more than $17,000 on
legal fees for attorneys for itself and the welfare
committee. The amount, Hill claims, already doubles
the $8,525 he says the operation would cost at a clinic
m Colorado.
On Tuesday, following eight months of legal
wranglmg in which the city, in essence, sued itself in
order to overturn the committee's decision, Dane
County Circuit Judge William Eich reversed the
committee's decision, but ordered it to hear the case
again.
Though Eich did not rule on whether the
committee made the right decision, he said that state
law does not flatly prohibit the use of welfare funds
for transsexual surgery.
The city claimed in its suit that the committee
went beyond its legal powers and violated state
statutes governing the use of wellare money. State
law requires that aid recipients may receive medical
services outside Wisconsin only in emergencies.
Hill, who friends say has gone into hd.ing to avoid
public rl~~cule, has said the operation would be
performed outside the state.
The city also contended the committee based its
decision on hearsay, rather than testimony from the
doctors who had examined Hill, and that mental,
emotional and psychological problems should not be
handled by general relief programs.
The committee said It did not consider trans-
sexual surgery a psychologjcal treatment. but added
that it based its decision on doctors' opinions that cited
a high risk for suicide and life-threatening health
problems without surgery.
Eich agreed with the city, finding that the
committee's decision was based too heavily on
hearsay, and that a new hearing WM necessary
because of "legal errors in the conunittee'a rulings
and procedures."
Hill has said his money and health problems
began after an adven1e reaction to large doeea of
estrogen in June 1982 in preparation for the eventual
surgery. Estrogen suppresses male honnones and
allows the emergence of female characteristics.
Hill said he later developed llfe-threa\en.l.ng
blood clots, a side effect of the honnone. which
required two weeks of hospitalization.
The costly hospital stint, the inability to continue
usi.rig the hormone and the closing of the restaurant
where he worked tapped all of Hill 'a savings, he said,
forcing him to go on welfare and 9eek funds for the
surgery.
Exports Inay be
key to cuts in
jobless rate
NEW YORK (AP) -& the unemployment rate
dropped in each of the past five months, economists
gave credit to a resurgence of home building and auto
producti.on.
Yet with the July jobless rate at 9.5 percent of
the civilian labor force, compared with 10.4 percent in
February, economists say the key to more big gains Is
improvement ln a le&B publidz.ed, but equally
depresaed, buainea -exports.
A strong U.S. dollar haa been one of the main
obstacles to reviving exports.
·Here are aome questions and answers to help
explain the role of U .S. exports in the unemployment
picture:
Q . Why are exports 80 important?
A. It is estimated that about one American
worker in 12 depends on exports, either directly or
indirectly, for hia job. Economist.a at Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Co. estimate th.at l million ex-
port-related jobs were loo between 1980 and 1982,
accounting for 40 percent of the ri8e in total
unemployment in that period.
Last year alone, U.S exports to Mexico fell a
staggering 60 percent, turning a $4 billion U.S. trade
surplus with Mexico in 1981 toa $4 billion deficit last
year. The Federal Reserve Bank of San Franct.co
estimates that the alwnp in U.S . trade with Mexico
cost the United States about 200,000 jobs last year.
Q. Are U.S. exports declining now?
A. In the April-June quarter, total U.S .
merchandise exports fell I percent from the previous
quarter, according to the Commerce Department.
That, combined an l.ncreaae in Imports, left the United
States with a reooro $14.8 billion trade deficit.
Q. Who is losing exports?
A. The lo.es are widespread. Exporters o(
consumer goods have been big loeers, particularly in
the Latin American market. Manufacturers Hanover
estimates that u .s. shipments to Latin American
countries of bouaehold applianoe9 are running 43
percent below l.ut year'a level and 77 percent below
the 1981 level. Overall. U.S. merchandbe exporta are
running 15 percent behind 1981'• pace.
Woman electrocuted
by yogurt machine
BETHESDA, Md.(AP)-A Wuhlne'oh woman
waa electrocuted wh~ a YOIW't d.l.q>eNlng machine
develo~ a ahort drcult ln tM cafeteria of the
National InaUt.utet of Health, authoritlel laid.
Nlll offk:lala Mid Shirley Fotter was~ u
ahe tried to Ulilt another woman who bad receiwd a
shock from the dispenalng rMChJ.ne MC?nday. >.. ahe bent down to help the tn~ woman,
Foe~r·a leg waa ln contact with a metal eafe and her
cheek touched the dbpenllna machine, of6c:lala Mid.
Foster'• age wu not available.
The tnJured woman, ldentilled u UWan
Crawford, ~. of Sliver Sprtna w• lilted ln fair
condJtion at a local holptW. off.ldall ea.Id.
Dr. F.dwtn Becker of NIH ea.Id the around wire
had evidently become 1oc.e lnlide the rNCh1.ne and •
ahort drcult apparently developed 1n the motor.
-.,_ __
AD STARTS THURSDAY
AD GOOD THRU AUG. 17
Grab the kids and bring them down ~
to these a tores on Saturday, August
13th to see their friends SHORTY 8c
CHEAP CHICKEN.
LONG BEACH
9:30 lo 12
GARDEN GROVE
2 lo 4:30
MURRAY PHOENIX 10 SPEED
RACER BIKES
@p/~ YOUR CHOICE
MEN'S 27"
#3-6272
MIXTE 26"
#3·6571
J
(European Style)
~ ,4X8 PARnCLE BOARD
Vz" 397
¥a" 497
Pr•lly •bable hunk of Indoor building
material for the buck•. (Rule #5:
Never glv• th• wife particle board for
her birthday.)
"~PATTOll HIGH VELOCITY
•
• I AIR CIRCULATORS
~ 3997 I · .2 .. ~..._} 11" 6997
TheH 3 •PMd fan• whip up 3 time• a • much air a•
other•. UN th• 12" for one room. or the 18" (•o they
•ay) for a who I• houH.
Sound• like a deal. (What? Okay. tum lt down.)
AM FM •t•r.o catHU•. 1llmllne c:oaJClal •peak•r•. and
power boo•ter. All pre·wlred to go ln•a•y.
ARMSTRONG
FLOOR TILE
PLACE 'I PRESS
39cEA.
Yup. it'• that ea•y Hll·•ticlc
•lull In pallern1 llke Bradford
Brick. Palatial. Oak Knoll. and
mol'9. 12" x 12".
Al•o Hll·•tlcklng. 0110 12" x 12", but In Cord•n
Lace and Roman Court pott•rn1. !Rule 117: Alway•
put out th• cat and 9001 wh•n waxing th• floor.)
RULE #1:
NEYER OPEN THE DOOR FOR A GIANT
NEWT, NO MAnER WHAT HE SAYS.
I~ 5
:J
~
10
~
STYLE1 IE CARE
PAnERN STACKING
TABLES
2 FOR 5 88
Pollict pair for the patio.
Prudence. How about yellow? No?
Then let me •how you •omethlng
lnanahnond. That'•lt.
ACTIOll DfDUSTRIES
1t\Jlloc"'"'C'._, ADULT 4 99 SPRING BACK CHAIR
_, Th It It on• ol our Juvenile Spring Bock
..., ~ Cholrtalleril •grownup. To keoseolln t ~ your lovorlle color or pattern.
DIRECTOR CHAIR 6 99
White pointed fra me. Hal a nd bock In o
choice of colort IRul• "6~: Leto •mile be
yo1.ir umbrella. If the rooter dldn"t ahow up.I
~-':>< YALYOLINE MOTOR OIL
---30 WT. 72 t QT.
~-Our" L! =-1,1 IOW/ 40 WT. 82 t QT.
~
Rule #491i When changing oil. alway• drain the old
oll befo,. adding th• n•w. (Don ·1 laugh. I know
M>mebody who didn't.)
NEW!
3 Ill OllE PLUS
99c 90Z
Zlpe thru ru•t to lrH mec:hanlcal part• and ttop
equeak•. Get M>m• now and theM guy• wUl moll
you a O"E IUCl RDA tt.
.............. ---------
There'• •till a big •tretch ol p1cn1c weather ahead.
(Rule #H: N•v•H coolc baked bean• on the grill.
unleu they're in a pot.I
-------------------GLIDDEll SPRED
YEL VET rnnsa
LATEX BOUSE P IDfT
7 77
GAL.
Goe• on a• •a1y a1 mayo on a BLT, and clean• up
with 110 haule. too. Another goodie from Glidden.
In white and white only.
DEEP WELL MET AL PAINT TRAY 7 7 •
18" UllDERCOUNTER
LIGHT
397
Al.ogood over the co1.1nter or ln other dim •pot•.
(Rule #8: N•••r play ehtctronlc gamH In the tubby.)
WllfK FULL VIEW MIRRORS
4 PUEL 997 c:::;_:.....---------
Get a better look at what'1 5 PUEL happening behind you and be•lde
I 0 97 you. TheyalM>c:uttheglareand
helpellmlnate blind •pot•.
ALLISOI SUJI VISOR I 39
FILON
CORRUGATED
FIBERGLASS
PANELS
26" x 8' 2 66
26" I IO' 3 66
26" I 12' 4 66
Lightweight atuff to keep the aun and
rain off ayer head. In gr .. n or white.
(Rule #8: Never alt in front of the fire
and llaten to rnualc unleaa you have a
flreplace.)
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY, AUG. 11, 1983
COMICS 86
ENTERTAINMENT 87
TELEVISION 88
College football opener~ are
less than a month away, a11d
Penn State and Pitt expect
big years. Page B4.
0 I
~
a
Twins ar_en't the cure for Angels
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of ... Dell)' ..........
The last time the Minnesota Twins won
a season series from the Angels was 1977.
That same year the Angels finished m
fifth,place. 28 games off the pace.
This year, the Angels again lost the
season series to the Twins (losing seven of
13 c.;ontests) and by no strange coincidence,
they again find themselves in fifth place
trailing the Chicago White Sox by 7 Y)
games (nine in the loss column).
Indeed, you know things must be going
bad for the Angels when Twins desig-
nated hitter Dave Engle remarks: "This is
one of the first series we've taken from
any team."
What could possibly be next?
The Twins finished their 1983 cam-
paign against Manager John McNamara's
hapless bunch by exploding their way to a
4-1 victory before 27,510 at Anaheim
Stadium Wednesday.
Dodger-reject Bobby Castillo went the
distance, for only the third time in 21
starts this season. to up his record to 8-9
and lower his earned run average to just
something over 4.00.
The Angels, who had Castillo on the
ropes early in the game, sprayed a
buckshot of hits all over field through the
first four innings, but were unable to
deliver the KO punch, stranding eight
' ..
Carl Lewis runs, jumps and celebrates at World Championships Wednesday in "Helsinki.
...
runners during that span.
The Twins, meanwhile, fired off three
cannons-in the forms of Gary Ward,
Engle and Gary Gaetti-to compile a 4-1
advantage.
"California just plays us like we're a
pushover," said Ward, whose two-run
homer lO left-center in the third inning,
his 18th of the season, staked u.~ Twins to
a 2-0 lead. ''They think that they will take
CSff ANGELS, Page 8!)
. .. . . .. ,, ..
.V'ft JI Jiii
U.S. sprint power spelled L-E-W-1-S
HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -The
United States bu thrust ii.elf beck on top
aa the world power in sprinting, mainly
becauae of Carl Lewis.
The swift and powerful Lewi.a, who
nma with the speed of a runaway
locomotive, anchored the American
400-meter re.Lily team to a world record
Wednesiay night ln the inaugural World
Track and Field Championships.
ChW"Dlng down the final 100 meten to
the cbee.ra of 50,000 fans ln Olympic
Stadium, Lewi.a swept acrom the finiab
line well ahead of h.ia cloeest pursuers.
~ he did, he g.laqced at the clock.
"When I first looked at it, I thought it
said 38.8 (aeconds)," said Lewis.
"l did a doubJe.take. Then. I looked
again ... and I realiud it WM 37.8."
Actually, it WM 37 .86 .econdl.
The old record WM 38.03 by a United
States team in the 1977 World Cup at
DuelleldOrf, West Germany.
Preceding Lewb on the relay were
Emmit King, Willie Gault and Calvin
Smith.
Lewis, Smith and Kina allO had
finiabed 1-2-3 in the men'• 100-.meter
final Monday night. and~ led a 1-2-3
finilh in the Jona jump WtdnMdey m,bt.
The multi-talented 22-year-<>kl mm
Willingboro, N.J ., won with a leap of 8.5~
meters (28 feet, three-quarters tnch), and
waa followed by ~ Grimes at 8.29
(27-2 ~)and Mike Conley at8.12 (26-7 ~ ).
Despite the i.mpre91ive Joll8 jump
finlah, it WU the relay team that
commanded the most attention.
The Americana, once the world power
in the sprints, had slipped in recent yean,
failing to win a gold medal ln the 100.and
200-meter dashes in the 1972 and 1976
Olympic Games. .
And in 1980, the United States
boycotted the Summer Games. further
dhDitUlhing the American sprlnten'
~ty.
But led by~ who hM been ranked
No. 1 in the world in the 100 each of the
pMt two yeen, they are eolldly on top
aptn.
It took aome devastating performances
in the World Championships, however, to
make that authoritative.
"We have such confident sprinters in
the United States that we can win in any
World Championship," said Lewis.
He al80 said that the depth of the
American sprint team waa one reuon he
decided to bypus the 200 in this pree-
tiatoua meet.
Smith, the world record holder in the
100, ia running the 200, along with Larry
Myricks and £lllott Quow.
Srruth ii hoping for the same crowd
~ from the appreciative fans in
Olympic Stadiwn for the 200 that the
Amerlcana received in the 400 relay.
BlllBMRI
TONIGHT
FRIDAY
HLMM
T11a11 n .. ..................
TV-RADIO: See Page 82.
Twins'
Engle
a big hit
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of .... Oeily ,,_ .....
See if thts sounds familiar:
"We're JUSt trying to develop
some constStency It seems when
he hit. we don't get any pitching.
And when we get pitching, we
don't hit."
Another perfect description of
the Angels, right? Well, although
those remarks coul~ be applied to
Manager J ohn McNamara's
troubled squad, the observations
were actually supplied by catch-
er/designated hitter Dave Engle,
and they were voiced in regard to
the Minnesota Twins.
"I know the Angels have been
having those same troubles," of-
fered Engle as he was dressing to
make a quick getaway from
Anaheim Stadium Wednesday.
"To tell you the truth, I am sur-
prised at how things have gone
for them
"I mean, for the most part their
players are in their prime, or at
the peak of their game. They
remind me a lot of the Phillies but
without the age "
Engle, also without age (he's
only 26) and in his third season as
a major leaguer. appears to be at
the peak of his game as well. Over
his last 16 games, the USC prod-
uct and one-time Angels property
has manufactured 26 hits in 53
trips to the plate (a .491 average),
including six doubles. three
homers and seven RBI.
Those figures have helped im-
prove his overall average to a
brisk team-leading .338 (in 78
games).
But wait, 1t gets. better.
Against the Angels. Engle fin-
ished the 1983 season series with
17 hits in 27 at bats (a .630 mark)
with one home ruh (a solo shot in
(See ENGLE, Page B!)
Rams settle
differences
with Barber
Lasorda at loss for words
From AP dllpacd1ea
'lfght end Milt~ Barber ended
his holdout Wednesday and
signed a contract with the Rams.
Terms were not announced.
Last week, the two sides were
said to be only a few thousand
dollars apart, with the Rams re-
portedly offering $192,000 for one
year.
Barber, 30, passed his physical
and practiced with the Rams
Wedneaday afternoon at Cal
State Fullerton.
Barber is expected to begin his
teeond season as the Rams' start-
ing tight end. He was acquired in
a trade from Houston before the
1982 aeuon.
Barber, 6-3 and 237 pounds, has
caught 158 puees for 2.0~2 yards
and 14 touchdowns In his
seven-year career.
Before the Rams' exhibition
opener Saturday, Coach John
Robin8on had 1l.re98ed the im-
portance of Barber being in camp
at least two weeks before the
regular season started. The Rams
have three exhibition games re·
mainlng.
Robinlon alto had atreseed that
't waa preferable for the Rama to
, sign Barber than to make a trade
or pick another player up on
waJven.
In other news, the. Rama cut
four players, bringing to 80 the
number still in camp.
Kicken Charlet Stafford and
Alejandro DeAnda, halfback
Carlos Cuptdo and wide receiver
Hardy Moore were put on
walven.
Leaping high
Oakland outfielder Mike Heath went up, but not
far enough. He fell short Wednesday, and so did
the A's to eattle, 7-5.
·----------------
But ex-Dodger who sparked Reds' win isn't
CINCINNATI (AP) -Watch-
ing the Loe Angeles Dodgers
stumble to another defeat was
more than Manager Tom Lasord.a
could bear.
Lasord.a clOl'led the doors to the
Dodger clubhouse for 12 minutes
and reprimanded his players for
their lackluster performance
Wednesday night in a 9-2 pound-
ing by the Cincinnati Reds.
For good measure, Luorda
called an unusual morning work-
out for today to try to snap his
club out of the doldrums.
"Maybe they're trying too
hard. Maybe some of them are
tired. I don't know," Lasorda said,
eearching for an explanauon to
the Dodgers' third straight Joss.
The Dodgers, 6 'h games behind
fint-place Atlanta in ltle National
League West, wasted a chance to
gain ground u the Braves loat
Wed.nelday night. Loe Angeles
has dropped 19 of 33 games since
the All-Star break.
Luorda looked tired aa he sat in
a blue Dodger t-ahlrt after the
game with an unfilled food plate
in front of him.
"I don't know what to say," he
said.
A former Dodger minor leaguer
hE'lped to put the normally talk-
ative La~mia at a loea for words.
Rookie catcher Dann BUardello
drove in four runs with a two-run
homer and a pair of ground balls
to~ the Cincinnati offen.e.
BUardello was pk:ked up from
the Dodpra ln the off·ae_,.,, and
felt he wasn't given a fair chance
in Loa Anpln.
"They just kind of left me off to
the side,'\ Bilardello said. "They
On Tt' tonight
Channel 11 at 4:30
liked me as a person, but they've
got to like you as a ballplayer, too.
"I have nothing against the
players I played with (in the
Dodger organization) or the
coaches. I feel a little upset with
the people in the upper office."
Bllardello grounded out to
drive in a run in the second in-
ning, then slammed a two-run
homer in the fourth inninl(, his
fourth of the season, off loser
Burt Hooton, 8-6. for a 4-0 Cincin-
nati lead.
The Reds added three more
runs in the fifth off reliever Joe
Beckwith. Nick Esasky had a
two-run single, and Bilardello hit
into a run-producing fielder's
choice for a 7 -0 lead.
Cincinnati's Bruce Berenyi,
6-11. gave up five hits en route. to
his first victory since July 23. The
right-hander struggled., walk,ing
seven, but was helped by three
Cincinnati double plays.
i:~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
SPORTS BRIAK
Sociologist's study:
Title prize fights
linked to homicides
From AP 411palcbe1
SAN DIEGO -Heavyweight SI
prize fights and their coverage by the
media have been linked to an increase
in homicides by a sociologist who
conducted a study on crime statistics and the
championship boxing matches.
The national homicide rate briefly jumps by
an average of 12.46 percent following a heavy-
weight title bout, according to David Phillips. a
aociologist at the University of California, San
Diego.
This is apparently "the first systematic
evidence suggesting that some homicides are
indeed triggered by a type of mass media
violence," Phillips said in an article published in
the August issue of the American Socio)ogicaJ
Review.
"The evidence suggests that heavyweight
prize fighi.s stimulate fatal, aggressive behavior in
some Americans," he wrote.
The sociologist said his findings should be
considered preliminary until they can be repeated
by other researchers.
During the study, Phillips examined statistics
on all homicides committed in the United States
between 1973 and 1978. In that time span, there
were 18 heavyweight prize fights.
Revenge factor
hardly a factor
at all to Raiders
SANT A ROSA (AP) -When the New York
Jeta eliminated the Los Angeles Raiders from the
National Football League playoffs last season, it
brought to an abrupt halt the Super Bowl hopes of
the league's winningest team.
But when the teams meet in New Jersey
Saturday night, it won't be a night filled with
revenge motivation for the Raiders.
"We know it's the Jets, but we're not going to
tum it into a war," said Coach Tom Flores. "We will
still go in with a substitution plan based on who we
want to see of our young players, and that won't vary
just because of the game situation."
A week ago. when the Raiders r8:1lled fro.m a
23-0 deficit to beat the 49ers, 26-23, in overtune,
F1ores stayed with young veterans and rookies in the
final periods and the overtime session. In contrast.
San Francisco Coach Bill Walsh asked a number of his
starters to return to the game during overtime. The
Raider coach has said a number of times that's
aomething he won't do. just to win an exhibition
game. · C · San Fr · ) " "We were aggressive agamst anClBCO •
said F1ores, "but we were also pretty ragged. The
positive thing was that we rallied with our younger
players in the game."
flores said his regulars might expect to see about
two quarters of action against the Jets.
In other news, the Raiders have decided to break
their Santa Rosa training camp Aug. 18, moving
90Uth to their in-season facility at El Segundo in
advance of their third exhibition game.
Drag boa ts race
at Irvine Lake
The year's top professional drag boat race is
acheduled 1or this weekend, a three-day event
beginning Friday at Irvine Lake in Orange with 17
claaaes of boats involved.
Friday's echedule begins at 9 a.m .. with
championship qualifying rounds and continues
through the afternoon. Saturday's venue calls for
further championship qualifying rounds at 9 a.m. and
Sunday's final ellmlnation rounds begin at 9 a.m.
Over 250 of the nation's fastest quarter mile drag
boats will be competing and the event includes
$30,000 in prize money.
Among those entered are several current
national champions, including Villa Park's Mark
Lauz.on (blown alcohol hydro). Industry's Bill
Henderson (blown fuel jet), La Mirada's Rick Kyees
(blown gas hydro). Van Nuys' Chuck Fagan (blown
fuel flatbottom), Glendale's Curt Stewart (blown gas
flatbottom), Yorba Linda's Mike Fetterman (blown
gas jet). Corona's Johnny Harris (unblown gas jet)
and Fontana's Ralph Mills (competition jet).
Out-of-state competition includes world speed
record holder F.ddie Hill of Wichita Falls, Tex .. Bill
Vance of Burton, Mich. and Houston's Fred Bray,
among others.
HOW'D YOU LIKE TO
·· PATCH ~f~~~N:
..
Ll ·i)~"rJ l/ ~ ·~J£.i!JJ~~
SO THEY
WON'T EVER
COMEBACK?
Qulclt, c .. ,. ln•l•IW.. No Mtu .
Ho Sandlna. $" U• Now
Contain• •v•rylh•nl you llt t d to
ptrmantlllly r•P•" 18 II ol
creOt ' .
.• Alk llr llWl-IOTl• ,_..., ......,.,_..._D .. Cllllr .... 111 ..... ..._
Evans' h o m e r stuns Atlanta
Darrell Evus belted D three-run Iii
homer with two out In the ninth inning
to give San Franc1sc:o a 7-4 National
League victory over the West
Oivisjon-leadmg Atlanta Braves. Evans' 2Jrd
homer of the year came on a 2-2 pitch from reliever
Terry For lter .. Onie Smltb punched a two--run
single through a drawn-In infield in the top of the
13th Anti On M Green collected five RBI as St.
Louis snapped an eight-game
losing streak with a 9-5 victory
over the Chicago Cubs ... Biii
G ulllc kl o o pitc hed a
four-hitter for 7~ innings.
doubled twice and scored three
runs while Tim Raines and
Jim Wohlford singled in two
~ ~ runs apiece to lead Montreal to
a 5-3 triumph over the Ne w
York Mets. Gullickson, 11 -0.
EVANS has now won four in a row ..
J oe Lefebvre's seventh-inning triple knocked in
the tie-breaking run and Steve Carlton struck out
10 and registered his 296th career victory as
Philadelphia defeated Pittsburgh, 4-2 Carlton,
who gave up eight hits in 8 ~ inn~. now has
3,626 stnkeoul.s, the all-time high. He's 11-11 for
the year .. Houston's Dickie Tbon delivered a
14th-inning home run to give the Astros a 4-3
decision over San Diego.
Quote of the day
"I saw the lace in front of my face at the
eighth hurdle. What could I do about it? I
couldn't stop to tie it," -American hurdler
Edwin Moses, about the loose shoestring on
the way to winning the 400-meter intermedi-
ate hurdles at Helsinki.
Andrea Jaeger Chris Evert
Jaeger, Blount
battle it out
lfANl.tY llHOIJTON
Sore nsen shuts off Orioles
Lary Sorensen allowed six hits Iii
and struck out a career-hit njne batters
as Cleveland stopped Baltimore, 4-3,
Wednesday night to sweep a
three-game series from the slumplng Orioles, who
have now 106t five in a row Sorensen, 6-9, fanned
five of six batters during one stretch. Ken
SIJlgleton'a three-run homer was the only damage
Baltimore could in flict ... Elsewhere in the AL,
Tony Armas slugged a three-run homer and relief
star Bob Stanley put down a Texas rally in the
runth as Boston gained a 4-2 victory. It was the
25th homer of the year for Ann.as, the AL's home
run leader ... Dave Righetti and George Frad er
combined on a 10-hltter and the New York
Yankees capitalized on Toronto defensive lapses
for a six-run fifth inning as the Yankees routed the
slumping Blue Jays, 8-3. It was the fifth straight
victory for Righetti, 13-3, who has not lost since
June 24 ... Ron Roenlcke hit his first homer for
Seattle, a three-run shot capping a five-run rally,
and the Mariners unleashed a 14-hitattackina 7-5
win over Oakland, snapping the latter's five-game
winning streak ... Moote Haas, one of the hottest
pitchers in baseball since mid-.June, fired a
three-hitter and notched his sixth straight victory
as Milwaukee dealt Kansas City a 4-0 setback ...
Rain wiped out Detroit's game with the Chicago
White Sox.
ENGLE ...
From Page 81
the fourth inning Wednesday)
and eight RBI.
Not too shabby for someone
who has yet to put in one full
season in the majors.
"I'm going pretty well right
now," Engle modestly admitted.
"And I've always had pretty good
games at Anaheim Stadium. I
don't think I try any harder -
but I sure get better resuli.s."
Engle said he left more than 25
passes for friends and relatives
who came to watch him play
Wednesday
"I don't know w hat it is. but I
always seem to come in here and
do well,'' noted Engle, who calls
San Diego his home during the
off-season. "Maybe it's because
it's nice for me to come m and
play in my home town."
Da ve Engle
Engle was a No. 3 draft choice
of the Angels m June of 1978. By MANHA TT AN BEACH (AP)-Tempers flared '79, the orgaruzauon had traded
after a doubles match at the Virginia Slirru tennis him to Minnesota, along with out -
toumament, with Renee Blount accusing Andrea fielder Ken Landreaux, and
Jaeger of knocking her down in the locker room. pitchers Paul Hartzell and Brad Gar y Ward
McEnroe boo e d , but wins
MONTREAL -Top-seeded John ~
McEnroe had an altercatJon With the
fans and a mUd struggle wlth hi.
opponent, but as expected, won his
second-round match Wednesday over Snwl's
Marcos Hocevar. 6-2. 4-6, ll-l and advanced to the
third round of the Player's lntemationaJ tennis
tournament.
McEnroe berated a l.tnesman who called a foot ·
fault on h1m while he was servtng at deut-e in the
final game of the match, but that was the only
volatile incident. McEnroe, who was roundly
booed after that, said later that he Jet the fans get
LO him.
· Earlier he had prompted laughter when he
waved good-bye to a man and woman who rose
abruptly to leave in the middle of play. The
spectators were scolded by the chair umpire.
"Sometimes I play better (when I get angry).
but today I played worse when I got annoyed at the
people," said McEnroe. "That's why I have to cut
that out. These fans certainly bring you back into
the real world, I don't really understand them." l
Philly fans choose Schmidt I
PHILADELPHlA -Philadel-Iii
phia fans have elected third baseman r
Mike Schmidt as the club's all-ume
greatest player. the Phils announced
today.
Schnudt, the team's career leader in several
categories, was honored in a vote for the 13-man
centennial Phillies' team.
Television, radio
TV: Baseball-Dodgers at Cincinnati, 4:30
p.m .. Channel 11.
RADIO: Baseball-Dodgers at Cincinnati,
4:35 p.m., KA.BC (790).
ANGELS ...
From Page 8 1
four games from us, or however many
gam~ we play them. We're just as good as
they are and sometimes their pitchers will
give us home runs, too."
With the way they're playing, ifs hard
to imagine Ward would get any disagree-
ment from the Angels.
"We had men on base every inning until
the fifth, then he shut the door," said
McNamara 90ftly. "We just couldn't get a
base hit to sustain a rally ... but I think '
you've heard that before.
"When you take (Doug) DeCinces out of
the middle of our lineup, and you have
some guys who aren't having the kind of
year they had last year, you're going to
have a hard time putting runs up there."
* ANO•L NOTE'-J>llclll"9 coecll Tem ~.~vs r..
will rellre alter Ille current '"'°" Cielleret ~n-
911Ult h VH I, In •n etttmot to '"' et10ther llvt oitc,.lng
•'"'· lltl<I teil<l agetn with Clevelencl Wtcl"ff<l•v •ncl • _,
mev .,. lortllCOmlng Tilt Angall l\e<I wor-tcl out • 1.-.oe lor rl11ht·nane1e< Liii aanre' N r!W In tilt tter. Dul aerllt<
In nil sttrt '"•' night, orornpttv we111 oown "'"" • P<Jlled hemstrl"9 aer-•r woutcl a11eln aoour to De tM ._.,
oou11>111111. •11-n k1 llMt¥WI Md Nafl •~•.., 1 also 11tvt to bf cons'-tcl unclldelitt Outfleldr ....., Clar11 (Mllartled rlglll l.llOU!dt<I WH etlgtl>le to come off "'9
CllMDled lht Wt<lne\d8Y Dul M<INDt< Jetwl Mc.._.. Mid
a oe<:lslon r-rdl"9 C&erk won't lie -untn Frldev o.... ~. trvt"9 to ovefcome beet. or-..• IMI
l'lave "'°' 111m •lclet!Mcl line• June 1s. Mid ,,. 11 ~ "9 can De ru ctlvet.ci sometime during tr.. IMm'• nut roed trio whlcll O.Olns Monon Jaeger denied the allegation late Wednesday, Havens for Rod Carew.
saying Blount had fallen down when she "nudged"
Blount into a bathroom for a "talk" about their S t r 1 c k 1 y a l h 1 r d
dispute. baseman/outfielder in his brief Yolanda takes stakes victory
Jerry Diamond, executive dU'ector of the pro career, Engle lS being con-DEL MAR (AP) -Yolanda effort in the six-furlong event tor
Women's Tennis As.9ociatJon. said m a statement, verted into a catcher by the scored a four-length victory over 2-year-olds.
"TheWTAdisctplinarycommitteewillmeetafterthe Twms, a positJon his father play-Pretty Prospect in the $54,600 Pretty Prospect, 117 , and rid-
Virginia Slims tennis tournament or at the U.S . Open ed in the old St Louis Browns Junior Miss Stakes at Del Mar den by Ray Sibille. returned $9.60
to determine what action. if any. should be taken." farm system Wednesday. and $5.20.
Meanwhile, Chris Evert Lloyd had no trouble "You've got to ride these things Yolanda, carrying 117 and rid-Early Quest, 117, and with
knocking out JoAnne RusseUl, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2. for 88 long as you can" he com-den by La.ffjt Pincay, paid $8.20, Patrick Valenzuela riding, paid
The trouble began during the afternoon match mented of his sudden resurgence. $5.20 and $3.60 for her winning $4.20 to show. in which Jaeger and Paula Smith defeated Camille .------------;;:;._-----------------------------
Ben jamin and Blount, 6-3, 4-6, 7-6.
Jaeger accused Blount of calling "Out" as she
returned J aeger's serves. There were also accusations
of the players aiming their shots at each other.
The dispute continued off court, said Blount, 26,
who said she waited a while outside the locker room
before going in. ·
"I waited outside 10 minutes before going into
the locker room because I knew Andrea was upset.
That's when she started shoving and pushing me. l
ended up falling to the ground.
"Her behavior was unprofessional. There are
rules of conduct among professionals that you should
follow."
• CD > ·-,,,
• c
CD ~ • :Ille
CD • c ·-
llllyPlllt
Claulfled Advertltlng
642~78
We have rates )()'ll, undN
\landard r.Jre\ for drivers
between rhe aRe' of 30
dnd60
There·~ ,, icood r<-a\On for
1h1' r arm('rs knows 1ha1
tht'\I' d11vN\ tend to be
\dler dnd more careful on
th(' ht!(hW.!)
You're the rlrrvers who
have fewer .>ccident\
Thill\ why Farmers nea11'tJ
our J0/60 fl•ld•.tRe auto
policy II yov quality. you
< ouki \.il\ll' S1Jb\t•n1>ally
on your p<em1um..
l.irm('rs lnwr.J~ Group
I\ working < orat.intly 10 kl'f'fl
th.-(C~h Of lllSUlfl\Cl"
clown, ~nd 1hr .-mo.mt nf
prott't1tOn up "'nd thl\
J()/&Q p•< k.~Kt' dUIO polt(. y
I\ One' W.\Y wr rio II Why not
t•ll m••l
~"" • J ..... to 00• ltil' .... .,._ •""ti .... <t4ll ......... ···~ ... IZ11 ............ .,.,. t..,.... w • .-
~ ...... Vf .. A .. UM
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1T·n&-&4l 1138911
.... ZS.91
2666 HARBOR BLVD . IN COSTA MESA PHONE (7141 546-7080
I' 1 ---------'------
··-• .
'
FOR THI RIC ORD
~ • • 'f •
MAJOA LEAGUE STANDINGS
American LHVU•
Chicago
Kan'8t Cltv
Tues
O.klana
AM!lb Minnesota
Seattle
Balllmore
Detroit
Mltwaukft
New YOrl•
Toronto Boston
Cleveland
WllST DIVISION W L 60 $1
SJ SS s. se
SS 60
S4 60
0 61 u 69 l'1$T DIVISION
62 " 63 ..
6J ..
62 ..
61 SI
S6 SS
4 AS W.,._...v't Sc~
MlntWllOI• •. A"99h 1
New Yoo. a. Toron10 3 S..11141 7. Otklancl S
llo11on •. Teau 2 Cltvetancl •. 8a1tlmor• 3
Mllwauk" •. ICent .. CllY O
f'cf.
S41
•91
4 1 .,.
47• .a9
39S
569
S6I
S6I
S64 S4S sos
OS
Ga
.,,
7111
7
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Chlc;ago el 0.lrolt, Pl>d rein
T-v'• Goe~ Mllwaull" <Porter •·SI et Toronto
IA .. aender 0-S), <n> N-Yori. IFOfltenot 4·1) at Ottroh
!Rozema I· 71. lnl ICantas Cllv (Rasmuuen H)) al Bo'1on IOMtcla S•S). (n)
Balllrnor• (Ramirez •·71 at Chlce110 (8annltier 9·9), <n>
Minn.tote (Viole 5·9) at Oakland
(Codlroll l ·I), (n)
Onl• oemes scnecluMt<I
Allanla
°"""' Houston Sen Dleoo
N1ttonel LNgue
WEST DIV1$IOH
W L 69 4S
61 so
S7 S4
S6 57
Sen Francl1co Cincinnati S4 S9
52 62
PnliaCM!ohla
Monlreal
Plitlburoh
St LOUii
Ctllcaoo
New York
EAST DIVISION se s1 se SJ
S7 SS
S4 57
SI 61
•S 61
Wedr!Mclav's SC...
PC1.
60S .sso 514
496 ,,.
454
S32
523
S09
"' O S
l9'
GI , . .,
10'12 12Va
Uln 17
1
2in s .,,,
IS
Cincinnati 9. ~ 1 St. Louis 9, Chlc;ago S ( 13 Innings)
Sen FranclKo 7, Atlante 4
MontrMI s. New York 3 Ptillaoetonla 4, Pll t st>ut Oh 2
Hou"on •. Sen Olevo l ( ,, IMlngst
Tede'f't~ ~ (Re.nt 6-101 at Cincinnati
(Puleo •·71. (n)
SI. Louis (Cox 0·0) e t C1'1cago (Ruthven
7·91
Sen Frenclteo (LHl<ev t1·1l a t Allanla !Oeyltv 2·l ), (nJ
S..n Dle90 <Thurmond S· ti at Houtlon
(MaOOe<l 5·0) (n) °"'" IHlmtl teneclultcl
AMERICAN LEAGUE
TWlm 4, AntMll l
MINNIE SOTA CALIFC>lltNIA
Ollrown cl
llW"'91 20
Wardtt
Hrbek 11>
Engle Oh
GMltll l>
Brun1kv rt Leudner c
Jimenez u
T-
ab r II DI ab r II bl
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• I 1 2 Downlno If 3 1 0 0
4 o o o. Lvnn cl • o o o
• I 1 1 Grich 21> ' O I O
4121 R1JK,ndh •021
3000 RJck1nlO 4 010
4 0 0 O Va Ian tin rt • 0 I 0 4 000 &oone c 4 030
WltfonvP' 0 0 0 0 JS 4 1 4 T..... J6 I 10 I
Sc-. bV lnlllMa
---00'2 100 001-• ~ 001 000 --I Ge me·W1'1ntng RBI -Ward (4)
E-Burttton OP-MlnrwtlOle I LOB-Mlnllt'IOta S,Calffornla 10 2B-Ollrown
Hll-Werd ( 111 E"lli. 17), Gaalll !17)
If' H a Ea II SO -Bc .. 1111o w .1-t ' 10 l
~ Zahn L,&·7 9
T-2 1& A-71 SIO
A.,... IWU .. t
IATTIHG Al " H H• ... f'C1 .
Carew 3SO ., 12t 2 3S )66
o.c:1nc11 140 40 1S IS 46 313 Grich l36 se " 13 S1 m
Buri.ton 10. .. 31 0 10 m
Benkluer llS 29 so 2 IS 270 Lvnn 3S6 •1 '3 " 59 761
ScOfllen 21S 33 SS 1 3' 2S6 Ro JecktOfl 23' 32 60 s 2t 15'
8oont 331 33 16 s 39 75' Foll 330 29 13 1 29 75? Downl1>9 751 •9 61 n 33 243
Lut>rallch 50 5 12 0 s 740
Wltfono 12 6 17 1 10 13' Clerk 171 .. ., • 17 230
Vet.nllne 199 n .. 9 30 711 Adem1 76 " ,, I •. 211 RI. JICklO<I n • 40 61 ,. '3 .210
Brown S4 1 ti 2 1 704 o ·B.,rv JS 4 s 0 1 143
FttOUIOfl 11 3 2 0 1 .01• Tote It 39SI S30 1,036 113 sen 262
f'11"CHIHG I~ H •• so W·LERA For:ICll 170 164 •'l M 10-1 ) ..
S.llCM1 ~ n 29 )9 •·s 346 ZaM 13' I) Ill lJ SS ,., ,..
l(fl()n 11~ 171 JI 79 IO·S • It Jol\n 162 1 19• 27 '3 •·4 • 11 Curtis c .. 73 76 l·I •39 W1t1 100 110 ., s. S·9 •6' Sl1tr., 15'"> ll 1 )I l·O S33 HH Sler ~ 3' 12 " O·J S 47
Trotft .,~ se It 1• 0-l S91 McLeuor>tln ., . ., SJ le lJ 1-3 '07 Goo1 ~ II )7 n 0-6 622 C l!lrown 12 13 • l 1 1 6 7S S Brown s I) 1) ) 1 O· 1 11 1:1 Tot ell 9 .. ~1.0&l 317 .... 5'·60 ')I S..vH Sanchez S Will 4, He$\. .. r 3,
1( lt0n 1 Cur tit I
NATIONAL. LEAGUE
Reds t, Dod9ln 1
L.OJ AHGELIU CIH<:IHMATI
~Sea 21:>
RutMHI u
A~n n
Landra cl
L.andtlv ci
Ciuerr•r 3C Monday ti
Brock 111
Marthel rt
Flmotac •
OS.A O'l Hoolon o
Z.CllrV 0
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Stewarto
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2000 EMllMrcl 5220
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1 I 1 0 Orl~u.11 lb J 0 I I
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3 1 1 o e ... skv 3b • 1 2 2
3 0 I 0 OH ier 20 3 I 1 0
l O 0 O Peril 11> 0 0 0 0
I O O 1 llltrdelo c • I I • O O O 0 Btfenvl o 4 0 l 0
0000
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1' I J 2 Taflll
SC8"1tv .........
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L4" A...... -000 011-, C--11 ltO 2lO Ob-t Geme·W1""1n9 Riii -R~ 111
E-iluu.ell. L•~IOY 01"-<lnclnna ll l.LO&--l.ot A~ 1, C:inclnf'a fl I 2&-£ ... 1kY. OHtet. RIC!u•. eroc~ 1,
Guef'rff'O J&-£Ml1Nr HA-tltlarcklto U I SF-ttad<n
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Goll, JaCkMlll U I. M.WIM1amt 171 •lld
INf"t!Mr, WMtt 1111 •1911ettl. Fretlef Ill ettd wy,..., w--itltllltm, U-3 1..-0011, .... o.
••sn•.•....,..1 TlltH 000 000 00?-1 t I
htlOfl CIOI 000 03•-I 0
$mllllt0n, Cru• Ill 11'14 ~•. ~''· SlllMey (fl Md AlllMOll W-Hur\I, f •t ,
L-smllft!Mlll. 7·11 Hlt-9qtlon, NmM
(Hl
lndlan' 4, on.. > Clavalano 100 ilOO ~ t O llanlmore 000 .JOO Ol»-J t O
$oranten 1no Heu ev, B04clk"•' and Nolen W-!>oren•tn. • t L-&O<IOICker
1·6 HR-Balllmo1•. Sih(lltlon (131
~eWef'l 4, llaVeft 0
Ml1w1u"" 000 710 001--4 f O
tt.an&u City 000 000 OOC>-O J I HH t a no S1nunon•, Soilllorff ano
Wa lhen W-HH I, 10·2 L-Sollllortt, 9 ~
HR-Milwaukee, Molitor ( )4)
National Le•eu•
C.rdlMI& t. Cubt S
SI Louil 003 000 007 000 .__, 17 2
Chfcaoo 103 010 000 ooo o--s 13 o lll IM!fttlt l
L.aPolnl, Andular 13), La hti 161. Sutter Ill. Rucker ( 1 ll, Siui>er llll and Brum· mar. Porta< 161. Quirk (9). Trout, Bruu lar
(6), Lt ftert1 (6), Cempt>ell 171. Smllh 110).
Pro4Y 1111. Nolti (111 and Davi•, Leka (10)
w-Ruc .. er. 3·1 L-N~•. 4·7 HR-SI Louis, O.Smllh (•> L Smlltl 10
Giant\ 7, Braves 4
San FrenclKO 010 000 113-1 1' I
Allen•• 020 010 010--... 7 2
Brelnlno. MlntOfl 171. Lav .. tt 19) and llaoo, M.cMurlrv, Bedrosian (I ), Forsta<
(9) encl 8ene<11c1 w-MlntOfl, 6·1
L-Be<trcafen, 7·5 HR-S..n Frenchco, Younol>loocl ( 10) Evan1 123).
Ellpes S, Men l
New Yor" 000 000 012-3 1 1 Monlreel 007 020 10a-S 11 I
Torret, Diet 17), Gou.,en Il l eno Ortiz,
H0<1119' (I). GuUlcklon, Scne11-r (I).
ReardOn 191 ar>t:t Carte< W-GuMlcll.son, 11· 10. L-Torrer, 6-13.
,.....,4, l"\ratff2
Pltl&burOll 000 200 000-1 I 1 Pllllad.tPllla 001 001 111-<1 e J
J. Deleon, Scurrv Cl ). Guenre Ill •ncl
Pena, Caruon, Holland (91 ana Oler w-
Carllon. 11·11 L-J OeLeon, 2·2 HR-Phltadelphla, Dlat (It)
'11tr .. 4, Padr .. l
San Oleo<> 000 010 020 000 OC>-3 9 1
Hoution 200 100 000 000 01-4 12 I
1 14~)
Dre veckv, So1e IS>. Lucll II). ~
1111. L. O.Leon (13) ana Kannaclv. Knt9·
per. Di Pino Cl), Oewlav (10}, Rulllt ( 14)
encl Asllbv, Biorkman ( 10) W-fluhle, 4·3
L-L Dalton, 2·•. HR-Hou••on. Tilon (16}
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Amencan LN-.
BATTING (265 al ball): Boool . lloslOfl.
370. c:.,.w, 11,.,..n, ..>44; artll, Kanles
Cltv, .33S. Wlllielltf, Delroll • .317. McRM,
t<anu 1 City, .l24; Simmons, Mllweuk"·
.32• RUNS: Murrav. 8elllmora. 11. Mollior.
Ml!Waufo.", 76, Rlol<en, Balllmore, 75. Coooer, Mltwauk ... n , Ht noerton, Oak·
land. 73, Usnllew. Toronto. 73. Vounl.
Mllwaufo.H, 73
RBI Coooer. Mltwaul'. ... 96, Wlnlleld,
New York, 16, Perrish. Detroit. n. Sim·
mon1, Miiwaukee, 76; Armes, BotlOfl, 14.
Werd, MlnnelOla , 74
HITS· Boool. 8ot1on. 1Sl, Wlllteka<. Delrofl, 14S, Coooar, Mltweukta, l:W,
McRH, Ka~lH Cltv, 13', Simmon•, Mii·
waukH, 13' DOUBLES Boo111. Bot lon, 35; McRaa,
Kamel Cllv. 34; Hrbek, Mlnnew11, 31, Perr''"· Ot troll, 31, Rtpll.an, Balllmor1. 30.
Yount, Mhwaukee, 30.
TRIPLES Gr1n1n. Toronto ••• Wlnlfetd,
New Yor~. t, H•rnoon, Oalroll, 7; Cilt>son,
Detroit, 1. 7 are lied with 4.
HOME RUNS. Arme\. Bo•lon, 25. Coooer, Miiwaukee, 24; 1<11111, Chicago, 74,
LU1ln1kl. Clllcaoo. ?3; RIC•. 8011on, 13. STOLEN BASES. Henda<ton, Otkland. 70, R. Ltw, Chlceoo, SJ, J, Cruz, Clllcaoo,
'6. Wiiton, 1Cen'8• Cllv. •s. Semolt. Tue&.
JS.
PITCHING 110 0tcf1lon1) Ha81, Mii·
weukee. 10-2. l.56, Rl!llltlfl. ""w Yorio,.
13·3, l 40, Rozema, Oatroli, 1·2, 3 17;
Gouege, New Vorto,. 9·3. 11•. McGr111or.
B11tlmor1, 14-S, l.73.
STRllCEOUTS: Mortll. Oalroll, 15.3,
Stieb, Toronto. 131. Rl1111tt1I, New Vork.
126, BMeven, Ci.valanO, 116, Sutcflfft,
ClavalanO. 114. SAVES Qullefll>e<N, KantH City, 2f,
Stenlev. BMlon. 22. C•ud'"· S.1111e. 21, Oav11, MfnnHOfa, 19, Looet Detroit, 16
N1ttonal LMtUe
BATTING l26S 11 Dalt )· Madlock. Pli·
llburOh, 330, Htndrlc;fo., SI Louil, .ne. Lo
Smllh. SI Louil. 324. Herr, SI Louh. m . Oawton, Monlreal, .319 .
RUNS Muronv. Alla nla, 100, Relntt,
MonlrH I. IS, Garvev, S..n OlaOO, 16, Event, Sen Frenclteo, 15; Hor,,..., Allanla,
72 RBI. Oewton, MonlrH I. '7; Scllmkll.
Pnlleoetonle, 79, Murollv, Allant1, n ,
G~. Lft ...... 701 Chembllu ,
Allente, 61, Hendrick, SI. Louis. 61
HITS Oawton, MonlrH I, 1•1, Oliver,
Montreal. 13'. Thon. Hou11on, 136, llUCk • n1r, Cnlcaoo, 130; Remlrer, Atlante . ))()
DOUBLES BUCknet', Chlcaoo. 19, Hen·
drlc•. Sf. Louls. 21. OllYtt, Monlreel, 27, Knlohl, Hl)ut lon, 7,, Wallach, MonlrH f, 26.
TRIPLES. Buller. Altanla, 11, Monno, Houlton, 11, Crur. HoustOfl. 7, DawlOn,
Montreal, 7, Reines, Montreal, 1
HOME RUNS Schmidt, Phlledelollle, 26,
Oawton, Monlrtel. 25. E•ent, S..n Fran· clKO, 23; Murphy, Atlanta , 13. G~.
LM A ......... 21.
STOLEN BASES Raines. MonlrH I, 51,
Wllaon, New York, 37; S.Seir, LAt .....,
U1 LtMatltr, San Francl1co, J4; Butler,
Atlante. JO. Moref!O. Houllon. 30, Re<tut ,
Clnctnne If. 30
PITCHING I 10 oecf1lon1J Monl9fusco,
S.n Dlevo. •·2. l 4 . Pen z. Allt nle, 13·3,
J02, Otnnv. Pnlledelc>hle, 11·S. 2 SO.
Huc:tlOn, Phlladelonia, 7·3, 3 71, "°""· MonlrH I. 14·6. 2 16
STRllC EOUTS Carlton Plllladetr>lllt . 1'2, Soro, Clncinnali, 176, McWIMlanu,
PlllSburOll. l•S. Valtmut6e. Lft .,....._ 1141 Rva", HoullOfl. 110
SAVES Le Smlill, Clllc;.ago, 1&, Re-
arck>n. MonlrHI. 17. lledro1lan, Allanla, 16,
Hollal\CI. Pllfiadtll>llla. ll, Laveti., Sen
Franclteo, 13. Minion, S.n Frenclteo, 13
LfTTLE LEAGUE ALL-STARS
Junlw OIVIMon ( 1l·YHr·ekh)
WIESTErtM REGIONAL lat F-llt V...., Hltft)
w.-.....v'•~
No oeme 1 tClladulacl
T ....... tGema
S -Tue.on American •• Oak G.rov• IS.n JOH ) 110ter tllmlnalao)
S.l\ir'9v'• CllaniplentNp o-
9 a.m. -Norr11r100. N•tlon•f "'· Tucton Amerlcen·Oek Grove winner lit Norttirl<IOf
Neflonel IO•ft, another 11emt will ~tow •'
1:l0 o m.l
11· n -vHr-a6ds
DIVIPOMAL TOtMNAM•HT
I at T t9llce L.alr1 I
Wadrlt'6ly"Sc-
Canlral Garoen Grove 1, Tllouu nd Oakt O ITllOuMnd Oeks ellmlnated) FrOflllar (Ctfrltot ) e, Jurooe American
1we11 RlvettlOll 1 <Jurooe Amtrleen tHmfnatad)
T.....,.l Gema
S· IS -Central Gardin Grove YI Fron·
tt.r (Winner edvanc:M to Wfllern rt1111onalt
11 s... lltfnardlno Sa1uroav. ~•tno Ne
vMSe ••I o ml
Lft Aiemltn
w•OHUOAY'I a•SULTS Clllll If .,.,...,., _.,_,,_.. met!IN)
rlllST ltAC•. 3SO vllrdl
Aw._ APOllO (Ml),lleft) U O UO 1.10
Jolt MMle (8ardl 2 10 U O
lOUllh With Tllele ICrMter) ),00
AIM! r~: $w•-· D~ Pt~
eno On Ea•v Str .. I, ••lnt>ow rtlvet. Ttrrl1
Dream Tov, Montlonor Tln'le· 11 14
st •JCACT A (l-4) Palcl t 11 20.
••COMO ••c•. JSO varo&. S.mural Wattlor !Crvr> 640 J.40 HO 1111 Mv Oadd't (L.ltCUy) 4.40 3.00 ,,,,... or Limit\ (MlfcMM) a.20
AM •a<:ecl: levl 5M41et. St. ll6f Olneto,
Don ••" IClno, l'llat ()ul P•r. MY Rllffttllln
Moon, MT Eetv f talu,., Pelflt P•te
T"'-II. 1'.
t) •llAC1'A 17•J) P6lcl ltHO nc•o ••c• . .oo .,.roi Mallon !tine! CMvlnl t 40 UO l 40 Clll<. ADOllo ITrMW!'I ) J20 440 rioww •u"et ICte-) UO
Al.o r ecao u11im.11 Soiutlon. Awe.a A
LadY, Ma1111I• Motion, Clllc fi'-
fruo.la Pair
TifN 10 JI
,OUlllTH •AC•. lSO varo,
Mln v One !Edward•) •IO • 10 l 20
Truly A •ue (L.C ...... I 100 '20
Mr •unnln Wf\MI& (AO.fr) UO AllO ra~ D...Ov Oallev, L-r Te,
w ori11 A Gaml>lt, •enoa• •'111• Alive, 1(101 J•\~"r1 ~:"'"
12 UC ACT A Cl· 11 otlO 154 00
,,,,H aAC•. 3SO vafela
A1un Flrt (Ward) s 20 l .00 2.20
Nnrlv Sitler (Chn arJ ._00 2 60 P1f~y lliue (Adair) UO
Also recao sw"I MHI, z1111ona, Liiii. Miu BrOOka, Tim For Dotlan , Gamlllln
E u v, You For Me. Lllltt Hubt.
Tfme· 1' 01 U UtACTA I•· II oala ,11.00
SIXTH •Ac•. 170 vardt Btnlley Acll (Arm,tng) •,40 3.40 2.60 z .. , Milo IFlout roa> 6.fO uo Midland Aca (!lard) S.40
Alto ractcl Kinda S-v. llOWO Gar o.n. OHll Mee Kav. Flaming C11. Arrow
CherW
Time. 4'.M. U EXACTA ( 1·4) otld U l 00
s•v•HTH •ACI[. 400 vard•. Judllt Knlgtll (Leckev> U O 3.00 1.60
CaM Sf\01 (Barcl) 3 40 2.IO
Decks CllamPlon (V11ck1l U O Alw raced Tiny Siar War, Autumn Lee.
BroadmOClr Duct., Mally Mlto, l u» An
'lc.t, Dnlo O.vll. Mv Solcv ,,.,.n
Time 1010
IJ UtACTA 17·9) oalo I u 20
(
EIGHTH ltACI[. lSO varo1
Moon Wnatlar (Tr""t ) 6.00 U O 2.20
Moon• 04enl (A\mus"") 1 40 2 20
Peace Offering (Mll°'911) l 20
AllO raced Won Wtv JoM. Polv Rock,
Cl\aotrrt f Jet '
Time· 17 71
12 UtACTA (3·•> oalo "60.
n f'ICK MX t•·•·e+2·l l oalo 11,21020
wlih st wfnnert (ti• honetl, 11 Pick Six
consotatlon oeld M9 fO wllll 761 wlnnen
(five hOr"")
NINTH •ACE. 400 yard\,
Bllnktrt Off (Cror> 9.60 UO S.70
CllrltloPl\er Slv IForoa> 16.fO 9.20
llevmond Nocll•v• !Mllcllalf) 12.fO Also raoao: Fleming Count, Ar1l11rv, Gol
Hll Sllere, Slmott Men. Surtln Seier!. Seteclma. JollnnY c". Time: 70.40. i2 l[XACTA 110·21 11tld '271.20
Attendance· 7,102.
Del M9r
Wl[OHl[SOAY'S ll•SULTS ( 11111 .. n -•Y _ _,_.. M ,,_.,.,
""ST aAc•. 1 1116 mtlft.
One Mornl1111 (Olivares) 32.00 11.40 I 60
Tec:o Taco (Plncay) S.40 3AO
HI RIM ,,.,.ndV (Mell) S.20
Abo ractcl Momcal, A a1g KIU , Soor!·
lftO s.strli, Ram!Mln L.uv, Gold Country,
Doon'& IAdY. Star G«n, oi-Mini Hew
Haw
TlrN. US 1/S.
SECOND •ACE. 6 turlonOl. Stable YH (Valtnrla) 27 40 14,00 UO
Wlnnl"9 Tri (Lamence> 21.00 13.20 PrOOd Yank" IHotlkamo) 1.IO
Alw racao J; J encl Tavlor, Alier Eaola, Ron i Nlcttolas. Llollinlno llold, Tllel'• Mv Man, Vari" Pau, P11111v'• COOi, Naw York
Cllv, Confederate. Time. 1 13 l / s.
U DAILY DOUILE (11·1) oald ~-'°·
THlltD •Ac•. 6 lurlonllt. TUH Comrrvca (Vl1la) 27 40 10.00 S.20
Shedv Fo• (Etlradll 7.20 4.40
lll!lforl IS'-"'811.lf) 3 . .0
AIW rac;~: Ton UP, Suncl•v• Paydlv. J.D Qulil, An1wtr To Mutlc.
Time· 1 10 21 s. U •XACTA (7·6) oak! '316.SO.
"OUllTH 1tc•. 6 1urlon01. Rkllll TIVI* (Catlaneda) 16.60 UO 4,tQ
E1u>1o•fvt Tw111 (lllaekl 4.60 3.60
Goodova J v (Pl.-ca) • 40 AIM> racao Lt Smirk, Grill Ano Frlt1, llerblc.an, Mandef11,
Time 1.10
rlfl'TH •AC•. I 1116 mllel
Smot.t v CanvOfl CVlrla) 2'.to 11.00 &.60
Beaufort (Pinc.vi 6 00 4 .0
Bronre Em-lo< (0Uvaratl t.00
Also reoad. GOIOetl E. C,_ On. Po'tnca
OI AtlU<lat, Cm iel °'°'"• Dom OrltnOo, Dtc:onlrot. Whet a Plav. Gr••llellon
Time· I 43 .,S
lS •XACT'I 17·10) 11tlcl UJl.50.
SIXTI4 •ACI[. 6 lurlonol
Vaoabond Gal IMcCarronl a.oo 440 J .00
Mu'• Jov (Metal •AO l .CIO Anol,.., Cute One !SlbOla) 2.10
AIM> ractcl Jell, Gvon Autumn, C~ruol Ladv, KllllV Meri.. 0.-OI Oaf'knns.
llMl1.0.bt
Time I ll l/S
s•V•NTH llACE. One mile.
Merallaca (sr-mekerl IUO 6.20 4'.20
Oontslex> Tllemutk (Sl!Mllt) 3 00 2.40
Madem Forbft (McCarron) 3.00
AllO raced·~ .... Go Oollv Go,
Miu SllOW Boal, lloclv Telll
Time. 1.:W l/S. U l!XACTA (S·3l e>alcl 1171.SO.
17 f'ICK Sill 12·7-•·7·7-SI oalcl 122,627 40 with fhrH wfnneo (II~ 11or .. 11
·IG~TH tltACE. 6 lur'°""'
YOl•nd• (Plncay) U O S.20 UO
Prtllv Pr011>tCt (Slt>lli9) uo ~
Early Quell (Va1tn1uela) 4..20
AtlO racao: Summar& Sor'M. Alw•Yl
O.ar. Air of Malftlv, Carved L.edV.
Couvar'l O.Cfoht
TlrN· 117 11S
NINTH •ACE One mlla !>l a ll Comma no er (M cCrrn)
1 20 •.20 2.10 Cl\anca's lmaoa (LIDllam) 16 00 •IO Ll9hl Dancer (Toro) 4.00
Abo raced Ntv.,11'~. Particular. Alabtdo, Al l(llallla, Flfnl Fire .
Time 137 l /S U EXACT.A 17·•> oald UJ.C.SO
AllendetlCa 19,261
W"1d ~
(I t H .. I, ,...,._) Dhtel'Ct ._... ... ,.,,.....
M•N
.00 -1. Cam6f"on IJamefQ), «5.AS, 1.
Fre11•t IU.S.I. •U2; J. Nix IU.S.), W4; 4. Skamrehl (Wast Germany), •5.17; S. Seti«
!Wnl Germany), 4S.d; '· ScflOnleOI CE111 Gtrmel'Y). 4H OI 7. P•ul fTrlnkladl. 4UO; e Sou" (llra1l1), •Stl 400 r .. a y -1. U.S. (l(lno, Gall, C. Stnllll,
Lt wltl, J7.M. world r-o. olcl merk,
:1103, u s .1. 2 11a1y, Jl37; J. u u•. •.•1, •
EH i Germenv, lt SI; 5 Wnl o.nnenv.
Je 56; 6 Polend. JI n. 1. J amaka, JI.TS; I.
France, 31.tt
U -I. Lewlt IU.S I, 1t-0>14; 1 GrlrMt
IU SI. 77·7°"'1 3. Conlev !U.S.>. 26-J'J/4; 4. S11tma IHvntarvJ, 16•73141 S. St ... IC
(VUOMlaYla), 1H'h, " H-Y (Au"'alla),
2'·SVl. 7, CorllOt ($Nini. 1•·S'h; I. All
1(N1-la), 2S·I03/4
WOMAIN 400 -I Kertoellvn.va (Ct~·
.. kle ), •7 tt, wottcf record, old men..• 16,
Meflta KOCll. Et1t 0-,.., 1"2; 2.
KOQn>llOv1 ICt~lovllllal, •.5', J.
fi'tn191na (UUlt), ., 19; 4. ~ IW..t
O.menv>. 4'.7J, s. ~·-(c-dl), 90.06; 6. ll1t•lko•e 1uss•11 90A. 1. lt'tt!Mm (Eat I Gtrma<lvl, tow, I trvenl (U.$.),
Ml ....
400 L.H -1. F.-iko CUSS•>. 54..141 2.
Al><o•-IUS$1t), St 1$; i. l"!Mllf lletl
Garmenvl. SUS; .. f'fafl (Etll o.rm.nv>.
Sol 6"1 S I( rut 111111 Gtnnenv), 54.7'1 '-SkOOiund (Swtdln), ~IO; 7. "'41elr'I
fllrlialn), W.04; I. Ko!MGara lltomanla),
"'''· 400 , ... y -I E .. t G.,menv, •I 7•; 2
9rttaln1 41.711 3. JamekAI, a.n ; t. l utterl•.
42.'31 >. Cane de. 4U51 '-UIM. CJ.n , 1.
Frtnce, 0 eel; e. C11Ct10t1ov ... 11, 4UI
J,000 -I. Otclltr IU.s.l, l!M.62; 1.
Kreut IWnt Otrmenv>. IOS.111 J.
ICetanllltle (UUtll), US.I); .. uin..ov• IUSSltl, l;JS.SS; S Sl'I' <•rlllan), 1:17.06; 6.
l'otMmel llleM , 1:17.H. 7, '"""'" !lrlletn); •·47 .. ; I. Art-v1 IVUltl, U 7tt; . Cunlle (PonUN(), l:JUI: 10.
K1n.ika <CIMClal 1'90,20.
OT -1. OPflr {e .. 1 km.nvJ. m-1; t
MuralJIOva (U»•>. "1·>1 > """'"' <tul(Mlrla), 21'-0l 4. Hrlttova (~le), tis-),~ ....... , ... 1 Oermenv) 214·1; ..
$111\t•e <er~1111e>. '11-0; •. ''""""' (NettlWllncll), '°'"J; I. ltlteftlt (ltf'll•lft), toS-h t CreclunetOI llt-l'llel. 20-10.
10-Mltllove < tvi..rt. >. JO> 1
o.. .........
AAT'S LAMOtltG I...._, a..OI) -eo a/II* .. eo Dau, 1 bafraCuOa, u t llOtlllo, 1 llalltlul, J17 meekeret. 51 vellowlaM, t
"-"*' OAV•'t'S l.OCk•a (Haw,_,, teedll -UI anolen 716 bonllo, 62 ~ lleu.
1,09$ maQ<arel, ) roek llWI, It &atwl Den, 2
whit• ... beU, H V6fl0Wleli. 111 vellOwfln lune. 17i ..,,Pied., 3 ooreoo,
DANA WHA .. ' -1., •noter• 111 Otn,
'" bc>nllo, 1 Nlfit>ut. 30i mecl\eret. 76 vellowlali. I ,c;u1pln
UH ot•GO (H&M L.a,._) -S14 •nollf•. :MS veflowltll, 12' tk1Pla¢1l 1unt,
117 dortdO, n 4 vallOwflll lune,
'Olla WMll'a ...._,, !Unti
LOS AHGIL•S -llouquel Ce11von er ..... Ct1talc Lake, Jaclo.•on Lalla, PYr•·
mid Lek•. Sen Gebrlef Rl•tf' I Eu t •nd Wftl lorkt).
SAN •••MA•DIMO -1110 Bear L•"•· suverwooo Lake.
SAN OllGO -Cuyamaca Lake, Doane
Pond, Sen Lui' ltev River
K•llN -Ketn Riv., (MtYth fork), Kern Rivet (Kil 2 oowlr"°'1 ... to Lake lubtlla)
TULAA• -IOIM Cr ..... Orv Mffdow Cr_.., Ktrn Riv., !Fairview dam to KR 3
oower?lc>uM, JOllnlOndala br'°91 to Fair·
via... <11n1>. Nooe vouno Cratll. l'ffl>tf"· mint Cr-I-encl tow.,.), Soulll Crilelt, Tult ltlvtf (mlodle for~). Tull Rivet
lnortll and MtYlll fork• of Main !Ork), Tule River (C-r $lope ITM)
MAD••A -Sen JoaQuln River (mklcllt
!Ork). Sotdlllt Lake, S11rllw"tht<Lake
INYO -Balo.tr Cr ..... lllo Pine ''""· llllllOo Cr .... (lowe<, mldc!tt, IOUlll end
tnleka 1111, GtOtDM Creel(, Gooelalt Cratll.
lndeoeoOeoee Cr..... Lall.a Sebrina, L-
Plne CrMk, O.k Cratll (llO(lh forlll.
~ds Creak. South Lake, svmma'
Cr ..... Tabool8 CrMk, Tlneman. C,_,
Tuttle Cratll.
MOHD -lllua Laka (Ul>Plf and IO-).
llrlO<lePorl R._.,,olr, llucktv• Cr-.
CoM ICI Cratll, Con•ICI L.tkt. Deadman
CrMk, Ellary Like, G90!'119 Lella, Gian CrMk, Grant Lake, Green CrMll, Gull
Ulle. June Lake, LH Vll'llno Cratll, L"
Vining Cr .... (tootll lork), Lillie Walka<
L.ak1, Liiiie Walk•r Rl'l'lf, LunGy l..1k1,
Mamt. Lake, Memrnolh Crttk. Marr
Lake, McGee Creek, Miii Creek, Owen•
111,,... (Benton Cron lng and BID Sorfnva),
Pine Cratll. Ro«>lnton Cratll. Rock Cretlc
Lake, Rock Crttk (Paradtu Camp to
Tom'• Place). Tom'• Piece uo&lrtam 10
Roell Creek Lake. Roelt Cratll Le•1 lo 11\e
Ind of Illa road), Ru1ll Crttk, S.dclllbao
,,....., Sadcllt«lto Lake, Sherwin Cr-.
$11,,... L.ekl. Swtuoar Cr..... Tlooa Lake, Trumbull Lakt , Twin Lall.ft l!lrlOIMl>orl c-and lower), Twin Lall.et MAmmolh, Vlrofnla Cratll. Vlrolnla Ltlltt (u-I nd
-). Walk., Riv., (Cllrtt Flat Clf'n9•
Ofound lo town of Walk.,), L .. •111
MMOo-~ound to Sonora llrldot>
W'"*"• M"""*" (et Mllllw .... a.di)
~---~ Atvcla Moulton CU.S.l ckf . .sut Lto IAuttraila), 7·6, 6·2; Anne WNt• (U.$.) ckf HllaM S<;k:ova (C1~lovallla), 4-6, 7·6,
7·S; Cami.. llenlamln IU.S.> ckf. Ive lluOerova IC1ecllotlovakfa), 6·1, 4·6, 7·•,
Kalhv Jordan (U.S,) dti. •oMmaN c a ... !& !U.S.). 6·0, 2·6, 6·2.
TMnl ·--SMtttl Pam Sllrlver CU.S.) dtf. ICet• ~-1 !U.S.), ... l. 6-2; Kata Lalllam (U.S.) def.
Sue llarlllf (Great Britain), 6·2, 6•4, Clvls
Ewrt LloVd IU.S.) oet. Joanne Runell
(U.S.), •-6. t· I, •·1
Ct!MclM °'*' (It MIM'MI)
itcltllllll •Wftlll ..... Jlmmv Connon !U.S.) ckf. Joacllfm
Nnlfom CS...otnl, H , 6-2, GllMI Octeo·
oo Cltalvl 09!. Matt Wllanotr lSweOtrtl. 6-4, 6-I; 5>anclv mever I U.S I 6lf, SNorno
Cillck"tltl uw-..i>. 6·7, 6-1, •·l ; Anoen
Jarvd ($wtd911) CMf E llol Ttlltcller IU S.). 7·6, 6·2; llrlaft Taecllar (U.S ) def Frlll
a-ine IU.S..I. ••t. 1·•; Ge«" Govan
(Fr MCll) .... •amn11 K•I""*' (lnclla), 6-4. 6-1, JofWI McEMot (U.S.) CMf. Marco.
Hoener (lratll), •·2, , .. , ... 1; ,..,ff
F..,.,,.,. IU.S.J 09! TorNu Smid CC1ec:llO·
alovall.la), "°''· 6-1, lloOnty Hannon !U.S.) def. llotltn Van'! Hof IU.S.>. 1·S, 6·), ICtvln
Curran !South Africa) CMf Canto Moll• (llrazM), 6-l, 6·2, Jof\an l(rlak (U.$ I clef
PeYI McHe,._ CAuttrella), 7·6. 7·6,
Sammy Glamtnaha IU.!> I def. C"'9 H-
CU.S.l, ... 4, 7·S. Ivan Ltndl IC1tch0tlo· vaklal ckf $1..,_ llOMttU IC.nadal. 6·2,
t•l, Tim MIVOllt (U $I def. Woltt!I Flbefll
(POlend). 6·4, 6->.
Min's _,""''""" (It OWlllMd) ................. NICI< S..'ilanO (U.S.) def. Ito«>«! Seoui.o
(U.S.). 6·4, 6·2, Mall MllcNll (U.S.} ckf Bruce FDIW()f"fl\ (U.S.J, 6-l, 4-6, ... ); AndY
Andrew• CU.!>.) dti. Ml•• Mvt>uro l!>oulll
Alrleel. 6·3. 7·•. Jofln $1dr1 IU.S l OM.
CarlOt OIL.aura (Peru), 6-4. 7·$
N,. L elllllblft9n
HAT'tOMAL eottr•al[lltell --Attente
Sen Fran
...... OrltaM
o ....
PMa,1to:i ..
NYGlanlt
St. Loutt
Wl/11"91n
...,
w L. P'ct. "" I 0 1.000 )4
I 0 1.000 ll
0 I 000 73
0 1 000 ll
Eatf
1 0 I 0
I 0
0 1 0 1
~
1000 20
1000 11
1000 n
000 10 000 10
C)llQeo 1 0 I 000 '1
MJnnnota 1 0 I 000 1t
Tanwe llev 1 0 1.000 10
De!roll 0 1 000 11
~eav o 1 .ooo 10
"-MlllllCAM c;ott"l[lll[llte•
lllloilan
OtlWt!'
t<.enM• cuv
$6/\0laoo
S..111•
e11111nora
luflelo
Mi.ml ...... enoi.ncs
HY Jell
PlllteurOll
Clevtlend ClnclnNltl
HOUllCMI
W"1
I 0
' 0 I 0 0 l
0 1 . .. ,
1 0
0 1 0 l
0 I
0 I ~
1 000 26 I 000 10 1 000 ,.
000 10
000 OP
I 000 15
000 17
000 :1
.000 16 000 16
2 0 1000 S4
I 0 I 000 21
0 1 00007
0 1 .000 00 "~¥'• o--Clne!N\111 •• Walllfntton, n G,_ l!lav 11 s..1111. n
NY l;lat!t1 et Ptltwurllfl, n ....,....,,,..,_
...
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983 91
Will drug probe
taint Royals?
KANS AS CIT Y, Mo. (AP) -
Players on lhe K.ansais City
}toyals say they are worried that
the team will be tainted by re-
porta that several teamma t.es
have been questioned in a federal
cocaine probe, even if the in-
vestigation shows no wrongdoing.
"Nobody is arrested or an jail, so
I guess I'm not convinced yet
anybody is in real lJ'ouble," said
Dan Quisenberry, lhe Royals' ace
relief pitcher and the team player
representative.
''The big fear is that people
might be assumed guilty when in
fact we know so little, and it could
be nothing," says Quisenberry,
who hails from Costa Mesa and is
a former Costa Mesa High and
Orange Coast College star.
Jim Marquez, U.S. attorney for
Kansas, said Tuesday th.at pitcher
Vida Blue, re leased by the Royals
last Friday. and several current
Royals had been questioned con-
cerning an investigation of co-
caine use, sale and distribution in
Kansas.
Disclosure of the drug probe,
which began about three months
ago, came six weeks after a
cloeed-door meeting in which FBI
agents warned the Royals that
any player convicted of distribut-
ing cocaine ''will spend 15 years
in prison, no matter how big a star
he thinks he is."
Team o(ficlals, however, S4Jd
the meeting was routine and l)Ot
connected with the drug in·
vestigatlon.
O utfielde r Willie Wilsctn.
named by The Kans.as City SJar
as one o{ the players questiontd,
denied that and said: "N~w
people will blame me tor thil)gir
they don't even know about. Just
because my name is att.achtd •
they'll assume it's bad even wt-en
l haven't done anything."
G e ne ral Manage r J oh n
Schuerholz, who was lnst.rumen-
taJ in the Royals' subecribing last
year to a confidential assistance
program for any player with a
drug or alcohol problem, also
called the pro be disturbing.
''I am m no way implying guilt
or wrongdoing, bul when some -
body in that position of authority
(Marquez) says that kind of in-
vestigation is under way. it is
distressing.'' he said.
Schue rholz said all the Royals
could do was "hope that when the
investigation is concluded there is
not as severe a problem as it
might seem now."
Ma rquez declined to say
whether the players involved
were the target of the probe or
we re questioned solely for a.nfor-
mation. He did say that the in-
vestigation was not limited to the
Royals but that no other pro-
fessional athletes were involved.
Australia II keel
considered legal
NEWPORT. R.L (AP) -The
controve rsial bomtrshaped keel
on the 12-meter yacht Australia
11, the top contender among
foreign challengers for the
America's Cup, has been reaf-
firmed as leg.al by an Inter-
national Yacht Racing Union
committee.
Jock Smith, chairman of the
neutral International Challenger
Race Committee, which will
choose a foreign boat to challenge
an American defender in Septem-
ber, said the ruling came Wednes-
day from the fYRU's chief
measurer, Tony Watts.
"The measurement comrrutt.ee
unanimously reaffirms that the
keel of Australia 11 is legal,"
Coto d e Caza
h ost s tourney
Coto de Caza is the site for a
major junior tennis tournament
Aug. 17-21 at the Vic Braden
Tennis College with 128 of th~ top
junior players in the nation in-
vited to compete in the
USTA-SportGoofy National Jun-
ior Tennis Championships.
The tourney will featare boys
and girls divisions for ages 13 and
14 and younger in singles and
doubles.
Champions will qualify for the
first world championship sanc-
tioned by the International Ten-
nis Fede ration in September at
Walt Disney World in Florida.
Southern California athletes
who qualified for the tourney
include Manhatttan Beach's Je ff
Tarango. Rancho Palos Verdes'
Stella Sampros, La Costa's Mike
Chang and San Juan Capistrano's
Noelle Porter.
Proceeds of the tourney will
benefit the Children's HospitaJ of
Orange County
BOATING
Snuth quoted Watts as saying in a
Telex Watts sent from London .
"I'm absolutely thrilled because
now I can go ahead with my
semifinals and finals and produce
a challenger , whomever ~that
might be.'' Smith told The As-
sociated Press.
The New York Yacht Club had
challenged the revolutionary
keel. contending the fins on the
bomb-shaped structure give Aus-
tralia 11 a deeper dralt when
heeled over .
The club, which holds the deed
to the Amen ca's Cup. will che>Otie
an American boat to stage the
25th defense of yachting's top
prize in a best--0f-aeven aenes be-
ginning Sept. 13.
Today, four foreign boats -
Australia 11. Victory '83 of Great
Britain, Canada I and .Azzurra of
Italy -are scheduled to enter
semifinal races to determine a
challenger.
Laser s set
for big run
Laser sailors from up and doWTI
the coast will be competing in the
ocean off Newport Beach Satur-
day and Sunday in the Youth
Western Regional Ch.ampionsrup
for the single-handed dinghy.
About 50 entries are expected
for the two-day e vent which is
the only time the sporty 14-foot
dinghies are sailed in the open
ocean. There will be four races
Saturday ~ three Sunday.
weather permitting.
Newport Harbor Yacht Club is
host for the regatta. It is open to
sailors who have not reached
their 19th birthday
Star, Geary-18
w-orld titles on line
Two world championship re-
gattas are scheduled at Southern
California yacht clubs starting
Saturday and continuing through
the week.
Most prestigious of the world
tit.le events is the week-long In-
ternational Star Class Gold Star
Regatta which gets under way at
California Yacht Club. Marin.a
deJ Rey, Saturday.
Nearly 90 entries from cou.n·
tries throughout the world will be
oompetin& for the coveted Gold
Star, lncludlng defending cham-
pion Antonio Gorostegul of
Spain. ~veral other fonner
world champions will abo be
vying to unaeat Goroet.egui.
Down San Otego way, Mtasion
Bay Yacht Club will be halt to
the slx·day Ge&ry-18 lnter-
natlONl cha.mpionahlp at.artl"8
Saturday The Geary· la la one ol
the oldemt one-<ieslgn clamee.
orl.rinally known u the FlattJe. On the local front. Balboa
Y.cht Club and Nt!wport Harbor
Ytcht Club have acheduled
one-<ieelgn reptW over COW'IM!ll
ln the ocean and lnaide the bay.
Voyacera V.cht Club will be •t.aalna lhc Ufth and alxth races of
le. Humphrey Bogart ~nee fOI'
P~rformance Handicap Racing
Fleet and Ocean Racing
Catamarans Saturday and Sun-
day.
Dana Point Yacht Club will be
host to PHRF sailors in the fourth
race of its Dana P oint Series Sun-
day.
In other Southern California
Yachting Al9ocialioo areas:
""" ........ "'-a..OI L-1-11 Yec:ftl CIUO -~·,
Gate-Emmv rlC!I {IOtt. PHltF. ""'°"c. c.t-Ul
SUndev L.lillt StllOt ne.1 -lnvllallonaJ wlti .
Sa1urllaY.
..... MtNt;a ....
C:~ VICN Clull -Stlf Wortct ~11'1· aloMfllo, .,.,,, Seturdlv.
KN Hartiof Vedll °"' -Gee~ a IClnll Trop11., race (Por1tmou1h Handlcae,
Ctflterboer cb) $11UfCleV WI~ Y tehl C:IUll -Quee<I Marv L.•Vov«. S.turoavi w-On waw S.lat,
Saturoav, Slnell-hend9d rec., $un0rlv IM l*ll Mls&lon .. ., Yecht ouo -Oeent·ll Worto
Clla~. 11er1, Satura.v. coroneoo CaV' v 1e111 CIUb -..,_ cor
onaOOt lttench race, Salurdav, SUl!dly .
Cr11111ne·.-K1'll Aun, -Minion .. v 0¥er•
"19111. Salur•Y. Sulldev. SllYlf O• Yacti1 CJull -conw.'"911'\
OVtrnlltll r-, klunllly, ~¥.
$ent1 Cler• It.Cine A.-latlOl'I -Dell•
9MCfl Strllt, Saturdlv, SYnMv.
Oc.analdt YKht CluO -"orkti Serlft. S\lfldey, ...........
,.._ 'IK lll CIW -lo'--·lte!IWllllK"t
WM. $el!KdllY
CllaMll tUlndt 't aclll Clue -AMultJ DI
"'""' race. k turdlv, Junior S.11o1 On. S.Nl'Wv
........... h y Vitti\! Cl\IO -,i .. '°"""· "-• W..tte111 Y~ CIW -Wet._. E.e910e't
Dev lt ... 111,~v
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
Repeat is goal
of Penn State
Can Pitt rebound?
Panthers consider '82 a disaster
PITTSBURGH (AP) Last season, The
Uruversity of P ittsburgh won nine of 12 games,
STATE COLLEGE. Pa. (AP) and I'd be disappointed af we finished 10th an the final poll and nearly defeated
-Penn State Coach Joe Paterno weren't a pretty good offensive unbeaten and se<.'Ond-ranked Southern Methodist in
says that even to think about team after the first two games," ihe Cotton Bowl.
winning two consecutive national Paterno said. For most college football teams, it would have
football championships ts asking Paterno noted that the Lions' been a satisfying campaign. For the Panthers, 1982
6oo much. situation this season may be the was a near disaster.
Paterno 18 preparing hlS de-reverse from last year. Now , a year after failing to live up to P,redictions
fending-champion Nittany Lions "Last year w e had a proven of a national championship, the Panthers want to
for their opener against Ne-offense and felt our defense prove the experts wrong again -this time by
_,raska, Aug. 29, at the would develop into a good unit. winning, not losing.
tdeadowl.ands in F.ast Rutherford, This year we have a prove n de-But Coach Foge Fazio, faced with replacing 24
tJ.J. The game, the inaugural tensive team and feel our of-seniors and three first-round pro draft choices, said it
f(.icko ff Classic, comes a week fensive group may develop into a won't be easy for a team accustomed to Top Ten
Tun Lewis, later a No. 1 draft choice of the Green Bay
Packers, openly criticized some of hia teammates.
Reserve linebacker Todd Becker fell to his death in a
dormitory accident the night before the Panthers
were to leave for Dallas and the Cotton Bowl.
Despite the loas of 24 seniors, including
first-round draft choices Marino, Covert and Lewb.
the Panthers return talent and experience on offense.
\>efore most other teams open good unit," he said . Joe Pate rno finishes.
play. Paterno has two big holes to fill. "We're very young and inexperienced," he said. ~A(AP)-'l'hlNwon"tbea....-
: A year ago. Penn State went Gone are quarterback Todd Despite the loss of Warner, "The difference is, before a t Pitt that when you lost a cW of mow,,..,_ ID tbe power ,lilnlellll'e al
~0-1 in the regular season and Blackledge, who threw for 2,218 Paterno lists his running back Tony Dorsett. you had a Randy Holloway or a Matt Gllll!ll!t ~ ta U. SaUdl tlm t.11. ...,
won its first national cham-and 22 touchdowns, and ruraning corps as one of his best. He ticks Cavanaugh to replace him. When you lost a Matt tlll jt two of the,,,.., bftlr tt ,......._
pionship under Paterno with a back Curt Warner, who ran for off the names of Jon Williams Cavanaugh. you had a Hugh Green. When you lost MW •111 necL •
victory over Georgia in the Sugar 1,065 yards and scored eight TDs. (612 yards gained last season), Hugh Green. you had a Dan Marino and a Dwight ' .... ..,._.died lhortq afW "'*lnC
Bowl. But Paterno insists he's not con-Skeeter Nicols and Tony Mwn-ColJins and a Jimbo Covert. wUb tb9 mmt ....... al allJ cxJ9da ill bmiiar'7.
; Paterno 'described Nebraska as cemed about the quarterback job. ford. "There are no Hugh Greens or Dan Marinos this but ... A ........ ..m be Wt wW .... be In
epotentialnational championand Paterno was impressed with "I think we have a very dif-year." die~ b ~ ba tbe ~
said the Lions won't have a quarterback Doug Strang in ficult schedule," he said, listing While Pitt has suffered heavy graduation losses O•tlWJMI
chance to experiment as they spring practice. He also likes the Nebraska, Iowa, Alabama, Pitt from a group that had consecutive 11-1 seasons from Biiaa:till W.oi., tht H 'rnen TW'oplay
have in other years. He predicte;d poise of Don Lonergan. Both are and Notre Dame, and describing 1979-81, Fazio believes the Panthers have plenty of •w"'---•Wllo.,..=!9dto._..1be.,,_'1
.that Penn State won't be the juniors. West Virginia as on the brink of talent. ...,...~ .,.....~afat$8.9
big-play team it was last year, Strang threw 22 passes last becoming one of the top programs The 1982 season was turmoil and tragedy for ......, cioMled wttb tbt New -.y a.a..111
;particularly early in the season. season and rompleted eight. in the nation. He doesn't mention Fazio, named to replace Jackie Sherrill. Some stars, efdlilUa&aedS.....l'aadaDJ...cue, b7S n'DC
. "But we d o have some Lonergan tried two and sue-Temple, Cincinnati, Rutgers, Syr-like quarterback Marino and wide receiver Julius (IMIOOl'llf .... •> ·
. . . .. I .. 1 ·:
.. ..
( . .
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llanl~les,
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LA TEX INTERIOR I EXTERIOR
Acrv11c Poln~
For both Indoor Ind outOOOf stucco ust IOHI for ttie
economv·mlnelfd Otcomor ciems tlSllY wtth ~
and water Or~ In JO mlnut.s 12·0001
BELAIR
POUSHED BRASS
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1" x 25' ,,,.,.. ..... ,.
R!<omlMnded fO< use on Jnf tittnor ooor
Wfltrt kfYfCI lo<tln9 15 ~'° Wtth Ot~tcfl
for ~~ _S«Urlf'f I ~008
Heavy IMY. ~ CIOMI' l'tt\ln, ~ ~ lllt dip. IDS
112 " x so · VINYL
Garden
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'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Aug 11, 1983 Bl.:
Can Georgia
survive '83
Walker-less?
Clemson's one worry: winning . ..
ATHENS, Ga. (AP) -Vince
Dooley says interest ln his Gt!or-
gia football team is higher than
usual -and he thinks he knows
why.
.. I say that because we have
surpassed our season ticket sales
of a year ago, which was an
all-time record," Dooley said.
"Our contributions have been
surpassed by half a million
dollars. There's a lot of lnt.erest
about the season.
"It's a season without Herschel,
and that may be part of the
reason there's so much," he said.
Herschel, of course, is Herschel
W a lker, the three -time
All-American tailback who was
expected this season to shatter
college football's career rushing
record.
Walker chose to bypass his final
season of eligibility to sign a $3.9
million contract with the New
Jersey Generals of the new Unit-
ed States Football League. The
1982 Heisman Trophy winner
gained 5,259 yards in three
seasons with the Bulldogs. third
OOOUY
best mark in NCAA history. Tony
Dorsett set the all-time record of
6,082 during his four-year career
at Pittsburgh.
Walker's departure will hurt
the Bulldogs, as it would any
team, but it won't signal the end
of football success in Athens,
Dooley said.
"I think we'll have another
good team," he said. "But, what
we are talking about is being good
and being a champion, which has
been the standard for three years.
He (Walker) may be the dif-
ference between those two."
With Walker leadlng the way.
Gt!orgia fashioned college foot-
ball's best record the last three
sea9C:ms -33 victories in 36
games, with two of the losses
coming in the Sugar Bowl. The
Bulldogs have won three con-
secutive Southeastern Con-
ference titles and placed first,
fifth and fourth in the last three
Associated ~ final polls.
Georgia has six offensive and
four defensive starters among its
36 lettermen.
CLEMSON, S .C. (AP) -As
Clemson enters the 1983 football
season, it's certain that the Tigers
won't win their third straight
ACC championsh ip, they won't
be in a bowl game and not many
teams will run up the middle on
them.
When the Tigers play West.em
Carolina on Sept. 3, Clemson
coach Danny Ford will open his
fifth season as head coach of the
team which has won 21 games,
lost once and tied once in the last
two years.
The league championship and a
bowl game are out because of the
recruiting-violation probation
being served by Clemson. The
9Chool's football program was
punished for two years by the
National Collegiate Athletic As-
sociation and the ACC added an
additional no-bowl year.
That's the bad news. The good
news is that defensive players
William Perry and William De-
vane will take care of jamming up
the middle. Between them, the
Bruise Brothers form what Ford
calls "the best middle guard
tandem in the nation."
Perry, a 6 foot, 2 inch junior,
weighs 320 pounds and Devane, a
6-2 senior, weighs 265.
Ford loet all hia start.era at the
"skill positions" on offense and at
three skill positions on defense.
Gone ia Homer Jordan, the
quarterback who led Clem80n to
an undefeated aeuon and a na-
tional championship In 1981.
Running backs Cliff Austin and
Chuck McSwain, fullback Jeff
McCall and wide receiver Jeff
Stockstill also are rnisslni on of-
fense.
Free safety Terry Kinard and
linebackers Johnny Rembert and
Otis Lindsey are gone on defense.
The coach plans on a crop of
//
red-shirts to step mto those poe-
itions. Some say he planned Uu\t
as a contingency for probatio~
which linuts recruiting to 20 play-
ers for the next two years.
"That's not so," Ford said. "We
were blessed with a lot of good
players last year."
REFLECTIVE
OR NONREFLECTIVE
2 " x 4 "
SANDED SHOP
4'X8'
8'Sftldfl 5111·· PIJllWDllfl
<>--,.. r -i .. I ~ II
I =r
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ti If
10· x 6'• FAIRMONT
ShWaflB Building
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Bu1101ng 10 keeo roots combus111>1eS & cllemte.llS oro1f(1eo ano
1af Ply away from cMoren we.nner ano animals E,m to -Ksem
Die cream w11n orown rrim IF"'T1006
• APPl!O~IMATE ROOHINE DIMENSIONS
WHITE. TAN OR
BROWN
3 TAB
t=lllergloss
Shingles
Seti sultoq feature prevents wino 111
11n9 ll atto by unoerwrtters
ldbor arories 101 ft re and wino
II ••• tMtance E~v to install ~ bundles m;m tQU~ d ~u~rt
Bta8' .,,.,,.,, .....
4' x 8'
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1.o~~lce
Use the~ Of(or at1te oanets to aoo d o~t1nct1ve look 10 P.ltto
enclowr~ oat10 roots aroors
qatet>os ano inooor room\
WROUGHT IRON
30·· x 30" WINDOW
Guard
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securr your nome wnn Gu1trcl1an Win
oow Guaros Attr~t1ve easy 10 1nstaM
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ll MITI: 12260 E Carvev 12151 445·6953 PO•ONA: 655 North Mills 17141 624·1693 SAN llllAIDllO: 384 Orange ShO* 17141 889·9661 t:;.:=:;:';:;f~7
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STORE HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 • 9 I SATURDAY 8 •. 1 I St)NDA Y 9 • 6
Ad~ 'At
• INSTALLATION BY
llCENSEO CONTRACTORS
I
I
i •••
..
-. .
.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
GORDO by Gus Arriola
G\Rt'H :l .lt
GARFIHD, YOU'R£
GEHING ~NG£RDU'OLV
OV£RWE.IG.Hf
( HOW PANG£R~US ~ ~fy~N A Lli1LE. ~RA FAT f>f ?
WHO,BLUf>,
WOUUtBLUB,
HAVE., oLU8,
. ·
-.._./'-cf
G
THE
•·A~IL , .
('IRCLS
v
=
~_)
0 v v
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
I
"How long do you expect to be In there?"
"It's only an owl. Now, get back in your
own sleeping bag!"
by Brad Anderson
"Will you please find someplace else
to take a nap?"
lliY Ll~E CMR!.IE ~~·r ~LOW GIRLS o~ HIS FAR.~ ..
EXCEPr HENSANOCOWSA~04UNT SARAH .''
'10V WAN ...
VOUR BOO!\
TO SELL
OON'T 'IOL1"
tr·___..,
r '
l
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by Ferd & Tom Johnson
~,t>~R .. WHY Po SoMeTIMES EMMA
1 SAY FAC~TfOUS ~ES UP WITH ).
THINGS LIKE THAT? BRILLIANT
fMSOAAY.LORPP./ SUGGESTJQ'j ~ ~ f' '~0~1 ?J 7-!
'1'0U KNC'l.4! WHAT THEV
4LV.1A~ S Pl T 0 1-1 Tl1E
COVE~S OF BOOKS THEY
WANT TU SELL •
by Charles M Schulz
,. IN THE TRADITION
OF HAMMETT CHANC'LER
AND MACDONALD I/
And Leo Tolstoy
___ ,
. ~ ~
by Tom K Ryan
WHO'S 1HE Cl.MJ UPON -me IVaWIAIN wrrn ~IS
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Norwood, :'11'.J. 0764R. Makf
chfcki-payablf' to 'litwt·
pap.-rboob.
by Jeff MacNelly
1f.s<RIHC. I
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by Kevin Fagan
1 Jl)Si
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t 'OR BETTER OR t 'OR "URSE by Lynn Johnston
~Ot-1-WHY CANT we.
!AKE A KtliEN
HoMEW\Tt-~
us? WHY?ll
· Jl.IHit: P \RK•:R
'CRUSE.1Hc. L.ASI
• f e>f'.E.Ve.~: PROMISE.
LI KE-iRAI l GOT
l.f\5fED Two DAY'S
fr;;\ ~Ai WOUL.D ~ CALI.. ~o JABBA ™E HIJN IF ME.
PL.At.>ED FOOfBALL. ~
I'M 60tN(, OUT IN ™E BACK
YARD AND PLAY WITH THE
CHILDREN FOR A LITTLE
WHILE'
\
\
by Harold Le Doux
JUST BE SURE 'IOU CAL.L AB8EY SPENCER I
BEFORE I GET BAC.I< ANO. REMEMeER.
THE PARTY WAS YOUR IDEA' ALSO~
HER TO HELPYOV WITH A WEST '.IST•
J
-·---------
f; .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday. Aug. 11, 1983 ..... ......
Nancy Ebsen ••• Living life in the world of theater -·· . .
By WILL ANDERSON Aug.11 , 1918inChicago,lli.Her
eyes are sponge blue and her hair
color is, as she said, "in-
determinate."
Delly l'IMol c .. __ ,,
She lives in the world of
theater. Talking a bout the par-
ticulars of her life, one is con -
fronted with a fast forward video
tape version of Nancy Ebsen's
past
From 1936 to 1940, she attended
Vassar College and obtained a
bachelor of arts degree in drama.
While there, she performed in the
then innovative "living news-
paper." During this time. she met
Yasha Frank. (He helped 'bury'
Pinnoch io in TimeA Square at the
death of the WP A Federal
Theatre.)
It rings like a "positalker," but It
ts also human.
Her ancestors came from Eng-
lam.I to Boston in the 17th Century
-one of them founded the ci ty of
Hartford. Connecticut. T hesec-
ond last name o n the Declaration
of Independence is al.so a fore-
father . according to Nancy.
Nancy Wolcott was known to
have performed in the back yard
of the Hyde Parkhome when
Eleanor Roosevelt was in resi-
dence. In 1943 sh e joined the Coast Nancy Ebsen She was born Nancy Wolcott on
Twiggy knocked out by moon
NEW YORK (AP) -English actress and former
model Twiggy was temporarily knocked out of her
hit Broadway musical, "My One and Only," by a prop
that fe ll on her, causing one performance to be
canceled.
Frantic cast members rushed to Twiggy's side
and pulled the huge, pink, crescent moon -shaped seat
off her, asking. "Are you okay? Are you okay?''
According to Judy Jacksina, the show's press
agent, Twiggy was okay but "she w as shook up" after
the accident at the St. J ames Theater Tuesday. The
show was cancelled and Twiggy went to her Long
fANNY&.'ALEXANDER
R ~~\• ~J· , . l.,J;'.
Exclu•lve Orange Co. Eng1111ement
edwards SOUTH cow PLAZA
d:ISf0&.•rsuNR.ow~ cJr 2711 COST•MES• '1"tV"
Mon.-Thure.
4:30, 8:15
THE TERROR CONTINUES IN 3-0.
COSTAMUA 'fOO#IAIU AUIY OIWIG( OIWIQI [OwlfOJ8nslOI P.c1•<1'...,,..,V.., AMCOr'lnQOMMI UACJ!\'OnflT\I ~14'"" o.-.. 1n 962 2'-'ll 637-0:).I() ~.)911
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...ITAR.WAU'-
RET1JRN0f
11-IE
JEDI
'
~ ORANGE MAU
..,,.,, 6 THEATRES
tonOflS...l~OILWeM °'-. 837.0340
"A BRILLIANT
IMAGINA Tll'E PIECE
OF MOVIEMAKING" -TIME .......
Island home to rest, Jacksina said.
On Sunday, Twiggy slipped on a pillow at her
home and sprained her right ankle. By the time she
got to the theater, the ankle had swollen but she
insisted on going on. She could not dance, so Twiggy
did the singing and the show's dance captain, Nike
Harris, danced 'her r outines with costar,
dancer-direct.or Tommy Tune.
Twiggy was just getting over the ankle injury
when the moon fell on her Tuesday night. The moon
is pa.rt of a duet 8Cene Twiggy performs with Tune.
ARCADE of GAMES• ~J~s .. 'f~rt
Tidalbon Slit~ TicQI ,,..._
51RY1Dli AllUE LG
Showa •I 1:10 3 :20 5:30
7:50 lo 10:10 -In 70 MM
f<~ R 73~ .
Showt•I 1:1 5 3:20 5 :20
.........
l'lu1 f'IREl'OX (PG)
WlllGl'J --SllOWI Al 12:15 2 :•5 5:15 1 :00 10 :30
Plus BLUI'. TH UNDER
Drlve·lnl Ooen 1 '00 WHknlt ht1 I 7:30 WHkendt
Children Unde• 12 FREE Unleu N o1erl
Guard w;a code room offa.-er. She
managed to cajole President
Rooeevelt's daughter to lend her
eight-room estate in Seattle for
the use as "Rand R'' for sea weary
Coast Guard servicemen. There
Nancy met Christian (Buddy)
Ebsen, Jr . whoshe marriedSept.
6, 1945.
She now has a s~p-daughter who
has provided her with four gr'and-
childri!n she considers her ow n .
in Marina Del Rey.
S he is producing director of me:
New port Harbor Acton Theatre,~
a position she acquired when she '
di&oontinued her teaching career :
at Cal State Fullerton . =
She was discharged from the
service and had her first child in
1946. He died within three weeks
asaresult ofmeningitis.ln 1947
she had a daughter. She did this
again in 1949.1951, 1958 and in
1959 he r only other son was born.
In the ~t, sh e was active in
children s theater. both national
a nd international. Her life reads
like the "Who's Who" in the
theater world when she talks. She
was one of those w ho he lped
Ronald Reagan in the beginning
of his politkal career.
S he can be seen performing in '
Cerri I.OS as the Grand Duchess 111 ;
the production of "You Can't • :
Take It With You." ~·~
After this event, Nancy ret~
as direct.or of the upcoming pro·
ductions at the New po{t_ Harbor ~
Nancy lived in Beverly Hills
from 1950 to 1960 before she
moved to her present home on
Balboa Island. She and Buddy
have since separated and he lives
Act.ors Theatre. ~
Today is Nancy Ebsen's birth-•
day.
NOW PLAYING
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Pf(1f-< 'Al"l•nc1rn
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* PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES *
r Bargain Matinees!
• MONOAY Tlw'w SATUllOAY
All '-fe1111-lllfe<o S:OI PM
lh $t1ec. ( ......... .., .. a H.i•I
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"KllW" (PG)
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"RISKY BUSNSS" (R)
12'45, 2:50. 4:55, 7:00. 9:05, 11:05
"M STAR CHAllD" (R)
I ·00, 3:20. 5:40. 8:00, I 0:20
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* PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES *
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"PllWAlt SCHOOL" (I)
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"A CLASSIC
AMERICAN COMEDY."
-Stephen Schaefer, US Ma~
J< .. ~13 .
}~:'":"N~~~--= IR1 . •--.-.... -... --. :;
m MAMa.
8HIA l'I A/ft ~QllAAI
9th SMASH WEEK OF
AMERICA'S #1 COMEDY!
DAN IYllm EDDIE MUllPllY
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1'00. "'· "'°
""• .-......---.. OrangeCoasl DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Aug.11 .1983
Tonight's TV
EVENING
-t:00-
1) 00 NEWS D WOHOEll WOMAN 0 BJ /L080
Q) HAWAII AVE--0
fDOVEREAS'f
lf ) C8SHEWS
@)ABCNEWSQ ~HBCHEWS
ICl MOVIE
• • "'T &ke lt11s Job And SllOve It ·
11981) Robert Ha)" Barbara H8'
Shey
m WINE. MiAT PLEASURE
llOJ YOU ASl<£D FOR IT
{DMOVIE • * '> f 1ontte1 Gal fl945) Yvonne
De C.arlo. Rod Cameron
-7"45-z CtiARLEB CtiAMPUN ON T>iE
FllM SCEHE
-8:00-
1) lt J MAGNUM, P.1.
0 ~GIMME A BREAK D MOVIE
• • "Footllghl Parade.. ( 19331
James Cagney. Joan Blondell
-too-
l) 1 fl SIMON & SIMON
0 ~MAMA'S FAM#.. Y
O llQ!RfOOIE
ID VEGAI m m MASTEAPIECf THEATRE
H MOVIE * * loollei (198 II Albefl Finney.
James Co1>u1n is MOVIE
t • •,, "N'Ohl Sh1tt·· ( 1982) Henry
Winkler, Mlcilael l<e&IOl'I
-t:30-
0 ~CHEERS 0 (!~J IT T AKEB TWO
Ill MOVIE i ••"The Mounlam~ (1956) Spen-
cer Tracy, Rober! Waonet
NEWS tti> IH8IDE IQXINQ
COl LOYINQ FNEND8 AHO
PElffCT COUPl.£8
-11:00-
8 D G (J)dl Qt NEWS 8 SA TUADl\Y NIGHT
" .. 8EAACH Of ... • THE JEffEMONS
• ll9lff Hl.l
8i) THE PAWSERS ea 700Clll8
CH) BUY JOEL IN COHCERT
I 0) AOOK OH TV
1$1MOVIE * • • "Arlh111 ' 11981) Dudley
Moote. Liza Mlnnetll
tZlMOVIE
-12:00-• t:HTERTAIHMENT TONIGHT
O MOVIE * • 'h ' Somewnere In The Ntglll
( 1946) John ~. Nancy GUiid ( tJ N>EPEHOEH'T METWOAI<
NEWS tD MOVIE • • * "The St0ty Of Esthel Collet·
lo" ( 1957) Joan CAawt0td. Roual1o
Bram
UMOVIE "Gone In 60 Seconds"' 119741 H B
Hallekl, M1110n Busla.
-12:30-0 Qt TRACK ANO FlELO D COUPLE.s O MOVlE
• * 'The 8eM1 Wllhln ( 1812) ~
111 eo •. 8tbt Be1c:t1
-2:00-e CIJ C88 NEWS NIOHTWATOi I ::9 OOTTl£: ~ ClOflE
ISIMOVIE
• • 'The a.tsy"' ( 19711) L.N"enc:.
OltYlel Robert CluYll
-2;1S-
HJMCME ...... '"Mommte 0-111·· (1981)
Fa~ Dunawwy Ollrla $c:arwid
-2:30-
D MOVIE *'Ii "The Vlolent Patrtof' (1957) VII· tono Gaaman, Anna M«la F•r•o.
8)NEW8
l l l MOVIE
• • '1 "Smokey Ano The Ban1111 ·
( 19771 Burt Reynolds, Sally field
0 ti OJ EYE ON HOLL YWOOO
OMOVIE CHANNEL LISTINGS
* • • "Pueblo"' ( 1973) Hal Hof.
brook, Andrew Duggan
(fJ ~GREY lH~TRE
Q) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
• MARY HARTMAN. MAI('( HART¥AH -2:45-
.·
r :-
' 'J;· "". 'T ., t. ... t. ~ .... 'Jo • • .. ,
'i """' •..J
Vicki Lawre nce stars as Mama in
"Mama's Family" in a two-part
episode at 8:30 and 9 :00 to night on
K NBC (4).
'Kudzu'
lnoffensive comedy
about a boy's search
By TOM JORY
OthA11 1c:htadfl'rw
NEW YORK -"Kudzu" on CBS Saturday
night is an inoffensive little comedy that probably
says all there is to say on the subject.
That's important, because the story-of a young
man's search for h is good-for-nuthin' Cather -
preswnbably once was considered material for a
series.
Tony Becker plays OdeU "Kudzu" Venable
Dubose. whose desire to be a writer like some others
he can think of with roots in the South -"William
Faulkner, Margaret M1t.chell ... Rod McKuen" -
leads to the true story of htS long-gone daddy's
departure.
The sh ow's producers did aU they could to a ppeal
to the network, and they didn't miss the mark by a lot.
The title is amusing -kudzu is a vine th at often
grows wild in the South-the introductory footage is
inviting, the music appeaJmg. And, the humor is
mostly gentle:
"Boy, would I like to get my hands on that,"
Kudzu, thumbing through a magazine for aspiring
writers, tells his mo ther.
''Son," Mavis Venable Dubose replies, "I think
it's about time you and your Uncle Dub had a modern,
scientific talk about all the techrucalities of ...
begettin'."
Kudzu is talking, of course, about an electric
typewriter.
In any case, he decides to try for the $3,500 lhat
Reader's Digest offers for stories on "my most
unforgettable character." Kudzu's pal, Maurice,
thinks it's a lousy idea.
"Everybody in Bypass," Maurice says, talking
about their town, "is so ... forgettable."
But Kudzu has in mind a can't-nuss story about
his daddy, a Bible salesman said to have perished in
the wilds of New Guinea whde peddling the Good
Book to the heathens. Trouble is, no one wants to talk
about Harlan Odell Dubose
"Well ... he was short," Preache r Dunn tells the
inquiring Kudzu.
"That's it?"
"Well, he w ouldn't appear short," the preacher
•ys, "if you were a little bitty fella lookin' up at him."
Back home, Kudzu begins his article. "M y daddy
was ... a compact man ... "
But the n , he hears the truth, inadvertently, from
bis Uncle Dub.
One wonders how -or why -the producers of
a-show like "Kudzu" manage to cram so much into 22
minutes of TV time, including laugh track.
Sometimes, the miniplots strengthen a story.
Here, the digressions -Maurice and Betty Jane
wtload a broken ladder on an unsuspecting tounst
douple. Kudzu makes a play for the voluptuous
Veranda whde Betty Jane smolders -seem ll}Pre
like clutter.
That's not to say thoee lntle vtgnett.es aren't
funny:
"Saym' you're beautiful," Kudzu tells Veranda,
"is like sayin' the ocean is deep. the desert is dry ... "
"Ya mean," she inquires, "I got dry skin?"
In the end, Kudzu can accept the reaJ story of his
father's disappearance, but can Veranda?
"Would it hurt our relationship," he asks, ''if I
told you my daddy was a no good bum?"
"I couldn't care less," she responds.
Betty J ane pulls Kudzu aside and asks, "Well?"
"She'll stand by her man ," he says.
Linda Henning plays Kudzu's mama, James
tf.ampton is Uncle Dub, MaUie Jackson plays Betty
Jane, Larry B. Scott is Maurice and Teri Landrum is
Veranda.
-8:05-m OAANGECOUNTY TODAY
-6:30-m DICK CAVITT (R)
{'l!) SESAME STREET (R) Q
IJ l NEWS Ml BARHEY MILLER ~All IN THE FAMILY
{D FELONY SOUAO
OMOVIE
• • • The Alomte Cate ( 1982)
Oocumeotary
-7:00-
1) C8SNEWS
O NBCHEWS D KUNGFV
O ABCNEWSO 0 POUCE WOilAH CI> NEWS
Q) la JOKER'S WILD
&l) BUSINESS Rf POAT m> MOTORWEEK
()) P.M. MAGAZIHE
[I EHTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
{DORAGHET
COlMOVIE
• • • "The Ml1S1onary 11982)
Mlehaet Patin, Maogie Smllh
-7:30-
1) 2 ON THE TOWN 0 ~FAMILY FEUD
O EYEONLA.
ID ONE DAY AT A TIME
Q) Cl) TIC TAC OOU<*i
fl) MACHElL I LEHRal REPORT
• • • .. How To Save A Mamage
And Ruin Your l1Je" ( 1968) Dean
Marlin. Slella S1evens
( 9 J TWILIGHT ZONE
Q) P.M. MAGAZJNE
II) MOVIE • * '"A Time F°' Love t 1973J Rtek
Ja$00. Jane Merrow
fl!) SNEAK PRf\'lEWS
W IHSIO£ OAAHGE COUNTY Cl MOVIE • * •, "'Freedom Road · (1979)
Muhammed All. Kris Knstoffenon
HJ AH AMERICAH FAMILY
REViSITED: TliE LOUDS -10
YEARS LATER
S THE UHPREDICTA8lE PUOOYI
OMOVIE
• ,., Forefo~ ( 1982) Clint Eas1-
WOO<I. Freddie Jonei
1Z MOVIE * * * Monty Python lrve Al The Hollywood Bowl"' ( 1982) John
Cleese. M1<:haej Palm
-11:30-
0 1.)9! MAMA"S FAMILY 0 (10) TOO CLOSE FOR
COM FOAT
19 I CtiARUE'S ANGELS
Q) INSIGHT
fl!) LIFELINE
W SNEAK PREVIEWS
I OJ MOVIE * • • '' Mooty Py1hoo And The Holy Grarl'' (1974) Graham Chap-
man. J<>lln Cleese
0 KNXl tCB!">I
0 KNBC INBCI
0 l<TLA llncl )
Q> KABC IABCI
Q KFMB CCBSI
0 KHJ lV (Ind )
a:> KCST CABCI
Q> KTTV (Incl I
Q) KCOP rv (Ind ,
,fD KCET CP6Sl
C!l KOCE !PBSI
{D THE VIRGIHIAH
ZI MOVIE
• • • "Mooty PylhOn's L11e Ot 811-
an" ( 1979) Gra/\am Chapman, John
Cleese
-10:00-8 ell KNOTS lAHOIHG 0 ~ HIU STREET 81.VES
DOtDa>NEWS 0 @)20120
El!) KENNEDY CENTER TONIGHT
{'l!) MURDER MOST ENGLISH
-10:16-
0MOVIE
• "Homework'" ( 19821 Joan Collins,
MIChaet Morgan
-10:30-
Q) IHOEPEHOEHT NETWORK
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! Th is week on our comics pages,
I FUNKY WINKERBEAN Is presenting the Jedi Jokes ...
and he's Invit ing y-0u to send In yours! I .
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 Funky Wlnkerbean presents (what
else?) 11The Readers Strike Back!''
So Join the fun and maybe we'll see you in the tunny
papers!
,,,OIWIOI
P.e!llc's 0!111g1
Oll¥t-"111 '3401
~
10 1 On-TV
IZJ Z·TV
Iii HBO
c (C1nem.ul
l f i CWORI NY ,NY
~11 IWTBSI
tf CESPNJ
s CShowllmeJ
(;} Sp0111gn1
8 CCj!l:>I~ News N~lwor-J
• * • "'Whoopee!" ( 19301 Eddi& Cantor, Belly G1able.
-11:30-
1) (l}MOVIE
••*"A Ouesllon Of Honor" (1982) Ben Gazzara, Rober1 Vaughn
IJQtTONIGKT G l1J) A8C NEWS NIOHTUNE
0 YOU ASKED FOR IT
8)00000tR£
ll)HARRY O
fD 8USIHESS REPORT
(Cl MOVIE * * • "The Real Glory" (1939) Gary
Coop«. David Niven.
(OIMOVIE
• u "Outland" 11981) Sean eon.
nety, Peter Boyle.
@) CHARLIE'S ANGE.LS
CHJMOVIE
• • "Summef Loven" ( t982) Daryl
Hannah, Peter Gallaghel
-12:35-m ORANGE COUNTY TOOA'f
-1:00-
D MOVlf
• • "Thlee NI/IS In Seatch Of A
Bolt"' (1964) Mamie Van Doren, Torn.
my NOO!lan
C!J MOVIE
• • "'The Oaring AdvenlUfer·· ( 19471
DIMlcan Renaldo. Mar11n Gatralaga
II) MOVIE
• • "The Desert Song" ( 1953)
Kattvyn Grayson, Gordon MICRae
{D GEHESCOTT
fSJ LOVING FRIENDS & PERFECT
COUPLES (ZJMOVIE • •'Ii "Lion Of The Desert"' (11181)
AnlhOny Quinn, Oliver Reed
-1:10-
ICJMOVIE
•• "Improper Channels" (1981)
Alan Arkin. Manelte Hartley
-1:30-
D Qt N8C NEWS OVERNIGtfT
tOl MOVIE
••"Bleck Emanuelle" (1976) Laora
Gemset. Angelo lnlanll.
(Sl A NEW OAY 1H EDEH
-1:45-
<CIMOVIE * * "T alle Ttlls Job And ShOve II"'
( 198 1) Rober'1 Heys, Blrt>lra Her·
Shey
-3:00-
C!J t.IOAHIHO STRETQt
ID MOVIE * * * • "Rebecca" (HMO) Joan Fon l&lll6. l.AIUl'ence Olrvler
<OJMOVIE
• • "'The Slree1f1Qhfer"' ( 1974) Son-
l'l'f Chiba. Gerald y amada.
-3:2S-
OMOVIE * • '" "'The Amateur" ( 1982) Jolvi Savage, CMslopher Plummer
-3:30-
FNTH20
~:00-
TOP O' THE WOAtlNG
(l )MOVIE • •'h "Momrn4e 0-est" (1981)
Faye Ovnawly. Diani Scarwld. -•:OS-I SJ TIE UNPREDICTABLE P\JDOYI
-•:15-
!0lMOVIE * * * 'h "Monty Python And The Holy G<lit" ( 1974) G<llhlm CNp.
man, John Clee9e.
~:30-
DtSPY
(f) 8U.LWINKL£
(C)MOVIE • • * .. So long At The Fail"' (1951)
WHO PARTIES AT
LE CHARDONNAY LOUNGE?
:'\ow JPf'"'ann):, Bia/\' luh 19-Augu<,l )9
Irvine's ,1fter-hours l'lill•. r'l'1)ple whu know wherl'
conversation ~pJrklc~. You'll find 11 all
.11 Le Chardonnay Loungl', whl•rc the mood 1s light
and lively. Tonight drinl.., dance a nd romanct:
to the mus il· of BlaLl', who'll bt.· providing the
mu~t dynamic l'nlertainme nt tn tvwn bctwt..'('n 9 .ind
l·J t) a m: Ma kl' your plan!> now .in<l do n't be late! Afte r
all, who parlll''> at L<.' C hardonnay Luungt.>"'
EXCITING PEOPLE LIKE YOU.
J.. 1he KEG I ST~ ""-f{otel..._
~-
18800 MACARTHUR BOUl.EVAKD; IRVINE. CALIFORNIA 92715
714-752..sm
uThe Joy of Life is Living it"
JCO~C~~igtl!J~eg.wO~JOD
. I
Southf'rn California·,
Oldeat & Fineat
Re.tau rant
Since 1922
Sunday Brunch
10:30 to 3 pm
Sn vrnR 'tit I 00 a "' Q111/~
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SERVICE AVAILABLE
3334 W. Coast Hwy .• Newport Beach • (714) 645-7077
CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
SERVED 10:30 AM. UNTIL J:OO P.M .
~rvt'd with frt'shly squeezed orange juict'. Then enjoy o ur freshly
baked blueberry m uffins, banana nut brt'ad and English muffins,
~rved with the best preserves. You also receive a fresh fruit compote
and your choice of fried zucchini o r O'Brien potatOH with
the entree and complimentary ch•mpagne.
ROAST BEEF HASH, POACHED EGGS 8.95
CREPES VERSAILLES ...................... 8.95
Clticktn '"PtS with suprtmt souct and wh1tt gropts
ITALIAN SAUSAGE&: 3 EGGS .......... 8.95
EGGS BENEDICT ............................ 7.95
ASSORTED SEAFOOD CREPES .......... 9.95
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CATCH OF THE DAY .... .' ............... open
Ask your wa1ttr about our doily frtsh fish l t'/t'(t1ons
COBB SALAD ARCHES .................... 7.95
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llllJPllll
THURSDAY, AUG. 11, 1983
WEDDINGS C3 If I ID
BUSINESS C4
STOCKS CS THI ca 1111111 caum
Sherman Gardens ••• An oasis of botanical beauty
By CHRIS CRAWFORD Oelly,...c .. ,...,.,.....,,
One of the more secluded gems
in Orange County's collection of
cultural offerings is Shennan
Library and Gardens in Corona
del Mar.
Beyond the small, modest sign
and Spanish-style walls at 2647
E. Pacific Coast Highway lies
·hidden away a two-acre site
containing a library of rare books,
and Orange County's only
1 botanical garden -a horticul-
tural paradise graced with
Spanish fountains, a Koi pond,
dri(twood sculptures, and plants
from around the world.
The library, directed by Dr.
William Hendricks, focuses on
the past 100 years of the Pacific
Southwest (Southern California,
Southern Nevada, and Arizona)
beginning with the days of the
rancho, cattle-raising economy.
Much of the more than 15,000
volume collection is out of print
and usually hard to (ind
elsewhere. As a result, the library
has attracted scholars from as far
away as New York City and
Mexico City, as well as local
researchers of all ages -school
children to graduate s tudents.
Part of the library is a one-room
adobe house built by the original
owners of the property in 1937.
And just outside the adobe stan~
the pepper tree they plante<i,
which now has a spread of 65 feet.
Since 1966, when the library
and gardens were established,
the property has expanded to
take in a full city block, and "the
garden area actually consists of
several gardens in one," says
Wade Roberts, director of the
Gardens.
There is a cactus and succulent
area, a large display shade gar-
den, an outdoor tea garden where
members and their guests may
have lunch, a central garden
planted with seasonal color, a rose
garden, and a tropicl con-
servatory where automated con-
trols can regulate the climate for
humidity-loving plants such as
bromeliads and orchids.
"It is designed to be a garden of
discovery," Roberts says, "with
one garden leading on in to
another." It is also designed, he
says, to be enjoyed at various
visual levels, from low-lying
plants to rare moosehorn fems
attached to the conservatory
walls (looking very much like
actual mooseheads), to tall palms
towering above the rest of the
collections.
Both the library and gardens
are an outgrowth of the Shennan
Foundation, established in 1951
in honor of Moses Hazeltine
Shennan, a pioneer in land and
transportation development in
Arizona and Southern California,
who is also memorializ.ed in the
names Sherman Oaks and
Sherman Way in Los Angeles.
The foundation was established
by Arnold Haskell, Shennan's
assistant, friend and executor of
his estate. The purpose in estab-
lishing the library and gardens
was to create an educational and
cultural center for the communi-
ty with on-going and lasting
value.
Wade Roberts feed Gardens· Koi fi~h.
Gardens have everything from tropical plants to desert beauties like
these. 0 See Gardens, Page C6
Daily Pilot Photos
by Mike Schwartz
Terry McNay puts down stones for walkway. A tour group makes its way through main garden. Among the tropical plants is this Venus fl y trap.
Garden setting for fund-raising plans
Lucille Adams and Bob
Pennington
By VIDA DEAN °' .. .,.., ..........
Plants are nice and green adding interest to any room decor, but
behind thoee living creaturee are st.orieuo fucinating. A mini-tour at
Sherman Gardens conducted by Ann WeU. for Nora aud Charlie Hester,
Jean Aldrich and a few others provided all 10rta of history on the ginger
and other plants. (Did you know one produces its own birth-<:0ntrol
"pill"?)
The occasion was a gathering at the gardens to d1acuas plans for the
Aug. 27 fund-raising($100 perperaon) party. Theth.irdannualeventhas
been dubbed "The Spur and the Roee," an elegant weetern evening
beginning with cocktaila and hond'oeuvree at 6:30 p.rn. followed by an
under-the-st.an western dinner, including 12-ounce steaks. Johnny
Burger and his country-weetem band at.o provided the 8J'OUP with a
sample of their talents (Shorty Robins was strumming his guitar and
singing).
Other entertainers acheduled for the elegant western 10iree (Lucille
Adami l.s ch.airman) are Mickey Rooney Jr., Shella Man1cal and WillJe
Warwick.
Re.ervations may be made by calling the gardens, 673-1880. The
fund.a ra.t.ed will be I.Lied to support the library and prdena including
educational programs, horticulture, docent toun and gardenins clASllle9
for 1pedal-needs peraona.
Dally Piiot Photos by Ernest Coleman
I •
('2 Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Thursday, Aug 11, 1983
Can we trade heart attack for heartburn?
I h.tJ t•nough ~uah thts week without reading
that bt.><:ause I have a h1~h SL·hool edul'at1on and a
wh1te-rollar JOb. I Wl11m:reasmg my husband's risk
of a heart attack
The survey that wast.lone .it the Uruversny of
North Carohna really puzzles me. lf education and
a good pb arc a lt•thal mmbmallun for men, then
how come l d1d11'tget a hcartaltal'k when my
husband had a Ph D and a whjte-collar JOb to
which I contributed nothing but a ring on my
finger and another one around I 1is collar?
Besides. 1t wasn't more than two years ago
that another survey came out that said since the
return of so many women to the work force, the re
had been a definite increase in heart attacks among
women bt>cause in invading a man's world we fell
susceptible to their business pressures and
anxieties.
flMA
80M8fCIC
So 1t would seem that the family that
matriculates and escalates together ... hyper-
ventilates together.
The amazing thing abou \ these surveys are
the mysteries no one has answered. Why are
women both the carriers and the victims of these
heart attacks?
Why. if holding down a job outside the home
makes vou sick, would men want to keep 1t t.o
themselves and t-xdudc women?
If housework lS such a healthy job, then how
come we can't lure more men to 1 t?
I asked my husband this the other mg ht and
he said, "Nonsense. I know a lot of men who would
jump at the c hance to stay home, raise children,
cook , do the laundry and not have management
breathing down their necks."
AB we turned on the TV set, I kept that
thought. During the next three hours, there were
38 commercials geared toward keeping house and
raising children . There were wom en fighting
"disgusting roaches," wax buildup, peeling paint,
corroded ovens. oily peanut butU!r, lazy laundry
detergents, stinking kitchen odors, pesky temutes,
backed-up sinks, tension headaches induced by
dogs and kids. cars that wouldn't run, too much
caffeine, deodorants that let down. ga..rt.ge
tumbling out of weak bags, greue that clung to the
wallB, handprinta that wouldn't come off, toileta
that smelled and clothes stains that would take the
sight out of a good eye.
As we clicked oH the set, 1 srud to him, "I just
realized how selfish I have been staying home
havmg fun and letting you go out to work. 'Oneof
these days' ia now! All of this is yours!"
"Sweetheart," he said, ''I love y~u too much to
allow you to make that kind of a sacrifice and
jeopardize your health "
The answer seems apparent. Maybe if both of
us shared in the giddiness of housework and the
body-destructing job outside the household, we
could reduce the risk from a heart attack to simple
heartburn. There's a cure for that!
QUEENIE
Old timer has some advice for both business and labor
Dear Ann Landl•rs. They are calling it a
recession. We know better Too many of us lived
through the Late '20s and e~rly '30s. We got along a
helluva Lot better then than now . In 1929 I left a
small town to work an a big city. Millionaires were
jumping out of windows. Nobody jumps anymore
Today they take booze, get w nked on pills or toot
coke. '
In 1935 we got married on sheer n erve.
Between us we scratched up $500 to furnish four
rooms with good (used) furniture. I went to work
for Sears. Roebuck a nd Co. at $12a week_ That was
before NRA. when Franklin D. Roosevelt said
they had to pay $35 to anyone who worked 40
hours a week. We felt like millionaires.
There can be no recovery an our country until
millions of people go back to work. Oh. there are
loads of listings an the help-wanted columns, but
you have to be a s ystems analyst, a psychiatric
social worker or an electrorucs wizard to get a job.
What cruel irony that the ··Man of the Year" on
Time magazine's cover turned out to be a
computer
Wouldn't 1t be nice 1f greed. power and
dishonesty (how welJ they go together) could be
relegated to obscurity? Remember when business
people were sat1sf 1ed w1 th a 15 to 30 percent profit
and labor didn't make outrageous demands that
closed a lot of plants? Why go on? You've got the
picture. -From Conn
Dear Coon.: Thanks for a provocative letter.
It will surely attract hisses and boos from Wall
Street, business, industry and the unions, ~ut you
.RUFFELL'S
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754-0711
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642-1741
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631-n40
For O-lflfd Ad
ACTIO~ c..u
A DAl\T "lOT
AO-YlSOI
MJ·H 71
-q ANN LANDERS
made tome salient points and many people are
sure to agree with what you've said.
Dear Ann Landers: I tried for six years to get
pregnant. M y husband and I had every test under
the sun. All the results showed "normal."
Like "Long Island," every time I read about a
baby found in a garbage can or left on the doorstep
of a church I wept. When my friends announced
that they w ere pregnant I became envious and
hostile. Then I'd become depressed and cry for
days.
When we finally resigned ourselves to the fact
that we were never going to have a family, we
invested in a piece of property and made plans for
a new home -to take our minds off the
disappointment. I began to feel happy and rel.axed.
Two months later the doctor told me I was
pregnant. Last February I gave birth to a beautiful
baby girl. We are sublune ly ha ppy I realize this
cannot happen to everyone, but I thought I should
let you know it happened to me. -Walking On Air
In K entucky
Dear Walking: What goes on in the mind can
bave a powerful effecl on tbe body. Stress, for
example, can make u1 vulnerable to many
diseases, locludlng cancer.
In your case when the anxiety was removed,
your body became susceptible to conception. This
wlll not bap~n to every woman, bat thanks for
letting as lu(ow it happened to you.
There is a big diffe rence between cold and
cool. Ann Landers shows you how to play it cool
without freezing people out in her booklet,
"Teen-Age Sex -Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 50
rents and a long , self-addressed, stamped envelope
to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11 995, Chicago. Illinois
606 11.
8 TENNIS
LESSONS
•2000
Co1t1 . M111 T 1nni1 Clull
557-0211
"Then we aU agree -witboat me, we'd be
up the creek."
BARDEN•S m~557-2847
PEST CONTROL 896 RandOIPh Ave.
------~-------
Newspapers.
When the name of the game Js frequency
\M')en you need higher advertising frequency, newspapers offer advantages
over less flexible media. l(s easy to trod~ off ad size for more frequency In
-~papers. Smaller space con generate big impact If your creattve Is good.
And your creattve Is good. right? For more, coll Mac Morris, vice presiClent
National Sales. NeYJspaper Advertising Bureau, (212) 557-1865. Q coll your
local n0VJ'SP()per representative.
tJ::kwSMPER POWER. Go FOR 1r. Daily Pilat
Mm-4DI
-------------------------------------------------------------------- -.
:Anniversaries •••
DellrNet~-,...-~
~an ~nd June Prichard at 50th a n niversary party
Engagements .•.
Blair -Knutsen
)ulianne M. Blair and Darrell W.
Knutsen will be married Sept. 10 m
Corona del Mar Community Church.
A.nnouncemen t of their plans is made by ~t parents. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin E.
Blair of Newport Beach.The bride-elect
is a graduate of Corona del Mar High
and UC Santa Barbara. Her fiance, son
of Wallace Knutsen and Mrs. Reeny
George. both of Lake Arrowhead.
graduated Crom West Covina High and
Cal State Long Beach.
Vouga-Landheer
The engagement of Renee Diane
Vouga and Mark Alvin Landheer has
been announced by her parents, Mrs.
Ray Ostrander of Fountain Valley and
Dr. Robert Vougaof Huntington Beach.
The wedding will be a Sept. 3 event in
the Crystal Cathedral, Garden Grove.
The future bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Landheer of
Buffalo Center, Iowa. He is a graduate
of .BC High School.
~eddings •••
Mr s. Rhyme
Rhyme-Hummei
Mark Steven Rhyme and his bnde, the former
Dore Marie Hummel. are at home in Newport Beach
following a wedding tnp to Tahjti and Bora Bora.
The daughter of former Newport Beach Coun-
cilman and Mrs. Paul Lee Hummel and the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert W Rhyme of Ariwna exchanged
vows July 16 m St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church.
Golden occasions
The Hostermons
Pearl and Harley Hosterman celebrated their
60th wdding anniversary at a party held in the
recreation hall of the Royal Gardens Estate Mobile
Home Park i.n Westminster.
The event was hosted by the celebrants' son and
daughter, Burton H06tennan of Costa Mesa and Pearl
Hosterman Lex of Royal Gardens Estates. and
attended by 40 relatives and friends.
Harley, originally from Milwaukee, Wis .. and
Pearl from St. Joseph, Mo., recited their wedding
vows July 18, 1923, i.n Los Angeles. They have made
their home in Costa Mesa since 1966.
Besides their two children, the Hostermans have
two grandchildren, Gail Kain and Gary Nottingham
and four great grandchildren, Tommy Clendennen.
Brett Nottingham, Noelle Nottingham and Connie
Hall.
The Prichards
Evan and June Prichard, residents of Newport
Beach since 1960, celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary at the home of Betsy and Charles Folk.
Assisting the hosts with the surprise party were Doris
and Wayne Peart.
The Prichards eloped on Aug. 8, 1933, and were
married in Everett, Wash. They have a son, Peter,
now in Spa.in, who also resides in Newport Beach.
Evan, a design engineer, is a consultant with
Challenge-Cook with whom he was associated many
years. He enjoys the Goofoffers and is a drummer for
the Retrogreaive 5+2 jazz band.
June is a member of the Ebell Club and a charter
member of Harbor Key of Child Guidance Center.
They are active as a couple in St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church, Irvine Coast Country Club and
Balboa Bay Club.
The bride is a graduate of Corona de l Mar High
School who attended Loma Linda University. She is
employed by Dale Fahrney Interiors. Her husband
graduated from Redlands High and Cal State Long
Beach. He is employed by Arthur Andersen and Co.,
Los Angeles.
Now's the time to save on a
fabulous Hawaiian vacation. The
friendly skies can take you from
Los Angeles to Honolulu for just
$159 each way when you fly
round-trip.
And while our fare is
reduced, our service is not. You
still get United's exclusive
Mrs. Heafy
Healy-Gordon
USC graduates Joanne Carol Gordon and Joseph
Otis Healy exchanged wedding vows July 23 during
a ceremony in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
Newport Beach. A reception followed a t the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club.
Parents of newlyweds are Mr.and Mrs. JamesE.
Gordon of Newport Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Otis
McDowell Healy of Laguna Beach.
After a wedding trip to Hawaii the Healys are
residing in Laguna Beach. She is employed by Max
Factor and he is employed by Storage Technology.
Her high school is Harbor and he graduated from
Harvard School in North Hollywood.
The Dally Pilot wants your wedding and
engagement news.
To help you submit the required infor-
l'llJltion, fonns are available at the Daily Pilot
office, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Meu.
For weddings. only a black and white
phot.o of the bride i6 acceptable. Snapshots,
Polaroid and color photos can't be uaed. The
phot.o must be submitt.ed no Lat.er than three
weeks aft.er the wedding, otherwille it wilJ not
be published.
Engagementln/ormationLttobuubmitted
at least seven weeb before the w«ld.lng.
Fonm and photos CAn be dropped off at the
office or mailed t.o the &JJt.orW DepArtment,
Dally Pilot, P. 0 . Box IMJO. Costa Mesa, Cal.JI.
92826.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Aug. 11 , 1983
'•I/I'
\ \ \ ; 111
\ \ r. Ill
II I Ill
fh\· lk·,,
A b..•,1ulllul """' 1111
hlll\' '''" 1..\•d hn·I
pump 0~1.1hl\ ,11
,,., ti n""'
t i'~n.h. , ,,11 \\Ith
,t.H~ l°'f11h ,, tr1111
9Y Fa ... h1on hi.ind, Newpo rt Bt'ach 7:;9.9:;:; I
No other newspaper brings you more
of your c ity council, planning commission,
sc hool and college d istricts and county
government than the Daily Pilat
Royal Hawaiian Service, with
exotic drinks, Polynesian delicacies
and the roomy comfort of a 747.
So call your Travel Agent
today. Or call United at 973-2121.
We've got Hawaii on sale.
*Each way when )'OU fly round-tnp.
Prices slightly higher on weekends.
Seven days advance purchase.
Special fare not available December 16 to
December 24, 1983.
I
'
.•
Cot Orange Coast OAIL V PILOT /Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
Invest in s ome good p e t care
By SYl. VlA PORTER
My d1cuonary de(tnes "dog days" as the ume
after mid-summer when hot, humid weather fort."'t.'S
life to slow down, and were 90 named becaUS4." the
anC'ienl.S calculau.-<l their arnvaJ by the rosition of
Sul us, the Dug Star I, however, c~ tell the dog days
are here merely by looking out my window, in I.he
exurbs. and observing my golden retrtever t'Ollapsed
in the shade
Pets cost money. dogs especially, and demand
special attenuon in summer. Depending on what
brand of food you buy, you spend roughly $125 to
$175 each year feeding your pet. A well cared for,
heaJthy, household dog wlli live 14 l<I 15 years.
ln a household where the dug runs loose, life
expectancy lS eight to 10 years, and in homes where
there arc no t-ontrols on the dog. life expectancy falls
to a range about two years lower. Accidents, diseases
ancJ parasites ac:rou.nt for the lower expected life
spans.
When you take your dog for a nde in your car on
a hot day, never leave the dog locked inside with the
windows closed while you run off on errands.
If you plan to take your dog on your vacation,
check ahead that the motels where you have
reservauons make provisions for dogs. Bring along
food that won't spc>LI, such as prepackaged moist
patues A sudden change in your dog's diet, though,
can cause unpleasant stomach problems for your pet
and unpleasant consequences for you.
Of course you pay attention at all times t.o what
you feed your dog. As puppies mature and grow old.
their nutritional and caJ oric needs change. So, too, do
your responsibilities for meeting them, advises Dr_
J ames H. Sokolowski, a veterinarian and manager of
the Gaines Nutrition Center.
Dogs eat to meet their energy needs, and they
have definite pre fere nt-es-like you, their owners-
especially flavors such as beef, chicken, liver and
cheese. Dogs generaJly adore table scraps and as an
oocasionaJ treat, table scraps are fine, but as a
substitution for an adequate diet, forget it.
Also like you, their owners, dogs will overeat,
but they tend to do so when given a new food. If you
give your pet the same food regularly, he or she will
tend to eat enough to satisfy hunger and not much
more.
You may rely on generic pet foods for your dog's
meals. but at least two recent reoorts indicate that
some genem:s don't provide the nutrients vital t.o
your dog·~ health. At the Umvers1ty of California at
Davis, dogs came into the veterinary hospital with
skin lesions txpica1 of zmc shortage, and the vets
made the connection between a generic dry food,
lacking sufficient zinc. and the dogs' ailment. Once
the mineral was added to their diets, the problem
cleared up.
In another recently reported study. litters of
puppies were divided into two groups and fed for 10
weeks on either a commercial national brand or a
generic brand. The puppies fed on th e generic grew.
on average, to about half the size of their siblmgs fed
I.he national brand.
And feedfag your dog generic food only can be a
false economy because to meet your pet's nutritional
needs. you may have to feed your pet more -
sometimes much more-than nutriuonally balanced
brands Your protection. When in the supermarket, tead
carefully the nutritional 1nformat1on printed on the
food labels and dlSt'USS your dog's diet with your vet
or the breeder
Talk over, 100, how much protein your dog
requires. The National Research Council's Commit-
tee on Dog Nutnuon w ill LSSue new guidelines later
this year which will lower the recommended amount
of protem for dogs It's expected the level will be
from $100,000 to $500,000
L<1nlat:l . Small Business Administration
D~partment at
(ROO) -%72 -8529 Toll Free
L\. ~~
Ll/Jerl!J National Banlt
IJl'lc: l'.i..11i.. l'\..r..i • 7777 l flll(r \~ • lluntmlttnn lk.lch. l 1\ 4'lf><l7
\t1 ,.,quu/ Oppart1D1ity I.ender
Good care cnn lt•ngth('n the lift• of
your pe t.
down to about 16 percent (many foods now deliver
twit'e that amount). It could be the extra protein is
wasted and i{ in animal form, this is the most
expensive component in your dog's food. High levels
?flow-quality protein also can cause kidney damage,
in p lder do~ especially.
("Sylvia Porter's New M oney Book for che BOs."
1328 pages of down-to-earth advice on personal
money management, is now available through her
column. Send $9.95 plus $1 for mailing and handling
CO "Sylvia Porter's New M oney Book for the 80s," in
care of this newspaper. 4400 Johnson Drive, Fairway.
Kan. 66205. MaJce ch ecks payable co Universal Press
Syndicate.)
Travel seminar set
Travel transportation will be the topic of a
travel preparation seminar sponsored tonight by
Mary Williams. director of "Get Ready, Get Set,
Go!"
'The seminar will be held at the Zonta Club in
Newport Beach, 2101 15th St .. across from
newport Harbor High School. This lat.est in a series
of seminars begms at 7:30 p.m.
Three speakers from the travel industry will
discuss domestic and international c·rui.se and air
travel. as well as car rental A question and answer
session wiU foUow each speaker. Travel Literature
and products will be on display, and door prizes
will be given away
The cost for the seminar is $5 a person, $7.50
for couples, payable al the door. The general public
is inv1ted to attend. For further information. call
760-7157 or 675-3172
MONEY
Established restaurant equipment &
supply company Is expanding into
Orange County. Have prime lease
Established chain & independant
customers. Seeking Investor
with strong financial abilities
'~"" 813-4593 "' 845-9232
EVES.
U.S. FOOD SERVICE CO.
Impossible?
P rime Office/
Warehouse
At 55¢ Ft. Net.
11 ur Ask f11r ll>'JlllrUll'.c Jn>ily
'" Office 1 nndo )•Ill OW:-.1
Dramatic \U\ in(!.~ Phi' opprccm
tum l:.111:cllcn1 financing 'iOW
l'rr,11g1n11' nddrc.-~' Ma11nll1·
ccn1 dnM Hc;11.11ilul l11nd
icap1ng 1"<11 p111~1nj!. hll\\lc
One mrnutc tu lrccway <:u'
tom11cd Ill '<nUr lll"Clh rnJc of
uwncr\hlf' r>m·c hy cAll wrnc
lklly II 11n111lun
t\IRPORl Ill ~l~C ~.., PAl(K
245 I l\chcr A \C • L 0\1,1 Mc'a
92626 (7 I 4} 751 -27.51
,, .... ,., ..
............ f
western Thrift & Loan
Making more mon ey for you.
e u ,L
Orange
1111 E. Katella Ave.
(714) 997·1300
Costa Mesa
2000 Harbor Blvd.
(714) 645·3153
For o-11\fd Ad
AC'tlOI"
c.JI
Ass@ts over 1200.000.000 00 with more t han a quarter of a
... ''100t •or .. ,,., .,,,... t@nrury serving C~llforntans I""""",,,,,.,
A DAIU rtU>T
A .. YKOI ...... .,.
DRlllil COUNTY BUSINf SS
Staff changes at Irvin e firm
lrvine marketing and rommunications agency
V. Montegraade & Co. hws recently made two s1.alf
changes. The firm, which 1pedaU.zes in the medical
and hJgh-t.e<:h Industry, has hired Karen Kendiy
and promoted Bonnie Pe teraon. Kendzy. formerly
of Zellner Communities, h e. of Irvine, will
provide executive secre t.anal support to Val
Montegrande, president and will assist in the
functions of the office management. Pe terson,
who has been assisting in client services, has been
promoted to associate at't'Ount management.
Pett.'rson is responsible for all media placement
and will be assisting Tim Friday, vice presi·
dent/technical services The firm recently re·
located its offices to a new facility at 11 50 Main St.,
lrvtne
• • •
B.J . Stewart Advertising and Publlc Rela-
tions, Inc. of Newport Beach has promoted office
and personnel manager Madelynn Stetson to the
position of manager, administrative and personnel
services. Stetson's responsib1liues will include
training of new employees, establishing internal
policies, h1ring and dismissing personnel and
coordingating company functions and seminars.
Stl'tson comes to Stewart from Advent Adver tis-
ing, Inc. of Costa Mesa.
• • •
Civic-Data Corp., the Newport Beach-based
publisher of the Southern California Business
Directory and Buyers Gulde, sponsored by the
Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, has
announced the appointment of Robert H. Mackay
as general sales manager. Most recently, Mackay
was advertising sales manager for Easy Reader, a
Hermosa Beach weekly. He will be responsible for
display advertising and sales, as well a for the
marketing of the firm's custom list services and its
other publications.
' ~
STETSON KENOZV PETERSON
Marc Green, executive vit'e president for
Developus IBsurance Co., has announced the
recent joint promotions of BayaoJ R. Baloloy and
Judi Levick to assistant vice president po6itions.
Baloloy has more than 14 years experience as a
ch ief acrount.ant/controller in the insurance
industry and Levick has nearly 20 years in the
field of banking
• • •
Allen, Matkins, Leck, Gamble aod Mallory. a
Southern California law firm, recently leased
11,300 square feet of office space in Civic Pina,
Newport Center , for its new Orange County
headquarters The firm will be relocating from its
present offices adjacent to John Wayne Airport
this month, according to Laura A. Ro1tvold, sales
manager in The lrv lae Company commerrial
division, developer of the new two and three-story
office project.
• • •
Advanced Digital has annount'ed the addition
of the SUPER ST AR microcomputer sysU>m to the
firm's growing product line. The annount'ement
was made by Hou eln Asadl, president of the finn.
MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS
OYER THE COUNTER
llAID ITOCK UITlllGI
)\' , .... 34'.,,., ,, "'~ . . ....
,.,,, ""' 13111 ll"• ,. ,." 314 ,,,.
""" 1711, 113 17311.
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STOCKS
\Al•11ro ....
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I
.. NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
Ol)()fAll{)l'IS l~lV0£ TAAOU ON lt<f N[W •OAll "'40Wdl PAClflC P8111t 90610.., l)flAOlt ANOCIHC•N"-'TI llOCll UCHAHOU AHi>
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BUllllll BRllfS
Retail sales unchanged
after four-month gain
By the A11ocla1d Prn1
WASHINGTON -Retail scJes we1c virtually
unchanged an July after fo1.1r straight monthJy gains
Gains for food, furniture and appliance st.ores were
slightly oulweighed by declines for autos. building
materials and department and general merchand1~
stores, according LO the Commerce Department report
Wednesday "Consumers paused to cat.ch their breath an
July after boostmg their spending sharply" m the
April-June quart.er, Commerce Secretary Makolru
Baldrige srud.
U.S buyers pre fer luxury car~
WASHINGTON -U S.carbuyersare willing LO pay
a higher sticker price for luxury import models -
espedally during unceruun economic cycles, manufac-
turers of luxury cars say. An unstable economy has been
a boom for the luxury car business because wealthy
drivers are interested in investment value m addition ID
prestige, the manc.tlacturers say A.B. Shuman, a
spokesman Cor Mercedes-Benz of North Amenca said
his company sold 41 ,840 cars an the first seven months of
1983, up from 37,359 in the same period last year The
most popular model, the 3000, a four-door sedan with a
de1sel engine, costs $31 ,000.
$400 million expansion eyed
NEW YORK -Carnival Cruise Lines Inc of
Miami says at will invest $400 m1ll1on an an expansion
operation that would gave it the world's largest cruise
liner fleet. Carnival said Wednesday the expansion will
include a Bahama Islands casino and three new
superliners. The $100 miU1on casmoadjo1nsa $66 rniUion
resort development by the Bahamian government as
part of an investment in the Bahamas' $1 biWon
economy. of which tourism represents 75 percent, said
Baltron Bethel, director of tourism.
Airline reserYation rules due
WASHINGTON -The CJV1l Aeronautics Board
has vott!d 4-0 to begin regulating airline reservations
systems to safeguard against domination of the
computerized service by a few b1gcomparues. The board
instructed its staff to prepare an advance notice of
proposed rule-making, which officials said was likely to
be is.9ued wilhin the next three weeks. CAB Chairman
Dan McKinnon told the board he hopes the rule-making
process set m motion by Wednesday's vote will lead LO
final adoption of a regulation by January or February
Rigged gas pumps draw fin e
OLATHE, Kan. -The 70-year-old chauman of the
board of Hudson Oil Co Inc has been fined $5,000 and
ordered to perform 200 hours of public serv\ce work for
ordering gasoline pumps rigged to short customers at
company stations. Mary Hudson Vandegrift. who Last
year was listed among the 400 wealthiest 1nd1v1duals an
the nauon by Forbes magaz.ine, on Tuesday was placro
on two years probation by Johnson County Circuit
Judge William Gray She could have been sentenced to
up to five years m prison The company. which has
stations m 31 states. also wa:s assessed an add1uonal
$5,500 for altering the pumps so they pumped less gas
than motorists paid for
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT OOW JON£S AV£RAG£S •
NEW YOllK (AP) -TM lollowlno I• •
"" ol 1"4 "'°'' K ii•• ••oc:lu IMll«I on IM CIOlter ...,..,,,... for Tl>Urodev TM IOl•I ,, l>llMKI Oii ll>e medl•n ork;e
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Mol!tenlo 06.0il 7494 104 E oo~ '2S,J90 6t09 :U~ Sclllumoro U J,619 3963 Sf"-
N•IS.m l UJ,454 41'7 ""°
NEW YOllK (AP) -Flnel Oow·Jor>H
n o• ror w.o , Auv 10 STOCKS
30 Ind
10 l rn IS Utl 65St•
'"""' Tr•n Ulllt
65$11!
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111.36 111 1l 116 St 127 SS-0 ...
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7,llS,toO 1.ns.t00 ,,,$19,400
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the -· YOtumc ror Tl>U~dn WHAT NYSE DID TIW 10111 11 IMIMKI on ,,.. medlen e>rl<•
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NEW YORI( IAPI Auo 10
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WHAT AMEX DID
NEW Y°"K IAPI -'VO 10
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New 111911~
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MHALS
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SILVER
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tllv-. .i t. 724 per l•ov oonc•. NV COniea
11>01 m0<11ll ~IO-Wtd
COLO QUOTATIONS
SYMBOLS
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• 4 •• i£I
C8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
°""'_ ....... .., ... ~
Wade Roberts stands in front of stand of 50-foot-high bamboo.
Gardens an oasis of beauty
in Coast's bustling world
v From Page Cl
For a number of years, the
Sherman Foundation carried the
full weight of the program.
Today, however, the center is
designated a publicly supported
charity, with most of its operating
budget coming from individual
memberships and donations.
from businesses in the communi-
ty. and from philanthropic or-
ganiz.a tions.
• In recent years, rising costs and
the recessionary period have
severely affected the program.
according to Roberts: "We have
had tremendous cutbacks Ln the
last few years" with some staff
positions elirmnated and and
development curt.ailed. As a re-
sult. a Fund-Raising Advisory
Board composed of community
leaders was created three years
ago. to help gain financial sup-
port. With their efforts, member-
ships jwnped dramatically, from
100 members in 1,980 to 2,300
members today,
"We do need continued sup-
port," says Roberts. "There's no
question about it. Right now. our
goal, above all, is to make sure
that the library and gardens are
here in the future.'
The Volunteer Association has
been a tremendous help, he says.
Volunteers help maintain the
plants and floWTbeds, work an the
gift shop. serve t ables
aUWlCheons or afternoon teas.
and many other things. "The
members and volunteers develop
a warm relationship with the
garden, as i( it were their per-
sonal garden."
Marilyn Ford, currently
vice-president of the Volunteer
Asaociation, says "being sur-
rounded by the beauty and color
of the gardens makes doing
volunteer work here a pleasure,
not to mention the importance of
the numerous friends one makes
when being part of the activities.
I always have such a good {~ling
when I walk in the front gate."
Along with the volunteers,
Sherman staff members and
guest speakers from the com-
munity provide year-round cul-
tural and educational activities
for members and the general
public.
Pract.Jcal gardening techmques
and other information Cor the
home gardener are offered in
weekly cl.asses or as part of the
Weekend Gardener senes on
Saturdays, which is free and open
to the public. Evening programs
include historical or hort1cultural
lectures by noted professionals.
Regularly scheduJed coolting
classes are conducted by
Madeleine de Groote, Sherman
Gardens chef; and Kay Pastorius,
proprietress of the School of
International Cuisine in Laguna
Beach. De Groote is currenUy
vacationing in h er native
Belgium, but returns later in
August to offer classes which
feature complete menus from
soup to dessert. During August
and September, Pastorius is con-
ducting classes in chocolate des-
serts, hot and cold souffles, and
California/Mexican dining
Tours of the library and gar-
dens are available to schools,
clubs and organizations at no
charge. Trained docents conduct
regularly scheduled tours for
elementary school children
·•A new docent training pro-
gram 1s beginning in the fall,"
says Roberts, for volunteers
interested in becoming part of the
children's program The staff
considers thechUdren'seducation
program an important part of
their total effort, and welcomes
participation from the schools.
Roberts encourages anyone in-
volved with children's programs
to explore the center's offering.
For older students. the Shennan
staff ·works with Coastline Re-
gional Occupational Program
(CROP) in providing vocaUonal
positions.
Sherman Gardens also does an
impremve amount of work with
and for the handicapped. "We
enjoy it very much, " says
Roberts. "Our staff finds it very
rewarding." Recently the gar-
dens offered 10 weeks of "Gar-
dening for the Blind" -classes
for aduJts from the Braille In-
stitute The series included in-
structions for making a hanging
color basket, with the partici-
pants making their own. The
same senes will be offered again
in the fall. Also, the garden's
publications include a Braille
edition of the "Guide to the
Gardens." Currently, two of the
part-time stafC gardeners are
handicapped youths who orig-
inally were trained at the gardens
through the CROP program.
F\Jture plans for the gardens
include development of a "Touch
and Smell" Garden for the handi-
capped. which will emphasiz.e
container plants with abundant
or unusual fragrances or textures.
It will also have a number of
benches and easy wheelchair
access. All of the current garden
areas offer wheelchair access as
well.
Another frequent use of the
gardens is for weddings. Patrons
and Life Patrons have the privi-
lege of renting the grounds for
· private parties or weddings, and
so far this year, about 40 wed-
dings have been held. The cer-
emony is usually held m the Tea
Garden ("the most floriferous
area.'' says Roberts), with the
central patio used for the recep-
tion.
"We could never have enough
botanical gardens," says the di-
rector. "People want and need a
place to break away and see
something dJfferent.'' He sees the
gardens as equally desirable for
"someone who would like to
study the plants.'' and for "the
casual visitor who wants to just
relax and enjoy what is here."
Hours are 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
daily for the gardens; 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. for the library. Admission is
$1 Tuesday through Sunday;
Monday is free. Members and
their guests are free.
Manhattan in the dark again
Water main break triggers blackout in part of New York City
U.S.churchleadershack
Soviets in Afghan vote
By GEORGE W. CORNELL
Of .. 'I II······ PrMil VANCOUVER, British Colwnbia -American
church delegates voted with their Soviet counter-
parts as the World Council of Churches called for a
cutoff of arms supplies to rebels in Afghanistan, but
not for immediate withdrawal of Soviet troops.
The global Chrlstian conference headed lnto its
final &e6Sions today after delegates from the Soviet
Union persuaded It ln a tenae debate to tread 10ftly
about Afghanistan. While not urging an immediate
pullout of Soviet troops, the resolution did call for
withdrawal "in the context of an overall political
settlement."
The Soviet Union aent forces Into Afghanistan in
December 1979 to help the Moecow-backed govern-
ment crush an insurgency by Moelem guerrillaa. An
estimated 100,000 Soviet troops are deployed there.
Anglican Bishop Alexander J . Malik of Pakistan
said that if any Western country acted the way the
Soviets are acting in Afghanistan, it wouJd "be
judged and denounced in the strongest possible language.,,
"But the atrocities of the Soviet troops are not
even mentioned," he ~d ln attacking the reeolution
eventually approved in an emotional confrontation
bet.ween Soviet church leaders and some from
Western Europe and Aaia.
On Monday, the council said it couJd not act on a
human rights plea on behalf of Soviet Christians
unless Soviet delegates themselves brought the
matter up. But the plea had said Soviet delegates
U.S. concerns
about military
manpower grow
WASHINGTON (AP)-U.S. military activity
in Latin America and Africa is drawing attention to
America's widespread defense commitment.a and
underlining a key Pentagon concern about a possible
manpower shortage.
The current maneuvers involve a relatively
small number of America's 2.1 million unifonned
personnel and a.re of generally short duration with
the exception of the six-month-long aeries of
exercises in Central America.
But they highlight a potential problem that U.S.
military leaders and expert.a have warned about
publicly in recent months -America doesn't have
enough troops to fulfill all Its commitments at once.
Should greater numbers of troops be needed for a
longer time, there wouJd be manpower shortages.
Gen. John A. Wickham Jr., the new Army chief
of ataf:f, told reporters at the Pentagon earlier th.is
week that "traditionally, we've had a range of
contingency needs that probably exceed the force
capabilities that we've been able to generate. That
probably applies now."
Similar warnings have been &0unded by other
military leaders ln recent months. Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger, in arguing for the Reagan
adminisl.ration'a record $1.8 trillion Pentagon
were pawna of the government and were unlikely to
broach the subject.
Some aharp criticism of the U.S. military
preeence in Central America appeared ln documents
readied for action as the 18-day aaembly nean lu
end tonight.
On the Afghanistan i..asue, the &88embly rejected
propoeed amendmenta which wouJd have added the
word "immediate" to a conditional call foe
withdrawal of Soviet troops and weuld have deleted
a call for a halt to anns supplies for resistance
fighters.
The amendments, Introduced by Lutheran
Bi.shop Gunnar Listerud of the Church of Norway,
failed 278-to-306.
Instead. the slightly modified original pullout
re90}ution , backed by American as well as Soviet
delegates, was approved by a 479-to-21 vote, with 142
abs tensions.
The resolution supports initiatives of the United
Nations for "an end to supply of anns to the
opposition groups from the outside" and ''withdrawal
of Soviet troops from Afghanistan in the context of an
overall political settlement, including agreement
between Afghanistan and the U.S.S.R."
This "wouJd enable the Afghan people to follow
freely their own path of development," the resolution
said.
The resolution said the "continuing fighting
there has led to tremendous human suffering for vut
aections of the population, many of whom have
become refugees.''
Eye to eye
A baby dwarf crocodile, one of four
hatched last weekend al the Philadelphia
Zoo, gets a cl08e look r rom keeper Denise
Robinson. It was the first time in the zoo'•
I 09-year history that crocodile egs bad
ha tched. Only nine inches long. this little
fellow could someday grow to six and a
half feet.
buildup, says the money is needed to fulfill all the .------------,.-----------
U.S . commitments abroad Nil.IC NOTIC[
At the White Houae, deputy press secretary NOTICe M l"lllU9TU'I ·~ MORRJSON Larry Speakes was asked if U.S. forces were Loen No. ,,,20026-4/LOC>ben BERNARD M ORRISON ,
overextended and answered, "that's not the presi-HERMES FINANCIAL CORPOR-age 60. Jl'U8'd away on
dent's view." ATIOH August 9. 1983. Mr. Mor-
The Uru. ted Sta•-1.5' taking part . l'-__ aa duly appointed TruttM under the ri9on is survived by hla de-""" now lil • u 1:.:: 1otk>'<wfna deecrtbed deed of 1ru11 overseas exerciaes, in addition to moving about 550 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUTION TO voted aon Paul (Janet),
men to the Sudan to operate and defend U.S . WACS l~i~~':rE~~e81~°t:H~~~scAg= ~~~ ~de:,_~~~
surveillance planes. The big jets were moved there to CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIAED IN Mr. Morrl8oo WU. rmident
monitor th.e attempt of the U.S.-backed Chad ~L .~~ ,s.;;'~ .:f!2:' .!.:t.i of ~ C-ounty for over
government to repulse Libyan-supported rebela. moneyoflt.•UnlledSt•l•)lllrlgtlt, 15 yean, one of the foun-
In Central America, the first element.a of what 1111• •nd lnl-1 oonveyoed 10 -i den of the Orange C-ounty now held by 11 undf Mid OMd of Ch · · and will eventually be 5,000 U.S . ground troops began Tru.I 1n ,,,. property herelnan• ct. eta Amoctation com-
aniving this week in Honduras for a aeries of leribed: TRUSTOR: OuncM c. Lob-merated with the Bernard
tha tak · •'--t>en Moniaon Che81 Tournmeot.. maneuvers t may e up to SIX mon..... Joen M. Looo.n
Meanwhile, the Navy has committed three eeNEFtClARY:Men:utySa~and he taught in both private
ba_, -:-1 • and battl-'-' Loen AeeoclaUOn and publicachoollln~ \u.e groups-two 1Un:uu.t earners a earup reQOf~ Jtnuary 111. 1880 u 1ne1r. C-ounty, in 1975 he wu del-
-and a total of 19 ships to the maneuvers ln what 21074 In Boolt tl-473 ':It:. 388 of egate to the Yiddish c.an-
Wlck.ham and other Pentagon offidala sa~ is an effort =~"':'&~,,.County~'= vent.ion which wu held ln
to "aend a me.age" to potential ene.nues that the deed of anm deectlt>ee 111e follow· Iarael, also a Yiddl1b
United States will support ita friend.a such as Ing: Loi 15 of Trecl 2432, In the C«y Hebrew Teacher and of Coet• Mele, M per map recotded holar ......... --Honduras. 1n 8oolt 1e, P9QM 1 and s of t..u.-IC at many ~---
celleneou• ~. 1n 111e omc. of the tions. Funeral RrVica will 1----------i County Aecotd9' of Mid County. be held on Thuraday, PUBUC NOTlC( YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A A t 11 1983 at 2:00PM P t t DEED OF TRUST DATED JANUARY ugus ' ' ro es ~A=::· 11, 1980. UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-at Harbor Lawn-Mowit
, The ,..--.... -.. .......... TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· Olive Memorial Chapel with
f LNG --""' ,....._, w-.,. ERTY,rTMAY8ESOLOATAPU8-Rabbi Geof'Jle Schlmn,.t' 0 ~ •w Y MAM F 1N1 SH ~~M~~t~~~ ~~~:: 5:PT~E of Temple 9eth Emrt t>f~
CARPENTER. '~ Kentuc:lly ~. PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU YOU !ldat.ing. In Ue\I of Dowwa • I CC:~N~~J~MAN. 1949 SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. the family augeetta dclm-termln a ~241!'~Y "'-· Coete MeM, C.itf. 92~~~1 Dublin St .. Ca.11 Mwa, Ca. tiona to the United Jewtab
• ......, Welfare Fund of Oranae Thia~ la condueted by In~,~-~~:' i!°"'.: C-ounty. Servicet under the
SANTA BARBARA
(AP) -California's first
liquified natural gaa ter-
minal should not be built
near Santa Barbara, and
the utilities that. want It
should not get large rate
hikes to pay for it.
speakers said Wednes-
day.
Appearing at a public
hearing before the state
Public Utilities Com-
milaion, government of-
flciala, community ac-
tivists and residenta op-
poeed c:on1tl"Uetion of lhe
terminal al Uttle Coj>
Bay, near Point Concep-
tion, 35 miles north of
Santa Barbara.
lndMdu .. : •t>ove. no WllfTW!ly la gt.en a 10 h• d i rec t i on of H • b or Aon.io W'(fMll ec1 ) •• The Thll -..~t -flled wtth 111e ::::'~ ~ c:[ 0.:-:, ·True\. Lawn -Mount 0 I l v e County a.. of Or11nge County on by~ of a twMCh Of defllUlt 1n Mortuary. 540-!'>554.
Nky 14, 1913 ,,,. obllOallona MCUred thereby, ----------~ ~ofor• ••ecul9d and Otliv.r.d
Publlthed OrtnOt CoMt Delly to lht underllgned • Wfllttn Dec:let· r---------..... Piiot Juf'; 28. Aug..,, 1t.18. 1883 etlon 01 Oelauh and Oemend fOf i
4292-«S s•. and wrmen notice of bfMCtl ----------1 and of electlon 10 CllJM the under-PUBUC fl)llC( 9'cl'*' to ... Mkl property to Mtllfy --....;.=-;;;.;;..---------1 Mid obllgetlon•. and lhet'Mfl• the f'ICTmOUI ....... undenlgned CIUMd Mid none. of
MAim IT A rn.wT breech and of election to be ,... The totowtno per90n 11 d°"'O corded DeClmber e, 1882 • lnetr. bv.._ •: No. 82-'1283&4 In Offlcl .. Aeoofdtl In
LINING OREETINOS, 432 8. lhe offlc9 of lhe ~det of Or1111g9
.,ltbof no. t 1 • Stnt• Ana, Cellf., County. ~2704 Said Slit wltl .,. ~. but
NANCY ANN GERVAIS, q2 8. w1t11ou1 ~ or -ranty ....
Hwt>ot no.11 , Stnt• Ana, Cell! .• ~ Of tmpllecl, ~ tltll
92704 poMnlon, °' encum~.1o P9Y Thie ~ • c.onducted by an Ille ""1!lllnlng ~ Mim ot Ille
lndMduel: not .. MCVf9d by Mid dMd of TNtt,
twlc:y' Ann o.rv• with lnt.,..t u In Mid note Thll et1t~t WN Ned with lhe PfoYIOed, edvlllCM. If tny, undet
COunty a.11 of OrtnQe COunty on Ille terma of Mid Deed of TN1t • ....,
.My 1t. 111$ ctwlrgMand.,.,,.,_oftheT~
,_,. lllld of the INllta Ct9eted by lll6d
PublllMd Orange eo.t Delly Deed of T r1.111
Piiot .My 28, A.uQ. ,, 11, 11, t!IU Stiel .... wlll M held on: ~
'ACIHC Yll'W
MIMC>atAl PAa•
Cen-e1ery Mo1tuary Chapel-Crematoiy _
3500 Pac1l1c View D11ve
Newoorl Beach
644-2700
McCOIMCK MOITUA•llS
La<>una Beacn
•94·9415
laQuna Hills
768·0933
San Juan C.p1s1ta110
495·1776
42aa-a3 day, September I, 1883. II 2:00 p.m.
Moat of the 18 ·~---------•tthe CtiaipmanAvenueen1renoe10 ·-lhe CMo o.nt• &ulldlnQ, SOC> Eat
HA.Uo. l.AW~MT. OUYI
Monuarv • Cemettil"f
Crema1orv 1peakers before Admin· "8JC NOT1CE Ch"PfM" A~ .. ~.~A.
NEW YORK (AP) -A 12-i.nch water main
broke in Manhattan early today. flooding streets and
setting off a fire that blacked out the heart.of the busy
gannent district and clotted hundreds of stores and
offices, Including Macy's and Gimbela.
lltrative Law Judge i---f'IC--ml-toUt--.,_---.. --At 111e tlfM o1 the lnl!lll 1M1t111-cet1on of IHI llOllC». the tot .. Con Ed spokesman Larry Kleinman aa.ld about John J. Doran crltidzed NAm STA..-wf lllTIOU!1t of u. unpllld belerlOI °'the
10.246 customers le&t power bu\ he noted a single rate hikes the utilities ~ ~ ..._. -doing =:,~rv: !: =::-._t:
customer could actually be a major store or offiai ' want to recover an ..U-THI! 8TUOIO, tCI! CREAM ooete. ~· end ~ ..
building. mated $273 million PA"L<>f'. SU& VII UdO M• '°°• aeo.1.a.ot The 1~11 lndebtedneee
, 1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mese
5"40-5554
Police said the main broke between l .30 a.m. and
1:45 a.m. ln the Herald Square llectlon. Water flooded
a CoMOUdated &ii9on aubltatlon 40 fttt below the
street. causing elect.rica.l 1horts and fires in a
transformer vault.
Power waa shut off In an area bordered by 30th
and 42nd atreeta and Sixth 3nd Seventh avenues.
Twenty-flv• irafflc Hahl.I ln the area -one of the
city'• busiest -were shut off.
alttady apent. on the $3 ~ e.on. Callt0 •2993 oetno • Mtirnate on WNct1 tt1e Con Ed spoketiman Herb Hadad said a suggest.ion billion project CALIF~':.°,:: v:~ :.:. =Ing bid .. oommlecl ,.,~
that power could be restored by noon would be . '°°• ~ IMotl. Cellf,, ~ 1t1e:c'.,.::::i:.:~t.-
"optiml1Uc." The incrMle would ~-=--• OOftdUC'9d by• •. ,..,
,,.c1•ont1H
1&&. •0ADWAY
wot1TU4H
1 10 Brott<Sw•v
Costa Mes.
641·9150
Eight engine companies, three laddercompanlee 9dd about 31 omta pu _...,.... Lllllle Lofland HEAME.S FINANCIAL COT~
and two rescue squads went to the acene of the month to the average Ttlll , .. ...,::· ::-"11ec1 \lltlfl IM •Mid Tnil* IAL.n -••OM
ttubstatlon fire. '8ldentlal IM bill, Mid eoun1y a1tt1 °' OrllnOI 0oumy on 11)': T.D. hMol ~ IM"4 • T\ITMllJ.
Flre Commls,,ioner Joeeph Spinn.A to 93Jd lhe Ure oflldall for Southern .M't 14. ,.., I.Inda Peret, A11191. = Wlflf~7~Plt.
wucentered In the 150-foot-by-50-foott.ranaformer CalUomia Gu C.o. and ll'UtlWled OtllllOe eo.t'-:: One City 8Mlt:c7~ CoStaM .. •
vaulL Theheat.hesald,wauolntenaethatltwe:ntup P8Clfic Oaa &c Electric ""1~21.AUO ,,11,11.1ea ,ubll•hed ~.,. cout C)jlty tl•&-9371 , 11...,j l)n •lrshAh and Ignited o fire on &h roof. Co. ~ AUOU•• 11. 11, 2&. 1113 41774$, ..,. ... ________ _
• • ¥ {
Orange CoU1 DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Aua. 11, 1983 C1
Ml.IC NOTICC P\llllC NOTICC Nil.IC MOTICC MUC NOTICE Ml.IC MJTlCC
'1CTmOUI IU..... '1CTnlOUl IU..... 'ICTm0Ue IU..... ,K:Tmout •UttNHI l(Olm FICTmou• •UllNH• '1CTITIOUI ~.. ,ICTtnOU9 ....... MAl9 ITA.,.....,. MAm ITA.,....,,. ~ ITATW•NT NAJM ITATaMDf'T "CTITIOUI 9UllNIH NAMll tTATl•NT NUii ITA"rllmNT MAim ITA.,....,., ~ tOl60wlng pereon le doing TM lollOwfttO ~ 11 dOlng T~ IOllowtng petaOl\I .,. dOlng fne tollowlng l*IOO I• Going NAM9 tTATIMINT Tn1 lollowtng ~·eon It dolno The IOllOwlng petlONI .,. doing The lollowinO pet'IO'\I •• 00ln9 ~ ... ~ .. bulllnMe u bu~•.. rri. rouowtng 1>4Haon1 •t• a04ng bulln•u •• bu91""8.. ~ .. BAY TIMBl!R5 APARTMENTS, GRAMME PU8LICATION8, 3:l68 SICI BUS·TOURS ANO PROMO· J M H ELECTRONICS, ll.AGUIR-t>ullneu.. ECONOMY VIDEO SERVICES, (A)WILO KI NOOOM. (81 PIME KNOT ... OTEL, ~ W 3tt W Bay StNlt, Colt• ..._, rUfloc*I 0.. Coate ...... CA t2e28 TtON, 2821 Shlllltat, Cotta MIN. RE ORIGINAL OBJECTS D'ART. H5 WAVETl!I(, 3119() W .. lerly,Sutta 17080 San 8runo No H 1&, Fountain RENT ·A-PLANT, 20322 Vthage Or , eo.tt Hwy. ~ BMc;h, Ca. c..t. tH21 Mldlael "-Gtan11M Jr. S268 Calif , t2&:l& Tia.Nena. \.llgvna 8eac;tl. CA 928!11 :l&O, Newoo<I 8"¢11, Ca 92MO llalt•y. Cell! 92,011 Hunllng1on a..cn. C• 92648 t2MS
RALPH EDWIN HAUN. 2116' Tur10Gk Or , CO.ta ...... CA 9M2& HYLE BUROUE SCHAFH.AUSER RIChwd lagulrra. 9115 Tia JuaN, Aulom•t9d Swlmpool1. lllC (OH FREDERICK B SINGER, 11080 Ft.O H.,nandtu Ill, 20322 VII. ev.,.. & JMnla Wenoew, 21 t CaatlerOCic Ad . 1Agun1 BM c;ll. Tnla bu.._ It COl\Clue'l.O by. 1111 t 1, 211:l1 Snentar. Coeta M ... , Lagun• &Noh, CA 112&5 t OOMl(Otilo). 124& Wnt 45111 S1r .. 1, Sin B1uno No H 1&, Founlahl V•li.y, Or . H11nt1ngton BMcn. Ca 92648 Henover. C:O.t1 Meea, C. tHH
Ceillf . t265 I lndlvid\lal. Ct.Ill . 9262& Shlfi.y lagulrre, 1185 Tta Ju1n1. M1n1ttetd Onlo, U906 Celll 9:1708 Tlll1butlnff811 condvottld by 1111 Tnt1buW-11 oonouct.o by a11 Thlt buainwa 11 oonaUGt.O b)' an Mlcl\MI A Qram1M Jr MIKE JOSEPH HESSION, 5:l9. l1guna e.ach, CA 9285 t Thia tru1ln1H I• conducted by " Thll bu11oeu 11 conduct<l(J by en l11dtv1du11 lndlvlchl91
lndlvtd\111: Tnle 1tatement wu llled with tlll Wiiiow Grove A~o. GleodOlll, Cati! , Tn11 butlna .. 11 conductitd by an corporation. tlldl\lldoal· Fte<I Hlfn1nd11 Ill .i.ani. Wengejer
Ralpll EdWin HllUn County Clenl of Of•nga l;O\lnl)' on 9 1740 lndl\lldUal A UT OMA l EO SWIMPOOLS. INC Frederick S1ngor Thia 1111emen1 wa1 tllecl with the Thia 1111-1 wu llled wM the
Tlll• 1111111W1t w .. ttl•d with 1na July 27. 1983. Tiii• t>;JtlneH la con<lucted by 1 Alcll•ra l11gutrr1 Gory ( Zu1tnc11er. Pr.sld•nt lrlle•1h1tem .. 11 wae 11160 wnn th• County C .. tk ot Ora~ COut1I)' oo Coonf\' Clettl 01 Ofanoe County on
Couftty C.tt Of Of8tl04t COUf'llY °" l'nltOI general p1nnerahtp· Shlfi.y lzllQulr•e Tlll1 11etement w" 1110<1 w1t11 Ille County Ctork or Ore11ge County on June 30, t083 Jufy 7, 1983 Juty 14. 1N3 P\.tblllhed Of~ Cout o.tty Nyte Sc:naln1UMf 11 Tni. e1a1-t w11 111.0 won the County C141•k or Or•ng• County on July u 1983 1"211110 Piii'* na.. PllOI Aug 4, 11. 18. 25, 11183. lhl• at•I-• waa fifed wun tn• County Ctertt of 0t1nge County on July 15. 10113 F220t71 P1,1bll11led Orange Cout Deity P\.tblllhecl Otange CON• Daly
Publlahed OrllllQI Coalt Dell)' 4432-83 County Clitfk ol OfllllQI County on July 1 t, 1983 F220I01 Publlslle<I 01111g• Coatl Delly Pllol July 2 f. 28, Aug 4, 11. 19&3 Piiot My 21. 2&, Aug '· 1 t, 1ta
Piiot My :l&. Aug 4, 1 I, t8, 1N3 July 18. 1083 ,220:>41 Publllnecl Orenge Coa11 011ty Pllol July :l8, Auo 4,' 1, 16. 1983 4218-83 406$-~
4295-83 rt&IC NOTICE Fno.o Publlsned Orange Cout 0111y Piiot July 21. 28, Auo 4. 11. 1983 4293-&3 -----------i------------
flCTITIOUI IU ... H
NAMelTATa•NT
l hi IOllowlng perwon ti doing bual-u: HUEY & ASSOCIATES, t&ee New•
por1 Blvd. Sun• 1:l8, COit• .......
Ce?lf. ll:l827 -S CHRIS HUEY. 2 Enc;.ore, ~
port e.ecn. ca111 . e~
Thi• bu--l• conducted by 111'1
lndlvklual;
S. Cnrta Huey
Thll 1111-t WU tllld IMth tM
County Clartt of Orange COunty on
Juty T4, t983
f'DOfTI
Publtahld OfllllQI Cout Delly
Pllo1 July 28, Aug. 4, 11, 18, 11183
4:l9t-83
Ptll.IC NOTICE
Pu1>111111a Orange Cout OIAly PllOI Auo 4, I 1 18. 2!>. 1983 4217-83 DllD11c Mt\Tll't --II' Mt\ncc FICnTIOUt IUllNI•• PllOI Juty 28, Aug ~.11, 18, 19113 4459-83 ------------, _________________ ... ____ nv __ ~----1----... .-.n.---""------
..... ITATl•NT 4zt7•93 Nil.IC NOTICE Mt.IC NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUllNIH flCTTTIOU8 ~··
Tile toOowtng ~·.on la doing P\llllC NOTICE NA._ ITATl•NT NUil ITAftMINT ., bu1lnna u : DllDIJC Mt\flCE FICTITIOUS IUllHEll FICTmOUI IUltNlll Tne tollOWlng plf'IOnl are Going TIWI IOllOIW)g ~ .,. doing INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL & ... _ "" FICTITIOUI IUllNll• NAME ITAT1!MENT NAM!! ITATIMENT llusAneu.. ~""' ••
HOME PRODUCTS. 32&1 T~k ,ICTITIOUa IUUiMEtl NAME ITATlllHNT Tne lollowlng pef'IOOS .,. aolng lN~~:.:1:wlt1g !*IOnl .re doing BARBARA s BRIDAL SHOPPE, THE MILK PALACE. MO w 1tTh
Or . Colla M4IM. CA 112&:l& NAiii tTAn•NT Tiii lollowlng per.on II OOlng buslneu U C-'\IEXCALIBUR VIDEO (&)THE 270 E 17111 StrMt, eo.1a ....... Ca. Slroet. Colt• ...... C.. 82&27 ru?.:!1~.M~~:M~~~~9:;:61 l);J~'::~ng i-•ons ... dOlng bu;~~~~ SHEEPSKINS, 24z9LT?~o3~tA~e;~:i~ •• ;v;VT= -'\OVEMTUAE-FANTASV 'GROUP. 92:!:b.,. E l<I 275 E 18tn An~:9~11001 E.Grant.s.nt.
Thia bu'"-9 It conduct.O by. an NORTH HILLS PHYSICAL THER-Newpon Blvd . Spece 1. Ccma G1tden Grove, Ca 92643 ~!~~ C~~~tn;2s';c~ne, Huntington Street, t\08, Coa1•'teM, C. .112&27 ~ 0. Ryu, 100 I E Grant, Santa
lndlvtdulA. APV ANO &ACK SCHOOL 1211 W Mesa. CA 92827 Richard H Tyler. 10321 Well-NOBLE THADDEUS OILOA V lnl1 bull,_ la conducted b)': an An•, Cl. 02701
Getald Flor" Lamber! Road Suite tOO L• Hat>ra· wu11am Robert CorH . 3610 Lick-mtnsllf Ave. Gerden Grove, Ce 1555 Mesa Verde Easi 16F Colla tndhlldu111 Tnla bualneu I• conducted by. 111
Thia atatement wu tllod w1tn tlle CallfOl'nl• 90631 ' · slc,y, Pasadena. Callt 91107 92643 Men Calif 92626 • Barb1t• King lndlvtduat. County Clerk of Or.noe County on Frank Sorrentino, M.0 A p,0• This bu1lneq 11 conducted by en Daryl E. Jacobs, 16962 Lark Lane, ELIZABETH ANN LANCE 15!>5 Thi• et1temenl wit 111•<1 wltll the San1 E. Ryu
July 27, 1883 leutonalCorporatlon :ss1 e Whllllf tn<JMdual. Hunllng1on Bfltlch, Ca 92649 Mesa Verde East 16F Co.ta Meta County Clerk or Of•llQI County oo Tiii• 1111-t wN flied with the
F221114 Blvd l• Habra CeJttornle 9063 1 Wiiiiam R Corse This buslnes1 Is conducied by· a Calll 92626 • · Jutv 13. 1983 County Clltk ot °'"'Ill County on
Pul>lllllled Oranoe Coa1t Oa)ly Tn·I· bualne&i 19 conducted bv • Thia 11a1emen1 was 1111<1 wltn 1ne ltmlled par1neran1p co'LLEEN ANNE FORD 20121 ~ July 7, 1983 Piiot Aug 4, 1 t, 18, 25, 1983 corporation County Cletk 01 Orange County on Oaryt Jacobi · Publlahed Orange Cout O.lly ll'nt'*
4438-83 Fr8!1k Sorrentino. M o .. Prlaldlnt July 27. 1983 Thia statement was 1116<1 wttn the ~:i;:na92~:~e. Huntlnglon BMch. Piiot July 21 28, Aug 4, 11, 1983 Put>Uaned Orange CoM1 ~
------------1 Thia 1t1tement was fifed wllll ~tie F22157'1 Countt~ ~lerk ol Orange County on OAVIO LOWELL DARNALL 443 4:124-83 Pllol July 21, 28, Augt.191 4, t 1, 1N3
fltllt.IC NOTICE Cout1ty Clltk of Orange County on Publllllle<l Orange CoaSI Diiiy July • 983 Flit O• Apl 204 Co.la Mesi Calif mmt 'C Mt\TICE 4073-83 ------------1July 14 t983 Piiot Aug 4, 11 t8 2!>. t983 FZI029t 92626 · • .. niuu nu 1------------, 446t-83 Pul>lftllflO Otange Coast Dally f'tll.IC NOTICC f'lCTTTlOUI 8U8'Nl!U F220l70 Piiot July 2 t 28 Augull 4 11 11183 SHAWN WILLIAM OAVIOSON, FICTITIOUa IU ... 11
f1CTITIOUI IUIMU ..... l"TAT!•NT Pubtl1hed Orenge Co11t O•llY . . ' 4226-63 205 Albtirt Place. Coala MeH, C1lll., NAMI ITATEMPIJ ••n
NAME tTAnmNT Tn. fo11ow1no per.on 1s da1no P1to1 Aug 4, 11. 18. 25. t983 Nil.IC NOTICE 92921 Tn. 1011owing Pl'ton• .,. 0oino ,IC'TITIOUI ~••
bual,_ u : 4294·63 Nil.IC NOTICE Thia business Is conducted by a bualnua u . NAm I TATDllNT ~':!'~ l*'llOnl .,.. doing BODYGUARD MOULDI NGS. FICT1TlOUt aUllHfet ~neral partnership: t<EPOT PRODUCTS COMPANY Ttle followtng l*IOna .,. OOlng
(A)SAAOOUN'S, (B)SAMAR 18090 8eech Bllld. Suite 10, Hunt-PUBLIC NOTICE NAME ITATEMl!NT FICTITIOUI tUllN£89 snawn Wltltam Davidson LTD. 16962 llfk Lane, HuntlnglOfl bullt'IMI u :
E TEA SES ,. p lng1on Beectl. 92848 The roUowfnn ...,aon 11 dotn NAME tTAT'EMENT Tiiis 11etemen1 was flted wlln tne e.acn. C• 926-49 THE WASH HOUSE 710 Nofth El N PAI • :l lSv tac•nll• Adria n De nnie Cola, 9352 FICTITIOUI tullNCEll bullneea 0 . "• ,.... g The folloWlng person• are doing Coonty Cter._ or Orange County oo Daryl E Jacob•. 16962 lar1< Lane, "amino A.el ~ Vlato c...
Ave., eo.11 ~.Call! .. 92827 Sunrldge Of, Huntington &Ndl, CA NA• ITATU•NT GARONE.A SYSTEMS, 18600 bUSll\eSS.. July 14, 1983 HuntlnglOfl e..cti ••. 92849 92ee1 • •
SMOOUN AL-8AVATI, 2161 Pa-92646. Tiie followlng l>efsont ar• doing M.in Stteel Sulla 200 _ l1unt-G & G ENTERPRISES. 2730t F~ Mo G Freno. 22392 Val OemoN. Nao.r GhOleml 23102 SOnoft&. ~ Ave .. ~ll Mela, Callt., 92827 Tills bUllneea la Oonducte<I by: 1111 bull,.... u lnglon Beach CA 92648 Ptnavatl, Mission Viejo, C1 9269t PubttSlled Orange Cou1 Delly Mlaalon lllljo. Ca. 92&9:l MIMlon lllllO ca.'112ee1 clflc RBA CoeAL-8AYA~~15912::J tndMdueJ EXECUTIVE HAIR, 7242 Fenwey Joe Leo Garoner 3030 S•moa Georg• Mlcheel Trautnwetn, Pilot July 26. Aug 4 t I, 18, 1983 ftota bull,_. 11 conducted bv: 1 Thl• bual,..U 11 conducl.O by:.,
Ave.. 1' M..,, " Adrian 0 Cole 'B', Westmlnlttlf', CA 112683 Place Costa Meu CA 9282& 27301 P1,,avece. MtsSlon Viejo, Ca 4284·83 llmltoO p111neran1p lndMdulA · Thta., ~~ conc:IUC1e<I by • Thia •tatement Wll flied wun Ille Susan Lynn Davick, 7242 Fenway Tiiis business Is eonduC1ed t.y en 92691 Daryl E Jacob• Nadir Gl'IOlaml ~ earw/~t-Beyetl County Clerk of Or1nga County on 'B', w .. tmlnltler, CA 92683 indlvtduel. Virginia l , T1au1hwe1n, 27301 DUDLIC NOTICE Tnts Slatemenl W89 tiled Wllh the Tnta .. .,_, •u tllld ..tth IN
ThCe llal_,t wu llleCI with the July :l7. 11183. -Oavld E11I Morrell, 102 Scnolt Joe Leo Geidner Pinevt.1e, M1u1on v1e10, Ce 92691 rug County Clerk of Orange County on Coonty C1ef1( ot Of111191 ~ty on
County Clerk of Of.nge County on _ ............... "" C f'221 Plaza. 12138. N.B. CA 92683 Tnla atalemenl was !Ilea wlCn Ille This bualnesa ts conducted by a FlCflTIOUS IUllNCEle July 11, 1983 July 14, 11183 Mr 15 983 ~ "'~ _, Dally Tnt1 bullneu I• conducted by. a Coun1y Clerk ot orange county on oenet1I r.ennersnlp F22IDIMO fD1m ~ Onlnoe Cou~ Not Atlf 4-11, 1 111S. WM:! ~.:'nP~~~'ir.!~1c July 25. 1983 F221U1 ~1~'~t~t~~t~!.et;:lld wnn tna T~ fol~:.!:o ';!:!~E:r! doing ~~~~. 2~·::.,.~~'1. = P!~~~. ~~-4~1:
P110tJuly2&,Aug.4,11.18, 11183 r----.. ---.,.-Mt\-flC-E----1,._Tnl1~1Ct~~k f1~u ll~~~tn '"' Publlahld Orange Coatl Dally CJoot n11)'1 C191e83rk of Orange County oo buSA~a.;l~O RANCH EOUES-4227-83 4208-83 4300-43 l'UUU\I "" ....,.,n ,... o ..,.1nge ....,.,n1y oo Piiot Aug 4, 11 18, 25, 1983 u y ' TRIAN CENTER 3400 I I A DllmtlC Mt\flC£ t------------------------1-------------rJufy 2 • 1983. 4458-83 F220302 · rv "e ve · ,._ nu •-II' MnllC[ "8.JC fl>TICC flCTTTlOU• llUSINl!lt F12t* Publlll\oO Orange Coast O•lty Sulle 101. Newpon Beech, C•llf., ------------____ ,._~--""------
ACTmOUI ........
NAME ITATlmNT
The tollowlng penort II Going
~-EMC INTE.RNATIONAL, 20015 W.
8alboe &Nd Sult• 102. Newpor1 8-c:tl. Call! .. 929e3 JEFFREY G. CLAY, 201-8 81h S t ••
Balboa. c.Plt., '* 1 Thlll ~ .. conduc:1.0 by .,,
lndMdual
~ ITATI~ Publllllled Orenge Cout Dall)' Pil~I July 21, 28. Aug '4, t 1. 11183 92f:gl( w MULLAN 3400 I I FICTITIOUa .u..... ""'"° Tn. lollowlng l)e'ton Is doing Piiot Aug. 4, 11, 18, 25. 1983. Nil.IC NOTICE 4208-83 • "'ne NAME ITATElllOfT f1Cnnout CIUIMM t>uslneea u: 4439_83 Ave .. Suite tO 1, Newpon Beech. Tne toltowlno perton1 are doing ...._ ITA--P\llllC NOTICE Calll 92660 buslnese u : • _.. • AATMOSPHERE. 425 30tn St., 1111m1 'C N0TIC£ FICT1T10Ue •UllNl!ll This busll\ess la conducted by an CULINARY ARTWORKS 880 VIC-The foClowlng l*'IOf\I we dolr'O 8'.lll• t, Newpo418each. CA 92663 l"UUU NAME •rATEMCENT F1cm1oue IU81HESS I ted I t tn s c M c 92627 buafnMa u : John Denni• Kron• 501 E The lollowlng person Is do<ng un ncorport assoc a ion ° er tor la 1 · 0118 ese. ._ GALE AS SOCIA TES LIMITED ' . FICTITIOUI ltU ... 91 b, NAME 8'iAT'EMENT 11\an ti Plr11\erslllp Leo Lire Romero. 8&0 lllctorla St., ANt\urlt, Sl/'lta Ana, CA 92701 NA• ITAT1!_,,,. ustneu IS TIMI !0Uow1nn person rs doing Jacit W Mullan Coala Meaa C• 92627 PARTNERSHIP, 8 Callforna. Urnned Oennll Krone THE JM COMPANY. 15333 E Cut-... rn lled . Pan'*911lp 1800 OrOYI Str ... Thia 9181-1 wu lllec:I wttn the me followlng penon 11 doing lier Of. Sutle 920 trvtne c:.lllornl• t>;JSlnus u II 11a1emen1 was I wlln lf'MI lhls bus1""8 11 conducted by-a11 Suite t30 • Newpor1 8-:fl c.' County Cleril Of Ofange County 00 t>;Jatneu u . 92714 ' . . CALlf-ORNIA OIL RECLA-Counry CteR of Orange County Ofl 1ndivtdual t2MO · ·
Juty :lJ lll83 l R AMO ASSOCIATES. 3990 John Mtcnaot Mtnanan f!>31 E MATION. 3!>9 San Mtgvel Or Sii July 15, 1983 . Leo Lira Romero Stani.y W Grtbbll 13038 MlnO-• • ,221• Wellerl)t Pl-. Sulte Apl 100. New-Poeen Blvd BalbOll Calll. 9266 I 109, Nlwpon Beech, C.ill, 92660 F2207.. Tiiis lllltwnenl wu fifed wtln ttll W 4 MMina '0et .._ ~ pon BMCll CA 92660 ., _,. GERALD l KOZAI<, 2t00 Yacnt Publllned Orange Cout Dally County Clerk ot Oranoe County on -"'I· • ._,, ~ G. Clay Publllhe<I Otange Cou1 OIAly G G R 2300 F I I This buslne11 11 conouc:1.,.. by an Ml 111411 Newpon 81 h Call! Piiot July 28 Aug 4.11 18 1983 J ne 20 1983 IMnla llO:l91 M1ctlael J L..-.y, TNI IC...,_.. -ftled wttn the Piiot Aug. 4, t t. 18, 25. 1983. Ad r~ M~MoCA 92626 • rv..,. ndMdu•I. 92~80 • ac · · . ' ' ' 4299_83 u · F'21ll7I 112M P..UOtuei Or,..., K~.
eo..nty Clen! of Orange County on 4436-83 .. • John M. Menhat1 Calllomla 95451 My l&, lN3 , ____________ , Tiii• bulln .. 1 Is conducted by: an This atatement wu lll.O wCth 1119 Thia bustnesa Is conducted by an Publlalled Orange Cour Dally Thia bulinMa 11 oonduc:i.d by •
l"n071f7 •-II' Mt\TIC[ lndMdueJ. County Clerk 01 Or1nge County on lnOlvlduat f't8l.IC NOTICE Pilot July :l 1, :l&, Aug. 4, 11. 1N3 Mmll.O pertneniNp GRJ.E As.
Putlllltled °""-Cout o.Hy ,.~"" Gregory G. Rowe ~uly 27 1983 Gerald L. Kotek 4214-83 SOCIA.TES
Piiot My 28, Aug. ~.1t,18, 11183 1-------.... -.. -.... ---.-.--·c Tnl•~·c"..!..~,1"~18 llledCouwn!!_ tne . . F2215G --2~'·. ·c··~emenk ot'o"'8S llte<!Cowllllt the ICoea:I 1111-ic Mt\ncc UMITEO PARTNERSHIP
429&-83 ~,.,....,. --oon ""~ 0 ..,.ange n., 00 PuDllslle<I Orenge Coatt Dally ....,.,n Y "'" •enoe un Yon FICTmoua aUllNE91 ,..,_ "" •California Umhea
------------Thi ~~doing July 1 • 1983 F220CD Pllol Aug 4. 11, 18. 25. t983 July t3 1983 F'220H1 I NAME ITATEMfNT NOTICE Of' TMllTD'I IAU P"1'*'8hlp rtaJC NOTlCE bull,_ u: PubllllWIO Orange Cout OIAty 4447-93 Publlslle<I Orange Coas1 Oally b The IOllOW1ng peraona .,. Oolng On Augutt 17, 1983 at 10:00 Lm Slanety w GnbC>le.
• ACTinOUa WU REOLANOS PARTNERS. 111195 Pilot Aug. 4, 11, 18, 25, t983. Pttot Juty 27 Aug 3 10.17 1983 u~S~s ~AATNEAS l:lOt Dove SHE.ARSON/AMERICAN EXPRESS • ~ .. ·f i""ne: flied lll!ltl IN
NAm ITArn.NT £u 1 Mc:Ourmott. Unit H, lrvlne, Cell-«52-IS3 Pl&.IC MOTICE 4253-83 Street Suite 570 N~r1 Beecn fRUST DEEDS SERVICES. INC. u County 'Ci.:':~ Coun"' on 'Oii ....._..... 11 doC 1omi. 92714 C gieeo • · ruetee. or VCCIM90( Tru.i• or 3 ·r ~.,.,_,._:_--:"""' perwon no John c . Scou, 18105 Ellt Pt&.IC NOTIC£ FICTITIOUI auelNl!H Pl.ellC NOTICE •R 11 A 01.,,1 40 w 1 r1 Sub1tituted Tru1tee, of tn11 cenaln July I • 1t83
--u . McOurmott Unit H frvlne CIAtfomta N usse · · et po • Deed ot Trull axec:Yte<I by Chtt1 F. ~ SPA ING CLEANING VEAR i 2714 ' ' ' FICTITIOU9 IUllNlll AME ITATIMINT NOTICE Of T'AU9TEE'8 SALCE lrvtne. Ce 92714 Callas an unmarried men and r• Publlah.o Ofenge eo.t Olllly
4AOUNO, 310 Victoria Sutt• A 201. RIC:hard O. Burni. 18195 ENI N~ ITAnMENT Tne IOll~lng P«IOOI are doing On S.ptemt>er I, 11183. at lO.OO Ronald J Speyet 1842 Pt Carton corded Septemblt IS, 1oeo u In-PllOt July 21. 28. Aug 4, 11, 1N3 ~·~~ 310 Viet •-~Ourmon,UnltH.trvtne.Clll!Mnl• Thi following person I• dolng~S~N .. C)' ANlOINETIE 1423 AM Cefllo<n1alan<1TtlleCompeny, Pl~c;::;~~=·~: ~2: strumenl 21191. In book 13745, 4:l1~ .... 1 .. , "'"' ............. or. ~714 bu9l,_11 S · . u<1uly1pp01nteQTruS1eeunaerand I m r ' 5· page21190fflc:l1IRec:or<11olOrange 1------------~-A20 t, Coela ..._, CA 9:le27. Gary J. Glregoalan. t8195 Eut TOTAL HEAL TH ANO FITNESS .,,i ntlago Newpon Beacn, Catltomll P<Jrsuant to Deed of Trus1 &•ecule<I Irvine Ca 927141 County. Celllornla . Ind pureuanl to rtaJC NC)TlC( TN9 ~le condoc1ad by· an ~mo11 Unit H. lrvtne Cllltomlll PUBLICATIONS, 216'h PMt1 SI., "'2660 S DY 11ow1rO A Hamme<man an un-G•ry O Cohee. 408 t Ol1blo Cir-that certain Notice of OeflUll and 1------------
it>dMclull 9z714 · ' ' Newpor1 BMcll, CA 92M2 Mary Anlolnelte. Inc; · l4z3 811" merrleO man u Trustor tor itie bell-cte Huntington Beach, Ca 926'19 Election to Sell thereul\dl recorded HOTICa Of' TillUaTD'I I.ALI KMllY Ann HM11 MlctlMI 8aldwln 517 Juml Mr Eric R. Jenlcen. 2t8'.'\ Peart 'tego Newport Beectl. California allt 8lld teeurlty ot Wetts Fargo Tn11 business Is condlJCled hy • April 1 t983 H ln11rumen1 no T.L No. ... tCJ•
Thill •laternllll wu Neel w11n ltlll Corona a.I Met, caiuom1a 9M26 ne. St • Newpor1 ee.cn, CA 928&2 ~2860 . Credi! Corpo<allon as Benet1c1ary, genofal par1nersnlp 83· t37S69, ol Official Record• of YOU ARE IN 0£FAUL T UNOEA A
Coun1y Clertl Qf Orange County on Samuel Remena, 11119& Eaat Tllll butlnMa 11 conduc1.0 by· an Thia bullMiSa 1' con<IUCled by a ~aled MarCti 22 1982, alld recordeo G•ry O Conee said County. wUt ut1der anO purtuant OEEO OF TRUST, OA TEO NOVEM• """* :ze. 1H3. 1Mc0unnot1 Unit H Irvine Cllllt 1 lndlvlduel eorporltlon. u tna1rument No 112-108&82 on Tiiis staiemenl was illeo with tne 10 said C>eed of Tru1t 1811 •1 publle BEA 30 1981 UMLESS vou TAKE
'2211'1CI ~2714 ' ' 1 om 8 Eric Jenlcan Toni Annlllead, Pruldent Mercn 30 1982 ol Official Record• Couniy Clerk 01 Orange County on auctlot1 tor ce1n t1wfut monav ot the ACTION TO PROTECT VOUA ~bllahed °'enge Coaet OWiy Tlmotlly J. C. ~. eon Cella Thia llat""*'t wu lllld with IM C Thia Slllement wH IUed w1tn Ille 1n lhe OtttC. of lhe Counly Recoraer July 11• 1983 United S111ea ot Am«lca, 11 the PROPERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
....... t Aug .•• 11• 18· 25. l963. Carabl, Ranct\O CAicMlonga, Call· County Clerk Of Orange Coumy on 'f;~ c::a; OI Or•"QI County on .,, Ora.noe County. Slale of Call-f:t20Sn Nortn tront entrllllCI 10 Ille COUftl)' PUBLIC SAL£. If' YOU HEED AH ~5 l-83 om1a 91730 July 25. t983 ~u y 1 lorn,. Published Orange Co•ll Dally counhouM. 700 CMc Cen1., on... EXPLANATION OF THE NATVAE
------------Thia ~ le oonducte<I by. a F221S211 F221!1a Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Pllol July 21· 28· Augult •. 11• 1983 Welt, Santi Ana, Cellfomla 1111 tl\81 OF THE PAOC€WNO AGAINST rtaJC N0TIC( ~ pannennlp. Publlllled Orange CoUI Delly Pl:~~'.~ 1~,~~5 ~ Dally. TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR 420t·83 r1gnt. 11111 llllcl lnt-1 conveyed to YOU. YOU SHOULD CONTACT A Aic:Mrd 0 8umt PllOt Aug 4. 11. 111. 25. 1983 -.. . . CASH, CASHIER'S CHECK OR Ind now held by It unoer Mid OMO LAWVER. ~~A~U Thie at•t-t wu fllecl wttn the 4455-83 «46-83 CERTIFIED CHECK Cpayebla •t time Nil.IC NOTICE of Trull In the property llltualed In On Auguel 24, 1H3. at 10:00 T f " J:;ounty Cler1I ot Orange County on •m:uo oc Mii In lawful money Of tn. Unlteo said County llllcl Stat• ~bed ... .\.M., SUNKIST SERVICE COM· ~ ~ l*90n OOlng ~ 2?. 1983. c Stal .. ,, It '" ,,,. tobby of Ca lttornl•. NOncCE Of T1'U9fff't IAU EX.MIBIT A; PANV .. duly IPPOintad TN91ee
THE ORIOIMAL VIOEOGRAM '221M1 fltB.IC NOTICE P\llll NOTICE Land Tiiie Compenv -1010 N. Main Loan No. 111?0028.-4/lobban PARCEL 1· LOI 91 of Trac1 10347, .inclerancl ~I To o-i Of Tnail
COMPANY 2717 San lUCM i., Publlllled Otange Cout Dally FICTITlOUl IUIMH Slreet, S1nte Ane, Calllornle HERMES FINANCIAL CORPOR-In Ille City ol Irvine, County ol Of-r9COto.d on Decl9mb« 10, 1M 1, •
' -· l>llot Aug .... 11, 18. 25, 11183. FlCTITIOUI llU• .. e•• YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A ATION . •n~. Slate of Calllornl .. aa pet map OocuMent no. t3073 8ooll 14311, c:c;~ i A ~ 27t7 San 4«8-83 NAllll! ITATEMl!'NT The fol~~·~~:! dOlng DEED OF TRUST OR MORTGAGE u duly eppo<nled Trustte under tf\e fifed In BOOlt 489, PIQM 37-39, Of page 193 Of OlnQal A9cordl In IN
LUCM '--~ Meea• CA 11262e Tiie following l*IOf\8 ,,.. doing it>uslneu 11. DA TEO MARCH 22, 1982, UNLESS lotlowing described dee<I ot tru1t Ml_.laneoua Mlf)I, r9CC>rde of °'. otlloe of the County Recorder Qf Or-
r ............. .:......... .. _,...:..._. by• O ft ·-.,. MnllC[ ...... 1_.. c & w INTERIORS ... 885 l 'r'OU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUTION TO •noe County, C•llfomt• "'O'County, StateofeaMom& Ea· ~-,. .....,..,....,_ -· l'.-.n. "" ""NORTH HILLS PLAZA 111430 Bonita Laguna Hiiie CAg2653 une 'r'OUR PROPERTY. IT MAY 8E THE HIGHEST 8100ER FOR CASH EXCEPT all oll. go arid INled by R1c:hard H, ~ a ~ O'Btyan flCnTIOUl IUIMla 8rooltllurst StrMt Suite 204 Foun-cna(yi 1; Alicll 2488!> Luna SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OA hydrocarbon 1Ublt111\C181 anO other Clt)Qla m111 Will SELL AT PV8UC
Thia .iat~t u filed wtttl the NAa. ITA~NT 1eJn Valle)' CA 92J08 ' Bonita LllQun• Hills' CA 92653 NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE CERTIFIED Cl1ECKS SPECIFIED IN mineral rlgnta. witf'lolJI, lloweYlr, the AUCTION TO HIGHEST 81~
CouMy Clartl ol (;1191 County on The followlrlg l*90n la doing ll l p. rt n er. n Ip . 1 8 4 3 0 Wltll~ L Reich, 24885 Lune NATURE OF THE PROCEEDINGS CIVIL CODE SECTION 29:l4n IP•Y· rlgntlo enter tlWI 1Ur1Ac. or Mid land FOR CASH (pe)'lll* It tlma Of ...
Juty 27 1983 Pu.i-u: Broolthurtt Street Suhe 204 Foun· 8onlla Laguna Hllll CA 9z653 l\GAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-Ible 11 Ille time OI Nie In llwful down to I dlllanoe of 500 feel from In 1-"'1 morwy Qf IN United S\atea)
' 1'121• HEAL TH CHECIC. 3816 $outn tlAn Valley, CA 92J08 . Thll buslriesa II eond~.O by • TACT A LAWYER money ol lhe United Statea) all t1glll, ttle S<Jrl-thlf'eol. U rM«V9<1 tn It the North front entrance to tlle
Publlehad °'ange Coal Otllly 8rllloC No M, S.nt• Ana, Ctlllf., VICkle J. Plllerton. 5613 Olde o-at panneral'llp All rlgl'll 1111e and Interest con-!Ille 1111d tnletes1 conveyed to and the Deed recorded Decl9mblt 14, countycourtOO.-alt rtghl. ~.Ind
Piiot Aug. 4 11 18 25 1993 a2704 Wa<bW°'1h Boulevard, Arvada, co. Wllllam l Relcn "9)'ed to end now "91<1 by 11 undet now netd by It undr Slld OMd of 1979. In Book 13435, Paga 213, Of. 1nt.-•t oon¥8)'ed to llld now IMld ' • • · ~ t<. Sperl!uN M.O .. 1281 OCMn-80002 Tnla 1181_, wu llleo wtlh the Jato OMd of Truat 1n lhe propeny Trust In lf'MI propeny hereinane< d•-ltclal Record• J> by tt uno. Mid Deed of Tnaic In Itta
------------rrool, LIQUn• BMch, Cati!., 92651 JlmM l . Dixon, 2115 tndlan County Ct«k 01 Orange County on Situated In 181d County and St1te sc;rlbe<I. TRUST OR. Duncan C lob-PARCEL 2. E-1181 .~forth property ettuatad In Mid~~": rta.tC NOTia Till• bull,_ 11 con<IUC1ad by an Spring• line N-pon e.acn CA July 27 t983 aescrtbed u Dan tn the Seo11ona enmlld CenlAri Celltomla dMCflbed the land ___ _,__,_...._._,__,_.._ ___ lndtvldUll: 1'2&60 ' . ' F'2219l8 PARCEL 1 Unit No 38. In Ille Joan M Lobbet1 Euemenll for e>wn.r." Ind "Sup-.n Lotllo!TractNo.117,7,lntMClty ~Trnoua WU t<. Sperkunt MO. Thll bull,.... 11 conoucted by 1 Publltlled Ottnge Coal! Otllly ~n1ncorpor11eo ere1 ot Irvine Cll) BENEFICtA~Y Metc;ur;Sav1ngaand l>OM ... S.nternent . •nd Enc;~Otldl-or <:out Meaa, .. ~Ott a rnlP
MAim ITA.,._., Thie •t•tement wu fifed 111rttn 1n. llmlled pannerentp Pilot Aug 4 11 111 25 1983 :aunty Of Orange. 11a1• ol c amom11. Loan AasoctattOfl ment of Ille Ar'1k;le antlllld e-recorded In boOS '55. p11g91 SJ, M .
'Oii followlrlo ~ le OOlng ounty CllW1I of OfllllQI County 00 Paul Hurll partner · · · '"5-63 u snown and dMCrlt>ed In Ille coo-recoorded J1111uary 18. •980 •• tnatr menl1" 01 tile Oedar1tlon of C-and 35 of ~ Mlfll, ,. ~ & July 14 1983 Thi• 111,.,;,_,1 wu filed w!tn 11141 jomlnlum plan racoroeo on July 31 11074 tn Book 13473 pege 386 of t1ants. Condition• lllld Aeatrlctlona l)()(dl Qf Ofange County, c.llornlL
DOC ELECTRIC 202 Abalone ' F1:106r1 Counl)' Clert. of Ota County on 1980 In b(>()ll 13&85. Paoet 57!> to Otticl1t Records tn lhe olffGe of 1M described In "SUBJECT TC>." btllow EXCEPT THEREFROM en ~
Ave., Balboa lelll'ld: c.itt. 92882. I Pul>lllhed Or1ng41 Cout Dally July 19, 19&3 "QI P\&.JC NOTIC£ 846, 1nctus1ve o! olft01t record• ol RecQfder 01 Orange County, Mid flhe declaratloo") dM<l«I 40 percent Int__. In Wtd IO en-Wlllleme. 202 At>AIOM Ave., PllQI .July 28, Aug, 4, 11.18. 1983 F220IS7 111ld county Oeed of I rust deterlbel the follow• PARCEL 3· El~11 M llUCll 11C oll and,,._., t1QMt, t1u1 wttMu1
9elboe llland. c.itt. 92M2. 428M3 Pubtlli>eo Or1nge Coul Oally FICTITIOUI aut,..11 PARCEL 2 An unaMded on• 11ng. Lot 15 01 Tract 2432 In the Clly enem•t1t1 .,. partlc;u!~rty eet ton~ rtgnt of en1ry to the -1-or to tN Thia bu"-la conducted by· 1111 811_.,. Mt\Tll'c Piiot Aug 4 11 25 1983 NAME 11'ATE•NT lorty·•ourth (1/441 hl tnlerelt as • ol Cott• Meu, 11 Plf map recorded 1n Ille Anlcll entltled Eaeamen11 tubtur1-of aakHancl to a daptll ol lnd~al. · l'UUU.. nu rw. .. ' ' ' ' 4305_83 Tllo toCtowtng pertona ate aolng 1anen1 In commoo In Ille lee Int-I n Boolo. 76, PagM 7 •t1d 8 of Mfit-of 0.Clat•tton of Co~tl. Con-soo IMt ... gran1ad to ~ ~ en-Wllllamt lNlln ... u · n and 10 lhe common area ot Lot 3 :ellaneous Maps, In tne ottlo. of tne dttlont and Res1rlctlon1 ~lbed In vetitment ColJ)Ofatlon, a Clllfotnll n. ltat-l •M ni.d With the flCTITIOUt IU ... U MNn210 THE THAI· TOUCH RES -:ii Tract 10349. as per map tiled In County Recorder of Hid County 'SUBJECT T.O·" below(tlll "Mast« corpor1t\on, by dead NCOfOad,..
County a.ti ol Orange County on NAm ITA.,...,.,. ·-te WlftM' TAUAANT, 2616 San Mlguel. New· ooolc 4&8. Paget 35 Ind 3e of ml1-\'OU ARE IN OEFAULT UNDER A Oec:h11ellon") under tne S.Ctton Nary 14, 195e, In~ 41117. Pttgl
My 2t 1983 The follcJwlnO peraona -doCng ,._ ""'~ PM'I 8Mc:h. Ca 92&60 ::eltaneou1 m~ records of uld OEEO OF TRUST OATEO JANUARY l\Mdlngs In auch Artlell enlttlld u 173 Of Olflc:ial Aeocwdil.
. n:ntU ~ M: Pr.,_ Ooul\Odlak, 12005 Otc1a-:aunty," 9Ud'l 1erm 11 o.nnec1 In t~ 11, 19&0 UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-lollowa " "Owner't Alghlt and ALSO EXCEPT THEREFROM 811
P\lblllhad Onn98 Coal Dell)' lll PARTNEASHIP, 18430 FlCTfnOUI..,..... nomaAvenue.SOutllg•••.Cllllornll lf1fcll •l11111d "0.0nlllons" ol Ille flON TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-OUtletl, Utlll1 ... and C.bla T ..... un<IMOadCIOperoam!Marwllll end P11CJ1 Auo, 4 t 1 19 25 l983 IB<ootc"'"1 Street, Suite 204. Foun· NAa. ITAT'EMIMT 902&0 jecjarllion 01 coYenant1. condlllonl EATY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT A PUB· 11ltlon," "Sta.yard EaNmentl", to all o1 anc1 m1nat91 t1g11f1, M
' ' ' ' 442s-83 lain Valley. CA 90208. The IOllO'#lng pef1IOnS are doing Song .. k Ooul\oehlk. 12006 Oleta-9tld rettrlctlonl dMGrlbed In "SUB· LIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA-"Suppon •nd Seltlement," "En· Nlthout right of entry to the~
01Md A P9'w1, 1:l 1 3rd StrM1. butlneee 18; home Avenue, Southgate, Calllornla JECT TO .. below (the "O«:tar-NATION OF THE NATURE OF THE crollOl'lment:· and "Community Fa· or to tlle tubeut1110a of allld l9nd to a "8JC NOTJC[ Manhattan Beech, CA 902M lll PARTNERSHIP, 18430 90280 atloo") PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU clllllel Euemenl." depthot 500 t.c ... gfWltadto,..,,
---------------... ICllMC E. Wlte, 180 I R..i View Brooklll.trtt Str .. t, Uul11 104, Foun-This buslneaa 11 conducted by· In-PARCEL 3 EaMmenta u Ml lo<tn SHOULD CONTACT A LAWVER. PARCEL 4: An e.-nerit tor Com-lnv.etmenl C«pofitlon, a Ca11tom1a Aennout .,.._.. Clrcil, corona def M.,, CA 92&25 tlAn Valley, CA 90208 dlv1dull1 (Huaband & Wllel n 1111 MC1ton1 enlllfed "Cer1atn 311 I Dublin SI . Cott• MMI, Ca mon Oflvewly purpoee u delcl'lbed Corpor•tlon, by Dead fecotdtd ,._
...,_ ITATDm>ff p...,1 Hurtt, 1755 Aodly Road, O.vld A. Pe18fl, 121 3td Street. PrenM Ooungchatc e-11 lor Owner1" •nd Sup.. 92626 1n the SecttOtl antlllld "Common 1uaty 14, 1951, In Doott 41t7. peg.
The rottowtng peraon le OOlng J'ulltir1on, CA 92631 Manhlttan Beacti. CA 902&8 Tnta a1a1amen1 wu riled with the oort. S.tlle<nent •nd Encroach-"(II• •trM't a<ldr ... or common Orlv9'#1y E_._, .. ot ttle Artlda 177 Qf Otf1c1a1 Aecotdl
~ • Tiile bullneu II conduc;tad by. • Mi<:llMI E WIN, 1801 Reel View County Cterk ol Orange County on 'TMlflt" of the Anlcil anlllled "E.,._ dMIO"•tloo ol r•OC>ll'1y I• anown entitled "EH«Mnll" o11n. Oeclat· Tne et,...~ mid otr. oom-
ACOOUHTIMO ANO ANANCIAL 111!.*lll pat1ner'lfl9 Ctrdl. Corona dll Mar, CA 92625 July 1!>, 1983 'Mnta" or tf'MI Oecl1tlllon 1bolte, "°warrant) Is gtveri u to Its ttlon mofl oaalgnatlon. If "'V· Qf the N1111
SERVICES, 1798s-.1 S«yp&r11 Clrda, P.ul tiUra1 Ptul Hurtt, 1755 Rocky Ro.a. F22a7• PARCEL 4 Easements au 1ucn :omp111enesa or correc:lneH) .. Tiie Tiie 1trM1 acklr ... or oth« com• property 011orlbad 1bo~1 11 ~.CA 92714 Tiiie .,.t_I WM 111«1 wttn 1111 Fuller1oo, CA 9283 I Publtaned Orange CoHt Dally il~ll are r>art1c;ul1•ty set rorm oenel~ under lld OMd ol Trust. mon dftlgnatlon of Mid pt()pett)'. 3 t purported to be: 2330 UttlMon Qr-
811.,a 8. Mam<lanl, 925 So. Fourtn County Oertt of Ofange Counr,r on Thia t>uelneu is conoucte<I by. 1 Piiot July 21, 28, Auguet 4, 11. 11183 n Ille er1tcte entitled ·e..-n.n11" Dy <81tofl of a breacn or d•t•ull In SltklMt. *· co.11 Mee&. ca. tMM
Ave . Arcadia, CA 91000 Mr 19, 11183. generll Ptrtnennlp 4225-63 :>1 tne decltr•tloo of covananta, con-lhe obllgationa teeureo 1nerebv. N•rn• 1nd •ddr•n o f 1na The ~ Tr\191• e119-
Thlll ~ la c:ondue19d by. an ,,.._ Paul ~ural ~Ilion• and rMtrlctlona In "SlJ&. here1otor'e .. ecutld anO d.,t...,ed berleficl1ry •1 wtlOM requeel lhe clalm1 anv Matllll'Y for any tnool'raci·
indMdual. Publllhed Ofenge Coe.et 01lty Thi• 1t11emenl w1H tiled wUn tne P\ll.IC NOTICE JECT TO." below (tM "~&atlf Dec-10 th• und.,.lgned a 'i"'lttan Oeclar· sale 11 being conducted: Uptown -of tlle ,,,,_ .:tdr-end ottier s. 8. Memoant Piiot Aug. 4, 11. 18. 25. 1083. County Cfl(k of OranQe County oo 1ar1t1on"). unO. the MICllOn n..d-atlon of O.tautt end Oem•nd for Federll Saving• 8lld Loen AMooi. common dealgnat10n. If .ny, ~
Thlt 11•1'"*'1 WU llMd wttn '"' July 1g, 11183 FlCTTTIOUt •u---•• ng• "' IUCll •MICll entttlld .. fol· Sile, lllld written notk:e ot brHdl I I 0" 0 ' c n I~ I g 0 . c I 0 ,,.,., If the"'-'~ (/I °"*
Couttty Cler1I of Oranoe COunty °" rta.IC fl)TJC[ nlOlll NA• ITAnMUtT ows· "Owner• A1Qnt1 •nd Duties, 1n<1 or '41Ctlon to cauM tn. und«-S'-t'IOl'llAm«lcan Exiw-a Mort-oommondeelgnetlonoftM"""*1>'
My 2&. 1983. Publlalled Orange Coat 01111)' Tna lollowin9 pereoni are doing Ulifltte1 1ne1 C1ble Televl1lon' . llQn«I to !1411 Nld property 10 utltly gage Corpor1tlon. 1201 Eut Hlgtl-11 not tndleatad '*-'· dndona to 1'221132 FICTITlOUt .,..... Piiot Aug 4, 11, t8, 25. 1983 butlne11 es "Suppon and Se11i.ment". "En-Mtd obllg•llons, and lllerHn., tlWI l11nd Avenu1 ,Su111 0 , S•n tlWI property may be obtained !nlm
PUbllNd Or11nge eo.t Olllly NAm STATDmJfT 4308-83 BALBOA ·ISLAND REAL rt ANO ::toecnmen1 •nO Community FKlll-Jndenlgned cauM<I .. to nolloe of Bernardino, Celltomle 92404 lhl t>an•tlclary heteln 111m9d
Piiot AUG-4, 11, te. 25. 1N3 Tne f04loWlng pat90nll -dolnV INVESTMENT COMPANY 201 1111 E11•m•nt • EXCEPTING t>r•actl and ol elec1ton lo be ,.. Olr11C1tion1 10 the·~ property ~· to • ..,._~ .... ~7-13 ~-.. fltB.IC NOTIC£ Merine Ave Balbol ltl•no . CeCll THEREFROM all ott. gas. mlner•I• ::oto.d Oecemb« 8, 1982 IS lnatr may be Oblalned by requ.tlng mitt.cl fO Mid e.4flclarly ....--
------------KVMCO AUTOMOTIVE t 725 92&6:l ., • .. and 01her nyarocarl>Or 81.ibalancee. No 82 .. 26364 In Olfkllal Record• In 18"'41 In lllrflU1'9 from the t>enaflolal'y d9Y'1 ~ tM""" publlcetlOll of .. rtaJC llJTlCl "'onrcwta D-4, Cott• ~ CA ACmlOUt tuatNllU BETSY O. 80\'0, 539 Alvet'lidl together with tlWI rlgnt to ••Plor• tor lhe otftoe of IM Recorder of Oranoe ..tthln 10 dlye from the flrlt ~ notic.. BENEFICIARY: at-. a... 4 lll2t:l7 N.-ITATUICIMT Or Hewpon Beacn Call! 112680 •nd extr11c:1 Mme, below a depth 01 rwnty; c•tlon Of 11111 notice. Inge anc1 l.ollfl "->cMtlon Nnnout .,._,, Jflllr-v c Kym!•, 2829 Otange the tollowlng per.ona .,. doing l...,RAV ADAMS FINANCIAL INC. 500 feel from 1n• aurtlQI ol Mid Said S•I• wlll b• med•. but S1ld e1le wm be made ~th0u1 22 N. CEI Oonldo, 8toarton, Ca..
Mm ITAT'llmJfT ~VII Apt 5 'Coll• ...... CA g2827 butlneu H : CALIF 107 Coral B•lbo• llland land. wltl'IQ\)1 •ne right 01 1Ur1-NllllOUI coventnt or w11rr111ty. •K-COVlt)lnt Ol lllrafrtnt)', opr ... Of Im-11&202
... ~ fOllowlng .,._ " doing can J: Kymit Jf. 11100 Sabftna ST A-AHEAD ENTERPRISES, C•HI . 92ee2 • • 11nry •• r~...O In <INCi• ol rKOrd. P<MI or lmpllad. regatdlng tnle pllld, .. to tlllt. l)OtMMIOf1 or 8"· ~· (209) ..... 11 te
---!Terr., Cotont Oii ,,..,, CA 92t25 2121·A PlaQlnt11. Coeta ....... CA Tiiie bu•H\Ne ,, oonduoteo by • Tne ,,,.... .Odrtlel Ind Olher poeefflon, or encumb,.noff, to PB)' eumbfenoM to Mtllfy the unpaid Stiel ...... be rNrd9. tM-'*"
PACWIC PIANO AENTAI.. 270 E Cet1 J Kvmle Sf Intl 4tn St 92827 ""*" P"'1,..lfllp• ~ommon ONIQnatlon, 1111ny, 01 tl'll tne rem1tnlng ptlnclplll 1Um ol the btl•noe due on Ille not•-"*' by =ovenantorwwrwity.~orlm-7111 St., Coe\& ...... CA 92927. 1Yue411pa CA 112399.. .• Jerry Miid! Allay 2221 R9publle Larry Adanll •NI property detenbed .bo .... It '101• MC:Uf'.0 by tald dMCI ot Trust. Mid !)Md ol Tn111 to wl1.181,t5e.~ Oiied. rlQ&l'dlne ... p I I 9 ~or
.. ~ J lflCI ~· 1e1e Oek TNt ~ 11 conduCled by •Aw .. C:O.ta Miu. CA 82&27 Preeldetlt purporlecl 10 be eo H1.-woocl -,.;Ith Int«"' u In u td nott plu• 1111 followtng •Uma1ed oott9. eneumbranoee, lncludlnt •-•
..._et,,<MendorA. 91740 ~pertnantliC> · Ch•tlM Sfu•rt Myart 121.0 Thlatt•t-twutl~wttntne lrvlM,Ce ll:l714 orovtd.O, tldv•ncee. If any, under 1xpenM1andadvtnettt1 tn.11me aMtv-.nO~ofttleT,,-.. ~~ II oonduc1ad by-en Jelftll)' C 1(,..,,. ' JamM St C"°9tl M-CA 9:l&27 Counf\' Clerk ot Orenge County on THE UNDERSIGNED TAUS TEE IM ltfMt Of NJd OMd of Tn11t, 1-, of t~ lnltlal publlcttlOn of Ulll Hoo and o1 tlle tniea Ct-.d by lllld
_.,.....,_, Thia ll..,,..,t wu fllecl wllh the Jflrry Mici. Allay ' Jut)' 14 1083 DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY FOR IN-:lllVQ811nd expen-al the TrUllM lie• Of St.. Eltlma1ed Trwtee'e OMO Of Tf'\lllt, to~ ... 1 ~ W-0 IAI County C*1I of Ot•noe County on Thia ,,.,_, .... II~ with tl\9 • "2llltM c 0 R R E c l ' N F 0 A M A T I 0 H Ind ol 1111 lrull• Cflll~ by .. Id ,... end CO.I In the amount Of P'lnCIC* MN of the llOM(~ .....
Thll Mat.._,. wM lllecl wlttl Ille ~I)' 21 lH3 County Clafk ol Ounge Couflly on Publlslled Or1ng• CoH t D.ily ~UANISHEO Dead Of Trull. St,088.90 plu1 lnt-t al 13.76% by Mid 0..0 of Trvet to Wfl Oounc\I Clef'1 of Otange Col.w\f'; on · · ,1._. July 28 11183 PllOt Juty 28 Aug ,. 11 t8 l983 That Mid aai. I• mldt .tlllout S1td Hie wlll ~ het<I ori: Thure-per •nnum Ofl the UflPald Pf~ SISS.13Ul1 wfttl .,,.._. "*-~ 2t. 1"3. Publllfled Otange CO..t Deity ' F'Zl11lM · • • · <1298-33 CCMll\11'11 O< wtrrenty •eo•rdlrlg 11119, a1y. S..,ttmbet 1. 1083, 11 2:00 p.m. blltlllOI from 8/ t/82 to MM. plua lrom Novembet 1, 1112 e 19t7"
'111t14 Piiot Aug 4 1 t ti 26 tH 3 Put>t1th«I Or1noe eo .. 1 0111y t><>tMNIOtl 0< encumt>ranoe1, or .. 11 tile Cnapm1n Avenue entr1111Ct110 1ny l<lv~ llle l>tntftelwy may be per annum • ~ lft ..., Publlllwd OfMQe CoMI Dally · • ' • • .;.2 l-83 PllOt Aug 4, 11. tll, 25. 1983 . •-JC 1anncc to lneureblllty ot title. lhe Civtc Cent« Building, 900 ENl auill~ Or atad to pey, plua no14(tl plua • 009ll9, dW9la end
Hal Ayg. 4, 11, 111. 25, 1913. '456-83 r~ "" T~ to1al 11'1\ount of tl'll ~ Cnapman A,,. , Onnge. CA .i1y ACCNed lat• ~ encl • 90WtlCll .._W 1411111 442...:1 bllllnce Of Mid obllgatlonl loOt'her At the time Of Ille ln11i.t publl-VOU ARE tN OEfA LT UNOE" A Int.-! ----.---.,.-lllnftl'r-----NI.IC fl)TlC[ __ .,. MftTIC( flCTTTIOUt IU..... ""'" advll\Olll, end •U"'81ad OOll• llatlon of thla l'IOtlCI. ,.... 10111 OEEO 0, TRUST OATlO SV'TfM. The -~· llftdlr ... D* ,._ ""'-. r_.,."" NAM9 lfATDmWT ..-id PW'• It »0.000.00 anlOUnt oftlle unpeld bal!lnOlofthe BEA 10, IMO, UNl.E88 YOU TAKI! olT,,..,_.ob'e_,_.Md.._ -,,,------.. ~!!!.~ .. ~· AC-··--·· rne lollOwlng penlC)n8 .,. doing . fl\tt Mottoe ol brMC:l1 ol Mid obll· OOllgltlOn ~by the •bow a. ACTION TO P"OTEOT YOUA llwwed to ... Ulodllf'•pned ........ .-----., .. ,._.., '"""" -bu..,_.u : Olllori and aleotlon 10 1811 Hid real ~Mdo..d ot truat lllldaatlmaled PROPERTY, IT MAY ll!IOLDAT A OedarltlOll of__,.. encl~ MAm ITA1-T ~ lollcMlng peraona lf8 dOif'O MAllll ITATl....-r HA 8 TI HG 8 ·LUM 0 ST R 0 M property wu racorded u tn1tru· ooet1, expen-. and advancee le PUBl.1C SAL SALi!. Ill YOU NEID lot a-. encl• Wftttefl i.o.toa of 0.
The lolloMng '*"°"' le OolnO ~ -The foClowlng l*'tOn• -doing ARCHITECTS, t001 w 11th St. mant No. 83-170880 on A.pf'~ 22. 190.143.09 TM 101•1 IM.o1.0n.a A,. l!XPlANATION OF THI leult and flectlorl to .... The -~ ... 8AOOLE8ACt< S!L, 9ERVE ' ~ .. : Sult• J. Cotta M9aa. C1lll. t28:l7 1983, Of ()tftclll Rtcordl In tne Of· baCng •n ""m•t• on wttlcn the NATURE OF THE Pl'IOCUOING Orwlgnlcf aei...i...., NDllDe"' 0.. -~INTAI. SHIATSU SPA, 2022 ~AA WASH, 2303I i.M• For'aet TARGET WEST, 1001 w Biibo• AALPti L.. ~IASllNGS. 2061 Kno•-llCI or ,,,. tovnty A.corder of or. OP9fllnO Old la cbn1putlCI m•y be AGAINST YOIJ. YOU SHOUL.OCOM-llUlt mid Bec!tlon to ... to .....
-It., Hewpot1 leeclh, CA t2eeO >Jflve, l.agune Hiiie, CA 92163 ~llld,, H P.8 .. CA. 11"63 vll ... Long 8eaclt1, C1llt , 908 t5 ange County. St•t• of C•lllOfJll• ob1•t"9d by catllng (7141 937 09ee f ACT .A. 1.AWVEA 0.1ed: .My t , oordtd In the oounty .._.fie ....
I ~un Kim, HO Peulanno. "4>I G •• er.gy, Ina., 2303I Ltll• KIM'1 Vlnnla 81lnt John. ~20 Ntoe JOH E. LUNDSTROM, 1e Cam· rruetM Of party aonductlon .... Ille d•y t>efore 111e 18141 Oat• Auo11t1 11>83 pt~ 11 looetlll,
""'211, ec.ta ..._,CA mM ~orte' OrM.1AfYMHlll.CA92".3 ~ M.P 8 •CA 112MS PIM'O w .. t, IMM, Catlf . 92714 CALIFORNIA LANO TITLE COM· 4, t"3 S'-"On/Arn«lcan bpi-o.c., Ju1Y 11., 19'*
.... ~~II oorduCled 11¥:., ni. ~II COttOuc1.ct by.• Jeff F.-, 1()()1 W hlbol BMI • Thll bullneea It oon<IUC1ad by a PA.NV, 1010 Nortn Me.In Stra.i. HERMES FINANCIAL CO"POA· Tru1t Dead a.Moaa, lno 8UNl(IS1' MJ11V1C1 COMPANY
.._.._ ~don-. Hp •• CA tZMS Ofl*IA pattntrtnlp: Svlt• 400. Sant• AN. Calefolnla ATION .. TruttM • Coti>oiation ?(llfl l(un Ocw*d" lrOwn. ,.,...,. KYl't. laltrt. John Jon E L.un01lrom t27~ lT14)t3&-&&7& Altn For. .. latd Trvfl• Mlllle A llfo-.n, 8V:o.1er4 ..... .
Thee ....,._,. -fled -«II the "* ...._.. -flied wl"1 Ule Thie ... ,_, •• ni.o wttn lN Thi• 111tement -lllaCI ..ttll the ~-Depllflment Oal.O Augutt l!y T 0 SIMoe Compeny Attlttant vte.ttreelderlt T!\111181 .... a.... ~a.ta of~"°"""' On ~ Clertr of Otano-County on 04unty ~ or Ofange County on County Ciani of Otanoe County on 2 1983 ~t 1201£ut 11iattlend A,,.. 1'4 Nonf1ll00r.oo ttrMC ~-it. 19", My 2?, 1113. My 2?, 1~. July 14, 11183 By Clllforn1a I.and Tltlt Compeny Lind• Peret. Aet11t Sacrty San Befnarolno, Ca. 12404 StoCl!ton, c., tet01 ,._ n:tt• ll'l21"7 1'11971 .. TruttM OM City 8111(1 W•t. Ofa1199, CA. 714/188-7181 Of IM-7811 (209)94&-1111 1 ~ Ofanoe eowt Otlll) ~ OrMge eo..1 Delly Publllhecl Ot•rio• COMt 0.lly PublllMCf Ofanoe Coaat Dell)' Donna J Tnomu, F"tl. MS: t2M8 1114~M2M W "'tl<ln 311 °' sn "'*"'* a...... ~ D19f ll'llot Aue .•• I 1, ... H . 1113. ~Aug .... 11, 11, 7&, ,..., ""°'Aug 4, 11, 18. 26. 1t83 P~o1 JUiy 28. Aug 4, 1t,11, 1H3 ftul>ll•hed OfllnQI COMI PllOt Publl•llld Oran99 co .. , 0111r Publlthed Or"'V' CoMt Olllly "'°' Pflol ~ 4, "· , .. 1MI ~ 4«043 «37•113 ~290·83 AUQUll t 1, tll, '~· !913 4 70.83 AllQtltll 1 t 18, ?~. 1(!13 4677•83 My H . Auguet 4, 11, 11113 ~ .. ,..., . ------'
'
Cl Oran e Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursda , Au , 1, 1983
rta.IC NOTICE , ___ PUBL.;..;;.;;.;.;;.IC-'-NO;.;;..T;.;..IC;.;;.E __ I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Ntl.IC NOTICE
'ICnTIOUI au11.... NOTICE Of PU8LIC SALE T.,. NAMI ITATnt•HT Of ~El'IONAL ftflOPlllTY ·~n~~:: .. c:.~:T FICTITIOUS 8UllNEH l"ICTtTIOUI 8UllNHI
•ollo'#lng ptlftoo la 0011111 2:2t0tlc COUNTY 0 ' . NAME ITATIMl!NT NAMa STATUHNT Ouf~~Rt'NNER p B C NOl1Ce it nereby given 11181 In the Melle• 01 Ille OlllANQI Tl\e IOllOwlll\j ~IOl1 It l!Olng Tne lolloWlng peraooa ate doing
, U LI A flONS pu1au81lt to MKllon 1988 01111e CMt A usineu •• buame., .. ~~f E~f:o -Sl<ILLS LEARNING Coch1 Staie or Calllomla. the ul\<le• C~~~·'Su~I LEC MICRO llROOUCTS. 23012 Vie ROBOTS ANO COMPANY •000
O.ech C
9
3
2
~!I• Bol'llll Newporl 1••grilt(I wm aall 11 public Hie Dy com-10, Ct1ange 01 Nanie ab•~nt• Miuton Viejo 92891 Wn1 .. ry Place. Su•I• 100. N8WPCJfl
· A 8vv pettllve lll<ldlng on 111e 74111 aay ot N JamH P B111n1rO. 288 I Beech Ce 92800 I
OR lvclnda M ~c0.1mo11 603 AuQUSI 19113 Ill 10 OOo ctoci. AM ORDER~ A ~·I} 123 ear Coat• Meta CA 92828 JOMPh L Mlllll 143 B•l"olood Dt ;~~ 8on11a Newo~ Beach CA ~n 1M p•em•ses where said pi ope• iy FOR CH,!>NiE O~ ~AU~E Thta bu1lneu 11 conouc1ed b'f an NewPOfl Be.ch c a 92660 •u1~ ueen slo•t>d Anll wrucn •••I s 06 AM noividual JOMIC)ll J McCoro 1)82 BiiywOO<I
Thia butirniu" conclu~lllO oy an oc111t<1 111 Publtc Sloraoe Inc 2(199 Ch S I ~ G •I J•mH P B••111••0 Or NlrWPOrl Beech C1 92660 ~~~~~' M M ...... Plac11e1111 Avenue 1n 1ne Clly 01 "' ;hl~n~ou~n 10";' =~'~:': • :'~"'~.!: C Tl••• 'c1a1emer11 wea llled with Ille I"'' butinn' 11 coNlvcl.O by 11
• c ..... rmoll Costa Me111 Co..my or Orange 1 ' wi .,. oonly lerl. ot Orange CO<Jnly on gener11 p1111ner1h1p
Thia 1111emen1 wH llled wun llw! 1S1a1t! 01 Calllornla the aDaodoneci lf11 1110~~ 10 ~"ange 111•111•• n•me July 21 198J Joteph l M11111
County ClerM OI 011nge COunty On ':)OOdl Ch811111SO< µe1sonalprope11y ~~::'n S~:t,.,un lH IO AOQl!la F22t&M Tl\11 l!lllemenl will llljj(I with mn
JuHy 21 , l983 ~e>Cttt>ed below 111 ltlt1 mallets ol IT ri HEREBY ORDERED th 1 II p Publls!llld 011nge CoHI Deily County Clerk ol Otange County 011
1'221206 011ugt05 riellls-18 TuDS 7 polhllS r 8 ii llOI Aug 4 , It 18, 25 1983 June 17 t983
Publlshed Orengto Ct•isl 0111~ o• cement ugs roll of fooino m11tr1 ~o~:;~~ll 1;1e1e,1eo I '" lhe mailer 44••·83 . 1':11"'3
PUor Aug •. t I. 18. 25 1!16J !loo• polt911r 2 SIP l&dCler, CllSI nano Oepollmen~p~i:; b~ o~~ 1~~0c;,~:~ Publl•hecl Orengo Coa11 Dally
_________ _;:4;:::3;;:.30:::....::d::;:.3 rt ll•ke. boa1, aw0und1y smp Cenler Dnve West Santa An• Cell PUBLIC NOTICE Piiot July 21. 28, Aug 4 1 t 1983
PUBLIC NOTICE Ch8t1es Stahlheb"' 2 memu lornla on Augusi 29 l983 111 • tO 00 I 4212-83
---....:..::::;::;:...::.:::.:..:.:::... ___ nitl s111ps 12 bxs, 6 rolls 01 l1no1m, 2 o clock AM Bild then and Uiere FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
f'lCTITIOUI BUSINESS natr mi5c t1ems sriow cause. 11 a11y lhey hevo . why I NAME STATEMENT POOLIC NOTICE
NAMI! 8TATl!MEHT No Go Merine · Asal marine prls. suld potlllon !or cnango 01 name •11e lollow1ng persons are doing
The following porsons are dotr•g 20 b•9 boat Slerdng wheels. Assl should no1 be grenled u11neu aa ,.CTI o butlness 11. n•attne pt!&, 18 wnd Doors rolls OI IT IS FURTHER ordered 11181 11 ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE Tl UI aUllHES&
PRIORITY I COURIER SERVICE. :rpl. IS oxs opy ol 1n1s ord111 10 snow cause be ROCK GROUP) PRESSUAIZEO NAME ITATl!MENT
16342 Arlington Lene, Hunllngton Dale Bu•naC111n Chsl lt1dge l!ola, ~ubrlshed In 111e Orange Coesl Delly RECORDS (RECORDING LABEL). bu~r:e~~,~~wlng person• are Uolng
Beacri, Ca 926•7 ~:~~;~m maurss. 2 Ute Ible. 3 bxs Piiot. a newspaper ol general 60 Capital St Costa Mosa, Calll H & H CONSTRUCTION. 29836
Dennis Mlc1iae1 Penella 25 1 t 1rcu1a11on publlstlecl In lhls county 2627 HlcJClenwood Leguna NI 1 c
Sunllowe. T-7. Sarila Ana Celll Lorrarne Espmoza · Rouna Dd t leasl once a week tor tour c;on· T&rence JOMIPh Coakley, goo 92677 · gue ·
9
9270~ ~nst 1111..k 2 Dd llamas 2 cushloos 1secu1111e wei.s prior 10 ine aay 01 !Miid epllel S1 CoSle Me!I&, Celll 92827 Chilies John Haubrlc;k Jr 427 s
Hedy M1111na Pennella. t63•2 Ar· u~ inear1ng Mark Wllltem Lose111 960 Cep11a1 wrieelar Orange Ca 92669 • ll~on Ln Huo11ng1on Beech C11
8
Oreat Western lnduslfl81 Sal"s Oale<I July i3 tll83 I Costa Mesa. Cellt 92627 Ronalll Burke HollllOn 29836 Hid
92 7 °L•esdl I Fran~ Domen1ch1n1 Tnt!1 bu11nen •s conducted by e denwOO<I Leguni Nlguei Ce 9267r
Tritt buslneu I• conaucted by 8 an 0•11 reserves 1ne 119n1 to b•ll Judge 011118 enerel pe11ne11111p Thi b · 11-•l p1111nersn1p at 1ne sale Purcnues must De made Superior C.ourl Tererice Joseph Coakley gene•~I ~:;~:!'s~~P conducled by •
Dennis M Pennella ""'1h ca:n only ano paia for e1 lhejPuol19'1ed Orange Coast Oe11v p1101 This su11emen1 was hie<! wllh the Charles John Haubrtck Jr
Tnts statement wu llled ""'I" the ltme o 1>urc,h1u1e All purchased July 21 28 Augull " t t 1983 .County Clerk 01 Orange County on Tnla a1e1emem wu !Ilea wllh ine
,, v• .. ,. •emo11e<1 al Ille lime of purche•e u .. t-, ouniy 1e1k ol Orange County on Coun"' cr~k 01 Ore""e Cour>ly on ilOOds a•e sod as is. an<! must t>el 3·,.,., 83 July 27 1983 c c
Augu91 2. 1983 ~ F2215ft June 24 1983 F222022 Sale su1ec1 I<> ptto1 cancellattori 1n POOLIC NOTICE PuOltshea Orange Coa!I Dally ,211397
Publ1sne<1 Orange Coast Daily Ille e11en1 o• se111emen1 betw-. 1101 Aug • 11 t8 25 1983 p 1 Piiot A 1 t 1 t8 25 s 3 1en111ore1 ana obhgateo party Dated • ub !Stied Orange Coesl Dally ugus · epl t l98 11115 IOlh& t7thdayolAvgust 1983 STATEMENT Of .. 443.93 Pllo1July2t 28 August • 11 1983
4538·83 Public Slorage Inc landlord ABAHOOHMENT Of U8E 01' 42 t I ·83 PUBLIC NOTICE .Publtshl!a 01ange Coast Delly p,101 l'ICTITIOUS BU81NE88 NAME
1
PUBllC NOTICE ---------------~=::..=...;.:.::;.:.:.;:.:.. ___ August 10 1 t 17 t983 The loltowing persons 11ave 11b11n-Ntl.IC HOTICE
NOTICE 01' TRUSTEE SALE 457 t-83 l:loned the use of lhe FICllllOu!I Bull· l'l~:MITEIOSU:ABTUE~NETSS T S 1 ~ess Name "Tne Carat CoMec-..,EN SUPUUOll COUllT •uSlee ale No 15·8304-0035 loon 'The Karel Connection Tne lollow1ng persons are <Jolng YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A "The Kara! Konnection" 0, "The business as Of THE STATE OF ~:8ED o: TRUST DA TEED JUNE 23 POOLIC NOTICE 1carro1 Connecllon' . localed al 2048 SOUTH PEAK DEVELOPMENT co~~~~~~N~~;~~~~~ES
MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE NAME STATEMENT ~2660 or Post Ollice Bo~ 2000, Cor-92l51 u 11 agune ch. A T FEGURSON. JR . Deceased
TO ~RuoN~Ts y1'G~ i~~~:~~0.~ I FICTITIOUS BUSINESS !Port WeyOlldge, Newport Beach. CA ~~M~A~Y,2~~·olsoulh c:::· Hlth· In the Matter OI Ille Estate OI JAMES
IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF b The lollowtng persons are e101ng nn;h~e~1~1~;,0c:B92~1~:.s N ~ I Soulh Peak lid. 6390 Greenwlct1 CH• Ho. WEP 191'7 THE NATURE OF THE PROCEED us1ness as u u. v~ amv re· O 1 5 's NOTICE OF PERSONAL REP· INGS AGAINST YOU. YOU SHOULD I MESA VERDE LIQUOR, 1520 lerreCI to above was rlle<J on Sep1um· 11:r~~ 9.,u;~~ lOO. an Ol81jo, Call-RESENT A TIVE'S SALE OF REAL
CONTACT A LAWYER ~&kor S1ree1, Cos1a Mesa. Calllornla Der 22. 1981 In Ille Counly ot Orange S p PROPERTY AND PRIVATE SALE On Augusl 31 1983 Ill 1'00 p M 92626 Counly on Joan T Cummings. 20•8 r ou1t1 eak Assotleles. 1540 NOTICE IS HERBY GIVEN 1hat
CENTRAL CAPITAL CORPOR· Joseph Nanci. 29 t52 Murre Lene, Pon WeyDrldge. Newpori Beoch. CA :~~~a C~~5~11 H~~g:~S lSulle 202· THOMAS A FERGUSON as Per·
A TION as 1he duly appointed Laguna Niguel Cell! 92677 92660 l't1 1 1 sonal R11p1eson1a11ve ol lhe Etlele ot
Tru91ee under end pursu11r>t 10 De8<I Dora Nanci. 29152 Murre Lane. I J,~;~ b~s•ness was conaucted by a lJrnn~~.~u;r;,:: ~;~~~f,~~ DJ,,,!~ JAMES T FERGUSON . JR .. de·
ot Trusl recorded on June 25 t980 agune Niguel Calll 92677 n ua !flan 8 partnerstll ceased will sell al p1lv111e Hie, lo lhe
as Document No 078 t 1 Book t36•6 Tnomes Nanci. 29152 Murre Lane,
1
_ Hus s1111emen1 wes llled wllh lhe SI even M Bro! p esld 1 hlghesl ana beSI bidder, under the
Pege 299 0 1 o n1c1a1 Records 1n the aguna Niguel Calll 92677 .ounry clerk of Orange County on Th n. r eo lerms and condlllons here1nel1e1
onlce o! Ille RecOfde< 01 Orange t This buslnes$ Is conduc1e<1 by an lhe deie indlceted by lhe Ill• 1t1mp Cou~~ s~~::::-'~~·o~:~ 1118g with the m11nllone<1. and !lubJect to conrlrma·
County, ca11rornle execuled by nlncorpo•eled assoc1a11on otner abgve 0 July t~ 1983 ge ounly on llon by this Superior Court on
CHRISTOPHER MARK JANUSZ & han a prtnerslllp ubl•shed range Coell Dolly ' f220T73 Augusl 22, 1983 at 10 o'clock A M
ASTRID BROUWER JANUSZ HUS· Joseptl Nenct A.ug 4 11· t8 25. l983 Published 0 or lhereeller wllllln lhe lime allowed
8ANO ANO WIFE AS JOINT TEN· T111s statement was hied with tile b1101 Aug • range Coast Dally by law. at IM oNlce of Reitman &
ANTS ounly Clerk ol Orange County on PUBLIC NOTICE 11• 18• 25· 1983 Allman a110<neys lor the Personal
Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION ~uly 26 1983 4388-83 Repreaentellve II 9777 Wllahlte
TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER FOR F221'41 COUNTY Of OAANGE P\eLIC NOTICE Bouteverd, Suite 816, Beve.ly Hills
CASH, lp1yebl1 al ume ol ute 1n Publl9118d Ora"ge Coast Dally NOTICE Of PUtlLIC HEARING Celilornla 90212 1111 lhe rtgtl\. title,
lawful money of rhe Unlled S11tesl r 1101August1 I 18 25. Sept 1 1983 llEGAllDING !!!~ANCE OF STATEMENT OF WITHDRAWAL 1n1erest anll estate of Ille decelled,
THE NORTH FRONT ENTRANCE TO 4570-83 I MUL Tl-FAMILY RENTAL ~ROM PARTNERSHIP OP£RAT1HG and all the rlghl, lllle, lnteretl that
THE COUNTY COURTHOUSE 700 HOUSING REVENUE 80HDS NDER FICTITIOUS 8U81NE88 tne ESTATE OF JAMES T
CIVIC CENTER DRIVE WEST NOTICE IS HERBY GIVEN thal, Ill NAME FERGURSON JR deceased hes
SANTA ANA. CA 9770 t all right PUBLIC NOTICE IS regular mee11ng to be "8ld 81930 Tiie 1011ow 1ng person riu acqu11e<1 by ope<ellon ol lew or
!Ille end Interest conveye<I lo end a m on Augusl 3 t t983 1n Ille Board Nlltldrawn as• gener•l per1ne< from 01he1Wlde olher lhan. O• In eddlllon
now held by II under said Deed ot 1 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Hearing Room et 10 CIVIC Center 11he p111nersh1p aperatrr>g under lhe to lhat ot the daceased at Ille lime
TruSl In the property 911ulled In NICI NAME STATEMENT Plaza. Santa Ana. Celllornle, 92701. l1c1111ou' business name ol ol h11 dea1t1 In and to ell th1t certain
County, Calllornla describing the I The tot1ow1ng persons are dorng ~the bbbbBoerd of Supervisors ot 1he Progressive Fllm Productions real propeny sllulled In City of New· land 1nere1n bu sine" 85 ounty or Orange will conduct a OUb· 1t516 Rock glen. Apt 202 Glel'ldale. port Beach, County or Orange, S111e
SEE EXHIBIT A A TT ACHED SOLAR ELECTRIC POWER SYS· re Maring 111 which 11 wlll near er>O Cahlornla 91205 OI Calllornle, legally described as lol-
HERETO AND MADE A PART !EMS 245 Magnotra c051a Mesa ~or>Stder 1nforma11on conc.ernlng lhe Tiie flc1111ou1 business name rows HEREOF Loi 72 ot Traci No 99 t3. Ce 92627 · oulble 19.suance ol mulll·lamlly statement tor Ille patlnershlp was Lot 7. Block 2 ot Resubdlvlllon ol
as shown on M1p recorded 1n oook Stephen R BY7ek 245 Magnolia entel housing revenue bonds The lllled on May 18. 1982 In the County Section I. Balboa 111and. as per map I
425. pages 37, 38 39, ano 40 of St , Costa Mesa. ca 92627 roceeos from lhe sale ol such ,, Los Angeleir, The lull name and recorded In Book 6 Page 30 Ml1-
•no• County Calllo•n•e Laguna Beach ca 9255 t • end ea 10 De used 10 provide !Inane· BS a partner Is County Recorder of Orange Count~ Mlsoe11aneous Maps records ol Or· Larry Gtarum 258 Sen Joaquin St ~onas 111 &ny are rHue<ll are 1n-1·esldence ol the person w11hdr1w1ng 1 cellaneous Map In 1ne olflae ol Ille
EXCEPT THEREFROM all m•n· This business 15 conducled by a Ing •or lhe conslruc!lon or develop· Pa111c1< M•chenau<J The property IS commonly known I
011. gas. and 0111e1 hydrocarbon Stephen R Byiek mullt·lamlly rental housing projects Cat11orn1a 92651 Island, Ca111orn1a 92682 The sale Is
erals. petroleum asp11a11um. brea. ,11m11tl1J partnership enl or one or more of the 1011ow1ng 1820 Ca1a11na S1ree1 Laguna !:leach. as 125 North Bay Front, Balboa
subSlances 1n upon unaer or lhBI This statement was hle<I with the Ln the approA1ma1e omounle specl-!Signed Ge1ald M1chenaud sub1ec1 10 general ano 1pec1a1 tues
may b11 procured lrom Ille lanas Counly Cler~ 01 O•et1ge County on ~rec 101 each such project PRO-Mark Victor Israel lo• Iha llscal year 1983 10 196•. and
lle<elnabove described together July 27 198:! 1JECT lrvtfte Comperiy IPa111c~ M1chenaud I covenants con<JIHons. restrlcllons
with tile sole and exclusive •lghl lo F221901 Location lnttHlecllon or Irvine This S1a1em11n1 was 11190 w1lh the •1ghts Of way. esements. reaer·
drill slen1ea wells on 011\er lands 1n10 Publlshed Orange coast Daily rCen1111 or1 .. r und Cul1re1 Dove 1n !County Clerk of Los Angele5 County 1 va11ons ol record ii any and Iha •~
and tllrougn and 10 construct 01 P11o1 July 4 11 l8 25 t983 •rv1ne :>n dale 1nC11cated by Ille stamp cep11on of m1ne11l1, Oii ges. waler
aevetop mines 1unne1S snetts or · 4434 83 Amount $5,000 000 above , cart>ons and riyd•o-carbons on or
Olller works 1n ana througn lhe loc1111on lnle•section 01 98,,811c8 F'1le No 82·2973• unlle• H id tend now of record II eny
!l\lbsurtace lhereor lo• Ille pU•PO&e Par .. wey and Cree .. Roed'" Ir vine FILING ANO RETURN REQUESTED I The property IS 8190 subject IO renlal
of recovering s11d reserve<I proaucts PUBLIC NOTICE Amount S tO 000.000 BY I comm11ments through June. 198" hom S81CI lano and 5'mtllt prO<luCIS LOClllOn 1n1ersec11on OI Allon IHURWIT z REMER & OtVINCENZO I ena lne datH of Seplember 3, 1983
fr°"1 other preper11es prov1<1e<J NOTICE OF TAUS TEE'S SALE Parkway and Lake Street In Irvine 660 Newport Ceo1er Drive Ste 1555 lnrougn September t• t983 ere
rtowever. Iha! Ille surface 01 Ille land Lo.n No.79-l95$1•3 Amount $8.000,000 Newp0n Beacn Calllomra 92(16() I comm11111<1 lo• ren11110 a name<J llr>
be uMd for the e,pto•ellon de SUPERIOR TIRE SERVICE .. arkway tw!lween C•l"tlk Road and P•lol Aug 4 11 18 25 1983 The terms end cond1t1on ol Hie
llerein1bove desct1bed shell never T.S. No. 71117-t ~ locauon Norin side 01 Allon Publlatle<I by Orange Coast Oauy ant et no ct11tge
velopmen1 eimacuon or re<r>oval of duly appointed TrualM under lhe eke S1reet 1n Irvine are a5 follow
said minerals or Substances from lollowlng deKrlbed deed 01 truat Amount S7 500.000 NSLIC NOTICE I-Ca.ii tnrough escrow in the tum
said lend or othm prapemes es r• WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Loca11on l"terM1Ct1on ol Campu1 ol S 120 020 00 Buyer lo Obllln I
se<ved Dy Chandler St1e<man Co" 1TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOii br1ve and Bt1dge Slrtl4lt 1n Irvine ST II. TE ME HT Of WITHDRAWAL new second Trust Dell<l rn tne tum 01
por1111on a corl>O<allon 1n <IN<! r&-CASH AND/Oii TI4£ CASHIEll8 OR I Amounl S 11 500 000 Fl'OM PARTNERSHIP $321 100 00 as more pamcul11ly Ml
COfded August I 1963 rn booi. 6656 CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED l'4 Locellon lnlersec;lton 01 Senle OPERATING UNOEI' lorlh below Buyer IO Hsume ea11t
pages t41 OHlciel Records CIVIL CODE SECTION~ (peJ· Ana Freeway 11·51 8"<1 Jell•ey Roed l'ICTITIOUS BUSIHE88 NAME 1ng encumbrance 01 record 1n llte
Tile S11ee1 11<1dress ana Olht com· i•i». et lhe ttmi of •ale In l•wNI Amount S 10.000 000 approAlmale sum of S 173 8110 00
mon des19na11on 11 aoy 011111 real money of the Untied &tel") all ~ Loca11on 1n1ersec11on of Turtle . I ha to11ow1ng person has Total consioere11on 10 bel
properly destrrbeO aoove tS r~hl. lllle and lnlerffl conveyed lo ocl< 011ve and R1dge4lne Or1ve 1n Nllhdrawn as a general par1ner from S6t5 000 00 purponed 10 be 24692 Pr1scelle and now held by It unct.r Ntd Deed 1v1ne Ille pa11nersh1p eper111ng unoer Ille 2· Buye• sttall Pay lees enebllng
Drive, Oana Point Area. Ca 92629 of Trui1 tn the property lletelnetter Amount S 15,000 000 llc1111ous bu11ness name of Tom t>uye• 10 usume Ille u 111tng Trust
Tl1e uncJertfOne<l Tru11ee 1115· ci-crlbed: Loceuon North 9lde o! Alton 'Foolery 111 705 East Balboa Blvd • I Oeeo w11tt Home Savings of Amert·
cl11Jm1 any llablllty lor any 1nconecl· i!"•rkwey w11s1 ol Culver Or1v11 In IB11IDoa CA 92661 , " ne» ol the 11ree1 111lld•esa and other TRUI TOA: WILLARD ME AFIS. t n ~·vtne The t1c1111ous business name 1 3 Curi 10 bfl ae11u11ed through
common aes1gn1t1on, 11 any 1110.,.n unmerrled m•n. HOPE HATHA· I llmount $10.000.000 l"01emen1 lor the pa11nersttlp w H ttSG•OW d11pane11ng upon 1ne preclle
herein Salo sole wrll oe made. b\Jt WAY, •n unm8fTled woman Locallon Ir> I of section or lrvlni; tiled on Nov 8 1979 1n Ille County 01 I bale nee of IM •~••ling encum·
w1ltl0Ut covenant or warranty e•-BENEFICIARY: UNION FEOERAL Center 011~e and Culver Drive 1n
1
0 rarige FILE NO 1'126179 b•1oc11to1-e Mlumed Dy buyer
P•esa or lmpllea •90&rd1ng lllle [SAVINGS AND LOAN A880CIA· Irvine Full Name and Address OI the Pe•-4 ... 11 depo1llS IOI '"' month.
pay 11141 remaining pr1nc1p11 sum ot 1 AECOROED March 28 1111 .. loca11on tn1ersec11on ol Jeffrey me10. 533 Ohio Ave Apt 4 Long apphceDle will be pro-ra1ed ea 01 1
POHestlOr>. or encumDrencn. 10 TION, a corporation Amount $10.000,000 l!IOn WllhOrawlng Tnomu G Cos-rent securny cla11nlng and key, 1r
llwt not9Csl NCured by 98•d Deed ot Jnelr. No. $4447 In Booll 1iJ9e5 • Road and Sen Diego Freeway(•·•051 Beacn, CA 90814 1"8 close Tiu.st. with 1nte•e1t lnereon. as ~907 01 Otflc1-I ll~ord• In th:-:,. in Irvine Published Orange Coasl Dally S-Se11e1 will lurnleh a current •e· 1
provldedlnuldr>ote(el adv1nces.11 tee of the Recorder of 0,.,,9• Amoun1 $10000000 Piiot Aug•. 11. 16 25 1983 po•t ••om 8 1tcen1e<1 P•ll conlrol
any under Ille 1erm1 ol said Deed 01 ounty· L o c a 11 on 1n1e1se c11 0 n 0 ' I ope•etor cover1ng vial Die an<J ec-
Tru91 •ees. cnargff ano e,penees 01 • M11cArthu1 Blvd end sa11 Joaquin NSLIC NOTICE c.eulble areH 01 lhe house and gar
by aalCI Deed ol Trull I ollowl119:Thet portion of Loi 31 of Amount $4 ooo 000 STATEMENT OF WITHD*'AWAL lhrough escrow tor said report ana
111e Trustee llf'td of !he 1ru111 c11111ed
1
H id d...s of truet aeec:rllM• th• 1Hllls Road In Newporl Beach · age Sellar autnorlzes peymerll
Sal<I ule will bfJ mad Dul wtlhoul Tract W , H •how n Oii map re-Al least 20 percent 01 1118 rontall F"OM PAATNElllHIP will pay lor •llm1na11on ol Ory rot,
covenant or warrenly e•pre" o• im-corded In 8ool< 18, P99e 42 of mfa· ~nits 1n eech project 1tnanced wnn OPERATING UNDER I lvng1 and 8Cllve le1m1111 1nle11allon
plied, regarding ltlle poaseu1on or ceUan~u• m...-, record• of Or· ,bond proceeds wlll t>e fflQUl•ed to be FICTITIOUS 8U81NESS NAME '' eny Seller will also repair leak Ing
encumbrances including lees en9e ounlr. C•lllomla, dftcrlMct evallable !01 occupancy on a P•lo•lly ' . 1tall showers
c;hlrgft an<! ••P80S&SO! Ille Trustl!e "tollowe: Parcel 5 H •hown on • ba111 by lower Income lamllles 115 T ne lollow1ng person has 8-Selle• ""'"furnish buyer wlfh a
111><1 ot tile trusts c•e•ted by se•d ':','Pf "r In 8ootl II. Peofl 10 •nd joe!lned 1n Ca1tlo1n1a Hee1111 end ... 1111drewn u a g-•I p111ner from Prellmlnary TIU• Repo<I 111 aet••• 1
Deed ot Trull. to pay tne 1e<r>91n1r>g 0 arcel Me.,., In t1141 omc. of Safety Coo• Section 50079 5 lhe p1nnera111p Opetallng under tile I expenae1 end t>vyer shell lleve live
prtnclpal sums ot the no1es secure<! !._he County llecoraer of uld Coun-ALL PERSONS HAVING ANY tN 11c1111ous Dullness name of Uncle 1~>1 Cla)'S eher reG4lp1 10 •PPfOVe orl
by H iii Deed of Trutl 10 .,. !FORMATION RELEVANT THERETO Charlie• ol Southern Cal Bualnesa dlupprove Such Reoon 7·8uyer 10
wit S 107.90 09 w11n 1n1erh1 thereon YOU AAE IN OEFll.UL T UNDER A ._RE HEREBY INVITED TO APPEAR 0pporlun>ty Center el 121} 10 Huie< PfOYllle eYIOertce OI lire tnsuranu
ITom Oeoembet 1 1982 a t3 00°!• PEED Of TRUil DAT£0 Merci\ 2A, AT THE TIME ANO PLACE MEN·iGarden Grove. CA 926•0 su!llcient lo mMI Ille lender I re-
per 11nnum 111 P•OV>Cled •n 98td noles 1tllt. UNLES8 YOU TAKE ACTION lllONEO ABOVE TO PRESENT Tne llCllllous Duslnen 11am11 quiremenlS ll-8uyet 10 inspect dock I
plus ell co111. c1i11ges 11nd any and TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT SUCH INFORMATION TO THE sta1emen1 lor lhe partnership w151 and~· slip 81 lhe SUDtect P•operly
all eclvancea $2.279 94 ""'"interest .. AY BE 80LD AT A PUBLIC SALE. BOARD OF SUPERVISORS Diiied flied on July 27 1983 In lhe County Ind buyer wlll P•Y lor tny correcllve
thereon If YOU NEEO AN EJCPl.ANATION Augu\I • t983 ol Orenge wor1I al"d neces11ry 1epe1r1 Buyer
Tile benehclll)' un<Jet !Miid Deed OF THE NATURE O F THE ~Seal) JuneAle•endar FullNameandAddretsolthePe!· will P•r the P4flf lllr>tler IM In Ille
of Trull herelolore e•ecute<1 an<1 de-PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YO\, Clerk ollhe Boero ot 'w<t Wllh<lrew1ng. lulae Love. tO 15 sum O S220 00 IS reQulred by Ille
Mveted to Ille un<1ers1gned a wr11ten SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Supervts0<8 or Orenoe County ,EHi Ct11pm11n, Orange. CA 92667 Cny of Newpon Buyer 10 be 1ware
Declarellon ol 0.laull ancJ Demand Calllornra Publl1he<I Ora119e Cout Delly lhel lhe subject preperty lncluOM en
tor Sale. and a w••llen Notice 01 De c 1121 S.ablun Dr .• Coete ..... Publlsned Orange Coast o1111y Piiot Pilot A119 •. 11. 18. 25. 1983 un<llvlde<I o,,._111111 lnff""' In ttle
fault ano Elecllon 10 Sell The unlle• ~; l292e Aug1111 I t 17 t983 4580-83 p•er 111 lhe aubtecl property Sellt!t lo
•'11ned cauM<I said Notice ol Oelault (II • •lrMt adiSre" 01 comm°" PUBLIC NO have no obllgallon 110 1ep1l1 111e
enO Elec'11on to Sell to bt! recorded 1n F'••l9nat1on of property 11 lhown TICE water Una 10 the pier or any plumb
IM county wtlere the real property• ltbove, no W•rr•nly la 91Ven H to It• PUBLIC NOTICE K-a.>14 Ing problems IOCeted t:om!!•t•n•H or correctnH1).' STATEMENT OF 9·Seller 10 provide en 1n1pect1on
Oe1e· July 27. 1983 The netklary under uld De.cl of NOTICE OF Plt!PARATION ABANDONMENT Of Ull Of 01 Building Records by me Clly 01
CENTRAL CAPITAL CORPOr. Trual, b1 reu on of a t>Nech or OF NEGATIVE DECLARATION FICTITIOUI a Newport Beacn prior lo ctosirtg ATION ' elaull In the Obll91tlon1 .. cured The IAVINE RANCH WATER DIS· UllNlaB NII.ME eKrow Bu)er 111 I
11 Mid Trullee hereby, herttofe><e exec:11ted i nd TRICT "preparing o Negative Dec-Trie rollowlng peraona have •ban-Ille Clly Report~ en~o!: ::t;·~~
By· Dick Fo• Vice PrH1Clen1 ellvered to 11141 YndertlQned • laratlnn lor the pro1ec1 dotclrlbed doned Ille use ol the Flctllloua Buel-ommenae<1 !her I h I be • rltten DKleratton of O.fe 11 nd below 8 "Dr alt" N~ilve Oe<:l•r-ness Name INTERNATIONAL en• •I done 91
Publtcllllon Orange Coall Oally P110 u 8 Bllon 11 on lilt •1 1118 lelrlct ortl~e HOUSE OF PETS. 22485 EJ Toro lhe llJlpll!IM Of aetler Augull 11 11 24 t983 4578·8 •mind POf' Sale, end written no-p ~ • Ad E.1 r c 92830 10· Tiie Nie Includes tacked t1o....n ' ' lea of bf-etch end of election lo 18802 Bardeen Avenue Irvine Call· 'ti oro. 9 cerpellng. wind 1
11••• •••rt1
•tMfPM•nt f
for C'IMllra.td Ad
ACTION
Call
A OAIU '1LOT
AD-V1IOI
Mt·l611
•uM 11141 under•'1lned to NII Mid lc;rnla, and la available ior publlC tn-Th Flcllllous Bualneu N•me re-bulll·lr> appllances,0~ht~,?gv~l~l~~:S
ropeny lo M11aty Mid obl~1ttona, specllon A Negallve Oe<:t11r1111on wm !erred '0 above was Ille<! In 11r>d other flit h
nd tllefHtter ltle unct.rt~ned be considered lor app10~1I or dl11p-Orenge Counly on Sept 19 1980• and all lurn1tu~;e~e:'e8:11;';~~ I
euMCI .. 1d notice of breech end of prov111 by ttle Board or Olrec10<s or Fiie No F 146613 nouse 11 ~· an 1 1 tectton lo 119 tecord9d f""'-ty the D1stnc1 al 111 meellng 10 be helO Linde A Fenton. 222 S Trevor SI · turnlthed from .~~:,n ':'ci ~ouy:
• 1112 .. lnalr No. t2•H7!1 of al Ille DISTRICT OFFICE on Anohefm, Ca 92806 I 1-Sellflr 10 w1rr1nl 11111 tll efec· tnc:lel Re.:Ofdt In IM offtGe of Ille Project N11me Oyer Ao.a Well· s Kennein J Fenton, 222 S Trevor 111c:at, plumbing. healil'lg and ep-ec:Of~ of Oflno• County: field • Well Nos 8, t 1 1nd 16 1 • Anaheim. Ca 92808 pllenus 10be1n ood kl d
l ald ••le wlll tie _ ..... A, .... , Protect Loc:ellon Senti An1, • T1h:,:;••~• was conouctea by • 111 close of etcro~ wor no or II
,._ "" County ol Orange n n UI 12-Ear-1 •• 1 ,..,,, lthollt cowe...,,t Of ••"entr. ••· Well No 8 Commercial Parking This t1a1ement wu ttlecl wllh Ille OC>8f1 t • e ..... herein. 11\!J
"'o .. _._e><Jonlmplled, reotrdlne 11"8 lot 11 BrletOI Slreel end S'""e<ll•om County Clerk ot Orange CO<Jr>ly on ~1.._,. Y8.c!_ betubtOld In • Aa 11 con· .. , or enc:umbf-ee, to Avenue '""' July 13 19113 '"" S ... )eel to approval 01
J ltte reemfnlne ptlnclpel tum of Well No t 1 Agricultural Field el Publ~ 0•8f199 Coas• Delly ~rt I-Bid• or onera 11e lnv1te<1 for
he not•(•) MCYted b)' e9'd deed of GrMnvHle StrMI and SflOl'lllom Pllol July 2 I 28. Aug '· 11. 1983 ~ ~ft':'~~,!!u:: be1..._'nottw~ngo1 rvel, with In*"' •• In aa&d Ml• • •205 83 ..,,...,...... ,,.. .... trtd9d ~ver)Ue -~Iman & Altm11n, 11t0tneyt for IM ti! ..,~ ':':8o:.:'~ e, Well No 15 Church Parhlng 1.01 &I Personll Repr...,,tellve. el 9777
-· eher .... lftd Hpen-of.,_. Greenville Slreel end Sege•elrom !'\a.IC NOTICE Wll1hl1• Boul1vu O, Suite 818.
r ruetM •lld of tllel MAY llE MAOE Avenue BeVlfly Hiiia. Calllornle 90212, 01 N CAaH ANO/OR THI CAIHlll' Oetcrlpllon of Nalurt Purpote ITATIMl!NT Of' m9y be hied with the Clerk of 11141 CIRTll'll end Beneflclaflee ol Project The A8ANOONMINT Olf UM OF Superior Court, or deUvlll'ed 10
1(0 '" CIV: ~':~" .. r~g:; P•Ojeel con•lll• OI lhe o"rgn. con-l'ICTmOYt tUttNt•• NAMI THOMAS A FERGUSON. pertontlly 21'24fl. 9lrucllon and INllng or tllree w111er The following 1>«1<>11• htve t ben-et hi• butlnelt 1dd1"' of Speare A
Al the time 01 tl14I lnlllel put>!!· wells lite lhrM wotl1 Gontlltule 1 doned lh• uM ot lhe Flctlllou• But l-Company, tS•ll 26111 SlrN t, Santi
cation of thlt nollce, tl14I lotit portion OI the Dyer Road Wt llllefd neaa Name BARBARA'S BRIDAL MOl11cl C1lllOfnla 9040• 11 any Um• fhe Pu•POte II IO tW1tlll81l lhe rt-SHOPPE, 270 E .. 1 17111 SllNI after llrtl ""'•"''icll'AA Of tl\I• "'01•~ 91ttO<lnl Of the Uft•..lA b91911C8 of II b.._ l ..,, C • "v"' ""' • " "'"" lh obl'9 ton ,_... • "'w11 er w.,, • IOt Ille P•oducllon 01111 Me91. Ce 92827 1nd .,.lore making the utt 1~,. ~~IMcl =~ lr~!t .:!:: of dom1111e w1ter Thia portion ol The F1Ct1llou1 Bv1lne11 Nsme •• l•·For lurther lnlormellonenO bid
Hllmated ooeta,HpenHI , enchct· lhe protect do.a nol Include well !erred 10 abovo wH flied In Orenge form• apply 11 the olflte of the 81.
Hnc" le •t11, 22t.7S. To dterml'ne production, once Wiiii pr()ductton County On NovemlM!r 13. 198 t !Orney !Or the Per1on1I Repretenll-
lhe opening bid, rou mer call beo1n1. lhe ben11tlcl&•I .. wlll r>t me Rita Henriette Buehn, 16812 Oun· tfve (7!4)9'7-ollt peoe>le •e•ved by IAWO and lhe City 0111\ Lr> Huntington 8"oh. Ce 15 Tna rlghl 11 r"erveo to reject
D 1 , t 11 _.. ol S•nt1 Ane ~264 T any eno 111 bid• 011.a Auou•I 4,
• •: .. u 1 • ,...., Mitigation m1Hu1H 10 avoid Kun H Buenn. 158 12 Ound1ll\ 1983 :~~·~~!~ii llRVICl po11n1lal 1lgnlllc1n1 tlltcll 11 Ln. Huntington Beech. C• 926'17 Thon'IH A Ferguton, a, T.O. 8entoe COfftpeny, ~llfld In the EIA IO• !ht l)fO~\ B•1ber111 l! t<lng, '7$ E .. 1 18th Pt rtOf'l•I Ael)reMnlllive
1 edopteu September 11)711 •nd HO•• Strff1, Cotla Men. Ca 11262' ol the Eltett 01 er;' ... ~ A. fiend.it 1111.a In""' dllClUH lon of 1lgnlllcen1 Thi• bullnMa WH cion<tvctea by . JAMES T. f f: AO USON. JA
Attlatenl ~!My lnvlronmenlll ellocta lrom en-Qllf'\11'11 pannenhlp DeclelHd
One Cttr llfvd., Weet, ~11onm11n1el ChllCkll~t Dllltd July Tlll• tltl~nt wH 1111<1 with the q.,-MAM a Al.TllANttOfneyt fet , C .,._ 21 Hl83 County Cll{ll 01 Of•nge County on '-•h11r-t1t'"
1 Betty J Wheelet JuM 13, 1983 917'7 ............... '"
Of-... C-I D~~~ SK•etary Punlllhed 0 11nge Coa11 Delly 8effrty Hiiie, CA. 90211
""' "· A1191111 4. 11, 11U Publlst!ec! Orenoe COUI Oaff)' Piiot Pttnt July'' 20 Auouet .. ''· t~ ............ 0r.,.. c-• 0.-, ...... Augu11 1 t 198:) 4~11} 0:1 42 lS-83 Avpel 11, '2. t .. tta •1.a
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
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
To Place YC>tK Ad, Cal
642-5678
REAL ESTAH
,,.,.,, .. ,
Au .. h1-m1 lh1t .. u •• 11,. ,., 111o1 •• 11~J
"""ll1i.1 •• , Olhitvl1it c .... ;.,,.1, ...... , ......
c "'""., ,t.•I M.1
l14iW M• ......
llJ.tti..t'•11fll
t;;J 1'011
•·1.w1t .. u1 \ ... 111 \
Hw111111(hlf• '""""''
.. uHI Utt1l •11U ''"'"" 1 ... ..:"u .. ,., . ..,.,
I I"""· 11.ltll l<t-<Vt\.1 !'l411it111'1
l .... , f . f•~l
M1v.1 .. ,. V11 ,,
,..,,""J•ut l\...it -.. .. ,, ( ,,., ... , ... '•" J., •• , c ,, ........ , .. , ...... w ,., ..
....... IJ...-1
!'-.ulfl .... 1.1, ...
~""""' •t.~h lu\Un "'"'""' .. ,,.. M.tt"" U•.t'-'' A.11• .. .C•
At ... t•1t••·I
I'-..,, t·•·l"''"' l~1 11.. t't ,.It .. ,,.,_ .. ,.., ''"'"'
'••fhltif •• ,. '""'"
'"'""l•Ah1no.ono
fJ..11•h ~· 1 tul.\
,., .. ,
IOOt
jl1tH, II"'' ,,,.~
l•>.!J.
ltl.'-4
IU#f
llltl
HI U
10411
t01J 11111 IUIO
l\I'.•!
IO";.
Ill'•' I•• Jlfftf
)Ii '1
lo r
lt11tt
'''"' , .. ,.. .. .,.,. ......
'•'" Ill'
1 .. 11 I:.
, ....
LA
T llE DAILY PILOT
IF IEO OFFICE llOL fl.
Teleph,m1• ~f'r\ 11 •·:
~1onday.Frufo
8:00 A.M.-:,:]<J P.~t
Bu~inf'~., Countt·r :
Monnav·I· ndtty
8:00 A.M ~1 <HJ I'M .
l>EAOLl~ES :
Pl'Ol.ICATIC )i\
Monda)
Tul'bt.lav
W.-dnr11d..i v
l'hur.,da v
f nda \
"laturdJ\
S11111 l1n
"'lat
~1 1J11.
T tt t''
\\i '"J
1'1 1ur~
I II
I 1 -:~q <•.rn.
l :'.~O JJ 111
'1 .JO p.m
·1 ::HJ p.111.
tl·'~(J p .111.
J ()() p r11
'i (I(\ p.m
CA~(:El.LATIO:\ &
CO HR ECT H>~S:
Ctt rll'cllJ11011-. and t'.ffff'cllon~ ma 1
be ma<le on a111e dPadline::: a· ...
above. Plf'a'>t> ask for a cancPllat1011
number wh<"n t•;:in('rlling vour ad.
lt1>1t• '4· t .. M1·~,.1 "'".'"'" .. , ., ......
111 hj ·' I.ti t•, 'I'
f.-I• hJt ..... 11•
ERROHS:
•;,., Check
, ....
II
11·,,
your ad daily and rrport
:1,,:, errors irnmed1a1r ly. The DA IL Y
PJ LOT as~urnpr, l1abil1t v for the fi rst
intorrC'f"t it.sPrllon cnlv.
M ·1t1d• tt '"'' t1.1rk
.ll\11u1•1.u11 l.11 "-·••
j ., •• ,.,. (.
l•\•f t l ••• ,
I ~I.If ,j 'Llh
H o .. h•' ~ •• 111,
Kf9.K• t'r<>P"MY
Tln;rSllAlnl\j(
RE t;•<tuma• R £ w.,,u.i
RENTALS
,,.
11100 ....... t UI 111 .. ;!l'\f ~ 1111.J
Hu11v·' 1 nfurf\lll\~ll•l //HI
ll,111.,..,. jt Yflu,h•"-t ••I
t11111,1t1n1n..,I .tilf
4 •l!t•t" ~ "f 11 .!t•Jt
t "'~'"' "' , ... lo~ttft-,U\of~ f•JtH J .. •"
l•t\llrrnhou...,.., l:nl t"Jt ..
lh.lt1l1 "'' ..... ,h .t-i~1
l>v.,1t ""' Unf 'J"11•
Asw1 \rnt·ut... f "r-n111tw.J lbUC•
A1wrmwinta Unf i:w "'''°' .-.·urrt Of ( of lftW
K••'"'" 1\llOCI
Kulf"t'I IY f\o .. uf /WO.!
U••Uh Mub b '"Oi
(;\14'"1o, ltt"1ln '1ik•\ s ... mm.-r tt. h\llb ~""" v ..... turl It• nMt. .!'fol:•:"
•M, ui...b \t Srw1... :-..itt1
•t{,oUh Wo1nt"1 l~.,_
l ... , ,...,, ll•t Rt n' l'' r .!. ou ... H.••t11..th ?Vt• u,,,1h•,. H• tit•I• 1'"ftt-
'"""n'1 tt,nt..I• .l\ftlt lu,hH\ lt1 ltl,.I• /,.t.l'Jf•
'"'"'''"W' ~·Ji.~ M1~ h .. 11\.ilb. 11.!~
"NNOUNCEMENTS
l\nn ~•"'4.• •""''H\lli Ml\J.:
l•~' h f1turi~t -. .. I
I'• IM•fl•I,. Mfl!
)'1•f'Vtll•l "'-f\l\I"\ \ltlt
'l11•1t' fV ln•U\Mh'''' ,~1111
f t+o•1·f '"'"'
BUSINESS &
PtNANCIAL
lt11"•m-~ fof '-iii• 4UI ..
•uu11o~'"""""" 0•1l•lf'""1I••.,. 4r1 t
CLASS I FI ED 642-5678
a .... , '" Salt a ..... ftr Salt
Gt-.;.;;;•-.t.-r•-l ___ .;;.1.;;..00;.;;2 Gtatral 1002
ITUTHOHIOI
One 2 Br 1 Ba w/2 car
garage. $89.000 Aleo
have 3 Br 11/2 be w/2 car
garage 11no cent11I air
$102.000 Ownera are
motivated Make an ottllf
631-7370
TRADITIO~L
REALTY
Ill CllYOI
011llcres1 model wllll ants·
tic decor splll level 2
l>e<I • community pool &
1enn1s Golf course &
lights VIEW $247,500
C all 673-6900
U.·'11 HI HO"\ 1
llfl~I -. I•~
REAL ESTATE
131-1400
PllOE llHIOH HOii Ill Clllll
EIEW.1 IAY OH YI TOWlllME
Eme11ld Bay 4 Br 2'!r Ba, Tttally Rt•t4aletl
ocean vlewl Reduced 3 Bdrms. 3 baths. poot and
lrom $520.000 10 spa Elegant $350000
$440,000 jor Immediate auumeble llnanc;ing.' Full
sale. Open beams. warm pr1ce SSSO 000 wood accents Accoes 10 '
private beach. 1enn1111nd
community pool and '* C t" R I parks Superb value! Ask 0 e ea t~·
101 Aod Daley. 6~4· 7020 & I"' ~sl ment
llHO HAL ESTATE ll0.1100
tSu\1tK._.. \.\.o1rw-.J 1 Hn ----------•lf,,, •om m Wor•.1ttunu11 t111n !•••••••••••
lu\t"\H•~nt "'•nhd tUJJ.
•1ioihf11" .. 111 1 ..... " •u,••
•M11111••" \.\o101n1 •11:1
\Joi ljr( .. lo(t I r ff t\'2~
EMPLOYMEN T
II• 11 \l\ .. ul••I I •
•J,.a"' \.\ .. o,,..,, ~to
ANIMALS l...... ,....,,.
.~.., ') IU
tl1.,..... )~JU
l.4\1"...:t..: k '' "' p,.u \\"
M£RCH"N01SE
'\111 , .....
,,,pll ., ......
" I
" I
\U I Ill" t I "'
HM" M+•h ,_,1, "'"'
( lll!MfM .\ t•t'l•l11.1f hUlt1
'1in1puh•1 h••ttt
~ t< I 1H \nu ti'I./.
• ,rlltt••I• 1,11.•
toOl~I '"IH hf•M
H·•OV th1l1t f •• ,.h "-"•
I• w1•ln oH •
M..i.t111w ,,.. 11.•lt1
MlM• II"''""""' f'IJllt M1.--'v\o.111n1 t1J.1•J
Mu'll •I 1'••11 u1,1•f\h n~H
llllt•t JI 111w11111• A. .. :...111''''"' ,,, ,,.,,h
P111111--. ~ ' h llr"'"' kl l H
't••liHljt (.1 .. I" li.,!'~I
f\ H .. itu "'ii• fl o;e iJ
BOATS
~ t ... 4,,., 14,.,.,
( • ~ , .. I .. I I .,..,, ,.,,,
"·•-·'"l. ""'·•f•lh •••••• ''"""'' .... '"'". ,1i, .... Jvf11,·•~ 1'o.J 'I t o~• tt:t ""io1•f~tt' fn'\11111 •~··• io:f1
.......... ,1. ~"'"
TRANSPORU TlOfC
.\u· t •fl ttt11u
t\f. I-.. 11t 11J
l ..... ,." "i111
\\,.1 .. , f\1k1" KUh
•M•1hlf1 \It"" 'u•\#·f• .,,..
M •·hM ,, IUW"~ 0.(1111
ti\ IM>U
ffA1I• r It I 11 •tO!f
l .uh f t Ill t fllO.'f·
AUTOMOTIVE
\oh I• '''"... til)H
t\11ft1~1\111·,l' .. t1<1 ~IHI'\
1't•I•' \\' 111h..,t fft'/tl
'••l!h UM! ..... ,.. ~HI.'\
4 Wt'lf.,l l>.1\1• fU,hl
T ltt k~ HI t'
\ ''"" l\11l1tf!I ''l.1'-I
AUTOS IMPORTED
\ll.1 l<1•tlft
'"''' ""''"' HM\\
\ f••tl
l •.•hlAli
l)ro&o11n ol•
f, . ., .. " h•• 11 ... ,.1.
luuu
J~wt J• n .... 11 t .. ,. ... " ct111u 1 .. , .... ,.
l#'tUlll
Mu.U MMirr-ttn
M•nf"\t"'l"M .M•t .. 1ht~h•
M\;
'""'' t-1•nt.-u
l't'UlfllrlJt ..,,_,.._h,.
R.-Noh
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l\M!'
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If it's got wheels
you'll move it
faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.Call
642-5678 and a friendly
ad-visor will
help you turn
your wheels
i nto cash.
Do It the
easy way-
advertise In
classified.
Daily Pilat
l l•)\ltWO AO\ f't'IO ..... , .....
Hl'T •llS Tiii HE
Buy 01 the yurl ~ bdrm
home on large tot on
quiet 1tree1 Tusllr>
ICllOOIS New palnl In &
OU I Prtced $10 000
below II A apprallal tor
test sale S 12• 000 Call
Dion Schmeh•
GE 1s9-9too
1:,f..._-;._ •I• ... •. _ •.·.:..·,.,
ESTATE SILE
COROlll DEL IUR
Nice 2 Bdrm home With
llr6Place. beamed cefl-
1ngs and large sundeck
on lull size R2 lot Re-
ducecl to sellle ea111e
Priced now al 1ust
$235,0001
17141671-4400
111ll UMl28
HARBOR
Dalebou1
Bovii.Beoch Real Estate
IRYllE TERRACE
Fascinating split-le vel
three bedroom. two bath
home N icety 111nd-
scaped Large custom
ep11 Conven l enlly
IOCOted $310 00-0 1111-
sumeble llnenclng
below F H A rites
1485.000 Fee
131-1100
C11111llfed Ads are lhe1 answer to a succenlul
garege Of yard 111tej It's •
better way lo tell more
people I
COLDWeLL
BANl(eRa
UIUllllll .. ., .....
Understated eleganc~! This
L.autremont has everything !or
the dl.acrimJnating buyer. Very
private location with mountain
and d ty Vlew Highly upgraded,
custom decor and sparkling
clean!! Owner may consider
trade.
., ....... , .... 2
'"~., l•• '" ,,. ....... ""
lt ""'"'*'
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. Aug t 1, 1983 (:9
------------------------
....... ltr Sal\ IH1t1 ftr Sall --BtHt1 itr Salt 8H1t1 ltr Salt IH1t1 Fuah~t4
Gtatral lot2 Geatral 1002 Ce1ta M111 1024 •••tort ltacli IOlt •••rrt ltacli 21H
S 110t000 J 1R 21A 00.,111 YIEWlrl Fentaatlc on beech X bey LllO ISLE 2223 AVALON ~ view, 11va1ch from front Broker 640-9019 Brighi 2Br. 2Ba corner unll porch the wind surfers & Bayfront ~mgle story 3 Br 2 Ba beam cellmgR,
spacmllh tl.'rrlte1:.', plt>r & s!Jp. $1.250.000
Opt>n House Sal/SUJ1 1·5
101 V1a Lac.Ju Soud
11 ~ Fl111el11 IHll
on top floor LuKury am-yachta H ll right lnlront ol
menllles owner anKlous you 2 Br 1 • • Ba
BYCO 6-45·2251 tasletullly furnlsthed, also
RHICED 2Br Versallles. See to ap-
prec 962 3065
tennis 1 yr lease,
S 1500/mo utlls h1cld.
714/675·2836
ltHtt Uafarallli.. Ctdt•l•I••• At11t•tal1, UaJ.
Hiit. ltadi 2240 UafuabliH 2410 CHta ••11 2724 ---------12 In Cotta Meu, 2Br, M e.1-------...,.-.;.
$425 2 bdrm, rile near 2 cat gatage, dahwahr, 2 br, 1¥• be. lrplc, OW, new
ocean Crpta lhru-oul 11ove, pool & pallo 1595 drp1, garage, ne11v no wu
Flat lee 539·6 t90 Bui or 1650 mo 873·2160 floor• S565 648-6055 ev
OOrl'I 11valll 4 Br nN, 2 bi
stone lrplc. blllna. 1650.
neg lerms 4 move In. Fee.
539-6 t90, Best
HOME FOR RENT
YOU DESERVE ITf 2Br 1ba. encl ger. d1p1,
laundry $445 645-2075
or 5<16-5763
i918 Wallace /1 103 2 Br 2
Ba T11vnhse. t child, no
pels S 5 t0 /m o liayfront 6 ba 7111 ~rm. ViUu on w•de Int,
pool. spa. du•:k fur 120' yacht. $4.850,000
3-5 bdrms, 2 ba, skyllles,
nardwood lloore, lrpl,
bulll-ln mlCfOWlll/8, COV·
ered patio, fruit trees,
1000 sq lee• attic space
S 134,900 Open Sunday
1-4 3 t37 Sheron Lene
By owner 545-2786
Nearly on Peninsula 2Br 1 Seavlew tow dwn. lrg tot, oa w/garage 1625/mo
g r e 8 t I I n 8 11 (. 1 n g 650·3890 Agt
1 lunllngton Beach 3 & 4
B<Jrrn S775 Fenced
yatds & garegea Kid• &
pets welcome. 863-1500.
NEW geted 20 To11vnhome
VILLAGE COMMUNITY.
2 Bdrm, 2'h Be. 1600 sq
II of pure lwtury Gar·
agea. apa.s In evefy home
• master sul1e. dining
rooms. wood burning
llreplacea, mlc10·11veve
ovens, private patios &
yards , gardener
provided Elegant living
only 15 mlnu1es l1om
Fashion Island, 7 minutes
10 S C Plaza or 0 C Air·
port. Just east of New-
port Blvd. & 10 ot San
Diego Frwy S 1050/mo
631-5439 2473 Orange
Ave • Costa Mesa
831-3671
Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + large ra· nn .
beam t-e11Jngs. furrushed. patios $420,000
$379,000 Darrell Pash
Prop 851·8767 Winter 1 Br Oen. garage. Agent. no lee
llYSIDE PUCE UYFllOIT
Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up. 2 br.
2 ba dn 2 boat spaces. Redl.Jef'd $1,500,000
POOLNO•E
Oulel 1ocat1on 3 BA 2 Ba,
11rep1ace AV access
S t48,000 financing by
v1110 Balboa Penthouse yetd, no pels $500/mo
2Br 2ba Huge deck u111s 111cld 642·2097
oc.ean v1e11v Owner/Bkr Winier Rental 2 Bt
953-6610 lurnlshed, washer, dryer
Old·IOwn claaelc .
Kids/pets fine Basic
bltlns. telsure patio $450
& sm lee. 539·6190 But.
2 Br on golf course, new
paint. etc Only $475/mo
No pets 760-8862
3 Bdrm, 2 bath, carport $575/mo 540-3666
3 b•, 2 ba adult condo 011
E 17th SI Walking dis·
tance to rastauran11,
banks & grocery Perfect
lor older couple or
mature adults $700/mo
Call Liz 01 Chuck at
646·7171 or 646-5743
PElllSIU llDIE OCHIFllOIT
Oc11an & ,euy views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3
bath. 3700 sq fl. XLra parking. $1,385,000
FllllllllS llAICll HILLTOP
011vner
RtJ loCar.it Rltr.
141·1121
Moliile Htat1 1100
UHHlllLU 1972 Deluxe Royal Lancer
I 10,000 DOWN • VACANT 24 ~62 2Br , 2Ba large llv·
1 Ing, dining & kitchen 3 br, 2 ba twnhse, pat 0· areas Fam rm 11v/wet bar,
New 4 br, 4 ''l ba, custom Fren<·h Nonrumdy dble gar, pool 662-1156 all appllances & air cond
Fstate 1.2 prtme acre hilltop $1 ,250,000. OllARllH Young adults welcome.
COllOIADD CAYS IAYFllOIT
Coronado Island cust. bayfront lot 85' boot
deck. Plans avail. N ow $370,000 w /Lrade.
2 Ir. 1 la. ht••· Agt 540-5937 ua,ooo. QR£HlHf PAH 141 HIO Beaullful 24•64 wllh __ ·__ ' enclosed porch • Mod-
ONIROM II ular Menor Home. Island lllllDWHUI HOIE FOIEOLIHRE kitchen, large llv rm, din·
Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view. 3500 sq. S250,000 under appraised ing rm, family rm, 2Br. 2Baths Latge storage ft. $440,000 Will trade for a local property value Located In prime Permanent potch steps
Co91a Mesa loca1lon. 5 o 5937 62,500 s.t ol land 1 2000 Agt 4 · __ OCUI FllOIT llOllE lllTS 8 I ot bulldlngs. Owner Neelly new, 12' wide, nr
Prime 2 Br. 2 Ba & 2 Br 1 Ba. Duplex on xlnt will help finance, trade 01 Npt Bch. walk to grocery, swimming beach good income. $725.000. exchange 10"1. llnenclng S26,000 646·2573
available Please call now Sllyllne 12 x 55 Unique
Best view. tallest ocean front bldg tri-plex for de1alls Roy Kendell. plan. Low Aer;t. Adult
with spacious 4 Be. 2 Ba. each level $1,200,000. 631-1266 Agt Park nr Ocean $19.900.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
)41 Flnr•d•· Dr •v" "I B 67S 616 1
EHT-SllE 111 HWI 548.8837
HSHE 12-X. LOU Ct•ttery Lola
•• UAIE/lnlH Crrrt• 1225
Newer 3 bdrm. hlghly up· 2 Nltches. Pelm Court Pe· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~E~~~~I graded lown dble gar. clllc view Mausoleum tor _ ____ ----pvl patio, c.omm spa and price ol one 586-6075 pool Only S 125,000. __ _ * Hl9'80R RIDGE *
Come visit the most fabulous view. New
custom home in Newport. Nothing to
compare with this 4 bdrm, farn nn, 5
bath. fonnal dining, 3 frplcs. 6 car garage.
• Large pool & jacuzzi. Come to the gate
and ask for 3 Yorkshire, 759-1931.
IPfl IAIU 1-1
HELEN B. DOWD
llULTlll, llC. 144-8134
Ownr/brkr Biii Duggins Co••trci al _!33·2~1s..6.18~-frorr•I 1250
Eas1s1de 3 Br 2 Ba pool GAS STATION/CdM. High
I 140.000 Devlri Real Es-volume. sell serice 1nde-
1a1e. 642-6368 pendenat operation, Sale
UPGRADED 3 BFI 2 Be Includes land, building
Condo, double gar· and business. S950,000
age $ t32.500 Bike to with $300,000 down Cor·
Beach 13,300 Assums one del Mar tocetlon Agt
Loans Principals Only 675•6700 _
631-4855 Ctdtaiai1a-,-~1"'2=7-=5
frwiat 1044 OCUI YIEWlll
il!ILFOtl•SE Brighi 2Br, 2Ba cornerunll • " on top floor LuKury am-
CtlHMllll• menllles. owner anxious
Located In lrvlne. over-BYCO 6-45-2251
S600/mo. 673·3039
Soatli La1aaa 2116
Gated/Comm 4Br Newly
turn. oeech tennis
sauna, nr schools, no pets S1500 661-7712
IHIH Uafu•illit4
Gtatral 2202
1 Br condo on the
t>ayfront $950/mo
Su••tr I wl1ttr ........
.llOllS RULTY
PRIP •HHEIHT
114-111·1113 .......
Ptaia1al1 2201
lniae 2244
2 10 5 Bdrms 1856-12600.
~lsor
·Realty
651-1177
A1artatat1 Fual1lit4 2 Br 1 Ba. 1981 Maple
111-..a Ave, 1elr1ge, do11vna1alr1,
Ptala1ala 2607 no pelS. 2 persons $435
OCEAN FRONT·Yrly 1 er. Sl8111) Mgml 641-1324
$700. 3 Br S 1200 mo Nr 2 Br t Ba 57 t W Joanri.
new Gar. 11vlll unfum. No downstelrs, nopeu
... ..CHEl.80.. DNVW pels. 673-6640 $455 Siert a Mgmt .. .,... ----~-641-3124
:>Br. 1 '~Be Woodbrld e CtrtH •el Mar 2622 3 Br 2 Be upper. near
Condo. polio. lakes, s1¥5 Waterfront luxury condo schools, close 10 lrwys,
mo John 673·0707. apt CdM. boal slip avail $575/mo ~ deposit
833-1361 Iv mag pool, jacuzzi. 2 Br 2 Ba. 540.2245
:i Br, 2 Ba. 2 airy C ondo
with patio. pool etc 1775.
979· t942 or 662-2886
Rent by month or year. _ _ _ _
$2000/mo. I t500/mo 1490/mo 2 Br 1'/, Bo car
yearly Furn or unlurn port. lower unit, lndry rm,
714/786-1155 close to stores.
Steps to bflech BacheHor EKecutlve view home -------527 W Wiison
$450, yrly u1ll pd Pllg across from Turtlerock, ll!J!r1 ltacli 2H9 TSL l&•I 142-llOJ
673-7954 lennls & pool. 3 Br 21/2 s4951mo. 2 Br 18a pool.
Ctroaa •el Mar 222~ ~!ill.~ 1 ~~~~;'~6 Avail. Spacious single, one laundry roorn, close 10
2 Br 1 Ba ltplc, garage & IWo bedroom apts. shopping 149 E Bay St. Kids/pets OK. Finer 3 Br, 2 Tll I t U2 1103 w/d. Oshwshr short 11vall Ba wife saver Kitch. I• • .
10 U rtle Coromna Beach lrplc, pool hm l 700's -+ 1565/mo 2 Br 2 Ba apt,
705 Poppy $950/mo flat lee 539-6190. Best. enctsd yard, car P<>n. yrly, 675· 7716 lndry rm. sm pet ok
BEAUTIFUL OCEM Newlyredec3Br.2bahm 2195MopleS1 nr UCI In Turtle Rock. M VIEWS, steps to Chim 5985/mollse 646_1086 .. ~ ................ Tll IU. U2-11H
Cove 3 Bedrm 2' • be S 5 9 5 2 Br , 2 Ba owne<a home 1s1 um; nencho sa;;-Joaquln FURNISHED or rented Avail Sept 15 • Condo 2 bd, 2'h ba. den UNFURNISHED, Townhouse, patio, lrplc.
oll-st par king places w I wet bar, t r p I ALL UTILITIES sm pet OK. carporl, all
patio, deck • bit-In BBQ S 1100/mo. 640-8559 PAID, HEALTH bit·~~~ w 181h Street Appro~ 2000 sq ft Oper CLUBS TENN S beams, steined glass. re Upgraded J Br. 2 Ba. ale. . I TSL 642-6221, 642· 1603
cent 1 y rem ode I e d lrplc, 1acuzzl, pool serv & SWIMMING. plus S5115/mo. 2 Br. 11~ Ba
$2100/mo • 111/lest t gerdnr S995 551-4654 much more• Sorry. Townhouse, new carpet,
cleaning lee Cal --2 I no pets. Model!> new drapes, laundry
673-7901 L11•aa leacli 4 open daily 9 to 6 room, enclosed garage.
011 Bayside Fncd 2 a; Beaut house. ooeen & ca-1923 Pomona
clean, crp1d. decor nyon V\J 4 Br. 2'ir t>a, ram Oakwood TSL Mgmt 6-42·1603 tm Sl600/mo 497-3516 --bltlns, lelsute patio a Gillrden Apartments Prof dee. 2 Br 2 Ba Condo
$630 539-6190 Best w/formal din rm, many
lee LafHI Billl 2250 Newport Buch So. e1ttr111. nr SC Plua.
TIUIFEHEI
10011tng Rancho Sen Joe-SPECT ACULAA--Co1t1 M111 2224
Ctrtaa 4tl Mar 1022 quln Gollcourse. this 2 Br OCEAN VIEW 1----------
HOME FOR RENT 1 700 J 6th Street 16501mo. 0.b 540--0102
L agune Hiiis. 3-4 Bdrm. (at Dovei) Oeslreable Easlslde 2fj;'1
Husband In N Y wants last
sale. Young 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
w/2 ftreplace5 and 3 car
garage on a deep deep
lot. Great &tee close to
beach No w only
1160,000 761·3191
,C::SELECT
-rPRPEATIE:S
---------2 Ba condo Is en S5,000 DOWN I Br sml collage, patio
Cll llPLEI absolutely exquisite 2Br, t'.Ba. luKury ocean lrplc. no gar, S475 Incl
Only 11 years new this lrg home I Completely up-view Penthouse In Bl!· ulll 548·0113 dupleK w/two 2 Br units greded High celllngs. 11vllofts. Owner's unit Is fireplace. all amenities In· ciuslve VIiia Balboa Re·
1900 sq. tt . has fireplace eluded $205,000 Incl duced to $265.000 Sale
end lamlly room. Other land Dan Bibb or Step-by owner permits Low.
unit ts t500 aq, 11. Owner hanle Jonu 544.6200 l ow. 15.000down $2000 wlll ltnance w/good mo at 12•1. 540·7559
down Make ott8f Asking Darlu u [Uaita 1300 ~;11.~:70 s39o .OOO BY OWNEA·2Bf , 2Ba
Jf/: M~cnab ·Irvine
-
1 Ill. WESTllll $4t5/mo 662-170<
2 Br t Ba, gar. bllln ranQ•
& oven. open beam cell
frig, gard Cal QI( 162! • SSOO dep Avail Aug I
1982 A Meyer 549-3484
$775 Fencedyards $ 642•5,13 ba,gar,deck Avell8/31.
garages. Kida & pets $550/mo 642·9837
welcome 863·1500 Newport Buch No. Eestslde 2 Br. 1 Ba In
Agent. no lee 880 Irvine Avenue 4·pleK, lrg pr111a1a patio.
MiniH Vit~I 00 (at 16th) garage , no pel s -$550/mo. 759-9194. HOMES F R RENT 645-1104 Avail 8· 15 Mission Viejo 3 B<lrm 3
Ba. 1750/mo Fenced
yard. lddstpels weleome
Agent, no lee 863·1500 'lo BLOCK TO BEACH·YMy
1.2.3 Bdrm apls Wiii
unlurn No pets. 673·6640
HSTSIDE
1650/mo 2 Br l 'lr Ba
T11vnhse. yard/balcony,
sm pet ok, carport, lndry
rm, 111 blt·ln1,
~'~f!! ...... 1•._...ta_t_a,.._Ua_L~~-i•••••
Daaa Ptiat 2126 !""• •"'""'o-i"'i( """"I r_o_m __ b_e_a~ch~
$'75/mu t u!ll, avall
Bachelor, all ulll~ pulcl 1mr11ed Sue 1111 5 30
cloae to beactt S-l!>Olmu 6!10·5296
661-6142 ?Br Ccindo 10 aht. So Cat
STUDIO w/OCEAN VIFW Plard atea 1BI vacanl, Carpe11. Dtapt11o $:>7!. can 111.cornodale 2 pe<·
66 t-1192 sons r~ec lacll $356 mo
ftHtti a ~~~ 752 1 evs, 979-1955
Vallt~ 2734 Furnished Sleeping room.
Tlbuton ondo 3 Br 2' • snare bath, 111 SC Pfau, ba, lam rm, 2 c1J1 ')lit lern11l11 ncin-smkr pref
crpt/drp!I, U5hwr No S2701mo 556-t737
pe1s Call 911 011111
962·7470
a .... ltacli 2740
2 Br. 2•{ Oa 'lownl1<iuse
ltg llv rm, din r111, Oltln~.
gar. lrplc. ya1tl A p<.1tll
area new c.nrr>u l
$650/mo 644'-780J
•$450/mo up I 8 2 Sr
unlum & turn pool svo
18992 Florlcla 84l 'IL14
812·3172
Fresh 2 bd, In 4 p1ux. I t111.
encl gar yrd, JJllllU no
pets, 842 2897 S54'i
In OUI It Vine nse L aundry
rec.ti. jelun1 S325 Incl
Ulll 7J 1-8630
Lady 35 55 yrs 10 ahr C M
horr•s S200 mo, split u111.
Reis req Eves 548-5339
Ocuan Ftont 2BR, 2 C8f
g111<1g 1i night on Sand,
fully Ca1 pe1.ed, fully
r urn1s11ed w/Antlque
Fvr111ture $1,000 week
for sumn1or, maid service
tn<..luded Call Mt Paul
645-8927
On beach. Borm 11v1own
balh • k11 pnv. lndry lac.
NB $250/m~ 646-83266
Ot 552·3586
Lg Bach. wlyd lull k•I nr
bch, quiet per!.CJll nu
pals, non smkr $.190 rr1c.
960-0587 Hoom t 300 Pvt be & en·
i:Ovely 2 bdrm, 2 ba opt 3
blocks lrum ocean A 2
story unit wl encl polio. 1
car gar $650/rnu <..on
tact &36· 1435
trance Cooking. working
men Legune 494.4459
ROOM IOI rent S325mo
MASTER BEDROOM.
Private Beach, M/F Avail.
Neet Adams & Beath, up-91 t COM Cell· 760-2615
stairs ep1, slngle cor gdr 1.foom tor ran1, kltch p11vl-
age, patio. dswshr, smell leges, pv1 Ba, Avail t 5th.
pet ok, 1 Br 1 Bo lndry 662·2112 751·9132
lac 5450tmo $JOO de Working fem 25-40 Mn
posit Agent 110 1811 smok Npt Crest 1ennla
863· l 500 fJOOI 1300 650-1706 6PM
SHWUID
YILU&E Saa11 er
l utala
New t & 2 Bdrm lu•ury Baylronl 3 Br. 2 Ba,
epls In Iii plans. 1 IJdrm s 11JOO/r110. 21 Balboa
from $545, 2 8d1 m lrom Cove 645 5135 S630 T 011vnhoustl loo"' 1695 • pools 1e11111s. c A N c E L L A T I 0 N 0 n
waterfalls. ponos Gas for OCEANFRONT We heve
cooking & 11ea11r1g paid a week op•m Aug 27-Sept
From San Diego frwy 3, btlaul 3 Br 2 Ba $650.
drive Nonh on Beect1 10 650 9499
McFadden and wos1 on ON THE SAND
McFadden lo SEAWINO SUMMER RENT AL
V I L L A G E 3 Br 2 Ba unit, wet bar, (714)893-5198 turnlShed washer. dry8f
L•1•H Inc~ 2748 1ncld Summer. encisd _ garage 5802 Seashore
1 r N. end, nr beach. TSL Mgmt 642-1603
parllal kltch $550 utlls
Incl yrly 494-3044 V1eatita ..... ,. 2to7 Sweeping ocn views wlk to bch, $850 ulll & ga1 ..,.EK_q_u-ls_1t_e•1a_k_e"'!'tr_o_n_t •hom-.-.
Incl. Long term 494·3044 5 Br. 6 Ba. sleeps 12, Jrg •-'-n'' -ltacli 2769 game tm elegantly furn. tltJI dock 642-7080
1 b 1 uplex. close lo t;ch
$490 month 548 78,1 t MAUI Geau11tul Whaler Condo, 1 bd, steps to beaclt g..rr on Kaanapal1 beach, 1 Br,
age Perk I 11 g . Yr I I :? Be fabulous view.
$495tmo 675-3;> l 81Jv•ls special tales Book now
731-5446days tor loll & wi nier.
2 Br 1''r Ba No pf'li. :?13·389·5576
S4951mo 548-2682 Rcatib lo
PARI llEWl'OAT
APARTMENTS
Sbue 2tol
• TRADI T 10:\Al. llLF OIHH lllE
upper, 3Br, 2Be down
Ptlced balo11v app1als111
Steps 10 bch. owe 2nd.
$335 ~ carelaklng-1 B
cottage, very smell. newt•
reconditioned, no pel!I
213-471·1671
•••rrt luc\ 00 5 Br mobile home. no pets.
$750/mo 673-6030 Lido
Perk
4 BR 2 Ba, C.,nl Air, Own-
ers Unit $950 MO
2 13·355·2139 alt 5pm.
CJ( 7 14-650-2403 week·
ends
2536 Santa Ana Ave COUNTRY CLUB
Lady wlll sfiare her 2 Br apt with t resp pereon.
C M 642-7458 att 4 30
FAIT&ITIO FUTHES
~a 1ranal9'red. v91y
anKlous. 5 Bdrm Some<-
aet In HV Homes. Sky-
llghlS. spa. plank lloora.
S3-45,000
RL\l.TY
HWl.IEnYYIEW
200 b4k 40' IOI, 3br +den.
3ba, yard. compl 1eturb
$575,000 217 Jasmine
Owner/agl 573-555 I
SPYGL ASS 4 BA
TRADEWINOS Un·
surpassed ocean vl-s
Oanae Corp 851-9135 or
3 bd, 2'1o bl, greal view
Thousands below market
S220K own/bkt 752-8870
(602)881-2491
Owner. 2·3 BIS. W/Nwpt,
tse opl 01 sale $365,000
llRTllWHI PIH 873-024 1.631-4562
MllEL H•E ...;.•• ... c.-••-.•,_•..,r ... • .. r __ u,_s~ Well, It cer-telnly FEELS ,..,. -Ilka 8 model home 11v/all Ne11vpott ocean fronts
the many upgraOed tea-duplex & triplex Spec·
tures In this rare Plan 3 tecualr 673-7873
wllh 1700 sq ft ol bll-ln
perlectlonl Assumable
10' .'I. loenl 759· 150 1 or
752-7373
OWllER llEEDS
CASH
S335 : . carela-klng-t B·
con age. very smell. new11
reconditioned. no pels
213-471 -1671
3 Br.1•1t ba dupteK. Santr
Ana Hghts Gar. Inca yd
elec & waler Included
$685/mo 1 S500 sec:
20203 ' A ' Birch St
833-1927
Jlll21A
* IMMACULATE * 4BA
"BLUFFS CONDO" on
OreenbeU $1350 Mo.
1st, last, Sec Av•lllSept
Isl 75 1·7625/A 760·8738
I llliiilf.I I I ( ... S Realtora, 675-6000 6-44 ... 201 WALKER & LEE
1c;;":'•:":'::':• ==1:02;;• ~~
Wiii iake low down. 4-pleK C M Agent 645-9 t61
Loh lor S alt 1400
5 unit Condo pro)ect E.
Yetd, trplc, waaher/drye1
hook-up No pets
723 Center S1
$775/mo 1st t tee Days
497-6287, Eves
496-4792
4 Br 2·~ Ba home In
Bayc1est, •Int cono.
freshly pelnled, a great
family tiome, gardener
lncld $2500/mo Fot Into
please write P 0 Box
1029, Lerchmonl. N.Y.
10538
1uc1i 11u -
wes1 Newport, ercnltecta
beaulllul & unique own
JlllllUCI
SPYIWSllll
CffltlA Ill UR
Stlltrl1Mth1tt4. l•••lt .. , tfftra. IUtk
ll4trtfft llltr
131-'444
USTSIH UIHIOW r:::r.r.
This pampered 2 Bdrm ~.
Costa Mesa Approved
plans & map 1250,000
net Agt 85t-6260
home. lrg 2 Br 2 Ba
1acuul wet bar. many
em8flllles. Looking'°' me lure & professional
tenants Call 6 .. 2·5757.
home Is warm and ep· ---
peahng. freshly decor-PRIVATE OOUIFllOIT LIT
$875 Incl gatdener. 3 Br <
Be. Mesa Verde, no pets
1els req'd Vacanl 3253
ated and Impeccably SPA groomed Skylight end open bflemed ceilings
lhrovghout See It and
you'll want It, $147,500
Prime E891 Balboa Blvd A2
vacant lot OWNER WILL
FINANCE 1665,000.
Washington Agl
559-6221 Beachtn' bungalow ,_, blll
kl.Ml ltlaa4 lOOI
OArf 011
BeaU1. 3 Br 2 Be home
wlhlghly upgraded
Jenn-Aire kllch. & dining
area, Mstr Bdr has sky·
lighted loft plus upgraded
I Gr apt wllrg patio &
deck $485.000
CIZYOtTIAIE
142-1200
Lrg 2 Br 1 Ba home w/guest room & Ba ott Owner. 2 Br condo nr S C garage $365 000 Plaza, pool/ape 3/4
17• ..;_2 anum U7 ,500/0BO
...... 556-1626. 775-2580 @lora vance
realtor va n111
~11 101,1 LIW MWI
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Greal family hOITle !eatur-lng 4 Bdrma plus family
llWUITill
Obr11l11 IHfHht
Cottage with garden
E11:cel location, near
t>e.achM and fishing ptet
Sundeck + 3Br 2bl
$3-411.500
room. 2 fireplaces, latge
yard with beautiful spo
and decking OWNER
NEEDS FAST SALE,
MAKE OFFER Asking
I 137 .900. Cell 540· 1151
• -HERITAGE
-
W1\fl HI l<O'H
llOMI' l•c.. ·--------REAL ESTATE
. . REALTORS
i31-1400 _M_or_e-1am1-,---.,,-e-ge-tt-1ng-
Hive aomethlng you waM
to 1841? Clualfled ads do
It ..... &42-5e78
lhe camping "bug" thl1
year. 11 you have a camper that't not getting
uNd, NII It now with 1
Cluelfled Ad
·::~::-,~· s~~JJ1'A-l& r..;rs· ::::
u ... , ., <t&,• • '°''""' -----
0 :;,n~"!'~ .. ::~ : ;t ~
"1-#0 1 .. .,fo..' L••
I' I I' I I I PHCOT · 1 1 1 r I .
ffiR A r ~ : ,.,,,,,. o.opl• ar• ~•·••
I • 11u1f•.O M'r tam11y ••II 0,,, ! ,. .• ,,"'Ohl •nd lh .. y "'"com
,..-------''~ Ol•ln '"'•• ""l.',' • nn"'* ,., • .,_
T R C E J S I ",. ~·~·~Q "'°"'
11 I I' I I 0 ... -· . . . . .... -- - -• . t I I .,, ft• • "'~ j -' ,. .................. 1 ..... .
~.~·.:a;.~', .. [, r r r 1· r r r 1· J
:··:::~,'.'"'''1 11 1111 1 l
w.ursa.n..n ................. ,
2 Bdrm. 2 be Plan 3 In
Orange Tree Patio
Homes Profeaslonally
lllORULn
IU·UOO
decorated Plush carpet. Oat 0-1 -Coaaty custom shulters EJtcel-
Buy w/rent Specious 3 Br 10 surf Crptd. decOf •
2 ba, newer blllns • pool apple tool $400 Hurryl
dbl gar multi $750 • fee 539-6190 Sm lee Best
539·6190, Best Beeut. exee homes, newly
Eastslde 2 Br, 1 Ba. enclsd decorated 4 Br 3 ba,
garage, patio. lrg yard. no pool, verylrg rerd. nr
pals 1535/mo ~ 1 mo schools shops Bayc;rest
sec deposit 548·54<12 01 area By Owner leUe 770-5629 S 2 1 0 0 8 4 2 • 4 1 I 6 .
lenl amenlllea s 123.900. Prorrty 1525
~lsor
·Realty
651·1177
TllH RIYEH
SEtlllAPllll t;uatom home on 13 river 759-0884
rront actes. 2400 sq tt 3 EIEOITIYE Ml•£ Br 2 Be. Big Canyon Condo· 3Br hot tub. decking & 4 Br 3 Ba form11I din. lam 2•; be. I 1175/mo Avail
numerous xtras 4 hrs rm, huge mastet suite. lmmed Cati 476-2252
from QC, sit.Ing within central air. lrg patio d Y s or 4 9 6 • 8 3 -4 1 minutes. w/gas bbq. close to SC ev1wknd1 Plaza boetlng, fishing & back $1 tOO/mo tease Gorgeous 3Br 2•1r bl hm packing Country living at 662· 1700 w/1011 ol 11vood & lk ylttes
It's bestl S32S,OOO thruout. brick l/pe In llv· Univ. Pk Terrace 3 Br 760-8259 Luxury 2 Br. 2 Be Condo. Ing rm & msfr suite, 1 blk
Dover model, 2 Be, xlnl Ti -SL i -1590 FP, dbl gar, pool, Jee to bch $1275/mo yrly
location. walking dis· •• .ar •J 1695/mo 642-5290 No dogs 5305 River Ave
tance 10 comm pool Fee SACRl~CE Wayne 846·8816 elnd I 139,500 Jean DUE TO ILLNESS Mellow 5 rm, c1p1d hm 4
Lateri 752-1414 2 Timeshares The Plaza of lam 01 single . .S400's. lt!p!rt ltacli 2269 -,.-Palm Springe, Country 539-6190. E.lest. lee _
L11111 ltacli lu41 Club Dr , Palm Sp1lng1 M E 5 A v E A 0 E HorbOf View Hm1 4Br. fir,
OPEN S UNDAY 570 All amenities Call NORTH-Sparkling •Bi, 3ba Comm POOi Avail
Mounlaln 2 Br Wood For de1alla 673· 7173 3Be. llv. din & lam rm. Sept t et S 1600/mo Incl
shingle. spotless house many lltraa, big yd. gar· gardener Agl 873-1161
w/legal unit, view. I block HtaHI F•rii1llH dner Incl. Avll Sept 1 Nwpl Terraoe 3 br. 2'ir ba,
to ~!;~i~~ioi~l I lalMI 11111• 21H 11200 mo lie. 549·3301 near new crpl & palnt. 2 Br. 1 Ba, 1 hlk to So 'Bay. We1111de2 Br 1 Ba. 8f1CI Q&r. lrptc 963-3488
!!J!rt ltacli ---.oiJ 9 mo Avall Sept t5 enclsd garage. p1110, trg Seewlnd 5 Br, 3b1. view,
2 U' ••• 1
'ffrtltlt•tt 1775/mo 673·9224 yard, no peta $535/mo gdnr . tennis/pool. Ar~ ----• t mo MC depoelt. S 1800/mo 559-95311 Lov~ 6 r 11v/room for Ctrtaa ••1 Illar 2121 5-48·54 .. 2 Of 770-5629. Seawlnd vu. lmmac 5 Br, 3 l20 yacht. Cute 3 Br 2 Br lurn or unfurn hse. lat Ptlat -21ft Ba, w/pool/epl 11900.
wOwt35'91ellp57M3u7•t9aee73
1 I 1300/mo 8-4 .. ·0723. ---------Odnrlw11or 760·881 I n • 675-6000, Lind• *lay Frt1t o .. tle * L h L ~4 Sh0<ecil"-: lg 3 B1, 4 ba, VIEW! VIEWI VIEWI Illa& IC• "'•• llm rm, lrplc'1, grt OCMn
Seo. Bid • 2 Br 2 Be. cli11tmlng 1 Br hm. va. x vu. walk lo Pvt tx:h.
Poot. boat slip avall. paOo, 11r m111111 bch. 1675. 12000/mo. 548-7839
By Owner· 875-8637 Lse Sept 1 to June 1. No taatli • -----Waterfront~ 3 Br 3
Beaut executive home,
newly dec0<ated, 4 Br 3
811, pool, very lrg yrd, nr
tchoolt. ehop1 Baycre1t
1rea By Ow ner
1375,000 642-4118.
7511-0884
pets 494-6180 Vall~ W• Ba. mo to mo.1 1500
La,. .. 111 .. 1 2ill '111 ~•eeYX/c. 3 bdrm•. 2 3 A~:1y 2J ,~er~, ytly.
f vrnl1hed 2hr 2be, oen. ba, upd•ted kit, 2 g11r. I I 7
N I g u e I S h o r e 1 frplc & more Juat 1800'1 II ••••It
f own home, u curlty ~ IM 539·8190 B .. t Lu11 ~"" blufft condo.
Ollld comm , oceen HOME FOR RENT whlt-eter vu, 2 ir 3 Ba,
View Club houae, POOi. Fountain Valley 4 Bdrm I 1 ll O O Imo A g 1
tennle & beacl't prlv. no SH!i Fencedlard & -492 ·6384 LIM PAlll pall S 1,ooomo Call f -x Aiiin MOBILE HOME 4118·7-4'48 g1rage. Kl<le pelt H J•H "If. UI• BEST BUY _ __ welcome 863· 1500 _
20 C1brl1to, 118,600. iow l••rrt ltacli 2llt _,.,_Qel'l_t.nof ... • 1fs!i~4;'J~r~ ~:;.i:;:,h:!'o
down. 9¥.% financing by B C Ulll . 1 tftl'J problem 539~6 tllO ee.t ownr By IP')I 8-40-7385 Vlll11 alboa ondo, PfOI Sharp 2 bf HOUSE Only Ally, f ... __ ___ decOf, compl rurn 28r
MISSEO 'THI' AUCTION? 2ba. 11/drll•m rm, <!..-. nl81150C•U11ff982P~778!fd l&n· 1~JiliiaPl!a""tl°"""iiiiiiil---.fiPDI~ Identical 4 Br Harbor Pool, tpl, beeut vu· oen, ., ,.
RldOt Model w/oc11n b n r. 11 Q I\ It , L n -rm 2DR 2ba, nr So. Cou f
v ....... Aaaum 10"% 30 yr I 5 0 0 I m O . a•t. IC ilM• Pila Fem Met. downatra,
find m tg Owner 714/997·3000 eKI tlll flit. n;: Q . QfOUnd "'· 24hr tee bldg, ale, aM urn Cve/Wlln ~ 14/~-t t69. d )' •. 7 1'4 /77 1·O4 2 8 '700 mo Av.ii Sept 1 No pd ecpt elec: $650/mo.
85M771 wlld)' 811/Wkndt pet 846·7833 -Avtll 9/1, 894·25112
TSL MGMT 642· 1603 LIVING JBr 2Ba nse iO shr, Nwp1
BC'h. nr bch. pool, lennls.
$250 mo 645·2849
Eaa• Side LUKUry In a IN NEWPORT BEACl'i
"PINE FOREST" Large 1 Singles t & 2 Bdrm Aport
& 2BR $445 & $5-45 ments & Townhouses
MO Ges/Ulll Inc Frig, Some are eiegenlly Like new deluxe. 3 er&2 Br w/ger Face w&t8f
Avail Sept thru June
From $750 832-6000.
O/W BBQ Enc/Gar & furnished From S6:l0
Patio AGENT s..2.1644 On Jamboteoe Ad at
3Br hse to shr ~ one
other person (male)
Westside CM $325 mo.
• 631·5898 E/slde duplex. 2 Bf.1 Ba.
ger, yd, w/d hkup. Cpl
pref $595/mo 650·2077
San Joaquin Hiiis nd
144-1100
•CONDOS•
Beaulllul pvt NB home. un·
lurn lg bdrm • kit prlv.
$250 • ulll 645·9515
Prestigious bechelor.
water 11ont, private
beach. pool. fully equipped kitchen. secur·
fly. private parking.
St 100/mo 642-1802
VIiia Balboa and Ver · URIEi YllTl APTI sa111es s150 mo 5 lro Beaut lrg 2·sty condo,
2400 S F 2 llving rme.
pool. tieaut N.B. Blott lo-
cellon. nr all 759-1642
1485 1 Br. I Ba Apt 63 t-4960
Wlnter~Br. vi-& deck
$585-1595 2 Br. 2 Ba - -· To11vnhouse. F1plc, sky· BAYFAONT. 1 Gr I ba
Wesl Nwpt $825
673-0241 or 631-4562.
ltghlS, patio, all bulll·lns relr l g. downs tal r 5
366 /\vocado $600/rno ~ 1st. tasl 3 Clean. qulel & resp rmmta
shr beach collage. Lao·
una Bell. $275 497·6839 At1rt•tat1, UaJ.
TSLMgml 642·9412 $100 dep 644 0 11t:J Sandy
Geatral 2702
i2500 mo Fabulous 2Br. llfeStiB.llU 2'~Be Penthouse, 3000
sq 11. new cpls. utlls pd lPlllT•HTS valet parking, 24 hr se· Beautllutly landscaped cu r lly West11vood garden apt, pool & 1pa
Towers. 10717 Wiiishire Patios. decks No peta
Blvd , (213) 474·3575 I Bdrm $500-$505 2 Bdrm l't. B11 1590
111-..a 2250 Vanguard Way
Ptaiaa•l• 540-9626
~..--"'""'""'"'"'""'~.,...-Large 1 bd. ne11v carpets
Bach Ap-1-uiu1pd,
1300/mo yrly 675·7702,
6-42-1334
and paint, pool, adults.
no pets, $385 673·0884
Lge 2 br, 2 ba luxury apt
2446 Elden Av $695/rno
851 -6226
CtrtH ••l Mat 27ll MESA PINES 2650 Harle !!"m-------i,.,.,~ I BEAUTIFUL 1 Br 1525/up 2 Bdrm IOWflhOUM. \IX be. PAV patio, pool. spa
frplc, pool, $850/mo. TOP area, quiet, no pell
1 1 4 I 6 7 3 • 2 5 2 3 O I 549-.244 7
213/790·992 t NEW BREED APTS 2 Br lrpl, decic, riu cpt, Bech t Br Bach's w/loftl
qulel couple only, no pets 645·44 t 1
1650 6 .. 0· 1897
2 Br, quiet. convenient lo-H Tiil ILIFFS
cation, pool & covered Quiet 1Br. close 10 beech,
parking. 673·44 42 or 111eplace. patio, dshwahr.
675--2444. S700/mo din rm. encl garage S500
LARGE I BA. view deck mo 2163 Pacific. CM
gar. e'ltlH. 1795 + dep Jell Mgr • t7, call
719 Marigold 640·4255 548-4530
-m OAIYO" U ST 3 Br 2 Ba 2 car gatilQO
lull securtly. on tatrw<1~
No pets
644-0509
EAS rBLUFF-Avall 9-5
2Br. 2'>Ba. 3Br :!Bu
f1plc, garage, IJOOI sm
pet OK S725 mo
644-4258 eves/wknd~
E'Blull, 111vnl1se llPI 3Br
2ba 2 car gar, no rats
$750tmo 644 1010 r '""" 8·5, Mon 1hru Fn
CM/NB area tm for m"'i'iUrli
n/srnkr , pvl oa. $270 kll
nego1111ble 851-0149
Female, non-smkr, 25 • to
shr li~e on Bal II
$400/n10 673 5067 eve.
~ to Silt plly tum BaJl°iie
Ilsa non smllr. $395 ...
111119 675 5316
Fem 10 sh1 hse on the
Sluts. C M No dep, no
last S250/mo 631·2576
Gorgeous Nwpt Bch
Condo In Eest Bluff,
lmmec. Fully Furnl9hed,
Po<JI. lmmed. Occup&n·
cy Res 760-0672
For leeae Alulls. 2 yr~ old,
2 Br 2 Ba sep dlnlnu rm.
lrplc. St 200trno
640-0042
In c M . lg, .. Bt 2 B11 i' Lady 451 lo Shr W/Hme
psuos. gar. cllx. nioc Npt Beach apt. SJ50tmo
avbl 911, $600 640 9408 640· 1 t 44
Lovely 2Br 2B 1 yr ly.
s1ep1/bcl1 ger. no l•til~
775mo 650· 1706at111.1.1no
N-eve1ythtno 1 Cir ?
bloc ks o tr s11nrl
1600/yrly. 760-686i'
Lady wlll shore her 2 Br
ap1 11vllh I tesp pe11on.
C M 642-7458 alt -4 30
LAGUNI\ NIGUEL Casual
Country Selling 3 BA
w/2 Aclulls. 1 Clllld
$265mo plus 1\ utll.
SPECTACULAR oce11ro Avail. 8116 495-2643
view, 2 Bf, 1'• be luxury MIF 9hr NB house Pvt
penthouse Condo al Villa bath, Balboa Covea Ss33
Balboll Min 6 mo •sto. will mu shr utus 648-85-45 consider Isa, op t • __ __
11200/mo 548-3239 NB 3 Br $275/mo. C911
Waterfront luxury con--Studio Apt w/relrlg and
doapt, CdM, boat slip 01 Tll ILIFFS parking on Penn $,lOO
Aon Wkuys 97 •·6578,
Eve/Wknds 673-7570
Non smoklr\Q fem rmmte
3Br 2b8, 811lboa Island Tiil llWNRT MARii& Quiet nBllt Avall lmll'led.
avail P" >4. IKuu l. 2 Br 2 Oulet lBr. close to l>Mch. Cell 615-0612 alter 5 pm
Be Rent bymonlh 01 fireplace. patio, dlltiwlhr,
year 42000/mo S 1500 din rm, encl gareoe 1500 mo yearly. Furn Of un· mo. 2163 Paclllc, CM.
furn. 714/786-1155 Jtlf Mgr. • 17, call
15-48-4630
2Br, nr.ea. ram rm, ,,..,,, POOL. trplc. pvt p•llo,
CC)ll/drpa/palnt, IQ pillo dlhwthr. E11ttlde, ~lg 2
No pelt, nice location. Br garden apl. S595/mo.
2195 MIN!f ST $050 mo. 667-28-41
+ dep. To aee c all 'l Ir. ,.ti sli t IJf
6-45-HO.t patio. garden atmosphere.
c1p1. drapes. '385/mo.
1 Br 1922 Walleoe Ave. 731-88211,8A2·7312
upttalre, refrlge, quiet, s1unnlng large 1 Br. gar·
1420/mo Slerre Mgml den apt, poot & rec area.
Co. 641-1324 M 26/mo. 110 W 18th.
2 Bdrm. I Bath '590, Qlf· 2 er 1'A Be w/gar erpta
age. large patio, no peta. dr8')M etove lncd yard
laundry hook up evall. w/pallo wate; pd
534 Bernard 642--4905 836:4 t20 1-5PM
2 er 1112 Ba. 810 JoAnn 687 "L" Victoria 1525
St. Adulla pref Sml dog 20111 "0" Sanla Ana
OK 6-45-8'653 $5-40
WtHUlt YllUll 1 a 2 er Apia av all. Pool,
epa, g•rao• 1v111. ltundry
rm. gaa p11d. No pe11.
2 et ti/, Ba 1695·'610
tBr I BA 11515
TlllUT ll4-0h1
Spaclou• 2 Br. Waterfrool 1252/mo 640·9015 or
apll. t>eeutllul gBrdena, 67~·4133.
private aendy beach, -
close lo shopping, boat OOHIF181T I .I ,
allp avaJI. no pets. For f N/amlu. congenlal,
eppl 760-0919 $400 mo Avail Stol t
-------631·61116 or Iv mtg V8fl8111e Condo 2 Br, 2 Bii, 979•9263 view, clubhou11t1. $625. _ _ __
Sec. pool, 1ac 643-2094 P101 Met Fem. n..cse
200 McNeil Sat/Sun t7 5 same lo shr Bal tst home
Pvt rm, ba & entry. Lnclry
YllW IF llY 1ac11 S•OO Ant Ad 18'4 EASTBLUFF Stunning 2 cell 642·4300 24 hrt
Br. 2 Ba. hplc. townhou'e fir pin, lrg patio. pool. ~tOI M/F 10 shr W9l1 tum
non-1mollera, mature 3Br Condo w/ t mete.
pereone No pet• 1750 & Own bdrm, Ba. & 08'! Lg
$875 6-40·03-411 spllt level w/POOI, tac. 11tc Leouno wtaoe a..oo wn1011n 1rea, 2 ar 2 Bo mo Rick 770--4se8
condo. $650/mo, mo to ---mo Av.II 1111 673·3007 88411 Bch Modern 2Br, ~Bt 10 ahr, W/D, non-wnkr k• t•talt 1771 $325 mo (213) Ht-8033
2 BR Ii.¥ 81. Rettig. Slov. Shr IQ tux home t5 lt t.
3 BIOCkl to Ree'h 1510 IUI, dep. P1tv. Ba. View.
H1 1192 noot IOP Piiio. H&-8479
2 Br 1"8S. Pool, you
round, nr beach. bu!Hls
No pell 498-6?7 7
In
P90Ple wllO need P.ople
Th11'• whal the
DAILY PILOT S~AVICE DIAECTOfff
11 •11 ltboutl
A
•
•
•
-
c 1• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Aug. 11, 1983
lb ler · 1•11 llre•l•r
Mwtrtllla1 llttt 1Mt1, Kaia1./..-n . Ctanl Ctaci.tt Drywall Aar•eala1 1 ... le~ba ltatt llttlaL Pa!atla1 r1 .. •1a1 Tnla1 ltmce
MARINE wooDwdRR c;ment-M•son•ry-Bloc' MWJXCC/XcouSticXL E•P Gardner. Ma1n1. flift PRicts XlwXYsi """"'P .. i'"'en .. l'"'.-pe-"'te-"";fl ...... ,'"'evet--1·c·u·,·,om-.. h .... -P-., .. n·1·11\0-... ,..-
wa111-Cus1 worlc Lk: Smell job• & Repelr• e11anup1, tr .. trim, Fr" Painting, carpentry, roof-Local rel. Uv1 In/out. duced summer ratH H ltr D f 141· 7121 nrtll IHYIOE Teak cabinet• 10 Ory rot
repair Free est Local
rela. Dick (213)333-9524
#381057 Rob 673-8094 BUD 652-9582 HI. C•ll Pete. 641· 1096 Ing. fandaceplng, eto. Very reu. Betty 631-0055 Free Mt OI YI 673-2031
------STARR, 548-447 t
WATER HEATER Specie! 963-9321wkdy11tt. 5.30
Pool heatera•Furriec.a Typing/Word Proceulng
1 .. 1ae11 Strrict
Concrete. mltonry, 1111· Eltclrlcal ~llullng, cleln·ups. lrH ,_ --,.-:-----,.-----Laa•111"81 lu llllnr P8'1flq
work, tou~dellone Block. ELECTRiciXN. Priced trimming. ~lfd melnl ...... c1 ... ~ BOOdA!mBfto t AEAs Lie #42591• Ge+21117
•Faueet1•D4apou1a• Quid!, eHy relllalons.
lnt~tPltllM•I Reasonable 851 -10<41
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
End paperwork n1gh1-
meres Calf PAPER TALK
AHOC & organl:te lnOIY a buslne~• 760-1988
~Lie d 536-50 ~ r"'hl. free estimate on lndacp. Mike 6-46-6502 ROBIN'§ c lfXNiNG TREES • LANDSCAPING
C
'll E Wl.U.m Gllea Pllntlng e1a oR SMALL. . w1-~ ca 1 WE 00 IT ALLI 549-9770 .-n tu ~ kll• Cart 11rge or amell lobe. Lie L1wn/g1rden mllnt· rellld, SERVICE· •thorough!~ 21 YRS 642-3657 Contrec:tor: competitive
Before and alter acnOOI 39662 t &73-0359 comml. lndu• Yo cln up clMn houM. 540~57 M rll•. cuatom work. lie wAITE wiiAWD
ca, e we 1 k 1 o Faral lart ltllaiaklai Low r•111 646'""947 •11• APT a HOUSECLEANING _a"ll"'~IPPl'!IPIP!~--1"'1"-10 yr• e11p 751-7060 Smith-Dwyer 536· 1789 Mow, edge, clean-up, trim. Window.. Freeeet BRICKWORK: Small Jobe --1n-1.,-1or---fx-ter-10-,--
Ofaln1 cleered lrom 15 & WINDOW WASHING
$25 1nytlme Repelra. •'The only magic la
661-9604M&M432-0500 QUALITY" 631 ·2026 lail••n
Remodels or any fnvest-
ment, qlty Improvements.
u o M E PRE-SCHOOL· Free eat. A81a rates Jim 852-1007 e11e1 N4'Wf)or1. Cotta MeH, n lrvlne. Reta. 675-3175 Courtealy ettlm1te1 Complete Program by Antique furniture restored. 646-1958 CLEAi MOUSEi Don 644-4798 ROLLIN" ROOTER ~he Sunanlne ln'1
r .u .1.1.0111toe.
(It's Not Just a Name)
C d 1 1 d Kl d lree pick-up & del B • Knl•L re eni 8 e n er-645-6434 aft 8 731-9173 la J918 RoaeHMkpglH3-0564 --"'~.._______ INT/EXT. CALL JIM
g 8 B~~~ard;B~~n~nhg er. ""'i>J•E•ED .. "'R'll!!w"'[•p .. , •c""X""'L""L"'!JWEF~F-1 EXP'D HOUSECLEANING Oulck~C:!?.~!'.2;.... 111-lllO
Draln1 from S4 50 SUNSHINE WINDOW
Plumblng repair OC'1 CLEANING 642-1549
lo-at rates. 751-8753 DOITNOWll
ASIFHWllU Your D111y Piiot
Servlc:e Directory
Represent811ve
645-3305 Uc •320735 --call· 968-4397 Aara1• °"' ltpair Jeck 01 all trades. cerpen-CALL MABEL. Lie T 138046 652-0410 --.-PA-IN-T-IN-G-.-----try. painting. gerdenlng. 894 1421 536-8332
Smith & Son Plumbing ltalt Law
Plumblng repairs & dreJns 1's"'1a'"'1""e"'le""w-req-u"'tr·ea~t!"'ha·1""a1""i
Calliatl fll1liia1
•New cabinets. cablnel
facing, bars & lormlca
ccx.ntertops. 642-0881
Loving mom will babysit. Springs, repair, door oper-cl11n ups, etc. No Job too __ • ___ or____ A 1 llYlll Exterior -lnt.,lor
Infante OK Irv & Bristol ators See demonstration large or small. 540-0354 Houae. cerpet. window * • * Realdenl -Commer~ cieared. Lie 645-3428 contrectC>fl whO per10fm
work over $200 lncludlno
labor and m11er1a11 mull
be llclnled. Unllc:enaed
contracto" should so
state In their ~vertlalng.
Contractors 'nd con·
aumert, contec1 Mary
Grondle It 558-4066 with
any questions Contrec-
t or· s S1 11e License
Boaro, 28 Civic Center
Plaza. Room 690, Santa
Ana, CA 92701
142-Hll est. 122 sis, SA Hts 557-1665 Seacout, 2486 Newport cleenlng. we do Beltqu1llty. 26yr.exp. Free nt. 536-11601 a..lia1
Blvd. C.M 842-3490 All PhUM ol conslr & re-throrough work. Relfeble Competitive "1"· RALPH'S PAINTING ""A"'u•se:-111ri•oo""t"'tn·g-·•""il .. 1•ype_e_
~~~~~~~ Carratry Ctatracltu, ~Sprlngs·Hlnges·Openers pair )(Int work. com· end REFS. With complete Lie. T -116,428 730-1353 lnt/e)Ct, Reaa. ratea New-Recover-Decks
Gtatral Repairs Lowest rates! petlllve prlc:ea. Jobs lge carpet and house· STARVING COLLEGE Free eat. 24 hr. 841-3588 Lie. *411802. 548-9734
AccHatia1. . \!oRe""m .. od...,.e"!'l· .. re·p·a'!"lr""'l"'lU'""nl•q-ue""'!!'&
cfAnFtEblSueuc Acct unusual work a spec1a1ty.
Pertonll Serv Taxes 20 yrs lie. bonded.
Remodel/Repairs, comm. Llc'd. Tom 557-4480 or smell. 751-0870 Jon cleaning, windows done STUDENTS MOVING CO.
& resld uc·d. bonded. --• llEP&JRI * P&lmll tree. CALL TODAYI Lie. T124-436. lnaured Speedy ma1nt aerv, Secretarial
30 yr• exper. 640-2068 Palombo Const 962-63 14
Ins. For est, 552-9142 Gar•tlU•I Etc Gary 645-5277 PTL 540-5854. 841-8427 ~~~~~90~omee & apta. __ s.m __ , .. _ ..... ___ _
G C T"EES ------H-=o-u-=s-=E-=-C....,LEA=-"'"'N.,.,.1N'""G=--WATCH us GROWi SecretanaJ M(VICe. typll\Q,
. &.,.~ey·-Pat .. lng Lot Mstr craft;na;l, special· 15:'f'~-,. lzlng finish & remodeling
FAAMIN CON RETE • 8 r GOOD REFS. EXP'D p-1 i Pa~ial F l<:e MASONRY • SPA IN· Topped/removed Clean la aaf G 549-0759 aaat •I -copy. etc. eat aerv ST ALA TION 675-8690 up, new lawns 751•34 76 DUMP Joss & ledys •12-v,.e·a .. r .. a -ex'"'pe-r.-N""'w·p-t Flrt I~ Interior Oealgn 67S..456 760-8359
C ..
• c Ii CLEAN-UP MASTERS SMALL MOVING JOBS c J~AN·s ~L~~IN?, I ., ... I'm small-~ prlCH HANOI G/STRIPPING TYPING/BOOKKEEPING
r II oaalt •I Alf sizes Prol. reas. Ask Mlt<E 6-48-1391 oo -er5ran s-8a w e Y ere small. 650464 7 Ron VISA-MC &:ott 645-9325 For lndlv.lsml bualneu i:::::::::::::::::::
BAD CREDIT? clear up about our 25,000 lawn HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE duties. 40-12 7 Fiii Pllmll E.Xpen Wlllcoverlng In· Hr/dly/wk. 840-0888
Aepalrs-Sulcoatlng 499-3105
S&S Aaphlt 631-4199Llc -~R-e_p_e-lr--A-1-le-re-t"'"to_n_s_
l i Doors-Windows-Cabinets ti •J Panel-Patios-Fences. 35
ABYSlTTING yrs exp. Jerry 546-4413 neg TRW profile. Money special, Call anytime, Furniture, Traah, Trees Pacific Co8S1 Cleaning b SI 1 atellatlon. Real. Coneull-EXECUTIVE SUPPORT
back guar 645-5840 846-6684 (Mlcnael) 963-5415 NOAM "WE 00 IT RIGHT!" Y Richard nor· L c. anl Aulgnmt. 581-8590 Your office. Top ekllla, Incl. USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RESULT"
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For H €'!.Ull
Scrvt<.'l' Call
In my home near Victoria, --Colll Mesa 642-8482 Repair/small jobs. Fences,
· shelves. pert111ons Low IW Pa~f S.rrict races. Steve 731-8311
PERSONAL & eusiNESS VINCE LENHOFF· Finish
Biii p1ylng. Nora Higgins. Carpentry & Custom
999-71 15 499-1601 Remodeling. 536-2085
c11ullled Ada ere the Car~t Stn. ice
en.-r to a aucceulul1-~-... -----...-garage or yard Niel 11·.,. •W INSTALL CARPET
be11er way 10 teO more For $1.75 sq yd. Call
people! Mel or Pete, 772-1722
Messy dogs! liroomlng
schl. $10 any u T<cher
21 y~ exp. 546-2848
0.aealic A1tacin
ltHtht••rt HO/wt
Childcare. companions,
couples. We come 10 you.
Lowfees. (213)541-5150
• HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY O~AR R
FRIDAY, Aag. 12, 1983
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Gain indicated
through diplomacy -adopt wait-and-see attitude.
Time is on your side, you can afford to play waiting
game. Money will be received in connection with
property or legal settlement. Taurus figures promi-
nently.
TAUR US (April 20-May 20): Maintain low
profile. steer clear of schemes, define terms, see
others in realistic light. Emphasis also on basic issues,
diet, nutrition and need for st.ream!ining techniques.
Romance could result from clandestine meeun
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Relationship in·
tensities, responsibilities increase and you discover
that halfway will not do -it is all or nothing. Older
individ ual lends benefit of experience, makes certain
demands which are not unreasonable Cancer.
Capricorn persons play key roles.
CANCER (June 21-July 22). Long-standing
transaction is finished -know it, proceed acrord.ingly
Means don't attempt to hang on to past -take
positive steps towards future, don't underesttmate
your own worth. Aries, Libra natives figure in
unusual, exciting scenario.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Short trip may be
necessary, creative ideas can now be put to practic.a.l
use. Stress independence. originality, willingness to
pioneer a project. Exchange ideas with creative
individual who appreciates your talents. Avoid heavy
lifting.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): What appears lost
will be recovered. Follow through on hunch. realize
tlaat initial impressions are apt to be correct. Income
potential is enhanced. long-delayed payment actually
' will be received in mail. Cancer na live figures
prominently.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c::t. 22): Cycle high, holiday
spirit prevails, you'll have l~timate reason t.o
celebrate. J udgment, intuition are on target-timing
is such that you'll be at right place at crucial moment.
Aries and another Libra figure prominently.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Regard restrictions,
delays as "part of territory." You'll have time t.o
meditate, to gain second wind and to put together
puz::z.le pieces. It is time to remodel, possibly to rebuild
and to remove sa!ety hazards. Another Scorpio
figures prominently.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Pleasure
principle i.s emph.asi?.ed. Recent victory can now be
fully appreciated. Focus on emotional fulfillment,
romance, travel variety and a "special" relationship.
Gemini, Virgo and another Sagjttarian Cigure
prorninen tl y .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Important
domestic adjustment takes pl.ace, works to your
advantage despite inconvenience of "moving." Job
opportunities increase, chance exists to elevate
standing in community. You'll be approached
coocerning vote r.egi.stration, possible participation in
charitable project.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 18): You seek and
obtain "inner peace." Recent period of confinement
resulted in "revelation." Focus on travel, education,
spiritual values and great.er knowledge of inter·
national law. Pisces .. Leo, Virgo natives figure in
scenario.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Matth 20); Mystery is solved.
you'll learn where to go for needed material,
penonneL Relationship gTOws stronger, you'll have
more responsibility and chance for increased com-
peNation. Someone may ask you to "hide some-
thing."
Est. Brochure 768-7694 280644. 14 yra of happy d ' p I Clean ups • Landscaping GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS local cus1omet1. ··we GALS SHOULD wor proceaaing. ro ·
Hauling . Tree Trim & HAULING No job too Very reliable. dependable Thank you, 983-4114 HANG TOGETHER" references 497-6290
Free 111 6'42-9907 small. 895·6006 & lhorough. Have ret'a. flAUTT PAlmll 839-0730 anytime frH S.rrict
Clean-ups. snrub a tree HAULING SMALL JOBS Call 84 1•2261 pr 0 mp t . neat pro-Pluttr/btlir J.c. TREE SERVICE
lrlm, mo malnt Prompt Tralh & Furniture Bta1tlatl• 1trric.. lesslonals. 836-7149 PlXSfERllicAING Trimming. removal, yerd
& reas. Chuck 642-2873 MATI 645-5089 SERVICES UNUUITED CUSTO·· EXTERIORS clean-ups. etc 642-2914 ... Reatuccoe. Int/ext. 30 yrs. LT HAULING -MOVING Marketing, errands, Dr·a & INTER. Aeaa. retea. Free N11t. Paul 545-2977 ' LOW RATES s
lar•Hla1 WHt•• GARDENING · ODD JOBS •PP"· church, etc. Re-eat. Steve 547-4281 --==~-=~=="'="'"-Tree trim and r1mov1I; Mowing, EdgTng. Twloe a JON 645-8192 ll1ble driver, active, at-ED'S PLASTERING gen'I cleanups. 55<4-7017 642-5678
ht. l2Z month $20 to $25. tractive older woman, H•~ aomettlll\Q to Mll7 lnt/e)(l, Petcnlngltexturea
5<46-9707 Want Ads Cell 642-5878 own car. 846-9734 CIMelfled ede do It welt. Aeltuccoa. 845-8258 Want Ada Call 6-42-5878
Office ltalab 2914 Le11 l r .... , ................ .-...--------3004 Tra"I 3011 ltlt Wult4 SIM ltlt Wut.. stM lel1 Wut.. stM ltlt Waalt4 SIOI
OC Airport area, 10141 tor
designers ahowroom,
new corner bldg 1st nr,
plush 1400 sq It. shingled
bldg w/glua. 556-089 t
btwn 10-5, (213)
420-2307 evea/wknds.
Office spaoe evelleble In
Old downtown Hunt-
ington Beach Welk1nng
distance to benka, poal
olc & utlt co. 400·500 sq
It. Stanlng el $250/mo.
Contact 538-1435
Olllce apace lor lease: 7 4 7
tt, $695/mo ullls pd, AIC.
ground fir 1055 El
Camino Or, Colla Mesa
3 Blks E of Fairview &
Adams
754-t040, Mr Tracy
DELUXE OFFICE SUITES
Beytront bldg 800· 1 t07
sq It evall from S 1 25,
BASEMENT $1.00 sq It.
2500 sq ft Call· Mon-frl
9.5
642-4644
NEWPORT CENTER Full
service Executive Suites
$575-$625 640-5470
Prime Corona del Mer
011 Hwy. 1880 sq It.
Perfect for erchltoclurat.
detlgn, etc S1/lt Incl, full
services. Agt 673-8409
• $290/up, c arpets.
drapes, ale, realrooms.
17301 Beach Blvd. Hunt-
11\(jton Beach 842-2834.
SUBLEASE 725 sq t1 of-
fice suite In Newport
Beach. 3 offices, I rec:ept
rm. S750/mo Xlnt loc
863-1262
UYYIEW
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
CaU:
142-1171
FOUND Oelert Tortoise In
Santa An• Height• eru.
5<45-1882
One Way Tic11e1 to 8oS: Beauty Salon. at1llon1•-----------------• LUALllUn&l'f
TON $176. 751--0536 avail. et Qlllfe(•'•. CdM. AilllTllT Ylll PIE.-?....... Pert time, ex~
worlc at your let1ure, required, 780-8820.
la1lat11 o,.. 4014 pleasant surrounding•. EMKA Y DEVELOPMENT ia seeking an
dXs STATION:CdM. A1gh ~~~e ~~~~~~g. Call individual with real estate experience to Ll~ ~,P;: ~:'. =t8f~
volume Nit service lnde----------work on our real estate loans and joint. person btwn 3-5, Mon
pendent operation Sale Wm lnLJIT venture financial arrangemen ts. thnJ lrl a1 Ruby's Re9-
lncludes land. bldg end W/lollowtng. Top Pay. Res 'bill" . will . 1 d . . taurant on Balboa Pier bustneu. $950,000 with eeiu1. NB Selan. pollSl ties me u e rnorutonng ---------
$300,000 dn. Corona del 8<44-0U1 existing loans, preparing loan """'Lr"nes L&ING11E1 ~:J91H10. ~v~dsprpe/ft Mar loclllon. Agt ~ ''""' ....,... 675-6700 O&lllH and loan negotiations. This is a decision Plelse ull 548~4
LIU IEOlnU'f
IPllOEUM
lllneaa forces sale of Ex-Prefer meture per.on. Call ma.king position that requires a minimum
clualve wood & me1al Serb for eppt, 540-3280. of 4 years experience with knowledge of
bu11nesa, $85.000 takea Cte1nlng Per.onnel went-real estate, financing techniques, and ac-
Found. Male Aull sMp. trl all. Terms. 988-6187 ed, pert time, mu11 be r• counting.
color. mile red Golden Hardware Store, Foreet liable. honeel m well
Newly formed Mortgage
banking division of
Southern Celllornla Bank
needs experienced
FNMA personnel Cell
714-1155-6978
Rtvr. rem L•b mix black. Av, u.g Bch. 2400111. 5yr groomed. Call for lnler· EMKA Y i.s a w holly owned subsidiary of
Male cocker-bull lee C111Jeck497-5452. lllew.966-l300 Morrison-Knudsen Company, based in w/lrecldes on noae, fem
red cnow. fem p11 bull. Swimmll\Q Pool Chemical 1_.~~-ir Boise, Idaho.
Mete & Fem. Great Servlcea Bu1lneu. New· ""~ _.r..... Pl d d Liff <lW.S Pyrennn, N.B Sheller pore Beach area, no Entry level poeltlon. ease sen resume an salary history to work w/dogs & cats.
125 Meu Dr , CM. uper neceuary, wlll Typing, operating 1ete-Micky Porter, P . 0 . Box 2390, Newport typing a phones, must be
644-3656. treln,WS55,ooo 51~101 e000mount type, ans-ring phones, Beach , California, 92660. E .O.E. experienced Call Betty
req. Ill net .. . + filing, etc. Requires 0000 5<49-9820 Found· P1rro1. OoWT1town Call collect Mon-Fri typing akllls., neat 1p-1im----------------------------
H B Area. Identity 9-8PM ~sl(for Tlm (408) peerence end lllTlllTIAIAlll G en·1 office clerk. Mald1ofOranoeC0untyla
960-1195 667-0t t t non-smoker. Call btwn 9 To euperv!M ~aper non-profit org1nl11tlon. accepting epplicatonafor
FOUND· Pure White Kit· em 10 <4 pm fOf an tppt. c arriers. Selery com-Outlet Incl llte iyplno. re-Proteulonel Houee
1en, 8/6/83, Blue EY". •••; te Leaa 4024 714/982-8877 meneure1ew/e(perlence oeptlonlst, reprodUC11on cteanere $5/hr to s1an
& 201 S Cu Com benefit Ind procealng. 1179-7900 HOuHWIYH welcome Irvine Ave h ' .... i NEY fo LENbi OLER .. •• peny 1 PI T OK 831-8222. 1v 642-7342 -bonus owty. +generous Ull ..... If.
Found radio. Newport
Belch area. 675-3070
1st, 2nd, 3rd Trust deed•. Adm Clerk tor Pera, Ina, mllelge inowenoe. Muet -s message
John KC>fdlch 751-1155 Typing. 4 other ofc IUP· hive van, atltton w1gon Lease apace. Cllentele M ---1 ---A--1--al-1-
Found smell btonoe 1hort Mert11'-n,
haired Chihuahua mix T .D. 1 4021
female. Edinger & New· ----........... --1 I a n d 9 6 0 -8 8 4 2 • 1.1, IATIUI
892-1366 ltrtaap o. .....
found Sm Female Specleftitl\(l ln 111& 2nd
Puppy; Brown/White 8/8 TD'1 lince 1949
Vicinity Herbor/Watner A E Broker Bd Aelltor1
646-25•4 842-2171 545-<>611
FOUND: White Peeklnese Holder ol land contr1e1 •
mix dog, vie 15th & equity at maturity.
Tu1tln, N.B. 6'46-4905 $75.527 .80 paying
port duties. Knowledge of sml/plGkup. Apply In neceaaary STUDIO 5 an curilt, cry IC n s,
of ofc procedures, Bua. peraon weekdeye be· _A_•k_tor_J_u_dy_._640 __ -6-4_4_3_ ~1~·:.~: ~r!~e:' With
Eno. Spelllng & Mith. ·~ 3PM-5PM II 330 Ull •1uir11 $1, 137 -$1,383/mo. Fiie Well Bey St., Coall s Menna
by 10 AM. Aug 17. M ... Meaa. wl~=1Y=~N~ DOC111&STER Coneolldated Weter DI•·•=----,-----..,.-. -... 9' trlci 1965 Pleoentl• A~. Do-nut shop, counter Bch. °'or:e M~ 1875 The 1rv1ne Company
Coat• Mesa. 831-1205 .... PfT, no •Jtt>. MC ........ -Marin• OMslon, IS leek· Apply In ~. OlppUy ....... , Ing an C>fgenlzed. public
Clefk, Nlll FOOOs, FIT. Do-Nuts 1854 Newport ..... Ill rellllOn• oriented Pl™>"
1231 No Cat Hwy, Lao Bl, C.M. Regis Halrltytltt• In the as Oo<;kmuter.
Sch. Apply 1tt 6pm. U_S_D_R-11/_E_R_____ Mission Viejo Mall 1tn·
Beaullful large ottloe avaJI-Found. Wht Pomeranian
able. 642-4644. Mon-Fri, mill,. vie 1611'1/Tuatln. CM.
9'-5. 646-<4905
mont hly $4 28 43
Matures 3185. Loolclng
tor bvyer, wllf dlaeount to
attrec1iv. deal. Pvt pty
640-6130 9 10 5.
Colllllng Operltor Sehool bue driver full or nounoea outetendlng Job You wlllbe1upeM11ng1he
_ __._., muat know m•· PIT. Wiii treln II quelllled. opp tor uperlenced. janitorial ateff, purefles-,.......,..., 117 2 5 qualified tull a«Vk:e heir-Ing materlel1 ano have Chi~. lull time work, _4 __ • _1_1 _____ atytlat & manlourlat. II you responslblllty for the
s ti rt Imme d Ca ti Orycteanera, counter & u-era out 10 mike lop doller overall hande-on dock
751-8505 ask fOr Rod or eembly. lull time. wlll and don't mind wortclng malntenenoe Must have
Hink train, Aak for Lauri herd wllh • grNI ettnude IOfNI boating knowledge
CeaaerciaJ
... ,... 2911
400 Sq ti Bldg w/yerd C-2.
Rear ol 2470 Newport
BIYO C .M . $350
646-3192
CM/NB 17th & Newport.
Newer 3300 IQ rt. emple
parking, air cond. Owner
675.6900
OFFICE SPACE FOR
LEASE O.C Airport area.
New 2 11ory wood end gls
bldgs. Free standing 3
bldg complex with frwt
vlslblllty. 500 to 6600all.
Wiii complete Interior lm-
p<ovementa to suit ten-
ant Idell corporate
headquarters or pro-
fesslonel feclllly Bkr
co-op A & H Property
Mgmt Inc. 7141751-5980
•••••trial
•••tab 2920
1206-2560 aq fi (''°" office)
WMI lrvlne area From
$504/mo Tom 851·8928
2.660 sq It. 3975 Birch,
Newport Beech S 1330.
M 1 A zoning Agent
541-5032.
6500 sq It, 3 !rant offices.
2 large rear drive In
doors, Kira e1ec1rlc
power 32',.C, a sq It, 1779
Whlltler St Costa Mesa
Daya 540-9352. Evea
646-0681
842-5466 come wflh ua Guatan· and plumbing, INectrleal
INCi Nlery, eommlaalon, anO carpentry 1111111.
II you·ve lost • pe1 -can h e I p y 0 u c e 11 WIDOW "1AS SSS for OMl/HH
1-800-824-1797 T D's. $10.000 up. No lor night• and 1 dly ll'lltt, Err1rld PWIOn. $3.751hr.
Lost. All white female cat. credit check. no penally. Broll« and Seute·. Refer-Approlllmetely 30-40 Al b J b TO ences 114101181fY, Apply hra/Wk. RNllable, neat, Blue eyet. C.M. are1. '0 uy um 0 1n pert0n, 2-5 pm, Frld1y honest. prompt ONLY
545-8511 =· 6'r3,.7f11.Denlaon thnJTtluraday.REUBENS need 10 apply. Good
LOST Dog . Fe Samoyed. NEWPORT. 251 PIClfk: Irena• must The Starv-
( 1 1 1 w h 1 t e ) ltl( Wut.. Sita Cout Hwy, Newpon Ing Actors Moving Co
Buacherd/Adams. H B. * +1XCTORVWORK** Beech. 850-1386
Sii AM Full time Ul«rlbly llM ....F ,,..,...ll,....e--=c:-:1:-.-r-:-k-,--=p-=1-=T:-,
paid 11ac1tlona ano other we otter excellent salary
Incentive bonut point and an el<oellent benefits
progr1m1. Call Charlotte package. Pteue apply 1o
Clark 495-2005. Betty Delgadlllo (71•1
IWI lnLJIT , ... ,,) 120-2680
Newport a..ch. ~4-9143 THE IRYlllE HANDYMAN· Pelntlng.
L/Crptry, Etectrlcal. COIPAllY Plumb. U~ Melnt.
TEMP. FIT 545-2251
1100 IEWA.11. producllon. Acceuory opening fC>f cook ex-Mon-Wed-Fri .• 4 hrald1y.
964-5658, 1164-7 «8 HouM, lrlllne 968-1822 perlenQed In lnatltutlonel Clll 549-9671 eoe m/f/h 1011 camelback Street
Lost dog, vie. Doheny 1111 Wllllf cooking. AM or PM ehlft. Auff & told, mature per-Hardwere/lliee. Full Time. Newport Belch C~ 92660
State Bech, Oane Pt. PrOCfflll\Q mall, f\.ill or ~pply 81 Tiie Geroeni, 10n. hard wortler, ex-Experienced pref. Crown Equal Opply Employer Grey hu1ky, scar on I t pert/lime. No~ 450 GlenflllY1'e, Legune pertenced, pan tlm.. 30fS Herdwere, 1024 trvlne. M/F
leg. no colter. Daye neceNl1Y Send Mii ed-Beech. Old Newport Blvd. N.8. Newport Beect1
68t-t11 I , Ev .. 881·1228 dreued, itemped env-.....,1 , ....... •••-ILJ llUIETill
t ST C '""""""' 10· "-1ury ....... _. --Help Wanted In our Book -•tll"•-• 0 -Female et with no "'v"" """' ,..,,...,... Now hiring. Experience Working foreman to Ilk• PuttMJp 11111. Mon, 2 -_,,....
Tall. B~ Tabby mar1c· llahera. PO Box 48. Pref Weo-. and houra eherge ot amall alee· pm to IPPfOll 6:30 pm. OLDI
lngs Vicinity of Westclltt Wekefleld. MA O 1880· negotlable. THE GRIN[). tro-mechanlcel machine Tues. 10:30 am to IP9fOX Uteratura milling 10 1d In-
& Dover Drive NB. &..Modi. & .. ht. ER. 1400 Peclllc Cout 111embly department. 5:30 pm. No experience qulrlel. Addr"' 1yplng
645-0939 Full 1~:.""'ertstol Care Hlgh•ly, Newport Mustbefullyexperlenoed neceaery. Thi• I• a per-Orgenlz.1Nlealeedd1ta
LOST Ladlee gold 14ct ~ter 54e-1966 Beaclh. 642-8881 In precllllon mechanical m1n1r1t part-time po.. Call Micro Generel Corp.
gold meafl Omega Wiich n----sn-UMmbly, mlChlne ll'lop ltlon. Apply Pennyaever. Irvine. 557-3744
bracelet, on Thur 8_.. Vic Air conditioning, ex-.,._. nvs prectloet, 1nd mull h1V9 1860 Pl1eentla Ave, MATERIAL CONTROL
Pteoentle, NB. Maln St. or perlenced. ln1t1ll•· l)erwn needed. FIT-PIT electrical knowledge to Coate Mell. M•NAGER for comput-S.A. $300 Reward tlontServlce. L•g une Licorice Plu e, C.M. tollOw wiring 8Chern•tlea. ... ~
_ Niguel 831-0700 646-0566. contect Carol Products conli•t of m•· Hop Singe now hiring mlgr/dtatrlbutor Experln
Lost "SHEL TY" mete .... ....__I a..a ....... chl"9ry for lhe Printing pr"9er'I tor hend Iron-Inventory control, lfllp-
Oog Name Oawntee. at Al.TtUT1111 r •• ._. ... ,_ lnduatry. No amoklng. Ing. <194~044 100 North plngl rec:elvlng. &
Fairview & Sunflower. Smllll rllllll ahop needs Need n11r fC>f COior & car. Mull have own toolL Ela· Cou 1 Hlgnw1y. Ulgunl purchUll\Q Send ,..,ume
CM 8j:>m 812 540-1031 per9011formlnor PT/FT. Terrific: ctrffr cellent benellta end 8eacll to Star Tectlnok>Q!e•.
3478 Sen Ael1et. CM. alteratlOna. opp. Wiii trlln. 828-516& w 1 g e 1 . R 1 M A lll110ILTIRE tnc 3180 Pullm1n. {f.M
LOST . Small Whit• NptBcttaree Call HUYllY•m• ENTERPRISES, 15395 Parttlme.'tull tlme.lnterlor _9_2_62_6_A_•_tn_P_erson __ ,,.. __
MALTESE No Teeth, 9AM-6PM. 640-4128 Good driving ...cord. Over Chemical Lane. Hunl-& exter. melnt. Exprd lfOIAlllO&L
\Jae Anita & Glenneyre, A.101. llAITlnllll 20, Bring MVR. Costa lngton ee.c:ti. 693'""534 only. Need own tfln•por-Ull•llD/
LB. on 8/7/83 home: 2yraexp, 648-6021 Men Blueprint, Hl90 nu Tm PAY tetlon, 760-1486 no11•u1
o4 9 7 • 4 3 8 7 work . Plecentle #F. &46-5571. p••f.-Wlll ..,. 631--0358 AITI IUU.. -"-lllT /MmU Excellent growth op-
LOST Sm gray/whit• Wheel alignment & bt'lk• llUYllY Opporlunltl., 1v1llabte 18 yr end~ tor new Or-portunlty lor yO\lng.
tamale Poodle. 8•9 on the Own hand toot1. Newport ~Eltra ...... , with tll9 Lo• A~.. ange County an llldeo lhlf'P, medlanleatti In·
bch btwn Golden-I & Tire Center. 3000 E. Be en t~ant C9Nltf Tlmea ClrC\lletlon O.· dance c:tub. Mutt 1>41 cllned lndtYidull J°" re-
Newport Blleh Lido Cen-Warner, HB. Rewerd. Cou1 Hwy. CdM. fol the lster. Muat P •rt m en t In o II r clMn CV\, NIY9 me. IP· qulrH '*'· c!Mn '4ll'Oril nery VIiiage ., .. 3250 sq ,.. ci.pend I>+. dOOf·lo-dOOt new.paper peerance. Apply Thur.. habit• with en aoo'-..!11e
tt MI or commercial uee<. 540-3105 or 963-3976 am nu IUYIOI eve • aeon-..... ~rem. Guarin· d•v and Frld1y, 3-6 6M• d••lre to m ove u p g OUnd floo xlra wide omy r:ar. lrvlll9, Np1 Bcfl, f:: ""' N s .. w ··""' "-" r r, Loat Tan Fem Doxie end light repalte, Newport Coron• det Mar. Call t..O r1y w~ • S1turday, 6-8 pm. B M· on-m,.r e -'"'"
door plut 2 loedlng M 1x ,617 , p I ace n -Tire Center, 3000 E. Vicki before 11 a.m. oommlMlon. Houra: AM BAY BROADCASTING right peraon. SeeVrlty larlfHltr Oflicelntala tt91'°i Ofla'celeatala 2914 docks, ample oft •treet t1e/Vlc1or11CM 548-<169e CoutHwy.CdM. 951•7113 -2PM, 0( o4PM • 9PM. CLUB 2722 No Main, backgroundehec*wtl be -w parking, u 11. $.50 • sq TrelnlnQ la provided. Santi Ana. ntqulred • ... , 2t12 EXECUTIVE OFACE Newport Beech Lido Cano-II. NNN C•ll Slyvia. Lost Blue Perlkeet Miii 8abyal1ter n eed ed . DellYefYl •toc:k. Full Time. Potential to earn '300 Tll 1111 M.
i&Olmo. 21g:; LaSelle, 400 sq ti. w/pvt beth & nery V1tl1ge 11 .. 3250 aq Petk:ln Pr09lfllea Inc. Vetde ., .. n1me: "BUD'. Mature, retlabl9. Pltlme Muet b9 l8. s.. H•old. plU• per...-. For en In· HouaeclHnera l'lffdlcl. (n .. r Hoeg HQt91t9')
CO.I• MeH. Call •It ll'IOW9t. CC>ll. Bil Penln. "M1 or cornmetcl•I UHf, 7l4/645-6501 5<46-7682 SM. REWARD =~rn:·:~J~. 495 ENI 17th St C.M. 1ervl•w. Cell (714) g:cs A~t>':. 9R:: ~ 850-2885
6PM 957-2740 S300/mo 642-4823 ground noor, lllfl wide Plec:entle St In Coals LOST: YeUow pet para-DENTAL ASSISTANT 957·2391, ext 1204 MQ9 1---------
G r ,.~ ..,__,.... door plut 2 IOldlng Meaa, Beck IOI for rent, k .. t. 'Arcttle'. 11to 1 Benlcll\Q Wented lhet exeq>1k>Nll Gar: Door ()p«'ator In• '••• alll MECHANIC/V W O"'n
•age or ,_,,, ......... ...,.. • Execu11Ye Row Inc .• one of doolt•. ampi. ott •lr11t tppro11 :l0,000'. •If °' em111 green J•"""'· PIT TIUD ch1lreld• ... 1a11nt to atat • aelea, MNic.. -tools, 50150 &34_.f17 8e1cn Aru $75/mo tht oldest eatebll1hed _ ... , 1 • 50 ..,, """"' w "'-....._..._. 1y _......_ 842-6870 11877) prollllllonel ex-p.,,. "~· u '· •· a""' Plrt. 844-2535 R-ard.""" k "'°"· E•cellerl~unlty lor compllment our 111rt. t1000/mo to atet1 plua ..allPll ""per,.._, on --·
Otlict ltatala 2t 14
1117 w 1111c11#f. R 8 275 10
3eoo tq. ft. 2,435 aq. ti.
Suitable fC>f medleal or
dental Agent $<11-5032
250 aq ti. Suite l 2001mo
779 "L. W. 191h SI
Coat• Mela. es 1-e928.
81yftont Ottle9e, pllloe,
parking, janltorl1I.
873-1003
ecuttve M.1111 OOn'lple•H, ~ellc~n N Pr~~1.!1~~~· • 1775 up. 22615 t1 lndua-rr63_1_-s_1_2 .... 3. ___ ..,...,.,,,,. exper ~In II· 1148-111188 H it for T1n1 %. 842-3402 Female atuelent or .-LI
hu ottlefl tor teaH or 1 14/645·6501 trlolotllce. 16101 Aldon· PtrMa&ll JOU ttKllve Selllnga 6 Loan. ci.rtlal •----11---~•rt/time employed. •-1 d Cl I #T ... 11 1 1mmeo1e11 op«'llnQ 01'«9 --..-oom 1 ........... + 1 1 -·-S2~~oM':sJ::~ Furnl1hed offJoe. Bank of ~ec~c:42.2'83~~ ngon EDIRTS/llHLI verleddutl•.Poatttonr .. S.Cond chllr lttlatenl. Pert time 9ookkff~. •xchen09"";;"t1ou~ &l11IJU1
C I •• 1 Pla•a ~ult• •-roxlma1..ou 3 X·R•y llcen H r•q. With Accur111 Typll\Q. 6 _ .. 11d A•-. M•-t .. __ 1•••GE ,,..,. .. .,.,NE. , ... Include: reotptlonlsl, oa e .... ea • · •-anutatall~ Outcalt ONLY 835-9199 ..,... -1 642 79911 a Cl 1 1 ''" ....... ... ..... ~ '"'"' ... _. ,,. aecretlrlll. word pro-$ 1 7 51 mo, no I 1 e . -t .tWil aye/wt< end allernate • · AltO eneral •r ~ r9fs & own car. LM~ only nmatlonel megadne
c.Nlng, f)hOIO copyll\(j. 556-3900 •sPtRifOXt XbvisoR• DITll...... Sa1urd1ye untH t P.M. YOtJ don't r-..d • gun to DutlH . Coat • MeH IMM909 It 790-2&90. deYOted 10 1119 mocMlog
computer ecc1·0. Tele•. Furnllhed Ofll<:e 19~ Advtce In love. m1rrl1ge & 8eaMlofl8ect*<>r.ne Call Lind• D•c'l•· "drew fut'· wtl9n ~Ou 1M&-ee71 end enlertelnfNnl ~·
men & meat~ awvloe, bu I 875 2495* Offlcel91t1~Partlee 75-4·1801 OCSL. l'TOO piece an Id In the Deity a.netw OfftCe. PIT !IP· lllllfUf trynMClamod911,ectore,
telephone anlftfll\Q Fe· :~~~111!: r v ~::o ~~~ 1S.,...CRA. M--LETS TllE UIT llllUI ~d~ma ~1 g<:t• M9M. Piiot Went Adel Celt now proxlmet .. y 4 ttrid1y. tntM ......... & ec1,..... lor our~"' cllltlH Include: c:on-cillon. 17th ind Npt 738•8538• &&8-81538 • orn • · · · I 842·1M178, Trlln. O.K. NMd good a.. .. a.. par..... l..ue F,.. Mft'llnara VO
lerenoe room, tull Blvd 842-6661'1 Banking PhOMperiONUlty. Outlee -.... 11, 12, end 13, C'Ql\-
lcltch9n. jenl1or111. ulll· ANSWERS SPIRITUAL READINGS 11••--1 Include: Mall ~. ctupll· = 1.,...e1111• dUC1ed •wry hour, onJhe 1 Need am•lf ottlce or 1hop ...,. •-• 11ng endl JUICE • ..._. M hour trom tam to & pm ltlH, t r .. perk rig. SQIOe, 100 to 200aq"111 Adlll09ll'lllln\llt.,.. l.Ove. Immediate opening for D•llY Piiot r .. r.· :;;51 Monenm ......, •• ~ No~,,,...,,,~ !';:~~z.. ~C::.-:'.c, = Nwi>t Bet! erM 642·1257 Octeve-Oipth ~,:,r1•::un:..1:;.•ln1~'1~ frl•ndly, ~med • CIHSifleds Stre.t, Owden Oro~. IJdMI (tr ..... ).... ary, M ... and,_,__..
i mtn or C>ranoe Cty Air· -----·---Avert •Mter so EJ Camino AMI. San S*90fl In en.,. • wor1l tor et1-«2& tloN ........ .... eo-. Semln1r1 at the
por1 11 Junction Jam-NEWPORT BEACH ott~ ATTACHED Clem Lkfd. 492_72" oendttloeL.?!...~-~ W10t1.... • t:"· C.ll ...... ntW....... SOUTH COAST ~
t>orM/M1tcArthur BIY<I 1,000 aq 11. AttrlGttw, Some P90Ple lfe ~ -· ......,.. Oenerll <>ftloe. 1emporwy, W IM= 1-ll ~~tEI~. Anton llvd.., Well Matnt1lned. MOdern 11t11lted. My lemlly ••11 Ptopl9 wN> naeCI Peope pf\On9 and tYPlna lltllle 2v5671 Al.IQ 11th-23rd. LH Ye -· ..,....
w/eonvt nlenl i ocH• Oulldlng on Quiet str .. t ou1 every nlOht and they Thllt'a wt1et tt. required. Cell Linde • for quldc rMN efU 720·100'4 -· 11 1-1111
frQn\ Dove St. 762·7 t 70 AHlgned Par111ng Ger-atlll complain. Thay •ant DAILY PILOT Oacua, 7&4-t801. OC8L. • Cash Wlft _, hit 1"111 £A8EI Shoe>· et ttonie lt'I MIY I g t a A 11 I 11 a b I • 1 hOVM Wttll lhe dining SERVIOI Dl"fCTOA'Y 1700 Adlmtl A~. Colle ' Olllllfled Ade, ~ ~ 8e11 tNnoi , ... with DeMy n•a a IAEUE • wtttl CllKdflwd 842-6417t &•5-4800/846-3323 room ATIACHEO. j,. II Ill lb0u11 M .... Cllltornl• E.O.E. • 1109 tttoc>PlnO oen•. Pllo( Wen! Adi. C1Wlfled Ade 842-llf78 -============.l.:=====----=~
\
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 KU1d OI
math
6 Gray !>liade
11 Bob ba11
14 Woody 11mt-
15 Cat
16 . - -pigs
eve1
17 Poll wori..er
19 w11oel.lees1
20 Trade
2 1 Canadian
1no1.:in
22 vei1111a1ed
24 Tar s shou!
26 Enrolls
'27 Veriheo
30 Window
accessories
32 Organ
33 Tumbler
34 Crosscut
37 Amerinds
38 Nobleman
39 Recap
40 01sf1gure
41 Cankers
42 Sierra -
43 Bell se1
45 Cot1c1zed
46 Plan
48 Rea111y
<19 Hike
SO Regan s !.•r"'
52 Old
56 Rowe1
57 Kill r,y A (.,
60 Commn••
enduttJ
l> 1 French
income
62 Man s narn ...
63 Lellt!I
64 Enauiea
65 Inform.,
DOWN
1 Mall d1 inks
~· F1" n .. 111!.
3 Asian weight
4 Hemmed in
coun111es
5 SCdb
& Narra1111e
7 Footbc1 t1
group
8 Askew
9 Mound
10 MtSStOll'>
1 1 Oe111a1ton
12 Secret
1J Te1eg1ap11
speed u1111s
18 Image
23 Belonger
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
~~I I ~~-~ SL AM OCT AN BRED
lYRO FRAME VORE
fR AO IC Alli.S P OS E --MA OISO N •SlEA M ER
-s l lJ £ 0 •0 Al -
PE S T E R • E A R T H M A N
l A T E •S WA p • us AGE
u s O • 1 E A R s u p •R • w
ME R (G E • IC. E E P •S A T E
p R E L A T E S •S E T T E A
-I CE •T I T LE -
°'"i !.~··""" HU NT MANA GERIAL
ANTE ElOGE I EOGE
DEA N DETER OOO M
""'' <'!:> Possess1v• ·
?6 011ec11011
27 r ru11
28 vHI S n,m 11•
'29 C.ouqe
JO S wumµ-.
J I l 1erma11
flcHlE'
JJ Blood
35 Enqli!.h
compo<.t•r
J6 J1111son
38 E111er'
J9 Feeler
41 Snurl.-.
4i' Rt"S111
44 Dr t''>!. IJurt
4'> S.ilmon
4b Zt:>1t01tu
4 7 Bircl
<16 Ot!S!lllo'!U
'JO GduZe
S 1 Ou1s1ae prt!I
:.3 Sect t.J11u
54 And o lher c,
l d (
55 H1deawdy'>
58 Perrn11
59 Reed pipe
r-........ 2~-r-3--.~4~~5:--~6,..--~1=-,...,,.a--.~9,-~=-12 13
14
Orange Coaat OAIL Y PILOT/Thuteday, Aug. 11, 1983 l~ 11
.... •e ... 1._1 .... w ........ t .... M...___.s ... 10...,.0 1111 w .. , .. SUM ltlt Waatt4 s100 r ... 11.,. IOZS Mlsctll1tHa1 1211 IN11, laU 1014 lain Waat.. 9020
27' Erlctlaon. f/8, 111n1 AI0""1 c;Jl lmm;cJ fo,
cond., 5 Mill, nu main, your ~~le. dom•tllC CJr
ROF/VHF.116,600/0BO IOtaign 581·8285
Ra11au1ant
Waltra11/Walter EiC·
perlenctd Food/Food
and Coc1t11111 Alto Bua
Pereon1 needed for day
•hill ~ Brown's RH
taurant, 31106 COHI Hwy, South Laguna
AMtaur1nt
Woll groomed service per·
eon and bu1 peraon
needed for braekf&1t and
lunch 1hllt1 11 11ttg1n1 Laguna Beach Aas-
1auran1 Cont11ct Finn
DelOf• 1 I am, 497-4477
THE TOWERS RES·
TAURANT
Re1teuran1
llllllH HITllUIT Now accepting 11ppll-
ca11ons. Weltar/esa. Host
poslt1on1. Day & night
shltta 1400 Pacific Coast
Hwy, NewPQrt Beach
Restaurants
IEW PllHCll IHEIY
I UllWIOI ltlTIOH
Is hiring IUll and Ill counter
sales personnel. We are
looking for lrlendly,
cheerful, qvalllled
people. Please call lor
appt Mon-Sat, 10·5
UllllmE
751-1268
Retail sales Fabric store
needs full llma help
1mmed opening for
mature sales person
Apply In person, Home
Fabric Center. 2121
Westcflff Or, NB
sales
TEAOHlll PtetehO<>I & el•m•nlery
Par1111me Cn11•111n m1n
l1try SJ 60·$5/hr C M
842·9181 Ot G42 1426
WELDER. Apply 7 A.M Lg• uec dHk wlflle Ruta, good eond 1120
only M1eOrt0or Ytchl d•twe•. 0•3 ft, Teak Skill & 1kl bOoll S75
Corp 1631 Ptacenlla wood Orig $700 Mil lor 552-7854
Coste Meta S2~ 548-• 147
l ·UY TIOH 1 lvlr)O Room for 1111e. 9' TILHUllmll tor m1tQ1ce1 olll<:41 Min 3 gold valve• •u•edo aofo. 2
PIT job with 1\111 time earn-yr1 axp P/l 548·93 19 met<:hlng print 1w1vel
WINE \/AULT Cu1tom by
\liking. holds 780 0011 ....
65 CUM, 97 X 94 .. 40",
compl Mlf contained.
Ideal fOf M<iou• COllac-
ton at home, ottloa °'
gar age Pr1<;e Incl. de·
livery· & tnetallatlon.
$3350 831·9460
lngal • • 8 pm week high b8Cll chaJra, glHa
nlgMs S11turday Ideal Jo~a WHIM SIOS iop collee tab!$, acu.nt tor mollvehid atudanta. chllJr, S 1000 takH ell
Call 760-3936 asll lor Cheulleur. experienced, 833-0468
Suzanne Private or eorporala. Antique Oak Roll Top -496 9865 n.a L d I Tatepnone Appo1n1mant """'"In g1eat c;on c rca
S 11t1 a r s S 5 I h r Santor citizen detlres pit 1900. S 6 0 0 I 0 B 0 . Iliac. WHIM
4PM-9PM I bonus. Mr po1111on w/same SS COOi\ 675-2576 i60 Vard1 Green 1 white
Dennis 7141966·1727 & compa111on/1ecretary On :st Mattress x'iiit cond Shag Carpet, Very Good
r.i.,1t111 ltllolll11
lor Insurance company
Top dollars. Work trom
ttome Scott 540-1005
Please ca II A II c 11 w/bo• aprfngllrame Cond 540-4032
964-560' 1200 962-5717 •••ical Jul. '224
Call SSOS 0ueef1 u waterbed, xlnt Elec Gultar w/amp. uied cond, must fffl. 1175/olr bul In good cond. $150. KITTENS, PERSIAN. Stephanla720·4170days 760-1065 TELEPlllH PEDIGREED. GOOD ----------HOME $ 100 536· 1892 Se a r s k Ing I O 11 m Gibson Les Paul o.luxe, llUOtTOlll man/springs $300, kng custom tlntshe, case,
PIT people needed to cherry bltcaae/hdbrd good cond. S450. Fender
promo1a presentations 0091 5510 $150. 2 711 decor sofas Princeton Reverb
for Holiday Inn Veca1lon -$350ea 19" RCA cir Ampllller. small, good Travel Club No aelllr1g In· Auslrellan Shep pups, S 150, gas dryer S 150, practice or bag Inner
volved Top commission I ' I -c h a m P 11 n e 1 11 89• 8026 s c
and salaries + bonuses S75·S 175 549-3984 more • _ amp 150 Roa om-
SOFA/H DE BED 6' t pressor 150. All for $600. paid Call alter 1 P m Golden Retriever puppies, 1 d A · :,o,C 1• Rob 631-0505 751-4223 AKC $ lSO 642•7984 xlnl con , green ost
TIU WlllEI DI STILL
U'S PlYTV
CHAIPIOll ...
. $425, Sacrifice $95 Call Ofl' r ii •/ MUST SELL PrlCed Re-Steve or Gary 645-1731. let •fl ar
duced. Purebred German Walnut Collee Table S75 lca!f•Ht 122'
Sheppard Pups Large 2 Night Stands $15 88 se\Yn Desk f op Copier.
Boned Parents Im-Book Shelf Cablnel 5120. Model 840. Brand New.
por1eu Champ1or1 Blood Triangular Chinese List, $1700. Sell $1100.
l 1 n e $ 150-S 3 0 0 Carved Ben<ih S900 An-714/780-3918.
pp 494-7927
Naplee Sabal, xlnl cono
127$ 11•1673-1003
Sa bot. Ilk a new,
$350/0BO 494-7875
Vtgabond 12 f1 llbef glatl
w/accatt. oil cond.
1350. Eves 559-7417.
MarlH S,11~ 7 ii 35 Jottnaon E trlC Out·
board. tong lhalt, har-
neN & control•. Call
642-5800.
WEllf
OLEAI OARS
All TlllCIS
CONHEll
CHEVROLET
....... ,.. I t I r r., ', f' I ~ t
. •~I\ \11 "\
SU-1200
WE PAY TIP ltLUR
Fiii IHI GUii
&WlllAllll
PHTIAO/lllHU
2480 Harbor BIYd Seagull Outboard 2HP, COSTAMESA ~~;~~~~;•1oh1 1 115 Ut-410014t-141l
ctl5f ce t!R1Nd ~o a/. 0p~~' ~~~-~;~~au~~;!
Boat$18,S00673-6022 Jaguara , TR7a &
30' power boet Ilda tie, Poraches but any model
Balboa coves 1200/mo considered Top prices
650-7737 paldl Call Clive a1 Bauer
LARGE CENTER SLIP
Up to 46'. 233 19th. St "
C. Newport Beach.
675-0236
Newport M111lnalsllps
day, week, month
646-0551
M o t ors at (7 14 )
979-2500
WEWmrHR
ClEUHHClRI
See Ronald Daee
THEODORE
240-2268 uque Desk. Swivel Chair ~-----s ti ,,_..... 6230 Siii)s Avatlable 25'. 30" Sherry s Poodle puppy Side Chair $1700 An-rr •I -· 35'. and live aboard. Cati
ROBINS
FORD ON TV
sale. teacup-toy min-llque Side Board with 11111&11 9•5. Mon-Fri. 642_4644 is now hiring direct sales ature. $250 up. 546-2846 goldleal mirror & 2 can-surfboard. trl-lln wt 1 re-I II"'--• 70 r e p r e s e n i a 1 I v e s Pe ts----5535 die sticks $280 Antique 1 a _, 1 1h h I th I D al11 Table s140 An movable fin A 101:;,;;;,;.;.;...,;..., .... __ ....,.,. T L 9035 roug -ou 8 grea er ---.... --~.,.,..-...,, r ng • 1eash-hold111 pivot Coet 'Wlndrid'er, good cond. RC .. LoaAngelesa1ea "COCKATIELS" $15 tlque Crystal Chandelier $380, sac. $175/0BO SS00.875-8125 OVERHEAD CAMPER
2060 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 642 · 0010
each/080 548-6477 S 160. Antique 1943 Shor1 Jarry 6•5· 1731 M Jik IOll SLEEPS 4, S250, CALL * •Company paid sales Wave liam Radio (Ne· .. t training DWARF Buriny Rabblis. llonel) w/40' antenna t Ir II 546-0336
.. * DIALING
FOR
DOLLARS
Earn big money for short
hours. 30 hr work week
with potential to earn
SSOO +per weelt
•6AM-NOON
•NO EXPEA NECESS
•WEEKLY PAY GU.AA
•HIGHEST COMM +
*Bast commission/bonus S4 eacll. 752 -6106 S200 A 11 o • P' TUT SAU ·76 VESPA 125 Good --n que a" 1C-10 •• 12.x6' DOME SSS '72 Dal pu w/cmpr S t20rl plan lr1 Iha business Lost UnUSUal Parakeel ture F1ames lrom $4·S 15 3 •• oo••E S48 · body, runs well. $500, obo 646-4684 •Group llfelmedtcal 548 7086 ... an .., 631-3853 °' 544-8006 C M Knows name -Othe1s on sate OC Swap '77 Chevy iieps1de. exll •~n~~:~nsurenca 'BUT" 545-7882 Wood dining set $150 Meet. Sp K131Sat, '79 Peugot 570 ml cond. axtru. $2650
co1terage Mini lop Bunnies. papers Dinette $65 Oak colree Loaded. Xlnt cond $315 645-6708 art 5 & wknds
•Supar111sor / manage-$25 499-1997 tableS95. Dresser/mirror TV.I: la4ie, 644-1016 ·50 Longbed M82da lll\e
ment A.llti SHI --UlO ~~~-9~~c~ Mmlsc turn :lttr" 1232 Btk, chroma lid Ed • n-. low m1, $3700/or
groW1n potential American Oak desk and xlnt 8pc llvlng rm seUSOO. 25·' COLOR TV ll)((Nf" ~3~1i.~e~1nt cond.. bat 75 '· 71 ~
Come, Investigate the ex· swivel chair s95o, 546•3533 COND $175 962-1523 ·91 Toyota Plcl<up. At. citing opportunities avail· 6 2 7658 .. MoPed "Free Spirit" Very AM/FM casselle n1.,,.. able to you al the World's 4 • BEAUTIFUL 25 RCA to Mllea, good cond, tires & wtieels roll bai 4
largest pay TV sys-English Antique Oak ROLL Costa lltH '124 Color Tl/, 2 yr wrnry needs lgn. awltheh only apd S5900/best 0,,,1 tern ON TV1 TOP DESK Circa 1890 Antique Furniture, 2 color s148 Freedellvery Open S1SO obo 714-995-8205 Excellent eond 646 6474 BONUSES
•PLEASANT WORKING CONDITIONS 11 you're bright and pos-For interview arrarige·
sess e pleasant voice call ments -call nowl
Mr Thomas at 714-751-3550
Sacrifice $750 Come see TV Dishes. Collectables, Sun T V J 0 H N 'S · • 2·6 Sat/Sun at 233 16th Clo1hlng. 9-5. Fri & Sat. 646-1766 MOPED, runs and IOOkl VHa -9040
3 ---great Asking S19o,,_,.. _______ _
Place or call 676·4 33 910 w 19th St. C.M P.A System: Yamaha pwr 499•5046 169 vw van, runs gd. reblt
673-0118
Sales-hardware, full time
position In retail hard-
ware store. No Sundays
or eves See Steve. H w.
Wright & Co. 126
Rochester, C.M.
SALES MICRO c'()"M-
PUTERS. mature person
with butlneu and c;om-
p u t er axp erlenca
754-6363
ULHPEISOI for exclusive children's
boutique In S.C Pia.ta
LeMaguln 5-49-8585
English Oak Dlnene Sat, VARD SALE 2324 Elden mixer $400. J B.l spkrs, . eng wtrecelpts 996-8720
EOE
x In I con d S 5 0 0 St Furn llousettold 10"" $700, 496-68'\.l Puchd Moped, 81• x!nt afternoons. Boo MIF 960 56 8P · · · •·· con ictra equipment 1..,....---....,.... • 25 att M. etc. Sunday tO 10 5. leati Gt•tral 7011 1415:'645-2419 '70 vw Bue/Van. Double
TOP SSS
Females Pref. Models &
Escor1s. (213) 866-1964
TOPLESS MODELS
S75 DAY PAID DAILY
No Exp Nee. 626-2583
AHllHctl 6011 BHt. 811cll 6140 4 man fnlratable boat. OVt· lltttrcyclea/ g:'ii1.P°:~g1~~1te~,11b~ri
2 Re/rigs. LI-defrost S3S. 18252 U [ F j.§ n board auachment New. ScMttrl IOU Clutch Rebuilt LOOKS Fros1 Ir wht 2 dr S125, sa n. r u 1125 obO 714-995-8205 GOOD RUNS GOOD
both run per1. 494-5419 9--4· Household misc · '70 Honda Trell 90. gd S229Sioao 737~0966 rollaway bed etc. Power INtl 7012 cond. S250. 548·8773
HARBOR AREA -F--Y S EA I '73 Dodge Dual belt APPLIANCE SERVICE 3 AMIL Al -nt ques, 11' llfLIHll 12000 ' 7 5 H o n d I 7 5 0 s stm, artlal conve•~
we sell recond .. guar. collectlbles, turn, books. Elec: motor, aeats 9. Semi.chopped, ruris xlnt, ~/Im c!.s ater runs go ..... I llll appliances 549-3077 clothes, 'slnens9, hou .. -786-1599 Of 549-2288 new tire, chain S battery. $1750 obO 54S,:6465
1""' _ hold. Sall un ·5 S 1095. 673-6687 • llOW Tl SELL Coppertone 17' side by 1 O 1 8 2 C 11 11 Or , 18' 1973 Trtsonlc, 185 HP, •75 Dodge \Ian Tradesman
side Philco Refrigerator (Brookhurs11Atlanta) See 110, good buy at $4000. '77 BMW A100·6. Mint Bubble Top, alps •.1tove H:il~rl g~:rnl~~; S;S h::~ $295 545-8362 Olmes-e-llrie ad Sat. Call CC. 556-5730. cond. Lo ml w/luggage. Icebox $2800. 540-0657
lime evening& Only Elec range. 1 yr old.$275 FAMILY GARAGE SALE: 20' DONZI 110 350 Chey .• $3500, 96-4-9316 '78 Show Car \/an.lacker
positive, dependable, Trash comp, S100. Small U584ble HOME Items. Oceen & Harbor Cruise, 77Yamaha2SO,OT,cher-Black Too Many E.~tras
outgoing adults need lrzr $100 646-58-'8 Sat. Aug 131'1, Graham like new cond. 548-0291 ry cond. $700 /0BO. to usi_ 861-4808
SANDWICH SHOP, _ _.. _ _.__....&.._...._ _ _,,needs responsible person. apply Phone 848-702 1, Frig $225, W/0 $135ea. Olens1one. Hunt. Beach 20 Fl. Flahlng Boat, Buick 841-367 1 ' •~~.------
2·30 lo 6 p.m Monday Osh/W & Trash Comp Fr/St Rig trtr. Trl-al!tr. E.nglne, OMC Outdrlve. '79 Honda Odyuey $750 bChl••e~, t""S ~ F~I~ ___ S 100ea_ 646-5848 desk. musical bar 6801 Bate Tank, Outriggers. 962-9946 ,,..._ ... _•..,•.cs.,.. __ .._'"-lelt WHIM 5100 Belt WaalM 5100 B I W ..... SlOO lrvtne aree 955-1247 °' e, Ht.. 971-1739 TllYEL lHIT Kenmore 2 dr ralrlg. 5 yra Jarrell, 641-0779 sleeps 4·head $4,500. '81 GS 450S. black . 5K '29 Model A. 4 DOOr Town
Mover/Drlvflf'. MUST be PUT TIME
24• yrs. hardworking, lltm HLIYlllJ IEOEmtllST SEAMSTRESS. exper for Full time. automated old auto defrost. s100 lfewport ltacll 61 9 * 646•8205 * mllea, must 1 all Sedan, restored S9.99S
clean cut, rellaDle. and prompt If you take pride Dellver auto newspaper
In doing the bat IOb route In Lagone Beach
possible. call S18rvlng area. Mon-Fri (altar-
Actora Moving co nooo), Sat & Sun (early
Others need not apply morn,). Must Have r&-6S0-1366 liable transportation
Active Mortgage Banking am productions. Sharp
firm Is seeking a sharp Designs 642-8908
energetic r9C41Pllonlst for
its lrvlne offices Poslllon S.a•strtll
a gency E~per 'd 64S-1448 iii1 22· Searay, Mere 110 $850/0BO 644-1238 .48 Ford Woodle, nih';
4972402 or 752·5879 Aafr1ne78tOr Gibson dht Sat 113. 9.5 Windsurfer. w/20hp Mere O/B kicker, '81 HONDA MOPED Low blue. reato1ed S 12.9i!5
Truck D.rtv~ Full Tlm-e .,, surfboard•, Oaisun Pu. \/HF, d8f)lh finder. head Ml S200 963-1165 P.P 675-6161 ~ frost-free S 195 759·0986 bikes. clOthes & more & fully galley. w/trlr NB ___ _
~ed Shempoo USI•
tent lor busy salon.
Lleente required N--
POrt Beacll 631 • 1390
Some collecllng re·
quired. mostly paid In ad·
vance Good pronta Call
Foster '°' datalls Dally Piiot • 642-021 Ext 342.
requires pkla .. nt tel•-Sample hand alter·
phone voice, positive atlo ns-brldal shop
public relations minded Exper with delleate and altitude and previous llne fabrics Costa MHa
corporate office u -556-9333 546-1821
parlance For lntenrlew. • s k , o r s t a v • IECllnUIY 1111. tto.
Monday and Tuesday. Refrigerator. like new, 4805 River Ave, sllp.$10,000 631·7772 '81 Kawasaki Kl.305. Xlnt '58 llolks Bug Perfect ~~~~,~~ }~ld6a:.~-5T~i:;,~d ~~3'.~br:,• 2-dr $165 631·8227 -,z 24' Sklpjack '72, FI B; '82 ~~1~4~J 8 0 0 I 0 B 0 ~r7~~~10,~~ ~::,n:o ~'t
Ca111orn1a license. good Jewelry 14 Eng, 010 + trlr. St3,000_ preclate 714•751.9039 driving record, minimum Refrlgtrast-lree family si 135-00 diamond & sapphire 646-2317 '82 HONDA 7SOF. lo ml,•.-------
age. 20 yrs Apply Pen-1175 Maytag wash· ring, new, coral ring set In ---24 sKi'P:i'ACK Ilka n-Saddle bags. 8•'~ Mu11ang Con
nysaver. 1660 Placenlla. er/dryer 11.y di; s 185 aa l6K. gold, antq. garnet Twin \/olvoa. S lS,OOO. cover $2149 964-9480 verllble. Fully retiore<l
7 1 4 -5 4 5 • 1 4 o 2 or Join the ex ell Ing world of 714-474-0300. recording Good typing skllls a must Be the right
hand person to 1n111r-
natlon111 Direct°' of Artist
Relations. Please call 549-9820
Costa Mesa. Oas range. sll-claanlng necl<lace & earrings Wiii 963_6477 home, 964-8845 wt\ Blue & Wht $9fl00 Ope11
Tustin Business needs all pllolless Ignition $225 sacrlllce 759-1642. Mu1t NII awap or trade to otters 714·75 t-9039 All kll I 24' Wood 250 horae In-. • . ---Nurae-LllN or RN PUT TIME
Charge Nuree, 11-7 lhltt. -•••Ill llECEPTIOllST PIT Apply at 1hll Gar-"'~ dens. 450 Glenneyre. Supervi!lll newspaper car-lot brokerage manage·
Laguna Beach. 494-8075 rlers early morning -•AM ment firm. Work directly -8AM Sat. and Sun. -under office mgr Typing,
mus1 have van. station phones, errands, some
wagon °' small plcJ,,up bkkpg R & H Property
Hourly wege + mileage. Mgmt. 751-5980.
Nuraes Aide. certified,
11·7 Mesa Verde Conv,
Hosp 661 <Anter St
C.M. Apply In person week--A-ec_e_p_t-lo_ri_ls_t_/S_e_c_'_y.-1-ull
NURSES AIDE days. 330 W Bay St. tlma. tor busy church of·
Opening• for certllled Coeta Mesa. Ca Orange flee Typing 50wpm, good
nurses assistant Full Coal! Dally Pilot phone skills. churcll
time or Part-time. Tile P&m IP UITIIT exper preferred. Call
Garden•. 450 Glenneyre. lrvlne Presbyterian Laguna Beach 494-8075 Experle~ed Full or Church, 857-9023
--==...,-;:""7::-::. :-:--:-=--p/trme. Cati 493-7648 OFC ASSISTANT
Temp, vaned duties. rec?>t. Pltttt Prl1ttr type SOWPM, phOnes. NB Night• and Wknds Must
Ole. 87~ 110 be exper'd on Nortlsu equip Apply In person PARKING VALET . New-between 12 arid 5 pm In
POr1 Beach Aettaurant. and Out Photo, 10052 Eves PIT. Good Job op-Adams Ave Hnt Bch
portunlty IOf loul atu· -----·----dent. Cell for Appl. PLUMBER
875-2566 Drains/repairs. own truck
PUT-TI•/ OlUIOAl •32-0500 or 851·9604
10-5, 3 dayt weellly, 55 PIT Book It a 11p11 r ,
wpm, Corona del Mar, Ho1t/Hos111ss. Kitchen
SS.SO/hr, 7 14-875--0638 Prep Apply In Person. Jim 9· 1 1 am. Mon-Fri Josh
· Sloouma Reslaurant.
Part-time help wanted 2601 West Coatt 11wy.
Weetland1. Marine Salel Newpo<l Beach, CA.I
2900 Lafayette NB
Part-time potltlon open In RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST
11ddre11lng M onday, PART-TIME -kend re-
4;30 pm to nnllh, Tues-ceptlonlst + part-time
day 6 30 pm to finish. ryp1ng during •he week,
Apply PENNYSAVEA, •Int part-time work tor
1680 Placentla Ave, college student Cal!
Costa Mesa. weekdys only 9·5 Clarie
I e Dally P ilot e classifieds
work for
• you. call
• 642·S678 e forqulck e cash sales. •
Johnson 644-9080.
COLDWELL BANKER
Newpon <Anter RE Ole
HOlmtlllT
for prestigious .. ton Must
be luhloneble Tuesday
• Saturday Richard
O\lllelle Salon, 200 N--
port Center Drive, N-·
P0<1 Beech.
HOEmlllST
Private Club In Npt Bch
seeks lull time recep-
t 1on1 st M ust be
artlculate. cheerful and
prolesslonal Ability to
handle busy 11N1tchboa1d
and excellent ryptng skills are aaaentlal Call Per-
sonnel. 714-644-5404
llEOEPT /nPllT
lull time position w/real es-tate Investment firm In
Newport Bch Must have
front office appearance
w/good telephone per-
sonality & typing skill•
Excell. salary & benellll
Call Deborah aft 1PM,
833-3581
I .E. lll'Y Miil
Real estate firm needs
exp secretary for Ill
Costa Mesa office Musi
heva excellent typing
aklll•. 60+. Shor1hand
not req'd but helpful IBM
wOfd processor In offlGe,
training avallable. Wiii as-
sist manager with oper-
ation of office. Real ea·
tale license desirable
Call Cra~ 631-1268 '°'
appt
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN tr TO S75.00 P£R WEEK
We now h••• I~ 011tnin1' for young tater
bt.Htfl to S«UIC 111dtf$ lot '"' o,.,,., Coul
OHy Ptlot <Nr trt.., \tart ii J JO p "' tnd
W01• unbl 8 30 p 111 ~J) On S1turd11. wt
-or• ; lrw mo1e !loves You will u1n many
t11ps and pmn. ll0111 w1lh nrn.na you1 own
money lllftt is flO delt¥t11n1 01 rolle<llon
111~od H you .,, 1n1Htttfd plfa~ calf Ml
hrl
MlA M coor (714) 548-7058
110Rnur
lrvlne Restaurant Oe1lgn
firm has opening for sec-
retary with good typing,
figure aptitude and com-
munication skllls In con-
genial small office Word
processor and restaurant
equlpmen1 ellperlence a
+.Call 714-641-5735.
SECRETARY· Part time.
SS.SO hr Good sktlls.
7141675-6960 Kay
general office help, pref· are spar ng c aan STUNNING (NEW) 1 05 Cl b d v' b th 11 1 77 Yamaha Enduro 88 Flreblrd 400 4 aP<I
erably with health In· 89 l-2545 RUBY RING (Cert of ap-b 0~J e j ~ed YI~~ 500XT, lo ml, good trans. Classic $2400 846-447t surance background SIS re~g wllcemat>.er I) v I s' 450.0 r g · oa w St200/0807 845-2035,
5 0 pral88 , a ue • equipment, perfec1 con· 11 9113 5•2-1578 'IOFIH211 4 4·4 14 $200 King sz hardwood SAC $2500 TODAYI, dltlon Musl Sell. S42SO. a .. rv-Commercial Pro· hdbrd $35 645-8397 640-40-' 1 675-4326 V_a_m_a_h_a_Y~Z-2_,SO,..,...d_rt_b_k-. e-x_,...11 Brand new int, runs very good, new tires. S 1500 ductton Co Is Inter-11.11. ualeriala 6014 .. -.. -.-121• C C 1 cond. extru $350 consider trade 969-i22I >1iewtng oc people for TV • _ "' ... aca1•e11 v •o· hrls ran trl-cab n. 631_8048 commercials for deslgnet Patio or outdoor Ille 6 ' Wood Furnfture Manufac-valued at S40.000, good =--::--=,..-----:rr.r.i;: A t la ff fashions, restaurant. soil Hex Mocha, 1100• fl, luring Machinery and cond, engs need work, llttlr le•tl I ft, rrt drln~. cosmellc 50cf1 493-9878 Suppll&1. "Factory sellS\8•000·528•6680 •73 Calypso. aeU con-Alla .. aN 9105
advertisements. only re-FrH to Joa 6022 C I o s e • o u t • · '70 Boston Whaler, 17', 60 talned. 33K mlles, new 172 tifV 2000. 3 10 pick
liable people need apply 7 14-493-2072 hp Mariner eng. only 18 decor. 18750. 830-7722 from. from $3500 Call
These are tor people 1n 2 Fems t e dogs , M' ll &Zl hrs, + 4'11 Mere under SI) background only ll"IOn Queensland Healars llct llNal hrs. S7<100. like n-. ·73 Winny 25· Cl. A, 413cc 642-1969
speaking) Call between IAuatrallanJ Had all 160 Yards Green & White Oceanside 619·7~7-4017 Dodge, crulae, CB. stereo 1A--a~.~i-----~,-1~7
10·4, Mon thru Fri ln1er· shors. spayed. house· Shag Carpet, llery Good .71 Cl•••lc, 18. Tri-hull.' ceu. 2 roof air. 5.5 gen, ¥laws are In Hollywood by broken Need good c d 5,0 4032 ..... 58,000 ml. Honda 90 trail '71 AUDI 100. spotless h 0 m es 3 5 1 _ 1 o 8 9 on • __ cyt Volvo 110, open bow. & rack. Ready to gol 93,000 ml. runs great
appl 2 •3•549-35 t9 eve•lwknds 20· Yaroman Mower. $3000/0BO 850-0435. S 10.500/obo. 548-0346 12000. 645·2334
Typesetter eKparle;;c;d Po-dr Tcrlmo EddgeSr215000. Duffield Edison HI electrlc 75 Tllan. 20 11. 18,000 ml, •a1ta'• 9109 IEOllnlllY /IEOPT Compugraphlc 7700 Full 4 exceptlon111 and terrific goo n bay launch double 1 $8500 642-0795 ,_ .. ______ _.._.._
For Orange County motion time deys O.C airport kittens to good homes 645-6125 __ ender. • .. rrey' top, ... 11 anvoe• 5•8_882•3 • 'ti lllTII UIERIOl picture production com-area 24 1-9238 546-1305 --"' ..
pany located In beach TYPESmEll 7 ~old Klllllfl•. 1 snrt Albacore. Yellow tall. covers, $7200. 548-3558 •77 PACE ARROW, 27 n. wl rabulltmotor.S350
area. Mull be person· hair. whl /blk I Ing :f2~~;5 K~8~~·832raeis. Jeffrie• 24 n, trybrldge. all ll)(tru, 37M ml, top 8111969-1221
abte,xlnttyplat,&wtlllng PART/TllE llelr/brn 548·1932al16 --llead,galley.389Ponllac, cond. $14,900, call llllW 9112 to accep1 Interesting pos-Approx •O yds of 1u11 e•l1 thru out. S7500. 646-45•8 Npt Beach lion & responslbllltes Experienced In quall!y ad AMER°iCAN ESKIMO cleaned green shag crpt 673•4705 173 Bavatla. 6-cyt 11u10.
Please tend resume to work&IOfms lnpasltlon 3 mos old P\.IPS. 2 M. Perl cond s 120 RENTS195/wk upan11zes air. stereo, anr1, beautY1
Dept p F P .. PO Sox 205, No paste-up Kerning Im-shote FREE 546-5143 546•0945 Must sell 19 f1 Corolla nsh· *ll0· 1100* SSOOO firm 548-5857
so. Laguna. c a. 92677 portant Day work Irvine, __ Ing boat. Gd cond .. gd ,77 B••w Rl""S. ••ini 405 Fwy & MacAr1hur Beaullful Shep mix pups, 8 BINGO letter 'T' needed. mpg w/Volvo 4 cyl and Tralltrt( ... vv-..,
SECRETARY Sophist I· Call bet 4-Spm, 549-2231, wks 846-5194 Alberton• Mkt game. Vo 111 o ou t d r 111 a . Tr&Yll 1024 cond Lo ml wlluggage
cated Investment firm In ask lor John or Davis Klllens, 8 weeks. male Pit 552·9•3 t REWARD S 1500/obo 650-4270 l8!'1pip'l'Pl"""-l"IP'~--S3500, 964-9318 Newpor~~h coodhMekl7ga n1•1rrTTKR --Bull7mos642-5478al13 Brass Celling Fan with 4 ..... •-n 7014 fKXV EL TRAllOR . ·92 528E automatic person ... t g typng. ., .. ,,., ---~ "COZY .. Home Built loaded,takeove<leaseoi
coorespondenca & Wan111d to operate a Need gd hm for aban-~~~Pbl~~~~·3~~u4~ 14' 000 w/SChook trlr. Trallor, Ideal For Hunting S426/mo. Eve 964-1280.
ehone akllls, ahort tlend & Comp 4 Salary on ex-doned Doble/Shep mix verslble, coll 1290. take good cond. 11300. PP. & Fl1hlng $800. 645-6300 Daya 848-5800 c~~:i~8:g! o~,~~rd Jo°N ~r13~ce amCal~ ~•wi:,n male, 8 mos. 545-8735 $99 552-0796 498-1540 WANTED: Pvt Pty wants to Convenrentry Located
SMOKER 873-0954 545.3954 To gd hm. Coon Hound. 6 Fixtures 3 Manneklna. 1980 HOBIE 16 wllrlr: by reasonable Travel Trtr, & Competltlv.ty Priced
S 1 d 1 yrs, heellhy. sweet dll· goose neclls 2 rounders, many 11tras. xlnt cond. will pay cash (213) &
ecur ty guar , reg.Sony. WllTH/WllTllHI position, spayed Will pay 4 shells Cabinet w/llrea. $ 1900 846· 1787 925-8940 Newport Bell area 4,00 for food 846-4468 dys. -=---=--.,,.------,...,..= hr Call Tues· Thurs bet (O.olrtall) 499.3749 evM & wknda bakers rack. Musi 91111 21· Aurura, flberglaH, with Aatt tlicn
SPM-6AM. 675-2575 21 yrs end over. dean cut, 675-5396 from 10·8pm. cabin. All .. 111. worth IMPORTANT Sales·Servlee-Leaslng ~-------nice eppeatanoe Fun at-Fara tart I 25 ------$4500. wtll take $1800
Service station anendant, mosphere Good money 1rDEcoA .. ToR's OWN ... HO. Train table & road Best and cheepeat etlp at NOTICE !ONDREADERS JO (ATJ\ 'ER lull time, Chevron station. • 1 Th ... d F 1 .,,.. ,. 1 d 1 bl c M k ,. J\ V •-·· c •• ,.pp Y ur ..... ay an r • Collon, sofa, love Space race se · en 8 81' B 81 b011 111 8 r "DVEA.TISERS °" ... 1 <S ~ ~ -r ·I'~ I\\ 3000 Falrv.,, .. , .m day, 3.5 pm. Satuday 8-8 k c h e s t • C 11 I I 85 t-4 133 ,... rt.."-'-I"-•1\. r-~'
Service Station workers, pm. BOMBAY BROAD-saving oa wall units 642-4100.Ana Ad ------...,---The price ol ltema ,... "'""' ..,, • ..... . PIT S6/hr Call Steve. CASTING CLUB 2722 No Gorgeous oal\ din set 696. 24 flours 21 ' Clipper Yacht, Trallrlte 1d11trtl1ed by vehlcla v.,<· ... .. .... ....
Main, Santo Ana w/metchlng colfee tbl trlr. 4HP Jottnson. Must deai.1 In the vatllcle OCR\ll~R 645-5760 ,., Unused qn mattress Jacobs SurlbOard, 9' 10" sell 13000. 831·5153 claulfled advarll1lng
Sm Fashion tale Law ottki W&ITllEll/ER 4 box 11prlng1. S 175 Xlnt cond. $70 Clmenl . columns doe• not Include needs pit oto aa11 for Ill· Experienced lull and Brass lamps. Oat( bdrm Moped. nda work $75. 24 Swedlth Trad. Sloop any applicable taxH. Sa~LeNlng
Ing & reception. Mature, p/tlme Apply In person set PP. 972-4695 873-851 I Days FG on wOOd, >clnt cond, llcanH, tran1lar '"'· UlllEST h d kl Mil all I -90% r .. tOt11<1. \/olvo In-flnence cri.ro-. ,_ for ar WOt SngS. ,.... .. r a.n Patio Cafe 1900 W 2 Twin bedt, $80 ae MAGIC ISLAND gold brd head, fathO, tandem air poltutlon control d._ llVEITlllf Flex hrs . vwn trant BalbOa B 9-11 am Waahe & OT.; Ilka new "-lhlP I I lull '"I s Ill ..-" 7so-Oso8 Beth r · !Nim....,, • nc · ,. trlr a tow away. vice cartlflcatlona or • '75 "002 4 •""' I WllTIEll/Wlmll S350 set. 67 ·9041 ree-$750 831-361 t evea. 15500 490-7890 dHl•r documentary cond. (033NJL) """'" II r
SteUonery Store In Corona Pert/time Mature person 4 rattan arm chairs, table. Meglc-11tend Unllmlled 27 fl, •IMP• 2.11200 obo. p~aratlon chargee un-• '71 530; auto, sn rf, (806
del Mar needs FIT ex· preferred. Call for Inter-4 shell standing arch. all Membership. Pllld thru 11 ,, wl trlr 1300 obO leea othenit!M llPllClfled RXL)
perlenced aalesperson view Answer Ad •806 $495 760-9387 Dec. S950 714-995-8205 675. 7083 ' · by the adwrllatf • ·79 320!; 4 epd, A/C (045
07S-tOlO 642-4300. 24 hrt . 86" rust couch, S ISO 40" UXD) Newport Beach club famlly '73 SABOT Fl~rglaaa. late nt/ • '79 320!; 4 ePd .. klnrool. Have aomethlng to NII? di• md walnut burl din. me m b 11 rah IP. S 7 0 0. Aluminum MHt Rao. Patti HI 9 ('u" X .. K) Claaalfled 1<11 do It wall. Sell Idle llama 642-5878 table, $75 957-1834 964-1962. pm. RI 137 .. • 2 1.:,,3 00"' .., g " v4 • ..., 'Bf QBi m hOOCI. trunk, • '80 3204: au10 .. "' n
Ullf PILOT
11&111111 TIAllEI
Now accepting apphcations
for District Man.ager to su per-
vise newspaper carriers.
Salary commensurate wlth
experience. Com pany ben-
efits plus bonus opportunity.
Must have Van, station
wagon or pick up with/shell.
Mileage alJowance included.
Apply in person, weekdays,
3PM to 5PM at 330 West Bay
St .. Costa Mesa.
Drexel gem91blt w/cht1lr1
$350 2 ofl wtlt Cklb thra,
$85 ... 857·8844
Eatate Sale: All muet gol King u Bdrm 1111 (5 piece)
$350 Dinette Ml w/8
chalra I 100 Burgundy
Nlugh Recliner $200
Beav 7' So•e 1250. Prua
ml1c trom $5-$26 811/Sun t0-3 544-8152.
FOR SALE Complete
Bedroom Set, Including
OrflHr, 2 Bookahelv".
Qe11!, Night 8t1nd. Trun-
dle Bed w/New Mllraaa
CHIP 804-8941
For Sala • SiK!Oot
hlda-11-Md. Brown plald,
Il k • new 1715 00.
660· 1710
King size water bed,
tllelled hdl>fCI w/mfrrOf.
6drwT pednttl, w/haatar
& rail r>•d• 1300
650 4294
lllT&U TlOml AMF Puffer 13' Race other petta. t~ ... VW ("3 2ER)
Sal Oct 6 concert.Pactllc Sloop, tr1r, xlnt $1095. Bua r a ar bench • '80 3201, auto., AIC Amp, 2 , ... ~ Miii. 673-6853 801·2220 661·2220 (1AHY239)
$4IO bOlh 969" 1221 af1, 6 Hobie 18 on trtr. Full OOl()( PAINT & LITE BODY • R:::,~ (7~~0h.~t0· Sun
STUNNING (NEW) 1 05 Ct package. 12900. call WORK: Up to 60% off • '80 ~; 4 tpd, Lo "''
RUBV AINO (Cert. of 8P· 7141240..0106 YoUf Ml 9111"9•1221 6655493 &~~al) 12~0~· T~o'~i K50 "MUST SELL" Prtc. ... '"" • Re!;, (~~;s:o1id. Sun
640..4041 R•duoed 84 2-1234 047·1994 • '82 7331,· 5 •"". roadt<l 182.SOO/BKR .,.....
\/IOEO GAMES FOf ALL Van or motOf ham.. foam (7365637)
Home Syetems & Com-LaMr 60 cuthlona, aH ..,.._ two 11141l1
pvtOfa. Lower Coll Than 675--4848. ...11 (OM dbla), blu.. No 2oe W l tt. Santa Ana
Any StorH Ruuall LASER SAIL BOAT 1700. raaeonable On.t" reluMd. Ctoeed Sund-.y
8g4-8947/89s..3618 073·6117 714·781·0030
v1ny1 hlCJ ... ·bad. $75. 10 LAUR 11 Liit• NW. lnOI. Aitta Wu... Nit
f1 tallbotlt. $195 477 N dolly, 8ptnnalct( and All 1---------. Newport Blvd, 1118 Avlll. Extras.. 84&-268e WI llJ
WINI! VAULT ChltHU lido 14, dey aallw, tr1r, USl!OOAA8 a TRUCKS
Pe111 by \liking, holds 312 oover, exit cond. S 1750 COM! INOA CALL FOR
bottlff, 20 C:.HI 38"' • obo 7&1·9181. PIDAPPlllUL 48 I( 80", kaac>I WIM It Cottniar•O.Ulo conttattl tamp & hu-MOfgan 30/i, beeuUM. ~
mldlly 10..I tor apara ovat S 10,000 refit, new 10211B!AOH 8L \/0,
•oom or gtttQe Prk* ~:mt:· r°'~ 1-::,: HUNTINGTON HACH
LARGE SELECTION Of
NEW&.£ 8MW'SI
.... '11...w
VOLUME SALES
H AlllCI a L!AS1No ,
3870 N ONrry A_..
LONO &EACH
(No Cheffy nlt-40&)
'114)111-llM tr~lna Wak:omt
..M!!!!!!!~~ ........................... ~--~~ ---:~~ :~:rrvu~ ~~9:111• 132.1100 652-7143 .. 1 ... .,, we.1111
(
I
I"
'
11 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, Aug. 11. 1983
"At"'· laf!!!.. AatM, laert.. Aaa., laf!!t.. atel, laf!!t.. AatM, laprt.. Aat•, lat!!!.. _ Aatt1, laprtN
tll2 lea•a tlll •11•1 1141 Ptat"' llSS Y1lll1wa1ta 1173 V1lk1wa1ta -1173 •lie .
....,,...., _____ ....,-...111! Honda CMQ, good '82 RX7, '7.600 ml. 6ik. 5 79'-" PEUGEOT 604 ·82 VW Sunrr Bug. Run1 81 Jett• lJal, inn, a11, com;--""'f'"'n·&-... -""N"'ewpor--t ·~~·~~;= ~:: con d , good 1 n t . •Pd 1tk, 111/rt, air, am/Im Wagon, g11 model, 4 Oood l>Ody, nd1 work 51po, tank, AM/FM ca11 BHch'1 nne1t Mleotlon
BMW aMlfm caae Snrt, I 1500/0BO 542-M33 9 f::· :~,~.,.~ikb;a. nc:!· apeed, 1Jr. ata<eo, 45,000 $650. ee t-2220 etMeo. 2or. perlect cond of pr~vlously owned
Altoyt, 121,&00 ()elphln '76 cvcc: wagon, clean. $t0,600 e7:s-t te7 <lyt, ml, Flawltu Cond '83 B•fUt8Q eng, lrun. $5450 5-48-8451 Poree ta, Audia and
'72 Pinto
1 1000
run1 g,e1t
549-2724
Qr9y, 806-269-989 t AM/FM 119190, nu radl· -844-, 197 '3,960 831•3018 AM/FM CUI, new, paint, 81 vw--pfck.yp dii'LX
alt. lo ml $2600/0BO It Ptrtclal t1S7 tlrea. Int Fu1 & aharp w/cap. 5-ap. 1lr, 111<eo.
70 Ranct1ero GT. nv urea
tllll cond Beet otter
548-8e25 646-13H Dttlu 1117 640-9015 trc ti aa $2400/ofr 546-8451 mint thruout. $42116. 1686 288 SE c-. Whit ·~1' White, 3HA, eunroot, 970-0646 ..-----"2"..I~ ·eo Camero 228, 1 ownr, ·91.·92 Citation•. all have air, autom1t1c. •Int '81, 4 d""', 5 fO, 47,000 77 Accord Hatehbacil. 5 .,.. •In' cond .,, 200 Mu at ·93 Micro Bue. Run1 great ...... • w/ra<l, auto. PS/PB/PW. ~ ' • ... I 000 6 .. 6 3 -total mllaa, run1 goo<l tp<I. great cond, .,2900. B 1 • u Punk 1 • n 8 w aelll 497-2894 3 • 4v· 14 '82 Wfftphllll Cemper Low •• 653-0633, • 1600. 557· 1247 968-8 t84 •6• v t'""" d Oletel.pop top, xlnt cond. Mloh1llna, local car. '68 9t2, rebll eng, nu ~ an, '7'JV eno. goo o $ 700 2 9688 '12t200,newpalnt,g00<1 '78 AccrdLX,5ap.vrycln, 17300/obo.760·0755 clutch, brka, 51pd. cond $2200 obo tK, 11 •. 64 ·
tlr•. $950. 5-45-1097 tYI $3200 Obo. 84().7187 .-=~~---,..--~ $4500 63t-9059 831·10 .. 4 ,...,.._ _________ -----...,.--...,..-...,.-'61260SL. IUtO, Kini cond. --
'74 2eoz. tm/fm 8-track.4 '79 Honda. 43K ml, Ilk• Must Hll s 14,200. I 11 11 '67 VW BUG Conv a pd , run 1 gr a 1 t n-. new rtdlala, brkt & 640-5 l92 I I tJCt "CLASIC" Xlnl Cond 5 4 0 . 4 5 3 O a I I 5 batt. $3250. pp 675-4895 S3600/0BO 873-8627
73t-775t ' '72 250. XLNT lntwlor, · "81 Chile 15000X, am/tm runs grut, Muat Sall by
'11 200SX. 5 tp<I, am/tm cau, •llver 13900. Mond1y 539-9184 ltereo, MW tlrN, wall 759-0260 or 759-6025 ft•_,. f I 1 t '75 460SLC, ~d/taOdle ...,.., °'· '1W man an-'83 H~da 4 or Accord ..,.,. •2300 •~o •128 .,.., Int, solld cat. aka otter. ........... • .... .... 6500 mllel. All 9AlrHI 540·0737. 646-5865.
'68 VW Bug Rune greall ~ CAJ{\!£R N-Interior, n-muffler ~ 1 c ~ and llatt. Am/FM eter l~-1~1~~ CUI $1500 wkOys
•!>40 lM«llll• ,..., N1.......omt1N1t• 645-519 t, ev 641-6664
N('M'(.olll llJl('tt , .. IMO 6'144
'77 2eoz, clean, Ilk• new. 19500. Like new. 846-7841
$5960/bet Off, 548-8610 I 7 '78 450SL. MUii .... Exit . 1aH cono. 126,500. 875-6815 =----·77 B210 htc:hbck. runs or 673-4617 ft71t1 91'
ClOSlO SUNDAYS '69 Bug, restored, orig,
valve Job, llke nu. $2600.
631-9059.
good. hu some body m 476 cellca ST air new d1m1ga. nu clutch tires, AM /FM atereo
I 1250 obo 67~4 t5 radio, $2000 546-9335.
'11 B210 ox. 5-ap, run• 754-8870 aek for J.J good, $2000/0BO '82 3000 Turbo, muat NIL 838-7032 It cond, lo ml. Call '76 Corolla Llltback, auto, 5-6030 n-tires, rune great,
'16 Z 2+2. Xlnl cond, t $1995. Work 833-20t4,
ow ner, $7000/obo, lllllel••••rs Ask about the money we home673-5768 494-7735. 836-4700 ~ can eave you thru our
.-69 VW, litres cln, AM/FM
cass. nu paint, rbh eng
$3000/olr 720--0291
'10 Bug, nu eng w/recs,
radlal1. am/Im tape, eitll
cond. $t750. 661-3982.
'7 t Bug. Runs/Looks
great S 1700. 856-6645
Oya. 63t·1279 ev/wknds
SOUTH purcnue & leue plan1.
'62 280ZX. T-top, 5 apd, ,,,. SU ... I
loaded. Extended M(V1ce COUITY warr. new etl<*w . ..._Ing 11 ... 1'
"60 Turcel. Litt bk,a/c,
am/Im cass. ,1ln1 cond. ·71 Super Bealle conv, nu
$3950/obo, 969-2526 paint. lop, good cono.
$11,900/obo, mull Mii. lllZI 1301 Quall Street 15K ml. 499-2922 NEWPORT BEACH
Oet11.1n 200SX '77. Air.
automatic. Good cond.
$2500, Iv mag 831-7332
"WI WILL llT IH-1100
IE lllllllLI Volume Sales. Service
AnO Ltalng
fiat 1123 18711 Beach Blvd.
MB '77 3000. mint. 1
owner. PP, S t2.300.
714/640-4062
Mull NII IMMEOIA TEL Y
V1lk1wa11a t173 S3000 obo. 760-9662 l•7•8-R;;,a;,;,boiiiob•ll•Oiiii~-l.-en-rt"'".'"'2•d""r, '72 VW. clean. new
<lspd, AM/FM. Runs & tires/brakes, re-bit en-
looks greet $2350. glne, am/Im cass, bra.
546-845t M Ult sell. $ 2 4 50 714-85 t -2222 days,
549-0626 eves & wknde '79 <Isl Rebbll. lo ml. 1
iil!W~.w .. -.------w• Huntington Beach '73 128, New tlr•. am/tm (l 1 _..) l_..2-2000 c au. S700 obo. • •
M tl4 ownr, 4-ap. AIC. mint orig cono.. 50mpg, '73 Super Beatie, am/Im, ·11 MOB GT, rebll eng, $3l75. 970--0548 nu p1lnt & uphols. orlo good Int. cus. mags. ownr $3000 675-t73!l
Miil ltlllU't SOUTH
COUITY
YOLISWAIEI
"WEW1t.LHT
HllHlllLI"
Volume Sales, Service
And Leasing
1871 t Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
(714) 142-2000
VOLKSWAGEN
,•:•, WISTWAGEN ,•:•,
A personal and proud ••· clualve VW agency dedl·
ceted to quality Mfvlce,
spare perta. and a com-
petitive sales preaen-
tallon of the unique
Volkaweoen quality ve-
hicles
BOB CHALLMAN'S
"Tll HIT" LITILE CAR HOUSE
IN COSTA MESA
Many priced below
WhOlelale
Oealerl ~Oma
'69 Chryaler $970
N-Yor1ca<. YXZ706
'72 Ford 4 Or.11190
Gran Torino. 445FLB.
·73 Pinto H/baek $ 1290
Auto 997JET
'75Plntowgn l t290
Auto. Squirt. 492MW0
'72 Audi 4<Ir.I1290
100LS. 85'ZOO
·71 OO<lge Dart I t390
Pwr. air 1420TS
·72 Marc Cougar $1390
XR7. pwr, air. 290FNA.
'74 Chev Nova S 1390
Pwr, air, auto. 246ZIC.
'73 Mere HOtop $1490
Auto. pwr, air. 220GNM
·73 Mere Hdtop S 1490
Montego, air. 048GNN
'73 Ply. Outtw $1490
HOtop, pwr, air. 787HSW
'76MercWgnl1590
Montego MX. 763NXC.
· 7 1 Ford Pickup $ 1890
F100, auto. M0749.
'70 VW Bua $1990
10 passenger. 023BTO.
'79 Buick Skyhawk 12 t90
4 apd, pwr. 10MF709.
"60 ChevChevatteS2570
4 epd. air. 308VSQ.
'f6 Sevllla. •Int cond. lull
power, nu tlr", 2-tone
gry/blk. w/blk vinyl lop.
$5000 63 t-7772 'IOFIU211
·77 Coupe de VIiie. exit ,,,-----,.:-----Brand MW Int. runt very cond. n-urea, 70,000 Outatandlng '78 Sliver Ann good, new Urea, S 1600,
ml, loaded. $4800 obo. Corvette all ex1r11. al e, conatoar trade 969-1221
951 8511 re<l leather, t top, cu11 ~-.,,.------,r&'.=
• · whla, n-shadow rear Llactla 3
'78 Eldo BlarlU, 62K ml, wind cover. 47 m. $9200. Mark Iii. '76 clanlc.
lull pwr. nu llrea & rao, 640-7824 al1 6 pm burgundy. Kint cond,
en/rt. $7495. 7S4-t850 must -· must Miii 01· SEE US FIRST! ,., •. 673-3313 TIE URIEST
SELEOTill
of late modal. low mileage
Cadlllao• In Southern
Callfornlal See u1 tod1yl
IAIERI
OAllLUC
We l}ava e good Mlecilon
of \IEW &. uMd Chev· Mercuy
rolttal See u• todayl ,lii7•5~C:;ouo""'••-rr.-eng-. ....;n:;;;a.,;.;;;19a
COM MELL
CHEVROLET
'A.!>1 I l.11 I•,, Ill', I
work. $500 64 t-8000
Must sell '73 Capri, Qood
Irena c ar. lo ml
$1000/0BO 645-2035,
1119/13 642-t578 2600 Harbor BlvO --,,.,,.=
COST A MESA Ol•1at~il1 9 27
• • l!--1 \ \H..., \
S46-l 200
540-1860 __ ·67 &d1 Cutlua HOiiday
'63 Falcon Spr1 Cpe con-Coupe Like new. IO ml, ~ .. 6-<:)'1. nu eng, every-orig owner Sacrlllce Clanr1ltl . tlll thing nke n-26mpg $995 650-6130 160 Chevy Bltceyne. runt $3800. 675-3205 ·eo Cutlua Brghm. V8.
good, good cono. $1100. '65 Mustang. rune good, Company cer going off
646-5164, 538·1288 needs some work. $800 lse. Loaded Full pwr.
·99 Mellbu, em/Im tape obo. Ed 845-8258 C.M. 14999. 759-9219
deck, low mlles. S 1200 or '66 MuS1ang. Need• some Olds '78 Cutlua Supreme.
mal<e olfe<. 675-5365 work. Runs goo0 $1800 Top contd New tires,
·73 CAPRI, very clean, iclnt obo. 645-7405 blue, pvt ply Aaatlng
841-ooee J11ur 129
'll ln'MI 124 '63 Jaguar Mark ii . $2200 obo. 642-6580 '79 Rabbit Diesel. 4 dr. 4 Marcie
•""" ttn I '''.'~WESTWAGEN 1% '74'~ MOB Roe01tar. moo 799 ";~7 mmac. ·-=7-4'""'S,....u_pe_r_Bee=--,,...le-,S""'u-n-roo~I.
'8 t Toyota Tercel $2590
5 spd. 1CNM78 t.
'73VWCamper13290
Seterl bubllletop. 51043.
'76 Ply. Vol. Wgn 12490
Premier. aJr. 1CBK576
cond. 1 1700. 548-8698 '68 Falcon gd eng noa bOy ~~~: C~ :h 1':~Su-
'78 Caprice claaelc. mint wrk SSOOcash 846·82 10
cond, no urea. loaded, ,68 Ranchero restored, Wagon ·79 Cullus, auto,
2-tone blue. pp 13900. auto & air. mag whit. air, delael 13750 Rune good, 1trong engine, Clesslc, 7 8,000 orig.
new top&. paint. 11900. mlles, 3.6 L, 4 door
Call Angel, 847-6272. e ed an, auto m a t I c
'76 Flat 128, 4 apd, gd
oond. S 1000/obo. Oy1
978 -9421. Ev/wknd
Borg-Warner trans,
am/Im marine benO
Blaupunkt 1tareo, bronze
with bucket aeata, wire
'11 Spl<I«, lo ml, lmmac .• wheels. $3500/0BO.
S2 tOO,pleaae cell • Rblt motor, N-Inter,
551-8575 alt 4 pm, ·79 VW Dal Rabbit. dl11, elr. radials, S2600, 642-8555
·77 .. OB c I h d 4sp0, 40r, stereo, Kint. s 8 I ,... onvt. P ui ar 2,.K ml. 14700. 851-3922 '74 uper ug, 43K or g . top. am/Im $2750/obo mllea, excep:lonelly clean
Car must go 548-6477 60 Rabbll Convertlble th r u out. S 2 9 O O.
I 1 SI w/all white exterior and 646-1929 0,. 9 top. White lntwlor ano ail
Ecurle Shir lee Corp.
7600 Westmlnaler Blvd
Phone 714/VW1-WEST
Total Performance VW's
"Are You
Hav1n· Any Fun?" V•••• t11s
640-4979 $3450. 642-48 to ;;;;:64;--2_ ... _6_1..,.o ___ T-.:=
'78 MALIBU CLASSIC '69 Mustang, n-Urea, ... ·~·~ .. ·-·-•-la;....,..._.-.-, 4 dr. S3350. 644-5450 s17oo. 545•1097 eva ·bsapporo, l 11 Powe<. l
, wheel dl\C t>rllkn, $8000 73 Stal wgn. 2L eng, obo, 839-9099
$3750. 495-2497. 963-3751.
~-------~
1r' Opel Kadel b lnor eittraa, lncludlng new
body work. Xlnt oon<I. stereo tepe $7650
'16 Conv. t'-Pskln seats. cover, bre, em/Im cua, '71 4 dr, WT. Good cond.
beaut ltly blue w/alloy ~s_1_000_._9_86-_M_79_-,-
whla. Vou mu•1-and I '73 vw VAN w/Bra, Very
mu st se II, S 6 t 0 0 . Good. $3,000. 963-1165
'78 0101 C/Sup Br $3790
Full pwr. air. 404ULA
'79 Buick Reg. LTD $3990
Fun pwr, air. BJK267.
'60 Ford Convert 16250
Mod. "A" rep. 1AOL461.
ALL W/CALIF. SMOG
Llttle Miu Mulfet tat on a
Tulfet. along came •
eplOtr ano read In lhe
Dally Piiot Claullled
MC11on about Miu Muf-
te1'1 Tutlet 111\d bought It
tor 19.95 Vou can Mii
your tulfet and Iota of
other thlnga through
Dally Piiot Clanllled
Ade. Call 642-5876
good bo<ly, lair running.
Nos AIT work $425. Peatlec t3 S
875-6610 or 631-8335 •79 900;;;;;0; 8rouoh:m. '78 Spider, Loolla &. Rune 'll l.1$ INIT1 otlPf
GREAT $3200. 857-2431 RARE MODEL. 17000. S650/lirm. 831-9322 646-8647
Muat NII '76 Flat 124 Sprt 786-115515-49-2288 PH("t 91!15
oorwert. Xlnt trans. car, laraau ClaJ1 1132 78 !ronze 604. cluatc goo<l In/out. $2500/0B0 .1!9!________ leathef lnta<lor. Smooth
845-2035, alt 9/13 173 COOv, atlCk, rvn1e11it. rlda.POWa<tunroof,wln-
1 &42-1578 S4000 Obo. 676-1267. d O W I . I 4 8 5 0 .
. -8-1_C_o-nvt--R-e-b-bl-t.-a-ut-o.
AM/FM. lo ml. $7450.
5'U451
------
551·5881 or 833-7650.
... IHALl/ULll"
443 W. Bay, CM 845-2963
Ok. Blu Volvo. '72 142. Have you read today'•
4 t470 ml. Blue Booll. Cta11lllad Ada? II not,
S2500, our price $1800. you're mllelng the bea1
760-1095. bargalnl In town!
·75 Capri, mull sell. 4 dr, mn/rt, Ill elt1ru .
$1500. 675-9041 Sacrifice ule. Balow io....
'78 Fiesta 4-ap, nu Urea,
beeut. orig. red paint,
runs graa1 $1695
970-0548
book $4350 657-6644
MAP
MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE
WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
ATLAS CHRVSLH·Pl YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 546-1934 3 bloct.s
soultl ol San Diego Freeway oll Harbor Blvd Complete
body shop Sales Service Paris Service Oepl open
Monday lhru FriOay 7 30 A M to 5 30 P M and 8 A M 10 5
P M on Saturday
ORANGE COAST AMC/JEEP/RENAULT
•25;.>4 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa
549-8023 645-7770
= t Jeep Dealer in the West• See us tooay lor sales service
& leasing There are reasons why we are = t Price and
se1ec11on1 Also .the all-new Renault Alliance os f'tere•
'
THEODORE ROllHS FORD
Modern sales, service. parts, body, paint & trre depta.
Competitive rates on lease & d111ly rentals 2060 Har1lor
Blvd . Costa Mau 642·0010°'540-8211
WISTWAGIN
A personal and prOUd exclualw VW 809f\Cy dedicated to
quatlty MNICe, epar• parta, and a competitive .. ,.. preaen-
tatlon ()( IM unique Volktwagen quality Yehle.... Bob
Chtlllman'1 WESTWAOEN -a Ecurte Shin. C0tp. 1eoo Weetmlnltlf Blvd/BMett Phone H 4/VW1-WEST.
Total Performance VW'e "Ara You Havtn' Any Fun?"
DAVID J. 'HILLIPS IUICK-,ONTIAC ·MAZDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 AllCIB Parkway
837-2400
SOUTH COUNTY VOUCSWAOIN/ISUZU
(FC>fmerty Jim Merino VOlkawaoenl
1871 t Beach 81vd .. Huntington S.actt. (714) 842-2000
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLOlll
5 Year Financing 0 .A.C. & Fl .. t Ofacounts
LONG BEACH BMW
Large selection of new & quality u~d BMW s ano olhe• line
cars' Sales service & leasing Trade-ins welcome' Take 405
Freeway to Norlh Cherry oll·ramp turn right & go 6 blocks
north 10 3670 N Cherry Ave Long Beach
(7 t41636-5790 (;.>t31427-5494
0
NAIHS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540-9 100 Orange
County s Largest Cadillac deale• Sales Service Leasing
fD SOUTH COAST DODGI
"Your Friendly Ne I ghborttood Dodge Dealer1hlp "
2888 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Meta 540-0330
Sales, Leasing & A Full Servlc. Department
lnCIUdlng Body And Paint Shop
We speclallze In custom van conversions In all price ranges
AND WE PAY CASH FOR USED CARS TOOi
CHICK IVHSON PORSCHE-AUDl-VW
4 15 E Coast Hwy Newport Beach 6 7 3-0900 The only
dea1erst11p 1n Orange County w11h lhese three greot makes
under one rooi'
• ALAN MAGNON PONTIAC-SUIAIU
2480 H arbo• Blvd Coste Mesa Tel 549·4300 Satea
S11r111ce Leas1nQ Mr Goodwrenoh
•• CLASSIC AUTOMOllLIS
765 Newlon Wey, Colla Mesa. Tel. 831 1393
"JAGUARS OUR SPECIALTY'"
XK 120'a/ 140'1/ l50'1lXJ'a/E-Typee
Salee -Sel'vlce -Reator•tlone •
PAINT AND BODY SHOP
Off Ptecentl• ~tWMn 17th & 18th In Cotta M"•
IOI LONGPRE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd Westminster Tei 892-6651 Orange
Countv 'i oldest ano lorgest Ponhac. dealership Sales
Srrv•ce Parts
DICK MILLER FIAT/LANCIA
P1 (1baolv lhe lowesl priced Fiats 1n Southern Ca11torn1a ..
flocatPd I mile nonh of South Coast Plaza
near Ma111 SI anO WarnPr Ave 1n Santa Anat
120 w Warne• Santa Ana 557·213:.>
0
SANTA ANA DATSUN
200 1 E 17th Street San1a Ana Tel 558· 78 t t Your
Or•Q1nal Ded1c.a1ert Datsun Dealer
SHOW IVllYONI WHlll YOU All •••
on oyr Orange Coast Car Gu:Je Mapl When you llat your
aut~tlve bualneta (no new car dfflef1ttlp1 otea.M) In the
DaNy Piiot. you reach the ~ Coaet•I Market trom
Huntington Beach to San C te. Call fOI' rM eonable
rat .. and more Information -&Mt for Sandra L ... e11t. 322.
New Car O.alersttlpa ... call your outllde l&lell rep
0 CORMIH DeLILLO CHIVIOLIT
(Formerly Groth Chev1olet)
182 1 I Beach Blvd . Huntington Beach
NPw • Used • Sales • Leasing • Perts • Sor111ce
Come by nnd se"' our Huge Inventory•
847-6087 549-333 '
HACH LINCOLN MllCUIY
"We're new and eager lor your bualneu " Complete Hies.
service and body shop lacllltlea Ona of the targaat
Inventories 1n Southern Callfomla of naw Lincolns end
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f'rMway on Beach Blvd. In Huntington Beech.
16800 BeM!tl Blvd IM&-7739 or 558· 1008
HOLMES TUTILI DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd •• Cotta Mesa Tel. 540-6410 Tttla O.taun
location hu been Mr\'lng Orange C°"11ty 10< 16 yewa. 1
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ownership pledges to beat all compe1lt1on
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:Home ot W1ll1e the Whalet 5440 Garden Grove Blvd
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' I
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The rich get richer
IR S finds more m illionaires today
WASHINGTON (AP) -The typical rich American woman is
richer and older than the typical rich American man.
But there are two rich men for every rich woman, the Internal
Revenue Service ooncludee after studying a sample of estate tax
returns. Of the 4.5 million people with aseets of $300,000 or more in
1981, 65 percent were men.
The avenge net wonh of the wealthy women was $637,000;
for men, $471,000. The IRS found that 28 percent of the women
were widows; 4 percent of the men were widowers. Ftfty·two
percent of the rich men were 50 or older, compared with 71 perwnt
of the women.
The study estimated that the number of U.S. millionaires
increased from 180,000 in 1976 io as many as 500,000 in 1981, due in
.. ~~~~~ great part to inflation; $1 million just doesn't go as far as it used t.o.
-The $1 million in 1981 would buy what $677, 12 l would have bought
in 1976.
THE ORANGE COAST
Robin George
Krishna s uit cut
to $9. 7 million
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... Delly -IUfl
A $32 million jurr settlement for a 23-year-old Orange County
woman and her mottier -both of whom sued the Hare Krishna
movement clauning the girl had been kidnapped nme years ago -
waa reduced by an Orange County judge Wednesday to $9. 7 million.
Superior Court Judge James Jackman called the jury's award
"excessive" and ordered it reduced by about three-quarters. He said
the amount given to Cypress resident Robin George and her
mother, Marcia, "exceeds the bounds of justice."
ln a nine-page written decision, Jackman said, "The primary
reason ... for reducing the award of punitive damages is this court's
view that such award is excessive. The amount of punitive damages
exceeds that which is needed to punish the defe ndants or is
(See KRISHNA, Page AZI
ClllT IDITIDN
.THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Slaying
• • v1ct1m
found
in Mesa
By STEVE MITCHELL
Otho.tr ......... A man's body was dlscovered
ou~ide a boarded-up house on
Hamilton Street this morning by
Costa Mesa police who, hours
earlier, w ere called out to a
beerparty less than a block away
in which a stabbing may have
taken place.
Police Lt. Jack Calnon said
officers found the body of a man
described only as Hispanic, lying
beside a flowering bush at an
abandoned house at 522 Hamilton
Street shortly after 9 this morn-
ing. It is the fourth homicide in
Costa Mesa since early July.
The body was found by Officer
Jim Taylor, who was one of six
police officers searching the
neighborhood following a 3 a.m.
dispute at a house on Hamilton
Street. where police were told a
stabbing had occurred. The body
was lying face down, the victim
garbed in a burgundy shirt, long
trowers and boots.
"We responded to a house at 577
Hamilton where about 20 people
were. drinking beer in a patio
area," Calnon said this morning.
"Two of the participants got
into a verbal altereation which
resulted, we think, in a fight. One
subject may have been stabbed
two or three times."
Witnesses told police the victim
was pulled into a red "full-sized"
car by the suspect and driven off
toward nearby Harbor Boulevard.
(See MESA , Page AZ )
A pause that r e freshes
Just as this bee enjoys th e bounty of
a tropical water lily, ~o can O range
Coast area residents and visitors
en joy a brief respite from the hustle
a nd b ustle of the everyday world
amid the beauty a n d serenit y of
Sher man Gardens, a secluded oasis
in Corona del Mar. For a brief
g limpse of all Sherman Gardens has
to offer, see Page C I .
No love lost
in Newport
tennis flap •
By GL~NN SCOTf
and KAJ\EN E. KLEIN
OflMDellJ-•tllll
Tennis promoter Bill Stamps,
the man who organized last week-
end's High Stakes tournament at
the Newport Beach Tennis Club,
initially hoped the event would be
the first of five in the city.
Stamps said during a telephone
interview W~esday that New-
port Beach is the capital of tennis
in Southern California and the
perfect spot for an annual tour-
nament.
But the embattled Stamps, who
week managed to make enemies
among many of the people he
dealt with at the tournament this
week, said he never wants to run
another event in the city.
"Not in Newport Beach," he
said. "Possibly over on the Irvine
side but not in Newpon Beach.
Never."
The feeling seems to be mutual.
So far this week, the promoter
has had business difficulties with
the following groups:
•The tennis club: Club officials
filed a lawsuit Tuesday claiming
Stamps owes them an additional
$13,700 for services and expenses,
but the promoter said Wednesday
he doesn't intend to pay. In fact, he
said he may go to court to reclaim a
$10.000 check he paid in advance.
•The city: A crime report was
taken after Licensing Supervisor
Dave Larson, the man in charge of
ensuring that city conditions were
met. alleged Wednesday morning
that Stamps threatened him over
the telephone. Stamps also has
refused to pay a $2,140 check to
cover wages for city workers at
the event.
•The security fi.rrri: The owner
of Signal Hill-based Shaw In-
vestigations and Security has filed
s uit alleging Stamps stopped pay-
ment on a $3,000 retainer check.
Owner Victor Stringer said
'Stamps also has re f used to pay the
remainder of his bill for "several
thousands of dollars." Stamps said
the company did a lousy job and
(See TENNIS, Page AZ)
Midwife confesses,
faces terlll in prison
Fighting together, separately
By tbe Associated Pren
An Orange County woman who
says she has delivered at least 600
babies pleaded guilty Wednesday
to one count or practicing nud-
wHery withou t a license m a
negotiated plea bargain.
Kelly Lou Staker. 34, of Garden
Grove. "will face up to three years
in state prison for the one guilty
oount," said Deputy District At-
torney Chris KraUck .
This was "a clear-cut case of an
individual engaging in the prac-
tice of medicine without a
license," Kralick said.
West Orange County Municpal
Coun Judge Kathleen O'Leary
accepted the plea and sent the case
to Supenor Court Judge James L.
Smith. who will sentence Staker
after ordering a probation report
later this month.
Staker. who had been released
from jail in May pending trial on
eight felony counts of practicing
without a license, was arrested
last Thursday for investigation of
the same charge after a Pomona
woman was hospitalized in critical
condition after giving birth at
Staker's home .
As part of the plea bargain,
Kralick insisted that Smith re-
view all eight counts against her
before sentencing.
"We know she delivered 600
(See MIDWIFE, Page AZ) Kelly Lou S taker
The.Rams and holdout tight end Mike Barber
have come to term• and Barber ta already In
camp preparing for Mond•Y night'• exhibition
game with the Dalla• Cowboya. Page B 1.
Spe ra w sh e lves campaign to push revamp-Bergeson d oesn 't
By L.P. BENET
OflMDellJ-• ....
Not surprisingly, six Orange
County Republican legislators and
candidates expressed support
Wednesday for a GOP-backed
redistricting measure designed to
reduce the number of Democrats
in the Legislature.
S o m e what s urprisingly,
though, especially for State Sen.
Ollie Speraw, R-Newport Beach,
and Assemblyman John Lewis,
R -Orange. none of the other
politicians at a press conference
said they w ould suspend their
individual 1984 election cam-
paigns until after this December's
balloting on reapportionment,
known as the Sebastiani ini~ative.
Only Speraw and Lewis said they
would cease their campaigns.
•
A news release luued by
Speraw Tuesday said Lewis, As-
semblyman Nolan Frinelle,
R-Fountain Valley, and As-
semblywoman Marian Bergeson,
R-Newport Beach, had joined him
to suspend all campaign activities
to devote their full attention to the
GOP-backed reapportionment
campaign.
The Sebastiani plan would alter
the boundaries of congrelllonal
and state legislative diatrlcta,
which are now bounded by lines
recently redrawn by Democratic
lawmake rs. Don Sebastian!,
R-Sonoma, and other Republicans
say the current boundaries unfair·
ly aid Democratic incumbents .
.Berge90n said Wectne.day !'!he
will mobllize her volunteers and
actively campa~ on behalf of the
reapportionment propaul but
that she "owed it to her conati·
tuents" to continue campatgnlflR
'
for the newly created state senate
seat in the 37th district. "I do not
see my campaign as suppl.anting
the Sebastiani campaign, but sup-
plementing it," she added.
.Bergeson ls running against
Speraw for the Senate seat. If the
redistricting initiative is pall8ed by
voters in December, separate Sen-
ate districts would be fomled for
Bergeson and Speraw, mak1nR
their primary battle unnecessary.
Bergeson, who attended the
press conference at the Irvine
Coast Country Club in Newport
Beach, said that "at no time did I
indicate to Senator Speraw that I
would cease my campaign ef-
forts."
Speraw said that a "mis-
understanding" on the part his
staff Jed them to asswne Bergeson
was ceasing her campaign because
she said she was going to attend
Speraw's press conference.
Frizzelle did not au.end the
press conference but sent word to
Speraw that he backed the Sebas-
tiani proposal and would suspend
his campalgn activities. Friuelle.
like Lewis, has no announced
opposition.
Irvine businessman Ken
Carpenter and Newport Beach
(See GOP FIGHT, Paae Al l
Warmer, drier air
to chase humidity
•
l
I ~---=--
. • I
Al * Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Thursday, Aug. 11 , 1983
CONTINUED STORIES
From P•a• A1
MIDWIFE GUILTY ...
babies by her own admisalon. We
just don't want her to do thts
anymore," Kralkk said.
Had she gone to trial and been
convicted on all l!1ght counts,
Staker faced a maximum prison
sentence or seven years and eight
months.
GOP FIGHT
psychologist Stanford Green.
both seeking the Republican
nonunation for Bergeson's 70th
assembly district seat in the June
1984 election, said they support
the Sebastiani plan but would not
commit to suspending their cam-
paigns. A third Republican run-
ning for the 70th district seat,
Robert Hopkins, also said he backs
Sebastiam, but would not hold off
his own campaign.
Only four of the 13 GOP
candidates and legislators invited
by Speraw showed up to his press
conference.
Kralick may recommend jaJI
time or probation, but said he
would not decide on that rec-
ommendauon until he sees a
probation report.
Staker, who was released Mon-
day on $10,000 bond, said she
pleaded guilty because "the way
the law is he (Kralick) Is holding
all the aces. I really had no choice
but to fold.''
She vowed to continue to fight
for th~ right of lay mjdwives to
deliver babies. Under California
law, only registered nurses can
qualify for a midwife's license.
Women "should have the right
to go where they want and be able
to have their babies they way they
want to have their babies," Staker
said after her guilty plea. "That
should be a constitutional right.
That is not something that should
be dictated to them by a district
attorney or by a doctor or by
anybody else."
HUMIDITY FADING ...
But something else is moving into the weather picture -a
hurricane named Ishmael, with winds of 85 knots and gusts of up to
100 knots. Ishmael is currently about 500 miles south of San Diego,
moving toward California at about 8 knots per hour.
Forecasters say it is too early to determine whether the
hurricane will bring rain to Orange County, but it most assuredly
will mean a return of big surf to the coast -~bly by Saturday.
How large the surf gets depends on how Ishmael intensifies.
Mentzer said. He said waves will be in the 2-to-4 foot range Friday,
and ~bly Saturday morning.
County fire officials say the smaller surf and1ower tides puts
an end -at least for now -to five days of sandbagging and rescue
work at several south Orange County beach communities.
Chuck Murphy, a spokesman for the Orange County Fire
Department, said work crews packed up and left the ocean-ravaged
Capistrano Beach community at about 1 a.m today, after standing
by through another night of rough surf and high tides. Wednesday
night's pre-midnight tide did little additional damage, Murphy
said.
He said damage figures tabulated in the aftermath of the
battering sustained by beachfront homes since Sunday night total
$1.2 million, with two homes declared unsafe and 16 others
sustaining damage ranging from decks ripped from their pilings to
broken windows.
Further north, residents in the private Blue Lagoon
community in South Laguna began cleaning up after a pummeling
Tuesday that resulted in broken windows on seven of 16
townhouses facing a breakwater.
And residents on the ocean side or Coast Highway at El Morro
Mobile Home Park, an area usually the most affected by a
combination of tide and surf. fended for themselves Wednesday,
with only one mobile home sustairung damage to its foundation.
KRISHNA SUIT ...
reasonable by way of punishment of the defendants for their
WTongful conduct."
But the judge al.so concluded the jury did have sufficient
evidence on which to base its verdict favoring lhe Georges. He said
it was his view that the defendant.s' conduct toward the Georges
was "outrageous," even though Robin was treated no differently
than others who had joined the religious sect.
Jackman also said he "was struck and strongly suspects the
jury was struck by t.he almost universal lack of candor and probable
perjury committed by many witnesses" for the Hare Krishna sect.
The decision allows the Georges until Aug. 24 to decide
whether to accept the reduced award. If they reject the $9.7-mlllion
figure. the case will have to be retried.
Attorney Milton Silvennan, who represented the mother and
daughter, said he WM unhappy wilh the judge's decision, but didn't
know whether he would seek a new trial or accept the reduced
award.
Spokesmen for the Hare Krishnas have indicated the case will
be appealed.
ln a related decision, Jackman al.so ruled that the Gt!orges are
entitled to earn 10 percent interest annually on the $9.7 million.
dating back to Jan. 3, 1983.
Mesan seized in NB
car-torching incident
Residents from three apart-
ment units at 2415 E. 16th St. in
Newport Beach were ~acuated
by police and fire.fighters early
today after a Costa Mesa man
allegedly torched a vehicle
belonging to his former girlfriend.
police said.
Michael Phalen, 40, was ar-
rested on suspicion of araon at his
home by police shortly after the
incident . He was taken to New-
port Oty Jail, where bail was set
at $25,000.
The suspect. police said, had an
argument with Frances Young.
61, earlier Wed.netkiay. Shortly
after midnight, the suspect al-
legedly entered the c.a.rport
underneath Young's apartment
and set fire to her 1978 Buick
Riviera, police said. Young told
police ahe awoke to noiaes and saw
a man she identified as her
ex-boyfriend leaving the carport.
An officer respondJng to the call
obeerved the car in flames and
evacuated restdenta living in unita
near the burning vehicle. Several
apartments were filled with
smoke. but the building was not
aerioualy damaged.
Robert Hum phrey-,
College
trustee
calls it
a career
Robert L . Humphreys. a
long-time Coast Community Col-
lege Dis trict trustee who was
targeted recently in an unsuc-
cessful recall drive, announced
Wednesday night he will not seek
re--election in November.
Humphreys, 56, has served 20
years on the district board, which
oversees Orange Coast, Golden
West and Coastine colleges, plus
KOCE Channel 50 in Huntington
Beach .
Announcing his plans at
Wednesday's board meeting,
Humphreys said his decision was
based on family and business
responsibilities. He said the recent
recall campaign, which targeted
H urnphreys and three other board
members, was not a factor in his
decision.
The recall campaign. which fell
short of the required signatures,
was launched last spring after the
district board laid off more than
100 teachers and administrators to
offset a loss of state funds.
Humphreys said he will serve
the remainder of his current term,
which expires in November.
"This community college dis-
trict is one of the finest in the
nation, in large part due to the
trusteeship of Mr. Humphreys,"
said Dr. Norman Watson,
chancellor of the district. "We will
all mias his leadership, his
creativity, his advice and his
constant support."
"There has never been a more
dedicated trustee serving this
district," said fellow trustee
George Rodda Jr.
"This has been a most painful
decision," Humphreys said "Ser-
ving (on the college board) has
been one of i.he great experiences
of my life .. Commmunity colleges
are one of lhe signficant develop-
ments in this century. I'm proud to
have been a small part of their
evolution."
S anta A nan
hurt in c rash
in Ne wport
A 23-year-old Santa Ana man
was in serious condition early
today at Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hospital after his vehicle
hit a traffic signa I near
MacArthur Boulevard aud Ford
Road in Newport Beach at about
4:30 a.m .. police said.
Richard S. Alonso, 1109 W.
Curry St., apparently was driving
northbound on MacArthur when
his car crossed the center divider
and struck the traffic signal.
Newport Beach firefighters re-
sponded to the scene and freed
Alonso from the wreck.age with
the "jaws of life." H e was treated
at the scene by paramedics and
transported to the hospital.
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
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Publiltw
Chazy Oow•HbT Rermond MaoLMn Editor and AulttanT COntrOllet
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• .,.,..,...._,. '-<..,. mey ti. •woooc.o """>OV' flPeCIA4 l*-ol~l"19'>·-
VOL. 71, NO. 223
I
Pair subdue rape suspect
By L.I'. UENET
Olh0.-,"9lltllllf
A 30-year-old Dana Point man
-who authorities say has two
previous convictions for rape and
burglary -was arrested by police
early Wednesday after being sub-
dued in the Newport Beach home
of an alleged victim by two men,
one of whom was the woman's
husband.
Starley E. Roehl was )8iled on
suspicion or assault to commit
rape, Newport Beach Det. Lavon
Campbell said Wedneeday. Roehl
was to be transferred to Orange
County Jail today w1lh bail set at
$50,000.
Campbell said that Roehl al-
legedJy entered a home on the
1600 block of Balboa Boulevard at
about5:20a.m . through aside door
and proceeded to the bedroom of
h1s intended victim, who was
a.sleep next to her husband.
She then awakened and
screamed at the sight or Roehl
standing over her, Campbell said
The husband then Jumped out of
bed and wrestled with Roehl
Upon hearing the dlaturbance, a
neighbor came to aJd t.he couple
and helped detain the suspect as
the intended victim phoned the
polioe.
Roekl suffered cuta to the
fo,...h,,,.,.. "'",.. •~" :,... •he "' M '""1 ..
He La unemployed and has been
<.'Onvicted on rape and bw-a.Lacy
charges Jn connection with crimea
committed ln Newport Beach and
Fullerton during the past aix
yea.rs, Campbell said.
Roehl told offl.cen he had
aerved three-and-a-halt years ln
Patton State Hospital in San
Bernardino, Campbell said.
MESA DEA TJI PROBED ...
From Page A1
Police were unable to locate the
car or the suspect, described as
Hispanic, standing 5-foot-5 tall
and welghlng about 150 pounds.
A search of the area wrui begun
by police early this morning, and
the body was found in an over-
grown yard at 9:25 a .m. Officers
cordoned off the dilapidated prop-
erty and an adjacent parking lot
and were awaiting the arrival of a
coroner's deputy at mid-morning.
<'Alnnn "8id euests at the party
deny knowing either the victim of
the alleged stabbing or his •-
sailant. He said party-goers were
also unable to say what might
have prompted the verbal dispute,
which ended, several witnesaes
told detectives, in a stabbing.
Police are seeking a red car with
a tom black vinyl roof believed to
have been driven away by the
suspect, accompanied by his al-
leged victim.
Tight fit on Summit
Laguna Beach's hillside roads a re
difficult eno ugh to mane uver in a
conventional vehicle., but whe n
Jim Brown of Oro ville a ttempted
to round Va n Dyke Drive onto
Summit Way in a moving van ., he
got hung up -lite ra lly. Police
diverted traffic while a king-size
tow truck straightened out the
mess.
TENNIS TOURNAMENT TUSSLE ...
From Page A1
cases of beer and alcohol were
stolen
•The parking company; Jim
O'Shaunecy. owner or Southland
Parking Service of Newport
Beach. clauned Stamps has not
paid h18 $3,000 bill and told him he
doesn't intend to.
•The Explorer Scouts: Stamps
stopped payment thlS week on a
$300 "donation" to the police
scouts, who were to provide traific
control during the tournament.
Stamps alleged they never show-
ed up
To add injury to tnsult, the
promoter said Wednesday his
profit during the three-day event
-with an official att-endance
mark surpassing 21,000 -was
"not enough to spit at."
"It certainly was not what we
could have made with a tour-
nament of this magnitude," he
said.
Stamps didn't offer any figures.
Tickets sold for $50 a session for
rourtside seats. Others ranged
from $25 to $12.50. 11 the average
ticket price was $20, the 8f0$
ticket revenue would come out at
$420,000 At $25 per seat, it
reaches $525,000.
Those figures don't include
money made from concessions nor
do they include the $300,000 in
prize money given to the players.
How did everything go so
wrong?
Stamps denied responsibility
for most of the problems and said
he was caught in the middle of a
political tussle between the tennis
club and the city that took au his
time and left hlm in "total duress"
during the event.
Stamps claimed the tennis club
had promised to obtain necessary
penmts in advance for the tour-
nament but failed to do so. "They
were not, in fact, my pennits to
get," he said. "They were sup-
posed to be already there."
Larson had a different reading
of the activities. If not for the city
and tennis club, he said, the event
would have been a fiasco for the
city, and especially for the neigh-
bors Uving near the club.
He said Wednesday that
Stamps doesn't have to worry
about returning to Newport
Beach. The city wouldn't let him.
Stamps said he stopped pay-
ment on the city's $2,140 check
because he was angered by the
last-minute requirements im-
posed on hlm and he claimed
Larson forced him to deliver 50
free tickets to City Hall as a
condition for receiving the per-
mJts.
Larson said he suggested
Stamps provide some tickets to
neighbors as a goodwill gestun>
but didn't require any for the cit y.
Stamps admitted he doesn't like
Larson but he said he didn't
threaten him during the phone
conversation Wednesday Larson
had SSJd Stamps called hlm a
"punk" and said something Like,
''One punch from me and you're
dead."
Stamps, who is 5-10 and weighs
170 pounds, said he told Larson
he'd like to meet hlm alone
sometime "and we'd see who the
better man was."
Mesa developer
Sydney Sher dies
Sydney Sher, whose Harbor
Center in Costa Mesa was one of
the first shopping centers in
Orange County, died Tuesday in
Los Angeles alter a long illness.
Hewas75.
Sher buUt Harbor Center, the
commercial development at Fair
Drive across from Fairview State
Hospital, in 1957. He and his
brother, Saul. al.so developed sev-
eral other shopping centers in
Huntington Beach and helped in
coordinatJng the planning and
division of properties for the
Huntingto_!l Beach Regional
Shopping Cent.er.
Sher died at Cedars-Sinai Hos-
pital after a long illness. He lived
in West Los Angeles.
He iB survived by his wile.
Sylvia: two sons, Merritt Sher of
San Francisco and Ron Sher of
BeUvue Wash., a daughter. Abby
Sher of Los Angeles; his brother.
Saul: sister Dr. Fra ncis
Sher-Sharpe of Philadelphia, Pa ..
and six grandchildren.
Services will be at 2 p.m ..
Friday. Aug.12 at the Hi.J.lsjde
Memorial Park, 6001 Centin~Ua
Ave., In Los Angeles. The family
requests flowers be omitted.
Featuring Mannings Beef
B.B.Q. BEEF SPARERIBS
&ROUllD BEEF
$121 ..
......... RAllCHO MARKET .. l .. n
2480 IEWNRT ILYD.•GllTI IEll•(l14) 111-1111
l ' j
I • I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday, Aug. 11 , 1983 * Aa
BULLETIN BOARD Mesa projects: A Bear of an issue
Free movies offered at
Laguna arts f estival
Cou ncilmen study comme rcial en croachment plans as neig hbors hold their ground
Viaitors to the Festival of Arts in Laguna Beach can enjoy a free
Alfred Hitchcock movie thriller in the Forum Theater every night
through Aug. 28.
"The Lady V aniahes," a 1935 espionage film starring Margaret
Lockwood, Michael Redgrave and Basil Radford will be shown at
8:45 p.m. every night through the festival run.
In addition, the festival offers comedy shorts starring Abbott
and Costello and Laurel and Hardy at both 3 and 5 p.m. daily. The
films are free but admiaion to the festival grounds ia $1 for adult.a.
The festival grounds are open from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m . daily.
Talk pla nned on a gin g, m alignancy
How does the high incidence of malignancy occurring as we
age relate to the de.creasing efficiency of our immune system? What
can we do to stregthen ounelves now against these disorders as we
grow older?
Dr. Amelia Globerson, a leading cancer reseacher for lsrael's
Weitzrnann Institute will address these issues Sunday at l p.m. in
Lei.sure World's Clubhouse 2 in Laguna Hills.
For infonnation call Evan Fruithandler at 640-8900.
Country con cert set a t Irvine park
A country-western band will provide entertainme~t ~t
Heritage Park in Irvine Sunday be~ at 6 p.m. Lawn ~a~ lS
available on a finlt-<X>me basis. There lS no charge for admission.
At 8 p.m., the High Society Band will play dance music in the
youth servia!S center at the park. Admission is $5 for couples, $3
general admiaaion. Heritage Park is located at 4601 Walnut Ave.
OCC p erformance passes on sale
Seaeon puses to Orange Coast C.Ollege performing arts events
during the upcoming achool year are on sale through Sept. 15.
The paaaes, which cost $100, will allow admiaaion to more than
70 events, including performances by Carlos Montoya, Up With
People, the Roser Wagner Chorale, the All-American Boys'
Chorus, Woody Herman, the Civic Ballet of Southern California
and the Five Penny Opera Company.
Puees are on sale In the OCC Ticket Office in the Student
Center Building. It is open Monday through Thursday from 8a.m.to
7 p.m. and Fridays from 8 a.m.to 6 p.m.
POLICE LOG
By GLENN SCOTT
Ol ... 0.-,,... ...
Poe.i tioning was the key when
Costa Mesa City C.Ounctl members
met this week to go over two
proposals to develop commercial
property west of Bear Street
acrosa from South Coast Plaza.
Positioning: In diplomatic cir-
cles, it covers everything from
where to sit to what to say.
It was working on various levels
when about 45 people crammed
lnto a fifth-floor meeting room at
City Hall Monday for a session to
study the proposals from plaza
developer CJ Segerstrom & Sons
and from Amel Development C.O.
The council made no decisions
at the session, which was intended
to offer background before the
council's public hearing Monday
at 7:30 p.m., when action is
expected to be taken.
But council members heard
plenty of, well, positioning. It all
started with the easy stuff. The
first five minutes involved a lot of
hand shaking and introductions.
The council members settled
into seats around a table in the
middle of the meeting room while
such well-heeled applicants as
Henry Segerstrom, George
Argyros, and Mike Gould, chair-
man of Robinson's department
stores, ringed the council in chairs
set against the walls.
All of the top business people
seemed to be wearing suits with
crisply starched white collars and
conservative ties. The jackets
came off, but only after Mayor
Donn Hall Invited the thankful
group to take them off in the hot
and stuffy room.
Then the real positioning took
place. CJ Segerstrom & Sons is
Battling speeder curbed in Mesa
Police said a Corvette driver who
waa pulled over on Newport
Boulevard on auaplclon of ac>eedlng
Wedneeday fought with ottloefa who
tried to arr .. t him. The driver,
Stephen Arden Cox. 37, of Anaheim.
was arrested on suaplclon of battery
on a police offl<lef' and drunken
driving. Cox 11 president of Lulngton
Inc. of Norco An officef aald he first
noticed the Corvette because It
waited 20 MCOndl to 8CC411erate on a
green light white Its pauengers
talked to people In a Po'*=he In the
next lane
Flahlng oear worth $340 was atolen
Wednesday ITom an °'*' gange on
the 700 blOck of Shalimar Drive,
police said.
An employee fOf th4t Automobile
Club of Southefn CalltOfnla, 3333
Fairview Road, reported S 140 In cash
stolen from his wallet wtllle he was
working
Stereo equipment valued at S500
was reported atolen earller this week
from a home on tt'le 900 block of
Sonora Road.
Huntington Beach
A resident of the 16900 block of
Blue Water Lane In Huntington Beach
reported that four tires and rime w«e
stolen Wednesday mOf'nlng from his
1983 red Porsche. parked In hie
carport. The lou was estimated at
$1,500.
A resident of the 21100 block OI
Shephefd Lane reported th4t theft
Wednesday of his 1975 orange
Oat14.1n p!Qup truck With camper
ahetl, wtllch had been parked on
Beach Boulevard. The loaa waa
.. umated at $3,000.
A man staying at a motel on th4t
21000 block of Pacific Coat Highway
told police a cat t>urglar atruck
overnight white he WU aaleep. The
loss, estimated at $1,570. Included
money and jewelry.
Irvine
At lealt 20 UoenM plates w«•
swiped from care In the UnMn!ty
Park area Wedneaday night and thla
mOfnlng. The llcenM platea ttoten
were mostly personallzad ,
out-of-atate or new, white California
platea, police aald. Tt'41 th4ttt1 oc-
C\Jrred between 10 p.m. Wedneaday
and 6 a.m. today.
Two men were arrested early thla
morning In the Turtle Rock area on
14.1aplclon of poseeulng t>Yrglary
toola. The pair, Rodrigo M. Rivera,
20. and Reynoldo 0. Sanc:Mz, HI,
were allegedly spotted by police
crulalng through nelghbomooda and
chec:J(lng out cars and hom91.
Fountain Valley
Ten wooden pallet• worth $130
were reported atolen Wednesday at
the Hughes Market. 9091 Garflald
Ave. Witnesses saw a man load the
palleta onto a 1982 white Toyota
plcicup truck at the rear of th4t store
and drive oft
A resident of the 17200 blOCk ot
San Mateo Street reported Tuesday
night that his orange Chevrolet van
tiad been t>Yrglarlzed. The t>Yrglar
pried open a wind wing to enter and
stole $~0 worth of toola.
A Glendale woman reported her
purM mllllng after the left It on a
aeat In the Edwards Theater, 16149
Broot<hurst St. The lou Included the
$200 purM and $ 115 outi lnllde.
Newport Beach
Two men were arrested for poaa.lon of cocaine at 2111 Street
and W91t Oceanfront Bootevard
Wedneaday at abOUl 2·40 p.m Ball
Mt at $10.000
Aa th4t vlc11m ~t on hla blanket. a
auapect llote 1908 In fewelry, money
and mualc equipment at the 2 lit
Street beactt at 3 p.m. Wednesday.
A UC Irvine profeaaor had his
battery atolen from Illa vetllcie at
1700 18th St. sometime during th4t
past two weeka.
A 14.11pect stole tool• and a tele-
vlalon valued at $508 from a vetllcle
parked at 2555 Vlata Bay sometime
Monday night.
Laguna Beach
Laguna Beach pollee are In-
vestigating three vehlcle break-Ins
that occurred Wedneeday. A purM
containing S 110 was atolen from a
car par1<ed In th4t 20000 block of
Laguna Canyon Road at aboUt 5 p.m.
A second 119hlcte break-In occured
a ahort time later In the tOOO bled< of
Laguna Canyon Road. The toss,
according to th4t owner, was $120 In
cuh.
TODAY'S WEATHER
Surprise: Cooler weather coming
Coastal
Ex tended
I
IO 11 ...,,,_ .. ,. .....
=~ : :::.?:: .. 71 89oll-
" IO lyr-M 7e Topllka
.. 17 T-
M n TlllM t3 11 w..,.,.,on IO 1t Wlclfllla
anowmD
.. •1 .... t4 ,,
11 .. t2 IO 79 11
" n IO 72
100 IO ., n
100 71
seeking to amend the city's gen-
era) plan to change the desig-
nation for 18 acres on Bear from
medium density residentiaJ to
comm ercial so a n e w
650,000-square-foot mall can be
developed.
The mall would include a
Robin.son's department store at
the southern end and a Broadway
at the northern end. Parking
would be under the mall and in a
three-level, mostly subterranean
garage behind it.
On 50 acres next door -in an
area roughly bordered by South
Coast Drive and the San Diego
Freeway -Arnet is asking for a
genera) plan change to allow a
mixed use including two 21-story
offices, smaller commercial build-
ings and residentiaJ uses.
Nothing so crucial is easily
decided, however, which was why
so many people were spending an
afternoon sitting around a table in
an airless meeting room.
The city's Development Ser-
vices Director, Doug Clark, was
the first to set the agenda. He
indicated the council's pa.\t pos-
ition has been to draw the line on
commerciaJ development west of
Bear. The council must decide
whether to change it, he said
Henry Segerstrom, however.
suggested property facmg Bear
might be considered separately
from the rest because homes
would be out of place on the busy
street.
He introduced Gould, who told
the council Robinson's wants to
build a headquarters store with
HB man jailed
after two die
in auto crash
A Huntington Beach man has
been jailed on suspicion of man-
slaughter and felony drunken
driving in connection with a
traffic accident that claimed two
lives.
Westminster Police Officer Roy
Freeman said Marc J. Ellington,
23, of 60ll Kendrick Circle, was
westbound on Garden Grove
Boulevard in his 1981 Datsun
pickup truck at 11:51 p.m. Monday
when the accident occun'ed.
Freeman said Ellington turned
left onto F.dwards Street, alleged-
ly In front of a motorcycle driven
by Brian Louis Bonn, 29, of
Westminster. Bonn's motorcycle
struck the pa&'lenger side of the
truck, causing it to roll onto its
side.
Ellington's passenger, Lesley
Peterson, 37, of the same Ken-
drick Circle address, was pro-
nourlCed dead at the scene. Bonn
was taken to the trauma center at
Fountain Valley C.Ommunity Hos-
pital, where he died early Tues-
day, Freeman said.
Ellington, who was not injured,
was booked into Orange C.Ounty
Jail.
0.-,,.. ,.._.., ...__ ·-
Pro posed shopping mall (above) would include
remodele d Broad way store (below ) in outh Coast
Plaza e xpansion.
the kind of ambiance shoppers
Cind in Beverly Hills.
Segerstrom wanted the council
to view his project aside from
Arnel's and was careful to stress
its separateness. "I can't speak for
the Amel project." he said at one
point when the discu.s&on began
merging the two.
A model of the completed mall
was positioned on the council's
table. It was propped up on
plexiglas stands to be at eye level.
Meanwhile, Argyros, a partner
in Amel, tried to make an opposite
point. Noting that Segerstrom's
project is extremely specific while
his remains conceptual, he said the
city would be ill-advised to ap-
prove one without judging the
other, especially because street
improvements should 'relate to
both.
"Quite frankly, in fairness to
whoever owns this land, you can't
approve one without considering
our piece," he said .
That left Dan Gott, a neighbor
whose home is adjacent to the
Arnel property, to carry the
banner again.at considering any
changes to the general plan. He
reminded the council that neigh-
bors oppose both proposals.
"If we cross Bear Street and we
give one inch to commercial, w e
are opening the floodgates," he
said in a carefully measured,
fonnal voice.
Argyros offered a different
interpretation of the general plan:
"It's always a fluid plan," he said.
In fact. Argyros said Amel
wants to change its proposal again
to reflect recent changes to the
commercial corridor along the San
Diego Freeway.
"We'd like to go back to the
Planning C.Ommission with a
specific plan and a new general
plan amendment," he said. He said
Amel shouldn't be penaliz;ed for
presenting a Jess detailed proposal
than Segerstrom.
All this left the council mem-
bers in a tough spot. C.Ouncilman
Ed McFarland said he doesn't
want to look at Segerstrom's
proposal separately because the
council should judge cumulative
impacts on issues such as traf-
ficflow and air pollution.
But Mayor Hall noted the
difficulty of making wise de-
cisions on proposals that still may
change.
The council found it.self ln the
same position as in the meeting
room: Right in the middle with
little breathing room.
S hernJan Gardens plans
3rd fund-raising party
By CHRJS CRAWFORD
0.-, ..... ee.._ .... ,
S herman Library and Gardens
in C.Orona del Mar is holding it.s
third annual fund-raising party,
for both members and the general
public, on Saturday, Aug. 27.
"The S pur and the Rose," an
evening with an early Cali-
fornia/Western theme, will begin
at 6:30 in the upper garden with
cocktails and hors d'oeuvres, fol-
lowed by dining under the stars.
Informal, country-western attire
is encouraged.
Special entertainment. includ-
ing mariachis and music for danc-
Ing, will be included ln the
festivities. Entertainers featured
will include Shelia Marrical,
Mickey Rooney J r., and Willie
Warwick .
Donations are $100 per pel"90l'l.
All funds raised through the
benefit party will be u.eed to
support the library and gardens.
including their educational pro-
~ in hi.story, horticulture,
docent tours, botanical educations
for Orange C.Ounty school chil-
dren. and gardening classes for
special-needs peopl~.
For further ulformation, call
673-1880.
The P.0..5.H. .
Attl1tude
;J'he value of quaUty,
classic styUng
and natural comfort ...
an Important
statement about hli
good tosta .
t
i
...
Orange Coost DAILY PILOT!Thufsday, Aug. 11 , 1983 NB C5
,-------------~~----~--------~~~--------------------------------------------------------------STOCKS NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OuolAllONB INC:l llDf Tl\AOf.8 ON IHE N(W YOAll MIOWHT PA\.JFI{. r'llW llOITON OCT~I ANO CINCINNATI 810Cli U C.HAHOUI. •1u AEPOAIEO 8V rnr NASO INStJN( I
f'll I ICSUA \' t:U>SlN(, f'FUC.:s
•
Dow Jones Final
Down 1.59
Cloalng 1, 174.39
BUSINISS BRllfS
Retail sales unchanged
after four-month gain
By the Associated Press
WASHINGTON Retail sales were virtually
unchanged m July after four straight monthly gains
Gain~ for food. furniture and appliance stores were
sbghtly outweighed by declmes for autos, building
materials and department and general merchandise
stores. aC\~rding to the Commerce Department report
Wednesday "Consumers paused to cat.ch their breath in
July after boosting their spending sharply" m the
Apnl-Junt: quarter, Commerce St:cretary Malcolm
Baldrige said
U.S buyers pref er lux ury car
WASHINGTON -U S. car buyers are w11Jing to pay
a higher sticker pr1~ for luxury import models -
especially during uncertain econorruC' l'ydes. manufac-
turers of luxur y cars say. An unstable economy has been
a boom for the luxury l'ar business because wealthy
drivers are interested in investment valuf' in addition w
prestige, the manufacturers say A B Shuman, a
spokesman for Mercedes-Benz of North America said
his c:ompany sold 41,840 cars in the ftrst seven months of
1983, up from 37,359 in the same period last year The
most popular model. the 3000, a four-door sedan Wllh a
de1sel engine. c:oslS $31,000
Rigged gas pumps draw fines
OLATHE. Kan. -The 70-year-old chairman of the
board of Hudson Oil Co. Inc. has been fmed $5,000 and
ordered to perform 200 hours of public servwe work for
ordering gasolme pumps rigged to short customers at
company stations. Mary Hudson Vandegrift, who last
year was listed among the 400 wealthiest individuals in
the nation by Forbes magazine, on Tuesday was placed
on two years probation by Johnson County Circuit
Judge Wilham Gray. She rould have been sentenced to
up to five years m prison. The company wh1c:h has
stations in 31 states. also was assessed an add1uonal
$5,500 for altenng the pumps so they pumped less gas
than motorists paid for
Airline reservation rules due
WASHLNGTON -The Civil Aeronauucs Board
has voted 4-0 to begin regulating airline reservations
systems to safeguard against dorrunat1on of the
computerized .service by a few big comparues The board
instructed its staff to prepare an advance nollce of
pro~>d rule-makmg. which ofhc1al!. said was likely LO
be issued within the next three weeks. CAB Chairman
Dan McKmnon told the board he hopes the rule-makmg
process set in mot.Jon by Wednesday's vote wiU lead to
final adoption of a regulation by January or February
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JON£S AVERAG£S
NEW YORI( (API· s.,.., Tnun Price
and n•f chanoe of th• 1S mou ecll•t Ntw "{C)(k Sloe:' E•ct>•nu• l u u n . lrtOlno 11•llOntltv ti
more IP\an ll Amt< T& T Euon FldNel M•o
Arkla
Plllllp>Ptl N11s.m1 PlillloMo<r
AmerHe\t CIW'vsi<>r
ColKo \ EHi Koci••
ScNu.-0 CereroTr
1 m.soo '97,JOO IS.,200 nooo t96,900 690,200
61S,600 663,SOO 629.300 612,300
611,000 '11,600 606100
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW '!'OAK (AP) AUO 11
AO~t~
Oecll...O
Uncn•-Totatluue1
Ntw hlQl>I Htw low\
'~"" 139 .. I '37
19S7 16
11
WHAT AMEX DID
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NEW VORIC (AP) Auo II
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METALS
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prlCMlodav c-n"' 79'> .,.,,,. • "°""" us """"•"0"1 C-• 72 40 c:.en11 I>'" l>O\tt10 N ~ Cotne•
t001 mo<11n doMO Wld 1..-. 20·23 <*111 • pound
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N..-Yorl> ~""""' 1•20 00 1•'2 00 00-•llC ,,,...,,..,,, 110. oun<.e. N V
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
llftMA--~ S-.0 WOflQ gold ~ IOOay L_.., lflOf""'G n•lflO ... , I I&, up 17 90 ~ t!Mfnoclll "•lflO M 11 76, up~ 60 ,_.. lflef-naino IA 10 7t. up 11 .,
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SYMBOLS
d-VH t'I'-"-l'ffl"rl"Q" ~OI""-•-rot..01-0tt -·--•.,._on 1 ... 1ot1 QUlll•"r
Ot --Ok*•'"'" 8-• Ot oehlo -OI l)llly.,......n no! OMoQtlal.O •• NO -••• -ll!loG '"1"9 ~ lilOI-.. • A"°,,.,.. Of' ••t,et b A~I t1te P'ft ttoc:K
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1•01. lor Tnur>da• Auo 11 STOCKl
JO Ind
20 Tr" IS Ull 6SSt•
lnd'U\ Tran
W toS lltS 11 lltS SS 111•3'-I ~ s.JI IJ WS °' SlHO SJ9'7+ BS 111 .s 111 21 111 en 111 llA + o 1' 061n •7D9S "31• 66613+ OSI
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AMERICAN L£AOER S
1 166,200
I S1'.SOO I 1,402,300 10 071,000
NEW Y()lll( (AP)-Sele•. Tn"'' Ofla
and n•I cn•n o• ol "'' 10 tnO\t ~ll•t "'""'~" StOG E•C'ler>oe " \ult' lfadln9 n•"onell\' •t
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111.300 120600
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UPS ANO DOWNS
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