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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-08-16 - Orange Coast PilotJohn Robinson admitted he didn't prepare the Rams for Dallas, and It showed Monday night. Page C 1. t THI ORANGE COAST The Big Top comes to town Crowds line streets for parade of circus animals Crowds of kids and adulb found a their 15-minute trek from the circus good reuon to brave the heat and train to the service area of the hwnidity Monday as they lined the convention center, where they will be streets of Anaheim for a glimpee of the housed through Sunday. Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey The Great.est Show on Earth opena circus menagerie on ita march to the tonJaht at 7:30 Auditiona for anyone Anabebn Convention Center. lnt.erest.ed in becoming a clown ot Arabian atamom, dromedaries and showgirl for RinglingBros. will be held '19 pachyderms paraded through aev-Thunday at 10:30 a.m. on the arena eral residential areu about 1 p.m. on floor. , ca1m 1111111 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ...., .... ,._'r ....... U,-. No break in humid ·· Weather BJ STEVE MITCllELL °' .............. Like a late-night party guest who refuaes to go , home, the remnants of Hurricane Ismael linger on . along the Orange Cout. ; And now, a new guest, named Alicia, baa arrived : on the ICl!!le, promblng no respi.te from the· thundentonna and hwnidity that have turned · Orange O>unty into a sauna room for the put week anda half. National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Hoffer said Alida, a tropical st«m that is rapidly· pUng Into a hurricane in the Gulf of' M~ "is definitely aotng to pump more moist air and humidity Into our area.'' 'lbe forecast for the next three to five days? ''We think Alida will IUStain the current humidity we're experiencinc in Southern Callfomia. In other WOl'da, continued Miami BMich mugi- ne1a ..W eut-of~ thunderatonna.. I Addlnc to the Southland'• weather woea is yet anotlMt lystml -thl8 mt In the form of • trop6ca1 depi Ion -cnm•nc llCl'09 Baja from La Pu. (lee MOU BUMID, Pap Al) Low exhaust pipes make Clark fume The black oily exhaust coming from the back end of many of Orange County'• public 00.. is bad enough. But when the fumea hit pedestrianl and motorim In the face, aomething ahouJd be done. 'nlat WM the opinion Of Orange County Transit District oftidala, meeq Moonday in Garden Grove. Transit dlatrtct chainnan Ralph Clark. who is ai.o a oounty auperviaor, complained about street level exhaust emitted by many of the county's orange and white bwea. A dromedary kept an eye on handlers unloading circus animals Monday in Anaheim. He aua-ted that. in the future, bu.es be equipped with exhaust pipes atop the vehicles In order to keep the black smoke from coming directly in contact with the motoring and walking public. Dllt:rict oftidala aaid 105 bu8e8 with exhaust (See EXHAUST, Pace Al) FV farm land targeted Recreation property also phased out in re'}Jevelopment plans BJ PlllL SNEIDERMAN °' ... .., ........ Some of F()l\Otain Valley's farm land and cnmmercial recreation property would be phaaed out in Aature years under redevelop-;ttent plans now being considered for two sections of the city. The targeted areas are along the west side of Brookhunt Street aouth of Talbert Avenue and along Recreation C!rcle near Warner Avenue and Magnolia Street. Victims recovering. Attempted murder charges retluced _. ' "' The Fountain Valley City Council. in its role as the Agency for Community Development. will consider preliminary re- devlopment plans for theee areaa at today's meeting. The0 council meets in a study session at 6 p.m.; the regtalar meeting begins at 8 p.m. in City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. . The Brookhunt redevelopment proposal would affect the properties now occupied by th~ Fountain Valley Drive-In Theater, the FHP Medical com- plex, the Fountain Valley Soya Club, various commercial bulldlng and uparagua farm fields owned by thc..~waguchi family. City ¥Planner'1:>on c.ontraman aaid mart of th1a acreage is considered "bUghted" becaUle IOil pi-oblema make conventional de- velopment plans too expensive. The preliminary ~lop­ ment outline for thJI area, already· approved. b u;,y the dty'1 Plann1na Comm1lliOn. calla for a mix of bou8lne. oommerdal b~ and rMdlcal-profemional odloel. No agricultural uae la Included. The Recreeuon60n:ie area la conaiden!d bJicbted beca~ of traffic and land \9e probleml. dty offldall •Y· The area now ln- clOO. a miniatUM aolf coune, Malibu Grand Prix l'll09 tnck. a aka Una center with claeed outdoor skateboard track. • drive-In ,._ ~SeeVALLEY,PqaAt) Mesa sign ordinance sparks new dispute I However, Mayor Donn Hall, who ln thia c=-e did most of the speaking foe the majority, lnclud-tna Arlene Schafer and Eric Johnlon, drew a sharp diatinctlon between what he called the non<Onfonnlng si1JD1 and illegal ones whJch were orilinallY erected without pennita. ~ reque.t foe the grandfather clau.e came bun the c.o.ta Mesa· Ownber of Commerce. Council members Ed (See MBIA SIGNS, ...... A.I) • J • ';"' & :: -~ • U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 . CONTINUED STORIES From Page A1 ' VALLEY PROJECT ... taurant, gas station, and a pitcll-and-putt golf center. The preliminary plan foe this . MESA SIGNS .. · McFarland and Nonna Hertzog opposed adding the grandfather clause. Mc.Farland said he was surprised at the Chamber's pos- ition because it catered to a small special interest group and was unfair to the hundreds of business people who already had paid for new signs to meet the law. However, Jim Hollister, who runs a business on Harbor Boulevard, said he believes the grandfather clause is fair because, with -few exceptions, the non-confonrung signs are well designed, attractive and ex- pensive. area, abo approved by the Plan- ning Conunis&on, calls for the eection now occupil.!d by the miniature golf cow-se to remain a recreation area. The other acreage would be earmarked for a tiotel or motel complex and professional offices. If the council approves the prellminary plans, more detailed redevelopment outlines will be prepared. Planner Contraman said the city has the right to condemn property for a redevelopment project. But he said the city is phil060phically opposed to the practice and has not used it on past redevelopment projects. He said the conversion to the uses outlined in the redevelop- ment plans would likely take place slowly over a number of years. VICTIMS RECOVERING ••• Investigators have noted pl"06eeutors would have to prove the driver had intended to kill the two to gain a guilty verdict. Hicks said Freund has been released from Juvenile Hall pending a hearing scheduled for Aug.' 31 in Orange County Juvenile Court to discuss the charges. Freund, who until the incident was a member of the police Explorer Scout unit, apparently became enraged at the Aug. 7 party over the way his former friends from C.OSta Mesa High School harassed him concerning a graduation prank two months earlier, witnesses told police. They said he left the party and returned with a rifle. While he was still in his car, others at the party managed to wrestle the gun away from him. But, witnesses saidr...he. then lurched h.i&....car forward, causing Smith and Anderson, who were leaning against the car, to fall. He then backed over them, according to statements given the police. Police Lt. Jack Calnon said the key point in the case is whether Freund meant to run over the pair. COSTA MESA FIGHT ••• Why so much damage? Well, his right hand had a cast on it. The fight apparently ,was over a dispute about a loud stereo in Sikorski'sapartmentat 527 Wilson Ave. Officers said Roelle and his roorrunate, Patrick Michael McBurney, 20, walked downat.a.i.rs to the courtyard and clicked off the circuit breaker providing power to the apartment where Sikorski and Michael Patrick Lorey, 20, lived. Sikorski and Lorey then retaliated and turned off power to Roelle and McBurney's unit, according to the story both sides gave investigators. When Roelle and McBurney returned to the power box. they met Sikorski and Lorey and the fight began. Lorey told police McBurney began hitting him. so he turned the circuit breaker back on. Meanwhile, Roelle told police, he faced Sikorski and told him not to join the fight. Then Sikorski jabbed him in the stomach , inflicting a shallow stab wound, according to police reports. Roelle said he began hitting Sikorski without noticing whether he sUll had th~ knife. Police officers made no arrests and said they would handle pcmible prosecution only if one of the parties makes a complaint. Sikorski was treated and released from C.OSta Mesa Medical Center: RoeUe was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. Whittier girl, J6, knifed; two held By Uae AHoclated PreH LA MIRADA -A Buena Park police officer shot and wounded one of two men who authorities allege kidnapped. knifed and tried to rape a 16-year-old Whittier girl early today. The girl, whose name was withheld because of her age, was reported in stable condition at La Mirada Community H0spitaJ where she was treated for a knife wound to her hand and other injuries to her nec:-k and shoulder. said Los Angeles County sheriff's Deputy Robert Stoneman. William Garcia, 23, Whittier, and John Risenhoover, 23, Bellflower, were booked for in- vestigation of robbery, kidnap- ping, assault with a deadly weapon, grand theft auto and attempted rape, Stoneman said. Garcia was being held on $17,500 bail at the Norwalk s heriff 's station, while Risenhoover, shot in the knee, was being held on $45,000 bail in the jail ward at County-USC Medical Center where he was listed in good condition, Stoneman said. Stoneman said the teen-age victim and two male companions, James Welsh, 19, and Wallace Balaty, 19, both of Whittier, drove into a service station at Imperial Highway and Norwalk Boulevard in Norwalk about 2:30 a.m. today. While they were putting gas in their car, Garcia and Risenhoover asked them for help, claiming one of them was injured and needed a ride to the hospital Inside the car, one man pulled a knife and then forced the two male teen-agers out of the car, Stoneman said. Welsh and Balaty immediately called sheriff's depu- ties. Within 30 minutes, Buena Park police Officer Charles Russell spotted the car parked by the side of the road on Beach Boulevard north of Rosecrans A venue in La Mirada. Garcia was found m the car and was arrested, Stoneman said. Russell, accompanied by other Buena Park officers and sheriff's deputies, started a search for the girl and the second man. "They saw suspect Risenhoover lying on top of the victim in llOl1le bushes off the side of the road. Her clothing was tom and she was bleeding," Stoneman said. Newport car dealer probed The FBI is investigating a Newport Beach car dealer for possible criminal bankruptcy fraud, according to offic:iala from the FBI and U.S . Attorney's office. Albert Mardik.ian, owner of Trend Import Sales. Inc., on Paci!ic C.oast Highway, directed bankruptcy court last fall. He sells Ferraris and Lamborghinis, among other exotic cars. dispute from the state court to the federal court. A spokesman Crom the U.S. Attorney's office said the probe is in the early stages and that no charges have been filed against Mardikian. • his busines8" into federal Mardikian has been involved in a 36-month legal bllttle with the state over allegations of illegal sales of "bootleg" cars in Cali- fornia. He previously said he filed for bankruptcy to maintain the firm's finances and move his legal Mardikian's attorney, Stephen Wilson, said his client has not violated any laws. I MORE HUMID WEA TUER ... From Page A1 "it's only blowing 25 to 30 knots. but it will also add a bit to our humidity," Hoffer said. Meanwhile , the legacy of Ismael continued to be 'EXHAUST ... felt Monday along the coast, where nearly a half inch of rain fell on El Toro in a half hour. Greg Cunningham, of the Orange County Flood Control District, said the cloudburst dumped .4 7 of an inch on the unincorporated community between 10:30 and 11 a.m. Laguna Beach received nearly a quarter inch of rain during the same storm. officials aid, while nearby Dana Point received barely a trace of moisture. . • • I ' . • I I i . • I • • • ' l pipes on top were recently purehased, but added the district still has about 175 older buses W1th street-level exhaust pipes. And whtle district general manager James Reichert said the county won't be buying any more of the street-level exhaust buses in the future, he explained the older ones cannot be altered to spew exhaust from the top. '!bat prompted director and county ~upervisor Roger Stanton to mumble, "Meanwhile. we've dbcovered a new solar system." The low temperature Monday of 76 degrees broke a 16-year-record for highest minimum temperature for an Aug. 15. The previous record was 71. The weather service said highs will remain in the 90s for inland areas of the county, al least for the next few days, with beach highs in the upper 70s. Lows, such as they are, will range Crom 74 inland to 63 along the coast. We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Pilot., What don't you like" Call the number .at left and your message will be recorded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour answering service may be u!ied lo record tel ters to the edalor on any topic. Mailbox contnbutors must include tht'1r name and tell-phone number for verification No circulation t·alls, please 642·6086 Tell us what's on your mind ~· leGuwMtteH \otoMey f Ndey " '°" 00 no• .,... rou• P•C>e• Dr • JO p "' Clll DolfOt• ' .. "' anct 1our COPY' ••II b• -...,.., lal.,.CMJ tnG 6vn0•1 II ~ oo nol ·~•••• '°"' copy IJr 1 • ,.. .... .,...,,. 10 • m eNI yQuo C()j)y .,. oe_....., c~ TIF1phcM..e ...... Ollt'9fc-tv "'--..r1 HOt--.......... ,, &W--...... l ..... ~ ~ l OAANGF; COAST Daily Pilat H. l.. Schwartz UI Pub1""9r Chazy DowallbJ Rarmond Maclean Edlt0t and Allilt1nl ContJollef \ to the PUbl~ ·~,.c., ... "'~'IOI' M~ CleHlfled ed••ttlelng 714/M2·Mfl ""other cMtMti1Mnt1 IU~1 MAIN Ofl'1CI , 330 WHI 0.y SI , CO.I• Mo.. CA • "'41M •cJOI-l!lo, IMO Coote M-CA 92626 Cnc>Y'IQl!t t083 0.""l't C:0.1 ~ Compeny HO n••• t tot1•• llluttrallOl"'lt •d1101fa f mall•r 01 10--.1_..... .. ,,.....,. _, bo f9()focMced _,. ljMOCtel .-....-Ol eCll>'ftOQtlt - VOL. 11, NO. 221 • .. O..,Nel_..,.......,...K ..... Overhead protection Umbrellas wer e the orde r of the day a s ped estrians dashed through intermittent morn- ing showers on their way to work in f..osta Mesa . Probation for deputy in CM gun incident A former Shasta County sheriffs deputy who allegedly fired shots into a parking lot at the C.OSta Mesa Inn last March was Channel50 • to continue pledge drive Approximately $25,000 was pledged to KOCE Channel 50, the public television station baaed in HunUngton Beach, during the first weekend of the station's Starfest Summer fund-raising drive. The summer drive, one of three conducted annually by KOCE, has a goal of $150,000. The pledge campaign will reswne Friday and continue through Sunday, Aug. 28. As part of the swruner pledge drive, the station is broadcasting special programs and is featuring celebrity guest hosts. SALES • SERVICE LEASING • TRAINING sentenced Monday in Harbor Mu- nicipal Court to three years' probation. Wallace Goold. 42, of Redding, pleaded no contest in June to a misdemeanor charge of assault with a deadly weapon in the March 14 incident. Goold was in Costa Mesa attending a law-enforcement seminar when the shooting occurred. Aooording to police, Goold had been "drinking heavily" before he allegedly fired three shots toward six people in the hotel parking lot. One of thoee in the parking lot. a bodyguard, fired six shota at Goold. No one was injured. In addltion to his probation term, Goold was ordered by Judge Sellin Franklin to perform 250 hours of community aervloe work in Shasta County, to abstain from alcohol and non-preterlption dr\.lgl and to not carry a firearm during his probation.. Goold, w ho had been promoted to sheriff's captain shortly before the incident, later was suspended and then fired. ~ower ·] medics 1 pact on agenda By STEVE MITCH.ELL OflMO.-,Nelewt Laguna Beac~ city oow¥i1 memben tonight will consider approving a two-year con~ with Orange County tor COIJ· tlnued paramedic eervice that '8 much lower than that W-,t proposed by county fire oftici.als, The original propoeal called for Laguna Beach to pay $235,941 next year for paramedic service provided by the county -ap incre.a8e of more than $100.000 over the current contract. City officials termed that i.Q· crease unrealistic. City Manager Ken Frank and Fire ~ef ~ Adams met with county officiala eeveral times, arguing that more than a third of thoee aided by county paramedics in l..agw'8 B each lltst year w er'.e non-Lagunan.s. The city maintains ~ taxpayers shouldn't have to pdt up the full tab for medical aid to out-of-townen who are injured« stricken while visiting or comml&- ing in town. ' But county fire officials coi\- tended the city advertiaes f-'r tourists, receives revenues as a result of tourism. and, since the town is tourist-oriented, the coun- ty should not be obligated to aamt· in · providing service l o non-residents. Figures compiled by the ciJy show the county billed Laguf8 Beach for 637 medical aid calla~ year. A total of 220 ol thOR calla~ or 34.6 percent -were flw non-Laguna residents. ~ As a result of what Chief called "a lot of head-butting · the county," the two gove t entities came up with a contract that calls for Laguna Beach to pay $170,000 for para- medic service for 1983-84. The following year the city would be required to pick up 50 percent of the total yearly operational cost of the paramedic unit -about $191,000. U the city backs out of the county contract after 1983-84, a $21,000 penalty would be aasesaed by the county. U the council approves t:be contract tonight.. the city manaaer said Laguna will continue to. monitot cost of the program and re-ev'aluate the validity of COll- tinu.ing to contract with the OOUD· ty after 1984-85. Foreign student needs a home ,- The Sweden California Inter- national Academy Ls seeking a home for a Swedish high .chool student who wanta to atteoc:l school in Laguna Beach this fall. Families interested in pe.rtid- pating in the atudent-e>CChanlJe program shoUld call regional man- ager Gigi Lewerth at 497-2965. The Biggest Name. in little Computers~ , NEW! TWO LOW-PRICED POCKET COMPUTERS-GREAT FOR STUDENTS! Model PC-3 Model PC-4 RISID ···--Lim [ l1o:PRit tf "PR-3 P~,~~~~ ~ ~~c:uc:uG!G:l~•-•1111 c;JQffictJGJ~CJClGJttJ B••• ml'ilmrnmraraGJ C:Jra•••il mramramGJr;ifbi~ • ••• 99~ Computing Power You C.n Hold In Your H•nd I • Meaut'91Juat •11 JC51/11 JC 2*/••-Smeit Enough for Shirt Pooket 0t PurM • UN Our Reedy-te>-Run Proora,,,., or Program It Youf'Nff In l:•y-to-leem BA8tC • 24-chtnet., Llqukf Cryatel ot.pay • 10-01911 Accurecy • Bullt·ln 1.41( MetnOfY • Print, Loed end Store Progntmt Wttft Our PC.3 Prlnter/CuMtte lnt9f1909 (21-3511, 1111.15) 6995 Our Lowest-Prtced Pocket Computer ~ -Ev•I • ld4t1I tor UM In School or Bualnea • lncf'Hlbfy Compeot-Only •/u t 1/u ~1.· 1 • ElqNtndeble ~ Memory-M8frn.ln Up to 10 Frequentty.Ueed Progrwna • Wrtte YOUt Own IAStC Computer Progl.,. • Store and Loed RMdMo-Run aonw .. ~ Ou1 PC"" c....tt• tntertece (29-3151, Ut.H) ~ E•pand Wtth PC-4 Plin1., (M-MS2, 171.H) A DIVISION Of TANDY CORPORATION PRICES APPLY AT PAATICtPATING STOAES ANO DEALE -.... • I . • I ...................... ----_...--io_.. __ ....,.. ____ ~~~~~~~~~-·-- ~ .. ~· ·~;r .. ~·-· 5--~~---·-- Irvine reception for presidential candidate United Sta~Senator Gary Hart of Colorado, a democratic candidate_ for pr'esident in 1984, will be attending a cocktail reception Thus<lay, Aug. 18 at the home of Stuart and Deborah Karl of Irvine. The fundraiser will be hosted by David Stein , Bernard Schneider and Harvey Englander. Price for the event Ls $100 per person and $150 per couple. For infonnation call 760-1121. Heart saver course offered A heart saver course is held each Thursday night from 7-11 p.m . at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach. The course trains participants in one-man rescue techniques, but does not provide certification for basic life support CPR, which requires eight hours of t5aining. Cost for the c~ is $4 per person. To register call 760-2344. Unclaimed property auction Saturday Newport Beach police will be holding an auction Saturday, Aug. 20, at 9 a.m. at the headquarters at 870 Santa Barbara Drive. Items are unclaimed property and are purchased on an as·is basis, with no guarantee of physical condition. Payment must be made in cash or local check immediately after a bid is accepted and all purchases must be removed at the 1 conclusion of the auction. One hundred and thirty-nine items will be auctioned off, including many bicycles, stereos, cameras, typewriters, watches, and radios. Flight instructor course Aug. 23 A flight instructor refresher course is scheduled at Orange Coast College Aug. 23 to·25 with tuition set 1t $95. ThecoUI"9ewill be conducted by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association's Air Safety Foundation, and enables flight instructors the opportunity to renew their certificates. The course will cover changes in Federal Aviation regulations and explain the newest techniques in pilot training and education. For information, call 1-800-638-3101. Adoption workshop set Aug. 23 A two-hour workshop for couples interested in adopting a child will be offered Tuesday, Aug. 23 in Irvine. The workshop will run from 7 to 9 p.m . at the Parenting Resources offices at 2212 Dupont Drive. Cost is $15 per couple. More information may be obtained by calling July Mayer at 553-9339· Orange Coesl DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aup. 18, 1983 "I Summer is a good time to be careful Warm weather means more chances for fun and accidents, say· medical personnel By LINDA WOODS O..,"-'C--11 Summer fun and ~reat.ional accidents seem to go hand in hand say medical peraonnel who are called upon to help accident victims. . David Bautista, director of the Orange County Paramedics, said people use the parka and forests more in sununer and often go into restricted areas, getting into aitu- 4'tions where they need medical help. He al9o noted that motor- cyclists don't wear helmets and heavy protective clothing in the heat and that also results in more severe injuries when accidents happen. Bicycle accidents also increase during summer. "Orange County is a tourist spot. This increases the traffic load on the streets, resulting in a higher risk of accidents," Bautista noted. Rob Peterson and Bob Landa. paramedics for Orange County based in South Laguna, said the summer months bring an increase in back and neck injury calls from the beach regions. Patterson said the steep sand beaches and th e waves camouflage the depth of the water and many swimming injuries re- sult. "This year we're seeing veteran swimmers and surfers with spinal conl' injuries," said Dr. Greg Super, director of the emergency room at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. ''The bottom Qf the ocean has been changed by the winter storms and there are sandbars in places where there weren't before. People are expect- ing their favorite swimming and surfing stop to be like they remember it -but the ocean floor i5 now changed." . Dr. Super said the summer Dellr'11o41t.ll-o Tourism increases traffic which in~reases accidents and injuries in summer. months brit)i a 25 percent increase in cases brought to the emergency room of Hoag, and most of the accidents are recreationally orien- ted. People between the ages of 10 and 40 are most prone to such injuries. "The beach moves into the emergency room ... it gets a lot sandier in here," said Dr. Super. "We want to make people aware of the common aense precauuons they can take tn prevenUng water accidents. lt'1 not unconunon to aee someoM taking a running dive into the waves only to find th.at they've landed head first in shallow water. We're trying to promote a slogan, said Dr.Super, " ... 'Test the water with your feet first -not your head.'" Since 1970, Dr. Jack Skinner has organized a seminar at Hoag Hospital for those who deal with water-related accidents. Life- guards, paramedics and hospital staff, as well as the public, are invited to hear about the latest emergency tecMiques and to share ways in which each support group can aid the others when caring for a beach-related injury case. As summertime has come into full swing, Dr. Peter Anderson, director of the emergency room at Fountain Valley Community Hos- pital, said they are seeing more motorcycle and moped accidents -especially on weekends. Dr. Anderson sees a slight increase in accidents occurring among the young teens, listing bicycles, mopeds and cars as the major causes. "This has been a fairly brisk summer for Fountain Valley hospital," he said, "although the summer months don't usuall)( bring a noticeable increase in the number of caaes." Dr. Anderson also said there are usually quite a few bicyclists hit by cars on Pacific Coast Highway. This summer though. there has been a slightly lower number. He speculates it might be due to new traffic regulations and signals. which are altering the traffic flow and thereby lessening the hazards along PCH. . -...... ; I • • ... I . ' ·M Coillillittee o ·Ks FV eatery loses 30 gallons of 'hot' chili upper hity work Six five.gallon buckets of chill wefe reported stolen over the wee« end In a burgi.ty at Tommy'• Burgers, 9024 RecrMtlon Circle, by eomeooe who entered the clOMd bullneea, poss- ibly with a key. The lou was eetlmated at $450. A 1974 Chevrolet Monte Carlo belonging to a Ward Street realdent wu burglar1zed by aomeone who aipparentty UMd a acrewdrtver to remove a ~ cueette pl•Y9f trom the cw on Monday. Costa Mesa Police arrested Rick Wllllam Mcllrath, 23, an automobile painter trom Huntington Beach, early Mon- day on 1U1Plcion of burglartz.lng an apartment In a complex at 635 Baker St. Officers petrollng the complex, the alte of many bYrglarlea, 1topped the auapect after the compleit man-ao« aald he wu acting stra11Qely. According to police repotts. when Mcilrath aald "Natch me." they did and found a gold chain and bracelet worth about $200. The jewelry was later reported stolen from an apart- ment Monday afternoon, police said. Mcl11ath wu booked Into the city )all on $25,000 ball. A worker at the Ollve Crest Group Treatment Center In Costa Mesa told pollee Monday two glrl•. ages 15 and 17, left the premleea Saturday after- noon. apparently to go to Loa Anoelee to become prostitutes A realdent In the center Mid the 15-year-<>ld 11 a le>nneJ prostitute. A 1979 BMW left overnight In a panting lot at 2038 Newport Blvd. Sunday b«:auee of mec:hanlcal prob- lerr\9 wu dlecovered Monday With a broken right reer Window and tt1 seoC> Bl1Wpunkt stereo ayatem ml,.._ Ing, polloe aald. Someone broke Into the Coaatllne Regional Occupational Program of- fice at 1001 Preskllo Square over tile ..-enes and stote a S2 ruler and S3 In cash, poll<»-• told Monday. A worker at Von'a Marllet. t85 E. 17th St. placed Leonard Vernon Lawver, 35, of Costa Mesa under citizen'• arrest Monday after he aald the suspect hid a $6.15 bottle of Blacl( Velvet whiskey under hie 1hlrt and walked out of the store. Lawver wu on parole so he Is being held today without ball at the city lall A nine-club set of golf clubs and bag, valued at $275, was reported stolen Sunday rrom an open garage of a houee on the 3100 block of Country Club Drive whlle the occu- pants were home. Irvine ~ An Industrial plant on the 17000 bloc« of Eastman Avenue was broken Into Monday about 7:40 a.m. and a typewriter was taken from the otflcel. Entry was apparently made through 1 smashed window Two tennis racquets were reported stolen from an unlocited vehicle parked on Bethany Drive early today. Huntington Beach A microwave oven and a S300 televl1lon eet wete reported atolen In the burglary Monday of a home on the 8200 block of Newman Avenue. Entry waa apparently made through a broken side window. Two female Juvenllel were arrested Monday at the J.C. Penney 1tor. In Huntington Center. 1m Edinger Ave. Tile glrfl allegedly ll'lopllfted S25 worth of cosmetlca at the Penney store and $75 worth of merchandlee at other malt stores. A woman who llves on tile 17400 block of Queens Lane told polloe ll'le wu robbed Saturday In a fleld near Slater Avenue and Beech Boulevard She told otttcera aomeone came up behind her, pushed her down, grabbed her puraecontalnlng $200 and fled A burglary wu repor1ed Monday morning at a home on the 9800 block of Rainer Clrcle. Entry wa apparent- ly made through an unlod(ed ,...,. bedroom window. The loa Included S35 In mlsoellaneou1 coins, S 1S4 In casaet1e tapes with a cJtM, and two contalmtr1 of beer. A man waa arreated Monday evening at Skegga, 7S42 Edinger Ave~ alter he allegedly tried to ateal preecnptlon medicine W011h s 11. ' .. By L.P. BENET OI ... °""'Y "9t ,...., The House Public Works and Transportation Committee has approved a $2.5 million project that would authorize the U.S . Anny Corps of Engineers to dredge and maintain upper Newport Bay, according to Rep. John E. Badham, R-Newport Beach. The legislation will be included in this year's water reeources bill, which goes to the HoJ,se for a vote after the Sept. 12 recess. l The Anny Corps would be in charge of dredging thO&e parts of the bay located outside a state-owned ecological reserve. Other supporters of the legislation were Marian Bergeson, R-Newport Beach, Supervisor Thomas Riley, Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart and the Irvine Co. The back bay is a dumping ground for thousands of tons of sediment that washes down the San Diego creek. the bay's main waterway. Despite millions of dollars spent by the state last year to build catch basins, silt continues to pour in to the bay. Recent reports also say that sand and silt are being swept into Newport Harbor, separated from the back bay by a narrow neck of water near the coast. Seminar on computers Sept. 13 in Santa Ana A seminar on the use of the small computer by non-profit organizations will be held Sept. 13 at the Ramada Inn in Santa Ana. The day-long work.shop offers non-profit or- ganization members a non-intimidating introduction to the potential value of having a small computer system. Dying mother .. J eri DeMille of Orange is a te rminal cystic fibrosis patient and didn't want to leave her husband alone. Last week she gave birth to a six-pound, 11 ounce baby boy. The baby may be the first born to a cystic fibrosis patient in Southern Cali- fornia. DeMille said, "I ~anted a reminder that I was here." ~: ~ More of the same: Cloudy and warm 4 ::. • Coastal Some -c:toude °"' rno.lly ,. i..-1&1o 13-rz-74 IOIO MIN -to -............. ---<JAC>r.,.c-tJ. ~12 to7t. ...... ~1 .... ....-. llorW -out., ....... 0.. ... -_., ~ ...... 10 to 20 Ir.not• wMfl 4 10 t IOOI coml>lned -== w.o.-.. -.. ier.: UOM --dl"'"O ,.,.. -~ r.our.. ~-to-•101• "°"'"' thew.to-.--~ ..... I to J -P911y ~ tlwough Wt• II ,$ Extended ~-=: ttwo..gll a..n.y ~ • '°' - -momlno -CIOud9 _ ... _. H!Qhe ln lhe7'0elll IN -·~· ... --....,.. i..-"' --7'0e Temperatures ...... ,.._.,, ,. " =-... •2 .. 100 17 Nfl/lrl# ... " Q ~ .. i) ....... .. 16 ....... °"' ,. M ~ .. 78 ......... IM .. :z..R .. w .. 70 ....... '° 11 ... ,. 12 ~ 74 17 ==---.. 11 71 .. E;; ., 11 N .. ,; .. .. .. Olwtoft9.NC 18 t1 ~ ,. ~ 17 50 C'-oo 90 72 Clnclnnllll ae M ~ " M ~S C 90 M Coll.mbul .. 17 o.a..f"IW-101 78 o.r-83 57 0.-" eo 0..-.. 70 ~ 82 57 OUIVtll . 80 IO EJP..., IM ee F~ 65 4e F•go 112 17 ,.,.,.11 71 11 G<MIF-91 12 -" llO ........ n 64 l4oftoUu '° n -.. 1• ~-MIPG4ll '° .. ----·-1:1 72 ""d'eiar,,.. 17 17 ""'-.. aJ "-City '1 71 Olr.-Clly 0..-L.-Veo-.. 7' Ottenck> Ul1lt AOClll t4 .. ::.:z-13 70 ~ ., .. "'-"~ ~ " 70 ::=t'Me ......,.,.. •1 70 ...... .. 7t ~.o.. ...._._ .. 11 ,.,_ ..,...,,~ 1:1 .. =Clly ......... 90 .. Hlllt~ '° 74 .... '\'. .. a l'ldwNIM MotlOll n 11 ll.Lou19 ... .._., .... ~,..... .. 12 Tides TOOAY lecofld .. •-o-t .f"' u .......... flrMIOw 12 42 IUl'I o.• :::::r.: ~7.iOeM U LOCIAftOll , IOw 11·~pm 21 =:'C'"" .._._""" ·~.:"' II 4 11rM """ .Hi11Y ...,. -::t .. 7: pm .. -4Clllta1 .. ......,, w.....,,.c1· ''"'·--....,. =:1~a1 •1.•p.111. .._,._ .. t4lp111~.--llC ~a-di 1-0SLM.W~--........ ..,~ , ... p"' w-......... w. '* -, 101 11 atate-M 71 9elllMI• ,,. 71 ... AnlonlO 12 ..... °"90 104 ..... ,.~ IO M a..nte ~::: == 71 .. llclolr..-12 .. ~ 18 70 T OINll• II M T-11 81 TIAN .. •1 w~ .. 18 - .. 12 17 • t7 " = ~ 73 114 IO 7' 13 .. t1 IO 71 &4 " 13 12 74 IOI 71 .... 102 n SURf RIPORT • A busy week In New York City ... end hot and humid! But I love the excite- ment of the big city and see- ing all the new things et the jewelry show. Thia year every- thing seems to run to ex- tremes ... either big and bold or llght and dainty ... aome- lhlng tor everyone and every lute. Peerta and gemstone heads (and combinations thereof) are atlll very strong. They are ehown In every length and In many new twltts. Thet wasn't meenl to be a pun ... It Juat came oul that way. It It lrue lhough, twisted strand• are very popular. By having mMy MP•rale ttranda of • wtde var1ety they can be put together In just the.right com- bination to 11C:Cent or blend wtth M'lldy't eotturM MCh dey. Thet i. for the P«l<>n who llkee to have a hand In creating her own jewelry ac- OMIOrlM. For thOM wtth leU Imagination or crMtlve lklll there are many, meny beeutl- f\11 nectclacee to be Mfected for their "alrMdy" look. Blade and white It very popular In ctothea thla MUOn eo It onry followt thet lher• ~ . Mary Barr CGn1fifld Gemo1~1:1t ~CHARLES ff. BARR ew~tA it.cc,...._•-L••••• 17th & Irvine, We1tcliff Pla101 Newport &.oc:h 642-3310 would be many dramatic jew- elry ltema shown In onyx and white coral too. Meny of thOM pleeea have diamond accent• and ,re eo emer1 looklng thet r Jutl couldn't rellat them. I love buying love- ly "''no• too, and I want our ~st<>t'Mft to have the op- portunity to tetect from the wtdeat veriety poeelble. Whl .. In New Yortc I ettend- ed lot• ot l~utt'Y. mMtJnge and eemtnera and ceme home much wtMt. I had a gOOd tlrM too . . . went to dinner at Llncotn Center wtth Al Haig and Gerald· Ferd at the Invitation of a mutual ft*1d. Aleo to Wlndowl on the Wor1d for e Diamond Ctub dinner, the next night • bfio- quet at the Ptau wtth the Plumb CIUb, 9nd then a ,... otptlon et the New YC>ft( YICht Clu~ for the America Cup partldpanta.. BY THE WAY we atltl ha~-· few CC>P* of the Amertce Cup bOok aveH•bte. "you .,. lnt8Nlt9d OOtM by end '** one up . . . oompetment1 of Ch"1tl H. 8wr Jni ..... Md the R<>*t Wetef'I eomp.ny, 'l . -'4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 ... . . . ... .. .. ' ' .; ~ · . .• :· . . . . ·: < ;. ; . . • . • • ~ ~ " " ,. " ·' " ·. ·: I TOP OF THE NEWS NATION Airline strikers losing jobs By die Associated Press HOUSTON -A rock-throwing incident left one person injured in the first reported violence of a Continental Airlines mechanics strike as a "substantial'' number of workers threatened with loss of their jobs broke ranks and returned to work. Some employees w ho showed up Monday but reported late were told their jobs had already gone to "permanent replacements," according to uruon and company officials. Family camped in desert EL PASO, Texas -Camped in tents in the Texasdesertafter beingevicted from their home. a family hopes to earn enough to move back to Michigan. Richard Findley, 35, and his wife, Elizabeth, 22, said Monday thetr only concern is for the sun and 95-degree temperatures. which have left their 6-month-old dau~hter Corinne's akin bright red. Findley said he's worked various jobs around the country since being laid off by General Motors Corp. tn 1974 Paraqua t spraying blocked ATLANTA -As Gov. Joe Frank Hanis tried to soothe fears about the spraying of paraquat on marijuana pat.ches in a national forest, a citizens group won a temporary injunction in a multimillion-dollar suit to block the spraying. A federal official said Monday no more spraying had been done m Georgia and none was immediately planned. STATE 'Sin Tax' funding urged LOS ANGELES -Funding for California community colleges should come from a "sin tax" on wine and liquor, not from tuition. an American Federation of Teachers leader says. AFT College Guild president Virginia Mulrooney said Mon- day that Gov. ~rge Deukmejian's fund cuts for the state's 107 community colleges could cause a decline in enrollment because of students who cannot afford to pay tuition . Latinos ask crash probe COACHELLA -A coalition of four Latino groups says it will ask for a federal investigation into the death of 11 men whose car collided with a hay truck last week as it fled U.S . Border Patrol officers. Saw Martinez. field director of the United Fann Workers in Coachella, said Monday that a request for a formal mvestigauon by the U.S. Justice Department "is suU in the planning stages.'' Firm accused in gem fraud LOS ANGELES -A Beverly Hills com- pany has been accused by the Federal Trade Commission of luring valuable diamonds away from WlSUSpecting customers m exchange for other gems that w ere overvalued. The Kimberly International Gem Corp. told gem collectors that the diamond market was Cal tenng and promised them large returns il they invested in other gems, which the company failed to reveal had little value, the FTC charged in a suit filed Monday in U.S. District Court. WORLD Rioting leaves 400 dead COLOMBO, Sn Lank.a -President Junius Jayewardene described the riots between the majority Sinhalese and minonty Tamils that wracked his island nation last month leaving nearly 400 dead as "a crisis of civilization." Jayewardene spoke Monday, making his first public appearance since the nots that also left 100,000 people homeless and caused millions of dollars of damage . Chad war conference due N'DJAMENA. Chad -President Hissenc Habre said today he IS prepared to hold direct talks with Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy to end the Chad war, but would not talk to rebel leader Goukouru Oueddei. Habre told a news conference that his only quarrel is with Libya, "which today is in military occupauon of hall our country ... in contempt of the conscience of the international community." Marines lo 'shoot back' BEIRUT. Lebanon -The government reopened Beirut international airport today, ending a six-day shutdown caused by Druse shellfire.~ Mannes and one U.S. Navy air controller were wounded in three previous ahelling attacks, OM in late July and two laat week. Col. Timothy J Geraghty. commander of the 1,200-man Marine contingent said his men would return fire if they were attacked. Storm Alicia heading west MIAMI (AP) -Tropical Storm Alida, the fint named storm of Lhe 1983 Atlantic hurricane eeuon, wu drifting west today after forming in the nortb-amtnl Gulf of Mexico, forecast.en aaid. 1lle s1orm pecking winds up to'° mph waa movina wmt at about 6 mph, aatd offk:W.I at the ~ NatlOnal Hurricane Center, and conditions were ' favorable for Alicia to strengthen. ~ • Storto wamings·may be required today along ~ por1Jonl of the Texas cout, the forecaateni aaid. ! At 6 a.m. EDT, A.Uch• was ct>ntered at longHude • 27.0 north and latitude 92.6 west, or about 300 rntla • eMt of ~ ChrlttJ. T~xaa. r . ': . . •• • ''Probabilities lndiC3te that the Texa.s cout remalna \M most Ukely area that wtll be affected by Alida durtng the next 72 holtrs," the NaUonal Hurricane Center uid early today. U AIJct.'• maximum 1Juat.ained winds reached 74 mph, It would become the ~uon'1 !int hurricane . ' . ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Oregon amnesia victim Identified as an Auatrallan By RICH.ARD GREEN Ofl'lle. .., , ,,_ PORTLAND, Ore. -An amnesia victim who mistakenly thought he waa from London was "visibly moyed'\~hen a family friend he didn't recognize identifted him as a 24-year-<>ld antique dealer from Australia. Un.identified for two weeks since receiving head injuries in a traffic accident, Mantis Gaaiµnas now can be sent photograph.a of family members in a bid to revive his memory, aaid Marianne Koop, a spokeswoman for· Emanuel Hospital where he· is being treated. His mother. with whom he runs an antique shop in Melbourne, planned to send the photos as well as samples of her son's fingerprints to confirm his identity, Koop said Monday. Gasiunas, who thought he was from London and answered to the name David Miller, was "in some shock and was visibly moved" when the family friend identified him in his hospital room, Koop said. Before Gasiun.as was identified, an international search was begun and the hospital received more than 200 phone calls that provided leads but no name. The first solid clue to Gaaiunas' identity came Friday when an uncle living in New York City saw the young man's picture in a newspaper and called the hospital, she said. Officials were contacted in quick succession Saturday by Gasiunas' brother, Aras Gasiunas of ,.,..,........ Amnesia victim Mantis Gasiunas re- covers in a Portland hospital from injuries suffered in a traffic accident. Manchester, England, the family friend from Montreal -who asked that he not be named -and a cousin from Cleveland. Details they provided about food preferences and habits led hospital officials to believe that the amnesia victim was Gasiunas, and the family friend confirmed their suspicions. Family n,.embers said Gasiunas was visiting relatives in England and left there June 9 for Australia via the United Stat.es. He had planned to hitchhike acroes the United States from east to west. Aras Gasiunas, who was t.o arrive from England today or Wednesday, deacribed his brother as a "free agent and independent." Battle near Honduran border By The AHodated Pre11 Nicaragua says its troops killed 26 rebels in fighting near the Honduran border, and Honduras invited neighbor nations, includ- ing Nicaragua, to observe U.S.-Honduran jungle war games starting later this month. Nicaragua's Defense Ministry said Monday three government troops also were killed in the clashes with insurgents fighting to· overthrow the leftist Sandinista government. The ministry said 20 guerrillas were killed in a dawn shootout with government soldiers 12 miles north, of the capital of north- ea3tem Jinot.ega province.Six others and three government troops were killed in skmn.ishes in other parts of Jinotega and z.elaya province, the ministry said. The ministry statement con- tained no other details, but mili- tary 30urces said the fighting was part of an offensive launched this month to counte r a new cross-border invasion of between 200 and 250 rebels from bases in Honduras. Defense Ministry sources esti- mate 2,000 rebels and troops loyal to the Sandin.ist.as have been killed in fighting across northern Nicaragua since January. Nicaragua's Foreign Ministry said Honduran air force planes violated Nicaraguan air space Monday and that Honduran troops attacked a border check- point with heavy automatic weapons fire. There was no immediate word on casual ties in the reported attack on the Las Manos border post in Nueva Segovia province. The ministry said only that Nicaraguan troops manning the post did not respond to what was termed as "a new provocation" by the ~ondurans. ComPuterized jewel robbery JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - Thieves manipulating a computer are suspected in the theft of $3.4 million in gems and ,ewelry from a major jewelry retailer. ' "It now seems certain that one of several of our own employ~. with aooess to our central computer, Is linked t.o the thefts," said Syd Barnett, chairman of the Sterns Diamond Organir.ation, which has 76 retail outlets around South Africa. The losaes took place over a two-year period, he said Monday, but were discovered in Marqarx:rpnugn Inventory. They became public last week when the company informed shareholders it lost just under $400,000 in the fiscal year ending last March. Pilfering is a part of the business, Barnett said, and Stems at any time has about $900,000 worth of stock in transit between warehouses and stores. Other items are on order from abroad. "Al this stage, though, we cannot say where precisely in our ch.a.in of delivery, stock-holding and returns-to-stock from our 76 branches th e thefts took place," Barnett said. Elvis fans mark 6th anniversary MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Joyce Rosenzweig clutched an artificial pink roee wrapped in a picture of two pink teddy bears as she stood with about 5,000 other Elvis Presley fans today t.o mark the sixth anniversary of the star's death. "I love him," she Sa.id, pulling out a stack of pictures of the 1962 pink Cadillac she had painted in Presley's memory. The car is decorated with 13 air-brushed pictures of Presley, including a portrait on its chrome air-filter cover. "He's singing on the motor," said Rosenzweig, of York, Pa. She waited in line with three friends to walk past Presley's grave in a candlelight proces&on that began at 11 p.m. Monday. Presley died of heart disease on Aug. 16, 1977, and the faithful assemble at Graceland Mansion, his fonner residence, each year on the anniversary of his death. ''I miss you and I wish you were here," Presley's voice sang as the fans filed through the mansion's front gates and formed a line two abreasL '!'banks for giving your appliances the afternoon off. , The electri city supply in our town is Jike that which runs a model electric train . When the electric load is evenly dis- tributed throughout the day, there's usuall y enough power to go around. But on hot afternoons, office and hon1e air condi tioners are added. And dryers. And ovens. And other appliances. And the total electric load could get too heavy. So use your air conditioner sparingly. When you're home, please set it no lower th an 7~ When yo u go out, turn it to 85° or higher. And please give yo ur appliances the afternoon off, too . That way you can help lighten the peak load and,help provide enough electricity to go around all day long And we can defer the building of new power plants ... and help keep electric bills dowp . You really do have the power. So please give your appliances the afternoon off. n ... Southern California Edison .s' E Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 1'1 Ma Bell a loser with cards Legless wolllan bests attacker Nationwide network making phone calls on stolen credit cards ,,. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Telephone companies may be losing millions of dollars to a nationwide network of con artiats l.W.ng Wegally obtained credit card nwnbers, industry officials say. The networks that uae a customer's credit card number are often the same ones that deal In stolen credit cards, said Doug Cambem of Pacific Tele- phone, which lost $6.2 million last year from fraudulent credit eard calla in California alone. Although tolls for fraudulent calls are often written off as "bad debts" which the company pays, the price is passed on to consumers as rate increases, Cambem said. "It's always been (thought) OK to rip off the telephone company because we're so big it doesn't matter," Cambern said. "(But) you and I pay for those charges." Phone bills for cardholders victimized by credit card scams can be breathtaking. John and Annie Kennedy of Inglewood received a telephone bill last month for $10,849.87. Someone had learned the couple's credit card number and used it to make 407 calls In one day to such places as Dallas, Philadelphia and Korea. eervice statewide and General Telephone la adding t>0,000 a month to the 600,000 California cardholders. Ironically, the cards were designed to Curb fraud by customers who billed calls to other than their home phones. Utilities lost millions of dollars from that practice until late last year, when the companies instituted third-party billing. Now patrons at a public telephone cannot bill the call to their homes unless someone there authorizes the call -or unless the caller has a telephone credit ca.rel. · The card.a themselves have created a new fraud problem. ~ Last month, Danielle Draper of Sacramento was billed for $19,030.12 ln toll ~. while a Miami woman received a bill for $18,oOO. Telephone company officials believe Draper was overheard using her credit card to place a call, while the Miami woman's name and card number were scribbled on a pay phone booth. Pacific Telephone Is fighting back with a new computer system. LOtnSVILLE, Ky. (AP) -A leglem 69-year-old woman who waged a succe811ful 1 ~-hour battle agalnat a naked attacker trying to undreea her says she wanted to kill the man, but he finally puled out apparently from exhaustion. "I don't know how I did it,'1 she said. Roeett.a M . Smith said she was glad ahe couldn't move much during the struggle Saturday becauae "if I had got ten m y hands on aomething, I , would have tried to kill him.'' . The double amputee, who spends 24 hours a week on a kidney dialysis machine, wa8 not injured in the attack. Cleo Joel Green, 25, of Louisville, was charged with tint-degree criminal attempted rape and 9e00nd-degree burglary in the incident. "I'm not bruised or anything," Smith said after police ruTived. "But I'm so hurt, because I've never bothered anybody. Why would somebody want to do this to me?" Fraud may increase as the number of "Calling Cards" rises. Pacific Telephone has 9 million cards in Customers in Loo Angeles can "dial" their credit card numbers into the pay phone for verification, -------------------instead of reading the number to the operator and The intruder entered her first-floor apart- ment about 12:30 a.m. through a sliding g1aas door which had been left open "to get some of that cool country breeze," Smith said. The man climbed over a 5-foot railing and cut the screen to unlock a screen door. "I looked up from watching TV and saw aomeone coming at me," the perky, dark-haired woman sa.id. "He slapped me out of my chair, threw my walker into the bathroom and threw me on the bed. I was hollering and acreaming: 'Please Bearly affordable Teddys covered with mink DANVILLE (AP) -Frank Nemirofsky . selling what may be the world's most expensive teddy bears, but people who squeei.e the mink-revered creatures don't seem to mind the hefty price tag. ''Initially I felt that a $175 teddy bear would be bought by someone who was well off," he said. "But I soon found people from all walks of life buying the bear because once they've picked him up, they can't put him down. It's exactly like going into a pet'store and picking up a puppy.'' The cuddly Rare Bears sell from $60 for the basic model to $800 for the special Rare Bear Breeding Stock. Nem.i.rofs'ky. a former garment consultant, said the chubby hand-made bears are covered in pure natural mink and come complete with pedigree papers stamped with 24-karat gold seals. In the first year of production, he sold 10,000 of the chocolate-<."Olored creatures. This year, he's cranking out another 50,000 slated for store shelves by Christmas. Nemirofsky said Rare Bear's success has made h.im one of the nation's top mink importers. He said he's had few complaints from environmentalists and animal lovers. "We like to point out to people that we use ... ranched mink, which is grown and bred for th.is purpose just like chickens are grown for Foster Fanns," he said. Sharp drop in heart disease LOS ANGELFS (AP) -Heart attack deaths among 18-to 64-year-old Los Angeles County residents dropped 75 percent between 1960 and 1980, according to a study by county and UCLA researchers. But the researchers say they cannot explain the trend. That study, as well as another by three UCLA researchers, says the rate of heart disease in Los Angeles County is significantly lower than the national average. One study said a county resident in the 18-to 64-year-old age group is 58 percent less likely to die of heart attack than if he or she lived elsewhere, while the other found that for people of all ages, the county's death rate from all heart diseases is 8.9 percent below the n.atio~ average. Ralph Frerichs, an associate professor of epidemiology at UCLA and co-,author of both reports, said the 58 percent figure is the more significant of the two. . "Death itself is a biologicaJ inevitability," he sa.id. "But premature death is what you're always fighting ln public health work. U people are dying younger than 65, that's too early." The 75 percent drop in heart attack deaths was revealed in the 217-pagecounty-UCLA report issued Friday. The study'a goal was to identify major health proble~ so the county Department of Health Servioes can concentrate on solving them. Juel Janis, assistant dean of the UCLA School of Public Health, said the studies "indicate a real difference" between the risk of heart disease in Los Angeles County and elsewhere. But, she added. "It's jus1 speculation to say why." However, the Los Angeles Herald Examiner said in Sunday's editions that the scientists listed eeveral possible reasons. They included greater I" affluence, temperate climate, an influx of migrants healthier than thoee who stay in their home nations, high mineral content in drinking water and a lifestyle that includes more exercise, better diet and less cigarette smoking. RUFFELL'S U'HOLSTnY, INC. .......... _ ....... 1912 HARBOR 8l VO COSTA MfSA -S-48.1156 ,, ...... ... ····•·••tf •11.1.1. DOES YOUR AUTO POLICY NEED A TUNE-UP? "Call me. I can check out . you:0 a~~~e sure pol1c~ etting the y~st for your m ,, money. 9023 Adanatlllanall 962-3391 A ..... Jllw~~-1~ Allstate ~ln~handa. risking being overtleard, said Cambem. He said that Pacific Telephone can also trace fraudulent calls to those who receive them and bill those parties. /#---Rosetta Smith, 69, of Louisville, a double amputee, fought off an attacker for an hour and a haU before police arrived. don't hurt me. Please don't hurt me.' I don't know w hy nobody heard me." A credit card holder is liable for calls made if he gives out his card number to another person for use, even if he did not a uthorii.e all the calls, Cambem added. The attacker terrorii.ed her for 90 minutes, demanding money as he beat, kicked, choked and threatened her. Smith said she told him; "I need some money too. I ain't got no money.'' '\ Any Loan BuysYo~a House. t:: . I :/ Before you buy your house, you look over the fea tures carefully. Well, it's a good idea to do the same with your mortgage lo an. Because with mpst loans, about all you can do is pay them off. J If you need more m o ney later, you must reapply and requalify for a second mortgage or a new first. L Imperials Tomorrow MortgagesM . Buys You a Home. lmperial's innovative new loan is a first that works as a second. It allows you to qualify to day, t~n bo rrow again to morrow at the prevailing Tomorrow Mortgage'\4 rate. With very linle p aperwork. And very few questions. With this additional advance feature. you c an refinish your ho use, pay for a college education. .. O r even go on a much need'e<l vacation. Plus the Tomorrow Mortgage':-1 provides an interest cap over the life of your loan, rnakin~ it even easier to afford all the extras you want. So look over Imperial's Tomorrow Mongage'M and see if it doesn't c heck out better . Then take out the loan that helps you turn your house into a h o me. .1 2 Feature by feature, we stack up better. • Additional advances • Assumabk • lip to 40 year amortization • No prepayment penalty • Interest cap over the life of the loan • Competitive rate We let you pick your payment plan. • O NE YE AR ADJUSTABLE PLAN Your interest rate changes once J)!:r year, not monthly, quarterl y or sc~i­ annually as with most institutions. • FIVE YEAR ADJUSl~BLE Pl.AN Yo ur Interest rate will only chang~ once in over 9 years 3 Plus, we added free lnterest ch ecking. • With our free Checking Plus Interest • A free ATM Card allows you to accn~ · Account, you have no minimum your money from a network of balance and no m onthly se rvice Imperial Convenience Centcrs'M charges. throughout California . 4 Call 1-800-C.H.E.K N.O;w. (1-800-243-5669) • • Our loan representatives arc o n the line from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m . Monday through Friday to tdl you how and w here you can apply for the Tomorrow Mortgage~. Don't forgt·t to ask about our var il'ly of saving.-, plans. c~c -400 Nunh llldltn Hiii BIYd <.l:trt'mortl, CA 91"11 (1106'21 WY6 Where Tomorrow Begins Today. £.--.., 111 Ccocro Pttmo 10 \& .. ,., .. xrtt1 1 12~ f:uc Main SCtn't 21~o1'll•rt' S.rt'ct ll1ywm!. ( A 9-4 .. -41 F.I CC'nt n1, <'.A 922H l'l'C'tft(), C".A 9 721 <"">881 0661 (619 ) ~"l-"'210 (209H86 8911 N"'JM>f1 9ac.b • 5-1 DklO SIM>·~ ,.....,..,... s-.a.-. _J J~1 Vla Udo Ncwpun &:iclt (,A 9166' ("'U )()1,.9,.,0 ( 1H)-48'Ht8W l uo fifth AY('nll(• fl() I C'.kmC'nl '4rn-t '861 Stat<' SUTCI '1n Dlqlr>, LA 92101 '3n ,,.nd'OC\I. (.A 9411H *111 ttatt>an. (.A 9 Ull\ (~19)UI ltUf t •l"n ~8"'(l090 (8Cl.,)Ml·4"'\4 IX> lWlnta ltclflll AVCtllK' ~nil i'uta. <".11 9H0-4 (70') '26·1160 ,. .. • ~ i\8 Orange Coaat DAILY l1tlOT /Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 ·Vandals exacerbate • • a tense s1tuat1on Harassme nt of management employees and disrup- tion of service to cilstomers has proceeded ahnost without respite since members of the Communications Workers of America struck the telephone company last week. Locally, union members in Costa Mesa have been accused of throwing eggs and dye on the autos of Pacific Telephone management personnel reporting for work through a picket line. The union disavowed knowledge of the incidents. Police found evidence that the incidents did occur. Since Friday thousands of Orange County residents have had their phone service cut off because of what appears to be more than the ordinary acts of vandalism toward telephone equipment, lines, swit.ching boxes and the like. A spokeswoman for Pacific Telephone says such disruptive activity "does tend to happen during strikes." The implication is that members of the union may contribute to the illegal activities to give the comany a greater incentive to concede more to employees in return for a quick contract settlement. The union officially denies participation in planning or carrying out any acts of vandalism or harasmnent. It should. Tampering with telecommunications equipment is a felony. There is no firm evidence that CWA 111embers have had anything to do with any of the local, or similar national assaults on A TT equipment. It is not out of the question that random malcontents have seized upon the publicity generated by the strike to strike out personallly against the utility. And divert blame to innocent union members In any event, distruption of phone lines can be a life threatening situation for many people ... the sick, elderly, di.sabled and very young among them. We join with Pacific Telephone and local law enforcement in urging citizens to keep their eyes open for persons tampering with communictions lines, lighting fires near transforme r poles or loitering in the vicinity of phone cables or equipment. MAILBOX Save the children To the F.d.Jtor: I have just read with sadness and anger the account of the senseless death o( Little Nga Thi Nguyen . Crimes against young children are becoming more apparent in our society today and for what reason. I will never understand. lf the person. or persons, responsible for this tragedy had a vendetta against the Nguyen family for whatever the reason, why for God sakes take out their anger on a beautiful 6-yEW'-old, who knew only laugh ter and happiness, and brought the same to her family? cruelty for their actions. Children growing up in this far from perfect world neE<i not be subject to the actions of sick people from which little ones cannot defend themselves. Little Nga Thi never harmed anyone in her short life and I think we as hwnan beings have a commitment to kids everywhere to offer them a happy, peaceful life, one free from senseless crimes such as this. May justice prevail over the guilty parties respoeible for thia. May God bless little Nga Thi, her family and others like her who may be subject to wronp of a sick mind. RALPH E. ROLLINS, m Sleazy food scam st~pped WASHINGTON -Reporters aren't lobbyists, nor should they be. But sometimes the press does influence legislation. This is the story of an inquiry from my office that kept a bad law off the books. It began with a lawsuit by a group of elderly and handicapped tenanta of federally subsidized houaing in affluent Westchester County, N.Y . They had been forced by thelr land.lord to pay for meals whether they ate them or not. The trouble was that some of the tenants had digestive prob- lems a nd literally couldn't stomach the institutional meals they were required to buy. Others simply preferred their own cook- ing -but couldn't afford to pay for both sets of meals on their limited incomes. So the tenants sued to get out of the mandatory meal program. Gagged on food One tenant, 85-year-old Mary A.rundeU was forced to pay $90 a month for meal.S, so she decided sht-'d at least try them. "I immed.i- ately found I had trouble eating the... food," she stated in an affidavit. "It disagreed with my stomach and I frequently gagged. Nevertheless, I usually tried to eat some of the evening meal. because I could not afford both to pay for the 'Meal Service' and to buy and cook my own suppers." The tenants had legal precedent on their side. Courts in Colorado and California have ruled against mandatory meals in subsidized G. -J1-c1-1-11-11-11-1 -~ housing. The Colorado tenants argued successfully that the meal payment was in effect an extra rent charge and therefore in violation of the law that limits subsidized tenants' rent to 30 percent of their income. Faced with the virtual certa.µl ty of an unfavorable court declalon in the West.chester suit, landlord interests successfully lobbied C.on- gress for an innocent-looking amendment to the Omnibus Hous- ing Bill of 1983 The amendment, buried in the 150-page bill, stated: Small print ''Nothing in this section . authoriz.es theSecr;itary (of Hous- ing and Urban Development) to prohibit a required meals pro- gram, nor shall any provision of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 be deemed to prohibit such a pro- gram or to require that payments under such a program be con- sidered part of the rental charge for the unit." In short, HUD would be power- less to stop land.lords from requir- ing their subsidized tenants to pay for meals whether they wanted them or not. The Westchester tenants' lawsuit could be thrown out of court. Alerted to this legaalative sne~ attack, my asaodate J ohn Dillon called the office of Rep. Femand St. Germain, D-R.I., chainnan of the subcommittee where the amendment originated. St. Germain's aides were flab- bergasted. They said they had assumed the amendment was a "defensive action" designed to keep landlords from canceling meal programs -in other words, a legal protection for the subsidized housing tenants. "It was never the intent of this amendment to impoee meals on people," a staff member said. Quick reaction Working quickly and quietly, St. Gennain pulled the amend- me nt out of the housing bill before it reached the floor for a vote. The landlords will now be unable to force their hard-up tenants to buy meals they don't like and can't afford. This may not be the way the legislative p~ is supposed to work. But an estimated 150,000 elderly and handicapped tenants across the country will no longer be forced to pay greedy landlords for an unwanted program. the three daily trains between Canada and the United States. with the cooperation of Amtrak, the Mounties and local police. In one recent episode at St. Albans, Vt., officials found illegal entranta. Amtrak has also in- creased ita surveillance on the Florida-New York runs, working with federal agenta to keep the trains clean of drugs -and of the guns that dope courien often carry for protection. Two men arrested on a train in Virginia were carrying $150,000 worth of cocaine. Political fact NO DOCUMENT DEAL: Preli· dent Reagan's asaertion that he knew nothing about any pilfered Carter campaign material in 1980 has history on its side: I can vouch for that. In 1976, President Ford's Republican regulars controlled the seats, floor passes and other coveted perquisites at the Kansas City convention. Access to the convention floor is a crucial means of courting del- egates, and Ford's men were determined to keep the Reagan DERAILING DOPE: Narcotics operatives off the floor no matt.er traffickers and illegal immigrants _ how unfair the tactics had to be. I are showing an increasing taste had a high aource in the Reagan for an unlikely means of entering camp who had readied a whole the United Stat.es from Canada: packet of documentary evidence the railroads. The switch to Am-o n t h e F o rd p e o pl e ' s trak is due in part to the tighter heavy-handed tactics. But before surveillance of airports, landing the story could be diBcreetly strips and coastal entry points. leaked, it needed the candidate's So customs and immigration OK. The word came back from authorities have quietly stepped Reagan's suite: "The Old Man up their enforcement activities on doesn't want to play that way." Industry still has a rough time I suppose the reason for writing this le tter is of the hope that the people responsible for this, and for othtr neE<iless crimes against chil- dren, will realize the abaolute cold Costa Mesa By THOMAS D. ELIAS ClllfDRlll fDCUB than a prudent businessman wanta to tackle these days," says Allen E. Puckett, board chairman of Hughes Aircraft C.o., the state•s third-largest private employer. any new facility and no new plant may add significantly to the smog levels of the area where it's built. l. M. BOJd !It's the law Divorced fathers who fail to pay the decreed child support pay- ments tend to resent the legal system more than they resent their fonner spouses. That you might expect. But what you might not expect is that divorced mothers who fail to get the decreed child support payments likewise tend to resent the l~al system more than they resent their fonner spouses. Many· a citiz.en alive today was alive in 1897 when the British Navy forbade ita sailors to use either knives or forks at mess. Such implements weren't manJy, decreed the braid. 11 Am told ttft? typical wearer of ·contact lenses spend.a about $100 a year on maintenance supplies. Q . In a fight between a polar bear and a wolverine, w ho wins? A. Bet on the wolverine. Atleut, in one documented caae, ifhe bear died, the wolverine didn't. Q. In what country do the men live longest? A. Japan. At the moment. Average: 74.2 yean1. Q . Wa1n't It orxoe a fad among men to wear el..utlc annband8 over ORANGE COAST D1ily Pilat . their shirtsleeYee? A. Not so much a fad as a necessity. Shirt&leeves were made all the same length, but anna weren't. A rifle bullet travel.a faster than sound, no? Then how do you account for the (act that many 90ldiers, wounded during World War II by single rifle bulleta, later told the medical reeean:hers that they "heard it (the bullet) com- ing." . Turns ou t numerous left-handed catchen have played in bueball's major leagues, con- trary to previous report. Most but not all did their stinta eight 1eore yean ago or earlier, however. Du&k of any December la known to be the moat dangerous time of all for pedestrians. D.1inoUi Avenue ls the aqua.re most frequently occupied in that game called Monopoly. Read "Boyd's Sook of Odd Facta," $10.95 plus $1.0~ poet.age, packing, hand.Uns -total$ 12. (or return mail delivery, tend s6Y· ment with order to "Boyd's Book,'' Crown Syndicate, Inc., P .O . Box 99126, Seattle, WA 98199. Jerry Brown must be chuckling a bit as he goes about his round of speechmaking these days. He's surely noticed that virtually all the problems blamed on him during h1a eight yean aa governor are still wi~ California, even If he's not. That includes 'SOme surprising ones. Every candidate for gov- ernor last fall promised, for exam- ple, to end Brown's "no-growth'' policies and bring new industry to the state. Corporate leaders said Brown's pttM!nce had led to so many regulations they'd rat.her build new plants almost anywhere but in California. It w as almost like a rehash of the famous "Fantua Report.," a 1977 study in which a Chicago consulting firm rated Caliornia the 49th most desireable state for industrial expansion, Only a Republican governor could tum things round. the GOP cl.a.imed during the campaign. No improvement Well. California got a Re- p u b Ji can governor, bu t "no-growth" problems are still alive. "The hurdles that one has to sunnount In developing a new industrial site here are just-more Puckett decried Callfomia's "anti-growth environment." His complaint, coupled with plans to locate new planu in F1orida and Arizona, demonstrate that Brown alone didn't create the problems California muat sur- mount if its growth pattern is to continue . Paperwork problems Like most big firms, Hughes Aircraft is put off by two key California requirements: It muat file a complex series of en- vironmental impact reports on Law properly 'handcuffs'police A British colonlal offlcer, when questloned in the last century about hla reports of investigating techniques there, said, ''There ii a great deal of Juiness in it. It is far pleasanter to alt comfortably in the ahade, rubbing pepper Into a poor devil's eyes, than to go about in the hot aun hunting up evidence." No doubt we have come far from the red pepper procedure, with our constitutional uteguarda for pel"ION M.'CUaed of trimbW behav1or. Many Americana ioday think we have come too far -but th1t it becauae they never have been, or think they never wUJ be, llOCUlled of such activity by the police. There are good and auong reuons for the judldary p1llclng theee lepl realrainta uPoft the police force. Hlttorically, ln every cue where the polJce have beesl• 8fven greatln' latitude, they have abu8e!Cf lt ..._ and prec:,Wely becaUle It la much easter to UR the equJvaknt of pepf>"r than to en&ap ln hard invt!9tlgaUve work wtthln tho JepJ perimetera. IYllH 111111 ~ y We are proud that we are "a nation o1 laws. not of men," but when the polloe complaln that they are "handcuff~' by laws, what they are really uying la \hat they want to be allowed to ect u their lncUnatJona and <tenpera- menta prompt them ln any if ven situation. Our fea.r of crime hu became ., phobic that we are willing to bend the law In order to enfon:e It more vigilantly, whk:h la• deluaive and ~el'Oua contraidJctjon In t.enna. No nation hN ever been ~mm by c:rtminal.I; too many have been subjup\ed by• police atate, uslna "law and order'' aa a precext for cnWtlnc individual Ubertfea and dlllenl. CrUM arilee out of the &9neral culture of a tcdety; lt ii• .ymp\Om ol moral decay and aod.a1 d.lalnte- gntion and the looeening of t-.m1Ua1 and commwtlt)' u Sl.nce J , we are unwilling or unable to do much to rectify these cauaes, we concentrate on the symptoms and ask our law officers to "crack down" on malefactors and of- fenders. Given our high incidence of antl8odal behav1or, the only way they can do Lhll effectively la by lanorlng or flouting the Jaw themaelvee, whether they want to or noL The police ~ chronlcally frustrated here. beal\.we ~(.:d plalnly that the restraints upon them by the judk:lary leave too many loopholes foe the power- ful, the cunnina or the brutal. But when you cloee the loopholett, you &bo make it 8'llY for the police to evade their proper wk. and to chanae their role from pl'OCAlc1.0n to bulliee; and tbe!r vkUma are tnvari.ably the poareet. the weakalt and the dumbest. wbo cannol avail themltlvtt of expensive legal c:owwel. We have to be8Jn by lllkJna ourtelves why we have NCh a cttm1nal ~y andaW't plucJdni out the roota rather than haddna vain.ly •t lhe branchft. • Neither requirement came from Brown. And neither can be eliminated willy-nilly by his SUC· cesaor, Gov. George Deukmejian. The envirorunental impact re- ports are required under a 1970 law signed by then-Gov_ ROnald Reagan. The law's mandate was later expanded on by the ltate Supreme Court-which then was dominated by Reagan appoin*-t. • And the smog restriciioos '4ftl"e unpoeed by the federal Clean l\lr Act, palRd in j971 under ano&ber Republican, RT'chard Nixon. .; ' Puckett also complained about zoning and land use boards like the Coastal C.ommiaaion. claiming they make it difficult (or any firm to build in the state's best areas. Housing prices. he said, a.re another curb on expansion. Politicians didn't create the Coas\al Comml.9aion: The people did, v1a ProposiUon 20, a 1972 initiative. And houaing prices are high because of a combination of market forces, intereet rates and government policies. No magic here Saya LL Gov. Leo McCarthy. ch.ainnan of the state Economic Develoment Council, "We can't just wave a wand and wipe out all conditions.'' No politician can, becliUle the history of Calilomit no-growth and alow-growth regulation.a ahowa they exist becliu.e moat people here want them to., Which augaesta two thinga: -After .ome stat.el now oom-peu.n, wtth C..Ufomla ror new lnduatry arow a bit rniott, they'U lldopt almi.lar ~ona. -Tho no-jJ'OWth a.ue w• a bogul one all aloq, limply another vehk:M for the "outa" to attack the u1n1.n One \eltof Detnoc:nia' ln~ly wW be whe1.bm' they Miave the 1-ae alone now that t.hey"N ~ "out111 and ~pubUcanl mud f'n~ rorm th. eJdlUna ~-- .. ' ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 18, 1983 .47 Sally needs some space · Astronaut p icks flying over n ews confe r e nces SACRAMENTO (AP)-Astronaut Sally Ride says apace flying ia easier and more fun than the ceremonies and news conferences that follow. Dr. Ride, whoee degrees include a doctorate in physics, was praised Monday as "a genuine American heroine" during a joint session of the state Legislature, a public rally on the Capitol steps that featured band music and a release of toy balloons, and a reception in the Capitol rotunda by politicians of her native state. The Stanford-educated Dr. Ride, 32. w hose parents live in Encino, is married to a fellow astronaut. She said Be njamin Cohen she ii in the middle of a two-month publicity tour required of all utronauta on their return trorn apace mlaaions. She and four male astronauts spent six days in space aboard the shut tle Challenger last June. Dr. Ride was praiaed by Senate President Pro Tern David Roberti, D-Los Angeles, as a "model for young women wanting to excel in non-traditional occupations," and "a genuine American heroine." The Legislature presented her with a special joint resolution mounted on a wooden plaque. Astronaut Sally Ride is ho nored on the steps of the ,.,...,..... Capito l in Sacram e nto by Gov. George Deukmejian. Introducing Bawa.ii volcano spews hot lava VOLCANO, Hawaii (AP) -Fountains of • glowing red and yellow lava spewed 90 feet high overnight at Kilauea Volcano, ldentista said. The seventh major release since Kilauea erupted Jan. 3 began Monday morning, when lava gurgled and fumed inside a cinder cone 180 feet high in the volcano'• east rift wne, aaid Reggie Okamura, ICienU.t in charge of the U.S . Geological Survey'a Hawaiian Volcano Obeervatory. A lava flow pouring out of the vent at an estimated 100,000 cubic yards an hour had extended about two miles in an unpopulated and remote area to the northeast by Monday night, an obeervatory spokesman said. Rooseve lt aide Cohen dead at 88 W ASlilNGTON (AP) • -Benjamin V. Cohen, a echolarly lawyer who drafted major New Deal legislation as a member , Taste that delivers of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Brain Trust," is dead. Cohen, 88, who died Monday at Georgetown University Hospital, was credited along with the late Thomas G. Corcoran with writing such major New Deal laws as the Securities and Exchange Act, the Public Utilities Holding Company A.ct, the Federal Housing Ad- ministration Act, and the Tennessee Valley Authority Act. After he formally left government service in 1947,Cohencontinued to quietly advise govern- ment leaders from his Washington home. He also served as a delegate to the United Nations. No liberty f o r 2 5 0 m a rines after ba r fight ROOSEVELT ROADS NAVAL STA- TION, Puerto Rico (AP) The Navy has suspended liberty for 250 Marines based on the Puerto Rican island Vie- ques pending investiga- tion of a weekend bar brawl with townspeople that left fiv e leathernecks injured. f .tlllll'I' t Ill' r.111 •, 1111 .111111 llhlll.tlll I ' f11r drr\ ,.,, '"•I\\ I 'I ',II \fl , IJ II I I ;11 We h.we r<1t~ ~.under $l;indard rates lor drover\ between the age\ of 30 and&O TherP\ a good rea\on for th1\ J armer\ know\ th.ii th~•\f' d"ver~ tend 10 hf> \.tier and more <"<'ful on Your<' th<' drover\ who havP fewer accident\ That\ why r Mrner~ ( 11".lrl'd our .l0r60 p.idta!(e auto polory If you qualoly, yoo could ...-ive w~.mtrally F.irmen lnwranc<' Croup ~ worlung ~•antly lo k~p rhe coo.t\ of 1mur .lnu clown. and the amount of protf'<1ion up And thK )()/60 ~1.1d.•ge •UIO poloc y I\ ont' way we rlo 11 Y,,hy not ullmel CARL SIPES ~142 Warner Ave. #105 Huotlngtoo Beach C'.alif .• 92649 846-7707 Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. pack LIGHTS: 10 mg. "tat. 0.9 mg. nic!l'ine, FILTER: 16 mg. "tar". 1.1 mg. nicocine, av. per cigarette by FTC method. r .48 -.. - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 If you've been reading the paperorllsten- 1 ng to the news lately. you probably know that a lot of changes are tn store for Pacific Telephone. These changes are coming about because of the recent agreement between AT&T and the Justice Department. Out of this agreement seven regional companies will be created. Each independent from the oth ers and from AT&T. What do~s all this mean? It means that Pacific Tele phone ts undergoing the biggest c hange In Its history. After m ore than 76 years of serving the communication needs of Cali- fornia and Nevada Pacific Telephone ts looking ahead to a new name. A new set of opportuni- ties. A new beginning. Pacific Telephone gives birth to a new family of companies: Introducing Pacific Telesis Group. Pacific Telesis Group is more than a new name. It is a clear reflection of our corporate goal to build on the strengths of the past. while we plan for the future. The word Pacific stands for our hen tage. firmly rooted in P'aciftc Telephone's reputation f~~~~~vid-PACIFICEITELESIS"' finest com-Group munication service and equipment available anywhere in the world. The word Telesis stands for our direc- tion. The word itself means progress tha t ts in tellig~n tly planned and PACIFIC El BELLw directed. At Pacifi c Telesis Group. we want to put the Information Age at your fingertips -to help you intelligently plan and then realize your desired communtcatlon and Information goals, whether fo r business or home. In order to achieve this, Pacific Telesis Group will be a htghlydiver-NEVADAEIBELL ... sified family o f companies specializing in every aspect of Infom1at1on Age products and services.These compan1es include: Paci fie Bell and Nevada Bell. T hey will provide high-quality. dependable local phone service to 20 million people throughout Cali- fornia a nd Nevada. Of cou rse. there will be much more to Pacific Telesis Group tha n tele phone service. Starting J a nuary 1. ttrere wlll be three addl- ttG.nal subsidiaries: .. PacTel Communication PAC .. TEL .. Systems. An inn'ovative Communications marketer of state -of-Systems the -a rt communication equipment for busi- ness a nd residential c us tomers. Its function wiU b e to see tha~every customer receives the informa tion management system that best fits their needs. ' Pac Tel Mobile Access. A s pecialist in the rapidly expanding fie_Jd of na ·C ... :re L mobile communlcat10n r"IMI .. I "" systems (telephone sys-Mobile Areess terns used in a utomobiles a nd other vehicles). It will employ celluJar radio technology to im- prove performance so more people will be able to use this servi ce. This ls an area that offers unlimited potential. And finally. Pac Tel Publis hing.This will bethepublishingarmof nA.C .. TEL Pac ific Telesis Group. r"IMI W .... It will produce the tele-Publishing phone directories and the Bell Yellow Pages. Each of these three subsidia ries will pur- sue new business ventures In their areas of \ k" ~ \ ; <t expertise. Naturally, we wtlJ add othe r compa - J1 ies as the n eed arises. No matter how far we move into the future, we11 never forget our past. Weare standing on the threshold of a new communication era.An era where instantane- ous transmission of Information ls more than Important. ifs essential. At Pacific Telesis Group, we welcome the challenge of this exciting new time. We feel we already have the communication experience a nd state-of-the-art technology to be at the forefront of the Information Age. Bu l no matter h ow advanced our sys- tems become. we wtll never forget the commit- ment we made over76 years ago: To personally, satisfy the communications needs of all our customers. One of the n ice things about Pacific Telesis Group ts that we will be locally managed.This means we will be able to accurately understand the needs of our customers on an individual basis. And while.yes. we've always been respon- s ive to those needs. we believe our new struc- ture wtll allow us to be more responsive. More fl exible. And even more accessible than ever before. -Finally. th~ prime benefit of the Informa- tion Age should be to make Hf e easier because 1 t gt ves people more con troh>ver their personal and business environments. It ts to that end. and tha t end alone. tha t we are dedicating our new beginning. If you have any questions about our new beginning. please call us at (800) 555-5000. ~ t . ~ • • . ~ I '· . . ' • ' l • I . ' THI GUST DD THI caum ... __ _L -- ' • \ TUESDAY, AUG. 16, 1983 ANN LANDERS TELEVISION BUSINESS 82 83 85 Gathering for lunch at Tony Roma'• on Thun- day were, top photo lei t, Pilar Wayne and Alex Stoia, curator of Folk Art Museum in Los An- geles. Othen in the lunch bunch were, below, from left, arti1t Beverly ~hman Money of Beverly Hilla, Patrick Munla of Newport Beach amd Mrs. Vincente (Lee) Minnelli. l:i the evenin1 they were among tJaeee attendiq a party at Amen Wardy'• to 1how off Jle•erly'• art work and the fabolou fur collection in- trodueed at the Fa1hion leland 1tore. . Aa Peter, Paul and Mary breezed onto the stage at Pacific Amphitheatre, they were still raiaing "the hammer of justice and the bell of freedom" from the '60s, but aiming them at social concerns of the '80s. Page 83. • I ' I ~ H.appy birthday ••• 59 candles to blow out now A GOLDEN EVENT ..• .llm and ~tWrteon ~ a MexlOM fleet• at their Davenportl•andhometo oetebrat• Jlm'f 50th birth- day. Gueet• lrlcluded .kN11 and ltM •ler (Miiier y= mid lhe ... lllo 0 ng ~ golden day. .ao,oeandtllokl• .... were there -JU9t back from New Yark where they eaw daughter NllClcl It• In "42nd Street." Nikki haa worked her'way ur> fr the chorua Hne to eeoond underatudy and whit. her ' --., tamlly wa there •he got her big chance .. After the lhow the S=• hoeted a cut pw't. and Ken Abel ,. ,.,hd 147 United pilot). alto of Huntington Har-~alklng .talklng about k.,... NCUrtty bnrl} 1tudvtna to become pro-exam and he atlll hM two fe111onal partllam•n-. )'Mf'9 to go at use. I • t --+-' . . ... .. - U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 What is ice cube made of? Only child suffers Refrigerator is the hub of family's social life Nqt all one-child families harbor spoiled brat · If I had to name the greatest single contribution to the closeness of the American family, it would have to be the refrigerator. Itcoola the entire home in the summer, thanks to kids who stand in front of it with the door open. It stores dirty dishes and bowls with nothing in them, thua saving the wear and tear on the dishwasher. It's a twilight wne for half-eaten suckers and old bubblegum. It's a message center for the entire family. (My husband got such a start when he saw a dra1t notice until he realized the message was over 30 years old) It has recorded more fingerprints than are housed in the FBI. It's the hub around which the family's social life centers. Then why don't I love it? Becauae I am sick of fighting my way through crowds to stand there and spend hours trying to find what I am looking for. Who has that kind of time? rm old. I have to get on with my life. I have never Wlderstood why mothers lock the freezer with the key which they "hide" in the lock. and yet have an open-door policy with the refrigerator. fteally! When was the last time a kid ever filched a 17-pound bw.en.turkey and took it to bed with him? Cunpare thia to the fact that I haven't had one leftover all summer that has made it • through the night in the refrigerator. (The last time [grabbed a cold pork chop out of my son's mouth which I was saving for pork fried rice he accuaed me of ma.king an attempt on h..is life.) · So, I had this idea. Well, actually, it wasn't my ERMA BOMBECI idea. I got it from my husband. So we can keep track of what is in our safety deposit box, he keeps a list. When we take a d'ocwnent out of the box for our truces, he records it on a little sheet of paper. When we return an insurance policy or our passports, we write it down. In one glance, we know what is "in" and what is "out." I figured it should work with the refrigerator, 80 I posted the contents on the refrigerator door and asked the family if there were any withdrawals to mark them on the sheet. A cabbage roll had seven ins and outs, signifying no one knew what it was until they bit into it. Some smart-aleck withdrew 35 Bing cherries and two peaches and returned 35 Bing cherry seeds and two peach pits for "inventory." A box of baking soda was withdrawn and returned with the words, "Needs work!" beside it. Probably the most pathetic entry listed under "withdrawn" was ice cubes and a note beside it. "Would have returned same, but don't know what , you use to make them." He's 27 years old. Probably too old to educate. , Parents set tone .•• For kids at the piano TIM' I '1 'l'rw CillCAGO-Parents can help their children succeed at the piano by providing the right environment for practicing, according to the National Piano Foundation. To establish daily practice as a priority, parents should avoid ovendleduling their chil- dren into too many other extra-curricular ac- tivities, the Foundation suggests. They should also experiment with the length of practice sessions: for 90IDe children, two or more short daily practice periods can be more effective than one longer eession, These and other tips for parents of young pianists are offered in a free booklet, "How to Help Your Child Succeed at the Piano." It is available by lending a stamped, &elf~addresaed No. 10 envelope to the National Piano Foundation, Dept. A 230 North MJchigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill.60601. • • • STD...LWA TER, Okla. -To avoid the monotony of the brown bag lunch, vary sandwich filllnp and bread, suggests Dee Ann Hess, a Registered Dietitian at Oklahoma State Univer- sity. Wholewheat. bran and pita bread add extra nutrition as well as provide a change, she points out. "And, occaaionally, forget the sandwich and try aoups. stews or spaghetti," she adds. "Wide-mouthed, insulated jars make it easy to carry a bot lunch from home." ••• NEW YORK -Never store a fur jacket or coat in a plastic bag, adviae:s the American Fur Industry. P1utic prevents air from circulating and can dry QUt Ute leather. U1e a cloth protector if you want to cover the fur. • • • TAOOMA. Wash. -Since 1978, a draw- bridge that spana the 150-foot-wide Blair Water- way here baa been~ 29 times. And twice in (/) 0 z n ..... o 8'< 0 o,.. -c: ::y the past seven years it has been rammed by the same ship. · The British freighter "Dilkara" struck a leaf of the crossing recently, blocking traffic dunng the morning rush hour, In its first encounter, the "Dilkara" deoomissioned the bridge for 11 days. • • • WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. -The joys of world travel often go unnoticed by top executives. One officer of a worldwide· company with 100,000 employees said, "There is no time for fun when visiting eight countries in eight days. The demands are exhausting." The official of R.J. Reynolds Industries said, "It often la even more complicated when you get home. Friends and neighbors accuse you of feigned jadedness when you try to downplay the tri. .. ps. • • • NEW YORK -Pasta consumption in America has about doubled since World War II with about 1 Y, billion pounds of domestical- ly-manufactured dried pMta products eaten annually. Robert Green, executive secretary of the National fasta Association, says a major reason has ~n the nation's increased awareness of proper nutrition and the important role of complex carboydrates. North Dakota is "past.a" country, growing about 80 percent of the durum wheat used for pasta products, according to Green. • • • NEW YORK -The radio industry has traditionally considered television to be an adversary competing for audjence. But more radio stations have been turning to TV as a way to attract liateners. More than $35 million was spent by radio stations to advertise on local TV stations last year tO Cl.I , Cl) 0 :J ~., BASKIN-ROBBINS· < Q.l"+:J ICE CREAM STORE . ··: Ct> n '< Ct> . ·:: .., o n ~ Come and visit :J -0 VI 3-c:-o Cl) C'D ::s QI ;:, ca n 'tl our new ,.. C'D -·Cl) ,..a.:-, location and get ::y in. 'tl CT •QI ,.. -, :J , QI -· -· :s :J ,..~:JCQ ·':'I' V> -· VI (with this DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: There seems to be a difference of opinion about an only children? Some say the family's better off; others, that the one-child family Isn't the happy triad It's supposed to be. Wbat's your opinion? -Mrs. U. DEAR MRS. U.: I have tried to express the pros and cons in several previous columns. Opinions vary. Here is an example of how loneliness can be an important factor: DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: lam writing in response to Mr. B's letter in our local paper. He stated that parents are not selfish because they want only one child. He said that in the one-child family the situation could "be better all around - a happier child and happier parents. Right?" In yvur column you quoted members of the Zero Population Growth: "-they (only children) are definitely not the selfish, lonely, maladjusted 'spoiled brats' of popular stereotype." While many only •children are not selfish or maladjusted 'spoiled brats' (athough many are), most of the only children that I kn~. including myself, are lonely. I am now a college student at Ohio State University, and I still miss not having a little brother Or sister. The cl06eSt relative I have to write to, other than my parents, is a cousin, but it is not the same. I would ~ closer to a brother or sister. And, I keep thinking of how nice it would be to have a little brother to call at home, like the one in the telephone commercial. Also, it is especially diffficult for an only child to grow up in a neighborhood like mine. When I was little, there was only family in my neighborhood that had two children that l could play with. If they got angry with me. there was no one. Because of this I resorted to a close friendship with my dog and an enchantment with television. One may argue, like Mr. B., that the only child should be happier because he can have more toys ~-·~l!!J!.w.,..""tr : ~ 'PiMC~/ 12 50 3 :00 5 :10 7:20 9:30 -;<!~ R s""io!~.~ f~~2: S.30 7 :40 a. 9:50 Aa. WAR.k-RETURN 70 MM OF TltE Nf:foAf:\~5 JEOlm 7:30 1o:n .0411'\,IA ShOWl At 12: u 2 :45 5:151:00 0 :30 TRADlXO ,., PLAC&I "" ShOWl•I 1:003:105·25 7:45 .. 91110 SIRYll& .. m In 70 MM 1:10 3 :20 :30 7 :5010:10 CITY cenTER ~ 63-4 2553 /~~ WAllGll' s --11!111 Plus 8LUE TlNN0.11 (II) NATIONAL ll/'AJi1on l.AM-·s """'' o CHEVY CHASE 1!j SllOWl •I 1 :40 3 :50 C:OO :15 10:20 J:~~-Plus CLASS (R) * Orl·ve·lnl Oo•n 00 Weeknl9ht1 / 7 :30 WHkends Ch•ld••n U '" 12 FR£ E UnlPu No1ed Cl) Cl.I :J '< I :::i IC 0 ~ c. n c: ·.-=s33 ··-.. 30° off ad) on our Regular Sundae &olree 8/22183 One of America's top wine lists . 1927 Harbor Blvd ... c: 3 ~ I :::i -· 11> Costa Mesa ..,, ,.. VI '< c.n -· (N. of Slnclalr P1lntt) 0 645~8173 :s ... Th, w.n,· .;;r··· f.th•I Fine Dining \IK)I East C 11,l\t II 11o1h" .1y \ t'uron.1 dd ~for, ( .1lih1rn1.1 (714) 760·0HI • and can travel more. But I will let him be the one to disappoint a six year old child by telling him to go outside and play with himself. -MR. G . • • • MEDICALETft;S (Replies to and frorfi readers) DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I have been diagnosed as having bland diet-also high fiber-, I still have no relief from pains in my upper and lower alxfomen, with distention and nausea. I'll apreciate any suggestions. -Mr. R. . DEAR MR. R.:ie thing comes to ml.ad .. Have yoa bad x-rays f yoar gall bladder? If Dot, tbe troable may be ere. In a prevloas colam.n some months ago I mentioned a condition called Tbe Salnt Syndrome. When this ocean there's a11aaly Involvement In the gall bladder as we~ the blato1 bernla and dlvertJcalosls. Check this-( wltb yoar doctor to make certain your symptoms. aren't dae to chronic gall bladder disease. • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Last month I had surgery for the third time on the left side for inguinal hernia. My question: how can I prevent a fourth or fifth trip to the hospital? My doctor says he has done all he can. -Mr. L. DEAR MR. L.: lan't It a bout time for consultation? For the "second opinion" you may bave been reading aboat? "KRW" (PG) 12:30. 2:55, 5.20, 7 45. I 0 15 "M STAR CHMID" (R) I 00. 3:25.._5·50. BIS, 10.40 "RISKY BUSKSS" (R) 12'45. 2:50. 4:55, 1·00. 9·05. 11:05 • "M MM MtO- WASKT nor ca> "30 100 llO HO 800 1010 "STAYlli AlM" (PG) 12 JO. 7 l5. 4j0. '4S. I 5S II 00 '-.cTin Of M Ell" (PG) • '°""' 0., s-.r .. 12 JO, 3110 s .IO • O!i. 10 &O "M ma ClllD" Cl> " 00. " s lllll 0 100 HO HO 100 10111 ''fl.AM)MC('' (I) I 00 JOO SOO IW. 900 II 00 "otll." (PS) 11.IO. HS. S'lt I 0 1~10 "CUtSt Of M ,_ PMTID" (K) 11 .IO 1 IO H O, U~. tO!i II IS "WMGMIES" (K) 1001.IO •OOl.IOllOO "M MM MIO WASKT nor Cl> "J~ I 00 )20, HO, 100 1010 * PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES "JAWS 3:0" (PG) "'' "(IW" (PG) "PIY00 1" (a) ""' "TWl.JliKT l'OfE·M MOW" (K) "TMOING rt.AW" (a) "" "M MM MTlt TWO llMCS" (I) "Ctn",.. 'MmD {PS) ... "Slll Of M NIGHT" (l'G) • "1'UllMI PUCO" (I) .. 'ftlVAft sapl" {I) ..... ,_,, .. (I) .. "1lllff Hl" (I) "Qll)" (P) ... "CllJPSHOW" (I) 'Ull" (N) ... "MIS W (N) Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 .. Deja vu ••• Peter, Paul and Mary still extolling causes ~ Charles Kuralt is hack "On the Road," OD CBS. Kuralt, Moyers in new time slot By TOM JORY: CM .. '1 I 'I,,,_ NEW YoRK -Something good has been happening Tuesday nights Oft cas this summer I only thia time, it's two houn lkter. "On the Boa<! with Charles Kuralt" will be broadcast at 10 l!IYJ', and '"Our Times with Bill Moyers" at 10:30, mostly as 91 experiment to see how the back-to-back CBS News productions do with a network. rather than local. »ad-in show. Robert Altman'• theatrical film, "Health," will precede Kuralt and Moyers, tonight only. The two programs have done extremely well - probably better than anyone expected -at 8 and 8:30, and they'll go back to that schedule Aug. 23. In fact, only OM new summer show, "Buffalo Bill." the NBC sitcom, his enjoyed a bigger audience, on average, than "On the Road." And "OurTimes" is fOW'th, behind '"The Hampt.ons" on ABC. "On the Road" attnlcted 23 percent of the 8-8:30 audience thfough ~installments, and Moyers' ''Our Times" 20 peftlllnt, and that can't be bard for the network to swallow. Dming the 1982-83 season that ended in April, CBS shows l.n the 8-9 slot had about 22 percent of the viewen. Neither Kuralt nor Moyers are on CBS' fall IChedule -both lhows~ the air after Aug. 23 - but there has been e.Jl( reoently of working one or both of the oonu))Oftden._ inte the lineup after the first of the year. The fotrmt might be changed, and other CBS News people could be involved. A lot dependl on what happens tonight. "On the . Road" and "In Our Times" are contl'Mting shovn In nearly ~i-y way imaginable - subject. style, pace, ~tation. Yet each comple- ments the other in a remarbble manner. Kuralt, tonight, . talka about cowboys and clotheslines, unu.ual rnailbol(es'and Maude Callen, who atill cares for JJi!!Ople ln PineV\lle, S .C., 32 yean after abe was the subject Of ·a photo--esaay in Life magazine. Moyef'll' subject ia troUble in the Philip- pines. Kuralt's sensitive. thouchtful approach enables him to say thlnp that might aound corny coming from others. "The clothes give ~or and spirit to the American landscape," he •1B ih the first segment tonight. "l ask you, is there not art in these wwels of Ohio ... ?" Moyers is thoughtful and .enaitive in another, perhapa more penistent, way, and cares altogether as much aa KWlllt. Aa when he pursues Philippine By CAROL MOORE °' _ _,,_...., Twenty yean d.J.aappea.red with the sunlight at Pacific Amphitheatre. Peter, Paul and Mary breezed on atage, still rahing "the hammer of justice and the bell of freedom" from the 1960e but aiQllng them at aoclal concerns of the '80s. Their concert Saturday was a fitting cijmax w the week of deja vu headlines: New York's brownout, Elizabeth Taylor's •ngagement and Henry Kiss- inger's appointment. "Puff the Magic Dragon" was a natural reprise. Mary now opts for flowing silk instead of fringed ponchos and her partners have "matured" as they prefer to call it, but the acUvism that kindled their performing reunion ln 1978 is growing stronger with lyrics about atomic poi80nous power and military maneuvera l.n Central America. Personifying their current release, "Sweet Survivor," PP&M are-and urge their listeners to be Tonight's TV EVEMNG -e.-oo- 8D 8 NEWS G WONDER WOMAN" CIBJ1l080 I S.WAT. HAWAIRYE-4 OYER EASY (J)C8SNEWS 9A8CNEWSQ a HBC '=8oru ~<:41 10 From Navarone" Robert Shaw, HMrtson Ford. 0 t • "Adventures Of The Wlldemea FWly" (1975) Robert LC>gff'I. Suaatl Dlmente SNw. -t:»- • DQC CA~lf'I 09 SlAI Clll8INE ())HEWS di 8AAHEY Mill.ER IB AU IN THE FAMILY mDRAGNET -8:35- (Q)MOVIE t t t • "The Spl111 Of St Louis" (1957) James Stewart, MYrrly Hlfni. ton. -7:00- I CBSNEWS HBC NEWS a LAVERNE & SHIAlEY & tXJWAHY 8A8CNEWSO GPOUCEWOllAH Cil NEWS • THREE'S COMPAHY e Cl! JOttBfS Wl.D I BU9MU AfPORT NCVA (J) P.M. MAGAZ1HE <!I BmRTAINM9fT TOHOHT 6D ORANGE COUNTY TODAY (C)MOYE ** "My CNmpion" (1981) Yollo SNmlda.. Ctwil Mitchum. (l)MOYE tH "Art Enemy 0t The People" ( 11177) Sieve Mcaueen. Charles Durning. -7:30- 11 iON THE TOWN ·~mJO 8EYEONLA. I ONEDAYATATM (J) n; T At; DOUGH • MACNEIL/ L94A91 felORT <!I YOU ASKED FOR IT 6DMOYIE • • "Playglrl" ( 195<t) Shelley Winters, Sany Mvan. @ MOYIE •• on "Race FOf YOUI Ufe, Chai1le Bl'o.n!" ( 1977) Animated. -1:00-e (J) ON THE ROAD WI™ CHAAl.ES KURALT 0 QI THE~ TEAM • 8 9 HOU YWOOO: THE GIFT Of lAU9tfTB\ PAAT • llMOYIE * * "0on'1 Plan, l'I Chwoe When I'm Reedy" (19691 Enzo Ceruslco, Sue Lyon. "PAST, l'UNNY SAnR•!' • NEW YORK TIMES THEATRE ~ fA\Nl(Jlrl SQUAPI '...,;I • 111ur 11111~ U1"flltAL Al K>A"O l)tJl -OllJ .• -_,.::p Pre.ident Marcoll -carefully, respectfully, skep-J------------------- tically non.ethelem -on a government order w cloae 1111------------------• the small. opposldon newspapn called We Forum: "FUNNY, OFFBEAT AND ORIGIN~L •• 11 Marcos -•'there was no order to close We -•·••••• ··-... •• ... w"°"" NEw~ ...... 1•1 Forum. They doled it on their own." Moyers-"But they were an-ested." Marcos -"No, they were not. They were releued. After that, they dked to be released, I releued them. But they committed several crimes.'' Moyers-"What crimis?" M.aroos -"The crime of aubversion and rebellion." AllNtm1 a ""° 11ro111tNrt1 EOwarat ..,,,...,_ m~ 581·WI aA ..,..·..,_. 1itatv1h1'1111 E°""'* wnmio. 535331 53IM40• c:.TAIQA EOwWOtHlftllwle 13\aOt -------- I# I ..al'T'AILWA&r- R£TURN Qf 1HE JEDI rl~ ...... ,.,, I •• 4 ••• 'I ... ~ }· 41•••t. ..,.,,.,~. •"'.'lil! -.""!"O ·--..---·-·-·- l"C1••rd\ lllll'iTOI l'l"'t 1144 • , . -.. fearful of the future, auspidoua of the put carrying on for all that matters." Thelr emphasis la on humans singlng together. Mary lamented that it'a a shame work aonp have been loet to progress before ahe sang "Greenland Whaler," and Peter st.Opped th~ clapping aa:ompani- ment to another song w urge 1he audience to ahow more chutzpah and join ln with the word.I. The perfonners obviously revel ln their muaical genre. Mary noted that "if you aren't smart enough w pick up a tune the fi.nrt time around, folk songs wait for you to come back" before offering a reinterpreta- tion of "There But For Fortune," dedicated to Phil Ocha and Harry Chapin. But the trio can still be whimsical, too, especially when exhorting the audience w provide the collective "Zip!," "Pf ft!" and "Prrrrr" for one of their choruses. (Wonder how that registered on the decibel charts in College Park?) After intermission each star shared the spotlight with the new "fourth voice of the group," bassist Cil TWUGHT ZONE • SAHDIMIG'S UNCOlH .MOVIE t t ~ '"The Mone, ;haf1ge"" (Plfl 1) (1976) Ki111 Douglas, uvistopher Plummet &I NCVA QI!) lftl.IHE CID NOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS OMOVIE • • "Gone In 60 Secoods" (1974) H 8. Halickl. Marlon llu$ia. -8:30- ~ EVEMNG AT POPS fC)MOVIE .. "flllen Angel" (1981) Mellnd4I Ollon, Dena Hlll !KJMOVIE * t * "Body tietl" (1981) Wiiiiam Hw1. Kathleen Turner ( 0) CZ) MOVIE U • "The Mlaslonary" ( 1982) Michael Palin, Mlggie Smith. (~PURL.£ -t-.30- D ®J9T05 (!)MOVIE 11 (J) OUR TMES WITH Bill WOY£RS (!) CHAAUE'S ANGEl.8 ~ • • 'n "State Fu" ( 1962) Pat Boone, Bobby Darin. CHANNEL LISTINGS II t<NXT (CBSJ Los Angeles D KNBC \NBCI Los Angeles O tCTLA 1 Ind 1 Los Angeles II KABC TV 1ABC1 Los Angete!. (J) 1'..FMB 1CBSI San Diego 0 KHJ·TV\lnd I Lus Anqetes ®) KCST (ABCI San Oit.'QO GI KTTV \Ind I Los Angeles a> l<COP TV (Ind 1 Los Angeles fI) KCET· TV I PB St LO'> Angeles '1!) KOCE TV tPBSt Hun1m91on Beach CID OVER HEflE. MR. PRESIOEHT -9':00- ll (J) MOVIE * t * "HEAL Tlf' (19791 LJ1Uren Bactll, Glinda Jacltson. 0 at AD*OTON STEEL£ D [I THREE'S coMPAHY • SNDIUAG'S UNCOlH &llffUNE m THE VIAGINIAH -ICkOO-D a ST. B.SEWHE1* eameNEWS 8 9 HART TO HART • THE UNQUIET DEATH Of JWUS NC> ETHEL ROSallERG ti'!) KEMEDY CENTER TOHIGHT OMOVIE llUfllA 'AM fOUlfTMI VAl..ln ...,.. VIUO OMMCll ~ 1 l•ncoltl 0<·•• "' EOWW$ Fount ... V1tlty EOwlfds VlllQ , _ ~ 1!11 4070 839 1500 ~ 1134.~ COSTA MlaA llMlll NEWl'Oln llfACM OMlf8l EOwllCIS Soutll C-1 E1hll11CIS WoocbldOe Edwltds liOo fl•utre Slachlim Onvt·ln Pw1 So1&2111 c.n.1111 ~1 0866 573-t350 6»eno n TOllO E-s ~ !111 5880 10th SMASH WEEK OF AMERICA'S #1 CQMEDY! DAN AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY lllU ti•"""'·• ~•o •on cona•u fC•rl· 4 , .. <.:.o.>•~11 ~•611" ... ,. lot.l'j\ ........ <IQO c....... ~~· 06~~ u-.•ac11 .... ,.d ~ ... ,... lit ....... NOw. THERE'S /\NEW NAME FOR TERROR. 1,~ ···-..... •• ~• • I ' DIWIGI ~ U <7\U "'f,.-.MSTlA , ..... ,°'~ .,.,, ,., na ~~ Richard Kni.en, to Ulumlnate a apedal. perwonal concern. E.co-Peter Yarrow wld how Stewball the racehone repl't!9ented all championa of unpopular cau.aes and aoon had everyone galloping along. PoUtioo-Paul Stookey preeented both a ''State of Heart" love song with remini.lceooes of loe\ childhood hleroes and a telling oomment.ary on deadly n.lghta in El Salvador. Socio-Mary Travers mentioned ahe had taken her 23-year-old daughter to Russia th1a year to meeJ J ewish Refused-nika and proceeded to sing a Hebre-..t song that "I've never recorded but the KGB haa."! Later she added, "There were so many good cau.aet and good leaders in the '60s. Now lhere are still good cauaes." , : "Our songs need your voices," she reminded at the last lyrics of social uplift drifted out over the amphith eater's lead curtains for the benefit of anyone who's "weaving the hopes of a ne~ wmorrow." * t •,; "The Best Ultle Whorehouse In Te•as" ( 1982) Bun Reynolds, OOly Par1on • -10:30- • INOEP9ClEHT NETWOAK NEWS CO) HEW DAY IN EDEN (%)MOVIE Iii Iii * t "Putney Swope" ( 1969) Arnold Johnson. Lauta Greene. -11:00- tJ D D (J) [I QI NEWS 0 SA T\JAOA Y NIGHT 0 IN SEARCH Of~· tD THE JEfFERSacs ., BENNY Hill ~ MASTEAPIECE THEA TAE m 700CLUB fC)MOVIE • t "Lady CllaUertey's Lover" (19811Sytvi1 Kristel, NlcholuClay. (H) STEVIE Nl()(S .. CONCERT IO)MOVIE ** "The las1 Two Weeks" (1981) Ctaife Males, Tom Calaway. -11:30-IJ (J) POUCE STORY D C8J THE BEST Of CARSOtl D di A8C NEWS HIGKTUNE 8 YOU ASKED FOR IT m ODO COUPLE '8HAARYO (SJ MOYE * t t 'J\ "GrtOOfY'S Girl" (1982) GOf. don Jdln ~.Dee Hepburn -12:GO- " EHTERTANIEHT TOHIGHT &MOYIE • t * "The Story Of AleUllOlt Grallam Belt" ( 1939) Don Amec:he, Loretta Young. (!) INOEPENOEHT NETWOAK NlWS eMOYIE .. *** "The Men From ColOr~ ( 1!M8) Glervl Ford, Willllm Holden. (HlMOVIE * t * '"The Mllslonlly'' (19821 MICMll Palin, Maggie Smith. OMOVIE • t 11\ "Private Leaons" I 19801 Syl- ~ Kristel, Howerd Heaemln. (Z)MOVIE "Brlgltt Haas Musi Be Kiiied" (198 " Phlllppe Noire!. Jeln Rochel0f1 -12:30-D 09 LATE NIGHT WI™ DAVID l..ETTBNAN G A NEW llEOINNl.a GUOYIE H "Loly Madonna" (1973) Rod S1eiger. Robert Aytn. Cf) 1.ANE OREY 11£4 TAE • LCM, AlmWCAH STYLE 0 ENTtRTAIMNT TOMC»fT (O)MOYE • t "The St~tr'' (1974) ~ "Y CNba. Gerlld YllNdL -12:»- m ORANGE coum TODAY -12:46- CCJUOYIE t t 11\ ''Thinga Are T OUQh All <Mr" ( 1982) Rlcllard "Cheectl" Mw In, Tommy CtlOllll -1~- fi)UOYIE •• ~ "Oulc:lt. l.91'1 Get Mamed" (1971)Ginger Rogn. Ray Milwld. (!)MOVIE ••• 1h "Battle Of The BIAgt" (Pit! ~ 1~ tienry Fonda. Rober1 Ryll! t t 'I\ "loe Pllact" ( 1960) Rictllfd But1on, Rober1 ~an. e oeE soort (S) LOVING AEll8 & PSRCT COUPl.ES '°"' ceml Jt -• f10 OGll'I u.~ ...... .. ·-°"" ... 1'1111'-41~. Vdii:-"' _ 6 I\ I 1\. 10 I~ aiitJ "1\.-r-") :t ..=-0.., I ti, l1IO HXI 11ii:M I 00. tta. 10 0 f diid Doer si .... u. ,.,_ .,m• Ult" <NI ·-Dlily ll\)1\\" nl-41M 11\ t I\ cw cft. -· -!7Ml41 CllJtlA CTI. -· -tlt-4141 ._,.CPI) .... rn I ll "1\.-r-") .... rn •• tOl! "Cl.-" Cl> ... ,n t l( -,..111--.· Cl> ... '"no 11« lJ a a .,14_ Orange Collt DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, Aug. 18, 1983 GORDO Ci.OGl(4) cw ~ Gl="f" LOT~ HoOJl~ ~~ ~R ~I 8-lb 'C.:\Rt'lt:l .H THE f "MllL\' CIRClS "Daddy's lettin' his whiskers grow. Why can't I let my dirt grow?" by Brad Anderson "It's OK if you can't find the house keys ... Marmaduke's been waiting for a chance like this to open the door!" PE:\:\l'T8 :--., by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis ~ ~ e o 0o BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ·l "A w1rrant for WHAT?" by Hank Ketcham 11Cf QUSE HES NOT AS G«JlJ-t.aJKJN' AS RuFF .. 8UT HE~ IS NICE ... TMEV WERE CRY'IN6 TO 6ET OUT OF THE JAR ... by Charles M. Schulz COOKIES 6ET CLAU5TR0~081A, TOO. '{OU KNOW ! by Tom K. Ryan llulh vulnl•r.ihll·. Snulh 1h•:il' NORTH + K IOH c;1 KQ7 o A e42 • 953 Wt-.:ST t:AST • 973 • 6542 ~ 842 'I' 96S3 ¢106 '>J9S3 +QJl064 +7 SOUTH + AQJ 17 AJ10 o K87 + AK82 The hiddinK: Soulh Weal North EH l 2 NT PH4 5 NT Pan 6 NT P1111 PaH Pao Ope•11111K 11.'ad· Qu•·t·n or + BRABBLE ---------~.-...;;--.. ___.... . ....,.._ .......,._ -·. GOif ii 011 lllDGf BY OiAALES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF I 'l'h1•rl· '' or11•n nmr1• than ur11· line• 11r pl.1)' I h111 d1·rhm •r l'lln 111lnpl to m11k1• hi~ rnn lr11d Winn1•r' nl tlw lahlr on thn!<t' whn 1·11n 'IH•I th1· lint·~ onrl th1•1l rind II W,ly to lc'l 1111 or mnsl or th1•m. Nori h'~ mi~•· to fiv1• no trump rt'tfUl'~l~ his parl n1•r t11 hid ~IX no trump 1f h1• h11s a minimum two no l rurnJI OJlt•ncr. S(•ve n 1f h1· i~ max imum. South waH minimum and srllh·d 1n th1• sm11ll iil11m w ('lll lt•d th!' lOfl nr h1~ duh s1•11u<'nr<'. and df'clun·r rnuld count only 11 tr1l'ks h4·1·a11~1· or th1• wai.t1•d vulUl'' 1n I hr mnjor ~u1t ~ /\ 121 h l rwk could ht· ei.1abh,h1•d 111·11 h1·r minor \Ull sphl :I :I. hov.1·v1•r. OH.~. Sl-IE\ .. l ~Sl..'{ St 'fH~~~ ~U. OA-j ~ t h1• rhanr1·,. for 11n 1•v1•n rluh ~plit rouhl ht· d1s1•m1nlNI hc•rause• of 1h1• n111·nanK h·url l>t•fh1rl'r won th1• 0111•n1n.: lt•ad nnd lr11·d I hr1•1· rounrl,. of d111monils, 1•nd1n1: in rlum my. Whrn W1·~l f:11l1•1i 10 lollow lo l hi• la~I or I h1•iw•, 11 s1•1•mrd th:1t d1·1'111r1•r w1111 in lrouhle•. Fortunall•ly, h1• llpOl led lhnl hi~ 1•luh hnlcli n1: or h•Ml hnp1• nl un 1·nrl play. To strip W1·..i or hi< 1·x1l 1·ards, d1•rlar1•r rash1•d his mujur iiui l winn1•rs. Th1•n h1• h•d 1h1· nin1• of rluhs from I h1· lahh· and. wh1·n ~;;"I .;luffl•d • 1 'l'ad1• on I h1' t rirk. t h1· 1·on 1ra1·1 ruuld riol he• d1•h·alr1I l>t·1•lan·r ""'Pl" pl:in•rl .1 lo\\ rloh from h.1nrl .ind \.\'1•,t •·oR BETTER OR t'Oll WORSt; 1. J)CNT IEASE ME. I J?~N l I Hfff E. rr WHEN '/OU fili'/fi THINGS LIKE. THAT ! 77 '--" ' .. I WHAi you SAID MADE. rT .SOUND L-IKE. I WAS LAt.'/, USaESSANO STUPID ! 'OJ MEAN !T'S NOT RYh151.E t) 00 "MOU61-' LIFE wmoor EVf R mu~ A LI~? ....... _ ....... won I ht• t rirk w1I h I he· ll •n of 1·luhic. Now tl1•rl11nr·~ .:round work p.1111 oH W1••I ...w;il( tl11w11 le• nut hini: h111 1•h1h:1, ,, nil h1· \\ '" fon·1·ll to h·.ul a way """' h1' Q ti or rluhi< 11110 de•rl.m•r':c I\ ~ frn:u·1•. nnrl ~11 1:1v1• d1•1'111n·r hi11 rulfillini.: 1r1<'k llow do you cltotllf Ui. bHt opuln1 ltad? ('liarif.• Goren b11 tht 111wtr t'or a copy of MWiaalq Opuhic Lud1," 1ud II.AS to MGortn·l.ud1." cart of ~ atwlpef'C'r. P.O. 801 ZS9 • Norwood. N.J. 07648. M1b t hukl pay1blt to nt••P•Pf'rboolu. ~OU~ 10 AAoJ£ %EO SOMl15 IM?IAU-t0 r----r--, DN ~E.R ~~€.. CANl-you 1AKe: A UOKEf by Tom Bat1uk !£> I~ (.l)W{llJNISM .' by HlfOld Lt Ooux .. ... Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug 18, 1983 Newest from Dodge Chrysler Corp. Chairma n Lee lacocca sits on the fe nde r of his company's latest a ddition, the Dod~e Dayt ona. During the next 12 months, nearl y 130,000 o f the Do dge Daytona a nd Chrysler Lasers will be made at the Fenton , Mo. plant west of St. Louis. Too HJany laws h .. urting business Economists see restriction re moval, tax changes as growth key Joy Off AAlbODY 0.-,l'lldt~-I There are a lot of laws out there hampering business men and women, say eronomists and experts at think tanks around the country. Whether or not California in general and Orange County in particular will continue to grow may depend on the removal of restrictions or on a change in tax laws, many believe. ''California's tax structure is among the most prohibitive," says F.dward Carpenter, president oC Newport Beach-based Edward Carpenter and As- sociates, a coosulting firm to the major banks nationwide. "{t's the reason our state is not expected to remain a leader." If Carpenter had his way. the tax structure would be changed "to allow a business with annual sales of under two million to retain ea.mingJ> of up to a quarter million without tax consequences." Stewart BuUer, director of policy studies al the Heritage Foundation in Washington agrees that what is needed most by all sizes of business is a "further reduction in the capital gains tax." Butler feels that this would be more helpful to a continuing economic recovery than l~ 'to bUSl- nesses. "I oppose (government) loans in general,'' Butler said. "The government," he added, "does not have a good track rerord in helping small companies." Rather than help those who really need it, Butler feels that government programs are more likely to help those from key districts. "It's very rare that a company owes its sut'CeSS to government aid," he concludes. MIT economist Lester Thurow is getung a lot of attention these days arguing the opposite. He's calling for a new industrial policy aimed at giving research and development wings of high growth companies a shot in theann. to increase their capacity to compete with foreign co\lnuies. Not a 100 percent subsidy, he stresses, but a ma~hing funds plan. Those who oppose Thurow argue that even a little government intervention is worse than none. Leonard Liggio, president of the Institute for Humane Studies in Menlo Park, feels that govern- ment. by relying on the historical record or the theorizing of forecasters. makes more mistakes than the unhmdered marketplace As an' example he cites the idea of government funds for alternative energy sources. Windmills aren't a bad idea he feels. Unfortunately, however. for 50 years taxpayers pa.ad large sums to bring electricity to fannsasa replacement for the windmills already in existence at the time. Good year for small businesses Purdue economist predicts h ealthy profits for independents NEW YORK (AP) -It will be a great year for profits, said William Dunkelberg, the Purdue University economist who studies the eronorruc health of small busin~ for the National Federation of Independent Business. · The professor's comments. following his regular quarterly survey of 2.131 small businesses, were a sparkling contrast to his assessments of a year or two ago, when small business was in the pits of despair. Thirty-five percent of loans among companies studied in the survey were tied to the prune interest rate, which h as risen of late, a situation Dunkelberg blames in part on "the presence of Treasury demand in excess of consumer saving." That situation, he suggests, can lead to only two scenarios, the first of which is a decline in the level of consumer and business spending on items such as the purchases of cars, houses, plant and equipment. The extent of the recovery can be measured in the latest findings, compiled in July: "The government is soaking up an incredible 0111111 CDUITY IUBINEa PEARSON FRANK UC KER CARMICHAEL CARD BROWN 4 promotions at Pacific Mutual Newport Beach-based Pacific Mutoal recent- ly announced the promotions of four men to second· vice president status. Steven W. Brown waa named second vice president, asaociat.e general counsel; Larry J. Card was promoted to second vice president, fixed income securities: .Davtd R. Carmichael became second vice president, as- sociate general counsel and Edward E. Ucker was promoted to second vice president, data pro- cessing. Brown joined Pacific as an attorney in 1972. Card joined the firm as an investment analyst in 1976. Cann.ichael joined the finn in 1977 as an associate counsel and Uecker joined Pacific MutuaJ in 1973 as dJata center manager. The company markets life, health and pension plans. • • • Alan L. Frank of Huntington Beach has been named partner in the Orange County office of Deloltte Haakln1 & Sell1, an international account- ing firm. Frank, who joined the Big 8 accounting firm in 1973, is in the firm's audit department. • • • Jim Davl1, president of Huntington National Bank, announced the appointment of Patrick B. Pearson as assistant vice president. He will specialize in commercial lendinJ;t. M06t recenty, Peanon held the position of ualatant vice president at SeeDrity PacUtc Nadou.I Bulk, working in the commercial loan center in the Sant Fe Springs branch. .. . . Red Robln of Sootbena Caillon.la, Inc., a newly-franchised restaurant company in Orange County, will open its first Red RoblD Burier & Sptrltl Emporium in early September at 1307 West Sunflower St., Santa Ana. The site, part of the former Treasury Building, will hoUBe an 8,000 square foot restaurant and the company's of fices. This is the first or at least 10 restaurants, each employing l.DO to 140 people, expected to open in the next few years. The new company has been licensed by Red Robln International to develop restaurants in this area. • • • Robert A. Bovee of NewP<>rt Beach has been appointed executive vice president/general man- ager of BP Sy1tem1 Inc., headquartered in Irvine. Hovee previously worked for Aller1u Pbarma- ceutlcal1, Atari and Spalding Sporti.D1 Gooc11. BP Systems is an international manufacturer and distributor of emergency medical, safety and first aid products. MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS OYER THI COUNTER MAID ITOC& UlnlG• W•AmDO ... Plans to hire new etnploy,..,., mcrea.sed to a amount of money," he said. They·re "getting away -'""• NEW YOftk IAP) Cmw"Tll U lf vlJlffv II\ IH6 PnltGNI near-record level, resisting the usual third-quarter with it for now,'' he suggested, but it could mean NASDAQ -'"''°"' C::onP111> .01.tt .o.-. Joatvn • 19..., JO . PnS1.vn 10\'a " 6\'i ~ rl bl d h 1. lhowtnv "'-""1 lllcla Corella ' 15.,... 16111 Ke1.S1 of 22 t3 Proon> decline, and ending 14 straight quarters of negative se ous pro ems own t e me. .,,., 1ow .. 1 .,..... .,., coresi ~ .,111 ke!v•r ,..,, u -1• l'&SvHC responses The other possibility, he indicated, rel.Jes a good ,.,.,._.11'11111.,..•••14 croon u 2514 K•men 40"" ~ M....,re~ , pm. Pl'tc. do not CuttFd t ~ J KelvSv '4 45\'i r-" --Optimism, based on basic measurements such deal on the recovery's strenmh being sufficient to Inell* "91 .. nwt1 ... 0teo. • 14\'i ,...,. K~ "'"' 40 '"O' meni., .. ~~0<~· ~~ alO~ ·,~ ~~1 ~ s'1"" Rlt_•-, assales,eamings,cred.itavallabilityandjobopenings. produce a windfall of revenues, thus reducing the ~ -.._._ ... ~ -....... "'""""' _ .. . ed d hi h I ls Md! ... AM o.a-,. t•1.A1 1(-V 21 2'~ ltOOCIS remain at recor -g eve . deficit and lessening the Treasury's activity in credit AEL 1nc1 u• .. a1~ Oe!Cenr 1~ II\'> Kl'll•o• 10 10111 1tOOC>Mv -Only 20 percent of all finns planned to raise markets. """Pr°' J71'1 J9..., o.wey • 11 .... ,,,... KUld<• • 21-. 1' 1tOUM AVM. CP 7'" I ;,..... ~~ a371,~ Lelencitft 2714 27.... 5edller prices during the next three months, just slightly For the more immediate future, however. plans ~=~~ W' m! xner m; nii: L~, J._. ~~ ~=a above the April measurement, which was the lowest to build unusually Jean inventories should provide a ~:. ft.~ Jt. ~ • W .. l~ t~~ , ~14 li~ s1.....,. since the survey bea<>n in the fourth quarter of 1974. bs ·al k.i Dunk lbe " .. "' 22"" ""' ~----~~ 31 L09tlrn 1>.,.. 14 = , o-· su tantJ ·ck to economic activity, e rg '"" .,..._... -Met While the study is limited to so-called small believes. =~" '1-. '~" ~~' ~~ ~-MG~Oll ~~·1•4l~ s-w-• businesses, the range is sufficiently large for AFun1 1~ 11 E•r~vnc " •"' -GE 111\ 1~ t:=, ', AOre1 t if'-"" iC'OllLb 15~ 2~ Me!MIPI 4~ 4V, $tlMecl , Dunkelberg and his associate, Jonathan Scott of The intentions, measured as unusually strong, AlnGP • ""' f;Jlol ••• ''" J4 w rR1 "' 1 S11wmu1 o 'C'-aled h h ANllM lt\lt N 1c1tree ta.a ~ VIMtlO<I 11\ 2 ~Ra Southern Methodist University, to feel it speaks for aren t new ~rlier 11urveys reve t e same opea, A<Mttr 1"' "' 1eHue1 " ""' MeulLP .o 44 $lllcoon Dunk )be I . ed .. I u ARftM "' l"' 1-. EIMOdl 14 ,...... MeVPI IQ.a.l 11 SC,f/'1!11 the economy as a whole. , which, e rg exp am . were P easan Y Anec111e 1"' "'' Entc::.n• a 1.r.ol't ~~ J"' 1~ i!~,! Ninety-one percent of companie. examined by 'fruslrated by higher-than·e"pected demand." ::SA'GO '°" '°"' IZt~ 2~-!1~~ Mel'Wi 14:: f:._ Ji1Mk, the profesaon have 40 or· fewer workers, but others While the same thing could happen again, the 110~ "'"' l!111w1'" 11~ 11~ ~. uey "" IJ~ s1c111 .. • l:J8 = ~~ ): 1!111()1 M ..... Mcl(MO 12 .. I~ SIMIWN have peyrolla in the hundreda, which qualifies them Impact on the economy is still likely to be su tantial. ..,..Jo 7111 1v. ~r'."41 = = ~ 'tn,'lJ Sll'•wC. 1 for inclusion ln some middle or blg-bualne11 Lista. "Whether the production end5 up on the shelves ~.MC!!oon«,·~u',• ~~ }!" =f1r'.,s," •J!=~ fl*,~~ ME,,!. ~, ..• l... ti:_, While the news overall remains good, a warning of retailers and producers or ln the homes of • ... -U:': I .. : Mlaav-·""' I" .._ na, has begun to ripple in the fonn of rising Interest con.sumen. the third-quart.er·· economic activity 91 !? ~ I = h uld be " ··'d Dunk Jbe 1. lll~\'a .._ .. J, t -llJ ~ I rates. s o strons, ..... e rg. -" Mo111C Twu --------------, T ~· 1614 17 ~tcj. u: ~ ~ 'A II\ tlcmA ' r D h G I 5: ts ff: ~5fr 3·~ ua ii il ... i;:. ''"'' 114 N H11 l3•16 >la la\'a,, 1214 ""' , .... .- "" ""' U\l ~ 19 2'14 l\'a • 17111 17'6 1~119V. 21~ '114 lil-'4 I• 19 19'-,..., ...... II~ Ill Ji~ JJY, """ 1• 1,_ 1111\ ,, ... 6014 16 ""' n .... n~ ..... 1.- t>"4,. ,. ·~ lt1' to llS-,,_ l2 1' ... JI~ Jl'll NlllllcM6e. MONEY ~ orokt y o1 ur ey to !! :~til: ~~ ~i· ImP.i: Established restaurant equipment & S pea lO S8 eS WO men ~~ rd~ 'f ~.:& IJ.., m: a!t: B-. J; ·.·ASD--A· .. -.-.·.·.-.·.•y supply company Is expanding Into ¥ ·~ &;;Ml ~.!. • 'f"' 11"' .... Orange County. Have prime lease Dorothy Gourley will be the guest apeaker tor 1 ~ t=i 1'l~ 'i~e-~· hi: " Establlshed chain & lndependant the National Allociation ll'or Pro!etaional Sa.le.-1 so! 't.it .,,.etiwt Ji· J~ tow::'. ~ 5~ Met~~K~**1~.·~ 71· 1· Hom:il.,· customers. Seeking Investor women tonight at the Irvine Host Hotel. The event I fi ~ ~ ~·Jn~~ ...... ·c;· with strong llnanclal abllltles ::-~be'::,.6 p.m., •7 for memben and ~1~. !or , -~ s, i s~ ~ ~~ : 0 813-4113 • 141-1232 apecl•llst and ~r of Blanton/Gourl~y lric:. ln ,~ ·~ ::J;':.,.. • .-. ti~ ~ I: ~ "'"' ',• '. "' ~ 5 lrv1ne. She and her partner, Lorie Blanton. llllia1 .so. n~ ,,_ ~•lftt !! l!.,. Ntw11t, , 4,,. J:U -•- EVES. 1najor Southtnl C.llfomla p~ky Ma"-Ptnent H~:.: ~14 c~ =··"', "f~ 1~ .. "'91"'~ • ~ companie. wlth their marketing prosrama. --... f. ~ ~ ! .,.. "~ .. U.S. FOOD SERVICE co. I Her topic toni&ht wlll be "Ovcrwmlng Ob~· itE F.!m "=is . 11~11: ....... ___________________ _,, .... , uona -CloelngtheSal~." ~ ,. ,,~ ~ .,. ~ """''-P1a = ' .) I•... II wtce t I "' I~ li'oatlt l f4 U I ' . .. \ I n; •• .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug 16, 1983 STOCKS Tuelday'• l l a.m. (PDT) Pricn '-.. Ir°"' N•• '> .... , ,._.,., ., l ""' ( "'"" ""'.,..,, P ( rh,._ \ h•~• I nq NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OU0TAllOK6 l~l UO( lAAOE8 ON 111( NEW Vo.I~ MIOW'81 P&C"IC P8W I08l0N, Ol1A01f AHOCINCIHNATI l lOCK EJ(CHAHClta AHO AlPOllllO ev IHE NASO INSTtN[l \•If'' N•I P ( nn (10 .. C"<I \•I•' N•I PI ,..._Coo" Chlj \f l#'\ N~t Pr l'Kh (.10 ... ("Q -.,.ell"\> Nrt • t "fJ' 1. 10"' '~~ ~ 0 ..... n 0 8. .[ ~ <'t> <'t> ~ ;:1, ~ ~-8. ~ n Cl'l 0 ~ ;g -· -p aa ~ ~ -.._ ~ Cl'l <'t> 0 g, ..... s:l ("') ;:s <'t> (Q Cl) <'t> ""'t (') 0 <'> ~ -~ -0 ;:s Ill .. -· .... .. I - ••11111 Industrial production continues monthly gain __ . By tile Aaaoclated Pre11 WASHINGTON -ProducUon ln the nadon'• y. factories and mines roee l.8'peroent ln July, the eiehth ! straight monthly gain since the apparent end of the 1981-82 ~n. government figures tndlcated today. Gains were widespread amof1' materiall and product.I wt th "eepeclally aharp raee in automl>bilel and steel,"•, <:: the Federal Reaerve Board report said. ~ U.S. new car sales still rise t.:: DETROIT -Even with a acallng back of rebates !· and other incentives by automakers. U.S. new car aale9 tn early August roee 40.8 percent from 1ut year's low ' levela -but an analyst says the real test of buying • strength will come with the new model year. The l'ix :• major U.S. cannakers reported they delivered 178.686 autos between Aug. 1-10, or 19,854 per day, compared with 112,839, or 14,105 per day, in early August last year. Money market interest lowered , WASHINGTON -Beginning today~ savin8B. : institutions and commercial banks may pay as much aa ' 9.8 percent interest on six-month money market certificates, compared with 9.95 percent in the put week. They may oay as much as 9.43 percent on ' three-month certitiCates, down from 9.57 percent last '· week. The new rates are a result of Monday'• auction of . · Treasury securities, in which yields on three-month bills · declined -the fifth drop in the past 15 weeks-put the rate at its lowest level since the 9.36 percent of Aug. 1. . ' Salaried workers pay raised '· PRINCETON, N.J . -A new survey says aa.laried workers are getting a 6.8 percent pay i.ncreaae on • average this year, but forecasts a 6.6 percent i.ncreaae next year. Despite the economic upturn, companies are not returning to the high level salary budgeta of previoWI years and are projecting 1984 budget.a at a similar level to 1983, the survey by Sibeon & Co. aid Monday. Firm to divest major holdings NEW YORK -Gulf &. Western lndu.stries Inc. plans to divest $1 billion in hold.inga., repreeentlng 20, pereent of lta ueeta, which will result in writeoffa of about $470 million and a $215 million net Joa for the fiacal year ended July 31. lnveston bid up the price of its . stock on Monday by 75 centa, to $25.375 a share, on the New York Stock Exchange. Dollar lower but gold higher LONOON -The dollar was sharply lower in early European trading today amid investor expectations that ._ U.S. interest rates have peaked. Gold drifted higher. :. Tradera said the dollar was still reeling from Friday's ~ figures on the Ame~ money supply. The U.S Federal Reserve reported a lower-than-ex~_.,~~. creaae in the number of dollan circulating, leAlai.ng• investors to predict a cut ln American interest rates - and a conaequent drop in the currency's value as an lnvestment. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JON£S AVERAGES NEW YOltK (AP) -S.lft MoncMv llflc9 encl ner chent• o• 11\e IS ,.._, ..:five Nwf Yorti SIOCll Ea~ lu uu. lredlnt na rlonellv •I "'°" ...... ,, • DletnSMI 1.»2,GllD ~-l.Jtf .... EuOOI USUOO llM 1,llM,700 ~lid' 1.00.100 IE_.dtt 1.-.-0 ~ OI 1,flfR, MO lteltlnf'\K 1,001.100 Al'MI T &. T UJ MO Helltlurtn f4U~ CIWWltr m.ooo ""°"" m.ooo ... _. 71',1'0 FMNetMlo 711,ltO WHA f NYSE DID NEW YOlllC IAl"I Aue 1S foctey 110S m >IO 1'57 3' 1 WHAT AMEX DID NEW YOltlC (Al") Aw. U METALS TOCllY 411 15' a~ .. ' HEW VON< (AP) • Spot ~-nwt81 or-..1049y C...., · T~ Wiit e -..ct, US _.,.llOM. c...--1u._,.., ..-.. lfYc-............... .._ ~-»23-·~ Die. 43 _, ... pound, -..,.. • te.4"4 Meilm w-~lb .......,_ • 7109nll I !>O'U'"d· N,Y. .._.,. 1175 004t90.00 -,, lb ftelll. ....., Yotll ...._ · .. 20 OO.a.422 00 "-Oo -lfoy-,HY SILVER SYMBOLS rWN 1 ElftPOE llf9 t ,.., ....,.. ,..,.Ir w1 f W.1Alr1 w1 I I.Mn"""" ''"'~ ' 1 T1let IM ' FIM!wEn • OrleftPld pf '?-""" n 1 llM)l•H UA w1 I Ctwnler w1 u ... Ped! H 1111•1n1 1s 0r10n1"1<1 't SMldPwr ' tF~ • I: ~tetMt.,... ..... n Ml I ' ti It • F S ~l• nv-c1·· , • .. I Dilly Piiat TUESDAY. AUGUST 16, 1983 ClASSlfllD Rams weren't well p.-epared, -and _it showed By CURT SEEDEN °' ................ Rams Coach John Robinaon 18.ld it best shortly after hia team had been dumped by the DalW Cowboys, 30· 7 Monday night: "We got a pretty good clue of w hat the night was going to be like w hen Kirk Col.lj.ns injured himllel.f in wann~. '' . Indeed, the loes of the team's ltarting left cornerback turned out to be an omen in the second week of the John Robinson era. Before the night was over, the Rama had loet starting left tackle Irv Pankey for the aeeaon; quar- tierbacks Vince Ferragamo and Jeff Kemp had loet sight of their receivers; rookie running back Erik Dickeraon lost the ball twice; and it looked as if the Rama bad brt their offensive play book. Actually, Robinson explained afterwards, what the Rams had done with two extra days of prac- U.ce was to "do a variety of things and not focus on Dallas." The result was a less than im- pressive offe.nsive showing by the Barns (1-1) as Ferragamo and Kemp combined for just five oom- pletiona total -in 24 attempts while combining for four inler- ceptioru before 54,268 at Anaheim Stadium. The Ram offeMe never did 100re a touchdown. Instead, it took an interception by LeRoy Ii'vin and an 80-yard return tor a TD in the waning momenta of the first ball to get the club on the ICOreboard. Ferragmo played the first half and didn't come cloee to reeembl- . ing the Ferrapmo who played one quart.er in last week's 34-20 exhibition opener win over San Diego. "The crispness just wasn't there," admitted Ferragamo afterward. Someone mentioned that some of hia receivers dropped what looked like sure receptions, to which Ferragamo noted: ''Still, the pasaes weren't exactly good passes.'' In contrast, the Cowboys' Danny White and Gary Hogeboom continued to wager a spirited war -a war Dallas C.oach Tom Landry insists doesn't exist -to the tune of a combined 18-for-2(. perfonnance, good for 204 yards. Landry insists White is and will be hia starting quarterback this seaaon, but afterward, admitted ''it's reassuring to know he's (Hogeboorn) there if needed." Hogeboom directed the Cow- boys to their first 10 points -a 14-play, 66-yard drive to open the game with Rafael Septien setting on a 25-yard field goal. After three straight Ferragamo · incompletions (one waaa dropped by Mike Guman and the other by Jewerl Thomas), Hogeboom came right back and moved the Cow- boys 64 yards in eight pla~ the finall7comingonaperf~tpass to tight end Doug Cosbie. The Cowboys built a 20-0 lead as Septien hit from 36 yards 54 aeconds into the second quarter and White directed the Cowboys 58 yards on 14 plays with George Peoples ecoring from a yard out. Irvin's interception and subse- quent TD run eaaed 80me of the pain before the half was over, but (See RAMS, Pqe CZ) I U.S. gets victory, and a good scare, too CARACAS, Venezulea (.A,f) - Sam Per kins wasn't worried at baliftime, even i1 the heavi- ly-favored United States men's buketball teem did trail Mexico by 11 potnta in their Pan Ameri- can Games debut. "We weren't really concerned. We kDew we had a lot of time. But we bad to ease back into it. ~ BrD:D just kept oit • co011ng We couldn't BCOre 10 pointa all at once. I think the defenae did it for us," said the 6-9 North Carolin.a forward, who acored 10 of his 16 pointa in ~e second half. He proved to be a prophet. The Americana, relying on a zone de- fenae in the final 20 minutes, outacored the Mexicans 38-16 for a 74-63 verdict. In fact. all thi:ee of the men's buketball winners Monday night -Cuba and Puerto Rico won the othen in overtime -came from behind before a spirited, whis- tling Polledro crowd nearing ca- pacity of 13,000. Cuba, down by six points with 12 minutes left, stomled back for a 103-88 verdict over the Domini- can Republic. Puerto Rico, thanb to Mario Morrales' buket at the burz.er, stunned World Univel"llity Games champion Canada 90-89. Elaewhere, the United States collect.ed three gold medals on the first of 15 daya of competition in theme Western Hemisphere cham- pionahips. Eric Buljung, 39, ~U.S. Army member from Fort Benning, Ga., captured the men's free pi.ttol, the fi.nrt medal of the games. Pat Spurgin, 18, from Blllingl, Mont., just up from the junior level, won the women's air rifle, a first-time event in the Pan Am competition. And the United States al8o .reaped the team gold in the same event. The fourth U.S. gold medal bel0fl4lt!d to Margaret Castro. Raiders' bill: $2.5 million SALINAS (AP) -Attorneys for the Raiden have 1Ubmitted a bill for $2.~ million in legal feee followtna their IUCCe9lfu1 defeme .,.m.t a move by Oakland to retum the National Football Leecue tam fnm Loa Angelee. Oakland Oty Attorney Richard WlnnJe demibed the bill, whk.h wu 1ubm1Ued Monday to Monterey County Superior Court for payment by Oakland, u "cte.- ~"'t.." ,_....._. , "'They'11e claimina tive or lix ume. the 81DOW1t of the city'• attorney feet," Mid Winnie, add-inC that be expected excemve chu-ltl "ln an attempt to in-timidate the dty ... Mcmm LMky, one of the law- ywa woridnc lor the Raiden, de- c:llned co 11*!1.ty lndlvtdual a~ tarrwy fe11, but tM noted that four _.. of attomeyl haw been wortdnt on the c.e llnol "the dty filed ha aait J'eb. 22. 1980. cs .......................... Cowboy•' Benny Barnes (31) haa. Rama' Mike Guman ( 44) on Im baek after interception Monday mpt, wlaile Dallu' Bill Bates (left) ~airborne. DaUu won~ 30-7. Junkhall rookie shuts out Angels OAKLAND (AP) -The Oakland A's decided two years ago that Gorman Heimueller and his screwball were worth a look. The ~els saw that pitch and a few others at their best Monday night. The 27-year-old rookie shut them out 5-0 on a four-hitter. "The screwball is the maj>r reason I made it to the big leagues. I'm convinced of that," the left-handed pitcher said after his performance which included seven strikeouts and a string of 19 oonaecutive batters retired. "I threw the screwball to Reggie Jackson four times and he mis8ed it four times," added Heimueller, 2-3. "I threw the aameoldalow fastball, but I kept it down, and it aet up my ac:rewball." The A.ngela' Bobby Grich said, "I don't I know bow f kept rn.iaaing hi.a pitches, but I did. I waited on them, but lguesaldidn't wait long enough." . It was the first complete game of Heimueller's major league career, which began last month after 6 ~ seasons in the minors. He came up with a ac:rewball late in the 1980 9eaaon, had some success, but was releued by the San Francisco Giants' organization during spring training of 1981. The Angels, first team contacted by the pitcher after that, were not interested, )>ut the A's were, and he worked up to their Claaa AAA team at Tacoma. Oakland hitters collected 13 hits off Geoff Zahn, 8-8. Bob Kearney had a 3-for-3 night including a two-run single in the second inning, and Mike Heath belted a homer in the fourth. For the A's, it was the aec:ond straight shutout and third in five days. The victory, their 14th in the last 20 games, moved them from fourth to third in the American League West. "His minor league statistics didn't indicate he was ticketed to go to the maj>rs this year, but when we needed a pitcher laal month, we were told that he was the best available at Tacoma," A's Manager Ste\' Bol"Oll said. "I can't believe it's been a week since I pitched. But rm not worrying about it," said Dave Beard of the A's bullpen. "He's a kid who might just keep ge better when he realizes how good ecrewball ia," he added. .............. ., ........... Dodgers coll1e holl1e and face Giant task LOS ANGELES (AP) -If the Loe Angelea Dodgen got the same Ra! out of playing in Dodger Stadium aa San Fran- ciaco'a Darrell Evans does, they'd be hot on Atlanta's trail in the National League West, instead of drifting 6 ~ games back of the Braves. "I always get up when I come to L.A.," aaid Evans, who drilled hia 24th home run of the &eaa0n in the fil'llt inning, the 33rd of hia career against Loe Angeles, to atart the Glanta rolllna to a 7-3 victory Monday night. ''I come from this area, the weether la alwaya great, and there'• always a btg crowd," added Evan.a. who al8o had three llnclel to jump h1a ave,.. to .286. 0 r d like to put a '3' in front ot m.y batting awnie for the first time in my can!el', and I'd like ~ hit so home nm..0 Evania im't the only one who ,eta up api.nat the Dodgen. Jeff Leonard, -.ooeUme Dodger farmhand, aracbd a true.nm homer, h1a 16th, and allo drove ln a run wtth a triple, and Jack Clark had a double and three 81na1e1 u the Glanta battered four Loa Anae1ee pltchen foe 13 hlta. Fred Brelnlnc. 7-9, went the d1atance f« the tint Ume all Wl, 1eattertnc lbt ~ them hamen. Candy taking two of three games · Atlanta from the front-· Braves over the weekend, in on closing 80l1le ground in th National League West. Whatever their confidence, was quickly shattered only tw batters into the game, when Fra.nd8oo took a swift 2-0 lead. Dodger starter and loeer Hooton, 8-7, walked Johnni LeMaster to lead off the then Evana homered to righ Hooton, who has dropped fi._ auoceaive decisions, retired batters in a row until Clark livered the lleCOl'ld of h1a four hJ a double down the left field Leonard then tripled off the to of the center field wall, ICOred hiJmelf on a lingle by Davia, giving the Glanta a lead, and that finiabed Hooton. Ram• hallback Jewerl Thomae ru1t1 throush a hole dµ.rln1 lin t-halt action as ain1t Dallas Monday. hit the um of hJa ~ in the fifth lnnlna. • pW:t\, two-.nm homer, ancf N.ro Ouerret"O hit h1a 24th tn the ninth. The Doc:taera came home after l \ ' Cl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 SPORTS BREAK Youngster fil es suit, says $2.50 tab unfair for pine-tar finish NEW YORK (AP) -A la 14.year-old boy who attended the "pine·tar game" between the New York Yankees and the Kansas City Royals has filed suit to gain free admission to the completion of the game, saying the $2.50 admission for the final inning is unfair. Lawrence F . Morrison, a Yankee fan who wants to be a lawyer someday, filed his first lawsuit Monday. The July 24 game was suspended in the ninth inning after umpires called Kansas City's George Brett out be· cause his home run -that had reversed a Yankee lead -was hit with a bat covered with excessive pine tar. Pine tar 1s used to unprove a batter's gr1 p. American League Presi· anJNUENMEi. dent Lee MacPhail later over· ruled the umpires, reinstated Brett's home run and ordered that the game, with Kansas City ahead 5·4, be completed. · Yankees owner George Steinbrenner said tickets for the game's completion would cost $2.50. In court papers, young Morrison contended the fee would be a "breach of contract" because "the game is not over and I believe I am entitled t.o have my ticket honored so I can see the complete game.'' Quote of the day George Rogers, New Orleans Saints running back, asked if he had any goals this season: "I want to gain 1.500 or 2,000 yards. whichever comes first." Rams Doug Reed (left) and Nolan Cromwell bring down Dallas full- Chicago Burns Yankees, 1-0 Brltt Burns fired a three-hitter la and Tom Paciorek hit a sacrifice fly Ul t}\e first inning to give the American League West-leading Chicago White Sox a 1-0 victory over the New York Yankees Monday, to assure a 5 'h game·lead over Kansas City and an 8-game pad over the Cifth·place Angels ... Elsewhere, Frank White drove m three run" with a sm~le and sixth-inning triple to help Kansas City erase a Cour·run deficit and record a 6-4 victory over Detroit . . John Low· enstein's three-run homer highlighted a five.run sixth as Baltimore dealt Texas a 6·4 1068 ... Jam le Easterly walked Willie Upshaw with the bases loaded in the ninth and Tor· onto pulled out a 3-2 victory ov~ Cleveland . . . Moose •URN• pi!Ched eight shut.out innings for his seventh straight victory as Milwaukee topped Boston, 2·0. Haas now has a string of 26 consecutive scoreless innings . . . Frank Viola survived a shaky start and combined with Ron Davl1 on a six·h1tter as Minnesota defeated Seattle, 7-4. Raiders cut six from roster SANTA ROSA -Former Na· [i] tionaJ Football League starters Tony c. • Reed and Randy Burke were among six players released Monday by the Los Angeles Raiders. Reed. a sixth·year runrung back from Colorado, played previously for Denver and Kansas City, gaining 1,053 yards for the Chiefs in 1978. Burke. a fifth.year wide receiver from Kentucky. played previously with Baltimore, where he was a first·round draft choice in 1977. Also cut Monday were four free agents: tight end Ron DeBose (UCLA), defensive lineman Ron Hale, safety Rick y Fishback and defensive end Frank Thompson. But among those are two players who have retired, Burgess Owens and J ohn Matuszak: one rookie draft choice who hasn't signed, Don M06eba.r; and at least three injured players, Ga.Q' Nobles, Mike Dotterer and Curt Marsh, who are destined to open the season on injured reserve. 0.-.""' _., .... _ "- back George Peoples during first half action Monday night. N ehras ka, S ooners (who else ?) a re 1-2 RAMS ... From Page C1 nothing could soothe the spirits of Robinson and company upon · hearing the news that Pankey, the starting offensive tackle. was Jost for the sea.son. KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) - Nebraska and Oklahoma, which have dominated the Big Eight in football for the past decade, fig- ure to run 1-2 again this year, leaving the rest of the conference in their dust once again. Oklahoma's Sooners have won or sh.a.red eight of the past 10 conference championship$. In that same period. Nebraska's Comhuakera have won or shared four. Only Colorado and Okla· boma St.ate, who tied with the Soonera ln 1976, have managed to dent in the Oklahoma·Nebraska wall of domination. In the past two seasons. Ne· brMka has taken aole poaeet1Sion of the championship, and with its entire starting back.field intact the Huskers att a big favorite to make It three ln a row. Few ~ .eem to think anybody bu much chance to unseat the Huaken e>ea!pt Oklahoma. Quarterback 'l'unvr om bl 11 .1 in pma he h.u started for the H\.llkerl. "He'• ao qu.lclc.. tt•a Uke he wat ahot out of • gun," noted one oppoafnc C0111Ch. "We knew he threw lt well b«:au.e of hill atadltb ... but lt'1 hard to get MIDLANDS [i] ready for his quickness." The slender senior, a run·~ threat. his SO of 166 passes last year for 1,182 yards. But he must share top billing with another backfield operative, Mike Rozi~r. a quick, tough runner who set a achool record with 1,689 yards a year ago. He avel"llged about seven yards each time he carried tile ball. But despite bnlliant seasons by the two Nebr&llka seniors last year, It's a Soonef who's taken moat of the pre-season publicity -sophomore Marcus Dupree. Oklahoma fans spent the summer wo rrying whether t heir 10phomore star could patch up h i3 differences with Cooch Barry Switzer and get back on track after a llOTlleUmes~spectacular freshman aeuon Dupree wa.11 the moet hltihly recruited h igh tchool running back In the Mtion two yeara ago. And he went on a runnipg and acortng blngt> lut 11eason that has See MIOLANDS, Pa1t CJ) } The 6-4, 267 ·pounder suffered a torn left achilles tendon in the first quarter •and will not return this year. Earlier, Collins pulled a thigh mW1Cle ln wannups. "We did as many things wrong offe~ as we can do," be· moan9"" Robi1\80n afterward. "And a lot ot it is my fault. I just didn't have the team focused and prepared. "The one thing I did get out of this game was that the Rams still played hard, especially defensive· ly. We played lousy, but the prime thing I need to know about thil football team ia what kind of guta and what kind of courage lt has. Thia football team, especially the defensive team, was prepared to plaY." -tr RAM NO~IS -S.C11uo QU.tt...Mc:k .Miff K-. lll•vlno the enllr• •tctfld MK, ~ cc>n'IKt on but two ,.. ... , In ~I trvs tor kit! d vards. H• 1111 Mir• 0-ovtl' the mloelle end MO....o IM ••ma lo the 0. .. , Oftt .... In 1M 1111ro wett.,, but a rnotlon !MIMI,., moved tM beH Mell five nrCh Md IN CMO.-''*' tumbled tor ,,,. MCOfWI 11me •lld oaaea • Mir• "...,_ recovel'ed HetftlKll 9lMr1 AleUMer. wllO tCOred 11\ree IOUChdownt IH I wMlt eHlll•t ~n oieoo. cllO llOI ruall wllll the MM once Mondev 1\10111 • H ..... wlff r'91Ke 1r1 ,_....., " IM \lertlno oft..,,,,.. t~lt Thert ....,, 4,404 no·"'O•• lot Ille @•me Wflk ll wet l•N del9Vtcl 11¥ It NX T. (llennel t ----_____ . ____ ....__ __________ _...... Horner out for the season AUanta'a dnve fo~ the Nauonal II League West flag auffen!d rwo aet- backa Monday -with a 4·0 loes to San Diego and with the feA}lz.aUon the Braves have loet power hitter Bob HorDer for the remainder of the seuon because of a broken bone tn his right wrist. Hom er, a .303 hitter with 20 home runs, suffered the break while trying to break up a double play at aecond baae. Dave Dravecky did the rest of the damage, limiting Atlanta to five hits ... Joie Crat drove in five runs with two homers to lead Houaton to a 9· l victory over Cincinnati . . .BW Madlock and Doug Frobel hit homers in a three·run sixth inning to lead rookie Joie Del.eon and Pittsburgh past the New York Meta, 4·2 ... Tambur~ino' Wilson lead . Joe Tam -of San Joee shoo\,. !I lng a 138 and Wu.on of Ch1co ahoot.lng a 140 turned In the top performances Mond.ay in leC'Uonal quallfyt.na l>laY at two Northern California mt.ea tor the coming U.S. Amateur Golf Champ&onahlp. Tamburino was top qualifier at the Almaden course ln San Jose, with rou.nda of 69 and 69 for a 138 total. The leader at Peach Tree ln Maryaville was Wil.aon, who shot a 71 and 69 for a 140 total. Other qualifiers at Almaden were Marshall Gleaaon, of San Frandacc>, with a 73 and 71 for a 144. Sharing a 145 tola.J were Bruce Taylor, of Menlo Park, with a 77 and 68, and Terry Foreman, of Concord, who had a 71and74. Tim RobiNon, of Stanford Unveraity, ahota pair of 73-for a 176, and Gregg Von Phaden. of San Franciaco, had a 77 and 70 for 147. t I l HORNE" Mike Scllmtdt'1 grand slam homer capped a five.run eighth inning to lead Steve Carlton and Philadelphia past the Chicago Cubs, 5·0. It was Carlton's 12th win in 23 decisions. He struck out 11togivehim 3,637, a lead of 18 over Houston's Nolan Ryan. It was his 55th career shutout ... Tlm Raines hit a tie·breaking sacrifice fly in the eighth and Gary Carter smacked a two.run homer to lead Montreal past St. Louis, 5·1. The others at Peach Tree were Roger Gu.nn, of Napa, with a 72 and 69 for a 141; Eric Peterson, of Fresno, with a 69 and 72 for a 141, and Gary Mortara, of Hayward, who shot a 73 and 70 for a 143. Archery title to Myrick Huntington Beac h'• Nancy • Myrick rallied at the 99th annual I 49ers' Walsh fined $10,000 SAN FRANCISCO -The San [i] Francisco 49ers have been fined 4. t $10.000 by the National Football 1 League because head coach Bill Walsh broke the league's tampering rule by saying he wanted to trade for the Houston Oilers' star running back , F..arl Campbell. NFL Commissioner Pete Roulle levied the fine Monday in response to Walsh's April 11 guest column in the Houston Chronicle, according to Joe Browne, the NFL's director of information. Under NFL rules, teams are not allowed to National Archery Association cham· plonshiptoumamentatEI DoradoPark · to win her third national title recently after a 13-year absence from the winner's circle. Her first title came in 1965 at the age of 28 ... Eu Tosa, far back in the seven·horse field in the early going, rallied outside in the turn for home and took command in the final furlong en route to a 1 'h ·length victory in Monday's $35,000 feature race at Del Mar. Carrying 115 pounds in the 1 1·16 mile race for 3·year·olds and up, Egg Toas was clocked in 1:43 2·5. Chris M.cCarron rode the heavily favored winner ... Cleveland Browns star Cbarlet Wlalte is not expected to return to National Football League action this year after being operated on Monday for a broklen ankle. approach publicly or express interest in obtaining T I d playerscurrentlyundercontract,Brownesaid. e evision., ra io Walsh, who returned to the 49ers' training camp in Rocklin late Monday following Sunday's ,., TV: Baseball-Angels at Oakland, 7:30 p.m., exhibition game against the New England Patri-Channel 5. ots, said in a statement that he had decided "at th.is RADIO: Baseball -Angels at Oak.land. 7:30 point in time, under the present circumstances, not p.m ., KMPC (710); San FranciBco at Dodgers. 7:35 to question any decisions by the commissioner." p.m ., KABC (790). Courses follow pattern T r end is to faster courses with f ewer h azards Public golf courses across the nation pretty much follow a pattern of few sand traps and only a sprinkling of water h.aza..rds . Like it is in California, such things tend to slow play and the object of public courses, especially in the larger cities, is to speed play to get more players out on the course. Having had the opportunity to play eight different courses in five states recently, extending from Colorado to Ohio and Kentucky with Kansas and Missouri also thrown in, we find that the courses are pretty much the same allover. Salina, Kansas has a fairly new public course with a number of trees and fast greens. Kansas City, M.i.ss()uri's Southview Golf Club is on rolling ground with one lake and many trees. The Zanesville Jaycee's Golf Club in Ohio is shorter but a good test of golf with not too many problems for the straight hitter Seneca Golf Course in Louisville, Ky. ia the longest we played at 6,610 yards. It has a stream meandering through the course that comes into play on at least five holes. Nine.hole courses are in vogue in many areas. At Russellville, K y., the Green Valley Country Club course is pretty and green as is the course at Elkton, Ky. --Elk Fork Country Club. Hill City. Ks. Elks Golf Club and the Prairie Dog Country Club course in Norton, Ks. are ego builders for a California golfer. We had better luck on these two courses than any others we played. In Ft. Collins, Colo., the Cily Park Nine also has a stream that comes into play on eeveral h oles and is one of the busiest courses we played during our travels. But all in all, golfers and course attendants have pretty much the same problems in other pl.aces that we have here in California. It is interesting to have a chance to play a number of courses in other states even though we didn't improve our 20 handicap at any time. -t:r -t:r * Kim Saiki is a name to keep in mind in the not too distant future when you are perusing the sports pages to check LPGA tournament acores. Kim, a senior at Ocean View High School where she is the No. I -player on the boys' golf team, won the GOLF HOWARD L. HANDY 35th United States Girls' Junior Golf Championship last week at Somerset Hill Country Club in Bemardsvil.le, N .J . When the Women's Kemper Open was st.aged at Mesa Verde CC for the final time several yeara *I'>· Kim was one of four amateurs to qualify for the townament. Kim is a member at Mesa Verde CC and attends Ocean View High evewn though she lives in Westminster . Incidentally, another young golfer to keep track of is Cathy Mockett of Newport Beach and B!g Canyon CC. Cathy reached the quartefinals in New Jeney before losing and while thia was Kim's third national tournament, Cathy haueveralmore years in which to gain the coveted title. Don't bet against her doing just that, either. Cathy is the younger sister of Nancy Mockett, now of UCLA and a fonner No. I player on the boy's team at Newport Harbor High. * * * Entry blanks are now vailable for the 11th annual City of Costa Mesa Golf Championships which are now known as the Will Jordan Claaic. They will be played on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 11 NOS !& ON BOTH COURSES AT Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club. Entry fee is $50 with competition divided into four flights. The field will be limited to the first 352 players who sign up and no entries will be aooewpted after Aug. 30. Entry blanka are avbailU>le at the course and most others in Orange County. Some outstanding players have played ln the tournament in the past including Scott Simpoi, Mark O'Meara and Paul Shea among others. Mark was the nationalamateur champion when he played here and Scott has been a winner on the PGA tour since turning pro. How far i s enough for golfers? I Innovations on ball are making courses just about obsolete By Wll.L GRIMSLEY "1 am hitting the ball farther than I did 10 years 0111 .. •111 ,.,.,,,_ ago," Nicklaus said. "I think the ball goes farther than The golf ball -see how it dolh fly. See how it it should." doth fly over the mulberry bush. See how lt doth fly But a few days later it wasn't Nicklaus' ball but overtheaa.ndandthewater.Howfardothltgo?How one played by young Hal Sutton in beating dUt far should it go? Nicklaus for the PGA crown that was declared Cl08e to five centuries alter King James IV of illegal. Scotland and his cou.rtlen sneaked out of the castle to The USGA said the ball bad too many dimples - bang away with a miahapen stick at a small round 384, ln fact-and waa not "•{>herically symmetrical." object stuffed with gooee feathen, people are atill Thu.a it flunked USGA regulationa. searching for the magic golf ball. The POA and the Tour ablde by USGA n.alea. u Their aim: A pellet that explodes off the head of do other golf bodies throuaho4\ the world. the club like a cannon ahot, forms a perfect parabola Nlcklaua' ball ls reported to have 390 dimples and Janda at an appolnted apot in the fairway 300 or (the norm hu been 224 to "6). It ~Y be \he next.to more yard.a from \he tee. get the official boot. Good luck. Meanwhile, Fiorlda Oolfw"k Map.line got into "No one can make a claim that one ball goes the act by conduc\ing lta own independent "'1'"W'Y• f farther than the o\hen," saya South African·bom aubjectlng 14 different companle.' toll bella to a Frank Thomaa. chief of the U.S. Golf ~tion swing machlne. The tests ~y ahowed Ill technical ataff, which sets the 11\andarda for the entire 1 _m_uch __ u_l_8...;;yarda __ '_d_lf:f_es_re1 __ ""li0e_! in_ .toto_t.alt.al_ cilitance ___ . __ _ world of golf. "We have very aophiat1cated testing apparatua on whJch aome 350 ball typet undergo continufn8 ex.ami.na~. We cannot allow improved equtpment to make our~ oblolete." ThomM' comments were 10licited when the lowly golf t>alJ becamt the object of unuaual at ten ti on du:rlnl the put couple of weeka. Fi.nt. .Jack Nicklaus, the world'• wlnnlngest champion and owner oi OQe of the lead1na aolf compan.lee (M.ac0ref0r), creeted mild shock wavea at the POA Champonshlp ln Pldflc Paliaadea. when"M Idly remarked that hla company'• premier baU, ~ Mf"G~gor Mulrfleld, 10ft farther than lt ahould. L, 8 TENNIS LESSONS •20°• ...... .... ,_ .. , ... 117..o211 h -. \ FDR THI RECORD ~ . . . " MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS AmeMc.eft LMeut C111Ca90 Kan1u Cltv Oallland T ... , .,,..., Mlnne•ote Sea111e Belllmore Detroit Mllweu"" New York Toronto 801ton Clevtland WEST DIV1SION W L '3 SJ S6 S7 SI 62 S6 60 S6 62 so 10 46 n EAST DIVISION •S 49 •S SI •S Sl 64 SI 65 S7 SI SI 49 "' _'f', Scon1 Oe~leno s. AMII' o Mllweul<M l , 8o•ton 0 Chk:e90 I, New Yori. 0 Toronto ), Clev•le no 1 Ken .. • Cttv 6, O•troll 4 8eltlmore 6, Tues • MlnnffOta 7, SHllle 4 Tltdll'f'I t;etMI .. ct. .§.13 496 413 413 OS 417 390 S70 S60 S60 .m SS. soo .. , Gl!I sv. 1 1 • IS II 1 I "'' llh I ,, .... 4""" (Steir..-1·0) al Oakland (COOlroll 9·8), (n) Boslon (Bird 1·3 end JoMson 2· 1) at MllwaukN (Porler S·S and Sulton 1·91. 2, (t·n) Toronlo (Alaunoar 0·7 enO Wiiiiam• l·I) al Cleveland (Barker 1·12 and Brennan 2·2l. 2. (t·nl C1>lca90 (8annJ1ttr 10·9) t i N•w Yort. (Fonltnot 4· ll. <nl Betrlmora (Aamlru 4·3) at TaxOl (8utcher 3-Jl, (nl Detroit (Rozema 1·21 al Kan•n Chv (81ack 6·4), (n) MtnMM>t• (Scllrom 10-41 at Sealtla (YO<Jllll 9· 111. (n) Atlenta ~ HO<Jlton Sen Oleuo N•Honal LHVUt WEST DIVISION W L 11 ... 64 S2 61 SS S.n FranclKO Cincinnati SI 60 S6 62 54 6S PnlleoelOlll• Pltllt>oroh Mon,,.., St. Loul• c111ceoo p.lew York EAST DIVISION 61 52 61 SS 59 S6 S5 61 52 65 ... 69 M9ftda'f'I ScleAS San Francl.co 7, ~ 3 Phlla<lete>llla S, Chluoo 0 Plll~gh 4, N•w York 1 San Oleuo 4, Allanla 0 Houston f, ClnclnMll l MontrMI S. St. LO<Jll t TedllV'I c;- .. C1. .S97 .m S26 .m 47S 454 540 .S26 .SlJ 474 .... 410 G8 IV. 3 ,.,, II IS S.n Francisco (Lask•v 12·fl at~ (ANSI 6·10), n New Yori< (Swan 2-Sl el PU"t>uroll (McWllllams 12·6) Phlledell>/lle (Grou 2·l ano By1trom S· 71 at Chlcaoo (A uthven 9·9 and Ltfterh 3·3), 2 Sen 0'9oo (~mond S·2) at Atlanta (P9fez 13·4) • • HO<J1ton <Scoll •·•> at Ctnclnnell (Puleo 4·1), n MontrMI CGUltldtaon l HOl at St Lout1 (COK 0-1), n t .. AMERICAN LE AGUE A's S, Anoltt 0 CAUl'OftNIA OAKLAND ••• Carew lb • LUl>t'ICll U llenklur rl LYM cf Grlell 21> AaJk111 Oh Oownlrlo II WlllOl>O 3b 8oonec ..... 111 4 0 l 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3000 J 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 RHnd>nll Almon lb Gr~s It> L-21> Burot>t Oh Lantlrd lb Mure>llv cf HM lhrl t(eernev c OHmu JI 0 t 0 T- ~ W llW*in .Orlllll 4 0 , 2 7 0 I 0 0000 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 I 2 0 ' I 1 0 4 2 1 I 3 I l 1 J 0 1 0 )ls u s ~ 000 -000-0 OeldMd GJD 100 lb-S Game-Winning A81 -KMrNY (6) E-t.ullfatlc:IL OP-<alltornla 4. LO&- CelHornle S, 0.klanG S l&-Atmon HR- HMtll (2) S&-«Hender'°" en >. Atmon (2:2) '" H It Ell 9• SO c;.....,. Z.hnL,t ·a 6 13 S 4 7 Senchez 1 0 0 0 I Oekiaftd Hatmutlf W,2-3 9 4 0 0 0 Zahn 110ehed to lllt .. balltn tn 7th H B P-<irlc?I bv Helrnuea..-T-2:24. A-31.619 Amenc-LeMUe -S.I l, YMll-0 Chlc.a90 100 000 OC»-1 S 0 N•w Yori! 000 000 oc»-o l I l!lurn1 end F1$k, AiUNttl and c er-w-e urn•, 7·6. L~IOtletll, 13·• -JaYI J..,.._.1 TOf'onto 000 020 001-3 I 0 Cleveland 001 000 IOl>-2 6 0 Gott, Jack'°" (7), G.IMI (I ), Moffitt (t) and Wllltr, Soreru.en, Sol._ (I), EHtertv (fl, Anoe<aon (9), eno Hauev, Eulan (9) W-Moffltt, 6-0 l.-5c>lttnoer, l·t .,._.., 1. lted Sa• 0 8o•ton 000 000 oc»-o S O Mlh .. ull." 200 000 OOit-2 1 0 Hur>t end Allenson. Gedman (I ). Heu, Ladd 19> ano Slrnmon•. W-Haas, 11-2 L-Hurst, 9·•. It nan &, T'-" • Oelrolt OolO 000 ~ I 2 Kanut Cltv 020 IQJ OOlt-. I 0 Paillnlcl<, Bair l'l, Marlin 16), Gum~t (I) er.d Pam"', GUfa. Anntlrol!Q Cl) e NI sieug111 w-<;ura. 10-lf l.-f'e~lcll.. 1·7. HA-0.lrolt, 'Herndon (17) l(a nYt Cltv, Afllen• Cl4l on.In •• It-.. 8alllrnore 000 OOS t~ II I Ta Ht 000 001 l<»-ol II I lloocllcl<er, Stewar1 C7I. T Mar11nn (t), StOOOat'd (t> and Oemllwv, 5nlltllaon, Matleek 161. H..-e cal ano Sundbe<o w-eoodlch•, t·• L-StnHhlOll, 7· 17 HRs-llattlmore, Lowen1teln Cfl TuH O'l!lr* 17) NATIONAL 1.&AGUE Glann 7, Otd9ln 2 j,AH l'ltAM Lai ANGU L•MllrH Evena Ill Cler" rt v-111e rl (Aonard If YQft90ldll COe11l1d OMalvJb MaV C l(ulMr 2t> Wtlmn ~ tarelftlnt II T ..... ..,rlllll ebrltlll 41 00 SSn21> lOOO S1 •2 Anae1n u 4000 s 1 4 O Baker If 4 O I O 0 0 O O G.-rlW )b 4 I I I s 1 1 • Lendn cf 3 0 I O 0 0 0 0 Thomes cf I 0 0 0 4 011 ~·Jllelrt 4 010 S 0 I 0 8roc:l< 111 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Flmolt c l I I 0 l 0 l 0 Stawat't 11 0 0 0 0 0 000 Monc!Vllfl 1000 3000 HoolonP 0000 1eclv"tl p I 0 0 0 MldnOo Oii 1 I l 2 89(ilwtll P 0 0 0 0 D$a•C I 0 0 0 • 1 U 1 T..... » > 6 I ker'lfW--.. -flf'Wldlc>9 1t2 ---1 LM........ -ra •1-J t;eme·WlnMtno lt8t -E•-(ll) D,..._._ot ~ l L~ l'rwt· chc:o .. Lot ,.,,..... s. l..-0.Mi ~-. L-d H~v-(24), MaldonMD (I), L-d (1'), G~rero 124).~. • N •UN to S.fl.....O.C. 9relnl1\o W,1-f f 6 J a.. ...... HOotefl U-1 2 ,., s 4 z.ctirv 2 1~ > o hct.•1111 1 , ' s_er, 2 2 o T-1-M. A-40,flJ. ....... w.ew ........ c... •• > 2 • 2 0 0 , ' • 0 1 2 I I .... 11111...... -... ~ ! 0 Clllcffo - -......0 ' l C.rHOfl and Dial/ Trout, lmllll ti ), l'l'OIY (9) tnd Oe'llt. W~IOfl, 1,..11, L.-Trout, 9·10 Hit~ "7J .......... Ml'h 1 N•w YOf'll. 001 100 000-2 4 0 Plt111>urg11 100 003 OOlt-4 S 0 Torrtr. Olar (7) and HO<IM" Del.eon, Scurry (f ), Tet(UI•• (I) end P911a. W- O.Leon, 3·2 L-Torr•r. •· 14 Hlh-New York. StrewtMtrrv ( 16) Plt111>urgll, Ma<llOCll t 11), Froo.t Cll AUte1 f, lteth I Hou1t0f1 1)0 000 no--t 14 0 C1nclnl\atl 000 000 001-1 11 0 K-•'1IOI Mlz.,ocll, a.renvl. Ga .. 131, Power ISi, Hav .. ct>. Scherrer (91 and Bllerllello. W-K..-, S·ll L-&erenvl. 6· 12 HA11-Hou1to", Crur 7 (f) ,. ..... , •· erav.. o San Oleoo 700 020 ~ 10 0 A11enta 000 000 ~ 5 1 Oreveckv end Gwosdz. McMurtrv. Oav· !av 16), Forsler <JI and 8enecllC1, Owen II) W-Oravecky, 14·1 l.-McMurtrv. 12·9 •x"' S, CerdlMl1 l Montreal 001 000 01)-S a 0 St Loult 000 010 OC»-1 10 l Lea. Aterdon (I) end Carter, Stue>er, Suller (9) and Porter W-Lta. 10-t l-Suller, a-a. HR-Montreal, Carlar (14) MAJOR LEA<iUE LEADERS Amtrlc•n LHeut BATTING (280 al bait) Booo•, 8o•toll, l11, C.ar••• Aneets, .>611 GrlHev. N•w York, 331, Bren, Kanta• Cllv. llO, Tram· mall, Detroit, .J74. AUNS E Murrey, B•ltlmor•. 79. Motllor, Mllweulo.ee, 79; Riot-It!\, Balllmor•, 7'8, Cooe>er. Miiwaukee, 74, Yount, Mii· waukH , 7S. A81: Coooer. Mllwaukff, 100; Wlnll•ld, New Yorll., 93; Parrl•ll, Detroit, 90, Al«, Bo•ton, 90; Simmon•. MllweukH, 77, Ward, Minnesota, 11. HITS Booo1, 801ton, 165, Whlteka<, O.trott, 147, Coooer, MllwaukH, 144, Wafd) Minnesota. 140, McAH, Kans"' Cll'r, 139 DOUBLES. 8oool. Boston, 38, Mc:Aae, K•M•I Cltv. 34, Hrt>ek, MlnnffOta, 33, AIC>ken, 8altlmore, 33, Parrl•h. O•trolt, 32. Yount, MllWeukH, 32 TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, I; Wlnfltld. New Yori\, I, Bogg\, 8011on. 1; Ganin••. Mllwauk .. , 1; Herndon, Otlroll, 1; I( Glllaon. Detroit, 7, Youn!, MllweukN. 7 HOME AUNS: Armes. 8o•lon, 2S; c-. Miiwaukee. 25; Rice, 8otlon, 2S; Wlnfleld, New York, 2S, Kltt19, Chlce90, 24 STOLEN BASES. Hender.on. Oaklend, 71; A. Law, Chlc190, 54, J Cru1, Chlca90, 41; Wllaon, Ken .. s Cltv, '5, Samc>le, Taxu, 36 PITCHING C 10 deelslon1)' Ha et, Mii· wau~ ... 11·2, 3.31; Roitma, Detroit, 1·2. 3.11; GOll'l08, New York, 10·3, 2.0I; IUolltltl, New York, 13·4, 3.21; McGreoor, Balllmore, 1S·S, 3. 10 S TAtKEOUTS: 111\o(rl•. Detroit, 16S, Alotlettl. New York, lJ7, St .. b, Toronto, 137; 8ennl1ter, Chlcaoo, tl9. Blvleven. Cte•elend, 116 SAVES Qul-rry, Kan1<11 Cllv, JI; Cauo11t, Seatt .. , n, Stanlav, Bo•ton, 11. Devit, Minnesota, 11, loe>ez, Oetrott, I• N•TIOMI LN9Ut 8AT1'1NG (280 et bal1)• Madlock, Pit· t11>uroh, .333, Lo Smith, St. loul•. .324, Hen', St. l.oul•. 323, H•ndrlck, St Louh, .322: Oewson, MontrHI, 316, Knloh1, Hous· ton, 316 AUNS; Mu<OllV. Atlenta, 102, Aal~. MontrMI, 9'; Evan•, San FrenclKo. 77, Garvey, S.n Olaoo. 76, Horner. Atlanta, 75 ABI OawMH1. MontrMI, 17, MurOllv, Atlanla, '3; Schmidt. PnlleoelPtlla, ll . ~. ~. 141 Hltl\drlck, SI. Loul1, 10. Ht TS: Oawsori, Montreal. 1.U, Oliver, MonlrH I, 142; Thon, Houstori, 139, Aamlre1, Allenta, 13S; Buckner. Cl'llcaoo. ll4; Crui, Houston. 134 OOU81..ES: BUCl<ner, Cnlcaoo, lO, l(nlpllt, Houston, 79, Hendrkll. St Loult, 27, J. A..,., PlltlburOh, 77, Ollver, Montreal, 27. We~. Montr•at, 27 TRIPLES. 8uti.r, Atlenta, It, Moreno, Houslon, II, Cru~. Houtton. a, OewlOI\, MontrMt, 7, GrHn, St Loul•, 1, Aal~. MonlrMI, 7. HOME AUNS. Scllrnldl, PnlladalC>flla, 27, Oewi.on. Mont reel, 15, Murohv. Atlenle, 7S. Evant, San Francisco, 14, !;ll«'!'W•. ~.K STOLEN BASES: Ralnet, MontrHI, St; Wtbon, New York. 40; S.. S.11, o.d9en. lS1 L.aMa•ler, S.n Frencl•co, 34, Aeelu•, Cln· ctnnall, n PITCHING C 10 decision•! Peret, Allen· 1a, 1l·4, 3 11, Monie!~. San oi.uo. •·3, ) Sl; Oennv, Phlledelc>llla, ll·S, 2.44, Rvan. Hou11on, ll·S, 1.11; S are 118<1 with .'67 STAlt<EOUTS: Carllon, Phlleoelollla, 203. Soto, Ctnclnnetl, tao, McWIMlam1, Plttlt>vroh, 146, V~IHN. Dee199n, IJ1/ Aven. HO<Jslon, 12S. SAVES: Le. Smllh. Chk:eoo. le; It.· erdon, Montreal, ll; 8.0ro1lan, Atle11ta, 16, Tekulve, Plll11>uro11, lS, Lavelle, San Fran· er.co, 14 LITTLE LEAGUE ALL-STARS ll· 12·VMr·Dld1 WESTEltN ltEGIONAL TOU'IMAMENT <•f Sen ....,..,._) M9f*'f'I keAi Fronllaf <Cerritos) 7, Falrt>enks (Alatka) S Raleloh Hilt•, OrltOOll 4, Marldl1n. ldellO 7 We11 Maul, Hawaii 6, Ci-o11 ... Coto· redo 1 ... Tltdll'f'I (;a"'" 10 a .m -Meriden, ldeho v1 Cher.,.., ... Colo S.30 om -Tue.on Amarian, Arlr v• KH rns. u1a11 I II m -Kettoa, W61hlnoton VI. Alv .. - •lde, Montane w.-..csav'• Gamet 10 a m -Cerrito& vs, TucMHI Amari· can·KH rnt, Uleh '°'"' 2 p m -MMldlen, ldallO wlnnef "' KellOI, WHll.,-ltlveulde Monl•NI lotar S:lO om. -Pactflc (S.Cremento) v,. Laramie, Wyoming a pm -GrMl'I Vallev. Nevaoe v1. Ea11 La• V-s. New MaitlCO ,,..,...V', 0- 10 • m -LDMf'I llracl<et oema 2 1>.m. -LDMf'• bracket uatM S:30 om. -Winner's llrecllet oeme I om. -Wlnnef's t>racll.11 oame .. ,.'('. GalMI 10 am -Lo..,•1 t>recket ciama 2 11 m. -l.oMr'I llreek•I O•tM S.30 o.m -Semlfln•I oeme I Pm -5amlllnel game S.,...y, A..._ -~ 10 • m -F1tt11 Piece oeme 4 lO 11 m -Third Diec• ff mt I 11.m. -Chem11ton•lll11 oame CWlnnar edvance1 to Liiiia LMuue WorlO S.rlet In Wlnlam•POr1, Pe.> WMdCN~ (If Hlhllllll, l'illefld) U.S. M•OAL W1NH•1ts Gttll MilfY ~, woman'• >.OOO·mat•n. l:k.'2 Maf't Dedier. w-·· tSOO-Matao, ·~'°· c;r.., Fotltr, Man'' 111>-mata< lllK~, IJG. Emmit IClno, Wlllle Oautt, Car.In Smllh end Cart Lewl1, M4111't 400-mtla< relav tH m . J1M (WOl'ld recOfd) Cert Lewt1. Men'• IOO-mei.r1, 10.07 Cert 1..awll, Man'I tong lumo, 19.-.. l!dwlft Motes. Man'• 40o-met.,. tlvrdllt, 47'0 ClllVlft ~tll, Man'• 200-mtter,, XI I• M¥w W-. 9a1111,, Mtft'I trlf)le tufnll, "·4\l't MMI-Ok:kw_.., Women" me••· ltlon. tll~ MIChMi Frankt, Men.. 400-matWI, 4522. JeMn Grlmft, Man'• IOflt luMO, n ·71i't. Tvtie ~. Man'I lllfll """"' 1·1•t.. Tom P'ttrenoff, Man'• lavetln, ao-1~ C•Mn $Mltll, Mell'' 100 meter, 10.21. Hlot Quow, Men't 200-m91trl, 20.41 Sltw Scott, Men'• 1'00-meten, >·•1 f7 ~ M*.a Coni9Y, MM'1 lone lume, 26-7-. Wlll9 Oeull, Men'• 110~ hutdlet, ,, ... lmrnlt Kint, Men't 1*mttwl,. lo.J4 kllldlr HltV /Ntt'1 --~·· 4$.14 w .. """', Wofrltll'• """ """-. •· ~ Oliliw Wlllleml. w-·• 100-nwieo, II 06 Cer04 LWlt, w-·· IOnt lwmo, ,, w •. Del tMr MONDAY'S tt•Wl.TS (I"" 8f 4l·da'I IMIM.,.M mwftne fltaST ltAC•. 6 furle>nl.l1. Wiid encl SwMt (Peine) 34.20 13.60 1t0 8M Gone (MIU) U0 UO Trond1 Kav (81ee.,J 4"° AllO raced; Aollalu•. SHY« l.u't p,.1441, 8all .. lll, Candv'I Valentina, Kervn't Pfe1• ent. Lii' Miu C.-v, Eble'• Sltta< Time 1:12 4/S. s•COtlD ltAC•. • lurlono1 Go4d AtO (Plneavl 17.tO 7,20 4,00 °'1•rlend Journey (McCerron) S.20 UO Jov for Wine (l!llaelt) UO AllO r!Mled: l.evontontM, E.T. HOma, Ce~ °'1 In, &arcing Allaed, Ga1Cl11fe, Famed Advoulor, Ona 111\o(a Hit, El•"•lo, Mldnlullt Arrow. TltM: l:l2 4/S. st DAILY DOUBLE <•· 11) oeld MOUO TH .. D ltAC•. • l\Jr1on91. Ketlllnll• CMc:Carronl 7.00 3 40 2.40 SQlen<lld Merk (Slt>llM) S.20 2.40 MM Solr (Fu.Ill .. ) 1 .• AllO reced. Foxzv Tov. Terre1to'• Puur, Double Huff, 811uful Moment, ladv A1ler. Time: 1:11 J/S. U •XACTA (7·S) 1><110 "6.SO. f'OVlllTH llAC•. 6 turtonu1 MUCh L•• (LlOllem) ll.00 6AO 4 40 Sllpllllv l.eced IFl.*lte1) IOJO 4.60 Garbec1 (Plncey) UO AIM> racied: Elellant Jade. TltM tor Petfltlil, For•ver Pr0e>er, tntenrlonal, Lall AaMv, PrOPl"etta, Queen of Jeu. Time: l 13 4/S. "'"" lllACI. One mile on lurt. Far (Valanzuelal 7.IO 4,60 l.00 Buv Mv Act (Maia) 1.to 6.20 Some I(!~ Fllr1 1Pec1rora) UO AIM> rac:.d Quast, Frostv Toci, Cl\erm· Ing Pin, °'1 ••turn, Marvlena. ~ Time 1:3.S 4/S. SS •XACTA 11·7) oelO 1117 00 SIXTH ltAC•. • tunonu1. Donner Pertv IPlncav) 13.60 7.40 4.40 Fall Time (l!lallatar) 9.to S.20 EatV EHV CFutnlH) 1.to Alto rec.cl: Lother, Nuctaar Alt.Ck, OnaO'CIOdC Jump, SIU9f .. I. llolemo. lel<e a A•tt, Uncle Allen. TltM' 1:11 2/S. HV .. fTH ltACE. 6 fur1ono1 Fro1tv TeN (MaH) 10.ao 5.20 J.20 Marthua'I Aoy (Black) 3.20 2.40 Olffe(enl WDl'ldt CGerrtllo) 4.90 Alao reced: For\MI<, Aly De Pia, Granla OUGUHA, Terra Miu , BOIO end Wllllllil. Time: l:ll. SS IXACTA (S·•> Pelo PS.SO '2 l"ICK SIX (l1·1+1·l ·Sl 11111d '63,110 wllh -wlnnlno 11c1c.e1 <••• l'IOr.-.). n Piel< Six contolatlon oeld 1,,341 40 wlll'I 27 winning tlct.•ts (fl•• l!Onatl •KONTH ltACE. I 1116 mlle1 E119 TOSI (Mc:Carronl l .90 3.00 1.40 v11tor cl!ITM:1tl S.60 uo Pet'1 Dude (Lamencal UO Alto raced: Saleo, Ouret>te, lnevltal>te, !>ummar CrNk. Time hl3 71S NINTI4 ltAC•. I l/16 mltn. Lt Le Tai (Meza) 1.20 360 1.IO Eminent lad (OefNdlllol 11 00 UO No Tru~ tT..,,_•) 4.60 AllO rac.d FUll\I VHted, Slnltter Smlla, Huttle UP. F~'I Soy, J .D . Atwater, S...rkl9 Gem, Bk:ll.'• • Kid.. Limit to Romance, Plr•I• Man Time: 1:46. SS •XACTA (3-6) palO 1260,SO. Attendanc• -1•.m . Ln AlemltM MONDAY'S ltHOLTi Ctht .. n .... ..,.,_ .. ,,_..,,., l'llllST llAC•. 350 verdl, Soverel9n ~ CCl!ave1l J0.20 IUO UO ltoeloe! t>v WOl'd (Frevl lo.tO HO s.11v S111r11tv cer-> 1.20 AllO raced: ~ e Fut. MIM Sneuv ~. Sclnulator, Fantaalna, Ml" Fan .Ht, AOVI Miu S..., Aoerlllil Jette 81.111. Time. II le n UlACTA 11·9) oald 117S.20. Sl'°"D •AC•. JSO varO\. Tlnv Patt1Wn (Adair> • 40 3.40 160 L.adv Lvnet ccr-> 10 00 S.40 Bldemalil (My ... ) 4IO Also rec.cl· Scarle1 Wiid Lii Sooflle AO'#. KewMll Stu, ~ Aova1 Alsk. ltMl ~. La Ptuncler, Arc En Clel Time. 11. ll U IXACTA <1•4) 1111ld s.43.70 THlltD ltAC•. 3SO vare11. Pen II To Me (Hartl s.oo > 40 J.20 PHWTI OOll (Trte1ure) S.to 4.60 Truckle Ano91 (Chavarl 7.00 Alto raced Atlut• sw .. thMrt, Conne on Old 81\18, Ea1v Juan, lnolan Instinct Time 11.'3 l'OVlllTH ltACE. 170 verel& Ouou l.lltle l!leer CCl•rh1•) 9.60 S.20 >to N~ HI (Plt ... entonl I 00 6.20 Tlnv Hav Buo CFloru l 9AO AllO raced. Big T ouoh and UCllY, LOf'rle l!lo, Fut J•tflre, LOllll Hard AoeO, Luckv Moonllohler. Time· 4S.92 n U(ACTA (t ·)) oalO voo flll'Tl4 ltACE. 3SO vards Remlllll!ll Nyrr.ofl CM...-.l S-10 2.10 3 00 Evenlllil Watch 1Zu!e4t) J 60 3.20 1W Sir LO•• (DetomOa) l 40 Alto raced: Mv IC.94tv Glrl, A l!ledulno Ballad, $\Jmmer Cta.uk:, Trutv • Ora\Hlflt, Btaek S.arae>ll, Sir Aedl Time: IU 3. n EXACTA (9·10) oelO SlltO. ~ SIXTH ltAC•. 3SO verdt l.oolul l.uv (Hartl S.20 3.40 2 to Jun .. 800M ITr•Hure) 4 :IO 360 Love eno Aun (Mltc:h911) UO AM rac:.d. AuVt"t Kl'len Artl1t. Oii" Crowd Pl9AMI', Wiil.-Paint, Miu /lllOMv L-. Flael FantHv. TltM 17.11. 12 UCACTA 14·6) Dllkl $20.60 HVINTlt ltAC•. 3SO varo1 Here Tru Rebel (8rooll'l )4.40 10.40 6-20 Plav Tuff (VeldH) 3.60 uo Joe Arf Coot (CrHW) ),IO Abo r aced; Juslllk• Don, Port• Fan, EHV Send\, High har>Oed, Zlnco Charge, SIU&ll Prtnoe, FIH h Em. Time; 17.U 12 UC.ACTA (S·IO) oekl 1101 60 •toHTH ltACE. 3SO varo1 ~ (Adelrl 40.IO 2UO IUO OH-Ee•Y LIU Jal ICl9rltMl t,40 t.IO 01+-Peoov Ganie (Pllk1M1ton> a.IO r.M> 01+-0eed heat. Alto rec:ed. Oual L.adv, Sound of Sum· ,.,,.,, Pau Mv COPY, Chlano, -u. Front. Linde, Al'ln Ju Te. TltM: 11 11 U •XACTA (7·ll e>eld 1246.00 U •XACTA (7·9) Deld lln,40 12 f'ICK Sht 16·2-9 Of' 2·4·1·11 Dllld S2,60VIO with Sf WIMlnCI tlel<•lt Hive l'IO<WI). ~•rrvovar DOOi U&,4.lS ts. NINTH llAC•. 440 vard1. Tiie l!llack A"lanot (He(f) IS.00 1.00 !JO Clau v N•lln (Adelr) UO UO O.vll WllO (H•rdlnO) 7.60 AIM rac.d: The $1Hnture, SanatOf' '"9, Garland $~, ShaWMa Hoo, lttbt l.ttlla L.utu, ~·· ~-,..,. ~ Time: 21 ... n • XACT A (2-1) pakl '191 .20 T•NTM ~. 3SO verch. ChamotCllle TOHI (Adelrl 17.00 1120 .. 20 Temerln (Cllrlu•> I0.00 4.M> Miio Thunder (Hert) 00 Al.o r.cH: Cl'lri. Cociv, l•t>v ltoar, PoecMt Te, S•-· S.mural WarTlllr. IW 5-MIU, arnDOOtta<. Tlrn9" 1e02. S2 •XACTlo (7·S) Hkl S I0.00. Atl9ndenet -t ,J76 o.ia.1 1tem1 N,L EXHl8fTIOH C•WbeYI 30, R•m1 7 Sear• 11'1 °"'""' 10 ID l 0 1 0 Oel-f'G S.Ollei'I 2S 1-JO ·-1 0....-Colllle 11 oan trom Houeooom (&eoilan k ldi) Oel-FG S.Otlen 34 Ov-f'IOP!et I ru11 (~tlei'I klCk) l.A-lrvln IO oeu lnlarc.c>tlon return (NtllOfl kk k) Del-FG Sel>tlen SO Oal-N•w-I run (Seclllaft klek) A--54.2" GaMll Stefttlla Oai LA 10 21·1?7 67 100 S-14·4 1-10 6·41 3-2 Flrtt oownt 2S Au&M .. verd• 39· IOS Paul119 vere11 2l4 A•turn v••d• 74 Pauea ?2·l7·1 Sadltl>Y 1·7 Punta 6·39 FumOlft ·lot t 3-0 Penalllel·varda t·Sl Time ot Ponenlon 34:20 IMMdual St9tls11a MS 23:40 AUSHING-OallH, Oor .. lt 14·31, Spring' S·2S, Peoc>IH 6·22, Nawt'IOUM 4·20, Newaorne 3·1, Alckt 1·7. 0 . Willi• l·O, McSwaln 2·(·)9 LOI Angele\, Dicker.on 14·67, Thomu S·tl, Redden S·l7, Jone1 2·12, Kl"'P 1·6, Gumen 1·3. PASSING-Oetla1, H-lloorn t· 13·1>- 106, O. White f·14·1-91. Carano 4·9·~. AanlOm O·l-~ LO• Angetn, F•rr•o•mo 3· 1'·)-2', Kamp 2·1· l-4S. AECEIVING-Oallu , Co11>1e 4·41, Oontev J·.U, St>rlng1 3·39, Pearwn l ·3l. McSwaln 3·24, JoMaon 2·24, Oor'8tt 7·11, T. HIM 1·12. Peol>la• 1·9. LOI Anoe••·· Gumen 7·32, Gren! 1·20, Fumer 1·13, Radden 1·9. MISSED FIELD GOALs-Nona. NFL timlbltton NATIONAL CONl'Elt•NCE !lam• Allenta S.n Francl1co New0rl9•n• N.Y. Glanll Phllaclelohl• OaMH St. l.oult Wallll1111ton WHt W L I l I 1 I 1 I 2 ... , T .. ct. ,. .. 0 .500 41 0 .soo 23 0 .000 40 0 .333 so 2 o o 1,000 •s 2 0 0 1.000 •2 I I 0 .SOOSO I I 0 .SOO 37 110 50037 c..w.i Tamoe 8av l 0 0 1.000 O Cllk:•OO I 1 0 .500 SI Detroit l 1 0 .SOO 34 MlnMIOla I I 0 .SOO lS Grten Bev 0 2 0 .000 •I AMERICAN CONFEltENC• Denver Ken"'' Cltv llalden Seatlle S.nOlego l!latllmore N.Y. Jell N-Elllllend l!lull•lo Miami Cleveland PU l'll\lrOh Cincinnati Houllon WHt 2 0 I I I I I 1 0 2 ... , 0 1.000 31 0 .soo l7 0 soo '3 0 SOO 4S 0 .000 40 2 Cl 0 I 000 2S l l 0 .soo l6 0 2 0 000 31 02000027 0 2 0 .00034 C811trel 2 0 0 1.000 ... 2 I 0 .667 67 0 2 0 .000 lO 0 2 0 .000 17 -*v'• k9r'9 Oet1a1 30, ltMns 7 Tllw'M9v'• GaMll N•w Yor" .Hts et ClnclnM ll, (n) l'rtdlt'f'• ~ Mleml at Wa.,,lnoton, In) MIN!ftOte al Seallle. Cnl Se~v'·~ "A so 31 41 64 29 31 ,. S2 36 17 24 0 31 SS 7 40 ... 5" 39 )() 52 SI 31 N•w Enoleno v1. 1tem1 al Anaheim lladlum, 7 p.m. Clllceoo al lleldan, In) ~la a t GrMl'I Bev 8uffal0 el Detroit, (n) H«Mnlon at New °""6M, (11) Atlenta et Tarnoa Bev. Cnl Baltimore et New York Gian••· (n) SI. l.oul• el t<anae1 Cltv, (nJ PC11~gh at 0 ... t, (nl Cl9velaild et o.nv .... (nl Sall Francbco •• Sen Oleoo, (II) ATf'~llMp (at IC.Illa bleM. ()Me' "'"' ..... Sln9itl /\NII\ Wllandtf (Swed911) Gel. Joachim Nntrom (Sw9de<I), 6·7, 1-S, 6·1, AoOtlrl Van•t Hof CU.S.) Ott. Br1en Gottfri.cl CU S.l, 6·3, 4·4, S.mmv Glemmetva (U.S.) def HM1rl Laconte I Fr.nee), 6·4, 2-0, retired (fool lnlut'vl, Eliot T4111W-IU.S I de! Fran« Puncec (South Alrlea), •·?, •·4, 8 111 Scanlon (U S.) def. Aamelll l(rl1t1nen (lndlal. 4·•. 6-2; Tim Mavotte (U.S l de! Jol'ln Alexenoe< (Au"ralla), 4·3, •·4. Ndutt.a OdltOI' (N'-181 def Jol'ln Mc:Curdv (Auttrallel, 4·2, 1·S, Thoma• Hoo•t•cll (Swed9nl d9I Stan Smith (U.S.), 6·2. 7·6, Hana Slmont.on (5""°9n) de!. lolc CourtffU CFrancel. 6·4, 6·1; Mika Ba.-IU.S.l dtl Oraw Gallln cu.S.l. 4·6. •·O. 6·2, David Ca<ttr (Autlr•ll•l Gel. Scott Oavl1 (U.S.), 4·2, 1·•· Tomei SmlO CC1ac:llo\IO· vellle) dtf C1'rl' Lewll CN•w ZMlend). •·I, 4·7, 4·4, Pat Cu ll CAu1trallal Ott Mlk• LM<h (U.S ), 4•6, 6·l, 6·•. Glenn Mkhlbala CCenedel Ott Mii.a O.Palmer CU S.), 6•4, 2·•· 4·4, Colin Oowdelwal (Swltterlend) dtf. Cerlos Klrmavr (8ra1il), 7·S. 6·3, Marco• Hoener (Bru ll) Ott. Eoen Adam• (U.S ), 6·l. 6·1, Jlmmv Arta1 (U.S l def CanlO Motta t8rarll), •·I, 6·4, Mel Purcell (U.S.) def. Haro4d Solomon (U.!> ), 7·S. 7•6, 6·l; Peta< Flemlng IU.S.) def Henrik Wndttrom (Sweden), •·•, 6·4 MM'• tourNNntnt (at S-.. Varmel'ft) "'"' ltwM s...... Paul McN-(AuUraUa) def Mike 8runnll9"o (U i I, •·I, 6·1; Matt Oovl9 (U.S.l Ott. JaY LalllduJ <US.), •·2, ••4, Vllav Amrltral (tndl•l def, Vinet Ven P•tton (U.S.), 6·2, ... 1. Fr1l1 l!lu•Ml1111 (U.S.> def Mell Anoer (U.S.), 6·4, 6·4; UOvd Bour"9 (U,S.l Cl<lf, Erk: StrOde (U.S.), 6·4, 7·•, A-I S.Ouao (U.S.> cMf, Tom Caln !U.S.>. 3·6, •·i, •·l, o.r... Tarr (South Alrice) dtf. A""" Andr'-• CU.SJ. 4·6, 4·3, 6·3, Kirn Warwk:ll CAu1traNe) d9f Eddie Edwerdt (South Alr'lca), 1·4, J·6, •·4 WOfMft'1 '9UrNmtnt (atT ..... ) l'lntlta.ld s-.... Kalhv Horvetll (U.S.l cMf. Liu Bond9f, 6-3, 6·1; Anne Hot>Ot (8rltalnl def. Karen a.twla (Canada), •·O, 6'-1; Terrv Phe4111 to.SJ Gel. Yvon,,. v.,.meek (South Africa ), •·•. •·2; H"8na Sukova (Crechotlovaklal Ott. Anne Mll'lta< (Au1trene1, 4·6, 6·1, 7•6; l(lm ~ !U.S.) dtf COf'lllM Vanier (Frencie), Q-6, 4· l, •·2; EHY 9urol" (U s ) def. A1'1981e Wallter CC~), 6·2, 6-4, Atvcle MGvltOfl IU.S) def, Kini S1.wn.t1 (US.), 4·4, 1·6, 1·•. lvanne Madnloe·Ou .. (Ar-tine) def SUMl'I MalCltln (U.S,), 6-t, 6·2; Ettullo Onove (J-l, Cernllt itenltmlft <U.S.), 6·3, 6·21 LIM Sencl1n (Sw9d9n) def. Pell'• H~ {Au\fralle), 6-l, 6-0; SuMll Leo (Auttralle) o.t. $eblne Slmmondl Cllaty), ... ,. •-'), 6-4; ~.t MadrMcl C lf'uA l dtf. '-""' Allen (U.S.), t-2, 6'-); Patn C.aele (U.S.I d91. ltOMlvn I' llirtlentl (Soult! Alrlea). 6• l, 7 •6; Eva Plef'f (Wftt Germenvl clfl. CelldY lt8YftOldt (U.$.), .. ,, 711 ............ lllelv) cMf 8elll Nonti (U.S.), 7-t, J-6, t-1 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 l 'S Saddle up Minnesota's John Castino look as if he's going to climb the back of Seattle's Dave Henderson . The two actually got tangle d in a douhle play. U.S. begins final trials to secure Ame~ica 's Cup spot NEWPORT. R.I. (AP) -The three U.S. boats in the America's Cup trials begin their final series of races today to decide which 12-meter yach t shouJd defend the sailing world's lop priz.e against a foreign challenger. The U.S. trials this summer have taken on an added ll1lport- ance because of the outstanding record of Australia II in the foreign races. The innovative MIDLANDS • • From Page C2 seldom been witnessed any- where, at any level o( competi- tion. Starting slowly out of the Wishbone offense, Dupree blossomed the minute Switz.er switched lo the 1-fonnation, un- leashing sconng runs of 86. 80. 75, 70, and 63 yards. He set a F'iesta Bowl record of 239 yards against Arizona State, prompting ASU Coach Darryl Rodgers lo say, "I penonally pit)' Big Eight roaches for the next three years." A gigantic Sooner quesuon mark is at quarterback The can- didate who stepped forwartd in spring practice was junior Danny Bradley. He's been a backup for two years. But his sire! 5-10, 185. may be a problem. A preseason poll of Big EighL area writers picked Oklahoma State to finish third, followed by Missouri, Kansas State, Kansas. Iowa State and Colorado. Kansas and lowa State are each breaking in new head coaches. Mike Gottfried. late of Cincin- nati, haa replaced the hred Don Fambrough at Kansas and Jim Criner was taken from Boise State to pick up the reins from Donnie Duncan. who resigned. Kansas ls led by four-year starter Frank Seurer at quar- terback and tailback Kerwin Bell, teammatee at F.diaon High School in HuntJngton Beach. Oklahoma State's Cowboys are in the nettlesome p05ltJon of having the 1982 collegiate ruahing champion while most people talk about the great stars at Nebraaka and Oiklahoma. F.rnest Anderaon. a smalllah .enior, rushed for 1,877 yards la!it fall to become only the fifth Big Eight pl.ayer to take 811 NCAA n.iahJns title. His ~tal waa the flfth·bett In NCAA history. "People know what Ernest Andet'IDn can do," aaya Cowboy Coach Jimmy JohNOn. "He'a proven that he'a a great football pl.ayer." Mlllowi'• Warren Powers ia workJns with an almoet onUrely n w coachlntl at.aft and a new 1-formatJon a.Ilgnmenl Aussie boat. using a wang-uke keel, added another win t.o its overall 39-4 record Monday with a come-from -behind triumph agamst England's Victory '83 Ill the foreign semi final series. Many yachting experts believe the Aussie boat ts the most for- midable foreign chaUenger in decades for the Cup, which has been controlled by the Unn.ecl States SIIlce the beginning of the internauonaJ races in 1851. "Obviously they have an un- pressive record in the challenger trials, buL there's still no way of knowing exactly how fast they are until the finals," said Jim Ford. a spokesman for the De- fender-Courageous syndicate. which has two U.S boats in the competi lion. Defender and Courageous are scheduled to ra<'t' agamst one another today on Rhode Island Sound to begin the U.S. final series. Each boat will then taken turns racing against the third U.S. entrant. Liberty. Light winds shorten race Light winds Sunday forced the race committee to shorten course in the fourth race of Dana Point Yacht Club's Dana Pmnt Series for Performance Handicap Rac- ing Fleet yachts. The winners: CLASS A -1. Gandalf. Doug and Su1A0ne .Tones. DPYC; 2. Rock N Roll. Jeff and Sue Rogers. DPYC. 3. RoUer. Steve Franta, DPYC. CLASS B -Red Line. Fred Perez. DPYC; 2. Maclunac. Wes Thompson, DPYC CLASS C Glory, Jack Pinhero, Oceanside YC; 2. Sun Shadow. BlU Pollock, DPYC; 3 F.cstacy, AJ Johnson, DPVC. CATALINA-27 -l. Sunset., Mace/Dutton. DPYC; 2 Sunshine, R on and J oan Malanosky, DPYC; 3. Alt.air, Bruce Toffelmeier. DPYC; 4. Funny Feelln'. Pete Meade. DPYC. Leap Frog wins LOS ANGELES -Leap Ji"ro8. skippered by Don Bl.eek. wu \.h~ winner in the Spinnaker Clua in Loi Angeles Y*Cht Club'• Nor- dlinger Trophy race to Emenld &y. C.t.Rlina Island, Saturday. The rK'O ls rxclusively for LA YC yachtll. RUIU'erup wu Jeck Ball.Ue'a N@wt.Boy. Third wu Hot Foot. sailed by Tom JorgtNOn. 1n the Non-apinnakcr ClN9 the wiJmef WU Anda, akippef'f'd by Jack Duston. l ! . l L 1 .. ' . • • . C4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 HoltZ finds new type of Wildcats must vie for pride ... only hall • carrier LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)-To hear Lou Holu tell It, a new breed of running back emerged dunng spring football practice in Fayetteville. "There are three types of runners," the Arkansu coach said. "Runners like Gary Anderson, they run between trees. Runners like Jessie Clark, they run over the trees. The type we have, they run into the trees. "I thought there were only two kinds until this spring." The top six rushers from last year's 9-2-1 team are gone. With a measly 143 yards, quaterback Brad Taylor has the best statistics. ' The candidates at tailback -Billy Warren, Terry Tatum, Carl Miller and Nathan J ones - totaled 21 carries for 46 yards last year. Warren was redshirted and Jones was on defense. Freshmen Gregg McKinney and Marshall Foreman could play. F.ddie White, the No. 1 fullback, was a tight end last year. "What we were hoping for was somebody would come to the forefront in spring and us not go into fall with as many question marks," Holu said. "We think we have some people in the backfield who can do the job but you don't want to single them out and lift them up out of the crowd ... you hope they rise out of the crowd." The lack of experience at running back may mean more of a load on the strong-armed Taylor, who sent defensive backs backpedaling when he entered the game last year in relief of Tom Jones. TUCSON (AP) -The 1983 Ariwna Wildcats' football season will be a year of playing for pride, and other things: an unofficial Pacific 10 C.Onference championship and a real Top 20 national ranking. Unofficial, because th.e Wildcats are on NCAA probation and ineligible for poet-seaaon play, and as such are prohibited by the Pac-10 from being the conference champion. Real, because while various publi- cations have given Arizona prominent mention aa a preseaaon powerhouse, it's the end--of-the-year rank.ings that count. And Larry Smith, going into his fourth year as head coach, is optimistic on both oounts, given the veteran club he has to work with -14 starters, most in the conference, returning from last year's 6-4-l team. They're among a total of 42 returning lettermen and a fresh.man class, comprised almost tot.al- ly of linemen and linebackers, that the coaching staff calls Arizona's best recruiting class. . "The way we're looking at it, we·~ playing for the Pac-10 championship and national prestige," he said. "Those are two big things we feel w e can go after. We've got to make it all happen in 11 games." The schedule, which starts Sept. 3 against Oregon St.ate, includes every Pac-10 opponent but Southern Cal, as well as Utah, Cal State-Fullerton and C.Olorado State. One of Arizona's "Brad Taylor is very explosive, people know that and we know that," Holtz said. "You cannot expect Brad to do more than what is built into the system for him to do. U he tries to do more, it would be a detriment rather than an asset. "It would be reasonable to expect him to throw it 15 times the first half. U w e throw more in the second half than the first, it'll be a long year. We'd like to get Brad Taylor insured but the premiwns are too high. A $10 policy would cost $2,800 a month." ;, ~ biggest wins last year came against Ouch f. Notre Dame at South Bend. In addition to being tied by UCLA, the Wildcats A I h · d b B b ff k . bumped arch-rival from a Rose Bowl t an ta t ar aseman o orner wal s off the r1eld trip in the season finale. Monday after breaking his right wrist. He is expected to Smith said his coaches and team are be sidelined for eight weeks. also "very realistic," facing a big --- Winning season may he all you need for playoffs ·ATLANTA (AP) -Bum Phillips foresees the m first winning season ever for the New Orleans Saints, NFC WEST 4 •? and that might be all it takes to claim the National --=--=-~-==-=-=---------~-!!~~~ Football C.Onference West.em Division cham-- pionship. last year. But the Falcons posted the best record, 5-4, The Saints, who have never seriously threaten-&{ld were the only member in the playoffs, losing in ed to win a title, could become the fourth different the first round at Minnesota . team to win the crown in their division in the last five New Orleans appeared to be on the right track Ill years. 1979 when the Saints had their best season ever, TheRams,whowonsevenstraightdivisiontilles posting an 8-8 record, but they plunged to 1-15 the beginning with 1973, won their last title in 1979 and following season and had a 4-5 record last year. then went to Super Bowl XIV as a wild card playoff The 49ers fell to 3-6 last season and the Rams had team in 1980, when the Atlanta Falcons ruled the the worst record in the National C.Onference. a 2-7 West. San Francisco used its division crown as a mark. stepping sto~e to victory in Super Bowl XVI. Bert Jones retired from the Rams after a neck There was no division championship awarded injury, and it seems all four teams will be settled at quarterback as the season starts. P\alC NOTICE Nil.JC NOTICE Vince Ferragamo, who returned to the Rams NOTICE M DEfAUl T Remember. YOU MAY LOSE from Canada, is firmly entrenched as the starter, with IMP<>ftTANT NOTICE LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU 00 NOT J ff K the back IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN FORE· TAKE PROMPT ACTION e emp as u~. . • CLOSURE BECAUSE YOU ARE BE-Notlee Is hefeby given by the Ken Stabler will trigger the Saints attack. Joe HIND JN YOUR PAYMENTS IT MAY unders!gne<I tl'l•I u~er that certain Montana will try to regain the championship touch So D • OMd or Trust d1ted May 18, 1981, BE L WITHOUT ANY COURT executed by YEZDI M BHESANIA .. for the 49ers. Steve Bartkowski will lead the Falcons ACTION. end YOll hi..,. tl'te legal rlgl'll TrullOf In wl'lk:h PRABHAKAR D • callin ll . to btlng 'fOV' KCOUnt In~ stand· DANDEKAR and JOANNA LEE man offen...e g for some ro -out passing, a phase Ing by paying Ill of your peat due OANDEKAR are named u of the game Bartkowski seldom resorted to in the peymente plus permitted coet1 end Banellcladea 1nd WESTERN t upert-wltl'lln three (31 months MUTUAL CORPORATION. a Call-pas ' • · • lrom the dete thla Notice of 0et1Ult tOfnl• c:orpo<etk>n .. Trustee and Two new coaches this year: John RobUl80n with Pals n. wu recO<ded. Tl'lll amount 11 M 29 8 ' th n---and Den H · Atlan Rob. ' s 10 575 9CI u ot Juty 28 1983 and rec0<ded ay . 19 t, tn Book e .i;:wu1a;:, enrung at ta. Ul80n was ARIZONA challenge because more is expected this year and because he thinks the Wildcats will be looked at aa "a true contender for the championship," meaning they must "stay a contender every week." The veterans, who say they've put the conseque~ of the probation aside, include all-American linebacker Ricky Hunley and another senior, quarterback Tom Tunnicliffe, whom Smith is touting as a legitimate Reisman Trophy candidate. Triathlon talk set for tonight A two-hour triathlon seminar, featuring such triathlon athletes as Dr. Ferdie Massimino, Bill and Julie Leach and Thomas Baughey, is scheduled for tonight (7 o'clock) at Fireside Lounge, , located at 200 Promontory Point in Newpport Beach. Cost is $15 or $5 for students with a current i.d. with all proceeds ticketed toward the Newport Water Polo Foun- dation. Massimino, a former UC Irvine water polo All-American, is a two-time Hawaiian ironman triathlete and the reigning U.S . triathlon champion at Malibu. Also speaking will be Dr. Vince Caiozo Crom the human perfonnanoe laboratory at UC Irvine. Further information can be obtained by calling Steve Nower (752-0565) or F.d Newland (642-7083). w111 °inct-un111 your .'.ccouni ~ 14078• P• 1815· OHlclel Record• a successful coach in the colle<riAte ran.ks at Southern of Orange County. CalllOfnla, a D-• comes cvrrent. You may not l'la.,. to br .. ch of the obllgellon fOf ..,,,!eh California before rep'~,,.; .. ,. Ray Malav&Sl and pay the enllre unpaid P<><1k>n of yovr he ~ t T 1 • • --..i'6 ' account -t"""~l'I full pa-t t ..,_, 0 rust • aecurlly l'lat Heruung directed the offense for the Super Bowl • '"""' , ... _. oc:cuHed; that the nature ol eoch • . • . •u demanded. but you must P•Y twMOh 11 the tattura to pey when due champion Washington Redskins before taking the amount 11a19d •bo..,. , . After tl'lree (3) month• from the 111 inc:umbr911Ce9 on .. !he aubfect Leeman Bennetts place wt th the Falcons. data ot r9COtdllion ol thl doc:u 1 P"Oi)llrty, to maintain rne lntklrance Oklahoma running back Marcus Sports Illustrated article a couple of Dupree, who had some unkindly months ago, jokes with his coach fol- things to say about Barry Switzer in a lowing running drills Monday. ~~~--~~~~~~~~--"'--~~~-=-~~~~~~--='---~~~-1 men on tl'\9 tklbject pr099f1Y· and to P•Y " ~~~~ig~~~~~~ Is th1·s f1·nally the year Pack 1·s Back? entire amount demanded by Yo<Jr and payable and fhat the under· • cr9dl10f algned hereby elecll 10 Mii Of CIUN To nn<1 out the amount you mu•1 to be told the tru11 property to pey, Of to errenge fOf payment to 1 ~ ' 1 1 o atop the fOfec:toaure. Of 11 your PfoP-.. t 9 that ob lgll on. eted. Jul)' GREEN BAY Wis (AP)-Bart S•ft-'-makin units· J hn And Geo C b Rand &::.-tt 11 1 1 ec:toau 1 her 211. t 83 , • ..., ... g Ell m o erson, rge um y, y ~ =•on." c~ntact· r~r:i,1'1-;:e~t D Prabhakar D Dandeller. Beneliclary no predictions, but he ls optimistic. NFC' C'E'~T'DAL .• ,, and Mike Dou.glass, and top draft choice Tim Lewia Dandell., ~~ ~:!9't.:"· Benellc:ltry Starr, the Green Bay Packers' Hall of Fame 1 °' n • ' should help the aecondary. s11nt~2!~ ~:':2705 0~1 & 9,_., · quarterback of the 1960s, has come close to being fired The Vik.i.nga' abort-passing attack ls led by (71') 7j1-2018 1101 Dove Street, Suite 100 several times in nine years as their coach. But he strength. But we have the manpower to win." II OU ru1 • "Ullfk>n Newport Beacl'I. CA. 112660 f th. ~ coni:C:t :':!....;., ()( tt!' Jo":. Publllhed 30r30a~_?>e•t Delly Piiot seems sa e ts Y.e~, and the Packers have realistic The Packen' main challenge ls expected to come ernment agency wt1tc:h may"•..,.. 1n. Aug l8. 2 • · ....,,t 6. l983. Super Bowl ambitions. from the Minnesota Vlkings, who have made the SUl'ed your 1<>en 4827"82 They went 5-3-1 in last year's strike-abbreviated playoffs in 12 of Bud Grant's 16 years as coach. ._CotlMtCll MOITU.UtlS Laguna Beac" 494 9415 Laguna H•ll'> 768 0933 DllTH 1mc1 National Football .League season, losing 37-26 to the But the Packers must es1abllsh an offensive line ll Dallas C.Owboys m a second-round playoff game. to make their passing game work. Quarterback Lynn ---------~Their primary threat is erson and Paul C.Offma -Dickey had his finest season. completing 57 percent of BARDWELL Pro-Bowl players James Lofton, John Jefferson and his passes for l , 790 yards and 12 touchdowns. Dickey FA y BARDWELL, resident Paul,?>ffman and world-class sprin~r ~.hillip Eppe. also is one of the least mobile quarterbadu in the of Costa Mesa Ca Passed TI\e people are here to do the JOb, Starr said. NFL. and Green Bay'• total of 32 quarterback sacks away on Aug~t 12: 1983 at ''Although we need to strength en the team in several allowed was 24th worst ln the 28-te.am league. the C.OSt.a Mesa Medical areas, and we need to lmprove our depth and backup Green Bay has one of the NFL's best llnebacking quarterback Tommy Kramer, who last year com- pleted 57 percent of his throws for 2,037 yards and 15 touchdowna."Tommy Kramer is like Joe Theismann and Joe Montana in that one of these years he's going to be the best quarterback in the league, and we're going to win big," Grant said . Kramer is sure to mial Ahmad Rashad, the Vlkings' retired receiver, but he has excellent targets in wide recelven Sammy White and Sam McCAt.llum, tight end Joe Senaer and backs Ted Brown, Rickey Young, Tony Galbreath and Darrin Nel8on. San J.Jan Cap1-,1rann 495 , 776 <:enter following an ex-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ HAA•ott LAWK-MT. OllVI Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory t 625 Gisler A<JP Costa Mesa 540-'1554 P1HCI NOTHllS llUHOADWA't' MOITUilY tended illnetlll. She was born ~~!~~::~~~~~Time the only question ,- •on Char l es Rex ·'"'='~'-==' Ridenhower or Pensacola, TORONTO (AP) -Anticipation Florida, 5 grandchildren took precedence over action during the T'Et~N.JS and 7 great-grandchildren, a tint day of the $250 000 Player'• 1-,, brother Carl Craven of Her-Chall , •~ .. -•~•~·-ft~ t rin, Illinois, 2 slaters Jean enge women I ...au .... ouu.1 , .... ,...,n . Cline of Fresno. Qi. and With only three eeeda playing-and 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 IAL T2 IH~flON "4ITH & TUTHILL WISTCUH CHA'll 427 E 17th ~t Co~fa Mf''>a 846-9371 Margaret Olinger of all advancing to the aecond round - Spencer. Indiana Mr1, many of 2,3001pectaton were hold.lnc Bardwell wu an active their collective breaths, waJtina for member or The Grand-today when three-time defending mothen Club #419 of New-champion Martina Navratilov• ana port Harbor. Crypwde aer-earu ..... Baaett of Toronto make their vices wlU bl-held on Tuee-... oe day. Auguat 16. 1983 at .eparate appearances. IO;OOAM at Pt1elflc View Navratilova, thetopaeed who pined Memorial Park Paclfl~ a flnt-rou.nd bye, will meet Terry View Mortuary directors. Phelps ln the teCOnd round whlle received a allaht brulatng Monday when Angela Walker and Karen Dewls fell tn the tint-round. Walker lost 6·2, 6-4 to American Ellite Burgin, whUe Dewia WU troUnCed 6-0, 6-1 by Anne Hobtw of Bri\ain. With everyone gueestng on how many minutes It will take NavraUJova to win her match today, Kathy Horvath, the 14th teed who advanced Monday with a 6-3, 6-~ victory over U.. Bonder, offers the beslcredenuala on bow to end NaVt"atilova's doml- natJon ln the Canadian Open. ''Now There's More Easy _.Listening Music on KOCM'' a l•liiiiii•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil•I Bueett, 1~, has her hometown pro- femional debut ln the tlnt round aplnst Yuao-Javian Mirna JaUllO'Vee, who woo t.fie c.n.tdian Opm here in For Ad Action Cal a Daly Plot __ ... .._ ........ _... 1976. s...ett. teeded 12th and 22nd on the Women'• Tennll A...oclation computer, spear~ CanM:llan hope1 which I "Youjutthavetogoouttherefeelin, confident," IAkl Horvath, the only player to defeiet Na\ll'ltilova ao far thil ye.r-UpllOtd"( Mr in th~ round o( 16 at the Fnmch open last May. "You have to be rela1tect ' ' KDCM tDa.t FM.StEREa Orange <f;,t DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, Aug. H,, 1i83 Cl 1--~~~~~~~~~~- rta.J C NOTICE Nt&JC NOTICC I I ,.._ OTICE OF DEATH OF NOTlel TO CfllOl'TOM Ho NOTIC: °'HU ACTmOUl IW ... H NOTICI TO CONTRACT°"I . ~ _ MOllt80.TIMTUHLI. ESSIE TRASK AND. 01' °'~o~~J" =~~U,~'::'::c1~ ...-arA1"1*NT c~~~nmunll 6 MllC f«>ltCC Ml.IC NOTICE rtalC NOTICE YOU ~=-.. ~ =T~A A ETITION TO ADMINIS-AL C 0 HO l t C •IV'" A QI Code ot 11141 Slate of C.illomta. the ~~~ '*"°" i. doing Ot~I~ Ot Y I LOT DEED OF TRUST DATED JULY 14. ER ESTATE NO. A-119487 UCINll(I) uncWllgnao, Hwbor TowtngwlllMll ONE WAY MOVERS OF ORANQE BIO O..Ollr>e 200 o'CIOCk pm of THE DAILY P 19&1 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION To all heirs. beneficl.arte-s teca. 1101 .. i01 u.e.c. _, •c1c>ubltc auo'6°"· •1964 w. 171hSt • couNtY. ONE WAY MOVING ANO 11141 H1h day of Aueu•t. 1983. CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS TO PROTECT YOUA PROPERTY, IT • :Man., M41 •• ,, °'"MM• alllornll , II 10 • m.on STORAQE ONe WAY MOVERS Pllllll4I of Ski ~pt· Ol11Ce 01 4 MAY SO\.O AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF redilors and con llngenl NOTICE IS HEREBY QIVl:N 10 the hlJ<'t the 25 dty of Arull, 1983, 11141 1005 N Baker Santa An• CA t27oe PutehHlng 011aotor .... B•tly YOU NElD AN EXPLANATION Of' ton of JESSIE TRASK C1.0ltor1 ol V• Yen Tian Sociel s.-Ollowlng aulomoolle(I. IO .... , D•vlO Arl~r Knudlaon 302e s Baldwin • Te'ephone Service· THE NATURE Of THE P~EEO. d penlOnt who may be OUllty No. Tranaleror and LloanaM. 3~.1 Oki• 103A837 8W127<425 ,.,. Santa Ana CA 92704 Projtet Cout Communlty'Collaga ~ • ING AGAINST YOU YOU SHOULD whoM t>vtlMU ldd1n1 11 2300 ... EKYI CA T · ~ 1 Ot t "°' 1370 Adame Aote eo.ta M d f 'da y TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF ill and /or estate. M .... County ot Otenga St••• of A Oalll<I;., Knuoteon Prolllet ldentlfjgetlOn N.,,,., BIO 8 00 A M 5 • 30 p M CONTACT A LAWYER. TICOR lherwlse tnl~rened in lhe Harl>Or'Blvd , #5,lntheCltyolCoala 78 Ford 8K93F197639 (720UUM) lndl:ulll ,,... tcOlldUCled l>y an~. Ca 92820 ' 2 On ay • rl ,• • CALIFORNIA FORMERLY. A petition has been {iled Calllornla 928211. lhal I bulk 1'11'11· ~al~I aala .. tor the l>UfPOM ol Thll 1111emen1 11111 llled With 11141 1111<43 • GOld.n Wtet COii.Ga ; • • • ' ' • " • On Tuee<lly. ~lamber II, 1943 y OONOV AN M THURN ltr, 1• ll>OUt 10 be midi to Johnny Ty :.··· rlO~kHl ol lh• und«1.,'*' ~~ County Cl.,k ol Oraooe County on Ene1gy con-vatlon. MMIUrtt. #3. Business Counter: :•. •et 9:00 A.M. Tiiie lnaurance and . · Au: Cha Kin Leung, Soc;lal S.Wtlly o no a llottg•, toget Wt Jul 25 1983 16 Truai Compeny, .. duly IWQlnted n Lhe Supenor Court ol Or-No .. Tran1larMan01ntenOedT11na-oe11of1<lver1lllng•rld••pen-01 Y • ,221171 Plac. Plana.,. on, ... Ottlce 01 Monday.Friday Truat•under and l)l.lrlUentto OMd ge County requesting that ,., ... whoM l>ulln.ta addtM4 It le Put>lltheel 01ange coa11 oa.lly Director. Phy Fae PlannlnQ. Joon of TNll flClOfded Jl*t 22. 1M1... NOVAN M THURN be 4783 Druid Str•t, In 11141 City ol Loa Dale Augutt 10, 19!3 Piiot Aun 2. 9. 18, 23 1983 Pott., Coat1 Community COiiege • 8·00 A M S· 30 p M •--1 No 30eM tn book 14150 ,._ • nal . Angeles. County 01 LOI Anga191, Janet Miiiet -• 4~'" 1.•~ 011tr ... I 1310 Adall'\I Aote, Cotta ' ' '• ' . ' i4'eo. ot Ofllclai ~In tt•'Ofb ppomted as perso rep-State ot Calllornll 90032 Publ1Slled Otanoe Coal! Dally ...., ..., M ... "' Ca 11211211 E D IN S ot the County Aacofder of Orenga nl&tive to adrrunister the The IOClltton In C1lllornt1 ot th• 1101 Aug tll, 19113 TRAILER FACILITY D A L E : County, California, Will SELL AT l&le of JESSlE TRASK chlel executive olltce or prlnelpal 4826-113 fltltl.IC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that 5 P UBLICATION DEADLINE PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST nd the l.ndependent Ad-bualne" 0111~ ot the ln1ende0 Dim• ic ""TIC£ f'tcn·riou a •uai .. •aa 1he 1bove-n1med School 0ta111c1 ot BIDDER FOR. C ASH OR u er 1ran1terorl1:(1t " .. meuabove",to niv• nu .... 011ngeCoun1y California IC11ngl>y M onday Sat. 11:30 a.m. CASHIERS'S CHECI<, (peylt*I .. tration o f Esl&t.es Acl). 11•1•.) none NAMI 8TAftMINT and through ui Gowmlno Boatd. time ot .... In l.wful money ot the petition IS llel ror hearing All olner l>ullneu namM and ao-K..,41 The lottowlng per90n la doing Mteln111 .. 1•lert.o 10 .. "DIS· Tuesday Mon. 4!30 p.m. """eel Slit•) at tlMI South lronl -· De l No 3 al 700 Ctvtc draues u..O by the lntenO.O trane-NOTtCI °' DtllOluno.. bull,_. u TRtCT". w111 rac:el~ up 10, but not 6 W d sd T 4 30 1r.-totheolftoeottheOIOCounty p . . fe<or within three yMft IMI pall 90 °' JOjNf VINT~ GENESIS INTERNATIONAL EN-latet than the al>o*lllted time, e ne ay ues : p.m. CourthOuM loeeted In the 200 biOcl( n ter Dr .. West, Santa Ana. lar u known 10 the Intended 1ran._ Notte. I• hetel>y given l)Uf"tuant 10 QINEERtNG.3 COtporate Plaza 202. Maled l>IO• IM the awltd of •eon-Th d W d 4 30 of WMI Santi AN Bl'td .. (lorm«ty A 92701 on SEPT 7. 1983 at teree are: (II "none". to t111e.) none Section t6035.5 01 the Corporation• Newport Beech, Ca. 9211112 ttact tor the above project urs ay c · : p.m. W•t 8th StrMI) s.n .. Ana Cell-9·30 AM The property Is Oeectll>ed In gen-Cod• that lhtl Jotnl Ventura com· Jenie• p Brainerd. 2881 Bell, Bid• aheJI be received In the place r rid a y Thuri.. 4: 30 p. m. lornta. all right. tltle and lnt.,W. coo-· lF YOU OBJIOC:'f th eral as All etook tn trade. 11~1uree. poMO ot Daon Corpor1t1on and Or-Co111 MeH. CA 92860 ldentlfi.d abolle, an0 111•11 be OPllf"· 7 Satur.Jay f . 3 OO ~ 10 and now held by n under 1 _ .. t.O e equipment and good will 01 a ~In anoe Devetoe>mant and ln11Mtmen1 This business la conauctao t>y· an ea and publlcly , .. 0 aloud 11 the 11 ra. : p.m. Mid OMd of Tn.ttl In the~ granting of the peuuon . you rt1t1ur1n1 buslnau known .. Compeny, heretolora dotng bull· lndMOuel. at>ova 1111.o u~ and !)lac.. Sunday f · 3 00 e11ua19d In MIO County and Stat• should either appear al the Phoenix and loclled 11 2300 Harbor neu under the n•~ of Ml1amer James P Brainard Thefe wlll t>e 1 $25.00 oepoait re-fl. : p.m. o..c:r1bed.. h -d wte u obW--Blvd 11S In the City ot Cotta M ..... eu.ir_. P11k. 3200 P1tk Center Thia 1111emeru wa1 tiled with the quired tor each Mt ol l>ld OocuMenll ' Lot 18 ot Trect No. 2009, _,the eanng ~ 8 yo .:-County ol Orange. Stale ol Cali-Otlve. Costa Mete. Callforn ... lsdll· County C•k ol Orange Coun1v on 10 guatantee their returen In good 8 CANCE LLATION & City ot Coet• ""-· County of Or-lions or file written ob,ec-totnle. and transit< Iha following 11-llOlved u ot Juoe 11. 1983 Hance-Juty 21. 19&3 condition within 1o d•Y9 111., the bid anoe.s1a1aotCallforn11.u perlNlj) lions with lhe court before cohollc beverage tlcenae (or forth no person ha• au1horlly 10 f'2:tt171 opening O•t• CHECKS ONLY AC· COR RECTIONS: 1ecorded In &MHI 8 I Page 34 of Mlt-the hearing. Your appear-licenses): ON-SALE BEER & WINE Incur •nr, Obllgatlon on l>eflall of the P1.tbllshe<I Orange Coast Delly CEPTED. NO CASH c:elfaneous Maps. In the oflloe of Ille be or by EATING PLACE Number 41-133943, former I rm. Piiot Auo 2.9.16.23. 1983 Eecfl bid rnuSI conl0rm and be Cancellations and c0rrections may County Recorder of MIO County. ance may '" person now Issued to pramlMs located at DATED· June 17, 1983 4340·83 rnponllve 10 the contraC1 doeu- Tn.tetor or rae«O owner: JOHN B. your attorney 2300 H&rl>Or Blvd . 115 tor 11141 DA.ON CORPORATION menll. be d d di' S WEENEY ANO MARIE E lF YOU ARE A CREDl-premlseslocatedaltheumelnthtl ByT PllrlekSmlthV.P f'tBLICNOTIC£ Eachbldd81'lllalt1111t>mll.onthe ma e on same ea mes as SWEENEY TOR or a contmgent creditor City ol CO•I• Mesa County ol Or-By David J. Moon torm lurnltlled W11h the contract above. Please ask for a cancellation The 11rMt add•-and Other . •noe. Stet• ol CatlfornlL By Gene A Hargre\IM, Perin« f'ICTITIOU• •u.... documt11t1. Each bidder .nan sub-common clealgnatlon 11 any ol the of I.he deceased, you must f 1 le fhet the amount ot purehaM prlQe By Rtcha10 J Benneu. Penn« NAME IT ATIMINT 8 mil on 1"9 torm turnlahecl 'IWltll lhe be h 11' d rM1 property dMcrtl>eO abow la your claim with lhe court or or consideration In connection With ul>ltllled Or~ Coatt Dally Piiot The totlowlng peison la doing contract Oocumenta. a flat of the OUffi r W en Cance mg your a · pul'J>0'1ed 10 be: <474 Cabftllo StrMI. present il to the personal rep-11110 Hensler ol NIO license (or ug 16. 1983-business u ; propoMO aut>oontrac10r1 on thla Coat• Maaa. Ca. 921127 lresentative appOLnled by the llGetHies) and Hid l>uilneaa. lnclud· 4825-83 BILL'S WINDOW CLEANING. proi«t as required l>y th• Subletllno ERROR S: TIMI undanlgned Truet .. 01.. . 1..:-f l'--lno the estimated Inventory, la the 18161 Park1lde Ln $3 Huntington and Subeontracttng Fair Practk:e9 Check your "d daily and report cHlrnl any lleblllty for any lnoorrec:1· court Wllsuu our mon '"' tum of $61.000.00. which conslsll of Betch CA 928"7 • Act Go111 Coda Sec. 4100 et aaq. Cl ,_of the 1tree1add,..and0111« Crom the date of first issuance •ha ro11owing w1111am L WaallMf. 16161 Each 1>100..-mull M.tbmlt With 1111 D d' 1 Th DAILY oomtnOfl dellgnltlon." any. lflowl1 of letters as prov1ded in Set--Cash $41,000.00 P\8.tc NOTIC[ Parkside Ln 53, HuntlnQton Beacti. l>kl certlllecl or callllef'• Check pay-errors imme 1ate y. e her.irl. 700 f ... p ba Cod Promissory Nolet 120.000.00. CA 921147 able to the DISTRICT or • bid t>ond PILOT I' b'I' , h fi Seid tale wtll be mea.. but w4111out lion . o .,,e ro .te e Thal II has !>Mn agreed be~ NOTICE Of' flLING WNTTfN Thie buslneu Is conducted l>y-an In 11141 form set tor'Ch In the contrloC1 assumes 13 l lly a Or t e Jrbt CCIYenalllor-ranty,upr-orln!-Of CalifomJa. The Ume for said lleensee and Intended 11an .. M~Of'81Wf!MGICMA1t01 1ndlvldual. documenta In an amount not less encumbfancee 10 pey the unpejd prior to four mon ths from the the Business end ProleNlona Code. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that lhta statement waa flied with the bid as 8 guarantee that the bidder plied. regarding title, PDH••lon. or filing claims will not expire teree .. required t>y Sec. 2•07<4 of '°" f'l9CAL YIAlt 119S/M w11uam L. wusner 1h11 10% 01 the maximum 1moun1 of A incorrect insertion c nl y. btllenca of the note(I) ~ by , .ced that the eonsl<letetlon tor the trana-ha Board ol Director• of Emerald County Clark ol Orange county on will enter ln'lo the propoeed contracl CL ASSIFIED 642-5678 uld Offd of Trutt, 10-wit: ate of the heanng notl fer ot said bualneN and transfer of B•v Service Otslr1el adopted Ord!-July 2 t 1983 II the Nme 11 ewarO.O10 him. In the $59,089.15. lneludlng u prOl/lded In above.• NIO floenM I• to be Paid only •fl« ance No 3 on Aprlf 2&. 1980, · F22ttn event of lallure 10 en11r Into aald Mid note(•), ldvanoea. H any. under YOU MA y EXAMINE the tllld tranaler has t>Mn apf)(O\led by Providing tor ettablltlhment ol -Pul>llshed Orange Coast Dally contract tcJCti eecurlty will be torlell. I ttlet-oluld. O..CSolTn.tat,leM.f·' 1• b ... If lh• Department ol Alcoholle irage~ch11~1or-aoep1iot Aug 2 9 1e 23 19113 OISTRICTr_,,..lhertghltor• chargaa and ellpeNMot the TruatM ue ... epl Y me court. you Beverage Control • acllltlea. and alecltng to have IUCh • • • • ,34 t-113 ject any or 1111 bids or to waive any and of tile trust crMted by ta1c1 o..a mlerested in lhe estate, That • sale. 1ran1fer and assigo-age Mtvlee chwgea collected 1rregul1r1tlel or lnformalltll• tn any of Tnm. you may serve upon the ex-mant ot the ator•ald stock In trade. the Orange County tax roll '°' bide or In the bidding. ot ~~:ci. =t~ and~ utor or administrator . or ~~r:~==i::~n::~'. .:~~:-~~r9~,lr~~~ Ml.IC NOTICE 1,!u~~)'~;~~heL':~'~eo~~ L "-'*'to the under9lgneO a wrltlen upon the attorney for the ex-and the con1tdarat1on therero1 Ing the preparation and llNng of • ~GAL NOTICE State ot Calllornta. the DISTRICT o.a.atJon ol Oefaufl and Demand tor or administrator, and f<>Qillher with the conllOetatlon 10< tten repor1 containing OelGrll>-Notice I• hereby given thll hH ol>talnecl from the Director of the tor Sale. and a wrlnen Notlee oi ~ file with the court with proof the transfer and uslgnment of the Iona of NGll paroel ot reef property purtuant to Section 1988 ANOORA 0ep111men1 ol lnduttr1a! Relations fault and Section 10 Sell. TIMI under· lloreaald llcenM (or Ileen-) t• to acet\/lng euen eervlCel Ind llCHI-A B 750 Cllllt Code Stat• of Call-the general prevllllng rate ot P9I a1gnec1 cauMd Mid Notice of Default f service, a Wrillen request 1>a paid on or after lhe <4th O•Y ol let, and the amounl ol the ch11ge IMnl• The u!'ldertlgnecl will Mff •• diem wages and the general prevail· y and Elec:tlOn to 5441 to be rlQOfded In ta ting that you desire special September. 1983, a1 the Merow de-tor eacn paroel fOf the for1flCOmlng Put>llC tale l>y Competitive Bidding Ing rate for llOllOay and 0ver11ma the COUfl'Y wtiere the rMI property la nollce of the CiJlng of an in-penmant of MODERN ESCROW llscal year. u prMC1'1becl by MIO on 1he 27th day ot Auguat el t l;OO work In lhe locality In wttlCh thl• work located. Tnm" or party oonductlng •~ y d · t of COMPANY, •I 125 S Atlal'lllC Blvd., Ordinance. 1.m on the preml-where MIO 11 10 be performed '°' each er•lt or HI• TITLE INSURANCE ANO ven ..... r an a pprrusemen . In the City ol Monl.,ey Perk. County SAID WRITTEN REPORT hu property hH been ttored Ind wttlch type of worker needed to e~ecule TRUST COMPANY. 35"0 Wltthlre estate assets or of the pell-ot Lo• Angeles, s1111 01 California. been duty prepared and tiled With are tocetao et lntamatlOnal Seti tt>e contrloC1 TheM rllM are on Ille BIYcl .. Loa AngalM, c.111. 90010, uons or accoun ts mentioned prOlllded that the Oepanment ot Al· the s.cratary of Emerald Bay Ser· S1oraoa. Huntington Beach. Call-at the DISTRICT olflce toeated at Ann: Hiide Wllilln (213) 384-9000, in Section 1200 and 1200 5 of collollc Beverage Control h .. IP-Ot1trlct on Augu11 t. 19&3. and lornll, County of Oranoa. Stele ol Otit Trallef Facility, 1370 Adami .pt. 271<4. Dated: Auguet 4. 1943 . . Cod. PfOved u to tra.nsle< 01 said lloenM ta evallal>le for lnapeetlOn In the OI• Calilornl• The •b•~ good•. Ave . Coate Me... Ca. 9211211. TIOOR TITLE INSURANCE I.he Califonua Probate e Dated July 18. 1983 trtc1 Olflce. 800 Emerald Bay. Chatttes dt$Crll>e0 balowln Iha mat· C<>Oln mey be obtained on r~. COMPANY OF CALIF. GERALD A. GARRETT Johnny Ty Lagune Beech. Catlloml• 921151 tera or A copy of,,_ rel• 1111111 be poated FORMERLY %08% BUSINESS CENTER Che Kin Leung TM said reporl lndlcafH I charge of F R E 0 S C H W A R T Z at Iha jot> Illa. Title lnauranc:e Incl Trua1 DRIVE #ZOS Publlahe<I 011nge Coul Delly Pltot $25.00 per clweltlng unit tor the nscal Space 1124 Leather Jackett 11 ahall be mandllot)' upon 11141 Company .. Mid TNlt• Aug. t6. 1983 yNr 19113/83 MARY ANDERSON Spaoa #38 CONTRACTOR to whom the con- By: Hiida Wlllcln-IRVINE, CA, 12715-1131 4623-83 NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that JOHN GILPIN JR Sp-•32 C 1rac1 I• aw11tdecl. and upon any eub- TrustM SM Officer ( 714) 7st..fHf Btmt1r wnrirc the Board ol OlrectO<"S hu Ht lhe NISA KAMPH Sp-.11138 contractor under him, to pay not .... PVbltaNO Orange C0Mt Delly Ptloc Published Orange Coast .-~ nu ~ time end piece for heating on MIO R 0 N A l 0 M CC RA C K EN that the Mid apaeifled rat• to all Auguat 111, 23, 30, 19113 "83o-a3 . . reporl. and eny and tit ol>jtetlona or Spaoa •&C WONtan employed l>y themem tn the Daily Pilot Aug 16. 1983. °"*11 PfOIMIS to Mid reporl, '°' Augutt 9, JOHN MOSLEY s~ • 129 tJlllOutlon of the contraGI ------------1 4620-8~ SOU'TM COAaT \983 at 5.30 p.m In the office of the HouMllotd 9oo0s. per90nel el-No bidder may Withdraw hi• bid PtlllJC NOTICE Alfl QUALITY ~NT Oii-District, 600 Emerald Bay. Lagun• faoll, 10011. refrigerator. l>O• for a patlod of ll•ty (80) 01y1 alter NOnc:a Of' ~ HIANNO PlllllC NOTICE TNCt Beach. CallfOfnl• 921151 aprlng•. beds, and mlSC411leneoua the date Ml for the opening of bid•. 9U'OM ntK" All•••Q ~~~ OATED Augull 5, 19113 Item• A payment bond and • Pllf· c •DI••• ........ ,.. __ _.,.."'°" COUfl'T NOrK:c--•• Wllllam R Meer .. S.cretary ot landlord r--..es the right 10 bid tormanoe bond MM t>e raqul...O prior ·--·---,,_ OPCA.L.Wo...A, TO _,..,..,...._ EmeraJct8aySer.llceOlttrk:t at1heule,purcna-mu111>emade 10 taecutlon of the COf1tract and ~r IS~~~~ mat COUNTY OP °""HOE TOfl~~~AL °'c ~-.. PUBLISHED 0 C Diiiy Piiot Augutl w41h cuh only and paid tor 11 the tlhlll oe In the torm Ml lorth In the In the Matter ol the ...,... .. ...,., .. --,_ --18. 1983 tJme ot purchue All pureh...O contract documanll on w.csn..cs.y. Auguat 24, 1983, at Appttcetlon of NOTICE tS HEREBY GIVEN that 4112~ gooa1 are SOid u ta ano muat be p iauant 10 Secllon 4~90 01 the IF•llLlmM Br alar1« hm $79.900 Br H~ba hm 197.000 Br starter hm S 110.000 Br 2ba home I t 27,900 Br 2ba home S 132,500 Br 2ba pool 1135.950 Bf & 3petloa1139,000 Br 3bahome1148,900 CONOOS 179,900 & UP 1..uw11tr. 171-Ull OPE.N TILL 8 PM. PlllllUIMI! IPYIUISRJ. , ........ _ RICK ALDERme. BKR CALL 731-44« u...llU aclou1 3 Bdrm with charming bride •nlry. eopper plumbing. '**'' roof. Mpat•t• l1mlly rm on • hy09 lot. low. low pnoe $98.900. 751-3191 UITllH UILTOHll ~ locatlon neer Wttt· clltt ll'lopplng .,.._ Only • stroll to nelghbo111ood at or•. "'°91 & tranapor· 1a11on. LO\'ely 3 Bd1m, 2 bath and unh with 2 car garage. Prleed 10 ... II $125,000. IMG-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS "DEOITIYE" ESTATE Double door lta!WI Ille entry lo a belMltlful ••· ecullve home. Seaucs.d IMng room. fonnal din- ing, hllge country kflchen over looka IWge flmlfy room. Glgenllc r.., yerd wl1h patio ... Bdnna. - ttf wtlh f\(epl-. a..utl· 1ui11'UI« ba1h. All Ihle at only S232.000. Call tor llhowlng S46-23 '3 . 7:30 p.m. In the Ctty Council Na1lman lt>rllhlm Oedah on betlatf 01 the South Co.ul Air Quaflty Man~ removed •t !he time of purcn... o~menl Code ol the Stat• of Call- • CNlmben, 10200 Sleter A--.e, Mohtmmad Oadllh. • minor ' meni Otttrlet HMting 8oed wlll hold Sale IUl>jeCI 10 p<lor ~1111on In tornla, the contract wlll provtllon• :: Fountain V~. the Planning~ for Change ol Name a publtc hearing •t 10:00 a.m. on 111-IC NOTIC( Iha event ot Mllternenl 1>e1ween permitted the aucceaaful bidder to p I L 0 T THE REAL ESTATE RS ;._ rnlaalon wllf llokl a publle '-•·ti"" No HURSOAY, SEPTEMBEA I, t983 r-. landlord end obligated pany tvbtlllut•MCurlllaa lor any moneya ~~,~·0"sE PERMll NO A I 19244 u~~~h=: ~~..: CITY Of' f'OUNTAIN VALLEY. Dated thll Mlhheld by the DISTRICT 10 enaunt &57 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Pl S A • Ceftf nla CALWONL\ lntwn1110nal Sell Storaoe pertormar>ee under 11141 contrect ..._....._ ~-.... by ., __ bO. Rae-FOR CHA.NOE OF NAME tar a:ta, -~•net · ~ • ...; NOTICI INVmHQ lllOI 1780 I Morgan Lane Goll8rntng Boatd ,..._....,., ..,.,.,,....... ..,..,. ' (S.C 8084) o oonalOlf an__. rom ---V1 t-1unung1on 8eec:h. Callt By N0<man E Walton :-.,:~·~'!.ta:=~~ Mot1e.mm10 Mlha;n Dadlh haa ~~'.;,~ =~-:;-~1:':,!: HNto:"~fir'::i •1:,.0 .,_,N Pul>lltll 8-16-83 and 8·19..,3 S/S.C.etary. Board ot Tr\191- ;: tt'9 Mo41ta .... and ~mc>tlon of flied e 1>41tltlon In thll eoun lor an llon control tyllem II ALISON ClHTIJ' T Latnt P1.11>tlatt.d 0r&ng9 Cout Dally Piiot !· beer Mid ...... 1111 18206 B<odlhUrtl order eJIOWlng 1>41lltl-IO change ATER MANAGEMENT AGENCY. NOTICE IS HEREBY glllen 11\11 lhe 17141 a•e-9999 '1129•83 Aug 9, Ill. 1983 !• Strwt.. ~::~~ Dar::=:o ~~-~~·o:.~: 9201 t.e Pu Road, t.aoun• Niguel. City Cietk 01 the City ot Fountain Dlmt lC """TICE ::: CONOITlONAL USE PERMIT NO. IT IS HEREBY ORDEREO that a1i allforn... Valley, C.llfornla, wilt rac:.llle ... led ----'-UV&.--""-----l------------I Me Int Nied 1 Iha 11 A copy ol the 1>911tlon 11111lllable propotall unlll the hour of 1 t:OO rtalC NOTICE .. . . . ; .. . Patltlon 1Ub!n111ed by Pee• and ., n ma er or 1nepec11on at ,,... ott1ee ot the 1 m on August 1s, t983, tor Con-NOTlCE OF DEATH OF i-----·------ T-Klm to oparate u...~a1or lor~'fP:;~~·~~~ lng8oatdC!ettr.9150EMIFlalr llNc11on or A S.Olor Clllnn'• PAUL ARTHUR NOR-NOTICITOCMDtT°"• •1 1 l701 Edlf1ger A--Oepter 0r1 .... WMI Santa Ana can-IW, ~ Monte, Callfornla. and •1 Drop-In Cente< 11 the F 'V Rec.-CROSS AND OF PETITION Of' llUU Tfl~ CONDITIONAL . USE PERMIT NO omla, on s.pt.,;,ber 2 1953 at he Anaheim Office. 1900 Eut Le niatlon Center m accordance wtth TO ADMINISTER ESTATE (S.C.. 8101-8107 u.C C.) 8691 Pwtltlon llOOmltted by Kin Hing 10-00 o'clock A M and· Uletl and a1me Avenue. Suite 207, Anat\elm, Iha PllnJ and Spec;tllc:etlon• Notto• I• hefeby gllten 10 the er.ell· TaangloraMotOflnn(motal)at9125t~e•h0We&uM ii'Myth41yhave alllornlL P1oPQaal1 •h•ll be pr-ted NO. All8t33 tort 01 J~ MIC.lluso trana- Aecreatlon Cirde. y MIO 1>91lllon I~ change ol name Int-led persona may lltencl unOlr ... led cov• and 111111 be lie-To. alJ h eirs, ben eficiaries, larOftt). wttoae bull,_ addr-111 CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT NO. Id OOI be orented 0 IUbmil Oflll or written II••• com~lecl l>y one of the form• ol c red1lONI and conllngenl 270 s 8'1•tol #112, City Of eo.ta 880 IT tS FURTHER ordered Hiii a II at the '-ring II II 1'9QuMled blddert ~lty raqvlt.o by See-_,,,, n... M&N, County ol Orange, State Of P9tltlon tut>mftled by Elin 8or'lletn Y 01 this order to lhow cau1e oe hat wrttten at•tament• be eut>-lion 10 of the Spaclllcetlona Aa o.:11:u.•lOl"S of c•ul Arthur Nor-Calllomta that a bulk trantllf 11 10 operate • rwt-911 al leoell btlth&d In Otange Cout Oalty ltted to the Hearing Boatd rive ~ropout• •h•ll be m1r1ttd c:rma and pert0ns who may about to be made lo l.9fl Hong Wu Hert>or BIYcl. Piiot • newapapar ol general lyl befOt'a lhe hearing. OATEO. ROPOSAL ON PROJECT NO. 4128 ~ otherwiae interested tn and Shlow Chyn Wu TranlfwM(•I CONOfTIONAL USE PERMIT NO. j llon l>ll htO I .. I UGUST t 1983 malled or Oellwred ao U to be h UJ d Wf!OM butlntM addr-Ill 2111111 1181. ZONE CHANGE NO. 3&5; TEN-':!1 ,,;:"'. !.. ~ tnlou~:;,,~ . lount COAST""' ,,... hand• of Ille City Clerk ., '* t e w ~ /or est.ate: . Brooll.huret No. 18", City Of Hunt- TATIVE TRACT NO. 1203& Utl\19 ~. P!'IOI ,::,t'lfl day of QUALITY MANAGl•NT Ifie. tn the City Hall. 10200 Slatll A petition has been filed lngton Beactl. County of Orange, Pwttuon IUbmltted by Pacific Wood• hearing DllnllCT Hf!~ 90ARD ....,,ue, on or before the hour by Deanna J. Norcross in the Stat• ot Clllllomla. ~to prcone tl'MI property Dated July 2t 1983 •r. Metatl Quin._ lated Al the deslgneted time •II Supen'or Cou.n of Orange Tiie Pt'operty to be tran1lened la It 111350 H•bor Boulavara to AH CLAUDE M o we s ~Cleft! bid• recat....O Wiii be publlety open-dMcrlbed In generll ••: All etocll In "Altord.t>leHoullng" o.ttlct ano to Judge of the Superior bl~ Orange cou1 Dally Piiot • axamtn.o and daQa<ecl by Iha County requesting that tr.a.. n11tur.., equipment and goo0 MlbdMOe the uJttlng llP«tln4ll'lt Pul>ltahed Orange Coast Dil te. l983 tty Clettc Bldd«• Incl the Pll* Deanna J. Norcross be ap-w111 of thet On-sele a--and Wine oomptp Into condominium unite In 1101 July 2e Augu11 2 9 18 1983 "8l:\-&'\ a Invited 10 be prMent •1 the dee-pointed as pel"!IOnal represen-'°' Bona Fide Pul>llC Eating Pl-~ to ttla AH zoning, IN City , ..... 27 83 '''°"of MIO propoaela _._,___ butl,_ known aa "Tummy SIUI· PWlnlng Commlaelori wlil oonalder 4• "8.IC llOTIC£ All bids to rec:411vecl. uamlned I.alive to aumuW1ter the t!State ler"ano loeeted at 13410 Flt•tone R4 "High Denalty Multlple Owelllng" l'tBLIC NOTICE SUPf'.fl!Oft OOUftT no Ooclar.O Wiii be refan.O by 11141 of Paul Arthur Norcross Btvd City of s ante Fa Springs, Otttrlet iorq for Ihle property Of' CAL•OMttA. lly Cletk to the Ctty Engi-Ind (under t.he I.ndependefil Ad-C0tmty of Orange. Stal• ot Cell-~~!,~ed~ 1~!,_ and NOOf'TIC~ ~~~· COUNTY OF ottANOE 1:;:1r0 ~:,'.°'~ 6:.nc~~ r':. nuruatrauon of E.t.ate> Acl), torTn,;: bulk,,.,,,,., w1n be eonaum- \llctona ~on 10 arec1 end !Sect 8101-11107 ucc1 In lhtl Matter ot 1he r mM1fng on Augutt 16, 19113 The peUllon is Rl for hearing mated on or 111., the llth Oey 01 maintain • "-landing algn •• Notlee 11 ~ glllen to 1119 cr.Ot· Al)9IM:etton °1 . Prior to oommencing work. the II\ Depl No 3 al 700 Civtc ~lamber, 11M13 at tO • m 11 Ac· 17225 8'oolthurt1 Stt"Mt klltltlf)lng ora of PAUL VORAVATPIBUL MARIA LEONILA SUOAKOFF trllClor and 1111 tul>COntractore Center Or Wes• Sanl& Ana tlon Eacrow Inc:.., Attn, Mtll'llyn W"1· er.IQt'rton'• Cookie Jfl/ ~. ranal«or wttoae bull,_. addr-l0r Change 01 N•~ Obtetn • .,.,.._ llQenaa "°"' " · 98 ' morelanO _.,OM aoor-I• 840 N NOl'ICE ~ PREPARATION OF • 2200 H·., Boulevltd City of No. A I t9232 • ,,. City ol Fountain Valley In lie-CA 92701 on Auguat 17. l 3 Tuttln Av~ .. Sulla 10 I, Santa Ana. NEGATIVE 0£CLARATION Olla M... nty ot Orange ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Osnoe with Illa City Municipal al 9:30 AM. 92705 Calllornlt. For the fl-!Oentllled with an 1111 of Calll. le that 1 1>uf11 Iran..: FOR CHANGE OF NAME No Volume I, Tltlt 5, C1111¢ett lF YOU QBJECI' to lhe Th1i the tut data for fifing elllmt ::::"~no:;: ~~~='.Ila~ ~1h •gout ~~ea;,~'!; Marta Leo:.~s=~lf hu filed • 5 ~~ :!:<i°!o. with tile prOllltlon• g;anting of the petluon, you in tr;:,,-::o;, t:::'ed 10 herein 11 ~tlYe Dec11t1tlon hu bMrt l>u addrMS i. 331 ,8 1111on In lhl• cout1 for an Ofder Sec11on9 1770 lo 1777, ln<llutll/9. should either appear at t.he ~ 1., u 11 known 10 11141 Tran•· prepered. The Emtronrnental Im-voc:ado Sir of C " MMe. pelltloner to change hltfher I lhe U bot Code of the State of heanng and st.ate you objt!C-farM(e). an butlnWa n-ano ed· pect....._CoMmltt•"""conelcMr ounty 01 Ora 1 01 Calf.. nttM from M111a Leonila SUOlliott lfornta. tl\e City Counetl of the tJom or file written objec-or-uMOl>ytll4ITran•Mtort•llor ~0\1111 of the NegeUW Otcletatlon ornla to Man• Leonlle Maclaa. tty ot Founllln v911ey h• by reaof· the put threa ~ 111.: SAME °" Frtdey, Auguat 19. 1M3. Tile 10 Ir lerred la IT IS HEREBY ORDERED lhll •II ullon 1009111<1 the prevtllltng hOutf)' UON Wll~ the court before Datad; A "5. 1983. THESE: MA1TER8 -being P<O-rit:a°:'~. 1 •took In person• lntar .. ted In the matter II• of "'ages tor each craft or type the heanng. Vou.r appear-Lao Hong ~Treniter-" ceaaed purtlUlfll to the Ptennlng ride n11turM equl 1 and Oood aforeukl •PPMr belore 11111 coun In 01 woricman °'mechanic nMOad to 8~ may be in pertOn or by Pul>ll•he<I Orange Cout Dally Piiot L-. of the s1-o1 Calfomta. Gov--11 o1 that Fut Food S..alneu bust-Dep1nmen1 No. 3 11 700 Ctvlc xacull the eontrllCI wNGh will t>e your alto Aug 18. 11183 ernmant Code, 85,000 et 1eq , and known u The Orange Jutlut ,., Ortve WMt, Santa Ana. Call· arded to Iha IUCCIUfut bldOar. u rney "807-113 tlMI FourMlrl v~ Munldc* Code, no located •• 2200 Harbor IO<nll. C?" Sec>tamt>er 2. 1983, ., lermlned by the S•••• Director of IF YOU ARE A CREDI. ------------1 Titta 21. 1e11ara City of Cotti Me.. 10:00 o etoc;k AM . and then and n0u1t1111 Aelatton• TOR OT a rontingenl creditor "8.JC NOTICE: THOSE DESIRING TO tetllty In ty ot Otange St••• of Call~ thefe allOw cauH. II any lhey haw • The contractor 111111 provide IUCh o f the deceased you must file 1-----;.;;,,;;;.;....;,,;,,;;...;.;..;""'----1 '"'°' or In oppoattlon to the ornia • Y Hid 1>91tllon for Change ot name ornperi .. llon lneuranoa u required • ,ICTTT10UI •u ... a1. pr~.,,.beQlwn anQPCIOrt..n-The. bulk tr•n•i.< wm be cont111m-allould not be grant.a. t>y the Labor Code ot t1141 Stall ot your claim wllh the court or NA• aTATl•NT ty to do'° at the publlo i-1ng, tf •led on or •lier 11141 281h day 01 IT IS FURTHER ordered th•• • alllorn1a. end 111111 execute• oon-p~nt 1t to lhe penonal rep-The 1o11ow1no persona are dotng fut1her lnformltlori la <ltairecl. you UQ\'ll 19113 •I 10 Am al California y of this 01der to lhow eauM be rector'• cerlllleat• 111gardlng .. Id resentaUve appointed by lhe butlneu u ; may conlKI the Planning Depert-e.k:, I whoea add I blltnad In the Orange Coul Dally Ptf\MllOn requt~ll. The . BMlel 8uQ Producta 959 W 17th man1 at 9113-8321 and refer 10 34 1 E.ut ~ithncS.lrMt 11111 '~,: Piiot, a new•P•P•• ol general lflC1°' lhall llKthet r~• a11 rourt within four months St. · 11>ow name CaNlornlt · ·• 1cu1111on. pul>llallad In tllte county t>conttaclO<"S 10 tlmlletly provide from th e date of fint illaua.nce P. Cotta MMe. CA g2e:n CLINTON SHERROD. Thit th9 1ut 01111or nHng c1a1m1 1 .... 1 onoa • wMll IOt '°"' con-compenMtlon ~ance tor Ill o( lenen as p.rov1ded ln Sec-Bret Howard Bank.,, 1874 Full- PWWnQ Commml6on n the MGtow referred 10 herein • 1"'• wetc• pilor 10 11141 day of aalO 1 the 11Ubcon1racllors' ~. lion 700 o( the Probate Code on Aote Pvblllllael Orange CoMt Deify Piiot I 26 1933 f\aarlng ®ntraclOtt and tubcontntelors B. Cott• M .... CA 921127 Auguat 18, 1983 To~., a. 1, known 10 the Trana-Oerao Juty 20, t9&3 hllll f\lrnlth ttte cuy 1 oer111\cat• of o f California The time for Ray Ch•rlM Randel, 2328 co11ag9 •a IM3 .,.. Ill t>utlneee nlllTIM "'° 90• Frank Oom.nlchlnl lllvtt ol eubrogatlOn under the filing claims wllJ nol expire .. Coe•• M .... CA 9211211 ----Or11M. uted t>y the Tran1feror tor Judge 01 the .,.,," ol 11141 worklf't COll'lpenaatlon prior to tour montha from t.he Thia butloett la conduated by: • Iha put lhr .. Y91~!.:. BMchF w1~t=t3~~y SWAIN n-.:-=-~ be conalder90 una..1t date of the hearing ootked er:·=~~lp No matter what you're doing. your hometown newspaper The Dally Pillt fits In. oer 2302 W"1 .,._, roni. 1"38 Sou h R A bov •wpofl BHell CA UllU . t ayer ll9nue • made on the omclll bllnlt form a • Thi• •l•taniant WU fllecl with the Dated Auoual' 1983 Fulltnon. ca.~ by tne City and la mea. In YOU MAY EXAMINE the ty Cler1I ol Otanoe County on E T U Y E T D U O• N G Pul>lllf'MICI OranQt Coett Otlty Piiot dance wftl'I Iha prtMllonl ol fll t.. b • .__ If 13 t983 u TAANOTrttnalerM uty 26, Augu1t 2, e. 18. t983 hlaNotleeandtheprOOOMll«l\lll• e ... epl y UlC C'OUrt. you • f'nola Ublllhecl Or Coaat Deity Piiot 42311-83 ,, and oondittona Mt lonll ere Interested In \he estate, r Pul>llahtd Ortnga COMt Dally Auou•• 16 197 ndtf StctlOn 2 ot the Spaclfl-you may ..erv• upon the ex-1101 July 20. Au;. 2. e. 18. 1t l3. • • ,1126-83 "8..IC NOTICE 11lona Etch bidder muat be ecutor or admlnlatra&Or or 4252·83 tn aooord•llOI wfttt lllPC>ll-• •-.,. .,..TICE NOTICI M UPUCATIOM 111ta 1ewe upon w attorney for lhe ex-"8JC NOtlC£ '~ nv TO etcAHCMI THI l.OCATIOM P\iflullflt to CllltOrl\11 ~ tor or administrator. and----------- P'C'TmOUl IUWH MA~" •Y Tl'M9 I Coda &.Gllon 4$90. the con-fJJo with the coun with proof ~ICnnout eutM•• MAIM •TATUmWT ••NCAN NATIOMAI....... r1C10t wllt be enttlled lo poe1 IC>-of 1ervkle. a wri\161 request NAMI aTATDllNT Tile lotlowt • .,. dot Notloe •• h«eby otwn lflllt lrtlnt llnenctal llwlltutlon In order --4 .. t TIMI folleJwlnQ ,,.,._, • .,. doing b\111-... ng per90f'I ng Amttleltl NAtlon•I Bank It ftflng .. to haw the City ,...._ fuOO. , .. l&a\1nc that you dt-IJ~ ·~ .. : oa Deelgna. 17._.8 Sic)' ,_,11 of the date 01 thl• llOttce. 111 ~I-t11nec1 by the City to ln1Ur• per-~ of the {Ulna of an ln· M~!!'°· 17'35 8kyP.nt Circle 8IW IMN CA 92114 Giiion for. change In ioc.tlon of"' onNllOI of the con1rtct. vt-nt.ory and appnJ.-ment of ~ N • lrvlnt, CA t27 t4 o.;· Anna· -....... tu c.-Newport a..c:n lrenctt wtlh the 111-apeo111c;e11one ana Offtclel f h ., Sl'ler1 Key Wllllama. 70214 Aeecla, A.... Cots• M;;''C,. 9292:11 tlOn Cotnpt1ot1er of the CIH'l'9f!CY w ... propoM. form• to be UMd for blO-•tJw ..eta or o l e peu· • Dal ...., . CA Ht2& Thi. Mir-. lt condUcted .... ""ern oi.111e1, '"Mont~·,.,.., dlngc;an.,. ot>talnacl only et the ot-ti.one w ~u menUoned ChllrW o. Pwrw. 10 ,_Cfl, IMM, vi San Fr~. Calttofnl• M 104 no. of Ille Ci1Y ~. C"°t Hell. In Sertlon 1200 and 1200.~ of '7'714 De Anna 8'ody The Ploooetd retocatton of 11\e Cott of Mid Pfant ano Sc-ttt-tho CaU1omla Probate ~ ~!tit "'""'· 10· Penlh. ~ CA Thi• n11_,1 w .. filed with 11141 Nawpon a..cl'I 91'.ncl't of r:ene :J:' ~· M.00.~~" _: O•Jlonl. BU'IOI • Weber. 2~~ ~ i. eonctuo1e4 by:..,, ~1'l', c;r.; 01 °'•noe County on =~a;;'llOl'=1=1 ~=..::. = apeclfloaC9f:!' tie ..,,, by t'Nll, tllt 41H IMI B .. dl Blvd., ~1e<1 aaaoct111on otlflf ,...,,, ~etecf\, CA 92800-~1'°° I. :i-:t~:o~.::==-oc:: Mm FloorS.lte "i~':IP ~~ ~?~~=Mar CA~&Hlgtlwiy. oni O.Clof the PWia and IOeOlfloa'llona nor ...... Calif. Hlt1 Tiiie •M~t wu flied wltf\the • • • 1"266-t3 Pv.,..,_, Of•• c;o..1 o..,,. PtlOt t.he -tot nw111ng and llllldflnt • P\abllahed Oran,, C.0..t tr ca.rtt Of Oranve County on Aug ti, 1~ ~~· t1gllt 0.lly PlJot AUl'J*l '1. 10, 18, 1 I, 1~ ,,_. rP-mll!!'~---~ ... ----------4Niii7~·riA taGt an;"~:"::: t.11e to ,.. 1983 PubllaMO Orange ddetr Deify Keep up w1th arl!a bu~ine~s trends tvtlyn McOanc1on 46~~83 JOfy 241. Auo. 2. t . it. tM3 a rrectln" local retail prices 1n Sun-,~~~.~ mMJ day's You /Your Money !l~ction ...,.... O.tad:AUOUft3, 1193 ae't Ii P\lblllfled ~ C09ll ~ ...._ Y on na net a I Auo "· 103 ·-• • advi~ by ••1~1 Sylvla Porter In the lllJNll II -------......... c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 ·8 Cote Realty & ln\lettment 1 ... , ... ILlffWUIT ltW UYYllW Exquleltely upgraded 3 t>drm + lamlty room. Spaclou1 "E" pt1n w/remodtled ldtcl'len, bathroom• Very plMtt locallon on lge gr.«11*1 o'looklng ba ck bay w/t>eevtllul aul\Mte & city llghta. OwMre want h told TODAY! $310.000. Allk for Sally Shipley or ~D.t>otl. GE 759-QlOO -------- * ~ • I 4 00 .. ~ Q) ~ • >< Q) • ~ • I I ....... ..u UllUMm High ~ ~ 11ft4 owner will cWry. lUJfur- lou• condo. 2 br 2'A pa. One unit wtth 3 BA'a. 3 BA'•. Fl<aplaoee In atl unl1a. C.it Miii)' Danita for more detalla. '449.000. 844-702G ..... IU&.DTAlt TR\DI T 10\.\1 RL\l.l' Ddebout . &Bead'\ ~Estate -min~-.... •WNITIWU Fantutlc lour bedroom ttotM. Aeat Otldt, owr- looklng eanel and lu.xur- la nt landecaplng. l Mdtd and ~ gta. In My windows. All other ~ dows are atalned glua. ... S26'>.500. 111-llOI THE ~EAL ESTATE RS MYM_, .. -..... -, ........ ,. N.w Cuetom HofM Reduce ~om S 1.IOC).000 to 17ff.OOO. 111.-1 ....... ~··2 .. tw111r hOme wltf*I .-ino --••nee to~ a 1ohoola . Owne r motlvatecl. "*'9 en o4'llr A1k1nii 1111.too . 131-7370 lr\\nl I 10\ \l h'I \I I \ To ~,:·11 4C!0 ... -,......,.,.._, -... . Ct :=.::....,... ""' .,_., &: ..,., ' ,.. . , I • -~.,...--·------... _ . ---- ce Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug 16, 1983 ...... lea We ...... ter l alt IH1t1 ltr Salt IHNI t.r Salt huea Uafara111at4 IH1u OalualUM !tutanla f!!!l!MI ...,,, .. ,,, !.t. AJ!E!Mllf, VU. ..... al lMI Gua11l 1002 Cn ta Mt11 1024 l twprt lttela lHt 1L lnlat U4f Ct1t1 .... . -Jili Cnta •tt1 zt24 npt ltacla IHI ltalalt t• IUrt Ull llLE &yfront sing I~ story 3 Br 2 Bu. beam cetl.mg.s. s~ou.s te!T9('(!, pier & !dip $ l ,2~0.000 &yfront 6 ba 7'' bdrm, Villa on wldt! lot, pool. apa, d0t•k for 120' ya<'ht $4,850,000 Remodeled 3 bdm1, 2 bath + hug~ rec m1. beam ceilings, furnished, paUOll. $420.000 UYSllE PUOE IAYFROIT Sp«tacular l:wlyfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba Up, 2 br. 2 ba dn. 2 buat 11paces. Reduced -SI ,:i00,000 ' PElllSIU MOIE OOWFROIT HARMING 2Br. 1Be ---------hOulll. Colla Melt, $83,000 Ta1m1 548-6680 " OOTIAIE - BR 1'\BA, lrg IOI $95.000 Soe at 243 E 22nd C M Ownlagl / 1<1-979-8330 UST ·SIDE 111 HWll ASSHE 1 n . LOll Oii LUSE/OPT10I ewer 3 bdrm. hlQhly up- oreded town, dble gal, pvt patio. comm spa and pool Only $125,000 Ownr/br~r Bill Ouggln8 833-2900/759-8121 IEWPHTIUOI noa~ Ttw11111 211111tll It. 4 Bedtoom1, frple, petlo. gar Fresh lovely and spacious On out-cl&-sac MOVI: IN TODAY' Al· svme 11·.1siTD lerms s 175.000. priced to aett 111 Pro,ertlt1 ltlll. 173·2110 OOEAI YIEWlll Brighi 2Br. 2Be corner unit on top floor Luxury am- menttles, owner 1111itous BYCO 646-2251 Pealanli 2207 E ·-.e-c•u•,-,v-.-v-le-w--h•o•m""'e1 --.-,.-,..,--Yl·L·u-u-· 5495/mo, 2 Br 1 .lfa. pOOI, EA8TBLUFF·~v:11 8·5. ~ate 10 lllr 39r hn. SlllPI lo b;1ch 8381or. acroH from Tunlerock. 7 minute• ttom boh. 18r. laundry room, cloM to ~ar, 2'"'8•. 3Br, 28a. Balboa. W/0, lar Avail 1450. yrty uttl Pd Park· tenn11 & pool, 3 Br 2112 1530 mo Jr I Br 1480 ahopplng 149 i B1y St frplc, garage, pool, em !'~t ~:i:: BN~ 11911 Ing 673·7854 210 '4411\ Bl $1600/mo Avatt. mo Poo~Jacual. 1and, TSLli•t. 141·11Ga pet OK 1725 mo St-rear Sept 3 752-4006 volleyball crt. t•nnla crt. &.44 4258 eve•lwkn<J• Sru 3Br ConOOi>!Wn S C:, C "'-1 .. ~22" - --rte rm. Sorry no pe11 1505/mo. 2 Br 2 81 apt, -----P112e & Airport trtl l •• ,.., I> I> For LoHe 2200 Ml fl 3 Br Call 557-0075 enclsd yard. car pOrt. In C M . lg, 2 Br 2 Ba 2 non-1mkr 1300 mo 3 Br 2 Ba & frpJc. So or 3 Bl condo lrplc. mlero lndry tm am pet~ patios. gar. dlx. mod 1vtl 979-7697 eve1 PCH. nr park ,t.vall now parquet. pool, lennta, lmat 44 21116 Maple St. 9110, 1600 6_40-&408 __ Turt1eroc11 VIiia PoH. Snr IQ lui nom.i 1205. Ill, $1050/mo 675-2500 tseopi 833_2227 liatlltlatl.lt ... Mll TILllllT. H2-11H Lovely 2Br 2Ba yrly, 1811 dep Prtv Ba, View. BE U l IF UL 0 C-E VIII 2 "B 2.., -----etepllbctl gtr no pets ""• • A "N Rancho Stn JoaqUin • Bf, & a. eat gar-$595/mo. 2 Br, 1'h Ba 775mo 660-1706 a1t16pm Aoor top oauo ...,.,..0479 VIEWS. steps to C111na Condo 2 bd, 2,lt ba. don age, $950 mo. Agt. Townhouee. new carpet, _ we II look for youii Cove 3 Bedim 2'"' b11, w /wel ~er. lrpl 63 1·7600V111 Stlnaon new drapH, laundry New everylhtng 1 Br 2 Hou~matet/Unlimlted owners 11om11 Isl 11ms $ 1 tOO/mo 640•8559 I le L room encloeed garage. b Io ck s o I 1 a• n d E 2 rented Avail Sep1 t5 4 ••;I IC• '1923 PA-Ana $100/yrly 780-8852 •tablithod 1 yrs umu • I in OC 832·4 13<1 011-111 parking places, Woodbridge Condo 2Br 1h BL K TO BEACH·Yrly TSL Mgml 642-UI03 Newpon Shoret Duple~.2 01110. deck • bit-In BBQ. 2ba. dbl gar no pets Lee 1,2.3 Bdrm ap11 Wiii B•ch Apt No C.M. 1 BA, Br 2 Ba SBSO/mo yaeir-leataf1 Wu tt42 909 ~~~~~.~:~ii:~~~~ ~~~~087~m. alt Spm, unfu~pete. 673•664~ 1ba Avall now $280/mo ly Agt 676-1642 Malura fem detlru pl/1 Ot-ean &([· tty views. Marine room, 4 bdnr1, :J ba•'-37 f X •-·-•1 385000 EasiSide-3 Br 2Ba. pool. Ul, llq l tfi p8.r1UJ1g. • , , • S 140,000 Devin Roal Es- POPULAR PLAN IV CONDO ctntly remodeled 2&3Br furnyrfy&wlnter 963-3000.673-11392 •Hf Fiii qtrs nr Nwp1 Bay. Reas $2100/mo , istltasi & LIJHI &Iils 2\,50 rentela lrom $600 Blk to -----------""" rent No vices. 536-6894 cleaning tee Cati HOME FOR RENT belch, prkng apace. Oeslreeble Eaatalde 2Br 1 Here ta your oppty lose· " -, ------tate 6<12-8368 fllRIAllS UICH HILLTOP New 4 br, 4 Yi ba, custom French Normandy liiiii1iiiH•AlliiYiiiliiiRDiiiEiiiliiiliiiliiiRiiiiilm F.state l 2 P~ acre hilltop $1.250.000 real corner lot wl1h AV Newport Crest. 3Br • den, owner will help finance or will ellCtlange down In SD or Orange Coun1y S 185,000 Cell Agl Ar1 Reese 75 t-t•73 673-790 I 675· 16•2 Agt ba. gar, deck Avail 8/31, cure a completely re-uar1111 ti Laguna Hills, 3-4 Bdrm. $550/mo 542·9837 furbtahed 2Br. 1Ba up-Ital 2912 lrvtne lerr hm. 5 Br. 3 Ba, S'H5. Fenced yard& S •2Br ocnlront, S600 mo Eaatald 1 B A 1 In stairs ap1 w/wood burn- d en . d 1n 1 n g rm garages Kida & pets 3Br $800 winter tllntata 4 1 e r, P Ing frplc & pvt gar Nr Beach & Adama, H.B .. Sl300tmo mo/mo or 6 welcome 863-1500 650-2493• -ptxw/garage,nopeta. CHOICE NB HGlS agl gar for etora~e , $400/mo 548-1665 $65/ (2 3""93 16 .. OORllAIO ans UYFROIT Coronado Island cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat deck. Plans avail. Now $370,000 w /trade ARROWHEAD NOIE Near new 4 bdrm. 4 bath, lake \/lew 3500 sq fl $440,000 WW trade for a local property OCUI FllOIT llCOIE u1ns Prime 2 Br, 2 Ba & 2 Br. l Ba. Duplex on xlnl swimming beach good income. $725,000 Best view, t.allest ocean front bldg tn-plex with spacious 4 Br. 2 Ba. each level $1,200,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J4 t Boy\•d•• 011v•· N B 67S 6161 * HARBOR RIDGE * Come visit the most fabulous view. New custom home in Newport. Nothing t.o compare with this 4 bdrm, fam nn, 5 bath, formal d ining, 3 fcplcs, 6 car garage Large pool & jacuzzi. Come to the gate and ask for 3 Yorkshire, 759-1931 IHI IAILY 1·1 HELEN 8. DOWD IEAl.Tlll, llC. 144-0134 access Close 10 parka and sclloot. asking $215.000 For an llP- p o t n t men t to see 540-1151 • · .. HERITAGE . . REALTORS ORLUHCOHO Owner 2 br 1'\ be. pool, beaut lge yard Steps to mar~et Ideal for elderly couple Low assumable loan $135.000 642-8609 UPGRADED3 BA"288 Condo double gar- age S 132.500 Bike to Beacn 13,300 Assum• Loans Prtnclpals Only 631-4855 Dua Poiat 1026 By Owner. 2-sty 4 Br 1 Ba. wood burning trplc, lrg kitchen laundry rm, Iron\ & roar yard S 129.000 Terms 494-1107 mo or)ly 651-6665 Agent. no &e 4 Br 2ba nr beach avail AREA. 528 Irvine Lae mo 1 r · " Sea111ew. tow dwn. 1lg lot, Reduced to rent rast2 Br La1aa1 litatl 252 Sept 15 ihru June l5 call Eaalalde 1 Br. small bul S750 mo No pets Agt Of bet ltatab 914 - _ 650-0303 cory w/wood celllnga & 631-5165 i;7~~olx,. I 6~~;11c 'ta~h =~~~~~asg~~~w.crri!! 2 bdrm, 2 ba Condo On Llke n-deluJce. 3 Br & 2 Clblnots $405 851-9523 SPECTACULAR o cean 1g!w~1~:i112.~:5 ~5 ~o Prop 851-8767 539-6t90BESl golfcourse Comm.Pool Br w/~81 Face water Eutlllde 2 Br 1 Ba tn vtew,2Br, 1't.ba,lu11ury Sultebi; for med~ or W/O and Aefrlg lnctudlld 4-pte~. lrg pr1va1e patio, n..n1"'ouse Condo al Villa MoitUe ffoatl 1100 SPYIUSS LEASE S725 492-8700 Avall ept thru Juno. .-v " denial Agent, 5• 1.5032 FromS750 832-6000. garage. no pets Balboa Mln6molse,wlll _ UlllHMILU Larga4Brhomewlthfam· Newly decorated beaut $550/mo 759-9194 . consider tse, opt 2'50sq ft.Su11e $200/mo lly rm. dining rm. and area 3 Br evall now OCEANFRONT Nell 2 Avail. 8-15 $1200/mo 548-3239 · 779 .. L .. W 19th St 1972 DelUlie Aoyat Lancer breaklaS1 area, lwo tire-$900 631 3'555 BA. $(175 winter Garage Costa Mesa 6S 1-8928 24x62d~Br. 2B&a, takrgehllv· places. large yard and Mi l-V-i .-~111~111~7 No pets. 673-7666 ElSTllDE THE IEWPORT IHlll 500 aq It up•t&Jrs olc Ing, ning lie en view $2200/mo Barbara 11 oa t~t "" S650/mo 2 Sr 1'h Bo Spacious 2 Br. Waterfront Q areas Fam rm wl wet bar, Aune 644_6200 HONES F A RENT Prestigious bachelor. T h d/b le oplS, beaulilul gardens. w I ba th & s ho we r allapptiances&elrcond "" water front, private wn se.yar 11 ony. Bal boa $400 mo Young adults welcome Mission Viejo 3 Bdrm. 3 beach. pool, fully smpet ok,carport.lndry privatesandybeach. 675_3600 Ant 540 5937 Bs. 1750/mo Fenced equipped kitchen. aecur· rm. all bit-Ins. close to shopping. boll " • yard, kldstoets welcome lty, private parking 2536 Santa Ana Ave slip evell. no pets For -BALBOA PENINSULA BACK BAY !Br. $15,000 Agonl,nolee 863-1500 $l100/mo 642•1802 TSLMOMT 642-1603 appt 760-0919 400 sq II Pvt bath Ae- cornm pool, spa, bCtl. -"' 69 --------•iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil done $300 mo. 642-4623 boat slip posstbte Owner Newrrt leacla 1; · Winter. 3 Br. view & deck. E/1lde duplex, 2 Br, 1 Ba. i.. Wiii consider lse op1ton i~--------*IMMACULATE * 4BR West Nwpt S825. gar, yd, w/d hkup. Col Spacious single. one Baytront Olflces, patios. 675-4010 Bkr Co1t1 JIHI 2224 "BLUFFS CONDO" on 673--0241 or 631-4562 pret. S595/mo. 650-2077 & two bedroom apts. ~?;.",~~· tantlortat 1 Br. cpt, drepes. gar. Greenbelt. S1350 Mo A,artaHll, Uaf. IAJllEI YllT& APTI --U8UHlllLLS Beautiful 24x60 2Br. 2Ba homo Corner lot Island kitchen. Fam rm, llghl In· terlor. enclosed porch. air cond Young adults welcome. $34.500 540-5937 Agl fenc yrd. 1550 128 1st, taat. Sec Avall/Sept ---------5495 1 Br, 1 Ba Apl. Execu11ve Row Inc , one 01 Santa Isabel 646-3192 191 751-7625, 760-8738 '-ae·ral Z'?OZ $585-$595 2 Br, 2 Ba lhe oldest established -T h F le (1977) professional ex-t Br sml cottage, patio. 2 sty. 2Br. 2Ba, l'lt blks to own OUN rp • lky· ecuuve suite complexes. lrptc. no gar. $475 Incl bch. $725 mo. 964-8589 $2500 mo. Fabulous 2Br. lights. patio. all bullt-lna. has ofllces lor leaao or utli 546-0113 ----21h B1 Penthouse, 3000 366 Avocado 4 br 2112 Ba. Bluffs, close sq 11 new cpte, utile pd. TSL Mgmt 642-9412 mo. t<;> mo. tenancy From 2 br. B. ba, frplc, ow. new to school, park & pool. Valet parking. 24 hr ... $295-$895/mo Services drps, garage. 1'18W no wax patio. dbl gar $1100. cur It y . w es 1w 0 0 d me&liBJIU ruRNISHED or Include· recepttontll. Skyllne1IT 55, Unique floor~. $565. 646-6055 ev 494-7429 e11ea To-ra. 10717 Wlll1hlre UNFURNISHED. aecretarlll, word pro- 3 bdrm house, nice home plan, Low Rent, Adult 2 Br. 1 Ba. oar, bltln renge 4 ~arbor View Homes. Blvd .. (213) 47•·3575 Beaul~,~~!~!aped ALL UTILITIES ::~J:~,P~~~~·g~o~~:: for ISi time buyers Park nr Ocean si9.9oo & ovon. open bHm cell, 2112 Ba. lrg lam rm, lrg lalltta lalu• 7 garden apt, pool & apa. PAID. HEALTH mall & menage sen11ce, Haat. Bue~ 1040 Kitchen completely re· 548•8637 trig. gard. Cat OK. S625 kif Ch.. comm poof . Patios. deck• No pets. CLUBS. TENNIS telephone ans-rtng Fa- modal'd, new carpel oaattcial + S500 dep. Avail Sept 1 $1400 644-8053 S850 yrly: Cute 2 br houN, 1 Bdrm 1605 , SWIMMING. plus cllttles t11ctude: con- $109,500 agt545-0316 p l2SO 1982AMeyer.549-3<184 5 B 3 B 21 · gerageprkg.675-3063or 2250VanguardWay rnu<.hmore'Sorry, lerence room. lull _ roptrtJ r 8 rptc 5• view. 675-'000 (Ramona) 540-9626 M kit 11 I 11 I I tll 3 br. 2 be, lrplc. Needs Great c ommerclal lo-2Br. 1Ba. slngle garage. g81dener s 1600/mo Alt no pets odels c en. an or a u -n.c $109.500 or beSI cation, Balboa Pen at the no pels. S370 mo, 6PM 559-9539 lalltta Large 2 Br 1 Ba. " Piel!. open daily 9 to 6 ~~~hari7 ~Y~ea !,~~~~~s ofter (213)530-5159 fun 1one (207 Palm) ,_54_8_-6_5_3_o_____ IUOM HISE Ptala11la 2707 Ldry Rm. New Carpel. 0 kwood & u111111os Located wllhtn lnia• 1044 Good Income-price rt-2 Br enclsd garage. qulel West Newpor1. architects 2 I l bdrm winter rental Rent: s525. 645-6625 a 2 min of Orange Cly Alr- nwnn nn uu d u c e d to S400K. olf Slreet. prlvat~ yard, beaullful &unlqueown Could be furn. StlOO & 2Br. 2Ba. frplc, encl gar. Gu~pillrtment.s p0r1 at tunctlon Jam- e .J I JI 102 U~~~et~oJ!.'.'~~o~ xi~; 1_6_73_·_2_9_43______ no pets. $625 548".8251 home, lrg 2 Br 2 Bo. S900 xtnt loc. 1145-3434 no pets, 1550 mo. 111, boree1MacAr1hur Blvd trHa •• Ir 2 locallon. wallclng di•-Cea••ai•iaal 1275 381.2 Ba, Montecello lacuu.I. we1 bar, many 3 Br 2 Ba, apacloua up ·~'a_1_1 _&_sec_._6_4_2_-0_4_3_3__ New r1 Rudi So. w/conven1en1 access ool F Twnh•• 2 car ~a pool amenities Looking tor ·-17"" 16 ... Str from Dovo SI. 752-7170 Great locallon. patio llv- lng. cool breeze•. qulot and ciote 10 Westclllf's 1men11i.s Come see this 3 Bdrm, 2 batll home In an appreciating area. 1169.900 142-5200 mm -------RE II CED f OR QllCI SALE! Setler transl8fed. In Costa Mes• and ready to move tn10. Sharp 3 bdrm. 2 bath. lrOSh paint. new carpels and drapes A great value! Total price 11 now only $104,000 Hurry on this one 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS • .IASlllE OllEH tance lo comm p ee oo•ra• YIEWlll ~. r, • mature & prolesslonal stairs unit.·~ blk from Lge 2 br. 2 bl luxury ap1 vu "' eel 2 bd. den. 1 ml 10 beh, atnd S 139,500 Joan "" no pe1s. $72 Sierra beach Ag1 675-4912 244(1 Elden Av. $695/mo. l<at Dover) ElECmYE HITES Laten 752-1414 Brighi 2Br. 2Ba corner unit Mgmt, 641-1324 tenants. Call 642-5757 851-6226 fi communlly tennis cour1S, __ ___ on top floor Lu•ury am-=-ae------,-----Nice 1 bdrm. gar. nroc.an 1,...,.=""""-=---------42·5~13 IEWPOllT IUOM pools, 24 hr security AMPLJS menltles. owner anxious 2 IR 2 U aul exec homes. newly and bay. No peta. MESA PINES 2(150 Hana Luxn-fullMrvlGeotttces Many e•lras $289.000 BYCO 645-2251 Yard, trptc. wasller/dryer decorated 4 Br 3 be, $500/mo 673-7638 BEAUTIFUL 1 Br $525/up. Newport Rudi No. 130-295tc:i11 Somo 2 Fee. Open Sun 12 • 4. 6 Yf EW ---hook-up. No pets. pool. verylrg yard. nr 1----------PAV patio, pOOI, spt 880 Irvine Ave11ue oll1ce sulles Maritime. CdM By Dapltxt1,Uaita 1300 723Center SI. schOota, ahops. Baycrest Nice 1 Br, oan. furn. lrptc, TOP area, qulel. no pell (~I 16th) Aecept & An'"" serv A F I r A 3 Bd --area By Owner Ltue S550, 111 + $100 dep 0 ..,. owner, os o erepten3 rm,2ba. BY OWN A·2Br. 2ea $775/mo 1st •sec.Days 1 2100 642 •• 116• 650•8284.Avall.911 549-2447 6 45 -1104 g81dencoor1yard.lrg 714-975-0060. 760-1733 family room One of a upper. 3Br. 2Ba down 497-6287, Eves 1-.,---v---2----windows Call 752-6•06 OOW I .IEm YlfW 200 blk .io· 101. 3br • den, 3ba, yard, compl relurb $575,000. 217 Jasmine Own11r/1gt 673-5551 CUtlMU.-1024 l110t000 I H 2H 2223 AVALON Broker 6•0-9019 S11S,OOO 4 Bdr 3 Ba. loweat priced In area. 5~. DOWN, below market Della 631-1266 2Br Condo nr S C Pla:za Owner, pool. spa. SIOK or less dwn. $700mo alt 18JI 187 .500 556-1 626. 775-2580 POOLllOIE Quiel tocallon 3 BA 2 Ba, flreotace. AV access $1<18,000 ltnanctng by owner kind patio areas FEE Priced below appraisal. 496-<1792 759•088" Security Condo. 3BA 28A metal derde br. I l be. "!I!!!!!!'~~!!!!!!!!!~ LAND S 177 500 Steps to bell, owe 2nd -BIO CANYON ocean/bay view $950 mo crp • rapes. enc . gar. ~ NewpOft Beacll UdO"Cai1· An Jnttre houte 1ree llnod FOR LEASE yrly. 536•2690 $525 mo. + dep. Water IH Cltatalt 2'17i nary Village area 3250 sq (602) 881-2491 street large 2 Br bit-Ina pd No pets 2• 1-9806 ...., ........ ...., .. __ ....,...,... It M 1 or commercial user I.co •• Pro 1350. provided $550 ullts paid Prol decorated home Ctrtaa ••I Mii 2722 2 Br $485 Poot. year ground iloor •llra wide 9 6 90 BEST Al w/magn1l1cent golfcourse POOL. lrptc, pvt patio, round. nr beach, buaes Newpor1 ocein fronfa 53 • 1 'Y fee v 1 e w Ca 11 LI n d a 2 Bdrm townhouae. 11% ba, dshwshr, East side. •lg 2 No pets, •118•6277 door plus 2 loading duplex & trtptex Spec-0Rlal..f1c 3br il72ba 548-0632 476-123• frplc. pool. 1650/mo. Br garden ap1 $595/mo docks, ample olf street tacuatr 673-7873 J(,g--,; bch Xlnl area Eas1blufl 3Br. 2 frplcs. lam 7 1"16 7 3 . 2 5 2 3 0 r 557-2841 IM•• 2900 r.ark~~N as cl I~ ~l:v~q Lttl ftt Salt 1400 S975646·1035l645·9095 rm format dining . 2131790·992l * 1 Ir. ,.ti llll ••f "" bik from beach. Pollean Propen1es Inc EM1s1de2Br.""1 Ba. enctsd S 1200/mo 720-0739 2 Br. lrpt, deck. nu cpl, patio. garcfen atmosphere $275/mo • utll, avall 71 <11645-6501 unit ondo project garage. patiO, trg yard no EASTBLUFFS-4Br. 2227 quiet oouple only. no pets crpt. drapes, S365/mo 1mmed Sue all 5 30 Furnisheo olf+ce. Bank 01 Costa Mesa Approved pets $535/mo ~ 1 mo Arbutus Av1tl Early Sept $650 6•0· l697 731-6829. 6"2-7312 650"5296 CoSla Mesa Ptaza plans & map. $250.000 sec. depos11 548-5<142 or o N --net Agt85l-6260 770•5629 Con1ac1 owner before 2 Br. palto, carpofl. Nr Stunning large 1 Br gar-ceanfront Laguna $175/mo. no tse __ __ __ 8-19 or all 8-22. beach. Avail 911 No denapt,pool &recar .. Share2of3BA2BA M or 556-3900 OCUIFllOIT LOTS Luxury 2Br, 2 Bii Cond0: 833-• 785 dys 64"-2224 pets $830 673-3983 S•25/mo. 710 w 18th F prof AvaJI 9-1 S600 mo Need small olltce or •hop L -. L l'"'_-1-2 magnificent adj lee FP, dbl gar. pool, 1ec eves ------2 Br. quiet, con-nl-t to-·incl uttl 494-79•8 00 200 1paa1 llC• .,., . ' S6951mo 6•2-5290 •v -· 2 Br 1'n Ba w/gar. crpts, soace. 1 10 SQ 11 In Three Arch Bay, So Lag Gorgeoys 3Br 2'ti b1 hm callon, pool & covered drapes, stove. lncd yard Am w/kltchenetto, bath, Nwp1 Bch area 6"2-1257 FOR UU BY OWllER Sec gale area (Tennis So coas1 Pia.ta 4/3 Br w/1ots of wood & skylltes parking. 673-4442 or w/patlo. water pd. pv1 entrance. utll Pd NEWPORT BEACH offlce eris. beach clbhseJ hseden dbl Ba & gar thruout, br In 1111-675-2444 S700/mo 6J6-4l20 l·SPM Stngte pereon. no pets $1. 100.000 & S 1,400,000 ktdslpe1s I/yd S600's & Ing rm utte, 1 blk LAROE 1 BR. view deck 667 "L" Victoria $525 $325 mo 631-9259 ~:OM~ta~~t~::'n 1 or both Cuh Or suit-fee 539-6190 BEST to 75/mo yrly 2619 "D" Santa Ana 4 Bdrm ·3 bath European able terms Courtesy to No dogs 5305 River Ave gar. 11x1rat $795 + clep $5~ Room lor rent. kllch prlvt-Bulldlng 011 Ou1e1 Street style Chale1 hlgll atop Bkrs Ownr Fri-Mon. DtH Poiat UZI Wayno 6<16-8816 719 Marigold 64<>-4255 legea. pl/1 ea. Avail 15th. A1Slgned Parktng Gar- Leguna Beactl's "Top ol 499-3070 Tues-Thurs WHIWIYIWIE 662-2112,751-9132 ages Ava ilable 1he World'' Maator suite 213/7"9-11c9 unga ow by the bch Harbor Vrew Hms 4Br. fir. Large Clleertut 1 bd. Older 645-48001645-3323 lncludos lrptc, Jacuul and _• __ .,_ ___ apptns crpts $350 rree 3ba Comm pool .AvsJI Outet Peraon. t btk to 1 & 2 Br. Apia avall. Pool, Walk to O.C C. UM of __ _ views $260.000 Call for Ti at Slaaria 1590 uttla • 1hlS 2 Br 2 Ba over Sept 1 at s l600/mo Incl beach & shops. S650 In· 1p1, garege av all, laundry W ID $300/mo Ullls In-Offtc. space tor toaae 7" 7 eppt to see. 646.-3375 811 1200 sq It tar~e deck gardener. Agt 673•1181 duding ~as No gerage. rm. gas paid. No peta eluded 850-1088 11. S695/mo ulll$ Pd AIC. 5 pm. DUE TO .'L~NESS S;9~~~:0 B~~; Rlt/~0 1-H-.-,.-s-2-rea_so_n_a-tom-ove 673•847 ~~~. r;:.• •595-rs!~ Working fem 25-40 non ~~~I~~ o!'.r Co;t~5~es;1 Ttmesllares The Plazo of 111 5 rm hae blk to ocean Prof. male ahr 2Br nr T1l llllT Tl"OOl 1 imok Npl Crest tennis 3 Blks E 01 Felrvl-& BUILD YOUR HOME on 11 Palm Sorlngs. Coun1ry El Tttt 2 $600 2nd watom design oceen $340/mo. latM I. .-pool S300 650·1706 6PM -Adams spectacular OCEAN Club Dr., Palm Springs. f oro wont lasl r 2 Br w/gar upper S500's 762-&777ex1 l S4, l2 lo 9 feaatala 1-tt 75<1-1040, Mr lracy FRONl 3 Arctl Bay. fee All amenities Call 3 B11 multl w/pool $595 am lae 539-6190 BEST 1-P_m_72_0_·_16_5_7_h_m_.__ Vall~ 2734 ltatall zto6 DELUXE OFFICE SUITES llllEHI a Ulll Simple IOI Owner Fri to For details 6•0-7 173 539 6190 BEST I Waterfront luxury con-M cL al n Bin Canyon I~~~~~~~~~ Mon \71~) 499-3070 or i-------ee Nwpt Crest condo. 2 Br 2 doapt, CdM. boat slip TlbVronondo, 3 Br. 21/. ON THE SANO Beytront bldg 800-1107 Rey loCerllllt llltr. 141-7721 Townhol'n41,thtngledex-1: 211011lS Tue to Thurs (213) Foaat~ den. yrly '" S l100/mo. evall.poot,1acanzl.2 Br 2 ba, ram rm. 2 car gar. SUMMER RENTAL IQ 11 avlllllrom 1125 1 1 mlM'mlor..:., ten52n31s~.900aps (~st1. Eatttl"'• Ceatl Its• 799-1159 ..__....,_-.~ .... ----..._ ... v.a,.l,.le._.. ___ .. 2;;2;.;3;.;;4 1_64_2_·_30_73_ag_t_. ____ Bt Rent bymonth or crpl/drpa, d1hwr No 3 Br 2 Ba unit. wel bar. ~~E~E~Tc~it ~~-F~i _ ~ .,., • ,.. ,. Nwpl Terr8Q8: 3 br, 2'i'I ba. year &2000/mo. $1500 pets. Cali alt 6pm turnlll\9d, washer. dryer 8_5 Vllloe) A2Lot.only$1<12,500 OPEN SUNDAY 370 BALBOA PENINSULA N near new crpt & pelnt. mo y .. rly Furn or un-1162-7470 lncld Summer. enctad 642-•644 • • Agent coll 645-9161 M t 1 2 B w 00 7 BA 2 Bf<. 9 Month Lease Fountain Valley 4 Bdrm encl gar. frplc. 963-3488 • _fu_r_n_. _11_4_1_1e_e-_1_15_s~~ l=a-=-.-8-1-._,, .. -1-c~L---,,2=7~4=0 garage se-02 Seashore ___ _ 1'-!l,_I I I ·C ~I \1-.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill ounl 1 n. 1 o $950 MO. Mr Macdonllld S775. Fenced yard & w • TSL Mgmt 642-1603 NEWPORT CENTER Full Realtor-. 875~ 1• shtng e, spo1less house garage. Kids & pets Ocean front 5 Br. 3 Bl. c.... .... 2724 2 Br 1 ea. upstalrt, frplc. service E11ecuttve Sut1es FOf Claasllted Ad ACllON Call a Dally Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 WI FlllEOLlllRE wlleget unit, vtew. 1 block 1-714-851-1855/evo welcome 663-1500 Duple•. yrty $1675/mo or '';iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii garage. $8 2 5 /mo. VacatlH $575-$625 840-5<170 Local banlc hu foreclosed to beach 1210,000 1-213-395-6625 Agent. no tee winter S 1500/mo Xlnt loc I• 6"2 7803 ltalah 2907 on 2 beautllul condo•, Newell,497-5411 Wlldys213/285-2261 2Br. IV.Ba. lam rm. new --·-------•$290/up, carpe ts l-3Br. 2112Be end 1-4Br, 069 Raat. lt1cla 2 40 cpt1/drp1/p1lnt, lg patio. •S450/mo. up. 1 & 2 Br. Big Bear cabin. 2 Br, 1 Ba, drapes, etc. restrooms, 2 112Ba The units are 3 """;.;,,;.io.,;;.;r,;.t ,;l;.;•.;•-.c.-la_,;l.;..o,,;. loi!..,.,_.~...,....,._~-..-Shoreclltt1: lg 3 Br. 4 ba, No pe!s. nice locallon. unlurn & turn pool, 1pa nr take. all • wood Int 17301 Beach Blvd Hunt- years n-. spacious ond S121,IOO lam rm. frotc't , gn ooeen 2195 Miner ST. $650 mo. 18992 Florldt 842-2834, 359-8932/359-4060 1ng1on Beach 842-283• rutty apoomted w /mod· N llyl f h vu. walk to pl/l bch + dt p To see cell 642-3172 L-k .,,__..ea" e•qut·'te ••y YlEW ern features Creative 0 quel ng or pure 818 52000/mo. 548"763g 646"9604 ---------lake"'rron" .. t" ho'::A, 5.br/6 .. bft, -ol this b1flly decorated IW"i&.ii.....,....,.,,....,._ ..... ~ 2Br, 2Ba. frplc, r,ound It•, I•--------Fresh 2 bd In 4 plex I ba .. _ B tlf 11 ff'• 11-llnanclng avall Submit all N po 1 condo c1~· to .. &,. 2 b • Walk to beach, ' Br Fam 1 ' 1• · alp• 12, game rm, el""-eau u arge 0 ... e ava ew r .,..., urn 5,.,,., r a. . 1700 mo •vall ept 1 No enc gar yrd pat o no G -• bl '"2 45•4 "on F I • otters Aoent 6•2-4623 thOOCean Xlnt amenities N 1gu1 I shore 1 8--98 96 1 Am. 3 Ba 11175/mo 1 Br. U11ts pd, avall 9-1at. &.4 • 29g7 $5 5' ant furn. dock. 642-7080 11 e "" • .. ·"" • r • • w/pool & clubhouae for Townhome. security pet 714• • 1 yearly Drive by 309 $325 Adult• pref. quiet, _pe_t•_. __ 2• ___ 4 __ 1---------9.5 wan1Ad1 Calt642-5678 enttrtalnlng.759-150101 gated comm., ocean 2 Br wtgar $535 crpts, Cedar. Call Agent pat10.nopet1.644-0958 Large 1 bdrm condo. llll -.-,-TE-R_F_ll_l _IT_tf_F_IO_E_ SELL Idle ttema with 1 1002 752_7373 view Club house, pool. lncd yard 636 • .i 120 640•8208 oallo. W/O, Frpl. Poot & Beeutllul Whl l9f Condo. 0 Dally Ptlo1 C'-llled Ad Gtattal & 5 -~ 0 De 2 bd. 1 ba, carpet, Drapee, J.cunl, s~ Gain. Cov-on Kaanapafl ..... n.~ ... 1 Br, Newpor1 Beech real ~~;jjiiiljiiiljiiiijiiiiiiiiii~.:~=~iiiiiiiii-.:= tennis beach prlv no 1-PM ~· ~ tawara bl I •495 2272 "" """"'' I ti c I H Hr•• 'U'rD&LEE s c t -ns. • ered prk'g, clo1e to 2 Bt, labulous vlaw. OG8 on on °19 W'f, unu ULIH ISUH S44t,000 Probate sale -prime location. Cape Cod 3 Br with dock for 2-18' boats. Lowest price house on the water Great area -walk to everything. Fee land IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 •Ott .... n~ P9e6 18 7 •8 1•000mo 811 Ba.ate bargain 28r4T1m Maple. 631-2927 beach.$550 968-5632 1pec1a1 rates Book now appro1t lOOOaqh n __ ,.,.....,.. 4 • 4.. slngtes too S400's call 2 bd, 1 ba, Colla Mtsa, tor tall & w inter, $1250/mo.Sllpalsoavall &\C41.1~ Gated/Comm 4Br Newly 539-6190 BEST Alty'" $475 S40-3tl66 Near Adema & Beach, up-213-389-5576 714/645-7100 .. --··-lurn. beach. tennlt , atalrs apt. slngle car gar-i~-~------,.& • ~ sauna, nr schools. 110 Buy/renl auper deal 5 rm 2 I=---=------......= 2 Bdrm 1 Bath 590, gar-eg•. p1110. d1w1hr, 1m11t tallb tt -••ttcaal i.:;.u.;I. oe11. 11500 661-7712 Ba ramlly spot pool, 1~-------Po---~ age. large patio, no pe11, pet ok, 1 Br 1 Ba. lndry lhtt 2tOI leatala JM:unl more SSSO + ,.. laundry hook up avail. lac. $450/mo. $300 de-1_..-.--.ii-____ ...., 2 Lllllt tet,rHt Neats M!!J!rl ltacla 2I'H 1_5»4_,__1_eo_a_E_1_T__ 534 B«nard 642·4905 po11t Agent no fee. Belut 11 5-sly condo. IUll IEW Lovely 6 r w/room for Ill OAIYOI Rat Stl35 takes this 3 Br • 2er. !Ba. on Back Bay, _9_e_3_-_1soo______ ~ .;!;.~t. 2N.'~!':fu;:.':~ generou1 1enan1 tmprov9' 120' yacht Cute 3 Br AVAILABLE NOW.. lly unit w/gsr dshwshr pool. S520 mo 2455 SEAWHID cellol'I. nr all. 759-1642 mA1~110•,.11c6~~2~88 aqNe~-w135· slip Musi seel ON THE GOLF COURSE kids welcome 539-6190 Irvine Ave. 1146·8 126 ...., " "" ~ ~ 673-7873 Drama1lc ~lew home furn BEST Alty lee YILLAIE Bed Follows Inc. Ltberel port Bl. C M 6.42-3490 * liyFreatOotlllt * Incl plano&poottable, --HOME FOAAENT 2w~~ ~0B~~~·~e::,r:. New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury minded c1tent1. 1111 CMJNB 17th & Newport VlEWI VtEWt VtEW• 90 to 120 dal' or 7 $2500 Huntington Beach 3 & 4 382 Victoria 117 1610. apt1 In 14 plans. 1 Bdrm scieened s25 each Ne-r 3300 9Q 11. ample Sec Bid . 2 Br 2 Ba. mo 720-17 2 anytime Bdrm S 775 Fenced 851 •9523 from S545, 2 Bdrm lrom 972·2095 parking. air cond Ownor Pool. boat slip avall Stepa 10 bch. Sant f8ni8i. yard• & garages Kid• & 1630. Townhouae from CdM ahr betut 3 br 2in 675-6900 By Owner· 675·8637 v,. Pt1• welcome 863-1500 191(1Wallace 11 103. 2 Br 2 $(195 1 pools, tennta, ba houae. frplC. $300/mo ~~~~46~~75 mo. Chrla Agent. no 198. Old maneton atyte 5 Br Ba TwnhN. no pet1. water1atla, ponds 011 for yrly. Sept 15 675-5016 la~1td1l A HUT lllY ff Liii hmt $525 hme $525 $405/mo 831-3671. cooking & Meting paid. - ' ltatala 2HO •• IE• SIOO 000 v1ii8Balbo1 Condo, prof OLI TOWI IPEOIAL apple lrple kid pell Ok From San Diego Frwy Condo rm avatl IOf young-_..,.,. .... ;;... __ ..,;;;,;,;;;; " ' decor, compt furn 2Br $385renla111 bungalow rHdy now 539-6190 2 Br on golf courM . new drive Nor1h on Eleech lo et prol perton. localed ln 1200·2500 aq It.('~ offk:e) 0111.IH Ollrf1t111htr 2ba. tr/dr/fem rm. cten walk to sand n surf 1110 BESl Ally '" paint. etc. On~ 1475/mo. McFadden end -•I on CM. Full amenltlel. $280 WHt lrvlne area From 171-1UI Poot.spa, beaut vu·ocn. $435beechpeach2 Nopett. 180· 862 McFadden to SEAWINO mo 645-7188 1604/mo. Tom851·8928 ldo A"Y b a y , 11 g ht 1 L 1 e Bdrm ctptd cltcor newef Taatla 2 Br on QOll courM . new V I L L A 0 E · Fe. 20-30, non-amkr Furn 2.660 sq 11 3g75 Birch. -.ul e1teeuttve home. $ 1 5 O O I m o bfHna 539-6190 BEST Mull rent lrg quaUty C5 paint. ttc. Only $475/mo. (71 4)893-5188. metr Br. pv1 ba. kit prlv Newpon Beach 11330 newly decorated, 4 Br 3 7141997-3000 ext 191 Ally fff $700 rr11hly painted No peta. 7(1()-88e2 Spacloua, quiet, 2 Br. 1 Ba. 1200 +•;, u1u 649·8677 M 1A zoning Agent Be. pool, very lrg yrd, nr d >' s' 1 1417 7 1 • o" 2 6 Very •mall 2 Br Beech P5g:•61~~ B°if ~T 1'0 buy 2 Br w/gat. crpt1, watet near belch. IS 15/mo. Femi.le 1mmte w1nttd to 54_1-_50_3_2, ____ _ tchoot1, ahop1 Baycr911 ov/wknd• Shack, comp unlurn. No • .. paid 836-4120 1·5PM. 9e0-e668 ahr 2 Br 2 Ba tpl w/pool Newpor1 BMch Lido Can· aree. By Owne r Wlnter1Br.Oen,&;•g•. Pttl. 7 blk• lo ocean. CfA&•lt>Nhtal\CIN.U l..Oi> 2176 "C"PlecenU1 $480 ~rt 1tla &lndry.0HBAval1Sep11 09fyVlllage•ree3250aq 1375,000 64 2-4 116, yuarc:t.1 noldpell. s0,.71mo. 5400. 638-7838 GJ'AA 2228 "C" Pleoentla 1410 04 r a!lront :.n•, 11.,. S2tl5/rno. 841-3503 11M1 Of comnierolet u... 759.088• tll• nc . 642-2 • l"lat 3 Bel 2 b th t , ,. ..... ....., ground noor. litre wide --Winter Rental· 2 Br. rm, 1 • cetl)Of · mo yrty 073-82Q2 en Fem. to lhr hM on the doot plua 2 loading ILUFFS Winter Rental 2 Br carport. REFS Call 1575/ll'IO. &40~. SPM. Btuf11 C.M 1110 dep. no dOGk•, ample 011 etr .. t Bdrm, elngle level. lurnlahtd, w11her. dryer. 875-9435 wttncla, weell· 3 br. 2 be adult condo off tut. •260/mo. 831-2576 parklno. " "-$.50 1 IQ $165.000 Denae Coro S600/mo 973-3o39 deys 525-7246 E. 17th SI. Walking die-2P~r.oos,~'~,~~hn1~0 Qoroeou• Nwpt Bell It NNN Call Styvla, 2'11 851 -9135 •••1ttlit1riltllt4 ~ '·.n.em hnfne4 lance to r .. 1auran11. 648•2082 Condo In Eaat etull. Pe11ean Propett'" Inc Gtatrtl H02 ;!JL...• bank• l orOCtfY. Perlec:t lmm.c. Fully Furnl1he0. 714/&4M501 I LIM llU fty --tor oldtt couple or Pool, lmmed. Occupen---l A P O II R br. 2 bl on one of Lido'• N~ ocHnfront 2 Br 2 Ba P11lu1l1 2101 mature adutt•. S700/mo. Cl". FIH: 700-0072 Placentia St In Colla I ll I I' I I tar--11 lot• l .... 5K. "-·1. wlfrpl & --•rat• garage c a•1 Uz or Chuck al # M-. Back lot f()f' rent. . . . . . . .,. ... .,.. l50 ~.. 651•1177 OCEAN FRONT-Ytfy 3 Br ., lnc:reellble OoMn View approk 20.000'. all or trade IMlopt 673·6315 1'~r2.co~':oofn7t.e b11y1ron1 2 Ba Oplic, gat, no~"· &48-7171 or M'-57Q tN NliWPOFIT BEACH 2. er. 3 be S. Leguna pan 644-2585 I f ,, c E H I lllT....... S8951mo yrly Sl200/mo 573..wo ~ Br. 1 Ba. 1861 ill:r;te SlnolM, & 2 Bdrm Apart• concso. Frplc. '2 ci.cka. • 17& up. 2205 tt lndul· ' I I' I I I Tiii Wllll 2 Br oceanfron1 w/gar19t Ave. retr~. downat "· men11 & Townhou.... garage, Pool 499-8009 1rt11 ol!IOI 11101 Aedon- • -t •• "'"'* vO w11n " n... H1rbor Ridge For~lolUre. S850/mo yrly. -~ DNVI c..... •.. ••. Ml2 ;~taM~~J;~5· Som• are •l•ganlly Shr bMu1 3 Br 2 etry IN Clo Cltcle. •T, HuntlngtOtl I H ,, l T E 11 o•n<:• u tt"'1 I hot CconnMIC new cuttom home •••• ., ..... ., Wat::front luxu.ry oonao lurnllhe<I. From $000 hm l.ndry flC, )llO. utll Po. BMcfl, 842·2834 I I' I r . C:tt• Cn• Cna Yl)OI •••• Oii• Reduced from ....... llP1 CCIM bO.i allp avail 3 If. 2 8• upper, near On Jambor" Ad at nr ahop cntr 731-8630 Aa•1a1w1t1 iii •, ot•P fn•w•r<' •• •••o s1.tl00,00010 ...... 1w.n Utfle Mite Mutflt M t on a poOt ~·aJ 2 8' 2.. ~·· cloet 10 trwys. San Joaquin Hllll Rd ... ______ _,o•r.••••" •"o '""' r•o '""' $795.000 e73-31>111. •-Tuttel, along came a Pteni ~th <W year. 1578/mo ~ depoall M4·11M l~~~=ht>e~'&·~ i §JIK1TOl LXDVlioKi I T u s A "I E 1d•ed 1""" '"" '" •· Pltp IUIAlllllT 91>tder and reed In 111• 12000 mo. 11600/mo. 540..2.2.45 •CONDOS• 8050. Imm.cl 4o1~39 1 A<Moe In IOVI. rnernage l • I I I I I' O ~-.... -...... ·-What a Wond«f\11 Wond l14/llM1U Dally Piiot CIH alfled yeerfy rrum or unturn to/rno. 2 Br. 1'/• Ba car bu1lneee er&-2~tS• ... !;_,::i,.:, '::.,";.;' l .;::.!' or Shopp ing, rlghl at aeotlon about Miii MUt-'T 141186-t 161 Pot\, loww unit, lndry rm, VIiia Balboa and Ver· Non amotctno fem rlTll'lte. ;; I fi~ ~ I rotJt ftngertlpl ~ayt f!M'• Tunet IW'd ......... t It cl-10 11-... NlllM. *780 MO· • up 39r 2be. IJal~ laland. ,,.~•--..-... ---.. ! ~~1.;~··0 r I' r I'' I' I' r r I Dally Piiot CIH •lfl•d lc1a11lfled Ad•.,. Ille '°' U .t5. You ;"M.1 Y°'-1don't nwl.oun10 --u1W.wi1eon 031-'980 °""'·""' Avall lm!Md. ·-,.,;;;;~ --Ada To pl-~r eel, 1n1wer lo a t v coeutul your tufle1 4nd Iota of "drew tul" •!Min you Tll.... Ml• 1111 HaY. you rH d todA;7 1252/mo. 72.().et•e or ma,., Balbofl Penlntula •} ... ••• I I j J 11• I I I I-j I C1111 &42·M78 IW'd fill a g9111911or ywd ulet l'l'a a other llllng a tllrougll piece an lld In the~ Cfaultled Ada? 11 not 11&-.4133 • ,_.ard Gf&-04.H ___ .::. __ "_"_' __ .a_•_M_.UJ_._•_"_"_nnn_ -:::.._ ___ _::~_ ... :_1t::::~=·=fted==A=d=·Vltot===he!C)=l::o:a:1::0:::!11e::1-="='0=1-'l==mor==e.l:::~::=.::":'Ce11::::P::118'4::0:::t2::~::'::~:::~::''="=e=d~=~=M2=~="'=1~::~==call=::inQW='·:J ... 8::.~=l~l~lltot:;'"~1e~g~-~m~1~111d~w!11.!.·~~~l-~~!·,..~!rnlelll!tn!.!!'~~IO~'f'9 __ 11ee1_:L.:w==1c1=1e=11=9'!\l=="'=2'=-6t==7=8:.L::Sell=-=ldte::· ::::ltttne::::::::;:;"':='::::-N:=7:.• -• ' CS Orang.•Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 18, 1983 TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 53 Eur waterway 1 Get rid ol 5 7 Bird S Oat 58 Ca11torn1a 9 Went white city 14 Enameled 59 Black. poet metalware 61 Deplored 15 Brain matter 62 More logical 16 Where L.odl 1s 63 Except lor 17 Floor coYers 64 Hence 18 Time of day 65 Galaxy units 19 Insect 66 Kiiied 20 The Ram 67 Go-getter 22 Flagrante dellcto 2.'4 Lobster claw 26 Stnke DOWN 1 Punlsl'1 27 Studied 2 Voluptuous woman 29 Citrus drlnl< 30 Fancy 33 Reword 3 1111no1s city 4 Profane 37 Tender S Forbid 6 Cygnus 38 Plunders 39 Inner· pref 40 Where 7 Instruments 8 Baton Cadiz is 41 Pot wielder 9 B1bhca1 42 Substanttally 44 Born 45 Vague procurator 10 Apologize t 1 Praise 46 Bluster 47 Siiken 49 vex 12 Otherwise 13 Stained 21 Flows out 2 3 4 TUlllllS .. nsw. Help give them a n.ed start. Earn toe> S$$ pert time avanlnQt. Only po1111Ye, dependable, outgoing edultt n!Htd apply. Phone &46-7021, 2:30 to 6 p m. Monday thru Friday. TV Commercial Pro- duction Co 11 lnter- Y\eWlng 0C people IOf TV commerclelt IOf designer luhl°"'. re1teur1nt, eof1 drink . co amellc .over1i-nent1. onty r• liable people need apply. TheM ere fOf' people In btdt.groond only (non epeel(lng), Call between 1~. Mon thru Fri Inter- views are In HoltywooCI by appt. 213-8-49-3519. nPUtTTll Wanled to o~r11e I Comp 4 Salery on 1x- penenee. Cell ~ 10:30 am -3 pm &46-39&4 6 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 23 Cache 25 Cheer 28 Fantasy 30 Cott 31 Seed covering 32 Disavow 33 Scheme 34 Very best 35 By 1'1eart 36 Term1te·s km 37 Splashed 40 Math ratios 42 Star in Cetus 7 8 43 Tnckled 45 Room layouts 47 Craltter 48 lntngue 50 Nova Scotia city 51 Fa1thlul 52 Witch city 53 Smooch 54 --the 1<111 55 Ms Millay 56 Fondness 60 Modern • I ·I John Robinson admitted he didn't prepare the Rams for C1allas, and It showed Monday night. Page C 1. THE ORANGE COAST TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1983 The Big Top comes to town Crowds line streets I or parade of circus animals Crowds of kids and adults found a good reason to brave the heat and humidity Monday as they lined the streets of Anaheim for a glimpee of t.he Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey .drew meoagerie on its march to the Anaheim Convention Center. Arabian stallions, dromedaries and 19 pachydenns paraded through sev- eral residential areas about l p.m. on their 15-minute trek from the circus train to the service area of the convention center, where they will be houaed through Sunday. 'nle Greateat Show on F.art.h open.a toni.lht at 7:SO Audi~ for, an~ interested. In becoming a c1owiI l:lr showgirl for Ringling Bros. will be held Thursday at 10:30 a.m. on the arena flool'. ClllT 1111101 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS u.-, .......... _, ....... u,. No break in humid weather By STEVE MITCHELL °' ............. Like a late-rUght party guest who refuaes to go home, the remnants of Hurricane IBmael linger on along the Orange C.out. . And now, a new guest, named Alicia, has arrived on the acene, promising no respite from the thundentonm and humidity that have turned Orange County into a sauna room for the past week and a half. National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Hoffer uid Alicia. a tropical storm that is rapidly gusting into a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico "is aefinlt:ely going to pump more moist air and humidity into our area." The forecast for the next three to five days? ''We think Alicia will sustain ~ current humidity we're experiencing in Southern California. In other wol'da, continued Miami Beach muggi- ne11 and ouklif-chancter thundemonns. Adding to the Southland's weather woes is yet anoU. ~ -Ulis one in the form of a tropical depl'MlkJn -coming acnm Baja from La Paz. (See MOU BUMID, Pqe A!) Low exhaust pipes make Clark fume The bUck oily exhaust coming from the back end of many of Orahge County's public buaes la bad enough. But when the fumes hit pedestrians and mot.oriata In the face, eometh.lng should be done. That waa the opinion of Orange County Transit District officlala, meetiJli Moonday in Garden Grove. Transit district chairman Ralph Clark, who is alao a county supervisor, complained about street level exhaust emitted by many of the county's orange and white buaes. A dromei:tary kept an eye on handle.rs unloading circus animals for parade to Anaheim Convention Center. He suggested that, in the future, buses be equipped with exhaust pipes atop the vehicles in orde' to keep the black smoke from coming directly In contact with the motoring and walking public. District offld.als said 105 buses with exhaust (See EXHAUST, Pase Al) P~ramedic pact aired Laguna council to mull new Orange County proposal tonight By STEVE MITCBELL Of .. 0..-. ......... The county wanted $235,941. Laguna Beach balked. Nego- tiations began. And tonight, Laguna Beach city .ftmcil members will consider approving a two-year contract with Orange County for para- medic .ervice that is much lower than that first propoeed by county fire officials. The original contract called for Laguna Beach to pay $235,941 next year for paramedic 11ervloe provided by the county -an lncreue of more than $100,000 over the current agreement with the city. Qty officials temled that in- crease unrealistic. Oty Manager Ken Frank and Fire Chief Ron Adams met with county offidala several times, arguing that more than a third of thoee aided by county paramedics in Laguna Beach last year were non-Lagunana. The dty maintains Laguna taxpayers shouldn't have to pick up the full tab for med1cal aid to out-of-townen who are Injured or stricken while visiting or commut- ing In town. But county fire of:fidalt con- tended the dty ~ for towiata, recelw. revenue1 u a rewlt of tourilm, and, 8lnce the town la touriat.-oriented, the coun- ty should not be obllpted to Mllat In provldln1 aervice to non-resident.I. Flprel compiled by the city show the county bll1ed i..,una Beech fOI' 837 medical aid cau,lut yeer. A total of 220of ~cei.­ or :w.e percent -went for non-Lacuna raldents. >..a rem.It of what Chief Adami ca1lild ... lot of ~-butttnc with the COUJ\ty,'' the 6n> ~ entitill w up with a propoeed contnct that calla fot' IAcuna s-ch ~-eeY t110.ooo tor.,.,... ( ... M&~,P .. AI) ' Mayor Donn Hall Mesa sign ordinance sparks new dispute BJ GLENN 8COTI' .............. ec.ta Mesa's 9-year-old ordi- nance recuiating the me and = commercial signa WU Monday to allow thole built ore the law wu p9l9ed to nay up after next year's deadline. The City Council, on a 3-2 vote, acr'eed to . lnclude a 80-Called "grandfather clau.e" in the 1974 ordinance to protect ovenUed algn9 that otherwlle would be- come Ulepl next March 18. However, Mayor Donn Hall, who In this caae did most of the speaking for the majority, includ· Ing Arlene Schafer and' Eric Johmcn. drew a sharp d1stinctioo between what he called the non.confonntna signs and Wepl ones which were <>ri8fnally erected without permits. The requeet fOI' the pndfather clau.e came fr'Clln the ec.ta Meea Chamber of Ccmmerce. Council members Ed l~ MESA SIGNS, P.,. A!) ' AS * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 . : CONTINUED STORIES Whittier girl, 16, knifed; two held I t • . . From Page A1 MESA SIGNS .. McFarland and Nonna Hertzog oppoeed adding the grandfather clauae. McFarland said he was surpritled at the Chamber's pos- ition becauee it catered to a small apedal interest group and was unfair to the hundreds of business people who already had pa.id for new signs to meet the law. However, Jim Hollister, who runs a business on Harbor Boulevard, said he believes the grandfather clause Ls fair because, with few exceptions, the non--00nfonning si8Jl8 are well designed, attractive and ex- pensive. The sign ordinance gave owners a 10-year grace period to amortize their non-conforming signs. Under its original stipulation, owners with signs that are too large were to replace them by next March. However, many speakers noted Monday that the amorth.ation period has been subject to debate virtually throughout the first nine years. City staff members had no specific count on the percentage ot signs covered by tbe grandfather clause. Hall said he believed it covered (rom 16 to 21 percent. C.OSta Mesa resident Ann Mound, noting that Hall IB a member of the Chamber of Com- merce's Board of Directors, said she hoped he would use his influence to persuade owners of the oversized signs to replace them anyway. Earlier, she had argued that the grandfather clause was unfair to th06e who replaced signs. "There are hundreds of businesses in this town who think grandfathering stinks," she said. VICTIMS RECOVERING •(• Investigators have noted prosecutors would have to prove the driver had intended to kill the two to gain a guilty verdict. Hicks said Freund has been released from Juvenile Hall pending a hearing scheduled for Aug. 31 in Orange County Juvenile Court to discuss the charges. Freund, who until the incident was a member of the police Explorer Scout unit, apparently became enraged at the Aug. 7 party over the way his former friends from Costa Mesa High School ·harassed him concerning a gJ"aduation prank two months earlier, witnesses told police. They said he left the party and returned with a rifle. While he was still in his car, others at the party managed to wrestle the gun away from him. But, witnesses said. he then l~hed his car forwilrd, causing Smith and Anderson, who were leaning against the car, to fall. He then backed over them. according to statements given the police. Police Lt. Jack Calnon said the key point in the case is whether Freund meant to run over the pair. , COSTA MESA FIGHT ... Why so much damage? Well, his right hand had a cast on it. The fight apparently was over a dispute about a loud stereo in Sikorski's apartment at 527 Wilson Ave. Officers said Roelle and his roommate, Patrick Michael McBurney, 20, walked downstairs to the courtyard and clicked off the circuit breaker providing power to the apartment where Sikorski and Michael Patrick Lorey. 20" lived. Sikorski and Lorey then retaliated and turned off po't.'er to Roelle and McBurney's unit, according to the story both sides gave investigators. When Roelle and McBurney returned to the power box, they met Sikorski and Lorey and the fight began. Lorey told police McBumey began hitting him. so he turned the circuit breaker back on. Meanwhile, Roelle told police, he faced Sikorski and told him not to join the fight. Then Sikorski jabbed him in the stomach, inflictmg a shallow stab wound, according to police reports. Roelle said he began hitting Sikorski without noticing whether he still had the knife. Police officers made no arrests and said they would handle possible proeecution only if one of the parties makes a complaint. Sikorski-was treated and released from Costa Mesa Medical Cent.er; Roelle was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. Hy tlae A11oclatecl Prell LA MIRADA ~ A Buena Park police officer shot and wounded one of two men who authorities allege kidnapped, knifed and tried to rape a 16-year-old Whittier girl early today. The girl, whose name was withheld because of her age, was reported in stable condition at La Mirada Community Hospital where she was treated for a knife wound to her hand and other injuries to her neck and shoulder, said Los Angeles County sheriff's Deputy Robert Stoneman. William Garcia, 23. Whittier, and John Risenhoover, 23, Bellflower, were booked for in- vestigation of robbery, kidnap- ping, assault with a deadly weapon, grand theft auto and attempted rape, Stoneman said. Garcia was being held on $17,500 bail at the Norwalk sheriff's s tation, while Risenhoover, shot in the knee, was being held on $45,000 bail in the jail ward at County-USC Medical Center. Police seeking truck driver who lei t crash Newport Beach police are aeek- ing help in finding the driver of an older, light-colored, full-siz.ed, America.n,...made pick-up truck that struck two people on a Vespa about 9 p.m. July 24 on MacArthur Boulevard near Su- perior. The Vespa was traveling in the No. 1 lane when the truck, attempting to make a U-tum from the No. 2 lane, cut-off the motor bike. Jeffery Johnson and Nor- man Barnes collided with the driver's side of the truck and w ere thrown off the Vespa. Barnes was hoepit.allied with injuries. Aft.er the ·collision, the driver pulled over for a moment, but left the acene without identifying himself or rendering aid. Anyone who can identify or locate the vehicle or driver, should contact Newport Beach Police Department Tr-affic Division be- tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. at 644-3724, Mon.-Fri. On weekends or after 5 p.m ., call 644-3717. Newport car dealer probed The FBI is investigating a Newport Beach car dealer for possible criminal bankruptcy fraud, according to officials from the FBI and U.S . Attorney's office. Albert Mard1kian, owner of Trend Import Sales. lnc.. on Pacific Coast Highway, directed his business into federal bankruptcy court last fall. He sells Ferraris and Lamborghinls, among other exotic cars. Mardikian has been involved in a 36-month legal battle with the state over allegations of illegal sales of "bootleg" cars in Cali- fornia. He previously said he filed for bankruptcy to maintain the firm's finances and move his legal dispute from the state court to the federal court. A spokesman from the U.S . Attorney's office said the probe is in the early stages and that no charges have been filed against Mardikian. Mardikian's attorney, Stephen Wilson, said his client has not violated any laws. MORE HUMID WEATHER ••• From Page A1 "It's only blowing 25 to 30 knots, but it will al.so add a bit to our humidity,'' Hoffer said. Meanwhile. the legacy of Ismael continued to be EXHAUST ... pipes on top w ere recently purchased, but added the district still has about 175 older buses with street·level exhaust pipes. And while distnct general manager James Reichert said the county won't be buying any more of the street-level eXhaust buses in the future, he explained the older ones cannot be altered to spew exhaust from the top. That prompted director and county Supervisor Roger Stanton to mumble, "Meanwhile. we've dlllcovered a new solar system." felt Monday along the coast, where nearly a half inch of rain fell on El Toro in a half hour. Greg Cunningham. of the Orange County F1ood Control Di.strict, said the cloudburst dumped 47 of an inch on the unincorporated community between 10:30 and 11 a.m. Laguna Beach received nearly a quarter lnch of rain during the same atonn, officials said, while nearby Dana Point received barely a trace of moisture. Jrhe low temperature Monday of 76 degTeeS broke a 16-year-reoord for highest minimum temperature for an Aug. 15. The previous record was 71 The weather service said highs will remain in the 90s for inland areas of the county, at least for the next few days, with beach highs in the upper 70s. Lows, !luch as they are, will range from 74 inland to 63 along the coast. We''e Listening ••• What do you hke about the Daily Pilot? What don·t you like7 Call the number at left and your message will be recorded. traruicribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24 hour answering service may be used to record let· tcrs to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verif1catjon No circulation calls. please 642·6086 Tell us what ·s on your mind D= "Guafen'-d Moflo.y ,,..,., II you ck> nOt h••• fO'JI P•P.-OY & ~ 0'" cia• oelCl't '0'" eno rov• '001 .111 ot .,.._.., 8•tv< Ot y 111<1 8..nClt y II you 00 f'Ot ,.c.,v• you~ COC>y Dy I 1 "' call bol!oro 10 • ,,, """ VOi" cov, .... be-"'1 ~· Clroui.t*' T1t1pt1ot ... • OrA'\Ot Courtly ,,,_ -~ -· ....,,.""9on9Mc:ll ,w ............ ., ..... ~....----- i ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L ~W•rtz HI Publithef ChaJ Dowallby ReJmond MecLean fclltor and A..,.tant Controller to,,,. Publlther ·~'·e•-,,_,tOfl Ment(llf ClaHln.d adwettl•lne 7t4/Ma__,.. All otMt «Mparll!*\tt M2~1 MAIN OPl'ICI '30 W .. t ll<ty SI Co.It ,,..._ CA M9" t Odr"' Oo• IMC) C.0.ta -CA DleH ~ogtlt 10$3 ()9110t C:O..I l'vOllilNna 0-"Y NO ne ... t 11011u lll•ll•t llOM. t di101let malt•• or -l~t• 11«..n may oe repiOCMleO ""'°'' _..i PMm"""°" Of Copy!lgl\t - VOL 7', NO. 221 -=----..-----,,~=~~----. --. ' . . . O verhead protection Umbrellas were the order of the day a s pedestrians d ashed thro ugh intermittent morn- ing sho wers o n th eir way t o work in Costa Mesa. Probation for deputy in CM gun incident A former Shasta County sheriff's deputy who allegedly fired shots into a parking lot at the C.OSta Mesa Inn last March was sentenced Monday in Harbor Mu- nicipal Court to three years' probation. Wallace Goold, 42, of Redding, MEDIC ... (From Page A 1) medic service for 1983-84. The followmg year the city would be required to pick up 50 percent of the total yearly operational cost of the paramedic unit -about $191,000. lf the dty backs out ol the county contract after 1983-84, a $21,000 penalty would be assessed 0by the county. If th~ council approves the contract tonight, the city manager said Laguna will continue to monitor cost of the program and re-evaluate the validity of con- tinuing to contract with the coun- ty after 1984-85. SALES • SERVICE LEASING • TRAINING pleaded no con test in June to a misdemeanor charge of assault with a deadly weapon in the March 14 incident. Goold was in Costa M esa attending a law-enforcement aeminar when the shooting occurred. According to police, Goold had been "drinking heavily" before he allegedly fired three abota toward six people in the hotel parking lot. One of thoee in the parking lot, a bodyguard. fired six ahot.s at Goold. No one was injured. Goold told police he had black· ed out and remembered nothing of the incident. In addition to his probation term. Goold was ordered by Judge Selim Franklin to perform 250 hours of community aervioe work tn Shut.a County, to abstain from alcohol and non-preecription drugs and to not carry a firearm during his probation. Goold, who had been promoted to sheriff's captain shortly before the incident, later waa 1U.1pended and then fired. lladte lllaeK Mesa · 1 shelves J Bear • pro1ect By GLENN SCOTI' Of11MOl9r ......... A key decision on whether to allow commercial developmeat west of Bear Street ln Costa M• was postponed Monday nigh\ by the City Council. The decision seemed a rel1ef to somber executives of two groups seeking general plan changes to allow commercial develoPmeilt but a bitter pill to leaden of a homeownen' group trying to halt such projects. Although a request from the Amel Development Co. for time to redesign a project on 50 acres just north of the San Diego Freeway waa expected. the aecond requart for a continuance until Nov. 7 from C.J. Segentrom & Sona was asurpriae. Henry Segentrom, company 1 chainnan, said his fum needed the time to review new oommenta added to the envi.tonmental im- pact report for their proposal to develop a 650,000-aquare-foot shopping mall on 18 acrea of land acroea Bear from South c.o.t Plaza. He pointed out -aod council members agreed -that such requests are routinely granted. But one council member, as well aa the leaden of the North COll&a Meu Homeowners' Amociatiiml. cla1med the request was primarily a political tactic. · ''I think the real reason foe the continuance la the Segetstn•m group haa 11een the writing on the wall," aald Jon Paradis, a lawyer who headl the homeowner group. He charged th.at the -del.lltw were efforts to grind down oppofi- tion from residents. "i'ltis propoeal should be heard rigtlt now," he said. Councilman F.d McFarland sug- gested Segentrom feared the proposal would be voted down. UU they thought there were three votes tonight (for approval), they wouldn't have requested a delay," he said. Indeed, it was obvious at le.ut two members of the council. McFarland and Arlene Schafer, oppoeed the idea of amending the city's general plan foe land Ule' to allow the commercial develop- ment on vacant land now cte.ig- nated for medium density residen- tial development. Schafer wanted a straw vow ta.ken Monday to clear up the council's position. Foreign student n e eds a home The Sweden California Inter- national Academy is seeking a home for a Swedish high achoo] student who wants to attend echool tn Laguna Beach this fall. Families interested in partici- pating in the student-exchange program should call regional man- ager Gigi Lewerth at 497-2965. The Biggest Name Little Computers «i NEW! TWO LOW-PRICED POCKET COMPUTERS-GREAT FOR STUDENTS! Model PC-3 ......... __ l::ltl [ l1 o; P~Itlf "PR-3 P~1~;;;;;i1 iilii ~ liiil CiJ CiJ Gl ci:i ~ ..... mGJramrn~rarnmm •••Ill mmmrnmrararnmm •••il mrnmramGJraa~•ilAlll 99~ Computing Power You C.n Hold In Your H•nd I .., • Meeeure• Juat •1. x 5•/1e x 2•14• -smat) Enough tor Shtrt Pocket or Puree • UM Our Reedy•to-Aun Prog18mt, or Prog,.m It YourNN In Euy·to-Leam BASIC • 24..chMeeter Liquid Cryatel Dtepley • 10-Dlglt Accurecy • Bullt-ln V IK Memory • Prtnt, Loed Ind Store Pt09'1t'-With Our PC-.3 Prtn1et1CuMtt1 lntlff11Ce (2W5t1, tt1t.t5) Model PC-4 69!P Our LowHt..Prtced Pocket Comput• Ever I • tdttll for UM In School or BuaAMM •Incredibly Compllct-Onty 1/a x 81/a x 2*/e• • Ex~ 544-Charecter Memory-Mllfntailn Up to 10 Frtquentty.Ueed Pf"OSl"N"' • Writ• Your Own BASIC Computer Dp, .... Ofll_..,. ... m-• • &tore end Loed Aeectv-to-Aun ~ Wilt\ Our Pc-4 CMM«e lnfert.ce (ff..M51, $39.11) '! Expend With PC-4 Printer (H-3152, m .H) A DIVISION OF TANDY COAPORATION PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPAllNO &TORES ANO OEM.£ -_....,,,_ ·- • .f. . ~ ' of • Irvine reception for presidential ca~did~te United St.ates Senator Gary Hart of Colorado, a democratic candidate for president in 1984, wW be attending a cocktail reception Thuaday, Aug. 18 at the home of Stuart and Deborah Karl of Irvine. The fundraiser will be hosted by David S tein, Bernard Schneidei; and Harvey Englander. Price for the event ts $l00 per person an<.t $150 per couple. For information call 760-1121 Heart saver course offered A heart saver course IS held each Thursday rught from 7-11 p.m. at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach. The course trains participants in one-man rescue techniques, but does not provide certification for basic life support CPR, which requires eight hours of training. C.OSt for the class is $4 per person. To register call 760-2344. Unclaimed property auction ~aturday Newport Beach police will be holding an auction Saturday , Aug. 20, at 9 a.m. at the headquarters at 870 Santa Barbara Drive. Items are unclaimed property and are purchased on an as-is basis, with no guarantee of physical condition. Payment must be made m cash or local check immediately after a bid is accepted and all purchases must be removed at the conclusion of the auction . One hundred and thirty-nine items will be auctioned off, including many bicycles, stereos, cameras, typewriters, watches, ' and radios. Flight instructor course Aug. 23 A flight instructor refresher course is scheduled at OTange Coast College Aug. 23 to 25 with tuition set at $95. The course will be conducted by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association's Air Safety Foundation, and enables flight LnStructors the opportunity to renew their certificates. The course will cover changes in Federal Aviation regulations and explain the newest techniques in pilot training and education. For !nfonnation, call 1-800-638-3101. Adoption workshop set Aug. 23 A two-hour workshop for couples interested in adopting a child will be offered Tuesday, Aug. 23 in lrvme. The workshop will run from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Parenting Resources offices at 2212 Dupont Drive. C.OSt is $1 5 per couple. More information may be obtained by calling July Mayer at 553-9339. -----·--------·-- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 16, 1983 * AJ Summ~r is a good time to be careful Warm weather means more chan~s for fun and accidents, say medical personnel By LINDA WOODS Dellr-c .. ..,..-.1 Summer fun and recreational acxidents seem to go hand in hand say medical personnel who are called upon to help accident victims David Bautista, director of the Orange County Paramedics, said people use the parks and forests more in summer and often go into restricted areas, getting into situ- ations where they need medical help. He also noted that motor- cyclists don't wear helmets and heavy protecnve clothing' in the heat and that also results in more severe injuries when acciden ts happen. Bicycle aocidents also increase during summer. "OTange County is a tourist spot. This increases the traffic load on the streets, resulting in a higher risk of accidents," Bautista noted. Rob Peterson and Bob Landa, paramedics for Orange County based in South Laguna, said the swruner months bring an increase in back and neck injury calls from the beach regiorts. Patterson said the steep sand beaches and the waves camouflage the depth of the water and many swimming injuries re- sult. "This year we're seeing veteran swinuners and surfers with spinal cord injunes,'' said Dr. Greg Super, director of the emergency room at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. "The bottom of the ocean has been changed by the winter storms and there are sandbars in places where there weren't before. People are expect- ing their favorite swimming and surfing stop to be like they remember it -but the ooean floor 1s now changed." Dr. Super said the summer Dally l"llot Ii.fl ""°'o Tourism increases tra ffic which increases accidents a nd injuries in ummer. months bring a 25 percent increase in cases brought to the emergency room of Hoag, and most of the accidents are recreationally orien- ted. People between the ages of 10 and 40 are most prone to such injuries. "The beach moves in to the emergency room ... it gets a lot sandier in here," said Dr. Super. "We want to make people aware of the common eense precautions they can take in preventing water accidents. It's not uncommon to see someone taking a running dive into the waves only to find that they've landed head first in shallow water. We're trying to promote a slogan, said Dr. Super,'' .. .'Test the water with your feet first -not your head.' " Since 1970, Dr. Jack Skinner has organiz.ed a seminar at Hoag Hospital for lhoee who deal with water-related accidents. Life- guards, paramedics and hospital staff, as well as the public, are invited to hear about the latest emergency techniques and to share ways in which each support group can aid the others when caring for a beach-related injury case. As summertime has come into full swing, Dr. Peter Anderson, director of the emergency room at Fountain Valley Community Hos- pital, said they are seeing more m otorcycle and mof>ed accidents -especially on weekends. Dr. Anderson sees a slight increase in accidents occurriJl8 among the young teens, listing bicycles, mopeds and cars as the major causes. ''This has been a fairly brisk summer for Fountain Valley hospital," he said, "although the summer months don't usually bring a noticeable increase in the number of cases." Dr. Anderson also said there are usually quite a few bicyclists hit by cars on Pacific Coast Highway. This summer though, there has been a slightly lower number. He speculates it might be due to new traffic regulations and signals, which are altering the traffic Oow and thereby lessening the hazards alongPCH. 'Search me,' he said. And the cops did CoIDinittee OKs upper hay work Costa Mesa police arrested Rick WMliam Mcllrath, 23, an automoblle painter from Huntington Beach, early Monday on avsplcion of oorglarlzlng an apar1ment In a complex at 635 BMer St. 01flcen patrolfng the complex, the elte of many burglarfes. stopped the euepect after the com- plex manager lald he wu acting strangety According to polloe r&- porta, when Mcilrath said "March me." they did and found a gold chain and bu1oe•et worth abOUt $200. The ~ry was later "'90'1ed etolen from an apartment Monday after-noon, police aald. Mclirath was booked Into the city )all on S25.000 ball. A worker at the Olive Crest Group Treatment Center In Costa Mesa told police Monday two gin•. ages 15 and 17, left the premleea Saturday atter-noon, appe.rently to go to Los AnQetea to become prostitutes. A reeldent In the center said the 1>year-old Is a rormer pr0911tute A 1979 BMW left overnight In a parking lot at 2038 Newport Blvd. Sunday bec8uM of mecnanlcal prob- lem• WU dlacovered Monday with a bf'oken right reer window and Its seoo Blaupunkt •tereo system miss- ing. polloe said A worker at Von's Market. 185 E 17th St., placed Leonard Vernon L.awwf. 35. of Costa Mesa under cttlzen'a arrMt Monday after he said the IUIP9Ct hid a S8.15 bottle ol Black Velvet whiskey under hie shirt Md --*ed out of the store. Lawver was on parole so he Is being held today without ball al the city jall A nine-club set of golf clubs and bag, velued at S275, waa reported stolen Sunday lrom an open garage of a house on the 3100 block of Country Club Drive Whlie the occu- pants were home Someooe brake Into the Coastline Regional Occupational Program of- llce at 1001 Presidio Square over the weekend and stole a $2 ruler and $3 In cash, police W8'e told Monday Laguna Beach A total of S2,000 In household Items was stolen from a residence In Ille 400 block of Agate Street, Laguna Beach police said. Two men, described as being "Marine types" were spotted "moon- ing" paaaeraby In the 500 block of South Coast Highway at about 4 p.m. Monday. Pollce were vnable to locate the two offenders. The owner of a loud parrot was advised to quiet the bird when neighbors In the 200 block of Viejo Street complalf\ed to police. Pollce were called to a home on Via Maforca Monday afternoon after a d~. apparently trying to escape the heavy rains, broke Into Ila owner's ..tlome and set off the burglar alarm. Otfloers notllled the owner and the alarm was turned off. Newport Beach A burglar broke Into Bar Harbor Liquor on 510 E. Balboa early Monday and walked off with S 13,000 In cash taken from cash registers and a loctced drawer. Residents of 215 Ooeanvlew lost an estimated $2,090 In Jewelry during a burglary, Someone broke Into a vehicle parked on 1939 Port BIShop and stole car stereo equipment valued at $550. Newport Datsun at 888 Dove St loat 23 tires valued at $880.50 to a • burglar sometime ear1y Monday Fountain Valley Sh< flve-gallon buckets of chlll were reported stolen over the weekend In a burgl81)' at Tommy'• Burger8, 9024 Recreation Clrcie, by someone who entered the closed buslnesa, ~ lbly with a key. The ION WU estimated at $450. ,. . A 1974 Chevrolet" Monte Carlo belonging to a Ward Street resident was burglarized by eomeone who apparently uaed a acrewdr1Yel' to remove a $300 CUMtte playeir from the car on Monday. More of the saRle: Cloud); and warRl tnow CJ c.__ 87 Sii Coastal ~ 90 72 Clndnnatl " sa c ..... .,,., 81 se ~--·but-lyllllt Columl>la.S C 80 sa LOWll 16 lo 73 -~ T• to 80 • Ille Columbus 84 51 -lo -............ ~FIWa.111 101 78 -._ OI 0...,. °"""'Y i.-&2 Oeylon 13 S7 lo 72. "'*" Concac>llCWI 10 -~ '*'-" eo --ou1 eo -o...,,. o.11• '*"'°' ... " 70 .......,~ -1010 20 knell• Ollroll &7 57 """"4 lo I fOOI com--lfl<OUQll DuMn ao 80 W......., -.. 1.,.. UQMvatlal>le ElPuo 11'4 ee ""* M\'111 ,,.., and morrilng "°"''· F111r.,_,..1 55 •6 ...... -I0-1110 lllcnol•ln Fat90 112 er -Uadn*"""r lift.,_ ~ FleqetaH 711 5 1 ~ 1 ~> -Pw11y Cloudy trwougll 0<•1 Fella 1$ S2 H<Wtto<d II 60 w~ -,. " -80 ,, • "°""'°" " ,. lnd""-""9 90 Ill Extended J.cilc9Cln,MIU ., 72 J..-.._.... 17 67 ""'-51 62 " u 1(-Clty 97 71 Olllll'IOl!l•Clly 101 76 81 a1. Mll1- °""""' .. 73 8411111..Mt• 17 • ~~lhrOWQtl~--IMVeQM Ill 73 ()MnClo 81 73 S..Alllonto ., 72 -"!'O"*'O tow ...,. Uttla "** 11'4 81 -.. -. H10N111.,. 70. .. ltla t:::-13 70 ~ u IMI a.. OliaoO 13 74 P!loeN• 1()4 .. ,.,.,_ .. 61 -~eo.111 ... __ " N ~ 80 .. s.ttla 73 " ... LOWll In .,.. -'!>' lUOOOCll t6 70 p .~ 76 " ~ t6 72 ........... " 10 Ponlend,Ore ,. 68 13 .. ... ._. 88 111 ... --"' 81 Pr-T8 58 &poli-" IO ....,.,,. .... l l 141 ::::t'Clly 82 65 811'-,. M 96 70 T()!Mlla H ., Temperatures -to .. llleno u 69 ,_ t2 74 .... Or-.. '° 74 ..... 'l'ortr ... '3 Nc""-d 81 61 TW. 10 1 76 ........ 11 1 1 81 L°"'9 .. 87 w-.01on 14 .. ...... HO<lfl...,. " ., at,.....T-.. 76 WleNI• 102 ,. =-,. .. ti 84 100 It ~ .. ~ " &3 Tides A-.. 16 SU Rf RI PORT A-C.., ,, .. ~ .. 71 ....... ... " TOOA'I' ::r.,_ a IS ._..,. ..... :,,~./"' I J 70 ---81 ,,,... tow 12421111 06 ==· ,, =:r .. , 30 •"' 31 l.OCAftOM ICD .... 74 ., tt>tpM 21 _:1!:'...., 14 , .. ---" n '-'c!Ngll I OJ pm 6• ..... -Jel!Y ,.., , .. .... , . .. ..... Wit lode(, al 731 PM.,_ 40!11 ,, ' '""""°" q ,.., r:-· f2 61 W~ey .. I t a m __ ....,, a11'd81 .~ ' POCW ., .. .,,., ... lelbOeW~ t-3 ''* ~c; 12 .. ...__ .. , •• , ... '°"'· .... '" ~c...t= 1·3 ,.., .. .. 1 0) • m WeodMedey It'd,_""'*' ol .. , . ... ~NO M 67 ~44pm w .... ._.. ..... n ._ -.etlOft ...,.,. ... ,, ' By L.P. BENET Of .... °""'-...... The House Public Works and Transportation Committee has approved a $2.5 million pro}l!Ct that would authorize the U.S . Army Corps of Engineers to dredge and maintain upper Newport Bay, according to Rep. John E. Badham, R-Newport Beach. The legislation will be included in this year's water resources bill. which goes to the House for a vote after the Sept. 12 recess. The Army Corps would be in charge of dredging those parts of the bay located outside a st.ate-owned ecological reserve. Other supporters of the legislation were Marian Bergeson, R-Newport Beach, Supervisor Thomas Riley, Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart and the Irvine Co The back bay is a dumping ground for thousands of tons of sediment that washes down the San Diego creek, the bay's main waterway. Despite millions of dollars spent by the st.ate last year to build catch basins, silt continues to pour into the bay. Recent reports also say that sand and silt are being swept into Newport Harbor. separated from the back bay by a narrow neck of water near the coast. Seminar on computers Sept. 13 in Santa Ana A seminar on the use of the small computer by non-profit organiz.atJons will be held Sept. 13 at lhe Ramada Inn in Sant.a Ana. The day-long workshop offers non-profit or- ganization members a non-intimjdating introduction to the potential value of having a small computer system. -------- A busy week In New York City .. and hot and humid! But I love the excite- ment of the big city and see- ing all the new things at the Jewelry show. Thia year every- thing seems to run to ex- tremes ... either big and bold or tight and dainty ... some- thing for everyone and every tute. Dying mother Jeri DeMille of Orange is a ttt"minal cystic fibrosis patient and didn't want to leave her husband alone. Last week she gave birth to a six.:pound, 11 ounce baby boy. The baby may be the first born to a cystic fibrosis patient in Southern Cali- fornia. DeMille said, "I wante d a reminder that I was h e re." would be many dramatic Jew- elry Item• Shown In onyx 1nd white coral too. Many of thoee pleoee have diamond eccent• and are so amart looking that I Juat couldn't rnlat them. I love buytng ~ ty thing• too. and I want our cuatomera to ·'have the op. portunlty to Mfect from the w1delt variety posatble. Whtie In N9* Yortc I attend· ed Iota of lndu8try meeting• and aemtn.,. and came home muoh w1tet. t had a good time too • • • went to dinner at Llncofn Center wtth Al H~ and Gerefd Fard at the lnvttatlon of a mutual trt.nd. Alto to Wlndowt on the World for • otemond Club dinner. the Mxt night• ben- quet at the Pfau wtth the Plumb Club, and then a ,... oeptton et the New Yortt Yed'lt Club tor the~ Pearla and gemstone heads (and combinations thereof) are atlll very strong. They are ahown In every length and In many new twists. That wasn't meant to be a pun .. , It juat ctime out that way. It la true though, twlated atranda ate very popular. By hiving many separate atranda of a wtde variety they can be put together In Juet th• right com- bination to llOCl«lt or blend with M'lady'a coatume each dey. Thtt ti for the person who Ilk• to h1ve a hand In crNtlng her own jewelry ac- CMaOl'les. For thote with '"8 lm1g1n1t1on or crNtlva aklll ther9 are many, many beauti- ful neckfaoet to be Mlected for their "already" loot<. M11ry Barr C.ert1hed GerrolOQ1st Cup partldP9t1t1. Black and whh• I• V«Y popul•r In clothet thla Haaon 10 It only followt th•t th.,e CHARLES H. BARR .. BYTHEWAYwe1tlllhave1 ------.--..... ~ few coplee of the America Cup book tv.ilabte. If you .,. lntereeted oome by and pk* OM up ... ~ltl of MC,.._... Chariee H. Barr Jftl .. ~ Md &ANr .. • w the Rolex Watch~- 17th & Irvine, WeatcUff Pla10, . Newport Beach 642-3310 • ' .. NB Orang& Coast DAIL\' PI LOT/Tuesday, Aug 16, 1983 STOCKS "itU ~t "' • hth ' ,,. ~ h\I NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 0UOIAl•0 "5 1N<:lUOf fRA0£S ON lt<E NEW YOAK MIDWEST PAC•f!C. PDW BOSTON OflAOtl ANO CINCINNATI SfOC!l OCHAHGU ANO REPOkfEO 9• THE NASO INSflNl'T . ,.,."' .... f· t "'1 r •qv I OQ .. .. r"" ,, II .... 'nq Dow Jones Final Down 3.05 Clo1lng 1, 190.AS 81111111 BRllfl Industrial production continues monthly gain By lbe A11oclaled Pre11 WASHINGTON -Production in the nation's !ac10riesand nunes rose 1.8 percent in July, the eighth straight monthJy gain since the apparent end of the 1981-82 rece&80n, government figures indica\ed today. Gains were widespread among materiala and produc\8 with "especially sharp rises in automobiles and .ieel," the FederaJ Reserve Board report said. U.S. new car sales still rise DE:I:ROIT -Even with a IC8.1ing back of rebatet and other incentives by automakers. U.S. new car salee in early August rose 40.8 percent Crom last year's low levels -but an analyst says the real test of buying strength will come with the new model year. The six major U.S. cannakers repor\ed they delivered 178,686 autos between Aug. 1-10, or 19.8!>4 per day. compared with 112,839, or 14.105 per day. in early Augusi laat year Money market interest lowered WASHINGTON -Beginning today, savings institutions and commercial banks may pay aJ much as 9.8 percent interest on six-month money market certificates. compared with 9.95 percent in lhe past week. They may pay as much as 9.43 percent on three-month certificates, down !rom 9.57 percent lut week. The new rates are a result of Monday's auction of Treasury securities, in which yields on three-month billa declined -the fifth drop m the past 15 week.a -put the rate at its lowest level since the 9.36 percent of Aug. 1. Salaried workers pay raised PRINCETON, N.J _ -A new survey says salaried workers are getting a 6 8 percent pay i.ncrea9e on average this year, but forecasts a 6.6 percent increue next year Despite the economic upturn, oompa.niee are not returning to the high level salary budgets of previous years and are projecting 1984 budgets at a s.imilar level to 1983, the survey by Sib&on & C.o. said Monday. Firm to divest major holdings NEW YORK -Gulf & Western Industries Inc. plans to divest $1 billion in holdings, repre9enting 20 percent of Its asaets, which will result in writeoffs of about $470 million and a $215 million net loes for the fiscal year ended July 31. Investors bid up the price of Its stock on Monday by 75 cen'8, to $25.375 a sh.are, on the New York Stock Exchange STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES Nl:W YOltl( (AP)-S..lft, Tunclev Ota end nor chen11 of llllt U ,,_, ec!I•• ,._ YOt'll ~100. Eac:NnM lu uu . rredlnv ne tlone llv e r more!Nn ll Tencfv E1t1ton E11l ICod•' OleMSl'lm H~ Ne-• C1i.1Tr 1'911 Arn TitaKO Inc lllM AllRldllld GtE Con> o ... Mqto<• l.'41,200 N l,100 9Sl,IOO t1•.100 fl>.900 •IMO .. 9,100 .. uoo 751,200 Jl ... 00 .. 1.000 "'"°° .. 5.100 WHAT NYSE 010 NEW YOflK CAPI Aue. 1• AOVenceG 0.Cl\M(I u~ Tol1fl1Sue1 NewlllOlll -IOVll WHAT AMEX DID NEW YORK (AP) Aue, 1• METALS Today 141 ., 111 ti• 1 5 ,......, cleY 1107 '71 •1 1'St Pl-ev .,.. :It 7 '11 75' 114 HI " 4 Nl:W Y()tC!l IAPI -f'lri.I Dow•-••11>-tor Tunclev. Aue 1• STOCKI JO"'° JOtm ISUll USl- lnOut Tren ~~~ Our w.,·~ 11'1.lt 11" 70 , ,._. l lt0~1-05 SJHl SlU4 $2US Sll.->.SI 12'1.os 12u 1 12u2 12u2+ a.n 4ff.Sf •n '° ...._,. ..,,.,_ 1.26 7,511,.a >.!57.-• ,;:ri:: AMERICAN lEADE RS >54 •• m . U:Ji 212 l?J,jQI ICll,100 l01,6Qll 14,900 l>.200 "• + .._ -1.-. + " -1"